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ALICIA KEYS: Playing 'Mommy' By Karu F. Daniels, AOL Black Voices Alicia Keys For The Children!!! The nine-time Grammy Award winning musical wunderkind will guest star in a special episode of Nick, Jr.'s cartoon 'The Backyardigans' premiering Oct. 9 at 10:30 a.m. (ET/PT). In a special episode, titled "Mission to Mars," Tyrone and Tasha are Mission Control specialists who send their brave astronauts Uniqua, Pablo and Austin on a mission to find life on Mars after hearing a strange sound --"boinga, boinga!"-- coming from outer space. Keys stars as the animated Mommy Martian along with her real-life niece, Shakyra Lipscomb, who plays baby Martian Boinga. In addition to voicing the bright green extraterrestrial, Keys sings an original song entitled, "Almost Everything is Boinga Here." "After speaking with kids who said they loved 'The Backyardigans,' I knew this would be a great project for me to get involved in," said the J Records superstar. "Working alongside my niece was so much fun and the people at Nick Jr. helped to make it a great experience. I can't wait to see it all put together to make one great episode." Also, each half-hour episode of 'The Backyardigans' features a unique music/dance genre with four original songs, along with real choreographed by Beth Bogush, a former director of the Alvin Ailey Dance School’s children’s program. ----------------------------------- The Awakening A Closer Look at Alicia Keys Ellen Von Unwerth In A Nutshell: As an artist driven by social responsibility, Alicia Keys sends out messages in her songs and videos, but now she has taken on a broader challenge: AIDS in Africa. Is Alicia Keys just another celebrity activist jumping on the African bandwagon, or can her dedication really save the children? By Claude Grunitzky, Trace Magazine As an artist driven by social responsibility, Alicia Keys sends out messages in her songs and videos, but now she has taken on a broader challenge: AIDS in Africa. Is Alicia Keys just another celebrity activist jumping on the African bandwagon, or can her dedication really save the children? In November 2002, days before flying to Cape Town as the headliner for an HIV/AIDS awareness concert billed “Staying Alive,” Alicia Keys told Leigh Blake, the British woman who would become her partner in front line activism, that she was going to Africa. Leigh told her she wasn’t really going to Africa. “Cape Town is not Africa,” Leigh said. “You’re going to Los Angeles.” After the concert, which was aired globally on MTV as a 90-minute special on World AIDS Day that year, Alicia and Leigh flew together to Zululand. One night, they were out in the middle of the bush, eating under the stars in a circle, African-style, around a fire and Alicia asked Leigh what it was she really wanted to do with her non-profit organization Keep a Child Alive. “I want to get AIDS treatment to the African people,” was Leigh’s reply. “If you can figure out a way to do that,” said Alicia, “I’m with you all the way.” They got into a helicopter and flew to Soweto, the township near Johannesburg. Their first stop was the Perinatal HIV Clinic at the Chris Hani Baragwanath Hospital, a unit run by a few dedicated South Africans who are known to be at the forefront of AIDS activism. 95% of the clinic are women; they knew Alicia’s song “Fallin’” and as soon as she came in, they spontaneously started singing it for her. When Alicia asked the women what they wanted, they said treatment. That defining moment, in the clinic, when she first confronted the catastrophe behind the African AIDS pandemic and the faces behind the alarming numbers, marked the beginning of Alicia’s active involvement with Keep a Child Alive . “I met so many people on that first trip to South Africa,” Alicia told me recently. “I met women who were infected. I met kids, some infected, some not. I saw a white South African couple, both infected, because the husband didn’t want to tell his wife that he had the virus. He was afraid of the stigma. When I got to understand, after that night under the African stars, that treatment was possible for less than a dollar a day, I decided to get involved.” That very day, Alicia began dedicating a large amount of time and personal resources to the cause. The African experience was a rude awakening for a singer, who, admittedly, had never traveled outside of the United States—with the exception of a trip to Puerto Rico—until she began touring and promoting her albums. Still, it created a new sense of purpose, a new sense of empowerment that comes with the ability to change the course of people’s lives. Beyond uplifting people’s spirits through music, she found that she could help to save lives, in countries where death by disease has become an accepted reality after years of neglect by the world’s health authorities. “My plan was to go to this nice vacation after my trip to Africa,” she later told me, “and I did go, to this beautiful hotel, but I felt horrible afterwards, when I looked at my bill. I asked myself, ‘What am I doing here?’” The key, so to speak, to understanding Alicia Keys’ appeal as an all-around entertainer and role model for a new generation of music lovers around the world, may be found in the very honest dialogue she began with her fans back when her first single, “Fallin’,” hit the radio and catapulted her, overnight, into the somewhat uncomfortable position of having to live like a celebrity. I remember those early days very clearly. I remember her gradual transformation from aspiring recording artist to global superstar, because five years ago, almost to the day, I interviewed Alicia Keys for the cover of this magazine, and sat in on Ellen von Unwerth’s photo shoot. Everyone on the set could feel that we were witnessing a very special moment, because, clearly, this young New Yorker had something very, well, special to offer the world. I remember how the photo, hair and makeup teams and I were gathered in a bar called Idlewild on New York’s East Houston Street, a very narrow space that had been designed to resemble a top-of-the-line 747, circa 1967. Ellen kept asking Alicia to look sexy when she sat on the banquettes. Alicia was trying, acting as if it were all natural for her. The distinctive, braided look was clearly working in her favor, with the red lipstick adding that special touch of ’50s movie star glamour that Ellen had long favored. Every time Alicia glanced at the camera from the corner of her eye, and tried to look sexy, Ellen smiled and spoke loudly, as she snapped away with feverish alacrity. Ellen was on, and so was Alicia; the pictures and cover reflected the energy of the photo shoot. A few weeks later, Alicia sang at our issue launch party, hitting the keys of the baby grand piano she’d had delivered that afternoon, and setting the pace with her accelerated finger strokes for an hazy New York summer evening. She made eye contact with our crowd, and cracked a few jokes when everyone could see that she was wearing the same houndstooth-patterned Dolce & Gabbana hat she’d sported for our cover pictorial, her first of many. On the last Tuesday of June 2001, five days after our party, we found out that Alicia’s debut album, 'Songs in A Minor,' had entered the Billboard charts at number one in its first week of release, and was officially declared the best-selling album in America. The bar Idlewild closed a while back, but Alicia’s record would go on to sell more than ten million copies worldwide and earn her multiple awards, honors and admiration. Even after she started selling out major concert halls, even after her follow-up album,'The Diary of Alicia Keys,' blew up around Christmas 2003 with the song “You Don’t Know My Name,” for the longest time, Alicia insisted on riding the subway, just like all her Harlem homegirls would, just like she herself had done since she was a young teenager growing up in the city. Eventually, her friends, family and business associates managed to dissuade her from riding the New York City subway, but Alicia’s attachment to those turnstile memories denotes a humble New York City upbringing just as much as it symbolizes the culture shocks that come with the constant travels associated with the job of being one of America’s sweethearts. “I miss the train,” was one of the first things she told me when we reconnected last March for our first interview—and Trace cover shoot—in five years. “I miss the sound of tens of thousands of people. I miss the grittiness of it all.” This time around, we’d decided to shoot our cover in a nightclub called Happy Valley, in New York’s Flatiron District. The two-level club, which was recently revamped by the fashion designer Jeremy Scott, revolves around a light box floor and a giant mirrored disco ball suspended above the dance floor. Alicia made her way around the go-go cages, light bars, staircases and multiple leopard prints before posing not too far from an oversize, mesh-gartered set of female legs that are said to open and close on demand. This time around, Ellen didn’t ask her to look “sexy,” but a seasoned Alicia struck a few natural, sexy poses anyway. The mood was playful and I managed to chat with her for a few minutes in her dressing room. I asked Alicia how success had changed her. She said that she had grown a lot, and that she was feeling like a woman now, even though her essence was still the same. New York, she said, had taught her about struggle and hardships. I asked her if she was starting to feel the pressures of staying on top, now that her Unplugged album and accompanying DVD—her latest releases, from 2005—were confirmed as her latest certified hits. (MTV had stopped the Unplugged series, but they brought it back for Alicia.) She relayed an anecdote, which turned out to be an analogy. “I went bowling last Saturday; I’m usually pretty good. At first it started alright, but I bowled a gutterball, and then another gutterball, and I was thinking so much about the gutterball that I kept bowling gutterballs. My point is that if you focus so much on the failure, you’re going to fail.” I wanted to get to her definition of success, because I knew from our previous interviews that, for her, success was closely linked to the central idea of happiness. “Success now, is being able to have the opportunity to create happiness for more people than just myself. I feel like I can help others to achieve their dreams as well.” While I was waiting to interview Alicia at Happy Valley, in between shots where Ellen was click-clicking away and navigating the club with increasing intensity, I couldn’t get my eyes off one of the front page stories in that day’s New York Times. The headline read “Plight Deepens for Black Men, Studies Warn”. The article explained how “black men in the United States face a far more dire situation than is portrayed by common employment and education statistics, and it has worsened in recent years even as an economic boom and a welfare overhaul have brought gains to black women and other groups.” The piece focused on the life patterns of young black men, and showed that “the huge pool of poorly educated black men are becoming ever more disconnected from the mainstream society, and to a far greater degree than comparable white or Hispanic men.” The subject was too heavy to discuss on the shoot, and I was aware of Alicia’s attachment to social issues – the messages are all over her videos - so I saved my questions for the following week, because I knew that she would be better disposed to speak about the cycle of poverty and miseducation behind the plight, particularly the role that certain types of negative hip hop imagery play in the crisis. “It’s very sad,” she said, “and I see it with my own two eyes. It seems that every image that we see reinforces this negative stereotype, and it’s the worst trap that we could go into. I try to show different sides of things, and I try to speak to people with honesty and truth, but sometimes, I feel like there’s only one way when I see these images being perpetuated. We need to sing about it, and show it in videos. I’m not trying to get too preachy, but…” I mentioned that she’d sang on a reinterpretation of Marvin Gaye’s classic 'What’s Going On,' one of the most political albums ever released, and she immediately started talking about her upcoming album. “I feel that this new album is going to be political. I’m feeling really heavy. I feel like we’re all feeling lost, me included. We get lost in these lies, and we are living in a broken society. Everything I’ve been writing lately reflects that, because I can’t turn anywhere else. I feel like Marvin couldn’t not have written What’s Going On.” In many ways, I mentioned, some of the hip hop videos showing booty-shaking, black-on-black violence, homophobia and misogyny amount to a blatant disrespect of the achievements of the civil rights. “Hell yeah!” she interrupted me. “It’s blatant disrespect. That’s why I was so honored to be involved in Oprah’s "Legends and Young’uns" event. Oprah had women who had been through it all and come out victorious. Many of these women I never would have expected to meet, women like Maya Angelou, Coretta Scott King, Kathleen Battle, Ruby Dee, Cicely Tyson. From the first days, we were able to spend time together. There were no men, no friends, no family around, just us women, and I remember feeling this very strong sense of responsibility. The reality is, we’re regressing, we’re sliding back down the mountain. I feel like, in a lot of ways, even though we have so much to accomplish now, the video games and BlackBerrys, and everything else that’s out there is distracting us from each other. We don’t even talk to each other anymore; we don’t even ask, ‘how was your day?’ And then you have these crazy advertisers who are having us believe these crazy things. We don’t have a foundation of where we came from, that’s why we don’t know where we are.” Alicia has refused pretty much every advertising endorsement that’s come her way, including very lucrative, multi-year offers from brands such as L’Oreal. She feels that her integrity is at stake. “These advertisers, they’re smart. They come at me like, ‘we want you to celebrate these strong women, the real people.’ And then the contract comes, and there’s this crazy clause that says that after the event, it resorts to a traditional endorsement. I feel like the right thing hasn’t come along yet. It’s not like you’re going to be seeing me with a bottle in my hand, saying ‘cheese.’” Later on, she said that many of the problems in modern society come from our obsession with “money, fame, success, big houses and big cars.” Alicia has had plenty of money, fame, success, big houses and big cars for a few years now, but she credits the strong women in her family, namely her mother and grandmother, and her New York education for her ability to stay grounded in the face of all the attention. “Being raised in New York meant that I saw things very early on. With the amount of prostitutes, hookers and hoes that were in my neighborhood, I said to myself, early on, that I wouldn’t do that. I learned to respect myself, my body, my mind, and the different turns in my life meant that I had to choose what I wanted to do. I’m not one who likes to run away from problems. When there’s a problem, I say, ‘Here’s my problem, let’s talk about it.’ I’m very direct, and I don’t like to play games. It’s more like, ‘Here’s what’s going on, let’s come to some happy medium.’ I find that, often, things are made extra complicated, when they’re actually not that complicated at all. My friend Bethann Hardison, a seasoned model agent from New York, knew Alicia’s mother Terri Augello when Alicia was growing up in ’80s New York. She would see young Alicia running around, and the first thing she noticed was that Alicia was a very mature child. Alicia graduated as valedictorian from the Professional Performing Arts School, a public high school in Manhattan, at the age of 16. She briefly attended Columbia University on a scholarship before devoting herself full-time to her musical career. The word precocious has also been used to describe her, given that she began playing piano at age seven, learning classical music by Beethoven, Mozart and Chopin, and writing her first song, "Butterflyz," when she was 14. I spoke to Leigh Blake in early May, just a few days after she and Alicia had returned from a trip that took them from Kenya to Uganda to South Africa. A thin, hyperkinetic, fast-talking, middle-aged woman from the working class Elephant and Castle neighborhood of London, Leigh is an unlikely doppelganger for Alicia. They met in 2001, when Leigh approached Alicia because she wanted her to appear on the "What’s Going On" tribute album she’d been working on with Bono. To Leigh’s bewilderment, Alicia asked her who Bono was. She explained that he was the lead singer for U2, and a major activist who was fighting for the African continent. Alicia agreed to appear on the album, and they stayed in touch. In 2001, Leigh had some money left from "Red Hot + Blue," her first AIDS benefit. Rather than having the funds disbursed through various organizations, she chose a different route. “All the focus was on prevention,” says Leigh. “It was as if the people dying weren’t worth saving. So I initiated a campaign and found the doctors who would help build this clinic in Mombasa, Kenya. Anti-retroviral drugs were costing about $11,000 a year, but we weren’t about to let the enormity of the situation deter us. We felt that giving family care, treating opportunistic infections, and giving nutritional advice would go a long way. I was married to a South African, and I ended up inheriting this incredible family of black South Africans in Durban. I saw people in our family dying. It was as if God had given us a test, but many people were still acting as if these children with AIDS in the developing world weren’t worth the investment.” One day, a woman called Anne, who had a three year-old child called Brine, came into the clinic that Leigh had helped to build. She said she wouldn’t be leaving until she got the drugs that the Americans had access to for their own children. When Leigh heard that, she felt heartbroken, because she had a four year-old child of her own. She decided to find a way to pay for the drugs that the woman needed. Eventually, she managed to procure the drugs through NYU hospital and bought them at the teaching price of $1,200. The clinic in Mombasa began to treat Brine, and more people stepped up, identifying themselves and offering to help. In 2003, an Indian company called Cipla began manufacturing generic anti-retroviral drugs, in a complete violation of the international patents that were imposed on AIDS patients and doctors in developing countries. According to Leigh, those drugs made a spectacular difference, because they made the Keep a Child Alive mission of providing HIV/AIDS drugs to children in need all the more realistic. After Leigh and Alicia had returned from the African trip in late 2002, Leigh had spent much time educating Alicia on the inner workings and ramifications of the international drug laws, particularly with respect to the crucial role played by the World Trade Organization. When the two women felt that they were ready to launch Keep a Child Alive to the world, they contacted Evan Harrison at AOL, and AOL Music became the media partner for Keep a Child Alive. On Word AIDS Day 2003, Alicia sang at a special concert and participated in the creation of a public service announcement, encouraging people to sign up. On that one night, through AOL Music, they signed up 56 donors, who agreed to pay $1 a day each for a minimum of two years. Leigh and Alicia didn’t want to show the usual terrible pictures of African children dying, but the message was clear, in that it supported a business model that was proven to have worked well with the public in the past. Statistics showed that people who sign up as donors end up staying on as donors for an average of eight to 20 years. By June 2004, Leigh and Alicia knew that Keep a Child Alive was going to be really successful. The cynics—and there are many—will remind us that a lot of celebrities choose to attach themselves to charities because it looks good. In general, it’s a temporary, transient thing, and the photo opportunities (usually with sick children) get leveraged in the mainstream media as a way to build goodwill for the celebrity’s own brand equity. According to Leigh, Alicia is different. “I am on the phone with her almost every day.” Last year, for Keep a Child Alive, Alicia hosted the “Black Ball,” which was sponsored by Time Magazine. Guests paid $15,000 each for a table, and Alicia sang some very special songs she’d never .performed before in public. “I got involved with Keep a Child Alive because I was really moved by Leigh,” says Alicia. “Sometimes, with these types of organizations, you wonder if it’s honest, if the people can be trusted. When I first got involved, it was pretty much just her. Here was this little woman, really rebellious and willing to do whatever it took to make it happen for the people whop deserve attention. To this day, there’s no red tape involved with Keep a Child Alive, where you wonder if the money is really going to the people. We act as a Fedex; we just send the medication. I wanted to make sure that when I went there [to Africa] and made those promises, people could trust me. The organization is still very grassroots; it’s just Leigh, a woman called Diane, a young woman called Erika Rose and a lot of interns who do it on the strength, out of love.” In Wentworth, which is located on the outskirts of the port city of Durban, Alicia bought a big building, which had previously been a sports bar, and with the help of a local team began the process of converting the space into a modern clinic. In South Africa, Wentworth is called a “colored” township, meaning that the “colored” people aren’t really considered black, nor are they considered white. For the most part, “colored” South Africans tend to keep to themselves. (Surprisingly, the term endures as yet another legacy of the apartheid years.) “I remember being very surprised two years ago in South Africa,” remembers Alicia, “because we were out one day and one of the guys I was with asked ‘what kind of clubs do you have in America?’ He said ‘colored’ clubs, or ‘black’ clubs? I was shocked, because I wasn’t aware of the degrees of blackness and the separations that they have over there. It felt like being back in the States in the ’50s. It brought me back, even as far back as the time of slavery.” In Wentworth, Alicia and Leigh want to do more than just fund a clinic, which is what they would normally do. Instead, they want to do something spectacular. They want to provide AIDS testing, treatment and counseling services. The place will even have short stay beds, and patients will be taken through anti-retroviral treatments. They even want to tackle people’s issues, like alcoholism, drug and family problems. In short, they want to make the Wentworth clinic the best clinic there is. The South African press reported that Alicia paid half a million dollars for the building, which is currently being run by Irene Stainbank, the coordinator of the Wentworth AIDS Action Group. Alicia gets really excited when she talks about the future clinic. “It’s going to be a rehabilitation center, an incredible clinic that will do wonders. In that area, there’s nothing like it. Because it’s in a ‘colored’ area, some ‘black’ people would not normally go there, but this one is going to be different. It’s kind of interesting that some things were allowed to happen, in our dealings with the health department, because over there they consider me to be ‘colored.’” When I spoke with Leigh, in early May, right after she and Alicia had returned from Africa, she told me that they were both “exhausted, shell-shocked and wounded” by this latest expedition. “On this Africa trip,” she added, “what I loved about Alicia was her incredible humility with the Africans. She was with the people, she spent time there, she listened to their issues, and she cried. I know that all of the love and compassion that she gives to the African people every day is completely true. She was resolute about going into crowds and signing autographs, even when she was told that it wasn’t safe. It also matters that most of the people who go on these sorts of trips are white, but when Alicia comes with her braids and brown skin, it makes a difference.” Soon after she returned from Africa, Alicia showed up on a New York movie set for the big-screen adaptation of Nicola Kraus and Emma McLaughlin's best-selling novel 'The Nanny Diaries.' She will be playing the best friend of Scarlett Johansson, who plays a New Jersey-bred nanny for a wealthy Manhattan family. Paul Giamatti, Laura Linney and Chris Evans also star in the relatively big budget production for the Weinstein Company. The character is a far cry from the assassin she plays in the upcoming action flick 'Smokin' Aces,' a Vegas heist movie which also features Ben Affleck, Andy Garcia, Jeremy Piven and Ray Liotta. Alicia is also currently in pre-production on yet another film, this one co-starring Halle Berry. This is all in addition to the production company, Big Pita, Lil' Pita, that she formed with longtime manager Jeff Robinson earlier this year as a vehicle for creating original television and movie projects. With her ten year-old production company, Krucial Keys, which she formed with Kerry “Krucial” Brothers currently in overdrive after producing hits for Christina Aguilera, Mario and Usher, it seems that Alicia just can’t allow herself to slow down. As far as this piece is concerned, another final key to understanding the appeal of Alicia Keys as an all-around entertainer and role model may be the zeal with which she has seized the opportunities that life has given her. “After I started traveling the world, I felt fortunate to see so many things that so many people I knew would never see, because they would never leave their block radius, or go anywhere below 125th Street or above 135th Street.” Alicia Keys is the talented, hard-working, mature, precocious Harlem girl who is taking over the world, and doing it on her terms, one big challenge at a time. Towards the end of our final interview session, I realized that, at 26, she is already thinking of posterity. “I know that I’d like to be remembered as a timeless voice that stood for something.” To become a donor to the Keep a Child Alive foundation, register at keepachildalive.org
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HEATHER HEADLEY: 'March'ing On By Karu F. Daniels, AOL Black Voices Tony Award winning dynamo Heather Headley is not only reveling in the near platinum-bound success of her recently released sophomore opus, 'In My Mind,' but she's offering up her time and talents to a most worthy cause. Last week, the Trinidadian born chanteuse filmed a Public Service Announcement for a forthcoming March of Dimes campaign to help generate awareness of the growing crisis of premature birth. The message is aimed, particularly, at African-American women whose risk of having a premature baby is nearly twice as high as white women. Headley, star of Broadway productions of 'AIDA' and 'Dreamgirls,' said that although she is not a mother, the issue still affects her and her thinking around it. "When all my friends, all my married friends started to have their little babies, started thinking of babies [myself]," she said. "And then of course there's my mother and she’s like 'when am I going to have my grandchild?' "So I started thinking of babies and then all of a sudden the subject came in. And I was researching so it was like the most perfect time in my life to do it." The two-time Grammy Award nominated bronze beauty, who turns 32 on Oct. 5, married former New York Jets wide receiver Brian Musso on Sept. 23, 2003. A forthcoming headlining tour featuring 'American Idol' winner Ruben Studdard and T.I. protégé Governor was recently scrapped. According to a label spokesperson (she's signed to the Clive Davis-helmed RCA Records), it was due to scheduling conflicts. "We were going to do some dates," Headley explained. "As of two days ago, we thought maybewe should postpone them with everything that is going on and just try and make sure they are the right dates." "We were kind of starting to get going there with them and Iwas like, ‘Wait a minute,’ I am like Miss Perfectionist … we are going to push it back a little bit and maybe go from there. I love being on stage with people though, so it will happen soon enough." The March of Dimes, founded in 1938, is a national voluntary health agency whose mission is to improve the health of babies by preventing birth defects, premature birth, and infant mortality. For more information, visit the March of Dimes online here. ------------------------------- THIS JUST IN: Ol' Dirty Bastard's Grand Finale By Karu F. Daniels, AOL Black Voices Hip-hop mogul Damon Dash announced plans to release the last studio album from Wu-Tang Clan member and critically acclaimed solo artist Ol' Dirty Bastard. Titled 'A Son Unique,' the opus will hit stores on Nov. 7 -- commemorating the anniversary of the hip-hop personality's death, which occurred on Nov. 13, 2004. According to Giovanna Melchiorre, publicist for KOCH Entertainment --distributors of Damon Dash Music Group, the album will feature collaborations with Macy Gray, Missy 'Misdemeanor' Elliott, RZA, Ghostface Killah, Raekwon, Method Man, M.O.P., N.O.R.E., and Pharrell.
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WEIRD AL - Confessions Part III Straight Outta Lynwood (2006)
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Thanx 4 that. The article ain't bad...and i like alot of things Snoop is saying. But he still has another step or 2 to take. He's got his head right, but as long as he's gonna be staying close 2 the gang scene, i think he's got a ways 2 go. It reminds me of people like DMX who got their mind and their heart right...but they surround themselves with people or an enviorment that brings garbage in2 their lives. I'm definitly ready 2 hear the new album and what he has 2 say on it. That story with his kids is hilarious.
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Yeah...definitly funny...but more than that...definitly disturbing.
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I'm not actually posing with Jeff...but here's one. My friend also jerked the camera...so it's hardly in focus.
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WHITNEY HOUSTON: Ready For Business By Karu F. Daniels, AOL Black Voices Although reports are surfacing that her soon-to-be former hubby wants reality television producers to buy him a car and --even the more absurd story-- that recuperated rocker Courtney Love (of all people) played a part in her extensive rehabilitation endeavor, multiple Grammy Award winning singer Whitney Houston is getting back into the swing of things. According to published reports, she's preparing a return to the stage next month. 'MTV Radio' reports that music mogul Clive Davis is readying Houston to perform at the annual "Carousel of Hope" charity gala, which raises money for the Barbara Davis Center for Childhood Diabetes. The event will take place at the Beverly Hilton Hotel in Beverly Hills, CA on Oct. 28. A record company source tells The BV Newswire that Houston is not confirmed to perform at the event, as of yet, but she is scheduled to accompany Davi -- the man who discovered her and made her an international success. Two weeks ago, the pop diva made the scene with the celebrated BMG Chairman (pictured right) during the Fifteenth Annual Ella Awards -- days after filing for legal separation from her husband (of 14 years) Bobby Brown. CASSIDY: Still Here By Karu F. Daniels, AOL Black Voices Amid unsubstantiated radio reports this afternoon that he died, a spokesperson for rapper Cassidy said he's still alive and in stable condition. According to published reports the Philadelphia native (legally known as Barry Reese) was in critical condition, after an accident in New Jersey on Wednesday night. "While details are sketchy, Cassidy was leaving New Jersey for a recording studio, when a U-Haul truck swerved into oncoming traffic" reported website AllHipHop.com. "The truck crashed into Cassidy's side of the SUV that transported him, critically injuring the rapper. He was the only one that suffered critical injuries." A representative for Cassidy's label Sony/BMG told the site. "[He suffered] a fractured skull and broken bones on the left side of his face." Four other passengers in the vehicle, reportedly, also suffered injuries. The spokesperson confirmed that Cassidy is still at an undisclosed New York City area hospital. Known as the first MC of significance to be supported by Swizz Beatz's J Records-affiliated Full Surface label, Cassidy scored national success with his debut album 'Split Personality' in 2004. The chart-topping street anthem "I'm A Hustla" was bolstered by a remixed collaboration with Queen of Hip Hop Soul Mary J. Blige -- the ring tone of the track sold nearly one million copies. Sales of the sophomore effort (of the same name) suffered after Cassidy was charged with a murder that took place in his Philadelphia neighborhood, two weeks prior its release the following year. While he did serve time, he was cleared of the more serious manslaughter charges. "Cass is like my brother, and this has been such arough year for him," Swizz Beatz said in a statement issued to The BV Newswire this afternoon. "We're all praying andstaying positive during this time. Thanks to everyone for their continued support, and please keep Cassidy and his family in your prayers." CORRINE BAILEY RAE: Can't Stop, Won't Stop By Karu F. Daniels, AOL Black Voices Get a load of Corrine Bailey Rae. The latest Bristish soul import to creep into our psyches (and be blared across our video screens) is still going strong -- even after the hype off of her debut album died down. The "Put Your Records On" songstress will be the musical guest on this week's edition of 'Saturday Night Live.' But that coveted booking isn't the only mainstream exposure the singer/songwriter will partake in this season: 'Late Nught with Conan O'Brien' (Oct. 18), 'The Ellen DeGeneres Show' (Oct. 24) and 'Late, Late Show with Craig Ferguson' (Oct. 25) has also been confirmed. In addition to all of that TV exposure, a one-hour concert special will air exclusively on DIRECTV throughout November. With only 387,173 copies of her self-titled opus sold in the United States (according to the latest Nielsen Soundscan figures), the gal has done good. The music video for her lead single ("Put Your Records On") became an anthem of sorts this past summer amongst the bohemian, hippy and ethereal music lover. The specialty channel VH1 Soul and (even VH1, itself) hyped the record so much, I threatened to jump out of the window if I heard it again. The album, itself, was critically hailed. 'O: The Oprah Magazine' referred to Bailey Rae as "a smart soul singer whose music leaves the rest of the R&B pack in the dust. Ummmmmmmmmmm, I'm not sure about all of that. 'People' magazine gave it four stars, calling it "always captivating." And the machine continues to churn. According to her publicist, she will also play a special show at Los Angeles’ John Anson Ford Amphitheatre on Oct. 24, and will perform at the Nobel Peace Prize ceremonies in Oslo December 11. A Dec. 13 show at New York City’s Town Hall on December 13 has also been confirmed. And of course Hollywood has called. She appears on a segment of 'Austin City Limits' airing Dec. 16, and her music (just heard on the season opener of 'Girlfriends') will be featured in 'Venus,' an upcoming Miramax/Disney motion picture featuring Peter O’Toole and Vanessa Redgrave. DA BRAT: 'Reality' Bites By Karu F. Daniels, AOL Black Voices Although one of my all-time favorite female hip-hop personalities hasn't done much on the music front lately, she's become a reality TV staple. I'm still wondering whether or not if that's a good thing. The BV Newswire hears that Chicago-bred lyricist Da Brat reportedly will star on the upcoming season of VH1's wildly popular weight loss competition 'Celebrity Fit Club.' But VH1 isn't confirming -- as of yet. "We haven't announced any of the upcoming cast members because they are not confirmed," network publicist Toni Heron told us this afternoon. "So I unfortunately, I cannot confirm this information." Well alrighty then -- don't call LisaRaye's half sister (legally known as Shawntae Harris) "Da Fat" just yet!!! It may not be a bad thing, after all: Flavor Flav was on 'Surreal Life.' So was wrestling icon Hulk Hogan. And rehabilitated supermodel Janice Dickinson. They all experienced TV success afterward. Even 'America's Next Top Model' star Toccara Jones, who appeared on the third season of 'Celebrity Fit Club,' has done well also representing the full figured beauties for BET. So I hope "Da Brat-ta-tat tat" (who already starred in a previous season of 'The Surreal Life") keeps doing her thing. Her musical mentor, superproducer Jermaine Dupri needs to get at her fo' real. Janet Jackson's 'So Excited'; is scorching HOT!!! A remix with her and Khia would be SICK. BEYONCE KNOWLES: Victory Is Hers By Karu F. Daniels, AOL Black Voices Last week, she was fighting off rumors of her name being booed at UK's MOBO Awards. This week, the bleach blonde-tressed bootylicious diva is claiming a courtroom victory. Last night, a spokesperson for Beyoncé Knowles' camp (worded carefully) released a statement from the multiple Grammy award winning superstar regarding the Sept. 21 dismissal of the copyright infringement case brought against her and the co-authors of the hit song "Baby Boy." Judge Nancy Atlas ruled that Beyoncé and the other defendants (including Sean Paul, Jay-Z, Scott Storch, Robert Waller, and their respective record labels and music enterprises) did not infringe the copyright in plaintiff's song. In response to the court’s decision, Beyoncé said "It’s unfortunate that lawsuits such as this one occur, but I am grateful and relieved to have this behind me and I am eager to move on." A Minneapolis singer-songwriter named Jennifer Armour asserted in a lawsuit filed in July 2005 that her former manager, Marc McKinney (Theo Forrest), submitted demo recordings of her song “Got a Little Bit of Love for You” to Mathew Knowles (Beyoncé's pappy and President, Music World Entertainment), representatives of Beyoncé’s record label Columbia Records, and Sean Paul's label Atlantic Recording Corporation in early March 2003. She soon discovered in the litigation, however, that the writing and recording of "Baby Boy" was substantially complete by February 10, 2003, approximately one month before Armour alleged that her demo was submitted. Oh okay. By just less than a month. Hmmmmm. But let's understand that the basis of the court’s decision, however, was not the fact that "Baby Boy" was in existence before the date on which the plaintiff’s demos were allegedly submitted to various people and entities affiliated with the the song's songwriters, mandated Knowles' spokeswoman Priscilla Clarke. "Beyoncé’s attorney filed a motion for summary judgment in which he asked the court to make a side-by-side comparison of the plaintiff’s song and "Baby Boy." One of the key questions in a copyright infringement case is whether two songs are "substantially similar" to one another. The court made the requested side-by-side comparison and determined that no reasonable person could conclude that "Baby Boy" is "substantially similar" to the plaintiff’s song. In fact, the court wrote that the two songs are "substantially dissimilar" from one another." Well alrighty then. SNOOP DOGG: A 'Novel' Approach By Karu F. Daniels, AOL Black Voices Hip-hop superstar Snoop Dogg is taking on the literary world. The Long Beach California reared lyricist is putting his writing talents to paper -- this time in the form of a novel, written with award-winning urban theater czar David E. Talbert. On Oct 17, a hardcover book titled 'Love Don't Live Here No More' will be released via Simon & Schuster's Atria imprint. According to a rep, the book is the very first in a series of drama filled novels called Doggie Tales, which takes readers from the rough and tumble streets of South Central, Los Angeles to the gloss and floss of show business. 'Love Don't…' takes place in 1989 and centers on lead character Ulysses Jeffries as he and his family movie from the drug-infested East Side to what they think is the safer North Long Beach area… Instead of moving on up, they've just moved on over. Talbert, a 5-time NAACP Award-winning playwright is also the best-selling author of 'Baggage Claim' and 'Love On A Dotted Line.' Currently working on his feature film directorial debut for Sony/Screen Gems, the Morgan State University alum wrote and produced Jamie Foxx's NBC special 'Unpredictable: A Musical Journey.'
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Hip-Hop Pioneer Afrika Bambataa Issues A Statement
JumpinJack AJ replied to bigted's topic in Caught in the Middle
Thanx for posting that. I'm with sonic in the sense that a few of those statements came across kinda scattered...but 4 the most part, i liked what it said. However, i think some of the ideas could have been stated in a slicker and smarter way. The sad thing is, the people who need 2 read this won't cuz they have no idea who he is...ha ha. -
Wyclef to Release 'Carnival 2', But Where Are The Fugees?
JumpinJack AJ replied to bigted's topic in Caught in the Middle
Very cool...i can't wait. I think Wycelf's albums got better and better (tho' i never picked up his last one). The Carnival has some good songs, but as a whole album, i favor the ones that came later. However, i think it's cool that he'll return 2 the vibe of his solo album that nearly 10 years old. Wyclef has needed 2 do something more mainstream 4 awhile now. Someone needs 2 knock that T.I., Young Dro, Young Joc trash off the radio. I still can't wait 4 that Fugee's album tho.' It's funny how Jerry Wonder says they are all busy...but other than Wyclef's work with Shakira...they haven't put and solo stuff out in forever. -
I'm ignoring the red flag that has popped up in my head 2 share my side on this whole thing. 1st off...only they know what went down. So only they know where the lies and truths stand. 2ndly, only God can judge them. But i will say this. R. Kelly has a rumored history of similar situations like this. So he really needs 2 get his addictions taken care of and straighten his life out. He owes that 2 himself. Now the girl...she needs 2 stop acting like such a victim. 85% of females hanging out with a celeb are either trying 2 get with them (in some kinda way) or they are fully aware that some male celebs' main goal is 2 have a one night stand with party-ready fans. The girls looking for a "good time" are always dressing older, looking sexy, and ready 4 whatever goes down. Overall, they are both guilty and need 2 do some soul searching. After all the media, invasion of privacy, money wasted...the case will go nowhere. The only thing set 2 happen is whether Kelly is gonna do jail time. And lets be real, it's been like 5 years. Either they've learned their lessons or they haven't. The case isn't going 2 do anything but draw negative attention 2 something that happened years ago.
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Jazzy isn't really throwing up a "westside" sign...his face is the only real part of it. The rest is animated. That sign just looks good with them of the pic.
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HA HA!! That is hilarious!!!
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R. Kelly Sued Over Song, Alleged Beating AP CHICAGO (Oct. 5) - A man describing himself as a "mentor and guide" to R. Kelly since he was a teenager is suing the singer, alleging that he attacked him and reneged on an agreement to pay him for a song idea. In a suit filed Wednesday, Henry "Love" Vaughn says he's worked for Kelly off and on for years. The suit says that in February he went to Kelly's suburban Olympia Fields home to watch a basketball game and that one of Kelly's other employees became "verbally abusive." It goes on to allege that Kelly, 39, and others dragged him to the basement, attacked him and held him against his will. Olympia Fields police investigated the alleged attack but decided not to file charges, said Cmdr. James Keith. The suit also alleges that the song "Step in the Name of Love" was Vaughn's brainchild and that Kelly reneged on a promise to give him half the proceeds from the song. In a statement Wednesday, a representative of Kelly's characterizes Vaughn as a "disgruntled former employee and hanger-on" who is using the lawsuit to extort money from the singer. "In fact, his lawsuit is a pathetic collection of half-truths, distortions, and outright lies," the statement says. Vaughn's suit seeks compensatory damages, punitive damages and court costs.
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SNOOP DOGG - Can I Get A Flicc Withcu R+G: Rhythm + Gangsta - The Masterpiece (2004)
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Ha ha!! No...no u don't. My friend loves that movie and made me watch it last year. I had high hopes but it waz as average as it gets.
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NICOLE C. MULLEN - Butterfly (self-titled) (2000)
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Cassidy Critically Injured in Car Accident
JumpinJack AJ replied to MaxFly's topic in Caught in the Middle
He's had a rough year. I pray he takes this all as a lesson and fixes up his life...and he's music. -
When something is fake...it comes across that way. When it's legit, it feels right. I see Beyonce's "Ring The Alarm" video and is steems forced or out of her element. It's not bad, it's just not her typical style...but for those few videos where Ashanti is tryna be hard...it comes off amusingly fake. I love her songs like Happy, Baby..., and Rock Wit U...but when she ties 2 be something she's not...it's not even worth listening. For me, that's how i look at music in general. If it's fake, i can't stand listening 2 it. But i tend 2 gravitate towards real artists. Real recognize real...that's all i gotta say. Notice that grown and mature people tend 2 like true artists, while young people still growing, finding themselves, and who are impressional like alot of garbage that's fake.
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JANET JACKSON - Where Are You Now (Nellee Hooper Mix) Janet.Remixed (Holland Import) (1995)
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DMX starts fight at concert, woman struck with chair
JumpinJack AJ replied to bigted's topic in Caught in the Middle
I agree with u Wes. Alot of people say they are spiritual and that u don't have 2 go 2 church or read the Bible 2 be spiritual...which is partly true. But without that knowlege, that refresher course, u are stagnet and staying in the same place...not fulfilling your destiny or growing. Back on topic tho'...the people in this entourages are mostly idiots. Snoop got in trouble cuz of the same situation. U have these untalented, immature fools who get caught up in the hype of their friend or boss who is famous. Then they think they are untouchable and famous leading 2 idiot attitudes and actions. Next thing u know, fights are starting at airports and chairs are thrown during a show and their famous counter parts are getting charged and blaimed with it...not 2 mention getting a stain on their name. -
Ashanti is so un-gangsta...whenever she, or any female tries 2 be more than they are...it's just rediculous and unattractive. Fake = ugly.
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KRIS KROSS - I'm Real (Butcher Remix) I'm Real (CD Single) (1993)
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MONICA - My Everything The Makings of Me (2006) Forget the crappy 1st single...this album is really good! It's everything most "mainstream but not 2 mainstream" R-N-B albums should have been the past 2 years.
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DMX starts fight at concert, woman struck with chair
JumpinJack AJ replied to bigted's topic in Caught in the Middle
DMX didn't throw the chair, but of course he's catching the flack 4 it. He's not resonsible for his friend's idiotic actions. I'm not saying it's cool that he jumped off the stage 2 go after the sound man tho'...ha ha. That makes me laugh tho.' I have Def Jam's "Survival of The Fittest" live album where DMX is yelling about turning his mic up and after the sound guy doesn't get it right at 1st, he's like "Don't make me come up there and beat the $#!) outta u, dog." And the waterbottle thing sounds like it waz written outta context. That's what they do at shows, they throw waterbottles out in the crowd. Not 2 injur people...but as a favor. When i saw JJ+FP, they threw waterbottles out in the crowd. -
Good point...but i still feel that he's just one of those people that the media is out 2 get. The media is just like a huge parasite trying 2 drain the life out of certain artists and they'll stop at nothing 2 let them appear normal or let them carry a career.