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#ripchrislightyRelated: chris lighty Tweets Top / All / People you follow 40 new Tweets
2h Nicki Minaj ‏@NICKIMINAJ
Another tragic & inconceivable loss for the culture. #RIPChrisLighty

Elliott Wilson ‏@ElliottWilson
Numb. #RIPChrisLighty

 SWIZZ BEATZ ‏@THEREALSWIZZZ
#ripchrislighty I am lost for words at this situation. I send my blessings to his family . He was the backbone for many people!

FavoritedFavorite 58m Rockwilder ‏@rockwilder09
cant believe my big homie is gone! #RIPCHRISLIGHTY!!!!! one of music's best to do it! im in awe!

Bossip ‏@Bossip
The suicide death of music industry talent manager Chris Lighty has been confirmed... #RIPChrisLighty http://bit.ly/O6PYpz

1h Global Grind ‏@GlobalGrind
Emotional message from @UncleRUSH to Chris Lighty… http://bit.ly/SWcK8Y -- #RIPChrisLighty Killer Mike ‏@KillerMikeGTO
God Bless the Dead. #RIPChrisLighty

2h Epic Records ‏@Epic_Records
RIP to Hip-Hop Veteran @clighty. You will be missed and forever revered for your contributions to music! #RIPChrisLighty2h Big Tigger ‏@BigTiggerShow
#RIPChrisLighty - Hip-hop manager Chris Lighty dead of apparent suicide in his Bronx apartment: cops http://m.nydailynews.com/1.1148073?pmSlide=0 via RT

 Dee Phunk ‏@DeePhunk
From 7/18/12. #RIPChrisLighty RT @clighty Hip Hop your blueprint generation is passing away. Embrace them now. It's now or never. Dee Phunk ‏@DeePhunk
Don't turn into f*cking psychiatrists, people. Bump some De La & show a little respect. #RIPChrisLighty #RIPBabyChris

3h CEO Jovana J. ‏@JovialPublicist
Take a minute out your day to lift his wife and children up in prayer!! #RIPChrisLighty

Mic Geronimo ‏@MicGeronimo
We just lost an awesome person. He laughed w me many a day. I will miss you Bruh. #ripChrisLighty

 ‏@HipHopWeekly
BREAKING NEWS: Hip Hop Executive @clighty is dead. Keep Chris' family and friends in your prayers. #RIPChrisLighty

‏@Missinfo
my heart is heavy. #ripChrisLighty RT @evboogie: The Lightys via Vibe Sept, 2000. Article by @missinfo: http://bit.ly/PQwsk8

Sinnamon Love ‏@SinnamonLove
"Hip Hop, you're the love of my life..." And you wouldn't be the same had Chris not helped so many deliver their gift to us. #RIPChrisLighty

 Dee Phunk ‏@DeePhunk
There's no Native Tongues w/o Chris Lighty. #RIPChrisLighty

DJ GOLDFINGER ‏@DJGOLDFINGERNYC
Definition of ambition. Dude carried records & became #Violator #RIPCHRISLIGHTY

 ♥ I FOLLOW BACK ♥ ;) ‏@SunkissedSexii
R.I.P. Chris Lighty. Hip-Hop Legend. R-T FOR RESPECT. #RIPChrisLighty

Angel Laws ‏@angelonfire
#RIPCHRISLIGHTY -- great business mind. you just never know what someone is going through. damn. :(

 #Stillmatic1305 ‏@Saleem_1305
DAMN #RIPCHRISLIGHTY

 Shabooty Bieber ‏@SHABOOTY
RIP @clighty. He's 50cent's manager I think. Commited Suicide #RIPChrisLighty

Earlington ‏@TeamEarlington
What he died from..? @JazzPo: RT @ElieMaroun15: Sad day in hip hop... #ripchrislighty

 Simone Smalls ‏@simonesmalls
RT @leighdav: You never know what's going on in the hearts and minds of the ones we love. #ripchrislighty

Jami ‏@MizBuzyBody
You never know what someone is going through #RIPChrisLighty

 Elie Maroun ‏@ElieMaroun15
Sad day in hip hop... #ripchrislighty

JeremyKSmith.com ‏@JeremyKSmith
Hate the price of fame it cost to much. #ripchrislighty

Expand Collapse Reply RetweetedRetweet Delete FavoritedFavorite 3h DJ GOLDFINGER ‏@DJGOLDFINGERNYC
Un- fucking- believeable! #RIPCHRISLIGHTY

 DJ GOLDFINGER ‏@DJGOLDFINGERNYC
YO, WHAT THE FUCK!!!!!!! #RIPCHRISLIGHTY

Expa

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Thisis50 & Young Jack Thriller recently spoke with Slaughterhouse for an exclusive interview!

In part 3 of our interview they discuss their new album "Welcome to: Our House", if they feel underrated & their BET Cypher. Check it out!

part 2

part 3

 

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Harry Belafonte Calls Out Jay-Z and Beyonce for Selfishness

by Dr. Boyce Watkins, KultureKritic.com

Harry Belafonte, who did a great deal of work for the black community during the Civil Rights Movement, is making no secret of the fact that he’s very disappointed in many young black celebrities when it comes to to social activism.  Speaking this week with the Hollywood Reporter, Belafonte pointed out Jay-Z and Beyonce as prime examples of what he’s talking about.

THR: Back to the occasion of the award for your acting career. Are you happy with the image of members of minorities in Hollywood today?

Belafonte: Not at all. They have not told the history of our people, nothing of who we are. We are still looking. We are not determinated. We are not driven by some technology that says you can kill Afghanistans, the Iraquis or the Spanish. It is all – excuse my French – shit. It is sad. And I think one of the great abuses of this modern time is that we should have had such high-profile artists, powerful celebrities. But they have turned their back on social responsibility. That goes for Jay-Z and Beyoncé, for example. Give me Bruce Springsteen, and now you’re talking. I really think he is black.

My friend Alexis Stodghill at TheGrio makes the point (in a news piece where she carefully cites both sides of the issue) that perhaps Belafonte is off-base with his critique.  She notes that Beyonce has spoken up for her fellow recording artist Frank Ocean when he admitted that he was gay, and that Jay-Z has chumed it up with President Obama during his presidential campaign and supported him on the issue of gay marriage.

We must note that Beyonce and Jay-Z speaking up on gay marriage and homosexuality is little more than a political decision designed to remain in alignment with the Obama presidency.  If Barack had said nothing on the issue, Jay-Z would have said nothing.  So, we have to be sure not to mistake meaningful advocacy for elitist political shoulder-rubbing (wealthy famous people tend to take care of one another).

But when you look at the black aristocracy that is known as Jay-Z and Beyonce, one form of activism that is missing is anything that involves the words “poor black people.” Also, when it comes to issues that affect the least of us, including poverty, mass incarceration, urban violence, unequal educational systems and the like, it’s easy to say that Jay-Z and Beyonce have been effectively missing in action, unless it’s time to show up and utilize this audience to sell albums.

One exception noted by Kirsten West Savali at NewsOne.com is the Shawn Carter foundation, created by Jay-Z and the people who work for him.  According to the foundation’s website, “Since the Foundation’s inception, over 750 students have received awards totaling over $1.3 million dollars.”

Jay-Z should certainly be commended for doing something he didn’t have to do, but let’s really think about this for a second, shall we?  First, most corporations have some kind of foundation.  Even Wal-Mart can claim to have sent thousands of kids to college, as they simultaneously strip workers of their rights around the world, drive small companies out of business and refuse to pay a living wage to their employees.  Secondly, if you divide the $1.3 million given away by the foundation by 750 scholarship recipients, that’s about $1,733 per child.  Please tell me what college in America has a tuition bill of $1,733.  Of course Jay-Z gives away more than most of us can afford, but even the local drug dealer can also afford to use heroin money give away turkeys at Chistmas.  The point here is that if I pillage half a billion dollars from the black community over a 10-year period, it’s pretty easy for me to give back $1.3 million of it.

I noticed a line in Jay-Z’s song “Niggaz in Paris,” where he says, “Can you see the private jets flying over you?”  This line is part of a consistent message of black elitism that has become all-too prevalent in the entertainment industry. It is a statement which says, “I’m better than you, and I am not one of you.  Your job is to either worship me or hate on me, I don’t care which one.”

Beyond the “extensive” efforts of his foundation, Jay-Z is also the man who earned over $63 million dollars last year and only gave $6,000 to charity.  Unfortunately, this has become par for the course in a world where poor black people are not nearly as fashionable of a cause as gay white kids from the suburbs.  Poor black kids can’t buy your records, rendering them effectively useless.

So, while Beyonce and Jay-Z speaking up on marriage equality is a politely cute form of activism, you have to agree with Belafonte that today’s artists are taught not to care about anyone other than themselves.  At best, we might get a photo op at a charity event, but the real pressure to sacrifice for those who are suffering is lost as millions of us forgive celebrities for being unwilling to use their power to make the world a better place.  The rule is simple:  If you’re rich, we love you.  It doesn’t matter if you’re a former crack dealer (Jay-Z), brag about murdering women and children (Lil Wayne) or sleep with middle school kids on the weekends (R. Kelly).  Money is used to wash away all sins, and people are quicker to disrespect an icon like Harry Belafonte than they are to challenge celebrities to do more than tweet pictures of their newborn baby.

By “social responsibility,” I don’t think that Belafonte is referring to charity concerts or speaking to Congress about saving dolphins.  He’s talking about the kind of activism that requires BALLS.  He’s talking about the black men and women during the 1960s who used their voices loud and clear to state that things need to change in America soon, or else.

Those days are long gone.  In the 1960s, oppression was much more rampant, so nearly every black person was banging on the door of equality.  Today, those who’ve been allowed access to predominantly white institutions are asked to sign a “Good negro forever” card, and disavow any meaningful political stands that might get them into trouble with a corporate sponsor or record label.  As a result, we have a group of celebrities who are very quick to build their brands off the “street cred” granted to them by impoverished African Americans, but don’t feel compelled to use those brands to become anything other than corporate-sponsored slumlords.

So, a “gangsta rapper” can speak all day about his time in prison, but he dare not say anything about the fact that the United States incarcerates more of its citizens than any country in the world, earning billions on the backs of black men and women, destroying millions of families in the process. He can rap all about “all his homies that done passed away,” but he’s better off staying away from a conversation about how gun violence is fueled by manufacturers who are happy to build profitable corporate tools to fund black male genocide.

It is the lack of acknowledgement of the deep and piercing artifacts of black oppression that bother Belafonte and others the most.  It’s what bothers me too, for I’ve always been raised to believe that (to recite the words of Spiderman’s Uncle Ben) great power comes with great responsibility.

Perhaps when Jay-Z really understands what wealth is all about, he can take a note from Warren Buffett, Oprah and others, who’ve convinced several billionaires to give half of their wealth to charity when they die.  A billion dollars is far more than enough for one family so why not use the rest of save 1,000 families?   Is it nothing less than utterly shameful to have 10 houses, 15 cars, 200 expensive suits and several private planes?  Maybe there is a point where such gluttony should not be celebrated by the rest of us, and instead be called out as pathetic in a world where millions of children are going to die this year from starvation.

Anyone who disagrees with me might want to consider the fact that there is nothing consistent with the teachings of Jesus about letting innocent people starve while you’re burning money in your basement.  The principled stands by men like Muhammad Ali, who gave away nearly everything to stand up for his values, are virtually non-existence when our leading artists write songs about excessive materialism, getting high and drunk every day, killing other black men and unhealthy sexual promiscuity.  Belafonte is right on point and we should look to our elders to remind us of what it means to live a purposeful and righteous life.

Harry Belafonte, by speaking up at the age of 85, is effectively asking that young people pick up the baton that he’s been running since Dr. King was a teenager.  But instead of picking up the baton, we’ve thrown it at his feet and signed ourselves up for corporate slavery. I congratulate Harry for taking a stand on this important issue, and I am hopeful that his courage can spark the cultural revolution necessary to make our people stronger as a result.

Way to go Harry, I respect you.

Dr. Boyce Watkins is a professor at Syracuse University and founder of the Your Black World Coalition. To have Dr. Boyce commentary delivered to your email,please click here.

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11020581269?profile=original

by NEVIDEO

DVD series GRIDIN N Ct has been a 8 year journey seeing the hip hop world as it enters Connecticut & the tri-sate area.
The DVD is filled with some Home grown talent and industry artist that come thru this area of the country. With assistance form Hot 93.7Fm, Toads Place , Ct #1 Promotion team GME. We NE Video are able to give you the fan/viewer backstage access like you haven't seen before. Professional photos provided by BKS Photographs along with Videos,trailers, artist interviews, and performances. All in this 90min DVD. If you are in the Tri-state area tryna make a name for yourself, you were probably at 1 of the 75 of events we did thru out the tri-state this year. This DVD will be at released in over 100 stores in try-state area as well as on-line.
For more info simple email us: 
@NEVIDEO@GMAIL.com

Your Support is Appreciated

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RK (AP) — Nicki Minaj’s New York City concert featured usual suspects like her mentor Lil Wayne and label mate Drake, but it was another guest appearance that was really striking: rapper Foxy Brown.

Brown joined Minaj onstage Tuesday night at the Roseland Ballroom. Before she took the stage, Minaj said she wanted to introduce “the female rapper who influenced me the most.”

As Brown entered, the crowd of nearly 3,000 roared. She performed three songs from her last album, 2001′s “Broken Silence.”

“‘Broken Silence’ changed my life,” Minaj said. “I always loved Foxy. When she put out ‘Broken Silence,’ I knew she was an innovator.”

The Queens-based Minaj added that although Brown is “crazy sometimes,” she’s also ahead of her time.

Minaj, who has dominated as music’s top female rapper since 2009, has had a longstanding beef with fellow rapper Lil Kim, though the drama between the two ladies has since dwindled. Brown, too, had battles with Lil Kim in the past.

“There aren’t any other female rappers who have opened doors for me than you,” Minaj said, looking to Brown and quickly adding: “You and Lauryn (Hill).”

Brown, the Brooklyn-born feisty rapper, has released three successful albums, but she’s seen her career wane after criminal charges on a probation violation led to time behind bars. But Brown said she’s returning to music, thanks to Minaj.

“I’m coming back,” Brown yelled. “My sister’s making sure. I’m coming back.”

Tuesday’s free show for Pepsi was to replace Minaj’s canceled appearance at Hot 97 Summer Jam 2012 in June.

The rapper performed more than two dozen songs as the venue transformed from a hip-hop vibe — as she performed rap hits like “Beez in the Trap” and “Did It on ‘Em” — to a pulsating, Euro-flavored nightclub as Minaj sang the pop smashes “Starships,” ”Pound the Alarm” and “Turn Me On.”

The 29-year-old rapper changed outfits four times — including three wig changes — during the two-hour show. She also sang a line from Beyonce’s hit “Sweet Dreams.”

“I bruised my vocal chords,” Minaj told the crowd, then gave a shout-out to her doctor in the crowd.

___

Online:

http://www.mypinkfriday.com

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RK (AP) — Nicki Minaj’s New York City concert featured usual suspects like her mentor Lil Wayne and label mate Drake, but it was another guest appearance that was really striking: rapper Foxy Brown.

Brown joined Minaj onstage Tuesday night at the Roseland Ballroom. Before she took the stage, Minaj said she wanted to introduce “the female rapper who influenced me the most.”

As Brown entered, the crowd of nearly 3,000 roared. She performed three songs from her last album, 2001′s “Broken Silence.”

“‘Broken Silence’ changed my life,” Minaj said. “I always loved Foxy. When she put out ‘Broken Silence,’ I knew she was an innovator.”

The Queens-based Minaj added that although Brown is “crazy sometimes,” she’s also ahead of her time.

Minaj, who has dominated as music’s top female rapper since 2009, has had a longstanding beef with fellow rapper Lil Kim, though the drama between the two ladies has since dwindled. Brown, too, had battles with Lil Kim in the past.

“There aren’t any other female rappers who have opened doors for me than you,” Minaj said, looking to Brown and quickly adding: “You and Lauryn (Hill).”

Brown, the Brooklyn-born feisty rapper, has released three successful albums, but she’s seen her career wane after criminal charges on a probation violation led to time behind bars. But Brown said she’s returning to music, thanks to Minaj.

“I’m coming back,” Brown yelled. “My sister’s making sure. I’m coming back.”

Tuesday’s free show for Pepsi was to replace Minaj’s canceled appearance at Hot 97 Summer Jam 2012 in June.

The rapper performed more than two dozen songs as the venue transformed from a hip-hop vibe — as she performed rap hits like “Beez in the Trap” and “Did It on ‘Em” — to a pulsating, Euro-flavored nightclub as Minaj sang the pop smashes “Starships,” ”Pound the Alarm” and “Turn Me On.”

The 29-year-old rapper changed outfits four times — including three wig changes — during the two-hour show. She also sang a line from Beyonce’s hit “Sweet Dreams.”

“I bruised my vocal chords,” Minaj told the crowd, then gave a shout-out to her doctor in the crowd.

___

Online:

http://www.mypinkfriday.com

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AP Photo

LOS ANGELES (AP) -- Michelle Obama is teasing Olympic champion Gabby Douglas about eating fast food to celebrate her achievements.

The first lady, an advocate of healthy eating, and Douglas taped an appearance together Monday for NBC's "Tonight Show" with Jay Leno.

When Douglas was asked how she marked her stellar Olympic showing, the 16-year-old gymnast said she "splurged" on a McDonalds' sandwich.

Mrs. Obama responded, "You're setting me back, Gabby," which drew a "Sorry!" from the athlete.

According to a partial NBC transcript, Mrs. Obama also used her "Tonight" appearance to praise her husband's healthcare overhaul law.

During the just-ended London Olympics, Douglas became the third straight U.S. athlete and first African-American to win the all-around title. She and her teammates gave the U.S. its first Olympic title in women's gymnastics since 199

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