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    • 11am
    • 08.01.08
    • 1 said

    Dan Johns On The Put On Mentality

    Written by Zillz™ on August 1, 2008 in Society

    Dan Johns

    For as long as I can remember, whenever the conversation turns to my career as a musician, there has always been someone ready to say “don’t forget the little people when you make it.” You know the routine, when you make it, you’re expected to put your ‘peoples’ on.

    In some ways, I’ve always wondered who exactly should be considered your ‘peoples’ in this sense. It’s a no-brainer that there are some individuals that are irreplaceable when it comes to the roles that they’ve played in your life. Then there are those who have been directly involved in your music career. This is where it gets sticky.

    When I started my company, the first business partner that I had was a childhood friend that I had known for over 10 years. In hindsight, we had not been very close during high school (I was 20 when I started Mag-O), but we had never had any fall out. In the beginning, we hit the ground running, trying to reach out to everyone and anyone that would listen. As time passed (maybe like a year), we had some issues that made it impossible to continue to do business. I’ll also admit that in some ways, his involvement in the early years helped me get on my feet, and i kept pushing from there. But, after what happened, if i ‘blew up’ tomorrow, I couldn’t with a clear conscience ‘put him on’ in any way. – [ SOURCE ]

    I’m ’bout to get racial here and I don’t care. I don’t see this type of mentality in any other race but our own. And it’s saddening.

    1 Person Said
    • 4pm
    • 07.29.08
    • 1 said

    Video: Fox News Is A Propoganda Network For The White House

    Written by Zillz™ on July 29, 2008 in News, Politics, Videos

    Scott McClellan confirms what people already suspected. Fox does a lot of bj’ing. However, what will they do next year?

    Former White House Press Secretary Scott McClellan, who wrote a book which criticizes the administration called What Happened, talks to Hardball’s Chris Matthews.

    For the Bonus: The W. Trailer.

    1 Person Said
    • 6pm
    • 12.01.07
    • 1 said

    NBC News Series - African American Women & Hip-Hop

    Written by Zillz™ on December 1, 2007 in News, Society

    African American Women: Where They Stand

    “Pour champagne on a b***h!” — Gemini

    Yesterday NBC News, in their continuing series “African American Women: Where They Stand” provided a 10-min video on their website discussing , and dammit they lost when the first head you see speak is Superhead. Good thing she was on for exactly 3 secs. Michael Eric Dyson (author), Kendra G (radio show host), Kevin Powell (writer,activist), Irv Gotti (he’s an irv), Melyssa Ford (halloween catsuit-wearer). Irv wyld-out! He maintains that the glamorizing of hip-hop video gals is really just entertainment. Melyssa says its a job. Kendra maintains that women are consistently poo-poo’d upon. Kevin Powell, maintains that their is a responsibility with the balance of image. Irv was playing defense too much… a la Nelly in BET’s “America Vs. Hip-Hop”. And ONCE again, the media misses out on one of the most IMPORTANT factors in this entire issue: the media’s involvement.

    Hahaha @ Irv…

    Viacom, Clearchannel & Radio One are the corporations who owns the biggest mainstream media outlets. Why are they NEVER involved in the finger pointing?

    I do agree that there is no balance being presented in the mainstream. But who owns these mainstream outlets? Not Murder Inc. Not DefJam. Via-friggin-com son!

    Where are the female artists? There’s no mention of Jean Grae at all. No mention of the history of the better women rappers (who will go down as hip-hop hall of famers) like Latifah, Lady Of Rage, MC Lyte, and Salt N Pepa. So what happened to the women rappers? They became complacent, for the most part, with being the sidekick or “First Lady of whatever group”. Excessive focus on the excess. Lyrical accountability is low. Now while I’m doing all of this placing blame elsewhere, I’ma point at the fellas too. For some rappers and their audience, their whole career is fantasy. The bad boy rapper who sells coke and murders yet making millions and never gets caught by the cops. Of course they’re gonna have a state-ful of brizzawds led around on doggie chains. Nevertheless, the women do sign up for it. And it isn’t just women of color. It’s ANY woman who will be in that video damn near naked getting vodka thrown on her chest on my yacht in front of Bun B & Pimp C.

    Irv still making me laugh.

    Check it.

    But yeah, NBC should run up on Debra Lee (President and Chief Operating Officer of BET), those Mays characters (Head guys at Clear Channel) and whoever else when they least expect it and ask ‘em these questions. All “To Catch A Predator” style and ask them why they only choose to promote one side of the fence.

    Short answer: Since the beginning of time, hoes make money.

    1 Person Said
    • 10am
    • 11.29.07
    • 4 said

    NBC News Series - African American Women: Where They Stand Part 3

    Written by Zillz™ on November 29, 2007 in News, Society

    NBC News - African American Women: Where They Stand

    In part 3 of 5 of NBC News’ African American Women, Rehema Ellis takes a look at the relationships among black men and women [ NBC Nightly News ]

    I can only speak for myself, I’ve never been afraid of an educated woman.

    “That is my s**t right there!” — Katt Williams

    The ladies did make a point in the video stating that there are men out there who are afraid of an educated black woman. I agree. That can be attributed to ego. But in my experience, I’ve seen some women out there on the other end of the spectrum. I’ve seen (more often than not) where an educated black woman would act like she’s too good for the next man. And then blame the man for not wanting to deal with a “strong black woman”.

    Hey, I’m just calling it like I see it. And this isn’t about black men. So I’ll leave it right there unless you want to take it there. I’m an open-minded fella, and I do believe that there is push and pull on both ends. But when it comes to societal matters, I do believe that the short end of the stick is definitely in the black man’s hands. Nevertheless, that’s not a complaint, just another hurdle one must jump.

    Tomorrow… Hip-Hop’s Influence. Stop It.

    4 People Said
    • 10am
    • 09.28.07
    • 1 said

    KRS-One Comments On BET’s Hip-Hop Vs. America

    Written by Zillz™ on September 28, 2007 in Society

    KRS One
    [ Image: KRS-One Myspace ]

    I actually watched the 2nd part of the special on BET the other day and I watched part 1 this morning. But when I read this 2 days ago, I wanted to hold off on droppin’ it on zs until I had watched part 1. You might read this excerpt but please go read the entire thing.

    “Even though there was a second part to the “Hip Hop vs. America” discussion, for me the panel was inconclusive; it didn’t go anywhere, no resolution was created, no plan or agreement was reached, and the artists T.I. and Nelly seemed to be forced into positions of defending themselves for no reason. As Nelly pointed out “when did music become the life-line of Black people as a whole, period? If our music is right our lives is right? No, it’s when our education is right, our lives is right. When our education ain’t right our lives is screwed up.” This not only sums up the debate and the reason why we must begin to approach Hip Hop beyond music entertainment to even have such a discussion, but such a view also pointed out the lop-sidedness of the panel. Putting Dr. Michael Eric Dyson and even Reverend Al Sharpton on the same panel with Nelly made the panel in my opinion unbalanced and it degraded the seriousness of the discussion. Nelly nor T.I. have ever claimed to be “community leaders” or even men concerned with the state of their communities, Black folks or Hip Hop.”

    …Why bring up issues of leadership to those who are not leaders, nor claim to be leaders?…

    What about all of the Hip Hop conferences, workshops and summits that we produced, along with my hundreds of college lectures, community rallies, and now famous slogans like “rap is something we do, Hip Hop is something we live” and the whole idea of living Hip Hop as opposed to simply performing it. What about all of this? What about my latest 2007 album “Hip Hop Lives” and the video for it? For me, ALL THESE MEETINGS AND SUMMITS ARE BULLSHIT! I am now convinced that we really don’t want answers; we want more bullshit!

    – KRS-One [ Source: BET ]

    You can view Hip-Hop vs. America here by going to BET’s On Blast video portal.

    Related: Hip-Hop Goes To Washington

    1 Person Said
    • 4pm
    • 09.27.07
    • 0 said

    Mychal Bell Gets Bail

    Written by Zillz™ on September 27, 2007 in News, Society

    bell
    [ Image: Yahoo ]

    Now that Bell is out of jail I have one question: Who’s perm is tighter than Soul Glo’s? Not any woman that I know. Probably Snoop Dogg or Katt Williams. 5 stacks on Katt yo!

    bell

    I really wanted to keep the case off of zs because I was so emotional about what was going on. I understand how the justice system is skewed when facing individuals of my color. I’ve faced similar. Not to Bell’s extent but serious none the less. And I would’ve ended every drop on this subject with some sort of spaz out. But I think I got control of that.

    Mychal Bell’s release on $45,000 bail came hours after a prosecutor confirmed he will no longer seek an adult trial for the 17-year-old.

    And the Prosecutor YT Walters keeps it going…

    Walters said the demonstration had no influence on the decision he announced Thursday, and ended his news conference by saying that only God kept the protest peaceful.

    “The only way — let me stress that — the only way that I believe that me or this community has been able to endure the trauma that has been thrust upon us is through the prayers of the Christian people who have sent them up in this community,” Walters said.

    “I firmly believe and am confident of the fact that had it not been for the direct intervention of the Lord Jesus Christ last Thursday, a disaster would have happened. You can quote me on that.”

    When the Rev. Donald Sibley, a black Jena pastor, called it a “shame” that Walters credited divine intervention for the protesters acting responsibly, the prosecutor said: “What I’m saying is, the Lord Jesus Christ put his influence on those people, and they responded accordingly.”

    After the news conference, Sibley told CNN that Walters had insulted the protesters by making a false separation between “his Christ and our Christ.”

    “I can’t diminish Christ at all. But for him to use it in the sense that because his Christ, his Jesus, because he prayed, because of his police, that everything was peaceful and was decent and in order — that’s not the truth,” Sibley said. — [ Source: Yahoo ]

    Related: Mos Def is hot at his peers for not appearing in Jena rally. [ XXL ]
    Case will be tried in juvenile court. [ CNN ]

    What You Said
    • 10pm
    • 09.19.07
    • 0 said

    YTs Got Less Than 10HRS To Get Their Stuff Together

    Written by Zillz™ on September 19, 2007 in Society

    Jena 6 T-shirt
    Sweetpea, I told you! I was wondering what exactly was missing in the news coverage of Jena 6. T-shirts ninja!

    We don’t care about OJ anymore. You can have that fool. Ten hours that’s it. Y’all know what happens after bullshit verdicts in court cases.

    *Notes
    - Notice the color of the t-shirt.
    - Please tell me there’s a youtube vid of Bill O’Reilly speaking on THIS and not revving up for Nas. I’m too cool to watch Foxnews.

    What You Said
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