Monday, 5 August 2013

DMC Criticizes Jay-Z And Lil Wayne, Says Listeners Are Being BRAINWASHED

Legendary Hip Hop artist Darryl McDaniels, more commonly known as DMC of the pioneering group Run-DMC, says "Jay-Z ain't hot."
As reported by AllHipHopDMC, a founding member of the Queens based Hip Hop group Run-DMC, added onto recent criticisms of some of Hip Hop’s biggest stars in saying, “Lil Wayne [and] Jay-Z ain’t hot, it’s just they’re programmed so many times people are brainwashed.”
Throughout the 1980s, Run-DMC provided some of Hip Hop’s earliest commercial successes. In his recent statement, DMC also noted that Hip Hop has undergone a stark shift from its early epoch as a youth culture. “It was inevitable that Hip Hop became commercialized but along the way our power got taken away," he says in the AllHipHop.com story. "Now you got the same 12 records on radio being played over and over again.”
In contrast to the type of contemporary Hip Hop he is critical of, DMC also ended up recalling the social impact that early Hip Hop acts like KRS One, A Tribe Called Quest and De La Soul had. "We wanted to change the world, taking responsibility for our actions," he said. "Now everything that’s negative in stupid ass America is celebrated.”
DMC’s comments are only the latest in a recent string of criticisms leveraged towards the former CEO of Def Jam. As reported early last month, Killer Mike condemned the rollout of Jay’s Magna Carta Holy Grail album due to privacy concerns over the early release’s accompanying Samsung application.
source: hiphopdx.com

FACTS ABOUT HIP HOP & PRISON FOR PROFIT (A MUST READ)



The Facts About Hip Hop and Prison for Profit
GoldenUndergroundTV recently released an interview I did with them late last year. I got a bit animated at the end. Only so many interviews in a row I could handle being asked about Chief Keef.
My tirade wasn’t really about Chief Keef. It wasn’t about Gucci Mane or Wocka Flocka or any of the acts spontaneously catapulted into stardom by synchronized mass media coverage despite seemingly universal indifference (at the very best) regarding their talent. Whose arrests, involvement in underaged pregnancies, concert shootouts, and facial tattoos, dominate conversation for weeks at a time, with their actual music a mere afterthought, if thought of at all.
My tirade was about marketing. It was about media powers seeking out the biggest pretend criminal kingpins they can find, (many of whom who shamelessly adopt the names of actual real life criminal kingpins like 50 Cent and Rick Ross), and exalting them as the poster children for a culture. It was about an art form reduced to product placement, the selling of a lifestyle, and ultimately, a huge ad for imprisonment.
This is not my opinion.
Last year Corrections Corporation of America (CCA), the biggest name in the private prison industry, contacted 48 states offering to buy their prisons. One stipulation of eligibility for the deal was particularly bizarre: “an assurance by the agency partner that the agency has sufficient inmate population to maintain a minimum 90% occupancy rate over the term of the contract.
What kind of legitimate and ethical measures could possibly be taken to ensure the maintenance of a 90% prison occupancy rate?
Two months later an anonymous email was sent out to various members of the music and publishing industries giving an account of a meeting where it was determined that hip-hop music would be manipulated to drive up privatized prison profits. Its author, despite claiming to be a former industry insider, did not provide the names of anyone involved in the plot, nor did he specify by which company he himself was employed. As such, the letter was largely regarded as a fraud for lack of facts.
Ninety percent of what Americans read, watch and listen to is controlled by only six media companies.PBS’s Frontline has described the conglomerates that determine what information is disseminated to the public as a “web of business relationships that now defines America’s media and culture.” Business relationships. Last year a mere 232 media executives were responsible for the intake of 277 million Americans, controlling all the avenues necessary to manufacture any celebrity and incite any trend. Time Warner, as owner of Warner Bros Records (among many other record labels), can not only sign an artist to a recording contract but, as the owner ofEntertainment Weekly, can see to it that they get next week’s cover. Also the owner of New Line Cinemas, HBO and TNT, they can have their artist cast in a leading role in a film that, when pulled from theaters, will be put into rotation first on premium, then on basic, cable. Without any consideration to the music whatsoever, the artist will already be a star, though such monopolies also extend into radio stations and networks that air music videos. For consumers, choice is often illusory. Both BET and MTV belong to Viacom. While Hot 97, NYC’s top hip hop station, is owned by Emmis Communications, online streaming is controlled by Clear Channel, who also owns rival station Power 105.
None of this is exactly breaking news, but when ownership of these media conglomerates is cross checked with ownership of the biggest names in prison privatization, interesting new facts emerge.
According to public analysis from Bloomberg, the largest holder in Corrections Corporation of America is Vanguard Group Incorporated. Interestingly enough, Vanguard also holds considerable stake in the media giants determining this country’s culture. In fact, Vanguard is the third largest holder in both Viacom and Time Warner. Vanguard is also the third largest holder in the GEO Group, whose correctional, detention and community reentry services boast 101 facilities, approximately 73,000 beds and 18,000 employees. Second nationally only to Corrections Corporation of America, GEO’s facilities are located not only in the United States but in the United Kingdom, Australia and South Africa.
You may be thinking, “Well, Vanguard is only the third largest holder in those media conglomerates, which is no guarantee that they’re calling any shots.” Well, the number-one holder of both Viacom and Time Warner is a company called Blackrock. Blackrock is the second largest holder in Corrections Corporation of America, second only to Vanguard, and the sixth largest holder in the GEO Group.
There are many other startling overlaps in private-prison/mass-media ownership, but two underlying facts become clear very quickly: The people who own the media are the same people who own private prisons, the EXACT same people, and using one to promote the other is (or “would be,” depending on your analysis) very lucrative.
Such a scheme would mean some very greedy, very racist people.
There are facts to back that up, too.
Prison industry lobbyists developing and encouraging criminal justice policies to advance financial interests has been well-documented. The most notorious example is the Washington-based American Legislative Council, a policy organization funded by CCA and GEO, which successfully championed the incarceration promoting “truth in sentencing” and “three-strikes” sentencing laws. If the motive of the private prison industry were the goodhearted desire to get hold of inmates as quickly as possible for the purpose of sooner successfully rehabilitating them, maintenance of a 90% occupancy rate would be considered a huge failure, not a functioning prerequisite.
Likewise, the largest rise in incarceration that this country has ever seen correlates precisely with early-80′s prison privatization. This despite the fact that crime rates actually declined since this time. This decreasing crime rate was pointed out enthusiastically by skeptics eager to debunk last year’s anonymous industry insider, who painted a picture of popularized hip-hop as a tool for imprisoning masses. What wasn’t pointed out was that despite crime rates going down, incarceration rates have skyrocketed. While the size of the prison population changed dramatically, so did its complexion. In “‘All Eyez on Me’: America’s War on Drugs and the Prison-Industrial Complex,” Andre Douglas Pond Cummings documents the obvious truth that “the vast majority of the prisoner increase in the United States has come from African-American and Latino citizen drug arrests.”
Add to this well-documented statistics proving that the so-called “war on drugs” has been waged almost entirely on low-income communities of color, where up until just two years ago, cocaine sold in crack form fetched sentences 100 times as lengthy as the exact same amount of cocaine sold in powdered form, which is much more common in cocaine arrests in affluent communities. (In July 2010 the oddly named Fair Sentencing Act was adopted, which, rather than reducing the crack/powder disparity from 100-to-1 to 1-to-1, reduced it to 18-to-1, which is still grossly unfair.) This is not to suggest that the crack/powder disparity represents the extent of the racism rampant within the incarceration industry. The U.S. Sentencing Commission reported in March 2010 that in the federal prison system, even where convicted for the exact same crimes, people of color received prison sentences 10% longer . Where convictions are identical, mandatory minimum sentences are also 21% more likely for people of color.
Finally, let us not forget the wealth of evidence to support the notion that crime-, drug- and prison-glorifying hip-hop only outsells other hip-hop because it receives so much more exposure and financial backing, and that when given equal exposure, talent is a much more reliable indicator of success than content.
Yasiin Bey (formerly Mos Def) put it best; “‘hip-hop” is just shorthand for ‘black people.’” Before our eyes and ears, a “web of business relationships that now defines America’s media and culture” has one particular business raking in billions of dollars while another defines the culture of a specific demographic as criminal. Both business are owned by the same people. Mainstream media continue to endorse hip-hop that glorifies criminality (most notably drug trafficking and violence), and private prison interests, long since proven to value profits over human rights, usher in inmates of color to meet capacity quotas. The same people disproportionately incarcerated when exposed to the criminal justice system are at every turn inundated with media normalizing incarceration to the point that wherever there is mainstream hip-hop music, reference to imprisonment as an ordinary, even expected, component of life is sure to follow.
Conspiracy theorists get a lot of flak for daring entertain the notion that people will do evil things for money. Historical atrocities like slavery and the Holocaust are universally acknowledged, yet simultaneously adopted is the contradictory position that there can’t possibly be any human beings around intelligent enough and immoral enough to perpetrate such things. Even in the midst of the Europe-wide beef that was actually horse-meat fiasco, and the release of real-life nightmare documenting films like “Sunshine and Oranges,” there is an abundance of people content to believe that the only conspiracies that ever exist are those that have successfully been exposed.
The link between mass media and the prison industrial complex, however, is part of a very different type of conversation.
The information in this article was not difficult to find; it is all public.
This is not a conspiracy. This is a fact.
source: raprehab.com

Friday, 5 July 2013

DRAKE SELLS HIS CONDO


Drake Sells Toronto Condo for 4.2 Million




Drake is selling a lot of real estate these days. Fresh off unloading his two Miami condos to Miami Heat guard Mario Chalmers, the rapper has now put his swank Toronto condo on the market, according to several real estate blogs.

According to Buzz Buzz Home, this MLS listing for a two-bedroom condo on the 22nd floor of a ritzy Yorkville building belongs to the Toronto-born rapper. It’s going for just under $4.2 million -- considerably more than the two Miami condos Drake sold last year for a total of $2.6 million.

On the outside, it’s one of the city’s most striking buildings -- a modern art deco masterpiece that echoes the style of 1930s New York skyscrapers. And its location steps away from the swanky stores on Bloor Street makes it one of the most desirable addresses in the country.

But on the inside, it turns out Drake’s taste in home decoration runs towards the, um, surprisingly mundane. With its tasteful leather couches, sparse decor and a decidedly non-blingy flat-screen TV, this looks like the apartment of just about any mid-town Toronto yuppie.


All the same, this is no ordinary apartment. Realtor Ilan Joseph notes the unit has 500 square feet of heated terrace and “private elevator access,” among other features.

Wednesday, 3 July 2013

GUCCI MANE Vs. THE RAP GAME


Gucci Mane Against The World!!!!!




               
Any "REAL" person from the street knows gangsters are no stranger to beef, especially when it comes to gangsta/trap rappers like Gucci Mane. Since Gucci's debut into the rap world in 2005, it's seems the beef street tend has followed him over into his music career. Gucci's 1st rap beef would be with Young Jeezy after Gucci put out his 1st single called "SO ICEY" featuring the now CTE CEO. It's alleged that Young Jeezy put a 10k hit out for the famous So Icey Chain in one of his songs called "Stay Strapped". A woman and group of men decided to take Young Jeezy up on the offer. The end resulted in Pookie Loc (one of the men in the group) losing his life, Gucci being charged and then acquitted of the charge. The rapper would then start beefing with singer Keyshia Cole, after putting out a song called "TRUTH". On this song the rapper would imply that the singer, who was allegedly dating Young Jeezy at the time, was cheating on him with producer Sean "Puffy" Combs. Cole then stated on a radio interview, "Putting all ya trust in some of these 'Hood Rappers'... How you gonna be a G, and you spreading lies, to sell mix tapes! Where ya talent at. Dude ain't have to lie though! Could've kept me out of it."

The next artist in-line of trap-god's shots would be legend/veteran rapper in the game "Nas". In a interview with Hood Affairs TV Gucci had this to say about the rapper ..."Does Nas make a 150 blood money per week off a mixtape," Gucci asked in a video. "Yeah, blood money. Nas' f*cked up right now. Yeah. Me and you got [whips], I just bought me [something]. Don't you have a drop top? ... You got the white one, I'm getting the black one? Nas got one? [laughs]" (Hood Affairs TV)

Gucci Mane would continue his "F*ck the Rap Game" campaign by taking shots at Nicki Minaj and French Montana for their dis-loyalty to the rapper after allegding that he was the one that help jump start their career. Stating that the 2 artist turned their back on him and his partners after they became famous. Gucci Mane's latest on-going feud is with TI(Tip) Husltle Gang and "Yo Gotti" who is now signed with CTE Records.  The rapper decided to call out these two individuals and his long time rival Young Jeezy on a single called "Birds of a Feather". In this track Gucci spits, "I did a song with T.I. but that n*gga still a sucka! I used to f*ck with Gotti ’till he turned into a buster". 

Do we see another 50cent strategy in place ... What do you think??? 


2 CHAINZ FIGHTS BACK


2 CHAINZ Calls Wallet Snatchers "PETTY THUGS"!!!




 As we all know while rapper 2Chainz and his entourage where in San Fransico, 2 gunmen caught them by surprise and the G.O.O.D MUSIC artist was robbed for his wallet and other personal items. When asked about the incident on more than a few occasions, the rapper still insisted nothing ever happened. Unfortunately for him there was a security camera that captured the whole event as it took take place. The stick-up team then did what seems to be the trend now-a-days when an artist gets robbed, and took it to the internet. Earlier this month a driver's license and credit card belonging to Atlanta rapper showed up on Instagram, which influenced many of his fans to believe the rapper was indeed robbed of some of his belongings. However, 2 Chainz is still denying that he was robbed, and took to twitter to shed light on how he felt about the situation. 
"How u glorifying a nigga, who took a wallet, I’m from the streets, that ain't robbing that's 'pick pocketing”.
“Cards get canceled and a license cost 5 dollars, been shot at before and vice versa, I am here for a reason so get use to U CAN’T STOP DIS SHT”.

KARDINAL OFFISHALL MAKES POWER MOVES


Canada's "Ambassador of Hip Hop" Is At It Again!!!




Our Hometown celebrity, Kardinal Offishall, is definitely showing there’s levels to this $#@!. Canada’s hip hop Ambassador is now taken the time out of his busy schedule of touring around the world, continuously producing hits and writing songs, to become Canada’s first rapper with his own rum punch mixer. The Juno award winning artist has partnered up in this joint business venture with the rum’s founder Zamani Thomas and his partner Dwayne Wade Sr. to promote a new rum punch mixer called, “Rated Z”. Presently the rum punch is receiving great reviews in Miami and also here in Toronto at the exclusive restaurants they are served at. The Toronto native was recently in Toronto hosting The Shots Party at The Harlem Restaurant, where free shots of the “Rated Z” rum punch were given out all night to those who where in attendance. Alongside Kardinal Offishall, to help TURN UP this event was Dj Starting from Scratch, Maestro Fresh Wes, and other various hometown artists. Kardinal even took the mic to MC and entertain his guests while DJSFS put the turn-tables on fire. It is very evident that “Mr. Bakardi’s”, years of hard work, patience, and just plain dedication and gift for his craft has put him in a class of entertainers that streams of #winning remain endless.

In a recent interview with weraddicted.com, Kardinal was asked, “How does it feel now, looking back at all that you’ve accomplished throughout the years”? Kardinal responded by saying,


“I don’t look back too often! I tend to keep looking forward! But when you stop to glance at all the blessings and realize that what you did and still do made an international impact on music culture, it’s an interesting feeling. You don’t really set out to trail-blaze, you just do it with passion because it’s what you live and love.”