Friday, October 29, 2010

Jay-Z's Empire 2010

The State of Jay-Z's Empire
He's worth an estimated $450 million and hobnobs with Bill Gates and Warren Buffett. How the Brooklyn-born performer has become the leading music impresario of his generation.

By JOHN JURGENSEN Wall Street Journal
OCTOBER 22, 2010

Jay-Z in a meeting at the offices of ad agency Droga5, the details of his book's elaborate, $1 million marketing campaign behind him.

Rolling through New York City in the back seat of his black Maybach, Jay-Z touches a button to let more light through the translucent roof, then tugs back a window curtain to peek out at the rainy streets of his hometown. The rapper went from a Brooklyn housing project to a top corner office near Times Square, a path traced in "Empire State of Mind," his anthem to the city that has taken a place next to Sinatra's.

At age 40 and still rapping, Jay-Z inhabits the rare zone where cultural cachet and corporate power meet. He's had partnerships with Hewlett-Packard, Coca-Cola, Budweiser, Reebok and Microsoft. Forbes magazine put him on the cover of its current 400 "Richest People in America" issue, even though at $450 million he was only "on his way" to cracking the list ($1 billion was required this year). He's posted more No. 1 albums on the Billboard 200 list than anybody but the Beatles, has won 10 Grammy awards and sold 45 million albums.

He's using his clout to rewrite some industry rules. His music company hedges the unpredictable business of music sales against steadier revenues from music publishing, artist management and touring. The company, Roc Nation, was created out of a $150 million, 10-year, profit-sharing deal with concert giant Live Nation, which has made bets on acts such as U2 and Madonna that are similar, though narrower in scope.

Jay-Z's ventures include an ownership stake in the New Jersey Nets; a sports-bar chain called the 40/40 Club and a Greenwich Village bistro, the Spotted Pig; creative and operational control of the Rocawear clothing line that he sold in 2007 for $204 million; and the Carol's Daughter beauty line he co-owns.

In the early days of his entrepreneurship, there were awkward exchanges with white-collar guys trying to relate. "In the beginning it was ' 'Sup, man!' " he says in his soft speaking voice. "But at this point, it's pretty much accepted that I walk both worlds naturally."

And yet, he chafes at the lack of respect for a genre that some people still dismiss wholesale because of ugly words and violent imagery. When he shares strawberry malts with Warren Buffett, confers with the president, or even vacations in St. Tropez, he does so on behalf of "the culture," he says, by which he means hip-hop.

Now, to state his case more clearly, the rapper born Shawn Carter has turned to prose. His first book, "Decoded," to be published Nov. 16, is a hybrid of music history, social commentary and memoir, with an emphasis on his transition from the crack trade to the music business. The 336-page book is structured around the lyrics to 36 Jay-Z songs, each footnoted to unpack his allusions, slang and double entendres. This couplet, "No lie, just know I chose my own fate/I drove by the fork in the road and went straight," is explained in footnote 16 to the song "Renegade": "I went straight—stopped selling drugs—but I also didn't accept the false choice between poverty and breaking the law." Microsoft put up about $1 million for the marketing of the book

He had rejected proposals to write a conventional business-strategy book. "Our ambition was never to just fit into the corporate mold, it was to take it over and remake that world in our image," he writes in a footnote to "Operation Corporate Takeover," a song that rhymes "reverse merger" with "no need to converse further."

The book deal follows his classic playbook. He maintains tight creative control of the project, but often connects with deep-pocketed corporate partners. Companies hope to borrow some of the rapper's glow, of course, but he has also used such deals to shape his own public image.

In 2005, Jay-Z completed an autobiography with writer Dream Hampton. But he felt that the memoir, tentatively titled "The Black Book," revealed too many personal details. "It was great, but I couldn't do it," he says. He shelved it, reimbursing publisher MTV Books for the advance paid to Ms. Hampton (who later helped with "Decoded").

Last year Jay-Z signed with Random House. Editor Christopher Jackson had some initial doubts about the proposed concept, an annotated book of lyrics, but in their first meeting, he says, the rapper fleshed out a broader context of rap as poetry and "a story of choices made." (That format allowed Jay-Z to dip into memoir while guarding intimate details, such as his marriage to singer Beyoncé Knowles, who is barely mentioned in "Decoded.") In meetings, Jay-Z also specified what the project would not involve, including a celebrity book-signing at a Barnes & Noble. "It's a very efficient way to sell a lot of books and it would have been a huge event, but he was completely uninterested in that," Mr. Jackson says.

Jay-Z is careful not to overexpose himself. "He'll decline something based on his gut, then he'll tell me, 'If that play's big, watch the bigger play that comes because I said no,' " says Kevin Liles, a marketing executive and friend. Last year, when influential radio station Hot 97 had new Jay-Z songs in heavy rotation, Jay-Z declined an invitation to headline the station's high-profile Summer Jam concert. He was clearing the decks for his own Madison Square Garden concert (and TV simulcast) on Sept. 11, which benefited 9/11 charities.

On the cover of the book, the golden tentacles of a "Rorschach" print by Andy Warhol dwarf the rapper's name, tucked into a corner. He vetoed an early mock-up from his publisher that splashed "Jay-Z" across the cover in bold type. "It always starts like that," he says in the car, wearing jeans, a gold Rolex and loose-laced Timberlands. "I'm not trading on my name; I'm trading on the work."

The Microsoft-funded marketing campaign for "Decoded" is markedly ambitious. The company's Bing search engine is used in a kind of treasure hunt: Some 50 outside partners were recruited to help place book excerpts on everything from billboards to hamburger wrappers in about 300 locations cited in the text, including Miami and London.

Jay-Z has had an informal relationship with Microsoft going back to 2006, when he joined Bill Gates and Steve Ballmer at a conference, discussing the future direction of entertainment. Bing specifically has co-sponsored two of the most recent "Two Kings" dinners that Jay-Z hosts with LeBron James during the NBA's All-Star festivities.

Jay-Z's music career began in 1996, when no major labels wanted to sign the 26-year-old local rapper. He and two partners formed an independent label, Roc-A-Fella Records, by necessity. That move eventually strengthened his bargaining position. Mr. Liles, who was an executive at the iconic rap label Def Jam, recalls Jay-Z declining an offer of a traditional signing deal. "He looked at me and said 'I own the company I rap for.' " Instead, Roc-A-Fella entered a joint venture with Def Jam.

In 2005, Jay-Z took the job of president and CEO of Def Jam while rival labels courted him. What clinched the deal with the label—by then owned by Universal Music Group—was a contract clause giving the rapper full ownership of his past recordings for Def Jam. These rights revert to him starting in 2014.

"I'm happy about it," he says now. "But when I think about it, it's something I shouldn't even have to ask for. It's mine, I created it."

By the time he left Def Jam in 2007, he had begun quiet negotiations with Live Nation for his next move. To diversify its concert promotions business and compete more directly with record labels, the company had previously signed U2 and Madonna to long-term contracts that cut Live Nation in on revenue sources such as merchandise and music licensing, in addition to touring.

Jay-Z's deal goes further. With financing from Live Nation that included about $25 million up front and $5 million annually in overhead, the rapper started Roc Nation, an umbrella for his own output and an incubator for new talent. In exchange, Live Nation shares in all new business done by Roc Nation. That ranges from a percentage of potential "Decoded" earnings to publishing revenue from the songwriter Philip Lawrence, a Roc Nation signee who has had two No. 1 songs this year, including "Just the Way You Are" by Bruno Mars.

Like many in the industry, Jay-Z is trying to wean himself off a reliance on selling recorded music. His company has released only one album, his own "The Blueprint 3" in 2009. "It's been two years since the Live Nation deal and I haven't put out one artist," he says. "But right now Roc Nation is profitable because we manage [artists] and we have a publishing company." He says such ancillaries buy the company to time to shape the musicians on its roster, including rapper J. Cole and singer Willow Smith (the 9-year-old daughter of actors Will and Jada Pinkett Smith). "We don't have to rush out records that don't work for the sake of making money," he says.

Even as he represents hip-hop, his Live Nation deal compels him to move beyond that genre. In the last two years, he crossed over to headlining major rock festivals, including England's Glastonbury and Coachella in Southern California. Among the artists that Roc Nation manages are U.K. rock band the Ting Tings, producer Mark Ronson and, as of this week, Rihanna.

Many of Jay-Z's brand partnerships, including with Reebok and H-P, have been funneled through the marketing firm he co-owns, Translation. "It allows him to circumvent the agency process in most instances with someone he can trust," says Translation founder Steve Stoute.

Jay-Z typically bargains for a degree of creative control and long-term partnerships rather than one-offs: his deal with Reebok, when he became the first non-athlete to have a sneaker line with the company, lasted about four years. He has used such deals to shape his own public image. In 2006, he was hired to star in and help craft the campaign for Budweiser Select. Earlier that year he had lashed out at the makers of Cristal Champagne after an executive made remarks about rappers drinking Cristal that Jay-Z interpreted as racist. Through the Budweiser deal, he was "shattering that Champagne myth." He says it wasn't uncommon for radio stations to serve him chilled bottles of bubbly during morning promotional visits. "It's 10 in the morning! I don't drink champagne all day, every day." Looking back, however, he says Budweiser might not have been the best match. "A beer commercial? That was pretty much on the line for me."

In his office, by a coffee table stacked with art books (Damien Hirst, Ed Ruscha), his Forbes magazine and a humidor, he perches on the edge of a chair with his fingers tucked into his pockets. He says he'll always rap about variations on the same themes: drug hustling, business boasts, luxury hopscotching from Gucci to Louis Vuitton to the new Dior suit he says is a perfect fit. They're all narrative devices:

"I'm just describing a scene, but the crux of the story is the message. Almost like a movie. Setting: South of France. This is what's happening. This guy from out the projects who didn't graduate from high school is now living this sort of life. And this is how he got here."

--------------------------------------------------------------


Just Asking: Decoding Jay-Z
In a new book, the rapper and entrepreneur breaks down his breaks.


By JOHN JURGENSEN Wall Street Journal
OCTOBER 21, 2010, 7:39 P.M. ET.


With music, clothing, advertising and other ventures already under his belt, rapper Jay-Z is about to release his first book.


"Decoded," co-written with Dream Hampton, looks at his life and the evolution of hip-hop culture through the lens of his lyrics. More than 30 of his songs, parsed and footnoted, frame the chapters on everything from his peers, including Notorious B.I.G., to the crack-dealing he left behind for music.


Among other businesses, the rapper, born Shawn Carter, operates Roc Nation, a company that encompasses recording, music publishing and artist management. Roc Nation is a byproduct of a 10-year, $150 million, profit-sharing deal Jay-Z struck with concert giant Live Nation. Here are excerpts from an interview with Jay-Z in his office.


WSJ: A lot of musicians claim to never go back and listen to their old material, but you obviously took some joy in digging back into your archives for "Decoded."


Jay-Z: I believe that it's necessary. Especially for rap music, where the words are fast and for the most part there's not a consistent melody that people can sing along to. So a lot gets lost in translation. Because rap music is poetry, I thought it was important to describe it as such.


WSJ: You're famous for not writing your lyrics down as you compose them. What changes about them when you see them on the page like this?


Jay-Z: Some [lyrics] become really profound when you see them in writing. Not "Big Pimpin." That's the exception. It was like, I can't believe I said that. And kept saying it. What kind of animal would say this sort of thing? Reading it is really harsh.


WSJ: This book puts a frame around your career. When did you really start thinking about how you wanted to present your legacy?


Jay-Z: You think about legacy before you even start. When a kid is practicing on the basketball court, it's "5-4-3-2-1 and the crowd goes crazy!"


As you start realizing your dreams and it's tangible, you think about it in a real way. But I think that emotion happens from the beginning, from record one.


The legacy, I think about that as I make the music, all the time. How can I make the best album of all time? You always fail. But every time I go up to bat, I'm thinking how can I make an album better than "Thriller."


WSJ: I've talked to some of your friends who say that when you guys make personal career decisions, you're taking into account how the decisions will move hip-hop culture forward overall. Can you give me an example?


Jay-Z: For us, this is the music that saved a generation. So there's a big responsibility for those who it saved to make sure that thing is intact for the next generation. We're the first generation that really took advantage of it, starting with Puff [Daddy] and Master P, guys who really made a name and became successful as entrepreneurs.


Even more than that, when you're under attack so much as a genre [as hip hop is], you're forced to come together. But probably the last time we really came together on something was working for Obama, lending our voice and the people we had toward that campaign. Whether he does a great job or not is almost secondary to what it did for the dreams and the hopes of an entire race. Just based on that alone, it's a success, the biggest we've had. Period. To date. It's Martin Luther King's dream realized. Tangible. In the flesh. You can shake his hand.


WSJ: What would you change about hip-hop if you could?


Jay-Z: We have to find our way back to true emotion. This is going to sound so sappy, but love is the only thing that stands the test of time. "The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill" was all about love. Andre 3000, "The Love Below." Even NWA, at its core, that was about love for a neighborhood.


We're chasing a lot of sounds now, but I'm not hearing anyone's real voice. The emotion of where you are in your life. The mortgage scandal. People losing their jobs. I want to hear about that.


WSJ: How did the conversation begin with Live Nation to do a profit-sharing deal?


Jay-Z: It happened at a time when I was looking for a different approach to what the music business was going to look like in 10 years. There's a big variable on the equation. I was at the end of Def Jam and I was already preaching that idea to them. [I said] why don't you give me a fund? Let me go out and acquire things. It would take the relief off of having to have a hit [song]. These things could help generate revenue while we found and developed great artists, which is the model I'm doing now.


It's been two years since the Live Nation deal and I haven't put out one artist. But right now Roc Nation is profitable, because we manage and we have a publishing company.


WSJ: What were your own priorities going into that partnership?


Jay-Z: Records are covered, we can make records in our sleep. Live Nation's specialty is touring. So we came up with a plan to put together a touring schedule that would make this thing profitable. We really concentrated on building that profile. Playing [rock music festivals like] Glastonbury, Coachella.


There are certain posts I've always had on the bulletin board: Madison Square Garden. Yankee Stadium. Central Park is the next one. If we walked up to the Yankees cold, without Glastonbury, without Coachella, without those things under our portfolio, I don't know if Yankee stadium gets done.


WSJ: What's the most important decision you made along the way to help keep your career in your own hands?


Jay-Z: We got lucky. In the beginning we couldn't get a deal. We had to work our own records in the beginning. It gave us a different way to negotiate when we came to the table. Most people get excited and take the first deal they're offered. We had a little bit of success already, so we were stubborn enough to think that we could really do it at that point. They offered us a deal and we asked for a co-venture. That pretty much ensured that we'd have control from the beginning, from album one.


WSJ: Will the artists on your record label own the music you release?


Jay-Z: I'll give them the chance to get it back. That's only fair.


WSJ: You don't hand out awards. Are there other things you say no to automatically?


Jay-Z: That doesn't have anything to do with building the myth. I'm just uncomfortable speaking. I can do a stadium show for two hours and I'm in my comfort zone. But if you look at any of my acceptance speeches they're maybe seven seconds. I want to get off the stage.

*Related posts
  • Brooklyn Week: Jay-Z
  • Jay-Z Albums & Commercial
  • Jay-Z: The Blueprint III REVIEW
  • Jay-Z-Kingdom Come REVIEW
  • 2010 Hip Hop Cash Kings



  • Friday, September 24, 2010

    Lyfe is Rough- Lyfe Jennings Going Back To Prison

    Singer Lyfe Jennings Heads Back To Prison, Retires Via Twitter
    originally posted by Naimah Jabali-Nash

    CBS News-Crimesider
    September 23, 2010 11:49 AM

    MARIETTA, Ga. (CBS/WGCL) Platinum-selling artist Chester "Lyfe" Jennings is headed back to the slammer to serve 3 years after pleading guilty to charges stemming from an incident with his ex-girlfriend two years ago.


    The "Must Be Nice" singer was arrested in Smyrna, Ga. Oct. 19, 2008 after an apparent altercation with former girlfriend and the mother of his children, Joy Bounds.

    Jennings reportedly kicked in the door where he assumed Bounds was staying and fired shots into the house, according to CBS affiliate WGCL. Police pursued Jennings in a high speed chase after he attempted to flee the scene, but he was eventually caught when he crashed his red 2005 Corvette, reports MTVNews.com.

    The 37-year-old Jennings pleaded guilty on Wednesday to driving under the influence, fleeing and attempting to elude police, possession of a firearm by a convicted felon and discharging a weapon near a street, reports WGCL.

    With his fate sealed, at least for the next three years, the R&B singer bid farewell to his fans via Twitter.

    "This will be my last post," stated the singer according to MTVNews.com. "To everyone who gave me a chance I am forever in your debt. I have had a fabulous career because of you.... I've lived a hundred lives in these 6 yrs so I not only won't, I don't have the right to complain. I would like to think that I've changed lives by changing my own, tho I can't be sure. But one thing I am sure of is God gives and takes away in measure. He is fair, just and forever. Amen from aman... Smile, it's contageous:)"

    Jennings spent 10 years in prison for a 1992 arson conviction in Ohio. He released his debut album "Lyfe 268-192" in 2004, attracting listeners with his heartfelt lyrics and distinctive raspy tone.

    Sentencing - September 24th, 2010 10:44 am ET
    The Examiner

    At the time of sentencing, Jennings reportedly asked to at least return home to say goodbye to his children before heading to jail but the judge refused.

    The video of Lyfe Jennings’ sentencing showed friend and BET correspondent, Jeffery Johnson, defending Jennings, highlighting the positive improvements he’s made since contributing music to the music industry.

    But that wasn’t enough to convince the judge who in the end sentenced Jennings to three and a half years behind bars.

    “I did it… I know I gotta be punished for it and I just wanted the opportunity to apologize and that’s it,” Lyfe Jennings said in court before he was sent to prison to begin serving his time.


    You can read more about Lyfe at Wikipedia
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lyfe_Jennings

    Monday, September 20, 2010

    Movies I've Seen Recently – May – September 2010

    Reading over this list I think DANG I watch a lot of movies, but who doesn’t? I don’t get to write about them as much I would like to, but I’m not a critic anyway. I haven’t done this in a while, but as you can see by the list that I’ve wanted to.

    For older movies that I had a repeat viewing of I also included the date of release in [brackets]. I kind of separated them into three sections, but generally I’ve seen these movies between May and September 2010.


    There are some “hidden gems” included on this list. Some of these movies are little known, but I found out about them and when I finally did see them they were good. I highlighted them in RED.


    Films in theaters now worth checking out as of this publishing Takers & The Town and Devil. Takers & The Town are both heist movies, but both worth checking out.


    So here's a quick rundown on the films I have seen recently all ratings are 1-5 stars with some minor commentary.

    · Iron Man 2 3 stars. Solid.

    · Robin Hood 1 ½ stars. (about a ½ star for the directing)

    · Raw [1987] (repeat viewing) 5 stars. Still so effing funny

    · Charlie Murphy: I Will Not Apologize NO stars. When talking about the Michael Richards (Kramer from ‘Seinfeld’) racist rant Howard Stern said this, (Paraphrasing) “Some people are “Comedic Actors” and NOT “Stand-Up Comedians”.” The same can be said for Charlie Murphy.

    · The Princess Bride [1987] (repeat viewing) 4 stars. Classic!

    · Star Trek: First Contact [1996] (repeat viewing) 4 stars

    · Harold & Kumar Escape from Guantanamo Bay [2008] 3 stars. Same kind of stoner humor and same funny.

    · Jennifer's Body [2009] 1 star. Horrible.

    · Date Night 2 stars

    · The Karate Kid [2010] 4 stars. Terrific remake, wasn’t expect it to be.


    · Justice League: Crisis on Two Earths [2010] (animated) 4 ½ stars. Has all the “All-Stars” Superman, Batman etc. with wall to wall great action.

    · Nothing But a Man [1964] 3 stars. Good movie, but hard to watch. Story is a downer. Best portrayal of racism by a white director though, they usually never get it right.

    · Where the Wild Things Are 4 stars. Great live action children’s film.

    · Menace II Society [1993] (repeat viewing) 5 stars

    · She's Gotta Have It [1986] 3 stars. Good movie, but more an exercise in cinematography (camera work) than anything.

    · Disappearing Acts [2000] (repeat viewing) 4 stars. One of the BEST depictions of black relationships on film.

    · Pitch Black [2000] (repeat viewing) 4 stars

    · Unthinkable 3 ½ stars. Starring Samuel L. Jackson, finally a movie he does some real acting in!

    · Inception 5 stars

    · GoodFellas [1990] (repeat viewing) 6 stars

    · Memento [2000] 3 stars. Good movie, but I was really trying to get to the end (beginning?) to get to the mystery. Probably will go up in stars after I watch it again.

    · Ripley’s Game [2003] 4 stars. A sequel to ‘The Talented Mr. Ripley’ [1999] with John Malkovich taking over the role of Tom Ripley from Matt Damon. Malkovich is THE REASON to see this sequel. He is fantastic as the older Tom Ripley. Matt Damon’s Tom Ripley was kind of a punk. Malkovich’s is SO gangsta. You got to see the film to see what I mean.

    · Up [2009] (animated) 5 stars. Terrific! This film is as wonderful as everyone says it is.

    · Salt 2 stars. Same ol’ counter-intelligence stuff I have seen done better in other films.

    · This Filthy World [2006] 3 stars Saw this while channel surfing on cable early morning and was pleasantly surprised. Starring John Waters in a one-man show discussing his life and career in front of an audience. Funny, witty and entertaining.

    · Sherlock Holmes 4 stars. This movie was better than I thought it would be. Great direction from Guy Ritchie. Personally the only drawback was the thick cockney accent that Robert Downey Jr. applied. I had to turn on the captions 5 minutes into the movie to understand what he was saying.

    · The Book of Eli 3 ½ stars. 2 ½ for the movie 1 whole star for the ending.

    · The Expendables 1 star. Should have been more fun than it was.

    · The Godfather [1972] (repeat viewing) 6 stars

    · The Godfather, Part II [1974] (repeat viewing) 6 stars

    · The Last Exorcism 2 ½ stars. Explains everything in the film. Doesn’t leave you hanging, but only ok.

    · Takers 3 ½ stars. Better than I thought it would be


    · Beverly Hills Cop (1) [1984] (repeat viewing) 4 ½ stars

    · Harry Brown 3 ½ stars. Gritty & raw with the excellent Michael Caine.

    · Revenge of the Nerds [1984] (repeat viewing) 4 stars. Haven't seen this film in about 20 years & it's still funny & it's still a classic.

    · Boomerang [1992] 4 stars. One Eddie Murphy’s best films and definitely one of the best ensemble black casts since he was ‘Coming to America’.

    · The Godfather, Part III [1990] (repeat viewing) 3 stars. Not a classic like the 1st two parts, but I still liked it. Mostly for Andy Garcia and the shocking ending.

    · The Score [2001] (repeat viewing) 3 ½ stars. Solid heist movie.


    · Justice League: The New Frontier [2008] (animated) 2 stars. Ok. Has all the heroes in it, but a different kind of story.

    · Machete 2 ½ stars .Ok. Didn’t hate it. Kinda bloody, but a movie called Machete…

    · Training Day [2001] (repeat viewing) 3 ½ stars mostly for the performances of Denzel Washington and Ethan Hawke.

    · Batman: Under the Red Hood [2010] (animated) 3 stars. The coolest thing about this film was the villain Red Hood. He was the anti-Batman, killing bad guys. Cool.

    · The Town 4 stars. Again, better than I thought it would be. Seen a thousand heist/robbery movies and this one managed to have a different angle.

    · The Perfect Storm [2000] (repeat viewing) 3 stars. Solid movie.

    · One False Move [1991] 3 ½ stars. Heard a lot of good things about this movie back when it came out. Finally saw it and it wasn’t THAT good, but it was good. Surprisingly, one of the stars Billy Bob Thornton, was horrible.

    · Devil 3 stars. Solid movie.

    · Malcolm X 5 stars. [1992] (repeat viewing) My second favorite Spike Lee Joint.



    Here are my older reviews from earlier in the year.

    Movies I Have Seen Recently-April 25, 2010

    Ok here's a quick rundown on the films I have seen recently all ratings are 1-5 stars with some minor commentary.
    Zombieland 3 stars. Cool movie.
    Paranormal Activity 1 star. Not scary or suspenseful despite what the commercials and online ads say.
    Kick-Ass 3 stars. Funny, crude and violent, but I liked it.
    Why Did I Get Married Too? 3 ½ stars. Good flick. Not better than the 1st one, but good job by everyone.
    Clash of the Titans 1 star. Horrible. The action was weak on a television series scale. Think ‘Hercules: The Legendary Journeys’ on the big screen. Don’t need blood. I enjoyed ‘The Mummy’ (1st one) and it had no blood.
    Robocop [1987] (repeat viewing) 4 stars. Classic film. Of course the special effects technology is better now, but watched it again to see if it held up. It did.
    Death at a Funeral 1 star. Horrible. Only a couple of funny moments, but the whole cast didn’t gel. No chemistry AT ALL.

    Ninja Assassin 2 ½ stars. Usual revenge, clan, master crap. Very bloody, live action anime movie. It was cool though. I didn’t hate it.
    Predator [1987] (repeat viewing) 4 stars. Classic film. Still cool. Still great group of soldiers Bill Duke, Carl (Apollo Creed) Weathers, the big Indian guy from ’48 Hrs’, Jesse “The Body” Ventura and of course Schwarzenegger.
    Brothers 1 star. Wanted to see this in the movie theater. Looked like a good date movie. WRONG. The movie was pretty horrible. Waste of time.
    Citizen Kane 5 stars. I've heard the "greatest movie ever made" for a long time, but never sat down and watched it for myself and WOW. I don't know if it is the "greatest ever" yet, but masterful, masterful filmmaking on all levels. We had to watch some of the scenes in college and while I totally saw why the professor showed it to us I wasn't ready to watch it, I guess until now. I've said before that I can "turn off the filmmaker" the 1st time I watch a film and just enjoy it as a viewer, but gotdamn it was so beautifully shot I just couldn't. WOW.


    Movies I have seen recently-March 7, 2010


    Ok here's a quick rundown on the films I have seen recently all ratings are 1-5 stars with some minor commentary.

    Surrogates 1 ½ stars. A sci-fi TV movie that could have been made for SyFy channel.

    Edge of Darkness 2 stars. Good ending, but mystery is tooo drawn out and talky.

    The Wolfman 3 stars. Gets a little talky as well, but when it "wolfs out" it wolfs out!

    The Hurt Locker 4 ½ stars. Very good motion picture.

    Up in the Air 3 ½ stars. Exceeds on all levels, but nothing spectacular.

    Precious 4 ½ stars. Amazing motion picture.

    Brooklyn's Finest 1 ½ stars. sluggish and uneven. Lackadaisical performances.

    Shutter Island 4 stars. Good bordering on very good. A little too long. Great direction...of course (Martin Scorsese).

    Wednesday, August 18, 2010

    2010 Hip Hop Cash Kings

    Hip-Hop's Cash Kings 2010
    Zack O'Malley Greenburg, Forbes Magazine, 08.17.10, 9:00 AM ET

    Four years ago Jay-Z issued a lyrical taunt to his fellow rappers: "What you call money, I pay more in taxes." Turns out his line was more than just a boast.

    Jay-Z pulled in $63 million over the past 12 months, earning him his second straight hip-hop cash crown. His income level places him in the 35% tax bracket, which means he'll pay Uncle Sam about $22 million this year--a sum greater than the total earnings of any other rap star besides second-ranked Diddy.

    "Jay-Z is in a league of his own right now," says Ryan Schinman, chief of Platinum Rye, the country's largest buyer of music and talent for corporations. "There are very few artists of any genre, not just hip-hop, who've created such brands for themselves."

    The top 20 earners on this year's Cash Kings list racked up about $300 million in earnings, an average of $15 million per artist. Remarkably, the total is roughly the same as last year, despite a troubled economy and a music industry thrown into flux by new technology.

    "There aren't many artists selling 250,000 albums in the opening week, and that used to happen all the time," says entertainment attorney Donald David. "The rise of iTunes means people don't have to buy whole album ... and that has changed the business dramatically."

    Jay-Z and Diddy are two artists who've taken the changes in stride. In addition to releasing an album and launching a worldwide tour (average gross: more than $1 million per show), Jay-Z co-owns the 40/40 nightclub chain and has a stake in the NBA's New Jersey Nets. Diddy continues to cash in on Diageo vodka, Ciroc and roles in television and film, including this year's Get Him to The Greek. He also hawks Diddybeats ear-buds, part of the headphone line established by Dr. Dre, who ranks fifth on our list with $17 million.

    Senegalese-American impresario Akon ranks third with $21 million, thanks to his Konvict Clothing label, a lucrative World Cup soccer ad campaign for Pepsi and Kon Live, his Interscope-backed imprint that's home to Lady Gaga and others. Fourth on the list is Lil Wayne, who managed to pull in $20 million from his new album, Rebirth, and heavy touring before the start of his one-year jail stint in March for weapons charges. Ludacris ranks sixth with $16 million, a total fueled by movie roles and a new cognac line, Conjure.

    "There's a lot of cross-branding and cross-marketing that's going on these days," notes Troy Marshall, vice president of promotions at Interscope Records. Along with touring, he says, "those are very important components for artists as far as spreading the message of their music and spreading the message of their brand."

    Kanye West's earnings fell from $25 million last year to $12 million this year in the wake of his highly publicized outburst during Taylor Swift's acceptance speech at the 2009 Video Music Awards. With a new album and world tour in the offing, he should be back toward the top of next year's list along with 50 Cent, who took a break from touring and recording to concentrate on film roles over the past year, earning $8 million, a relatively paltry total for the 2008 Cash King.
    --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Eleventh-ranked Drake is the highest-earning newcomer on the list. He banked $9 million over the past 12 months, thanks to a new record deal, an advertising pact with Sprite and an agreement with Virgin America that plasters his likeness onto the sides of airplanes. Another good decision: recruiting Lil Wayne and Jay-Z to appear on his debut album, Thank Me Later, which sold 447,000 copies in its first week.

    Though Jay-Z earned more than Lil Wayne, Drake, Kanye West and 50 Cent combined, he's not even the richest musician in his own home--that honor goes to his wife, Beyoncé, who raked in $87 million over the past 12 months.

    Methodology: The Forbes Hip-Hop Cash Kings list includes male recording artists whose work is primarily classified as hip-hop or rap. Earnings estimates, which include income from record sales, digital downloads, touring, films, TV shows, endorsements, books and other entertainment ventures, are calculated between June 2009 and June 2010. Management, attorney and agent fees are not deducted.

    In order to determine our list, we interviewed numerous sources within the music industry, including lawyers, media buyers, record label executives and many of the artists themselves. We also conducted research via Billboard, Pollstar, Nielsen SoundScan and the Recording Industry Association of America, among other sources.


    2010 Hip Hop Cash Kings TOP TEN


    1. Shawn "Jay-Z" Carter $63 Million


    2. Sean "Diddy" Combs $30 million


    3. Aliuane "Akon" Thiam $21 million



    4. Dwayne "Lil Wayne" Carter $20 million


    5. Andre "Dr. Dre" Young $17 million


    6. Christopher "Ludacris" Bridges $16 million


    7. Calvin "Snoop Dogg" Broadus $15 million


    8. Timothy "Timbaland" Mosley $14 million


    9. Pharrell Williams $13 million

    10. Kanye West $12 million

    *You can go to Forbes Magazine Hip Hop Cash King page with past lists right here





    Tuesday, August 10, 2010

    Tupac on 'A Different World'

    Don't get it twisted this is Jada Pinkett's episode of A Different World and Tupac Shakur is a "Guest Star".

    It's still a really good episode and does a good job at dealing with "black guilt" over leaving your friends behind to move forward and go to college. The whole episode, produced in 1993, but never aired in that regular season, is presented below in two parts.



    Saturday, July 10, 2010

    LeBron TV-The Aftermath

    LeBron James' 'Decision' draws big ratings, big criticism

    By Rick Porter-Zap2it.com

    July 9, 2010 7:28 PM ET

    The hour that ESPN devoted to LeBron James (pictured left) and his choice of where to play basketball next season was widely reviled (outside Miami, anyway) -- but it was also widely watched.

    ESPN says "The Decision" -- in which NBA star James announced he was leaving the Cleveland Cavaliers for the Miami Heat -- drew a 7.3 rating in the overnight metered markets, higher than any other show on TV Thursday night (July 8). By comparison, CBS' rerun of "The Mentalist" got the best overnight number on broadcast TV with a 6.0; that translated to a 5.6 rating/10 share and 8.6 million viewers in the fast nationals, so the James special probably drew somewhere between 9 million and 10 million viewers.

    That, by the way, is more people than typically watch actual NBA games (even in the playoffs) on ESPN or the league's other cable partner, TNT.

    Not that viewers got much for their time.

    James and his handlers essentially bought the hour from ESPN and sold the ad time, then donated money to the Boys and Girls Clubs of America. The actual decision wasn't made public until about halfway through "The Decision"; most of what became before and after was filler, and critics have used words like "horrid," "crass" and "cruel" and deemed the way James handled the announcement a disaster in terms of his image.


    The Decision Is In: ESPN Guilty of Hype

    By Milton Kent-FanHouse.com

    7/08/2010 10:47 PM ET

    Once upon a time, the letters in ESPN stood for Entertainment Sports Programming Network. The channel officially went with just the letters years ago, but every so often, it's instructive for viewers to remember that fact, because apparently some people inside the Bristol, Conn., headquarters have never forgotten the entertainment or programming part of the acronym.

    Thursday's airing of LeBron James' announcement of the Miami Heat as his team of choice was just the latest example of how the E and P increasingly trump the S at ESPN.

    The needle on the meter of the hype machine started in the red at 9 p.m. EDT, the minute "The Decision" began, when some disembodied voice declared James to be the most significant free agent in NBA history.


    That needle stayed pinned to the red and extended even into the commercials when the second ad of the hour was for a flavored water homage to James, with references to the momentous choice that was coming.

    No promotional/hype stone was left unturned, even down to a "Breaking News" ticker that declared in the commercial break right before the announcement was made that James was on stage to make the announcement.

    And while Norby Williamson, ESPN's executive vice president of production, pledged that James would make his announcement in the first 10-15 minutes, the choice wasn't revealed until 9:27, all the better for the channel to run promos for its World Cup and Home Run Derby coverage.

    When the moment finally arrived, Jim Gray, James' handpicked interviewer, appeared hell bent on extending his own 15 minutes in the limelight.

    Gray admitted on Dan Patrick's Fox Sports Radio show that he set the wheels of Thursday's monstrosity in motion by approaching James' friend and marketing advisor Maverick Carter during Game 2 of the NBA Finals and proposing a one-hour show for James' announcement -- with him as interviewer.

    And Gray, who hasn't been this relevant since he made Pete Rose sympathetic by trying to get him to confess to betting on baseball before Game 2 of the 1999 World Series, dragged out his moment in the sun, asking 16 questions of James before finally getting around to the only two anyone was interested in -- namely, Who and Why?

    The sycophantic Stuart Scott, a most unfortunate choice to host the evening, demonstrated his worth to the proceedings with his first question to James: "What text message that you've received since you made your announcement has impacted you the most?"

    Thanks, Stu.

    The hour didn't completely tarnish all the ESPN talent. Analyst Jon Barry's reference to NBA reporter Chris Broussard as "Clarence Beeks," from the Dan Aykroyd-Eddie Murphy movie Trading Places, was a laugh-out-loud moment. And Michael Wilbon was spot-on in his vigorous questioning of James after the decision was announced.

    All in all, the Worldwide Leader took what should have been a 10- or 15-minute exercise at most and turned it into a six-hour marathon, counting the SportsCenters on either side.

    In the process, ESPN trampled over the twin ideas of context and solid journalism, all in the name of hopefully drawing a big audience.

    It didn't seem to matter to ESPN President George Bodenheimer that handing over an hour of programming and advertising revenue to James, a person that the news division at ESPN has to cover when this was all over, sets a horrible precedent. All that was important was getting eyeballs in front of the television or computer screen, or ears in front of the radio.

    Bodenheimer and the rest of the executive coterie at ESPN can attempt to assuage themselves about the harm they've done to the reputation of the newsgathering operation in Bristol by saying that James was turning over the night's proceeds to charity and that its producers were in control of the evening.

    And you thought the Brothers Grimm could spin fairy tales.

    No, ESPN lost control of things last Friday when Carter, James' right hand man and the CEO of his marketing company, approached network executives about a one-hour show to announce where James would play.

    Instead of laughing Carter and James off the phone, ESPN officials gave them the green light. But it didn't stop there. They let James dictate how the evening would play out, even down to where the interview would take place and who would do it.

    No self-respecting newsgathering organization ever lets the subject take control of an interview, even if a charity as noble as the Boys and Girls Clubs of America is a beneficiary.

    Hardly anyone associated with Thursday's journey into wretched excess should walk out of it feeling clean. And worse yet, ESPN has almost certainly set a precedent that if the subject is big enough and the topic is important enough, entertainment and programming will always come first over sports and journalism.

    There's just one more question left from Thursday: What time does the Brett Favre show start?



    Cool Black's Extended Mad Commentary: I thought the whole concept of this special was inventive yet ludicrous when it occurred to me…it wasn’t that inventive. Almost 30 years ago something similar happened.


    On November 9, 1982, after consulting with doctors, friends and family, [Sugar Ray] Leonard invited Marvin Hagler, Muhammad Ali and other boxing dignitaries to a charity event in Baltimore, Maryland. Standing in a boxing ring with Howard Cosell nearby, Leonard announced his retirement, saying "a bout with Hagler would be one of the greatest in the hsitory of boxing...unfortunately it will never happen". Leonard maintained his eye was fully healed, but that he just didn't want to box anymore. (The fight finally did occur five years later promoted as "The Super Fight," April 6, 1987).-The Fort Scott Tribune

    I was present at that event. I remember my uncles taking me and my brother see some “Sugar Ray Leonard thing” at the Baltimore Civic Center (now the Baltimore Arena). We knew it wasn’t going to be a fight, but some announcement thing. What resulted was the same sort of spectacle that occurred Thursday night. Lest us not forget, all sports are spectacles and they love putting on a show.


    Back to the LeBron spectacle…I mean special. I ain't gonna lie, I watched this special. Even though I haven't followed basketball since the Michael Jordan Chicago Bulls, I was available and I was interested to watch it live. Never watched LeBron play, but as you may can tell from this blog, I'm a fan of black pop culture and this was black pop culture in full display.

    First of all the special really was ridiculous. Like stated in the article above "the minute "The Decision" began, ...some disembodied voice declared James to be the most significant free agent in NBA history." That was the most ridiculous crap I ever heard in my life. Not the subject, but the delivery. It really was laughable.


    LeBron could have accomplished the same feat on a 15 minute segment on another news program NOT a whole hour. Yes they shrouded it as raising money for the Boys & Girls Club, but everyone recognized it for what it was marketing and hype.

    It was inevitable that some manager or agent would try something like this…again so now that we got this over with, let's hope it never happens again.


    LINKS:

    Read the source article with links, video and comments
    The Decision Is In: ESPN Guilty of Hype

    You can read an article about the Sugar Ray Leonard event at Google News at the link below:
    http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=uNYfAAAAIBAJ&sjid=HNkEAAAAIBAJ&pg=4277,5056212&dq=ray+leonard+cosell+retirement+hagler+baltimore&hl=en



    Monday, June 28, 2010

    BET AWARDS 2010-Brief Thoughts-The Complete Series

    Chris Brown's breakdown at the BET Awards
    I did something fun on Facebook while fast forwarding...I mean watching the BET Awards last night. Here is the "Complete Series" of what I posted.
    BET AWARDS 2010-1st Hour Brief Thoughts
    11:22pm
    • Okay what the eff has Kanye got around his neck? Is that a cobra from G.I. Joe? His performance was really nothing, but the set design was nice.
    • Nice intro from Queen Latifah. Glad she got back on the mic as an emcee. That's where she started.
    • What the eff has Jada Pinkett Smith got on...HER HEAD.
    • USHER-Nice levatating cloud set design, but voice sounded weak. Low mic? I'm sure that's what it was.His performance aiiight.
    • TARAJI!!! Mike Epps is a damn fool. LOL
    • Never heard the song T.I. was singing, but didn't understand a word he said. Hisflowistoofast.
    • Nia Long & Larenz Tate! 'Love Jones' reunion! The BEST of the "black romance" movies.
    • Love, Love, LOVE Alicia Keys. She can never do wrong. She looked so hot, even with her baby bump, so classy. No tattoos all down her back and shoulders. Perfect way to end the first hour.

    BET AWARDS 2010-2nd Hour Brief Thoughts
    12:29am
    • Queen Latifah & T.I. woulda been cute if he didn't call her CHLOE, it was CLEO. Know your history T.I.
    • First performance of the 2nd hour-B.o.B, Keyshia Cole & Eminem was cool, but like everyone I was waiting for the first two to leave the stage.
    • What the EFF has Monica got on? And for that matter Denice Williams? She is WAY too old for that gittyup and it looks horrible.
    • Is that Puffy? Somebody went crazy with the smoke machine. Is Puffy doing the Morris Day & The Time dance? T.I.'s performance on this song was better than his own. Nikki Minaj you look crazy enough with the orange hair no need to make the crazy face.
    • Jermaine, Jermaine, Jermaine. Your hair has less varnish but still looks a mess. A long year coming, Chris Brown finally did do the damn thing. Awww Chris is crying. Choke it up boi. You did Michael proud.
    • Drake performance...whack. Jeezy where you get that white jacket homie, the estate of Michael Jackson?
    • Kinda whack way to end the second hour.
    BET AWARDS 2010-3rd Hour & the END Brief Thoughts
    1:00am
    • 3rd hour starts off with EL DEBARGE! DeBarge is my favorite group from the 80s!
    • El DeBarge you still the man, but why you look like you're from the cast of 'Grease'? You can't really hit the high notes most times, but I ain't mad at you.
    • Even though I'm fast forwarding through the commercials Keith Sweat reality show? ok NEXT.
    • Is that it for LENA HORNE? Did Alicia Keys leave? Beyonce couldn't make it? Mary J? BS!
    • Tyrese did an amicable tribute to Teddy Pendergrass
    • Thank goodness Queen Latifah has gotten out of the costumes and back in a gown. She looks very nice.
    • Haiti/Gospel tribute was nice.
    • Getting sleepy 12:15am. How long are these awards? I'm fastfowarding every chance I get.
    • Don't like John Legend AT ALL, but nice speech.
    • Nice song from Trey Songz and he didn't even sing about him inventing something that's been around since Adam & Eve. Nice little 'Purple Rain' interlude.
    • Who's that bald chick sitting with Prince? The mother of Kanye West's girlfriend?
    • El DeBarge 'Second Chance' was nice!
    • ABOUT TIME we are at the PRINCE tribute. That is so cute. Prince has a picture of El DeBarge on his shirt.
    • Janelle Monette? She must have known she was going to sing 'Let's Go Crazy' when she went to the beauty salon. Her performance was cute though. Espiranza Spaulding so nice! Alicia Keys singing 'Adore' can it get any better? Alicia ROCKED-THAT-SH*T...until Patti LaBelle came out. Best performances of the night HANDS DOWN!
    • Queen Latifah looks so nice in the white.
    • Luda 'My Chick Bad'...My performance whack, my performance no good, my performance makes you wish ya would...buy the studio version instead.
    • 'All I Do is Win' was a mess. The marching band sounded good, but you couldn't hear anyone else. Busta you have a gut, don't tuck in your shirt and don't wear the Captain Crunch jacket.
    A whack way to end the show and a weak show overall. Good night.
    You can see more photos and video (for now) of Chris Brown right here