2003 (5)

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Michael Jackson's family -- or at least some of them -- are outraged by the revelations about the BBC's Martin Bashir interview with Princess Diana, & they're reportedly considering legal action.

In case you don't remember, Bashir did a documentary in 2003 titled "Living with Michael Jackson." It profiled MJ's life at the Neverland Ranch. During the interview, Bashir lasered in on Jackson's relationship with young boys & the allegations of sexual abuse.

Jackson was unapologetic about sleeping in the same bed as 13-year-old Gavin Arvizo, saying, "Why can't you share your bed? That's the most loving thing to do, to share your bed with someone."

As you know, Jackson was prosecuted for allegedly molesting Arvizo. The jury found MJ not guilty.

In the wake of the report concluding Bashir deceived Princess Diana into doing her famous interview, Jackson's nephew, Taj, and MJ's brother, Tito, now allege Bashir "manipulated footage & unethical journalism."

The pair believe Bashir tricked Jackson the way he tricked Diana. Taj blames Bashir on Michael's death, saying, "Bashir's manipulated footage & unethically journalism is one of the main reasons my uncle Michael is not here today."

Taj wasn't done, adding, "That 2005 trial broke him. Shame on those who provided cover for Bashir. Shame on those who rewarded him. My family deserves an investigation & apology too."

Jackson's former bodyguard, Matt Fiddes, told the Mirror the Jackson family is considering taking legal action.

#michaeljackson #kingofpop #mj #superstar #icon #singer #songwriter #thejackson5 #michaeljacksondocumentary #martinbashir #livingwithmichaeljackson #ripmichaeljackson #lawsuit #tricked #unethical #princessdiana #titojackson #tajjackson #joejackson #katherinejackson #janetjackson #parisjackson #blanketjackson #michaeljacksonjr #jermainejackson #latoyajackson #randyjackson #marlonjackson #jackiejackson #rebbiejackson

Source: TMZ

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From their humble beginnings as hip hop's underdogs, to taking over the rap game, world tours, platinum selling albums, feuds with other crews, taking time away from each other then reuniting on the 2014 Summer Jam stage, G-Unit has seen it all.

Kidd Kidd, Tony Yayo and Lloyd Banks recently sat down with Jason Bisnoff of HipHopDX to discuss G-Unit's past, present and future.

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HipHopDX: On this new album we hear you guys singing over beats and hooks like "0 to 100" and"Grindin' My Whole Life." How would you compare it to 2003, when you were quick to take beats like "Right Thurr" and "Play No Games?"

Kidd Kidd: That was just songs that we just freestyled over. It wasn't on the album. I can't speak for the run in '03, but I can speak for 2014, and man we grindin'.

Lloyd Banks: It does have it's similarities as far as the rate that we're working, ‘cause in the very beginning we used to just go in the studio. That's probably why I record that way to this day. I got songs I just write down and prep myself before I go in there. I don't like to waste money in the studio. That is kind of like how we've been. We went back in there and did "0 to 100" the freestyle, we did the Jeremih joint, we did Chris Brown, and we did "Grindin' My Whole Life" remix. They all were connected and I think people were reminiscent of the days and the rate we were putting out music in the very beginning, before the record deal. We were able to basically hit current events that way because if something happens – like if the Knicks were to win a game – you could be like, "Something, something something like the New York Knicks." And it would be effective because you don't have a time limit on when to put it out. You don't have to wait eight months like you do on a major. I think that is the main part it reminds me of, the grind and the way we were putting so many records together at that time.

How G-Unit Benefits From Southern Rap Fans & Reuniting At Summer Jam 

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DX: A lot of New York rappers are trying to integrate the Southern sound in major part due to the South's prominence in between your run in '03 and now. How does it help to have Buck and now Kidd Kidd bringing in an authentic Southern sound?

Tony Yayo: The way I look at Hip-Hop is it always transitions. From the beginning of time, you had a point where it was East Coast, and then it was West Coast. Then you had Paul Wall and them in Texas, and it was going towards the Texas Rap, then St. Louis, Nelly and everybody. I just think it goes from different places and places around the world. It just goes from New York to L.A. I think Hip Hop really transitions, and I just think having those two guys here, one from Tennessee, one from N.O., I always liked Southern records anyway. We don't have nothing against the South. We played in the markets. I remember when we first came out they thought 50 sounded like he was a Southern rapper. You understand what I'm saying? It was cool. We were going to Atlanta, New Orleans, and all these places and performing ‘cause I felt like G-Unit is one of the biggest groups worldwide. We broke worldwide, and it wasn't like we were just playing in this one market. The records that we were making, people loved from everywhere, even when we go out of the country. 

Kidd Kidd: Coming from the South, to me they never sounded like Southern artists. We respected their music ‘cause it was real and authentic. When you listen to G-Unit music, all their music is G-Unit music. There is no other kind of sound like that. Even today, in this game there is no other sound like that.

DX: Kidd Kidd, how much did getting on "Irregular Heartbeat" with 50 Cent and Jadakiss prepare you for getting in the studio for the EP?

Kidd Kidd: For me, this is my dream. This is something that I woke up three-years-old watching TV and saying this is what I wanted to be. So I just work hard on it and do what I have to do. I already know that I can bring it to the table though I know I gotta work twice as hard for it because I'm among legends. I'm among legends right now, so every time I'm in the studio I'm just thinking I gotta be ready. I gotta spit some ill shit. 

DX: What did the reunion at Summer Jam and working on the EP feel like?

Kidd Kidd: Real talk, it wasn't like me seeing them for the first time, I always ran into Banks in clubs and stuff like that, Yay was around when I came around. Just to have my name mentioned in the same breath as G-Unit, and to be a part of the whole situation, think about that. I'm on stage with legends. We got Nas in back of us. I had so many paused moments on the stage where I had to stop and really just look around like, “I'm really right here.” Think about it: this is me from ninth ward, from nothing, and I'm like, “You got Banks right here, and you got 50 Cent. You got Yay right there, and you got Young Buck.” I grew up on their music. Just to bring it back to the question of what it felt like, Yay is like my mentor, and he tells me everything like, "You know we about to do this kid, be ready boy." 

Tony Yayo: To me, it felt like magic again. When we came out there to that crowd, like Banks always says, "It's bigger than us." I can be mad at Banks, Banks could be mad at me, and 50 could be mad at us or whatever it may be. But the fans will hit your page and kill you like, "Yo, you gotta get back together...I know y'all coming out for Summer Jam." Music, man, has so much power to it. You can be in a whole other country, mothafucka don't even know English, but they know your song. That shit amazes me. 

Lloyd Banks: Summer Jam is always crazy. Your legs are not gonna feel normal. Since the first time I did that, that crowd is ridiculous, and under the circumstances, the performance was crazy. Ten years is a long time for one, and us not recording together in 10 or 11 years was crazy. I hate to be selfish, but I kind of embraced that as our moment. I had to take that in because you don't even touch that stage just minus anything. There are artists who come and still won't be able to touch that stage, and if they do it's like daytime.

Tony Yayo: I told him when we did the Funkmaster Flex freestyle he was like, "This is on my Rap bucket list." I'm like, "Motherfuckers we gotta go up there and teach 'em what Hip Hop is about." It's one thing people don't know about G-Unit. Me, Banks and Kidd Kidd is fuckin' Hip Hop. [Kidd Kidd] is from New Orleans. I forgot what song came in, I think it was the Nas song where he talked about being a gun [“I Gave You Power”], and this mothafucka goes in like, "I'm seven inches, four pounds, I been through so many towns / Ohio to Little Rock to Canarsie, living harshly." It is Hip-Hop!

We was in Belgium, and we saw KRS-one. People think just cause we are G-Unit and we sold all these fuckin' records that we are gonna have fuckin' egos. [Banks] had Rakim on his fuckin' album. You know how big that was for him? You know what I did when I saw KRS-one? [I said], "Yo big homie! You the only guy that dissed Queens and made it look good, and I'm from Queens." He started laughing, and 50 is the same way and running down on 'em. It's big for us. It's Hip-Hop man. When Biggie and 'Pac was going at it, it was a bad thing cause they both died but, man, when 'Pac spit at that camera man and when Biggie came out with "Who Shot Ya?" I got chills in my body listening to that in the car, like, "What the fuck!" It's Hip Hop man. Talk about when Banks saw Tupac, how old was you?

Lloyd Banks: I saw 'Pac perform when I was like 11-years-old. It's funny because my story started with 'Pac, like that was the first performer I saw. And then Nassau Coliseum in 1996,  the day he died, I was on my way to that concert in Long Island with NasThe Fugees, The Firm, AZ and Foxy.Bone Thugs was there, Keith Sweat was there, and he got booed a few times. That's Hip-Hop for you, though. I never forget when Ed Lover came to the stage and Nas took like five minutes out his set to give a rest in peace salute to Tupac. I'll never forget the whole building just dropped. It literally felt like it sunk in, and from that day I was like my first show in New York stadium wise was the same Nassau Coliseum, and I put my mother in the same section we sat in. I told her I was gonna be up there the night that Tupac passed. It was crazy how I was able to complete that story.

Tony Yayo Says The Internet Helped Improve New York Hip Hop 

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DX: You guys talked about the fans pushing for this reunion. How much did the split up and reuniting work as a positive?

Lloyd Banks: I think even if it wasn't a split, like I'm excited for Bad Boys III, they working on that now, and I don't even know when Bad Boys II came out. I just know it was damn near 10 years ago. I just feel like that excitement would have been there regardless, and, truth be told, we spoiled our fans. Nowadays you'd be lucky if you get an LP from your favorite artist every two years. We was giving so much material out. Our mixtape catalog is probably 20 mixtapes or more. I think they just go so used to hearing us flood the gates, and the way things have changed, the way to make money with things is to be a little bit more strategic. Being independent is what's enabled us to go out there and kind of attack the way we did before. When Interscope and all the big machines got involved they told us, "Don't do mixtapes. Don't do this. Don't do that." We get a chance to, not rewrite it, but continue the page. 

DX: How is this a good time to bring back the aggressive, gritty sound you guys helped pioneer with Auto-tune and love songs being so prevalent? 

Tony Yayo: I feel like the whole game changed. Me and Banks come from an era where going to the Hit Factory was big for us. Going to these studios like the Quad... Once I saw the Hit Factory shut down and started seeing the record stores shut down... We used to do signings and people actually buy the CD, and it was just a different feeling when someone came in to buy your CD. It could be a mothafucka from suburban Long Island or a mothafucka from the corner in Brooklyn. They were reading the credits, and there was more of an excitement. Now everything is just more digital. You got groups like Odd Future, and I was on Odd Future years ago. They're one of the groups where these guys don't get any radio play, but these guys got GRAMMYs, money and go on tour. There are so many people who are going the independent route like, "I don't even need a label." Mac Miller and these guys are making millions on their own. This digital shit is a gift and a curse, like I say all the time. It's definitely a good thing at times, and it can definitely be a bad thing. But I think there is not timing with the Internet. You can drop whenever you want to drop. You can drop a record tomorrow saying, "New Lloyd Banks" and this shit is in Paris and Germany. There are times when we go overseas [and they shout], “Play Cold Corner.” I wouldn't think that shit got as far as it did, but shit man the power of the Internet is amazing.

DX: What do you think about the state of New York Hip Hop right now? 

Tony Yayo: I think it's great. I think it's coming back to that New York sound. People love the South music, and there are people who love that New York sound. I think after the Trinidad James thing, it was like a smack in the face to New York City deejays. Saying, "New York is irrelevant,” and he's on a New York label. He's on Def Jam. I wouldn't even have the balls to go to New Orleans, Chicago, or Atlanta and be in the markets and say or do nothing like that. It didn't make sense to me. But after that, Trinidad James kind of changed the whole New York Hip Hop scene. Then deejays were like, "We gonna start supporting our artists more." People were getting at the radio stations more saying, “We wanna support our artists.” I really think it comes from the deejay, the record plays and the spins. There are so many New York artists that have been hot for years that you would never know about because they not getting played on radio. Now mothafuckas are going on the Internet, Thisis50.com and all these fucking websites and getting themselves out there. I feel like the state of Hip Hop for New York is better now because of the Internet. We never would have knew who Joey Bada$$ is or Flatbush Zombies are if I didn't see them online, ‘cause they don't get too much radio play. But they have a fan base, they are selling merch, they are doing shows, tours and making money.

To read the rest of the interview head over to HipHopDX.



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New York Times Reports Manny Ramirez and David Ortiz, the sluggers who propelled the Boston Red Sox to end an 86-year World Series championship drought and to capture another title three years later, were among the roughly 100 Major League Baseball players to test positive for performance-enhancing drugs in 2003, according to lawyers with knowledge of the results Some of baseball’s most cherished storylines of the past decade have been tainted by performance-enhancing drugs, including the accomplishments of record-setting home run hitters and dominating pitchers. Now, players with Boston’s championship teams of 2004 and 2007 have also been linked to doping. Baseball first tested for steroids in 2003, and the results from that season were supposed to remain anonymous. But for reasons that have never been made clear, the results were never destroyed and the first batch of positives has come to be known among fans and people in baseball as “the list.” The information was later seized by federal agents investigating the distribution of performance-enhancing drugs to professional athletes, and the test results remain the subject of litigation between the baseball players union and the government. Five others have been tied to positive tests from that year: Barry Bonds, Alex Rodriguez, Sammy Sosa, Jason Grimsley and David Segui. Bonds, baseball’s career home runs leader, was not on the original list, although federal agents seized his 2003 sample and had it retested. Those results showed the presence of steroids, according to court documents. The information about Ramirez and Ortiz emerged through interviews with multiple lawyers and others connected to the pending litigation. The lawyers spoke anonymously because the testing information is under seal by a court order. The lawyers did not identify which drugs were detected. Unlike Ramirez, who recently served a 50-game suspension for violating baseball’s drug policy, Ortiz had not previously been linked to performance-enhancing substances. Scott Boras, the agent for Ramirez, would not comment Thursday. Asked about the 2003 drug test on Thursday in Boston, Ortiz shrugged. “I’m not talking about that anymore,” he said. “I have no comment.” The union has argued that the government illegally seized the 2003 test results, and judges at various levels of the federal court system have weighed whether the government can keep them. The government hopes to question every player on the list to determine where the drugs came from. An appeals court is deliberating the matter, and the losing side is likely to appeal to the United States Supreme Court. A spokesman for the United States attorney’s office for the Northern District of California, which seized the tests, declined to comment on Thursday. Michael Weiner, the general counsel for the players union, also declined to comment. One by one, the names of elite players tied to performance-enhancing drugs have surfaced this year. In February, it was Rodriguez and Bonds. In May, it was Ramirez — for the first time. In June, it was Sosa. Rodriguez had been viewed by some as a clean player who could eventually overtake the career home run record established by Bonds, who had been linked to possible drug use through the federal investigation. Rodriguez subsequently admitted that he used a performance-enhancing substance from 2001 to 2003. The Times reported in June that Sosa was among those who tested positive in 2003, the first time he had been publicly tied to performance-enhancing drugs. Sosa became a national figure with the Chicago Cubs in 1998, when he and Mark McGwire of the St. Louis Cardinals engaged in a celebrated race to overtake Roger Maris’s single-season home run record of 61. McGwire’s image suffered tremendously when, at a Congressional hearing in 2005, he refused to answer questions about steroid use. By 2003, Ramirez had long since established himself as one of baseball’s best hitters. Ortiz, however, was less known. In 2002, the Minnesota Twins effectively cut him after failing to trade him. He signed a bargain contract with the Red Sox and began the 2003 season as a backup. Ortiz quickly blossomed, setting personal highs in home runs (31) and runs batted in (101). He surpassed those numbers in each of the next four seasons. Ramirez, with his dreadlocks and quirky behavior, and Ortiz, with his gregarious personality and portly build, formed a dynamic tandem on and off the field. They seemed to feed off each other — not to mention demoralize opponents — by hitting back-to-back in the heart of the lineup. In 2004, they helped the Red Sox overcome a 3-0 series deficit against the Yankees in the American League Championship Series. The Red Sox then swept the St. Louis Cardinals in the World Series to end decades of heartbreak in Boston. Ortiz had a game-winning home run and a game-winning hit against the Yankees and was named the most valuable player of that series. Ramirez was named the World Series M.V.P. after going 7 for 17 at the plate with a home run. Three years after winning that first title, Ramirez and Ortiz returned Boston to another World Series, where they defeated the Colorado Rockies. The pairing was split last season when the Red Sox traded Ramirez to the Los Angeles Dodgers after team officials grew concerned that he was not playing hard in response to a contract dispute. In Los Angeles, Ramirez took off again, becoming popular among the fans and leading the Dodgers to the playoffs. But Ramirez’s hero status in Los Angeles took a hit in May when he was suspended after baseball officials learned that he had been prescribed a fertility drug often used by bodybuilders after they stopped using steroids. When Ramirez was suspended, he issued a statement that appeared to maneuver around his 2003 test results. “I do want to say one other thing,” Ramirez said. “I’ve taken and passed about 15 drug tests over the past five seasons.” That five-year period extended back to 2004, which excludes the 2003 test. Since returning from his suspension, Ramirez has been widely accepted by the home fans. In 48 games this season, he has compiled a .327 average and has hit 11 home runs. Ortiz, meanwhile, has been in a sharp decline. He had an operation on his wrist last year and missed nearly a third of the season. He started this year in a slump and did not hit his first home run until a month and a half into the season. Since June 1, however, he has hit 12 more home runs. In 2007, Ortiz said that he used to buy a protein shake in the Dominican Republic when he was younger and did not know if it contained a performance-enhancing drug. “I don’t do that anymore because they don’t have the approval for that here, so I know that, so I’m off buying things at the GNC back in the Dominican Republic,” Ortiz told The Boston Herald. He added: “I don’t know if I drank something in my youth, not knowing it.” In February, he said that players who tested positive for steroids should be suspended for an entire season — about 100 games more than the current policy requires for a first offense.
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