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It seems like almost every week there is some kind of feud jumping off on Twitter. Whether it's artists going at each other or even fans popping off to stars, the social networking site has increasingly become a place where people end up in verbal wars.

 

50 Cent has a simple answer when it comes to people talking trash via Twitter. He thinks a lot of them become internet gangsters, hiding behind their keyboards to mask real life insecurities.

 

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"When you're an artist and have an aggressive aura to you, people are urged to be aggressive enough to say something to you," 50 told SOHH, "And at that particular point, it's the only place that they could. They couldn't say it to you face-to-face because they'd end up in an awkward situation, like standing upside down on their head. [laughs] They're not [brave enough] to say it face-to-face, they're not strong enough to say the things they'd want to say to you and it's why they're on Twitter."

What do you think about what 50 has to say about these new age Twitter e-thugs?




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Pics After The Jump

 

Rihanna just might be the hardest working woman in show business. The Def Jam superstar has released seven albums since 2005, and all have done well.

 

To honor the 24-year old beauty from Barbados, Complex has decided to give her seven different covers for their February/March issue. One for each of the albums she has released.

 

Check out an excerpt from her cover story, as well as the great looking covers below.

 

Written by Soo-Young Kim (@sooeypooey); Photography by Zoe McConnell (@ZOEMCCONNELL) for Complex.

 

Rihanna’s moving forkfuls of calamaretti fritti onto her plate at celebrity hot-spot Giorgio Baldi, her favorite restaurant in Santa Monica. Even when she’s eating, her posture stays upright like a ballerina, long and graceful. In between bites, she explains how to take a flattering selfie for Instagram. “Get a good light,” she says, adjusting the Prada Minimal Baroque glasses on the bridge of her nose. Her heavy gold necklace slinks around the front of her black adidas sweatshirt as she turns to order spaghetti semplice from the server. “Get a good angle on what’s working for you that day,” she says with a laugh. Rihanna enunciates every word and hits every consonant, her hands dancing as she talks. “If it’s boobs, make sure you hit that. If it’s face, make sure it’s fierce.”

 

Today’s a good face day for the 24-year-old singer. After putting in work all week in L.A., including a signing for her new perfume, Nude, a photo shoot for a new clothing collaboration with River Island, and plenty of promo for the Grammy Awards, she’d love a chance to catch her breath. But alas, the life of the third-highest-earning celebrity under 30 offers no breaks. She says she spent the day packing for tonight’s flight to Switzerland.

 

Rihanna may be tired, but she’s always ready for a close-up. She holds the phone just so to capture her stony demeanor in the small square frame. Slick specs, diamond studs, Cuban links. She selects Inkwell. The black-and-white filter applies a grainy texture to the photo, giving it a rugged feel. This is the mood she wants to display: no smiles. She taps her touch screen and shares the image with @badgalriri’s 4.3 million followers.

 

Since opening her Instagram account last March, with a selfie of her blowing smoke, Rihanna has posted more than 230 self portraits. “It’s narcissistic, but whatever—everyone does it,” she says. “I’m capturing personality... Everybody has their thing they like or don’t like to see. It’s all in your head. That’s why people take their own pictures, because it’s difficult for someone else to capture what you seek.”

 

Rihanna is photographed regularly, whether for magazine spreads, album covers, or by the paparazzi. But when it comes to self-portraits, she’s the one in control. She projects the image of someone who doesn’t care what people think, but she's come too far to leave her image to chance. Moving 26 million albums and 45 million singles worldwide has earned her a lot of money—an estimated $53 million last year. It’s also afforded her the freedom to be as wild as she wants to be. Although it’s useful to have a direct channel to reach her fans, social media has been a blessing and a curse.

 

Some of Rihanna’s more buzzed-about selfies are the ones she takes topless (with arms strategically placed over her chest) or with a blunt between her fingers. And then there is the semi-nude shot she posted in December with the caption, “Who needs fashion when there’s pu$$y.” Provocative, even illicit, these are not the kinds of images a publicist would greenlight. In fact, they may have cost Rihanna her Nivea endorsement. The skincare company broke ties with her last August, explaining that she did not embody their image of “trust, family, and reliability.”

 

Even more controversial are the shots she posts of herself and Chris Brown, the pop-star boyfriend she broke up with after he assaulted her in February 2009—when he was 19 and she was 21. Despite a stay-away order issued by the Los Angeles Superior Court, the two have remained close friends. The exact status of their relationship remains unknown, but the takeaway from social media has been that they are hooking up again.

 

The couple became the talk of gossip blogs last June when Brown and Drake got into a fight over her at W.i.P., a club in NYC. In August, Rihanna told Oprah in an interview that she and Brown were “very, very close friends.” In September, they greeted each other with a brief hug and kiss at the MTV Video Music Awards. At the time Brown was dating model Karrueche Tran. In early October, Brown and Rihanna were spotted at various New York clubs and photographed together at a Jay-Z show. The next day, Brown released a statement: “I have decided to be single to focus on my career. I love Karrueche very much but I don’t want to see her hurt over my friendship with Rihanna.” He then released a video in which he asked, “Is there such thing as loving two people?” By the end of October, Rihanna was using Instagram to send subtle signs that she and Brown were growing closer. First she posted a shot of herself wearing sweatpants by Black Pyramid, Brown’s streetwear brand. Later that month she uploaded a photo of herself with a “miss you!” caption and, that same day, reposted a still from Brown’s latest music video.

 

According to a Department of Justice study, roughly 1.3 million American women are abused by their husbands or boyfriends each year, and one in every four women are victims of domestic abuse at some time during their lives. Rihanna, as we all know, is one of those women—the most famous of them alive today. While many victims of abuse return to the men who abused them, almost none go through that painful process while being scrutinized in public by the world. No wonder Rihanna requires final say over what images she shares. “People take the little bit of information they’re fed, and they draw a picture of who you are,” she says. “Most of the time it’s wrong.”

 

When Rihanna first opened her Twitter account on October 2, 2009, it looked like any other official celebrity feed managed by a PR flack. This fueled speculation that she was just a pretty face whose every move was controlled by handlers. Around a year later, during the release of her fifth album, Loud, Rihanna got hip to the game. These days she doesn’t just send messages, she also reads her timeline, and she’s not afraid to fire back at critics. When she posted an Instagram shot of herself at last year’s Coachella Music Festival, sitting on her bodyguard’s shoulders and rolling a blunt on top of his head, MTV.com linked to the photos with a Tweet that said “Yikes.” Rihanna didn’t hesitate to tweet back that she “ran out of fucks to give.” That statement was retweeted over 13,000 times.

 

Rihanna’s not the first sexy young megastar with a hedonistic bent. Madonna did most of her dirt long before the Twitter era, but as Britney Spears and Lindsay Lohan have learned, the Internet is a vicious place that can turn on you with the drop of a hashtag. Somehow Rihanna has found a way to weather all the negativity. The girl isn’t just thick-skinned, she’s fearless—and unashamed to put her business in front of 27 million followers. She makes it work for her. It isn’t enough to prove she’s not a manufactured pop star; Rihanna’s trying to be seen as the realest bitch in the game.

 

Last November 14, Rihanna emerged from the first-class section of her rented Boeing 777 jet carrying two gold bottles of Ace of Spades. “Champagne anyone?” she asked. A sea of hands stretched out plastic cups to receive tiny portions of the expensive Armand de Brignac brut. The first flight of the 777 Tour was off to an excellent start. Rihanna and her personal assistant, Jennifer Rosales, were only halfway done working the press aisles when the singer asked, “Where are all the fans at? I got to get back and see my fans.”

 

The 777 Tour—a seven-day, seven-country, seven-show journey—brought along 150 international journalists in addition to some contest winners and four die-hard members of the Rihanna Navy to party in the sky. Designed to kick-start promotions for Rihanna’s seventh album, Unapologetic, ahead of its November release, the tour devolved into a shitshow of delayed flights and acrimonious press relations. From the beginning it was clear which audience on the plane Rihanna was playing to.

 

Zipping past throngs of thirsty journalists, she headed straight to the back, where a group of her most trusted fans, Tamara Wray, La’Ashia Holmes, Janise Williams, and Johnny Marmolejos, were sitting. Rihanna said she hand-picked these four because, “They’re probably more like me than the rest of the world.” The photogs and writers had already finished their two sips of bubbly by the time Rihanna blessed the fans with a full bottle of the $300 champagne.

 

As the tour went on, the reporters got increasingly aggro, shoving cameras in Rihanna’s face. But the fans remained calm, confident that respecting her space now would mean spending more time with her later. “I guess we’re not like other fans,” said Tamara, a slim 20-year-old college student. Johnny, a husky 24-year-old server at T.G.I.Fridays, nodded in agreement: “You know—crying, screaming. Kind of like an attack thing.”

 

But crazy fans are nothing compared to frustrated bloggers. The tour rapidly became a publicity stunt gone wrong as journalists hoping for juicy stories got nary a quote. The blog posts grew snarkier with each passing day while Rihanna’s fans had the time of their lives.

 

Tyran “Ty Ty” Smith, a co-founder of Roc Nation, which has managed Rihanna since 2010, insists the tour was actually a big success, if only because the press needed to get an idea of what the young star’s life is really like. “It’s good that you guys got to see that it’s not all about champagne and bubbles and blunts,” he says. “She’s working really, really hard.”

 

Well, maybe just a few bubbles and blunts. After the Toronto stop on November 15, Rihanna’s creative director Ciarra Pardo posted a picture of the young star topless, scattered with flower petals, money covering her eyes, and smoke leaking from her mouth.

 

In retrospect, Rihanna kept it real throughout the tour. If you stayed home and followed her social media, you had as much access to her as the folks who had to wait on the tarmac for four hours while she finished shopping in Paris.

 

To read the rest of the cover story head over to Complex.

 

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Video And Pics After The Jump

 

The 70th Annual Golden Globe Awards were held last night at the Beverly Hilton Hotel in Beverly Hills, Calif.. Many of the biggest stars in the movie and television industries were in attendance.

 

Big winners on the night included Quentin Tarantino - Screenplay:"Django Unchained," Anne Hathaway - Supporting Actress: "Les Miserables," Daniel-Day Lewis - Actor, Drama: "Lincoln," Don Cheadle - Actor, Musical or Comedy: "House of Lies" and Jodie Foster - Cecil B. DeMille Lifetime Achievement Award.

 

Check out the full list of winners below, as well as pics and videos from the event and NBC Universal's after party at the Beverly Hilton  Hotel.

 

Winners List:

 

Picture, Drama: "Argo."

 

Picture, Musical or Comedy: "Les Miserables.

 

Actor, Drama: Daniel Day-Lewis, "Lincoln."

 

Actress, Drama: Jessica Chastain, "Zero Dark Thirty."

 

Director: Ben Affleck, "Argo."

 

Actor, Musical or Comedy: Hugh Jackman, "Les Miserables."

 

Actress, Musical or Comedy: Jennifer Lawrence, "Silver Linings Playbook."

 

Supporting Actor: Christoph Waltz, "Django Unchained."

 

Supporting Actress: Anne Hathaway, "Les Miserables."

 

Foreign Language: "Amour."

 

Animated Film: "Brave."

 

Screenplay: Quentin Tarantino, "Django Unchained."

 

Original Score: Mychael Danna, "Life of Pi."

 

Original Song: "Skyfall" (music and lyrics by Adele and Paul Epworth), "Skyfall."

 

TELEVISION:

 

Series, Drama: "Homeland."

 

Series, Musical or Comedy: "Girls."

 

Actress, Drama: Claire Danes, "Homeland."

 

Actor, Drama: Damian Lewis, "Homeland."

 

Actress, Musical or Comedy: Lena Dunham, "Girls."

 

Actor, Musical or Comedy: Don Cheadle, "House of Lies."

 

Miniseries or Movie: "Game Change."

 

Actress, Miniseries or Movie: Julianne Moore, "Game Change."

 

Actor, Miniseries or Movie: Kevin Costner, "Hatfields & McCoys."

 

Supporting Actress, Series, Miniseries or Movie: Maggie Smith, "Downton Abbey."

 

Supporting Actor, Series, Miniseries or Movie: Ed Harris, "Game Change."

 

Cecil B. DeMille Lifetime Achievement Award: Jodie Foster.


 

 

Jodie Foster's Moving Acceptance Speech At 2013 Golden Globes | Life Time Achievement Award


 

 

Amy Poehler and Tina Fey's Opening Monologue


 

 

 

Hilarious Will Ferrell and Kristen Wiig at Golden Globe Awards 2013

 


 

 

 

"Django Unchained" Best Screenplay - Golden Globe Awards 2013

 


 

 

 

Anne Hathaway at Golden Globe Awards 2013 - Best Supporting Actress, Motion Picture




 

 

Golden Globes Best and Worst Dressed


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Pic Sources: CBS and Rap-Up


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Video After The Jump

 

Maino and his Mafia crew of PUSH!, Twigg Martin, Lucky Don and Hustle Hard Mouse release a new music video for "Bury Me a G/You Hear Me."

 

Both songs can be found on the mixtape, Maino and Superstar Jay Presents The Mafia. Download it for free on LiveMixtapes.

 

Video Directed by Mazi O

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Pic After The Jump

 

Coco can't be happy today after new pics of men grabbing her butt have hit the net. Last month compromising photos of Ice-T's wife hugged up with rapper AP.9 emerged.

 

At the time Ice reacted angrily via Twitter. Coco later apologized and the couple renewed their wedding vows on New Year's Eve.

 

Today a new photo of AP.9 with Coco has emerged. Again, they appear to be more than just friends.

 

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“I took Coco out on a date to Haze nightclub. She brought some friends…some of the crew from Ice Loves Coco even showed up too! We had a steamy one night stand. I hate being called a liar…cuz I’m not," AP told Jacky Jasper.

 

To make matters worse another scandalous photo of Coco with Mustafa Abdi, a.k.a. Moose Diesel, the former manager of ARIA Resort & Casino’s Haze Nightclub has emerged.

Coco asked Abdi to remove the pic, but he refused.

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According to Jacky Jasper there are three more pics along with a polygraph test being shopped to various media outlets by AP.

 

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At this point Ice T has to be wondering just how far Coco has gone and what else will happen next.

 

 

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Justin Timberlake has announced the title of his third studio album via an open letter to his fans. The 20/20 Experience will be released later this year on RCA Records. It will be produced entirely by Timbaland.

 

The lead single is "Suit & Tie" featuring Jay-Z.

 

JT's last album was 2006's four-times platinum FutureSex/LoveSounds.

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Check out Justin's full open letter below.

 

An Open Letter to you (the fans):

 

I hope this gets to you the right way. It’s the only way I know to do it. Some people may criticize me for the last 3 days. But it was fun, right?? Right?!?! Besides, I’d rather speak directly to all of you. And, who can knock me for having a little bit of fun with it?

 

Well… No more teasing. Although, it was A LOT of fun. (Did I mention that I’m having fun with this?? Ha!)

 

*Makes a serious face*

 

So, here goes:

 

This year is an exciting one for me. As you probably have heard through the “grapevine,” I’m gearing up for a big 2013.

 

Back in June of last year, I quietly started working on what is now, my next journey with that thing I love called MUSIC.

 

The inspiration for this really came out of the blue and to be honest, I didn’t expect anything out of it. I just went into the studio and started playing around with some sounds and songs. It was probably the best time I’ve had in my career… Just creating with no rules and/or end goal in mind and really enjoying the process.

 

What I came up with is something I couldn’t be more excited about! It is full of inspiration that I grew up listening to and some newfound muses that I’ve discovered along the way.

 

I’m calling it “The 20/20 Experience,” and it’s coming out this year.

 

I hope you enjoy listening to it as much as I enjoyed making it.

 

That’s all I’m giving you for now… I know, I know! Again, with the teasing!!!

 

Get ready. This is going to be fun (well, at least it is for me).

 

- Justin




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The wait is finally over. Justin Timberlake makes his long awaited return to the music scene with the new song "Suit & Tie" off of his upcoming third solo album The 20/20 Experience.

The track features Jay-Z and was produced by Timbaland.

 

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You can purchase it now on iTunes.

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Video After The Jump

 

Young Chris has come a long way since his days at Roc-A-Fella Records as a member of the Young Gunz and State Property. The Philadelphia emcee has kept his State P ties as witnessed by the recent release of the record "Roc Reloaded."

 

Now as a member of Rico Love's Division 1 imprint, Chris is ready to releases his debut solo album titled Alive in May.

 

Chris recently sat down with Mikey T The Movie Star to talk about the project, working with Cardiak, Kelly Rowland, Mario, Rico and more.

 

Follow @YoungChris @MTMovieStar

 

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Video After The Jump

 

Murder Mook is finally addressing the infamous picture of him smoking an e-cigarette from in between someone's toes.

 

As we previously reported, Serius Jones retweeted the pic and poked fun at Mook, who he has labeled as a "wierdo."

 

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The pic has since gone viral. Mook said it was just him and his wife playing around, but some people have questioned whether it is the foot of a man or woman.

 

Mook sat down with Undeniable TV to clarify once and for all that the foot is his wife's, and that he is the one who initially posted the photo as a joke.

 

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"First of all, that's not a man's foot. I just wanna get that out of the way," Mook said. "The picture came about because me and my b*tch, we was playing around. I put the sh*t up on Instagram just joking around. I put that sh*t up in like October and it wasn't about nothing. Then out of nowhere n*ggas put the picture [up]. Then they put 'it's a man's foot. Mook's smoking off a man's foot.' Then n*ggas was like 'yo, it's too big to be a woman's foot.' N*ggas don't understand camera perception. That's what the camera do when you take a close up picture."

 

What do you think of Mook's explanation?


 

 

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Video After The Jump

 

U.S. soldiers are committing suicide at an alarming rate. NBC News reports that through November 2012, 177 active-duty soldiers had committed suicide. In all of 2012, 176 soldiers were killed in action while serving in Operation Enduring Freedom in Afghanistan.

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Russia Today reports the suicide rate is much higher when you take into account soldiers who have returned home from combat. According to their report, nearly 500 American troops and veterans took their own lives last year.

Many soldiers feel they will be looked at as being weak or denied promotion if they seek mental health aid. Families of some suicide victims blame the military for not doing enough to help troops deal with the stress of combat.

The Pentagon hasn’t spent the money that it has for suicide prevention for this year — and that money wasn’t nearly enough money to reach all the soldiers who need help. Now we are hearing about bureaucratic technicalities at the Pentagon that are preventing them from acting. This is unconscionable,” Rep. Jim McDermott, D-Washington, told NBC. “The Pentagon is funded to help soldiers and needs to do much more on the epidemic of suicides."

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The Department of Defense says that they are working on this growing epidemic and that "anti-suicide programs installed throughout the armed services soon will curb military suicides — and that such initiatives already have helped douse mental-health stigmas."

"We have seen several programs that we are optimistic are going to start making a dent in this issue," said Jackie Garrick, acting director of the DOD suicide prevention office. "We’ve asked all of the services to use the same messaging, the same talking points. So the Army, included in that, is trying to adapt and promote those same messages because we realize that this is an across-the-board problem."

Tim Kenney of the Army National Guard says that he battled suicidal thoughts when he returned home from the war, but was able to overcome them. He thinks many servicemen have a hard time adjusting back into civilian life.

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"What these guys end up doing is I think is they feel 'I can't cope anymore with civilian life.' A lot of guys end up killing themselves because they don't think they will ever fit back into normal society," Kenney told Russia Today.

Do you think the military is doing enough to help U.S. soldiers with this growing problem?


 

 


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