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The saga continues.

 

As we previously reported, Azealia Banks expressed her displeasure with Iggy Azalea being named to the 2012 XXL Freshman cover, citing a supposed racist lyric Iggy said. Within the last couple of days Iggy's Grand Hustle boss T.I. came to her defense.

 

"Strategically if {Azealia Banks] really cares about a freshmen cover maybe she could hope that she’ll suck enough to get shelved and then next year when the freshmen cover comes back around, maybe she’ll still be a freshman," he said "Which brings me to my next philosophy. If you spend half of your day getting money and the other half of your day counting money, you ain’t got no time in your day to worry about nobody else.”

 

Banks didn't waste much time in firing back at Tip. She took to Twitter yesterday to get at him.

 

"Lol I NEVER needed the next n*gga to sit up on a radio show with me and defend me," Banks wrote. "Furthermore, n*ggas r sitting up here trying to mask/defend what homegirl said. F*ck outta here. Everybody got something slick to say, but no one got an explanation. Come on T.I.... N*ggas is not scared of u and whatever sh*t u got to say on some radio show. @tip you corny for that one. LMFAOO how u a grown man commenting on what's going on between two girls. Come on son. Stop it. Ruin my career: what f*cking ever... Y'all wish."


Looks like this one might be going on for a while.



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More Pics After The Jump

 

When Robert Deniro hits a club, he makes sure it's packed with A-list celebrities. The 68-year old veteran actor was recently spotted at Atlanta’s Vanquish Nightclub with T.I. The two reportedly didn't arrive together, but Tip paid his respects once he found out Deniro was in the building.

 

Other stars on hand included Trey Songz, Fabolous, Wale, Def Jam exec. Bu Thiam, Kenny Burns and Ne-Yo's finance Monyetta Shaw.


Deniro is reportedly in Atlanta filming the movie The Killing Season with John Travolta.


Peep the pics below.


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Video After The Jump

 

As everyone knows by now Iggy Azalea made the 2012 XXL Freshman cover, becoming the first woman to do so. Almost immediately there was controversy as another female rapper, Harlem's Azealia Banks took offense to it.

 

We reported on the story and got a lot of feedback from our Thisis50 members, but there had not been a direct public response from Iggy or her Grand Hustle boss T.I. until now.

 

During a recent interview with DJ Drama the two addressed the conflict.


"Was she not happy with Iggy being on there or was Azealia Banks unhappy because she was not on there?" Tip asked. "Because if I am someone and I am moving and shaking and doing my thing, I don't care what's going on outside of my circle because my circle is being successful."


Tip then said he didn't know who Azealia was and had never heard her music.


"This is my day and it's my achievement," added Iggy. "So, you have to work to have your own achievements, with all due respect. Instead of worrying about who else is on there, you should just be happy that I’m on there as a woman for women. And if you wanna have an achievement work and have your own achievement. I can’t take what’s meant for you and you can’t take what’s meant for me.”


Tip threw one more dart Azealia's way before he was done.


"Strategically if she really cares about a freshmen cover maybe she could hope that she’ll suck enough to get shelved and then next year when the freshmen cover comes back around, maybe she’ll still be a freshman," he said "Which brings me to my next philosophy. If you spend half of your day getting money and the other half of your day counting money, you ain’t got no time in your day to worry about nobody else.”


Ouch!



 

 

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Video After The Jump

 

Via ABC News

 

Jacob Acaye, the former child soldier featured in the “Kony 2012″ viral sensation, told ABC News Friday that although attention from the film was overwhelming, his life was good now and it was important for people to see the video.


“It’s a hard movie,” he said today in an exclusive interview. “It brought back some memories. … I still don’t know when will it end. The more time is ticking, the more people are dying. The more people are still suffering. The more people [are] being abducted.”

 

At the age of 11, Acaye was one of 41 youth taken from a Ugandan village by Joseph Kony, the leader of the rebel group Lord’s Resistance Army.


In the video, Acaye, who escaped from the LRA, was interviewed by videographer Jason Russell, a cofounder of the San Diego-based charity Invisible Children Inc.


“We worry. The rebels when they arrest us again, then they will kills us,” he says in the video. “My brother tried to escape. Then they killed him. … They cut his neck. … I saw.”


“Kony 2012″ has garnered nearly 65 million views since Monday. It is part of a campaign by Invisible Children to bring Kony to justice, although the group has faced its own critics for its religious affiliations and financial practices.


In “Kony 2012,” he tells Russell that even though he’s not with the LRA, he wants to die. Then, at least, he would be reunited with his brother.


“No one is taking care of us,” he says. “We are not going to school.”


Acaye is now 21 and studying to become a lawyer at Uganda’s Makerere University — it’s a wish he shared in the 30-minute film released by Invisible Children.


He said that when the video was shot — he was 13 — he did not think it would reach this level of success.


“By then, I was like really, really invisible — like real meaning of invisible children,” he said. “We are like the children who are not seen. Children who are not even knowing that they are suffering.”


Acaye told ABC News today that while the video reminded him of horrible memories of his childhood, it made people aware of Kony.


“If they [people] know and they have seen and they could learn that Kony is still being the same in that movie, they can think about what to do,” he said. “And they can think about what they can do.”


Human rights groups say the LRA has terrorized Central Africa for more than 20 years, killing and maiming thousands of civilians and forcing children to become young soldiers. Kony and his commanders are wanted by the International Criminal Court.




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Video After The Jump

 

It was all about unity and celebrating the legacy of Biggie Smalls at the Rebel Lounge in New York City Friday [March 9]. 

 

The Lil Cease and Faith Evans hosted event featured appearance by PapooseUncle Murda and Maino.

 

Peep some footage from the event below. Filmed by Mazi O

 

 

 

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Video After The Jump

 

This is just foul.

 

Metropolitan Transit Authority police are looking for a man and the woman he is caught on tape beating and kidnapping outside of the Ronkonkoma subway station in Long IslandNew on Sunday [March 4].


The man can be seen knocking the woman down, then walking away. The woman then gets up and walks into a store, but her attacker follows her and pulls her outside again where he knocks her down, then drags her on the ground by her hair.


After the tape ends a witness says the man picked the woman up and threw her as she screamed over his shoulder, before tossing her into a car a driving away.

 

Cops have no leads.



 

 

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Video After The Jump

 

Lil Kim visited 106 & Park Friday [March 9] to talk about the 15th anniversary of Notorious B.I.G's death and her upcoming new music, but the highlight of the show was the showdown between Kim and Rocsi.

 

Rocsi insisted on asking about the "elephant in the room," meaning the beef between Kim and Nicki Minaj but Kimmy Blanco wasn't having it.

 

"It's almost like an elephant in the room to not bring it up," Rocsi said.

 

Kim instantly started waving her hand and said: "nope!"

 

"We're not bringing it up?" prodded Rocsi.

 

"No, why?" Kim replied. "We here...Brooklyn is in the building! This is about Team Kim and everybody in here. Brooklyn in the building!"

 

Rocsi continued to try to pressure Kim into talking about Nicki.

 

“With much respect due to you and your craft, and I’m not trying to not say what the fans don’t want to hear," Rocsi said. "But it’s been the elephant in the room. It’s being spit out there, so the only reason I address it… But I respect your game if you say you don’t want to talk about it, but I don’t want to see you talking about it somewhere else.”

 

The Queen Bee still wasn't having it.

 

"You know what? We gave y'all that movie already," Kim said. "At the end of the day this is about Kim right now. We gave y'all that movie already so we moving on to another direction, and if it come back that way we'll give ya'll another movie, but right now we're about to drop some new singles - there's nothing else to say."

 

Kim immediately took to Twitter to talk about what had just happened.

 

"I want to take this time 2 say #TeamLilKim & all my fans that came out 2 106. I f*cking love u guys. Y'all really turnt it up & represented," Kim wrote on the social networking site. "Even when Rocsi tried to get disrespectful towards the end & ask an unappropriate irrelevant question on a day we are supposed to be celebrating my man, The Notorious B.I.G's accomplishments. U guys held it DOWN!!!!!! I love U for life!!!! I look forward to our future together!!! Kisses!!!!!"




 

 

 

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Video After The Jump

 

Check out Talent Couture's latest "Roth IRA," which was produced by Stereo Symphony off of Talent's aNewLight project dropping April 2012

Shot & Directed by Philly Flyboy

 

 

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Video After The Jump

 

50 Cent appeared on The View today and left a very great impression on the audience and hosts. Fif was there to promote his philanthropic ventures through SMS Audio and SK Energy. Then things took a turn towards the hilarious when he was asked by Sherri Shepherd if he had ever "accidentally" told a woman he loves her.


"Probably the first time every time," he said. "When a man says I love the first time he means 'this really feels good.' Take it like something interesting is happening and I'm confused."


Elisabeth Hasselbeck then referred to the G-Unit boss as a tweet-a-holic because he's so interactive with his nearly 6 million followers on the social networking site, Twitter. That led to a funny conversation about his dog named Oprah, who has her own Twitter account.


50 explained why he named his dog after the famous talk show host.

 

"It started out negative 'cause I thought Oprah [Winfrey] didn't like hip hop culture," he explained. "I got the dog now I love Oprah."




 

 

 

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Video After The Jump

 

MTV's Hottest MC's Of 2011 list was controversial to say the least. The No. 1 artist on the list didn't have an album out last year, one of the artists is arguably not an MC anymore and several more who should have been up for consideration weren't.

 

So the panel over at Jump Off TV dissected the list as ranked by MTV which was: 1. Rick Ross, 2. Drake, 3. Kanye West, 4. Lil' Wayne, 5. Nicki Minaj, 6. Jay-Z, 7. Meek Mill, 8. Big Sean, 9. Wiz Khalifa, 10. Wale and rearrange it.

 

They also asked the burning question. How was it possible to leave artists like J. Cole, Big K.R.I.T., 2 Chainz and Kendrick Lamar off the list?

 

Peep the debate and feel free to add your own lists in the comment section below.




 

 

 

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Darnell Bolton

 

Via Complex

 

Fifteen years after Biggie's murder, retired detective Greg Kading debunks a few bogus theories and explains why the case will never officially be solved.

 

According to the police detective who spent three years investigating the murder of Biggie Smalls, the man pictured above—Wardell Fouse a.k.a Darnell Bolton a.k.a. “Poochie”—was the triggerman who killed Biggie fifteen years ago today. His fee for murdering the greatest rapper of all time? $13,000.

 

On March 9, 1997, Christopher Wallace, a.k.a. The Notorious B.I.G., was shot to death while sitting in a Chevy Suburban outside of a hip-hop industry party in Los Angeles. Biggie’s drive-by shooting occurred just six months after his friend turned foe, 25-year-old Tupac Shakur, suffered a similar fate after a boxing match in Las Vegas. These killings remain the worst tragedies in hip-hop history.

 

Seeing the two greatest rappers of a generation cut down in their prime was bad enough. The death of two young men who were so beloved by their family, friends, and fans was worse still. Adding insult to injury, Big and Pac were both murdered on busy city streets, in view of numerous witnesses. Yet there has never been an arrest in either case and both murders remain officially unsolved to this day.

 

Although the police investigations in Los Angeles and Las Vegas have failed to bring the truth to light, there is no shortage of websites, documentaries, and books detailing various theories and counter-theories—ranging from rap beef and gang violence to crooked cops and government conspiracies. But the latest book to be published, Murder Rap: The Untold Story of the Biggie Smalls & Tupac Shakur Murder Investigations. by Greg Kading (second photo), is different from the rest.

 

Kading is neither a journalist nor a conspiracy theorist. A retired L.A.P.D. detective, he was in charge of the special task force that investigated Christopher Wallace’s murder between 2006 and 2009. After Biggie’s mother Voletta Wallace filed suit against the City of Los Angeles and the L.A.P.D.—seeking hundreds of millions of dollars in damages—the department was highly motivated to solve the case. That’s when Kading got the assignment.

 

After his efforts led to two sworn confessions from people who said they played a part in the killings of Wallace and Shakur, Kading was suddenly pulled off the case. At the time, he was under investigation by L.A.P.D. Internal Affairs for allegedly making false statements on an affidavit in a separate case. However, in the end, Internal Affairs cleared Kading of any wrongdoing. Around the same time, the Wallace family’s lawsuit was dismissed.

 

When the 22-year veteran saw the case he built being shelved, he became so frustrated that he quit the force—but not before making copies of his evidence so that he could put all his findings into a book. His conclusions are controversial to be sure, but they are so thoroughly researched that they’re hard to ignore.

 

Complex caught up with Kading to talk about the results of his investigation, why no arrests have ever been made, and why he believes these cases will never be officially solved.


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Greg Kading

 

On Biggie’s Murder
Suge Knight was absolutely enraged. Not only had he been shot at, but his friend [Tupac Shakur] was killed next to him in the car. Suge always knew who was responsible. He looked directly into the eyes of Keefe D, who was in the shooter’s car. Keefe D was a member of the Southside Crips and a well known person to Suge. That explains why the next day this huge war broke out in Compton between Suge Knight’s gang entourage and Keefe D’s gang entourage.

 

“Suge Knight ended up going to jail on a probation violation, stemming from the beating of Orlando Anderson [Ed. Note—Anderson is Keefe D’s nephew, also a Southside Crip who allegedly shot Tupac.] in the MGM Grand hotel. While Suge was in jail, he conspired with his girlfriend. Suge gave her the directive to get Poochie.

 

“Wardell ‘Poochie’ Fouse was paid to kill Biggie. At the time, he was a 36-year old member of the Mob Piru Bloods. According to several Death Row insiders and FBI informants, Poochie was a down-for-the-cause, hardcore gang member. Confidential sources from the Death Row entourage, the Mob Pirus, and [Suge’s girlfriend, identified in Kading's book by the alias "Theresa Swann"], said Poochie had done shootings for Suge in the past. Reggie Wright Jr.—who was the head of Death Row security—said Suge and Poochie’s relationship was different than other members of the gang. They had a very secretive and exclusive relationship.

 

“[Suge’s girlfriend] and Poochie agreed to terms. He received two payments, one for $9000 and one for $4000. Poochie lay in wait outside the Petersen Automotive Museum. As soon as he became aware of where Biggie was sitting in his car, he drove up and he shot him.”

 

On Whether The Cases Will Ever Be Solved
“It comes down to how you define solved. Both law enforcement agencies—the Las Vegas Police Department and the L.A.P.D.—have drawn the conclusions that Tupac was killed by Orlando Anderson and Biggie Smalls was killed by Wardell ‘Poochie’ Fouse.

 

“Those are the facts within law enforcement. They’re considered solved internally, but the public’s definition of solved is different. They haven’t gone through the judicial process and nobody has been prosecuted.

 

“Both shooters are dead. Orlando Anderson was killed outside a Compton record shop in May 1998. Poochie died in July 2003 as a result of multiple gunshot wounds. He was shot in the back while riding his motorcycle in Compton. He was supposedly killed as a result of in-fighting between the Mob Pirus—Suge’s Blood associates—and another Blood gang known as the Fruit Town Pirus.

 

“That’s all the justice that these cases will see. The co-conspirators are never going to be prosecuted. Unfortunately, the cases are so complicated and convoluted. These will never see criminal prosecution.

 

“The co-conspirators are absolutely known and I say that with conviction. I worked directly on these cases for years and know exactly where they stand within law enforcement. They would be very problematic prosecutions because of all of the convoluted peripheral issues that were raised during the investigation.

 

“The D.A. in Los Angeles knows that this is an extremely difficult situation to try and prosecute. Here’s the problem; You’ve got [Suge’s girlfriend] confessing, and then, there was a bad move by law enforcement to giveher immunity. The shooter’s dead, the female confessor has immunity, so you just have Suge Knight.

 

“The D.A.’s office in Los Angeles has a policy: They don’t prosecute murders based on the testimony of one witness, which is now just the girlfriend. So the D.A.’s realizing, ‘OK, what are we going to do? We’re going to prosecute Suge Knight for solicitation of murder and the whole thing’s based on the testimony of his girlfriend? We can bring in all this circumstantial stuff and we can bring in the history between these crews, but ultimately, a good defense attorney’s going to say, 'Hey isn’t this all just an elaborate cover-up, because the L.A.P.D. actually murdered Biggie?’ The defense is going to try and turn the thing back around. So the D.A. realizes that there’s not really a potential for a successful prosecution.” 

 

To read the rest of this compelling story head over to Complex


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Video After The Jump

 

50 Cent will guest star on the Fox show The Finder as Big Glade, a mega-successful music mogul who turns to Walter (Geoff Stults) when songs from a deceased artist of his go missing.

 

Glade will stop at nothing to get the valuable music back before it's released by anyone else.

 

The episode will air Friday April 6th at 7PM Central. Check out the preview below courtesy of HipHop-N-More.



 

 

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