Is Iran’s Ayatollah under threat?

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Is Iran’s Ayatollah under threat?

 
 By Farzad Agah 
Is Ayatollah Ali Khamenei rule under threat?

Is Ayatollah Ali Khamenei rule under threat?

Since Mahmoud Ahmadinejad was declared runaway winner of the presidential election last week, Iran has seen a daily wave of opposition demonstrations, police crackdowns and violence.

 Not since the 1979 Islamic Revolution when Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini overthrew the shah has Iranian society been so rattled and divided.

According to the Iranian constitution, the Guardians of the Constitution are supposed to monitor and sign off on election results.

After the votes have been counted and the winner announced by the interior ministry, the Guardians have the responsibility to endorse the result within 10 days if there are no complaints from the defeated candidates.

The president-elect is then confirmed and later sworn in by Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

But last week’s election did not follow these procedures.

What's the real influence of Moosavi?

What's the real influence of Moosavi?

Despite complaints by Mir Hossein Mousavi, Mehdi Karroubi and Mohsen Rezaei, the opposition candidates, Ayatollah Khamaenei congratulated Ahmadinejad in a public speech and pointed out that he had got 14 million votes more than the first time he was elected president four years ago.

Opposition anger

he pronouncement, together with a self-congratulatory victory rally in which Ahmadinejad branded the supporters of the defeated candidates as “floating bushes”, infuriated opposition supporters and they took to the streets in Tehran and other major cities.

 The establishment backed by militias and special forces beat demonstrators and arrested scores of prominent opposition figures, journalists, students and lawyers.

Khamenei maintained his silence for two days before urging the opposing sides not to anger each other by making explosive comments at a private meeting of the candidates’ representatives.

He asked the opposition candidates to lodge their complaints to the Guardians of the Constitution for consideration – an indirect admission that the correct procedure had not been followed following the election.

The Guardians of the Constitution later announced they would consider the complaints and admitted a partial recount of the election results may be necessary.

Observers believe the moves by the conservative Guardians of the Constitution, who are known to support Ahmadinejad, were just to calm down anti-government supporters.

Still, they have promised to meet all the defeated presidential candidates on June 20 and take all their complaints into consideration.

Many moderate clerics, some of whom are believed to be members of the powerful Assembly of Experts, have questioned the wisdom of Khamenei in hastily endorsing Ahmadinejad’s “victory”.

The Assembly, which selects the country’s supreme leader, is chaired by Ayatollah Hashemi Rafsanjani who is considered by many as one of the pillars of the Islamic Revolution.

He was the man behind the election of Khamenei as supreme leader soon after the death of Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeni in 1989.

In theory at least, the Assembly has the constitutional right to question and even replace the supreme leader.

‘Not impartial’

Some influential moderate clerics privately admit that Khamenei has not done “justice” to the presidential candidates and has not treated them with impartiality.

 This behaviour, they believe, could jeopardise his position as leader since one of the main qualities required of the supreme leader is “justice”.

Rafsanjani is also the chairman of the Expediency Council which is a body charged with the power to resolve differences or conflicts between parliament and the Guardians of the Constitution, but its true power lies more in its power to oversee the supreme leader.

It is a well-known fact that there is a lot of bad blood between Ahmadinejad and Rafsanjani whom the president accuses of corruption and aristocratic behaviour.

Ahmadinejad angered Rafsanjani when in his presidential television debate with Mousavi, he alleged that all the three opposition candidates had been put forward by Rafsanjani to defeat him.

He further accused Rafsanjani of unlawfully accumulating massive wealth over many years and putting his cronies in the way of the president.

The allegations prompted Rafsanjani to write a highly critical open letter to Khamenei, which the supreme leader ignored.

Public rift

The result has been serious public rift within the establishment and many observers believe Rafsanjani may be encouraging the ferment among supporters of the opposition presidential candidates.

Mohammed Khatami, the former Iranian reformist president, has also been serving in the ranks of the “green movement” of Mousavi, who together with fellow candidate Karroubi, have been calling for the annulment of the election which they believe was rigged by Ahmadinejad supporters.

All this leaves Khamenei in a very difficult situation.

He is unlikely to either accuse the opposition supporters of being mercenaries of “foreign powers” as Ahmadinejad supporters have done.

Nor is he likely to agree to their demand that the election result be cancelled or to have an impartial election fact-finding body set up.

Instead, Khamenei, who is to give a sermon after Friday prayers at Tehran University, is likely to invite both sides to unite and accept the results of the votes or risk jeopardising the Islamic revolution and state.

But Mousavi and his supporters are just as unlikely to stop their protests until they have achieved their goal.

The deep frustration and disillusionment of the mainly urban supporters of Mousavi, together with the establishment rifts now out in the open, are posing a serious threat to Khamenei’s authority.

That may benefit Rafsanjani, who aspires to become the next supreme leader, and rumours abound that he is trying to muster support among some influential clerical members of the Assembly of Experts to take Khamenei to task.

This may prove difficult, however, considering that there is still the well-armed and powerful Iranian Revolutionary Guard – that some say are the country’s de facto rulers – to contend with.

Farzad Agah is an Iranian journalist and analyst living in London. The views expressed by the author are not necessarily those of Al Jazeera.

http://english.aljazeera.net/news/middleeast/2009/06/200961923416905779.html

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Breakdown FM: Meet Jessica Celious-Music Never Sounded So Good

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Los Angeles based singer song writer Jessica Celious has been quietly making her mark and is now about to blow the spot. Check for her album 'Melodies of Life 'is on Amazon and digital music stores near u. This sista definitely has it going on

Los Angeles based singer song writer Jessica Celious has been quietly making her mark and is now about to blow the spot. Check for her album 'Melodies of Life 'is on Amazon and digital music stores near u. This sista definitely has it going on

Listen to Breakdown FM interview w/ Jessica Celious by clicking this link

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We recently sat down with up and coming LA based singer song writer Jessica Celious. She’s a fresh new face and fresh voice helping lead the charge to bring inspiring, quality music that is welcome change in an increasingly stagnant and sterile industry.

Born and raised in Denver, Colorado and Phoenix, Arizona respectively, Jessica grew up listening to stellar soul artists like Otis Redding and Aretha Franklin who she cites as major influences. Through them she learned the importance of writing songs that would stand the test of time. Through them she learned the importance of writing songs that are honest and leave you emotionally vulnerable.

Her album which has been over two years in the making ‘Melodies of Life’ is a testament to the commitment one to continually grow as an artist and to impactfully connect with the audience. Jessica’s approach is not to simply follow the latest trends and treat her audience as statistics that need to be marketed to. She painstakingly takes time to develop a relationship with those who have come to love her music. The gola is to forever be in conversation with her audience.

So in 2009 even though many of us have never heard of Ms cellious on the local radio station or seen her video on popular video channels, she still has a nice following, because of word of mouth and myspace.com/jessicacelious people have discovered her and have come to appreciate her songs with cover a wide range of emotions and speaks to folks.

In this interview we talk about the appraoch jessica takes tywoard song writing. She explains that in addition to be honest and vulnerable, one needs to have a good resource for melody (hence the title of her album) and understanding the types of things that will resonate with folks. Note this goes beyond having a particular sound, but more so speaks to subject matter.

As Jessica bluntly put it, as along as she’s still living she will always have something compelling to sing about.

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JessicaCelious

iScrewedUp — Radio’s New App-How Bigtime Radio Executives Messed up Again

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iScrewedUp — Radio’s New App

Thursday, June 18, 2009

By Jerry Del Colliano

I don’t know how radio CEOs can be so wrong so often.

It is about to happen again as Sirius XM is set to launch an Apple app that they hope will revolutionize satellite radio.

Oh really?

Here’s the latest misread of the media consumer.

You’ll be able to get Sirius XM on your iPhone for free.

That is, of course, if you subscribed to the webcast feature.

It’s $3 a month for everyone else.

Look, did anyone tell Mel that he’s not the only one having a recession? Can’t he see that people are not lined up to pay for satellite radio that is arguably not much better than what they can hear for free on terrestrial radio?

In fact, as consumers feel the pinch, what would make these SiriusXM execs think that charging more monthly fees for the same old “not exactly free radio” is a good business strategy.

You can expect this new SiriusXM app to be a flop just like the free version of Clear Channel’s iheart Radio which received a few million downloads and a great number fewer fans once they listened.

Nothing personal, but consumers don’t think like media executives and you can be damn sure media CEOs don’t think like consumers.

A few years ago, one of my USC Solutions Labs did a project for XM Satellite before it merged with Sirius. These young folks came up with lots of ideas for satellite radio — none of which they were doing and few of which they adopted. The ability to listen to streaming satellite radio on a cell phone was not one of their recommendations.

I understand SiriusXM’s enthusiasm to get into new media because in today’s media world satellite radio technology is as ancient as a wagon train.

But they are getting it wrong — so wrong.

Satellite isn’t the only radio organization to do their version of iScrewedUp.

Terrestrial radio wasted broadcasters money and got a false sense of security in pushing HD which in effect was an excuse to create more channels on a radio. This would be great if the radio were a hot consumer device.

It isn’t.

Even in a car, radio is a mere part of the automobile’s entertainment system with growing competition from new media. No young person these days (or many older for that matter) buys a car without an iPhone jack.

The HD concept of adding more channels than the federal government would let consolidators have was fatally flawed when it turned out radio groups couldn’t operate all the stations they bought. And now we’ve seen that they can’t pay the debt on these acquisitions, either.

It would have been so much better to check with the consumer first — not iBiquity, the NAB, auto manufacturers (oops) or radio makers.

Lesson: Consumers want variety where they live — on mobile devices not radios.

Radio screwed up when it tried to bilk the record industry into paying legal payola to get airplay. They deny it but before then New York Attorney General Eliot Spitzer started his holy war, big radio groups and record labels were settling for seven figure penalties.

This was a screw up because radio is nothing without the music industry and the record business is proving that it is nothing without a vibrant radio industry. Maybe the heyday of consolidation factored into it but it is no accident that radio has declined in direct proportion to the music industry.

You know things are bad when the labels still — in 2009 — sue their customers and then turn on their radio partners in trying to win repeal of the performance tax exemption.

Lesson: Radio and records should have joined forces to create new delivery systems and content and launched the iTunes store before a computer company kicked their butts.

Radio is screwing up in the sacred area of news, information, talk and localism.

Repeater Radio to save money on personnel lives up to the term I use to describe it — a no-brainer.

But before radio groups decided to sell out programming to save money, they misread the marketplace again.

Take Iran.

Please.

Have you witnessed how news from the disputed Iranian elections and the riots that followed is driven by Twitter, Facebook and the Internet?

Not TV.

Not radio.

Not newspapers.

In fact CNN here in the U.S. has been busy defending its initial non-coverage of this world news event while their worldwide audience was taking matters into their own hands — literally.The many pictures are shot from eyewitnesses via their cellphone cameras and uploaded to YouTube.

When Westinghouse/CBS used to say “you give us 22 minutes and we’ll give you the world”, the consumer now says, “give us 20 seconds and we’ll give you thousands of photos, reports and commentaries”.

Events like 9/11 and Katrina may be the last traditional media coverage we’ll see.

Certainly, you can’t rely on a radio to cover a tornado down south or a crisis in markets where Repeater Radio is babbling on.

The marketplace is telling media execs that they are no longer the gatekeepers of news and entertainment.

They think finding the next Rush or Hannity is going to save talk radio — especially when you can mindlessly syndicate it across the nation. But today’s audience doesn’t need a lecture, they already have a town meeting with unbridled access to people and places that radio cannot duplicate.

To survive, it would take a sharp radio executive (an oxymoron) to start delivering content with new means and in new ways.

Lesson: Your new boss is the listener. They have taken control of your radio station and redefined how news is distributed. And before you start with, “but they are not trained journalists”, I ask “how many radio stations employ trained journalists”?

One more example of iScrewedUp.

Terrestrial radio streaming.

Media execs love duplicating the same content that they air for free on the Internet. Why? Because they think they can make a fortune selling different cheap commercials on the stream.

But there has been precious little evidence that streaming is even wanted by their audiences.

Yes, if you’re in a building and want to listen to a terrestrial format, of course, it comes in clearer online. But even with all that factored in, terrestrial radio listening delivers not quite 3% more listeners to the station’s format. By any standards that is a screw up.

Because a smart radio exec would listen to their audience and find 1,000 ways to program niche content that listeners absolutely could not easily get anywhere else and find a new model for Internet radio. They could also build Internet radio stations for local businesses and rent the stations to their sponsors. No biggy. No great expense. The music rights issues will eventually be resolved and they’ll be sitting there owning many franchises.

But no.

Radio execs missed the point.

Lesson: You can’t cram analog mentality into the digital space. If you do, you’ll get just 3% of the available audience.

Okay, I lied — one final point.

The People Meter.

You know, the one Cox CEO Bob Neil railed against publicly for years and spineless consolidators put down while they were secretly signing PPM contracts.

Turns out iScrewedUp applies to this as well.

I can’t tell you the number of apologists who gleefully remind me that radio’s total listening is up one million people.

Wow. Imagine that.

And how do you think tired old radio, with thousands of talented programmers and air personalities fired, is accomplishing this feat?

Can you say People Meter?

Finally, the diary system that broadcasters love because they can easily manipulate it is now reporting the real audience.

But radio CEOs and association execs drunk with spin are using this as proof that radio is alive and well.

What they don’t get is that the People Meter means a major redesign of radio programming.

I don’t know about you but even after all their meetings, conferences, research and consultants — radio still sounds to me like it’s built for the diary.

Lesson: The People Meter allows radio stations to know what listeners want every moment of the day and enables them to deliver it. But they are listening to each other again and not the audience.

So, there appears to be an endless stream of major screw ups that radio and record industry CEOs have made — enough to inspire a developer to design their own Apple iPhone app.

iScrewedUp.

Unfortunately, just like other radio apps, it would be downloaded by millions but I am afraid few people would listen.

http://insidemusicmedia.blogspot.com/2009/06/iscrewedup-radios-new-app.html

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Ten Known (and Little-Known) Facts About Tupac

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Ten Known (and Little-Known) Facts About Tupac

By Eric Arnold in 2009 Music Lists, Music
Tuesday, Jun. 16 2009 @ 9:50A
 
Tupac will always be with us

Tupac will always be with us

10. Pac was born June 16, 1971 in East Harlem, NYC. He also lived in Baltimore, Marin City, Oakland, Los Angeles, and Atlanta.

9. The name Tupac Amaru is a reference to the last indigenous Inca ruler of Peru, who died in 1572. Amaru’s name was later adopted by Tupac Amaru II , the leader of an 18th-century uprising against Spanish colonialists and by the Tupac Amaru rebels , a Communist anti-government group which formed in 1984. Clearly, the name Tupac Amaru is not one to take lightly and has always been associated with resistance, rebellion, revolution, and rightful rule.

8. Shakur wasn’t Tupac’s birth name, but the last name assumed by his adopted stepfather, Mtulu Shakur, a Black Panther who spent four years on the FBI’s Most Wanted List for helping his sister Joanne Chesimard, aka Assata Shakur, who fled to Cuba rather than face prosecution.

7. Tupac studied acting, ballet, jazz, and poetry while a high school student at the Baltimore School for the Arts in 1985, where he met and befriended Jada Pinkett.

6. In 1989, Tupac formed the group Strictly Dope with Santa Rosa rapper Ray Luv.

5. In 1990, Tupac was a roadie and dancer for Digital Underground, eventually becoming a member of the platinum-selling Oakland ensemble before launching a successful solo career.

4. In 1994, Tupac briefly dated Madonna, who reportedly wanted to have his baby.

3. Tupac is the only artist in history to have an album at Number One on the Billboard charts (1995’s Me Against the World) while serving a prison sentence.

2. Tupac’s alter-ego Makaveli is a reference to 16th century Italian political strategist Niccolo Machiavelli , author of “The Prince.” The fact that Machiavelli faked his own death gave rise to numerous theories alleging that Tupac is still alive.

1. Since his death on September 13, 1996, Tupac has been playing dominoes in music heaven along with Elvis Presley, Kurt Cobain, Jimi Hendrix, Janis Joplin, Jim Morrison, Marvin Gaye, Bob Marley, Richie Valens, Notorious B.I.G., and Johnny Ace.

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Remembering 2Pac the Infamous Westside Radio Interview

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As we take time out to remember the life and times of 2Pac on what would’ve been his 38th birthday we went digging into the archives and broke out with one of 2Pac’s most controversial and colorful interviews. Its the westside radio interview which took place at the height of the East-West Coast beef (Bad Boy vs Death Row). Pac had lots to say..as he pulled no punches..which is why we loved him.. enjoy.. 

Remembering 2Pac
 
KMEL’s Westisde Radio Interview
 
Interviewed by Sway..4/19/96 transcribed by Davey D
  
Earlier this year..Friday April 19 1996, Tupac Shakur graced the airwaves of KMEL Radio’s Westside Radio program in San Francisco. Here, in an historic interview he let the entire Bay Area know exactly what he was feeling and thinking at that point in time.  For those who weren’t up on the backdrop at the time that interview aired, 2Pac had not spoken to anyone extensively since joining Death Row. His album, ‘All Eyes On Me’ was the album of choice for more then a few headz especially here in the Bay Area. The Bad Boy/ Death Row conflict was at an all time high… No one from the Death Row camp had spoken on co-founder Dr Dre‘s departure. More importantly, 2Pac had not been through the Bay in what seemd like years…My boy Sway of The Wake Up Show was the person asking the questions..    


First of all 2Pac congratulations on your success…Most people from the Bay Area couldn’t be there by your side..but we felt like with every episode you went through we were there..we saw you through the media and we were right there. Brothers gotta a lotta love for you here in the Bay Area and we wanna know when you’re planning on coming back?  

2Pac:I’m comin’ back for sure..and I love the Bay. Everywhere I go..and every episode I’ve been through, I always felt like I was sharing it..both the good times and the bad times with the Bay Area. I felt like whatever I am the Bay Area had something to do with making me. So if I’m bad they had something to do with making me and if I’m good they had something to do with making me. Between the east coast, the Bay Area and LA and Baltimore, those places made me….I owe them everything. It’s not like I just got love for one block. I got love for those communities.. I got love for those areas because everything about those areas made me who I am…From the crack heads to biggest ballers to the teachers to the principals in schools to the police that pulled me by the arm to the mammas on the block. To everybody who help raise me and I appreciate it…With all my fans I got a family again.When I started rappin’ I was talkin’ about broken homes and now everybody is alright again just because of my fans being behind me..they made it more then just an artist thing..instead it was like them saying ‘hey that’s our homeboy and we support him. I appreciate that… I went to jail and they made me number one.. I appreciate them stickin’ up for me when everyone was kickin me when I was down… That’s love and I’ll never trade that..so for the Bay and Philly and all those areas and all those ghettos and towns..I love y’all..don’t let this east coast west coast thing get to you… I love you with all my heart with everything. I do this for y’all….

 

 


It seems like every time you come up something happens to bring you back down.. When you’re caught up like that what is it that goes through your mind when you got millions of fans wondering about you?   2Pac: It hurts me in one way because they be lookin’ at me saying ‘Damn you got everything why are you doing this?’ In my heart I’ll be saying ‘Damn you know I don’t wanna go to jail..I’m trying to live.’ On the other hand, I can’t really take it personal because I’m a reflection of the community… All young Black males are going through that..It’s happening with a lot of young Black females also young white males… A lot of minorities are going through that where they try to come up and get pulled back five steps…To me it’s not personal because they’re all going through it. The only thing that makes it different and original with me is that people get to watch it from beginning to end like it’s a soap opera. You get to watch mine and with everyone else they get to hide and go to their homes and get over it. With me you see me dealing with my greatest pains. You see me get over things…. 


What went through your head when you got shot in New York and that whole complication? 2Pac: I can’t front. It slowed me down. What went through my mind was ‘like damn I’m shot’. I used to believe I could never be touched. So now I’m more careful. Some people may say I’m disrespectful..but I’m more cautious because I have been shot. I know what that feels like. I’m not trying to be in that predicament. I know we all have choices to make and my choices have already been made even if I wanna change it.What I learned in jail is that I can’t change. I can’t live a different lifestyle..this is it. This is the life that they gave and this is the life that I made. You know how they say ‘you made your bed now lay in it? I tried to move… can’t move into some other bed. This is it. Not for the courts. Not for the parole board. Not for nobody. All I’m trying to do is survive and make good out of the dirty, nasty, unbelievable lifestyle that they gave me. I’m just trying to make something good out of that. It’s like if you try and plant something in the concrete..if it grows and the rose pedals got all kind of scratches and marks, your not gonna say ‘Damn look at all the scratches on the rose that grew from the concrete’. Your gonna say..Damn! A rose grew from the concrete? Well that’s the same thing with me.. Folks should be sayin’ ‘Damn! he grew out of all that?.. That’s what they should see.
 


  Brother you must be truly blessed to go through all these trials and tribulations you’ve been through and you’re still maintaining. Even now they’re still comin’ after you. You got these demons and obstacles that keep comin down harder and harder. It seems like everytime you turn around, you got somebody knockin’ on your door trying to take something from you….2Pac: They come harder and harder. It’s like everytime I think this is it and I go all out to beat that and I win or I lose…I come into the next one and it’s worse. It’s like the twilight zone. It’s like some evil, unstoppable shit that won’t let me go. It’s got it’s hands on me and it wants to see me fail. In my mind sometimes when I’m drunk or I’m just laying down..I keep thing to myself, ‘Damn is this true?.. Am I gonna fail? Am I supposed to fail? Should I just stop trying and give up? But then I’m like ‘Naw, hold up hold on..that’s exactly what they’re waiting on me to do’… They’re waiting for me to give up. So now this is just a fun little game that I cry at sometime..that I laugh at sometime..that I smile at and have good times and bad times..But it’s a game. It’s the game of life….Do I win or do I lose?. I know one day they’re gonna shut the game down but I gotta have as much fun and go around the board as many times as I can before it’s my turn to leave…


  How did you first get down with Suge Knight and Death Row?2Pac: I used to always see Suge. When they did the soundtrack for Murder Was The Case and I was going through all those legal problems..He was like ‘Yo give me a song dog’. I gave him a song and I got the most I ever got for a song. It was damn near an album budget. I got something like 200 thousand dollars for one song and they didn’t even use it. But I still got paid for everything I did for the sound track. I remember when he did it.. He did it not because he was jocking me, but because he knew I was having crazy legal problems and I was a man. He had asked me to come to Death Row and I told him I wasn’t ready,. Instead of taking it personal he did that for me and I appreciated that.

So when I was in jail just sittin’ there..I was gonna quit rappin’ but then Puffy and Biggie came out in Vibe Magazine and lied and twisted the facts. All I wanted to do was end everything and walk away from the shit. I wanted to get out the game. I’m trying to get out the game and they wanna dirty up my memory. They wanna dirty up everything I worked for. So instead of quittin’ it made me wanna come back and be more relentless to destroy who used to be my comrades and homeboys.

These guys were my closest click. I worked hard all my life as far as this music business to bring about east coast west coast love and make everybody feel comfortable. I dreamed of the day when I could go to New York and feel comfortable and they could come out here and be comfortable. So when people ask me about this east coast/west coast thing it’s not silly at all…but you can’t disrespect the love. You can’t disrespect the peace treaty.. That’s just like when the Indians made deals with the white dudes and they would just come and rape their women and shoot’em up and leave…of course the Indians aren’t gonna love white people no more.. They’re gonna want to kick up some dust until people think about it and re negotiate the terms of the treaty and that’s where this east coast west coast stuff is at right now. We gotta have this beef and these words and this dialogue until we can re negotiate the terms of the treaty. I love the east coast..I from the east coast, but they have to understand you just can’t be saying shit about us and think we’re not gonna take it personally… You just can’t be calling us fakers and pretenders and non-creative and say we can’t freestyle..and we just sit back and say ‘Naw it’s cool ’cause we love them because they started hip hop’. Hell no, we’re gonna take it personal, just like a kid would when his bigger brother who ain’t doing his shit steps to him. That’s like a little brother making lots of cash and the bigger brother comin’ along and sayin’ ‘You owe it all to me’ That’s wrong.. Don’t be mad because the little nigguh is comin’ up
 


  Pac you gave a lot of love back to some Bay Area artist like E-40, Rappin’ 4Tay, Dru Down and the whole crew…talk about what made you decide to work with them2Pac: Because I can’t always be in the Bay. I know how the Bay is. The Bay is the type of place where if you ain’t there they’re gonna talk about you. I wanted them to know that I love you, I feel you and I’m gonna represent for you. I know I gotta a certain amount of acclaim so I bring the Bay with me… I know E-40 is what I was when I was with Digital Underground. He is the Bay right now ..him and 4Tay. So I get them on my album to represent the Bay. It shows we still have love and we’re still all good. By us being representatives we bring the Bay where ever we go.. Rappin’ 4Tay has always been raw to me and I like his style. When I was in jail I used to always listen to stuff so when I got out we clicked and did the song. Now he’s in jail and I gotta do what he did for me. When I was in jail he used to send out shout outs and show support, so now I support 4Tay. Everybody pray for him and send letters. I hope the brother gets out of jail as soon as possible.. [Rappin’ 4Tay was released in July ’96]. You know its a struggle for every young Black man… You know how it is only God can judge us.


  Now is the east coast /west coast beef, really both coasts? Or is it Bad Boy and Death Row ?2Pac: It’s not both coasts. What it is..is the people on the East coast are real proud and real cultural and real strong like we are on the west coast. What happen was Biggie came at a time just like Hitler did with the Germans. Biggie came at a time when they were open to somebody saying ‘We’re the master race and these guys [west coast] are nothing. They’re pretenders and this is why we’re not makin’ it in the business. It’s because of these guys. This is why we’re not doing nothing.

So the east coast really not hatin’ us or knowing anything about us..have just been listening to their supposed to be leader. They were listening to the person who’s supposed to be representing’ for them… They didn’t know that what they were doing was ending our culture. We [west coast] held it down for you all. That’s how I felt. I was in tears.. When LL was out there dancin’ with women in silver suits which I’m not mad at..because I might do that one day.. But when the East coast was trying to be creative and test other boundaries we were holdin’ it down with this hardcore shit. It might not have been what you [east coast] wanted but it kept rap alive for years. It kept money comin’ in. It let them [the world] notice us. So how could you [east coast] look at us and say ‘You’re not good enough’? We’re from a broken home. Y’all [east coast] didn’t teach us this.. we ain’t got no subways and graffiti.

In spite of the gangs and all of that we still came up with this culture. I feel like we never got what we deserved. I took it personal because I’m from the East coast and I know about that culture but I know about this [west coast] culture because I was here when it was being put down…So now I’m doing what the East coast would’ve did if the west coast did this to them… I’m riding..for my side. You’re wrong..It’s not right..

Recognize us. The only way the east coast is gonna recognize us if for us to do it on record, by money, by sales and by representing. Just like KRS-One…when PM Dawn got on stage and he had been talking shit about him..what did KRS-One do?….[He bum rushed him] So why are people telling me I’m wrong for doing what I’m doing. They love KRS-One.. He is hip hop..am I correct? I’m mad at Biggie and I’m rushin’ the nigga. What’s the problem?

As soon as the east coast separate themselves from Biggie we will do shows in the east.. Everything is beautiful..But so far the east coast has been with him. Everything I read..every letter I read. every interview I read .nigguhs keep saying ‘Fuck 2Pac..Biggie Biggie this and Biggie Biggie that like he’s representin’ everyone from the east coast.That’s why I attack the way I do.. I’m a general and I’m a smart general and I’m not gonna attack at no blind soldier. I’m gonna attack those who attack me. The only reason why people was mad was because I came out of jail and made this a reality. When I got out of jail the east coast west coast shit was really started. California Love, when I was singin’ put it down. and now nigguhs is mad because money is fucked up, attitudes have changed..it’s not as safe as it used to be. Nigguhs gotta think about their business and that’s what I wanted to happen..Now let’s go to the table..Let’s talk..Let’s make peace..let’s work it out…let’s give the community the money.


  So are you saying a conversation with Puffy and Biggie would… 2Pac: I wouldn’t sit down and have a conversation with Puffy and Biggie..because that’s like Scarface sitting down with the dude he’s hoping to rule. They are not on my level..but I can sit down with the OGs and from there [back east] which we are doing. People need to now we’re not beefing with the East coast.. We’re about to start Death Row East with Eric B and all the OG nigguhs out there. We got Big Daddy Kane.. Christopher Williams..we’re trying to get Bobby Brown.

We’re trying to get the East coast Death Row to be like the West Coast Death Row and make it major. We’re not doing that until we get this business settled.. Even while we’re doing this we’re trying to get Wu-Tang.. I feel as though they represent the east coast the way we represent the west coast and I love them. If everybody’s raps is what they really think then everybody should understand what I’m doing. It’s gangsta shit..It’s warrior shit.. and it’s all by the rules of the game. I’m calling for dialogue. I’m gathering attention for dialogue which is what you do in a struggle for power.


  What’s going on with Dre and how does that effect Death Row ?2Pac: Dre is doing his own thing.. It doesn’t effect us..My take on what happened was that Snoop went on trial for murder for his life..somebody said Dre was in the car.. The jury believed that c we needed Dre to be able to say he wasn’t there..once they would’ve saw that he wasn’t there that would’ve saved Snoop’s whole case. They would’ve saw that the witness was lying. Dre never showed up. He said he was too busy. That’s how they told me..When they told me that I was like no matter how dope he is and Dre was one of my heros in the music industry..If he’s not down for his homeboys.. I don’t wanna be a part of him or around him. Plus I feel that what was done in the dark will come to light. There are secrets that everybody’s gonna find out about.. and you’ll know what I did it. I swear to god y’all we are living by the rules of the game.


  Hey Pac why don’t you talk about the project you are doing with Jodeci right now…2Pac: My next single is gonna be ‘How Do You Want It‘ , Amerikka’s Most Wanted, ‘Hit ‘Em Up‘ and ‘California Love‘ .. the version people couldn’t buy. Hit ‘Em Up is a song which is a classic hip hop record..meaning it’s a straight battle record to all the Bad Boy staff.. It’s to Puffy, to Biggie to Lil Kim..to all of them.


  What about Mobb Deep?2Pac: My little homies is attacking them. That’s why I’m not even addressing the Mobb Deep issue. They’re not even on my level. I find it disrespectful that they would even think they can attack me or the West Coast… So I don’t even address those busta ass fakes.. Please print that…. It is on and poppin’. If you don’t see me rushin’ them that means it’s cause they bowed down.

Those Mobb Deep fools they don’t want it.. Chino XL, Mobb Deep , Bad Boy, Biggie , Lil Ceasar, Junior Mafia all of them is on our hitlist and I’m getting with them with my new click called The Outlaws. They’re some Jersey dudes who are keeping that east coast flava poppin’ . It’s some west coast dudes, southern dudes.. It’s the epitome of what I represent. I got Big Syke from Thug Life

We got ‘How Do You Want It‘ with Ron Hightower doing the directing with me and we got all porno stars. I got Nina Hartley from the Bay..and all the big time people. It’s the dirtiest nastiest video I’ve ever done. I got a playboy version and a regular version. We got nudity. It’s the most amazing video you’ll ever see.

We just did the video for ‘Amerikka’s Most Wanted‘ which is the classic dis video. We got ‘Piggy’ and ‘Buffy’…

We’re doing videos fro ‘All Eyes On Me‘, ‘I Ain’t Mad At Ya‘, ‘All About You‘ .. The record company got all the money in the world so we’re just gonna put it out….

When things get real slow, we’ll release a home video with ‘Ambitions Of A Rider‘, and a couple of the hardcore songs….I just did a remix to ‘What’s Your Phone Number‘ with all new lyrics. We took that MC Lyte beat from her new song she has out..[Keep On Movin’ Up] It’s so freaky you won’t believe it… I got a whole new album out…waiting for the sound track. It’s clean..all positive..all in the vein of songs like ‘Keep Your Head Up‘. and ‘Brenda’s Got A Baby‘.. It’s that type of stuff. I just put out a hardcore double album.. and next I’m gonna put out an introspective album.. It’ll be like a ‘Me Against The World pt 2′ That’s what I think my fans are looking for… I’m gonna show that I appreciate your support. …


  So you worked with Janet Jackson.. I was wondering if you can hook me up with her number?2Pac: If anybody finds Janet, tell her I’m looking for her. That’s why I said that shit in my song ‘My Minds Made Up‘, but give me Janet. I feel like she got shit twisted and people gone made her my enemy. She ain’t my enemy.. I ain’t mad at her. I want her to know that. It ain’t even like that. She met me at a time in my life when I was real immature. I was comin’ up and going through a lot. Now she probably sees me in a whole different light. Maybe not and maybe she will. I want that opportunity. When I see Janet, I ‘m gonna try to make right where we made wrong.


  Let’s talk on some other things like your new movie and soundtrack you’re working on? 2Pac: We got a movie called ‘Gridlock‘ coming out which is a mainstream movie. It’s me coming back into the theaters with Tim Ross from Pulp Fiction.. I don’t know who it is, but there’s a big name female in the movie. I’m the music supervisor for the sound track. It’s my first chance ever doing something like this… We got Allanis Morresset and all these other big name alternative groups . It’s supposedly people I would never get with.. I got them all on the sound track just to show what kind of range I got.. I’ll be putting that type of sound track out and then I’ll be putting out a rap sound track. I’m gonna do it like a 2Pac album with me doing a whole bunch of solo songs and Snoop on there doing some songs. This is just to show I have a business mind as well as a creative mind. I can make my way in this business besides rapping.

What’s the one thing you would like people to know about you?

2Pac: Number one, when I dis y’all..meaning like when you come up to me and I’m not giving you the type of reaction that you think I should give you, it’s not because I’m ungrateful… It’s because I’m nervous. I’m paranoid, I just got out of jail. I’ve been shot, cheated lied and framed and I just don’t know how to deal with so many people giving me that much affection. I never had that in my life. So if I do that ..don’t take it personal..Try to understand it and see it for what it is.

Now I understand what its truly like to be a fine female who goes to a club and all the guys just rush you before you’re ready to be rushed. Everyone is touching you before you’re ready to get touched. So now I have a better understanding of what it’s like to be a woman..I have a better understanding of fans not making you do things. I’m gonna do it because I love y’all.. I do appreciate what you did ..But if you make me do it..then I don’t wanna do it.. I don’t care how many albums you brought. My fans to me are people who follow me who are down for me..who understand me and no matter what people say, they know me…because they’ve followed me through my career.

A lot of people just brought my album.. I buy albums all the time. I just buy them to listen to…If you brought my album, you brought it for the music. You didn’t buy it so when you see me, I just break down and start eating you out. I don’t like that.. Don’t start extorting me for an autograph. I’m real. I give autographs when I want to…I wanna be in this game for a long time. I don’t ever wanna hate the fans That’s what these other nigguhs do. They might give you autographs all the time, but they hate you. They never even look at you like people. I do look at you like people. That’s why I feel like I can look you in your eye and say ‘Yo I don’t feel like doing that right now.. I don’t feel like signing no autographs. and you should understand. I look at you like a human being. Let’s kick it..Lets not take pictures..let’s kick it. Do that.. I want some females to do that… Every female wanna come up to me and show me how much they’re not attracted tome.. Do the opposite cause these ghetto girls..these minority women..they’re the only women I can get cause every one else is scared of me. Their parents tell them not to mess with me.. Y’all can’t fade me. Y’all can’t turn on me Don’t change on me.. Stay down for me..’cause I stay down for you and don’t extort me unless you intend to do it forever.


  Five years from now what do you see yourself doing?2Pac:.. I see myself having a job on Death Row…being the A&R person and an artist that drop an album like Paul McCartney every five years. Not that I’m like Paul McCartney but there’s no rapper who ever did it so that’s why I use him as an example… But I wanna do it at leisure. My music will mean something and I’ll drop deeper shit. I’ll have my own production company which I’m close to right now…I’m doing my own movies. I have my own restaurant…which I got right now with Allanis or Suge or Snoop. I just wanna expand. I’m starting to put out some calendars for charity. I’m gonna start a little youth league in California so we can start playing some east coast teams..some southern teams …I wanna have like a Pop Warner League except the rappers fund it and they’re the head coaches. Have a league where you can get a big trophy with diamonds in it for a nigguh to stay drug free and stay in school. That’s the only way you can be on the team. We’ll have fun and eat pizza and have the finest girls there and throw concerts at the end of the year. That’s what I mean by giving back.

 Interview by Sway of The Wake Up Show…it first aired on KMEL’s Westside Radio on April 19 1996..
Transcribed by KMEL’s Davey D

c 1996

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Maker of Auto-Tune Machine Responds to Jay-Z’s death of Auto-Tune Song

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jay-z-folded-225Jay-Z has been making his rounds to speak on the demise of Auto-Tune, from his point of view. KRS has been doing the same. With alleged come-back tracks on the way from other artists, Jay had to recently explain what originally made him take a closer look at how Auto-Tune was changing the way people viewed the culture.

I just think in Hip Hop, when a trend becomes a gimmick, it’s time to move on,” Jigga told Chicago radio station WGCI earlier this week, echoing statements we reported on yesterday. “I saw a Wendy’s commercial and they’re using Auto-Tune. They’re joking on it. It’s like, OK, enough of that. … It was a trend. It was cool in the beginning. Some people made great music with it. Now it’s time to move on.”

Marco Alpert, VP-marketing for Antares Audio Technologies spoke on his product, telling SongsforSoap.com that their will always be a need for his product in music. He also said that their company had no problem with what is being said about its product or how it is used in the Wendy’s ad.

We’re thrilled to have our brand out in the general world of pop culture. When it’s made it into Wendy’s commercials, we know that we’ve definitely moved beyond the rather rarified boundaries of the professional audio-technology world. Controversy is good for the Auto-Tune brand, and kind of fun to boot.”

source: http://theurbandaily.blackplanet.com/music/auto-tune-responds-to-jay-z/

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A Message to the Laker Haters

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Eminem Gets Humiliated at MTV Awards

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One has to wonder what this was really about? MTV stooping real low? Eminem getting his just deserts after years of dissing people? Payback from Nick Cannon.. Wasn’t a cool moment for Em.. Not in the least

http://voices.washingtonpost.com/postrock/2009/06/eminem_enraged_about_becoming.html

Headlines: Sascha Baron Cohen knows from publicity stunts. Eminem, who loves to dish it out, may not know how to take it. (Or maybe he was in on the joke all along?) Anyway, showing up to present an award the MTV Music Awards as Brüno, his flamboyantly gay Austrian alter ego, Cohen, according to the MTV account, “descended via wires from the rafters dressed as some sort of S&M angel — if an angel would be wearing oversized wings, a white gladiator’s costume and a jockstrap — and introduced himself in German, ‘Ich bin Brüno.’ He then appeared to get caught up in his suspension wires, flipping upside down and writhing in apparent pain before asking to be lowered to the floor. His request was quickly granted and he crashed to the ground — upside-down and directly on top of Eminem, wrapping his legs around the rapper’s head, exposing his bare buttocks within inches of Em’s face.” The rapper, who’d previously performed a couple of “Relapse” songs, wasn’t pleased with being served a teabag, saying: “Are you serious?” He swore and told his bodyguards get Cohen Brüno off of him. Eventually, Eminem left his seat, prompting Cohen Brüno to ask: “Is the real Slim Shady about to stand up?”

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More Details Emerge from Austin Nightclub shooting

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people are claiming that the two accused shooters were beat down by bouncers prior to the Spiros nightclub shooting

people are claiming that the two accused shooters were beat down by bouncers prior to the Spiros nightclub shooting

 

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More Details Emerge at Austin, Texas Nightclub Shooting

by Davey D

By now many of y’all have read or heard about the tragic shootings that took place early Friday morning in front of Spiro‘s nightclub in Austin, Tx right off 6th street.  For those who are just getting caught up to speed, the initial stories we heard was a rap group from La Grange Texas, called the LG Allstarz were scheduled to perform at the popular night spot. The group was supposedly asked the promoters if  they could end a performance early so they could perform. Now in the initial news accounts we were told  an argument ensued and the group was removed from the club. Two of the members Big Hutch and Lil Hutch returned as the club was closing  and shot up the club injuring 8 people. The two brothers turned themselves in  and now are behind bars with 4 million dollar bails.

Now that’s the initial story and understandably is sparked outrage  and public condemnation for the group and the two accused shooters. The incident has left many of us wondering how in the hell could two people be that callous and that stupid. Many upon hearing this story wished the worse upon the pair.

Since Friday, we are now hearing more details which gives us a richer understanding of what may have went down. First, we’ve come to learn that Spiro’s nightclub itself is no angelic place. The club has racked up a number of insidious complaints over the years. So many so that the city is considering shutting them down.  Not that that excuses the shooting, but there’s more.

In the initial story we were told the group showed up late to perform  and then got angry. This led to many of us stating that the group should’ve been more responsible and shown up on time.  We are now hearing that the group was there on time. In fact they were there most of the night.

We are also hearing that the two brothers accused of shooting the club had gotten a serious beatdown after arguing with the promoter We are hearing reports that as many as 10 people may have whupped on them.The brothers were tossed out the club, they went to their cars and returned a while later and shot up the club injuring  a few of the folks including a girl friend of one of the bouncers.

We were also told of a troublesome practice that takes place at many of the nightclubs in the 6th street area. Its not uncommon for bands to pay to play.  One source said he was told the group paid promoters to perform that night and were then later denied and the money kept. This hasn’t been fully confirmed but as noted its a common practice.

We’ll let you know more info as it comes to us, but the bottomline it wasn’t as black and white as initially pointed out.. The shooting was proceeded by a serious beatdown -Not that excuses a shooting up of a nightclub but as they say that’s part of the otherside of the story…

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TIME FOR QUESTLOVE TO TAKE OVER THE JIMMY FALLON SHOW

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 Time for Questlove to take Over Jimmy Fallon Show

Maybe its me but it seems like the new crop of late night Talk show host are seriously wack. it’s high time for us to bring back Arsenio or have someone like Questlove take over….

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