Friday, February 13, 2015

Diddy Gets Violent Warning -- Keep Your HANDS OFF Drake, Or Else!



Gets Violent Warning ... Keep Your Hands Off Drake, Or Else!

2/12/2015 12:50 AM PST BY TMZ STAFF

EXCLUSIVE

Tensions between Diddy and Drake are still sky high after their Miami fight -- and now Drake's longtime mentor is blasting Diddy, Suge Knight, Lil Wayne and Birdman in a blistering diss track.

Rap-A-Lot RecordsCEOJames Prince recently recorded the cold-blooded warning -- which we're told he calls a "courtesy call" -- and we got our hands on it.

Sources connected to J. Prince tell us this has been simmering since Diddy punched Drake at LIV Nightclub back in December. On the track, Prince makes it clear Drizzy is "family," and adds ... "Puffy feeling like he can put his hands on my family, open the doors for his family to be touched. You reap what you sow."

That's just the start ... he goes in on Weezy and Birdman -- with whom he's had a long-running legal war -- and also rips "Sugar Bear" for a not-so-subtle jab at Drake he made to a TMZ camera guy.

You gotta hear the rant ... it plays like a manifesto, but with a beat.

Source: http://www.tmz.com/2015/02/12/diddy-drake-fight-beef-james-prince-warning-diss-track/



Continue Reading ..

Radio Free Montone: Bob Simon And The 'Other Guy'



By John Montone, 1010 WINS

We remember Bob Simon as a great reporter. A legendary journalist. A giant in the TV news business. The other guywell.

What a week. Brian Williams changed before our eyes from NBC Nightly News network ratings king to an easy punch line. Did you lie, Bri?

And what of Williams precipitous fall on the list of trust-worthy people from 23rd to #435? Who makes these lists anyway? But #435! Which allowed yours truly to report on 1010 WINS radio, It puts Bri in a tie with the guyfrom Duck Dynasty. On the same morning from outside 30 Rock as the crowd gathered in the cold to catch a glimpse of Matt, Al and the gang, I started one story on the LIVE radio with, Its anchor away, without pay

Before his career was shot down by his telling of a tall tale about being shot at with RPGs in Iraq, I considered Williams a bit smug, more of an actor than journalist. The made-up Iraq Attack was worse because it made the reporter the story. Thats bad form. So when I learned it wasnt true I thought, LIAR! And when Williams put up a self-defense of, I misremembered. I thought, Cmon, man!

But I am a curious cat so I did a search on the Inter-web and found a New York Times Health section article about human memory. It turns out memory experts do not think Brian was lyin about those RPGs. They say that, memories can change and shift dramatically over time, and that Williams might have, developed a false memory. That he could indeed have misremembered, the incident in Iraq.

Poor guy, I thought for a short time until I read another online post accusing the writer of the False Memory, article of being biased in favor of liberals and media darlings.

So who do we trust? Who do we believe?

Listen: Radio Free Montone

Well, hes gone now. But Bob Simon. Simon had a real war story. He was captured and held prisoner for over a month by Saddams thugs while covering the Gulf War. Starved and beaten and believing he would die, Simon certainly had a story to tell. Which he did, so infrequently, I had forgotten about it until it re-emerged in the coverage of his death. Simon was clearly not comfortable being, The Story. He once said, Im glad my fifteen minutes are about up. He also said, Not every story has two sides.

He was right. Bob Simon WAS a giant in his field. And thats that. As for the other guy, who really knows?

Source: http://newyork.cbslocal.com/2015/02/13/radio-free-montone-bob-simon-and-the-other-guy/



Continue Reading ..

Rap-A-Lot CEO J. Prince Threatens Diddy Over Drake [LISTEN]



Rap-A-Lot CEO James Prince has put Sean Diddy Combs, and others, on notice. Prince feels a ways about Diddy putting hands on Drake, who he says is family, and issued a stern warning, over a beat.

ReportsTMZ:

Tensions between Diddy and Drake are still sky high after their Miami fight and now Drakes longtime mentor is blasting Diddy, Suge Knight, Lil Wayne and Birdman in a blistering diss track.

Rap-A-Lot RecordsCEOJames Prince recently recorded the cold-blooded warning which were told he calls a courtesy call and we got our hands on it.

Sources connected to J. Prince tell us this has been simmering since Diddy punched Drake outside LIV Nightclub back in December. On the track, Prince makes it clear Drizzy is family, and adds Puffy feeling like he can put his hands on my family, open the doors for his family to be touched. You reap what you sow.

Thats just the start he goes in on Weezy and Birdman with whom hes had a long-running legal war and also rips Sugar Bear for a not-so-subtle jab at Drake he made to a TMZ camera guy.

Well d**n. Part of the bad blood involves Prince believing Birdman, Lil Wayne and Weezys manager Cortez Bryant (who he says is a drunk) stole Drake from his son, Jas Prince, without properly compensating him.

Listen to the audio below. Watch Drakes new short film, Jungle, right here.

Photo: J. Prince

Source: http://news.google.com/news/url?sa=t&fd=R&ct2=us&usg=AFQjCNE4hdYtQF2nkkCABjY7WPoOFSCWTw&clid=c3a7d30bb8a4878e06b80cf16b898331&ei=VRHeVMjDNeS18AGf8oDIDg&url=https://hiphopwired.com/2015/02/12/rap-lot-ceo-james-prince-threatens-diddy-drake-listen/



Continue Reading ..

Watch Alyson Stoner's Killer Dance Tribute to Missy Elliott



You may remember Alyson Stoner as the little girl in the Missy Elliot videos. Well, she has paid homage to the woman who made her famous.

Stoner appeared as a backing dancer in several of Elliotts videos in the early 2000s, including Work It and Gossip Folks and quickly became known for her attitudinal moves.

Now at age 21, the musician and actress has released a killer Missy Elliott tribute video featuring a mash-up of several of Elliots hits.

As Elliott put it: They grown up!

0

Source: http://time.com/3708648/missy-elliot-alyson-stoner-dance-tribute/



Continue Reading ..

Thursday, February 12, 2015

ABC Tones Down Author's 'Fresh Off The Boat' For Sitcom Audience



Constance Wu, Forrest Wheeler, Hudson Yang and Ian Chen star in ABC's new family comedy, Fresh Off the Boat. Jordin Althaus/AP hide caption

itoggle caption Jordin Althaus/AP

Constance Wu, Forrest Wheeler, Hudson Yang and Ian Chen star in ABC's new family comedy, Fresh Off the Boat.

Jordin Althaus/AP

This story contains language that may be offensive.

When they built a sitcom around a hip-hop-loving child of Taiwanese immigrants in Orlando, the producers of Fresh Off the Boat probably knew they would face some uncomfortable questions about culture and race.

But they may not have expected what they heard in the very first very awkward question at a press conference with TV critics in Los Angeles a few weeks ago.

"I wanted to ask the question: I love Asian culture," said one journalist. "I was just talking about the chopsticks and I just love all that. Will I get to see that or will it be more Americanized?"

Eddie Huang speaks during a press conference in Pasadena, Calif., in January. Richard Shotwell/Invision/AP hide caption

itoggle caption Richard Shotwell/Invision/AP

Eddie Huang speaks during a press conference in Pasadena, Calif., in January.

Richard Shotwell/Invision/AP

As other journalists and TV critics in the room groaned, the cast and producers tried a different response: They laughed it off. "It's more about the chopsticks," said celebrity chef Eddie Huang, whose memoir inspired the show and provided its title. "The original title was Chopsticks, " said Randall Park, who plays Huang's father on the show.

But the question, however clumsy, gets at an important point. When you're building the first sitcom to star an Asian family in 20 years, how culturally real can the stories be?

ABC will break an important boundary in television Wednesday night with Fresh Off the Boat, the first network sitcom in two decades to star an Asian-American family. But thriving in the world of broadcast TV will require navigating a host of challenges, including the ambivalence of the guy whose life inspired the show.

Huang's book Fresh Off the Boat is, in part, his story of moving to Florida from Washington, D.C., with his family including two immigrant parents. In the book, his love for hip-hop was a way of coping with the cruelty of his new classmates and the toughness of his parents.

"Suburbia's weird for a kid, because you're trapped," he said during the press conference. "You don't have modes of transportation. You go to school and you come home. And if the kids in the neighborhood are just ... you have no reference to communicate with them ... [then] you're very alone and isolated. The book is very much about figuring out who I am regardless of where I am and creating my place wherever I go."

Huang even narrates the pilot episode, which takes place in the mid-'90s, Wonder Years-style.

"Moms was always hard on me ... way before all that 'Tiger Mom' stuff," he says in the show's pilot. "She thought I was trying to cause trouble wearing that Nas shirt, but she didn't understand. If you're an outsider, hip-hop was your anthem. And I was definitely the black sheep in my family."

The book talks about how tough Huang's parents were when they tried to curb his teenage rebellion. But the pilot mostly shows Eddie's mother criticizing his taste in T-shirts.

"Why do all your shirts have black men on them?" she says in one scene. Young Eddie replies: "It's Notorious B.I.G.! Me and him are both dudes with mad dreams just trying to get a little respect in the game."

In the show, Eddie looks like an adorable rap nerd trying hard to look tough. But in real life, Huang says, rap was an integral part of his survival, something that doesn't yet come through in the TV show.

Huang told journalists he understands why the show tones down his parents for a sitcom audience.

"You come out with a strong Asian character on network television, people may not understand," he said. "And I think the show is strategic and smart in how it's easing the viewer into that."

But in an essay for New York magazine published one day before the press conference, Huang complained that the actor who plays his father was "neutered" and the actress who plays his mother was "exoticized."

By the end of the essay, Huang had grudgingly come to terms with the network's decisions. "This show isn't about me, nor is it about Asian America," he wrote. "The network won't take that gamble right now. ... The only way they could even mention some of the stories in the book was by building a Trojan horse and feeding the pathogenic stereotypes that still define us to a lot of American cyclope. ... People watching these channels have never seen us, and the network's approach to pacifying them is to say we're all the same."

At the press conference, Huang shrugged off the comments.

"I really genuinely feel, when you do something that's historic that has to do with race relations, there has to be conflict; there has to be debate," he said.

Conflicted as he seems, Huang also put his finger on a problem for people of color on TV.

Archie Bunker can be racist because there's lots of other white people on television. But when you're the only network TV show with a cast that's mostly Asian, every character becomes a symbol, whether you like it or not.

That's what helped kill the last sitcom to star an Asian-American family, Margaret Cho's 1994 ABC comedy All American Girl. It featured Cho, an edgy Korean-American standup comic, as a rebellious daughter who often clashed with her traditional mother.

Cho said in a PBS documentary she was pressured into damaging her health with a crash diet to fit a stereotypical vision of Asian beauty.

"When you're the first person to kind of cross over this racial barrier, then you're scrutinized for all these things that have nothing to do with race but have everything to do with race," she says. "It's a very strange thing."

Critics attacked the simple stories and bland sitcom-level humor. One Los Angeles Times story quoted Korean-American viewers who said they were angry at the show's stereotypes, its garbled Korean lines and the fact that Cho was the only Korean in the cast. All American Girl was eventually canceled after 19 episodes.

ABC has had its own stumbles with Fresh Off the Boat. Last week, its social media team had to delete a tweet with a graphic featuring caricatures of various ethnicities beside the phrase "We're all a little #FreshOfftheBoat." Huang himself tweeted that the image was "plain offensive and ridiculous."

Worse, these stumbles come at a time when hit shows such as ABC's Scandal and Fox's Empire have brought an unprecedented level of ethnic diversity to network television.

It's as if all the lessons TV executives have learned in creating shows starring black and Latino families ABC has one new show in each category this year, with Cristela and Black-ish were forgotten for this series.

But in his New York column on the series, Huang eventually praised a scene in which Eddie fights with a black classmate who calls him a racial slur. It was a scene taken from his real life, in which the network let the character use the term that was used toward Huang: "c***k."

For someone trying to challenge the safe stereotypes of Asians on TV, it's a start.

Expecting more from this show, which struggles in its pilot to be edgy without crossing the line into offense, seems a bit much.

But if Fresh Off the Boat can really subvert Asian stereotypes and amp up the funny, it just might become one of the best comedies on network television.

Fresh Off the Boat debuts Wednesday night on ABC at 8:30 p.m.and 9:30 p.m. ET, moving to 8 p.m. Tuesdays next week.

Source: http://www.npr.org/2015/02/04/383724495/abc-tones-down-authors-fresh-off-the-boat-for-sitcom-audience



Continue Reading ..

Lawmaker calls for N.J. lottery review after revenue falls short



TRENTON The state Assembly budget committee chairman is calling for a review of the contract privatizing parts of the state lottery following a news report that the firm hired to manage the system fell short of revenue benchmarks.

Assemblyman Gary Schaer (D-Passaic), reacting to a Bloomberg report Monday that Northstar New Jersey missed its projections by $24 million in the first fiscal year of a 15-year contract, said the shortfall puts programs for seniors, veterans and people with disabilities at risk.

The premise of the lottery contract is increasing lottery revenues according to Northstars own projections, Schaer said.

The administration brought in a company to work on the lottery system, and clearly the results are not what they should be, he said.

Christie inked the deal with Northstar in July 2013, making New Jersey the third state to hire a private firm to help run its lottery in hopes of boosting lottery sales.

Four months into the arrangement, which began Oct. 1, 2013, Northstar secured a contract amendment reducing its revenue goals, according to Bloomberg. Northstar cited slowed sales from Superstorm Sandy in its request.

Bloomberg also reported that lottery collections were down from July 1 through Oct. 31 of this year.

A Treasury Department spokesman did not respond to a request for comment Monday, but told Bloomberg that a 15-year contract should not be measured by the success or failure of one year.

The lottery is New Jerseys fourth-largest source of revenue, generating $2.7 billion in ticket sales a year. Proceeds are spent on scholarships, psychiatric hospitals, centers for the developmentally disables and homes for disabled veterans.

Under the contract, Northstar took over lottery sales and marketing. It paid the state $120 million up front and promised to generate at least $1.42 billion more over the next 15 years. In turn, Northstar gets to keep 5 percent of the increases if it meets its goals.

Christie can cancel the contract if the firm misses its revenue targets for two years.

Northstar is a consortium made up of GTECH, an Italian-owned company based in Rhode Island that has operated New Jerseys Lottery machines since 1984; Scientific Games International, situated in Georgia; and OMERS, a pension fund for workers in Ontario, Canada.

GTECH spokeswoman Angela Wiczek told Bloomberg the company has racked up "a long list of accomplishments" while managing the system.

Christies administration hailed the arrangement as a financial windfall for New Jersey that would reinvigorate and modernize the lottery system in ways the state couldnt. The governor pushed through the deal over the objections of the union representing lottery employees and New Jersey's Democratic state lawmakers.

Schaer jabbed Christies administration for time and time again, without fail exaggerating revenue estimates.

This is not isolated. This is consistent. I dont think theyve been on track once, he said. "One would think a Republican governor would in fact show a more conservative approach.

Samantha Marcus may be reached at smarcus@njadvancemedia.com. Follow her on Twitter @samanthamarcus. Find NJ.com Politics on Facebook.

Source: http://www.nj.com/politics/index.ssf/2014/11/lawmaker_calls_for_nj_lottery_review_after_revenue_falls_short.html



Continue Reading ..

Ballet Dancer Sergei Polunin Performs Hozier's "Take Me to Church" With ...



Hozier should definitely consider hiring Sergei Polunin for his next music video. The famed Ukrainian ballet dancer released a now-viral clip of his passionate choreography to the breakout artists hit Take Me to Church.

PHOTOS: Celebrity dance-offs

In the video, Polunin, 25, leaps, spins, and poses within the confines of a giant room while shirtless and wearing skin-tight, flesh-colored pants.

Ballet dancer Sergei Polunin dances to Hozier's "Take Me to Church."

PHOTOS: Candid Grammys moments

Polunin, who has been dancing since age 4, was the principal dancer for the British Royal Ballet and is currently the principal dancer with The Stanislavsky Music Theatre in Russia.

PHOTOS: Memorable Grammys moments

Its been a breakout year for Hozier, whose full name is Andrew Hozier-Byrne, 24. The Irish artist self-titled debut album was released in September 2014 and the hit single Take Me to Church earned the singer a Grammy nomination.

Watch the clip and tell Us what you think of Polunin's moves now! Plus pick up the latest issue of Us Weekly to see Hozier's blues playlist.

Source: http://www.usmagazine.com/entertainment/news/ballet-dancer-hozier-take-me-to-church-stunning-moves-2015112



Continue Reading ..