Tuesday 10 March 2015

Chris Brown Going After His Baby's Mama For Revealing He's A Father

As we reported, Chris Brown is the father of a 9-month-old baby girl, and now reports claim the singer didn’t know about the baby until last month, when the baby’s mother broke the news. When Brown found out he immediately made a deal with Nia where he will pay more monthly child support than required if she kept her mouth shut.
According to the reports, Brown is now getting legal docs together asking the judge for an order for him to pay the child support, and because Nia didn’t cooperate with Brown he is set to pay less than he offered to pay her.
“We’re told Chris upped that amount and in return demanded that she keep her lips sealed.We know Chris now believes Nia has been leaking stories and talking about their relationship. As a result, our sources say his lawyers are now preparing legal docs, in which he will ask a judge for an order requiring him to pay child support. It sounds strange, but he’ll pay less than he does now.”

Kanye West's Air Is Being Sold On Ebay For Mega Bucks?

Some people are so crazy about Kanye West that they are taking to Ebay.com to try and sell air from different Yeezy concerts?!? These people are asking up to $5,000 for the ziplock bag filled the air from Kanye’s shows. Check out some of the ads below.

50 Cent Says Game Acted Bipolar

While appearing on Hot 97 this week, 50 Cent shared the details of his falling out with former G-Unit artist Game. According to the Queens rapper, Game’s departure from G-Unit stemmed from a disagreement the Compton emcee had with Memphis Bleek and a diss he made towards Jay Z.
50 Cent also said that Game wanted to disassociate himself from 50’s The Massacre record “Piggy Bank” and downplay his alleged feud with Memphis Bleek and Jay Z during a radio interview. He added that before Game could make a statement about Jay, Bleek, and “Piggy Bank,” his idea was to get rid of the rapper.
“Nah, that was intended,” 50 Cent said when asked if he respects Game for leaving G-Unit. “Cause I don’t even know what sparked it. You see what I’m saying? If I had an argument or we had some sort of differences, I would understand it…The first thing that happened he went overseas. His first week numbers came back. He attacked Jay. He said something about Jay cause he was supposed to have ran into Memphis Bleek and had some sort of beef. I didn’t know what was going on…First, I was trying to get in contact with Jay. Cause I was like ‘He just got off. Jay will stomp him out.’ You see what I’m saying? I’m like ‘Wait, let me get in contact with him to stop it from going bad. I can fix it before it actually happens.’
“And then before I could actually get to him. I went up and he was calling the radio station saying ‘Yo, put me on the air. Put me on the air,’” he added. “His way of trying to fix that situation was saying ‘I don’t have no problem. Not with Jay Z. Not with Memphis Bleek. I don’t have a problem with nobody. I don’t have anything to do with that record ‘Piggy Bank’ that 50 Cent got or anything else.’ I’m like ‘Alright, well get rid of him before he even get a chance to make the statement.’ Since he’s saying it internally over and over. So, I’m not gonna wait for him to say it publicly…He’s one of the artists that showed me that you don’t actually have to have consistency. Cause he’ll go one way and then completely go the other way like he bipolar or something.”
Prior to speaking on Game, 50 Cent spoke on New York Hip Hop and why he felt it wasn’t his responsibility to help those who didn’t look out for him at the start of his music career.
“I couldn’t even get a deal in New York City,” he said. “My deal is with Eminem from Detroit. Dr. Dre from the West Coast. Because they were going ‘No, no, no. We like real. We want the real, but wait, yours is too real.’ It is what it is. It was no deal. There was nothing there for me. This is why—People always misinterpret what they’re [actually seeing]. Because I’m the underdog, when I get to the winning slot I’m going—I’m not looking back to help people who weren’t helping me in the whole time. Who would be doing that?”
Lastly, 50 Cent again addressed his relationship with those in G-Unit. He went on to take some responsibility for the group and then explained why members of groups like the St. Lunatics and D12 didn’t receive the individual shine that those in G-Unit did.
“Can you name every member of D12? Okay,” the rapper said. “Can you name every member of the St. Lunatics? I’mma tell you why. I’mma tell you why. I’mma tell you why you can’t name them. It’s because they all had to wait til after the second cycle of their leader. So, Nelly’s first album popped. Then Nelly’s second album popped. And because those albums were hugely successful albums it took a long time for the record to be over for them to get to the next album. So, it was so long that everybody just became they crew with Nelly. It’s like Em. D12’s the crew with Em. G-Unit, the first record came out, boom. I forced the G-Unit album to come out. Interscope didn’t want the G-Unit album. They wanted the next 50 Cent record. It just sold 13 million records. So, I forced that record to come out. It caused Lloyd Banks to sell three million records off of the momentum following right off of that. Buck, 1.8 million records. Then Yayo like 800-something thousand…And then it’s like ‘Okay, now we gotta work.’”

Kendrick Lamar Raps About "Democrips And Rebloodicans" During Big Boy's Real 92.3 Radio Show

Kendrick Lamar appeared on the launch of radio personality Big Boy’s return to radio today (March 9) and freestyled over the instrumental of The Notorious B.I.G.’s “The What” on the eighteenth anniversary of the rapper’s death. 
“From Compton to congress,” the TDE artist rapped. "It’s set-trippin’ all around / AIn’t nothin’ new but a [few] of / Democrips and Reblodicans / Red State versus a Blue State / Which one you governin’? / They give us guns and drugs / Call us thugs.”
During the interview portion of his visit, the Compton, California rapper explained why did not attend the Grammys February 8.
"I had to turn that album in," Kendrick said. "I was on a deadline, on the clock.
"It's crazy, as a kid I never thought of no Grammy," Kendrick continued. "As a kid, writing raps that was way over my head. Just to be accomplished with any award it can be BET awards or anything, it's a compliment to me."

HipHopDX Returns To Scene Of Biggie Shooting

18 years after his death, HipHopDX retraced the location of The Notorious B.I.G.'s last moments and visited the site of his shooting in Los Angeles.
Tracking the path Biggie took from a Vibe after party to the traffic light where he was shot in 1997, DX's Andre Grant helped capture the modern-day setting of the still iconic intersection of Wilshire Boulevard and Fairfax Avenue.
The intersection is currently the site of the under-construction Academy Museum of Motion Pictures, a planned 300,000 square foot space dedicated to the history of and ongoing education about film.
B.I.G. was only 24-years old when he was murdered. After the shooting, the Ready To Die rapper was rushed to Cedars-Sinai Medical Center where he was pronounced dead early on the morning of March 9 following an emergency surgery.
More than ten years after his death an autopsy report for Christopher Wallace was made public. The report revealed that three of the four shots that struck Biggie were not fatal, the shot that killed him injuring his colon, liver, heart, and one lung.