Showing posts with label P DIDDY. Show all posts
Showing posts with label P DIDDY. Show all posts

Friday, March 1, 2013

Sean "Diddy" Combs & Mark Wahlberg Launch AQUAhydrate (VIDEO)




Sean "Diddy" Combs & Mark Wahlberg have teamed up with the Water company AQUAhydrate.
I can almost guarantee when you order water in a nightclub in 3 weeks you will be sold AQUAhydrate for no less than $6 a bottle. Diddy has mastered the ability to work his products into our lives effortlessly.
I am pretty sure we will all be drinking AQUAhydrate on daily.


Wednesday, November 28, 2012

Kanye West & Lil Wayne Perform at DJ Khaled's Birthday Celebration (VIDEO)




DJ Khaled’s motto is “We the Best,” so it was only right that he had two of the best MCs in the game perform at his birthday party at LIV Miami over Thanksgiving weekend. Yeezy got on the mic for “Can’t Tell Me Nothing” and “I Wish You Would” as Khaled played hypeman before Weezy and the YMCMB crew stormed the stage for “No Worries.”

Thursday, August 30, 2012

Chris Lighty Commits Suicide (50 cent, Diddy's Manager)


Chris Lighty, an influential music industry insider whose roster of artists epitomized the freewheeling ‘90s hip-hop lifestyle, has died, according to Vibe. Reports are not yet conclusive, but there is speculation that Lighty’s death at 43 was a suicide by gunshot.
Without rapping a syllable or scratching a record, the Bronx-raised Lighty still had a profound influence on the development of hip-hop and its rise to commercial prominence. His Violator Management represented hitmakers 50 Cent, Mariah Carey, Sean “Diddy” Combs, Busta Rhymes, and others. Lighty also featured in the development of the hip-hop underground: he was a champion of De La Soul and A Tribe Called Quest, and handled lead rapper Q-Tip’s career even after Quest had called it quits. (He was interviewed prominently in “Beats, Rhymes, and Life: The Travels of A Tribe Called Quest,” a 2011 documentary about the group.


In so doing, Lighty modeled a hip-hop-influenced version of the corporation: one that spent money lavishy, partied hard, and drove bargains harder. Others involved in the business of hip-hop often looked to Violator for cues, and Lighty himself was often seen as a big brother to his artists.
Violator was more than a management company. The New York outfit was also a record label, putting out several compilations of hip-hop featuring rappers and producers on Lighty’s roster. Violator Entertainment released new music by Mobb Deep, the Beatnuts, Fat Joe, LL Cool J, and other Empire State rap voices. Through Violator, Lighty also tried its hand, if less successfully, at film production.

story 4rm nj.com

Monday, July 23, 2012

Future - Same Damn Time (Remix) ft. Diddy, Ludacris

Future connects with Diddy and Ludacris in the flashy video for the remix to his ubiquitous single “Same Damn Time” off his debut album Pluto.

Friday, June 8, 2012

Quincy Feat. Kendre - Stay Awhile (Video)



Diddy's Stepson Quincy drops his 1st single which turns out to be a banger.
It's already getting spins on radio through out the Country.
Diddy said he didn't help the kid develop any of his music. He showed up one day and said Dad listen to this.

Its # 5 on 106 & park,
Even Justin Bieber makes a Cameo in the Video








Monday, April 23, 2012

MA$E owes the IRS Big Mula





Former Bad Boy rapper Ma$e has run afoul of the federal government, as the latest artist to owe a six-figure tax bill.
TMZ.com reports that Ma$e owes over $124,000 in back taxes.
According to the IRS, the rapper-turned-preacher owes taxes for the year 2000, 2001, and 2004.
The news of Ma$e’s tax troubles comes on the heels of the former star’s return to the arena of rap.
Ma$e, who topped the charts with singles like “Mo’ Money, Mo’ Problems” and “Can’t Nobody Hold Me Down,” is reportedly working on tracks for French Montana’s upcoming release Excuse My French, as well as Rick Ross’ pending album God Forgives I Don’t.