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Month: February 2017

Officer Jeronimo Yanez Pleads Not Guilty In Philando Castile Death

February 27, 2017March 3, 2017

by Kevito

Last summer, the world was shocked to see the death of Philando Castile in living color, live on Facebook Live. Now, fast forward, his alleged assailant is pleading not guilty to the charge of manslaughter, as well as pleading to move the trial.

Officer Jeronimo Yanez, on leave from the St. Anthony Police Department, has a hearing scheduled for April 3, with a tentative date for trial slated for May 30. His attorney, Tom Kelly, is planning on filing a motion next month for a change of venue from St. Paul, just a few miles from where the shooting happened at.

Judge William Leary III denied a defense request to dismiss this case earlier this month.

The argument put forth was that the charges should be dropped because Castile, 32, put himself at risk by allegedly consuming marijuana and disobeying police orders. Prosecutors are arguing that Yanez, 28, acted unreasonably when he fired on Castile seven times while still in his vehicle.

Officer Yanez is being charged with second-degree manslaughter, two felony counts of dangerous discharge of a firearm and reckless endangerment of Castile’s girlfriend, Diamond Reynolds, and her four-year-old daughter, who were also in the car at the time. Millions were angered and in a rage after seeing Reynolds live stream of the shooting’s aftermath on Facebook. Protests, rallies and more sparked like a wildfire as several other instances—including the murder of Alton Sterling—took place within moments of Philando Castile’s death.

We shall stay updating you as this story continues to develop.

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Jay Z Blasts Pop Radio For Compromising Artist Creativity Over Ad Dollars

February 24, 2017

by Cherise Johnson

Frank Ocean surprised fans with a new Apple Music Beats 1 Radio show called Blonded on Friday (February 24). But the show itself wasn’t the biggest headline. On the program, Jay Z addressed how pop radio has affected the way consumers are exposed to new talent as well as how it puts a restraint on artist creativity all in the name of advertising money.

As a superstar mogul, Jay Z has made an attempt to make it easier for artists to get their music out to the masses and get adequately paid for it with the acquisition of TIDAL, competing with streaming services such as Soundcloud, Spotify and ironically, Apple Music. While TIDAL as a company may have their own issues, Jay’s original objective is still admirable.

“You take these pop stations, they’re reaching 18-34 young white females,” the 47-year-old rap vet indicates. “So they’re playing music based on those tastes. And then they’re taking those numbers and they’re going to advertising agencies and people are paying numbers based on the audience that they have. So these places are not even based on music. Their playlist isn’t based on music.”

He further goes into the politics of artists trying to make it onto radio, something that most aspiring musicians dream of becoming a reality one day. He believes that as technology progresses, the relationship between musician and radio has mostly regressed since radio has become a slave to ad dollars and not music. Jigga goes on to praise Frank for being one of the artists who has maintained the integrity of his art and explains why maintaining that integrity is important.

“The more times a person like yourself can bypass that, it’s better for the arts,” he tells the singer. “And it’s better for the audience because you have to have a level of discipline or just a belief to put music out in this place where not everyone can. People, they want to shoot [to be on radio] and they’re making music that’s not really conditioned to who they are so that they can reach a certain platform.”

Jay’s sentiments come on the heels of Frank Ocean’s open letter criticizing Grammy producers Ken Ehrlich and writer David Wild, as well as the The Recording Academy as a whole, for being out of touch with today’s musical climate.

“Believe the people,” he penned in the searing letter. “Believe the ones who’d rather watch select performances from your program on YouTube the day after because your show puts them to sleep. Use the old gramophone to actually listen, bro. I’m one of the best alive. And if you’re up for a discussion about the cultural bias and general nerve damage the show you produce suffers from, then I’m all for it.”

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Leon Ware, R&B Songwriting Legend, Dead @ 77

February 24, 2017

By Jordan Runtagh

Leon Ware, the songwriter behind hits for R&B titans including Michael Jackson, Marvin Gaye, the Isley Brothers and Quincy Jones died on Thursday at the age of 77. Though the cause of death has yet to be revealed, he was diagnosed with prostate cancer in the mid ’00s.

Born on Feb. 16, 1940 in Detroit, Ware began his career in the late ’60s as a songwriter for Berry Gordy’s Motown label, where he first began collaborating with Gaye, one of the imprint’s brightest stars. He would later co-produce the singer’s 1976 offering, I Want You—co-writing every track. The record would go on to sell over a million copies.

Perhaps the crowning achievement of Ware’s early Motown career is the Isley Brother’s 1967 proto-funk track, “Got to Have You Back.”

At the dawn of the ’70s, Ware teamed up with Motown diva Diana Ross‘ brother Arthur “T-Boy” Ross, penning the song “I Wanna Be Where You Are.” The tune found its way onto Motown golden boy Michael Jackson’s solo debut, Got to Be There, in 1972.

The song’s success on the R&B charts netted Ware a solo record contract of his own, leading to his self titled debut later that year. The disc failed to chart, but influenced a generation of soul artists.

As his reputation soared, Ware worked with a host of artists throughout the ’70s, including Ike and Tina Turner, the Isley Brothers, Donny Hathaway, Minnie Riperton and the Miracles. Production maestro Quincy Jones, later the guiding hand behind the King of Pop’s Off the Wall and Thriller smashes, tapped Ware to co-write two songs—including the title track—on his 1974 jazz fusion album, Body Heat.

As the new millennium approached, Ware’s work frequently appeared as samples in hip hop tracks by the likes of Tupac Shakur, Jay Z, and A Tribe Called Quest.

More recently, Ware served as composer and producer on Theophilus London’s 2014 album, Vibes. 

Lenny Kravitz shared a tribute to Ware on Instagram Friday afternoon, delivering a comprehensive rundown of the late artist’s musical highlights to his followers.

“Leon Ware. The man behind Marvin Gaye’s “I Want You,” and songs for Michael Jackson, @QuincyDJones, @Maxwell, Minnie Riperton and many more as well as so many great albums of his own including #musicalmassage.”

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Karriem Riggins Releases Sophomore Album ‘Headnod Suite’

February 24, 2017

by zo

As promised, Karriem Riggins has released his sophomore solo album Headnod Suite today. Announced during our conversation with the Stones Throw producer back in November, Headnod Suite is the crown on Riggins’ most visible year to date, following a grip of high-profile collaborations (Riggins produced Kanye West’s “30 Hours,” Kaytranada’s “Bus Ride” and the entirety of Common’s latest album Black America Again,) and his critically-adored 2012 solo debut Alone Together.

Headnot Suite follows the beats-only formula of its predecessor, clocking in at 29 tracks of neck-cranking gold, all littered with the precision of Riggins’ jazz chop pedigree (boiling over on the album’s closer, featuring Derrick Hodge and James Poyser.) In the aforementioned interview, Riggins also states that he’s already begun on Common’s next outing and has plenty more on the way (though it’s hard to say just when we’ll get to hear that follow-up.) Stream Karriem Riggins’ new album down below and head over to Stones Throw to cop the record on vinyl. You can also grab a digital copy via iTunes. The jury’s still out on whether that massive trove of unreleased Madlib collaborations will ever see the light of day, but until then, this’ll certainly hold us over. Stay tuned for the prolific beatsman’s next transmission.

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Malcom X

February 24, 2017

Malcolm X was born Malcolm Little on May 19, 1925 in Omaha, Nebraska. His mother, Louise Norton Little, was a homemaker occupied with the family’s eight children. His father, Earl Little, was an outspoken Baptist minister and avid supporter of Black Nationalist leader Marcus Garvey. Earl’s civil rights activism prompted death threats from the white supremacist organization Black Legion, forcing the family to relocate twice before Malcolm’s fourth birthday.

Regardless of the Little’s efforts to elude the Legion, in 1929, their Lansing, Michigan home was burned to the ground. Two years later, Earl’s body was found lying across the town’s trolley tracks. Police ruled both incidents as accidents, but the Littles were certain that members of the Black Legion were responsible. Louise suffered emotional breakdown several years after the death of her husband and was committed to a mental institution, while her children were split up among various foster homes and orphanages.

Eventually, Malcolm and his long-time friend, Malcolm “Shorty” Jarvis, moved back to Boston. In 1946, they were arrested and convicted on burglary charges, and Malcolm was sentenced to 10 years in prison, although he was granted parole after serving seven years.

Recalling his days in school, he used the time to further his education. It was during this period of self-enlightenment that Malcolm’s brother Reginald would visit and discuss his recent conversion to the Muslim religion. Reginald belonged to the religious organization the Nation of Islam (NOI).

Intrigued, Malcolm began to study the teachings of NOI leader Elijah Muhammad. Muhammad taught that white society actively worked to keep African-Americans from empowering themselves and achieving political, economic, and social success. Among other goals, the NOI fought for a state of their own, separate from one inhabited by white people. By the time he was paroled in 1952, Malcolm was a devoted follower with the new surname “X” (He considered “Little” a slave name and chose the “X” to signify his lost tribal name.).

Intelligent and articulate, Malcolm was appointed as a minister and national spokesman for the Nation of Islam. Elijah Muhammad also charged him with establishing new mosques in cities such as Detroit, Michigan, and Harlem. Malcolm utilized newspaper columns, as well as radio and television, to communicate the NOI’s message across the United States. His charisma, drive, and conviction attracted an astounding number of new members. Malcolm was largely credited with increasing membership in the NOI from 500 in 1952 to 30,000 in 1963.

The crowds and controversy surrounding Malcolm made him a media magnet. He was featured in a weeklong television special with Mike Wallace in 1959, called The Hate That Hate Produced. The program explored the fundamentals of the NOI, and tracked Malcolm’s emergence as one of its most important leaders. After the special, Malcolm was faced with the uncomfortable reality that his fame had eclipsed that of his mentor Elijah Muhammad. In addition to the media, Malcolm’s vivid personality had captured the government’s attention. As membership in the NOI continued to grow, FBI agents infiltrated the organization (one even acted as Malcolm’s bodyguard) and secretly placed bugs, wiretaps, cameras, and other surveillance equipment to monitor the group’s activities.
Malcolm’s faith was dealt a crushing blow at the height of the civil rights movement in 1963. He learned that his mentor and leader, Elijah Muhammad, was secretly having relations with as many as six women within the Nation of Islam organization. As if that were not enough, Malcolm found out that some of these relationships had resulted in children.

Since joining the NOI, Malcolm had strictly adhered to the teachings of Muhammad, which included remaining celibate until his marriage to Betty Shabazz in 1958. Malcolm refused Muhammad’s request to help cover up the affairs and subsequent children. He was deeply hurt by Muhammad’s actions, because he had previously considered him a living prophet. Malcolm also felt guilty about the masses he had led to join the NOI, which he now felt was a fraudulent organization built on too many lies to ignore.

Shortly after his shocking discovery, Malcolm received criticism for a comment he made regarding the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. “[Kennedy] never foresaw that the chickens would come home to roost so soon,” said Malcolm. After the statement, Elijah Muhammad “silenced” Malcolm for 90 days. Malcolm, however, suspected he was silenced for another reason. In March 1964, Malcolm terminated his relationship with the NOI. Unable to look past Muhammad’s deception, Malcolm decided to found his own religious organization, the Muslim Mosque, Inc.

That same year, Malcolm went on a pilgrimage to Mecca, which proved to be life altering for him. For the first time, Malcolm shared his thoughts and beliefs with different cultures and found the response to be overwhelmingly positive. When he returned, Malcolm said he had met “blonde-haired, blued-eyed men I could call my brothers.” He returned to the United States with a new outlook on integration and a new hope for the future. This time when Malcolm spoke, instead of just preaching to African-Americans, he had a message for all races.

After Malcolm resigned his position in the Nation of Islam and renounced Elijah Muhammad, relations between the two had become increasingly volatile. FBI informants working undercover in the NOI warned officials that Malcolm had been marked for assassination–one undercover officer had even been ordered to help plant a bomb in Malcolm’s car.

After repeated attempts on his life, Malcolm rarely traveled anywhere without bodyguards. On February 14, 1965 the home where Malcolm, Betty, and their four daughters lived in East Elmhurst, New York was firebombed. Luckily, the family escaped physical injury.

One week later, however, Malcolm’s enemies were successful in their ruthless attempt. At a speaking engagement in the Manhattan’s Audubon Ballroom on February 21, 1965, three gunmen rushed Malcolm onstage. They shot him 15 times at close range. The 39-year-old was pronounced dead on arrival at New York’s Columbia Presbyterian Hospital.

Fifteen hundred people attended Malcolm’s funeral in Harlem on February 27, 1965 at the Faith Temple Church of God in Christ (now Child’s Memorial Temple Church of God in Christ). After the ceremony, friends took the shovels away from the waiting gravediggers and buried Malcolm themselves.

Later that year, Betty gave birth to their twin daughters.

Malcolm’s assassins, Talmadge Hayer, Norman 3X Butler, and Thomas 15X Johnson, were convicted of first-degree murder in March 1966. The three men were all members of the Nation of Islam. Malcolm X’s legacy has moved through generations as the subject of numerous documentaries, books, and movies. A tremendous resurgence of interest occurred in 1992 when director Spike Lee released the acclaimed movie, Malcolm X. The film received Oscar nominations for Best Actor (Denzel Washington) and Best Costume Design.

Malcolm X is buried at the Ferncliff Cemetery in Hartsdale, New York.

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Dr. Khalid Abdul Muhammad: The truth terrorist

February 23, 2017

On the 69th anniversary of his physical birth, a couple of Khalid Muhammad’s comrades reflected on his legacy. Locally, Tuesday, Jan. 12, one tribute was conducted at a Brooklyn location on Atlantic Avenue, while another was held at Harlem’s U.C.L.A.— the University on the Corner of Lenox Avenue.

Whether as minister at the Nation of Islam’s Temple #7 (2031 5th Ave., late 1980s to 1993) or as chairman of the New Black Panther Party (1995 to 2001) the Black Power general unapologetically made his presence known while here on this physical plateau.

“Dr. Khalid represented a special brand of the warrior spirit,” reflected African scholar-warrior Dr. Leonard Jeffries, who commemorates his own (79th) physical day Jan. 19. “He was a product of our enormous struggle at the highest level.”

With this current generation of Americanized-Africans pleading that “Black lives matter” and with police killings of civilians escalating annually for the past decade—surpassing 1,000 in 2015—some wonder what the uncompromising Muhammad would say today?

“I would try to embody him in this climate of terrorism,” assessed Divine Allah, one-time NJ chairman of the New Black Panther Party and national youth minister. “He would say to us, in a strict manner … ‘The revolution won’t be televised; it won’t be on Instagram or Twitter.’ He would say… ‘Dammit, it gotta happen somewhere! At least make the revolution happen upside that crackers head!’ I honestly believe those would be his words if he were here right now.”

As some activists determined that the “government-sponsored” crack epidemic destabilized Black communities across New York City during the late 1980s and throughout the 1990s, it was the transplanted Texan with the shiny bald head the Harlem youth gravitated towards, as proved by 1999’s Million Youth March along Malcolm X Boulevard

Allah said, “He always said to us ‘Connect the dots, expand your base.’ … Those were some of his lessons as a Panther. ‘If you’re going to be in the church, be a revolutionary pastor … If you’re going to be a janitor, be a revolutionary janitor … If you’re going to be a teacher, be a revolutionary teacher. Whatever hat you wore, be a revolutionary.’ … He stressed that!”

Always speaking truth to power, Muhammad brought the knowledge he learned throughout his life and shared it freely.

“He understood that he had some young brothers around him who weren’t stupid … people who were organizing their communities … He was like, ‘Since you’re organizing, fuse this into that,’” recalled Allah. “We haven’t had anyone else like him. … We can only continue on where he left off at.”

Jeffries concluded, “I was fortunate to be with him on many of these battlefields. Dr. Khalid was in the middle of these struggles. The brother has to be recognized for making his contributions … like Frantz Fannon said, ‘Every generation has to make their contributions to the forward march of our people, or betray it.’”

Fruit of Islam member and long-time Khalid supporter, Daleel Muhammad, said, “Our brother, Dr. Khalid Abdul Muhammad, was and will always be remembered as a soldier, a warrior, a minister, a captain and a trainer of men. He inspired me, and others, with his boldness, whether in private conversations or whether in public arenas. He was an uncompromising straight talker with no chaser. In his spirit was a profound love for Black empowerment and Black development. On a personal note, he inspired me to study more, love the N.O.I. more, love Minister Farrakhan more and to love Black people more. He trained the brothers with tact, spirit and military science. He left an indelible and an undeniable legacy that still resonates within me when I hear his name or his masterful theological and historical speeches. Long live the spirit of Dr. Khalid Abdul Muhammad. Gone, but not forgotten.”

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Harlem’s revolutionary trinity: Khalid Muhammad, Malcolm X and Allah the Father

February 23, 2017

Last week’s edition of Amsterdam News spanned some significant dates that tied together three different alpha males whose lifetime efforts immensely affected many communities throughout the African Diaspora. Friday, Feb. 17, marked 16 years since the Black History Hitman, Dr. Khalid Abdul Muhammad, transitioned onto the ancestral realm in Atlanta Tuesday, Feb. 21, was the 52nd anniversary of Malcolm X’s execution at Washington Heights’ Audubon Ballroom (3940 Broadway), and Wednesday, Feb. 22, was the 89th anniversary of Allah the Father’s physical birth in Danville, Va.

“When you’re a Black leader of the magnitude of a Malcolm X, Khalid Muhammad and the Father, and your headquarters are based in Harlem, you are one of the cogs in the wheel that’s making Harlem special,” said Abiodun Oyewole, founding member of legendary hip-hop progenitors, the Last Poets.

All three migrated to Harlem and studied the teachings of the Honorable Elijah Muhammad at the Nation of Islam’s Temple #7 in Harlem. Malcolm X became the minister there when it was located at 102 W. 116th St., and The Father joined his wife Dora there in 1959, where he was known as Brother Clarence 13X.

“The impact those two men had on giving young African-Americans an alternative way of seeing and analyzing the American political and economic system, and also giving themselves an alternative avenue to develop as Black men, build their families and fashion communities,” explained Professor James Small. “Khalid’s analysis of white supremacy, white oppression in the Black community, his analysis of the damage to the Black psyche done by the white-control of the socialization process in the educational system, probably had no equal.”

Khalid Muhammad was minister of Temple #7 when it was at 2033 Fifth Ave. and 125th Street during the late 1980s into the early 1990s.

Clarence 13X changed his name to Allah and departed from the NOI’s doctrine in September 1963 and focused on teaching the urban youths. Malcolm X changed his name to El Hajj Malik El Shabazz upon announcing his departure as well in March 1964.

“Allah felt that he could better lead if he took that same body of knowledge that the NOI had and took it to the brothers in the streets and give it to the Black youths, and so was born the Five Percenters,” Small explained. “Malcolm X started the OAAU and Muslim Mosque Incorporated.”

Oyewole added, “I only met the Father once, at their school, but I do know about his work. Anything that’s for Black people, I support. He galvanized young men to know who they are and their purpose, almost like a rite of passage to become men. Malcolm represented a type of royalty we all appreciate. He gave us examples of what a Black man should be.”

Khalid left the NOI in 1994 and headed the New Black Panther Party shortly thereafter, also focusing on the youths who were overcoming the crack epidemic.

“These brothers brought to the Black community the primary ideological cluster of information that the youth are using around the world today to organize their communities, to build businesses, to build institutions, to build rites of passage programs, to fight police brutality,” noted Small. “After all three of these men left the NOI, their focus was on political and economic redemption. Youths around the world are now using their teachings to raise their consciousness and inform and instruct their behavior and to achieve the goals that will lead to self-determination and freedom and independence for Black people wherever we find ourselves.”

Allah the Father was also assassinated, June 13, 1969, in the elevator of 21 W. 112th St. at the Martin Luther King Towers.

“All of these folks have died for a purpose,” Oyewole explained. “They were in the throes of trying to do something really good for their people, and someone decided to take them out before their time. That has multiplied their existence because of the power they represented and the impact that they made. So I am very proud to come from that strand. They are still here because of the work they left. Many of us are still trying to live it.”

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Suge Knight murder trial postponed, again, as son lashes out over father’s treatment

February 23, 2017

BY Nancy Dillon

Suge Knight’s murder trial was delayed again Wednesday as his college student son blasted the rap mogul’s “extreme” jail restrictions.

The founder of Death Row Records, who previously agreed to push his February trial date to May, bumped it again to early summer.

His lawyer said the defense still needs to receive and review a “terabyte” of evidence from prosecutors, including recorded jail calls.

Speaking in court with his parents, sister and son watching in the gallery, Knight complained about the strict protective order that has him living in virtual isolation.

Judge rejects Suge Knight’s bid to peek at Dr. Dre’s bank records

His phone access is limited to lawyer calls only, he said. Meanwhile, his elderly parents had to fight to get on his visitor list, and his adult kids and fiancée Toi-Lin Kelly remain barred.

“It’s extreme,” Knight’s second eldest son Suge Jacob Knight told the Daily News after the hearing. “They’re treating him like a mass murderer.”

The 21-year-old son said he travelled from Fisk University in Nashville to attend the court hearing just for a chance to see his dad in person.

Marion “Suge” Knight is accused of running over and killing 55-year-old Terry Carter.

The last time they saw each other was two years ago, he said, when Knight dropped him off to return to school a week before the deadly parking lot confrontation that landed Knight in jail.

Suge Knight delays murder trial as lawyers fight to lower bail

“He almost died three times in jail,” the son said, referring to his dad’s blood clots and an emergency appendix surgery. “I’m worried about him.”

He said he was turned away when he showed up at the jail last year – and claimed the protective order is hurting his dad’s ability to defend himself.

“Going in today and hearing my dad ask to be treated like a regular inmate, it actually hurt me. Why does he even have to ask for that?” he said. “I feel like it’s taking time away from his actual case.”

Knight is accused of intentionally running over two men in the parking lot of a Compton burger stand in January 2015, killing local businessman Terry Carter, 55.

Suge Knight files suit claiming Dr. Dre hired hitmen to kill him

One of Carter’s adult daughters also attended the hearing Wednesday but left without speaking to reporters.
“They’re treating him like a mass murderer,” said son Suge Jacob Knight.
“They’re treating him like a mass murderer,” said son Suge Jacob Knight. (Nancy Dillon / New York Daily News)

Knight has pleaded not guilty in the case, claiming he was the victim of an armed ambush. He turned himself in for questioning and has been behind bars ever since, unable to make his $10 million bail.

The reasoning behind the protective order limiting his jail privileges remains sealed.

Prosecutors allege the founder of Death Row Records was upset about a fight with Cle (Bone) Sloan when he intentionally hit the gas on his Ford Raptor pickup and mowed down Sloan along with Carter.

Ice Cube and Dr. Dre reportedly cleared in wrongful death suit

Sloan was working as a security staffer on the Dr. Dre-produced NWA biopic “Straight Outta Compton.”

Knight later sued in civil court, claiming Dre wanted him dead to avoid paying him under an alleged lifetime management deal.

“Given that Dre has had zero interaction with Suge since leaving Death Row Records in 1996, we hope that Suge’s lawyer has lots of malicious prosecution insurance,” an attorney for Dre said in a statement reacting to the lawsuit.

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Alan Colmes Liberal Half Of Fox News’ ‘Hannity & Colmes’ Dead @ 66

February 23, 2017

Alan Colmes, the cable news and radio commentator who, as half of Fox News’ early and long-running Hannity & Colmes was the network’s go-to voice for a more liberal viewpoint, is dead following a brief illness at the age of 66.

Colmes death was announced on Fox News in a segment narrated by Hannity, who called Colmes “one of the nicest, kindest and most generous people.” Fox News confirmed his death.Colmes died on February 23, 2017 at the age of 66 after suffering a “brief illness,” which Stuart Varney disclosed to be cancer. The commentator was a talk radio host before and after joining Fox News in 1996, hired by CEO Roger Ailes to co-host Hannity & Colmes, the two hosts offering their right-left (respectively) perspectives to the issues of the day. The program lasted through 2008, with Hannity soon going it alone on his now solo-titled show. Colmes continued on a a Fox News contributor, appearing on such programs as The O’Reilly Factor, Red Eye and Fox News Watch.

Colmes was the author of 2003’s Red, White & Liberal: How Left is Right and Right is Wrong.

Colmes was also a fervent and prolific tweeter, with apparently automated messages going out on his account even today, including two minutes after the announcement of his death. Though the subsequent post was deleted, Colmes, who posted numerous tweets on any given day, might have been delighted with getting in a last jab.

The deleted post said, “Actual economists: Trump’s rosy forecast is baloney.”

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Jay Z Is The First Rapper To Be Inducted Into The Songwriters Hall of Fame

February 22, 2017

 by Kevito

It took almost 50 years for the Songwriters Hall of Fame to note the accomplishments and talents of its latest inductees, but as they say, better late than never.

This year’s class includes Max Martin, Berry Gordy, Babyface, Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis, Chicago and Marcy Project’s own, Jay Z. With his inclusion the Roc Nation founder, born Shawn Carter, becomes the Songwriters Hall of Fame’s first rapper to be inducted. The 21-time Grammy winner has written hits over the course of two-and-a-half decades of rap dominance. From “Dead Presidents II” to “Can I Get A…” to “Izzo (H.O.V.A.) to his duets with Alicia Keys (“Empire State of Mind”) and his wife, Beyoncé (“’03 Bonnie & Clyde”) — Jay has been at the forefront, challenging hip-hop lyricists to step up their bars.

“[Jay Z] was in a space where, even though he’s had more pop albums than anyone else, because he did it through rap,” said Chic guitarist Nile Rodgers, who announced the inductees on CBS This Morning. “It is massive. He has changed the way that we listen to music. He’s changed the way that we have fun.”

In addition to Jay Z, the rest of the class is pretty dynamic. Max Martin, a writer or co-writer of 22 No. 1 songs to chart the Billboard Hot 100, third only to John Lennon and Paul McCartney. Motown CEO + founder, Berry Gordy, contributed to many songs for Jackie Wilson, Marvin Gaye and Diana Ross. Babyface, as is no surprise, is one of the most gifted singer-songwriters, bringing in 16 No. 1s to the chart. Jimmy Jam & Terry Lewis created legendary hits for Janet and Michael Jackson, Usher, Mary J. Blige, Mariah Carey and others. Chicago, the trio of Robert Lamm, James Pankow and Peter Cetera, have their own brand of classics such as “If You Leave Me Now,” “Saturday in the Park,” and “25 or 6 to 4”.

The Songwriters Hall of Fame’s 48th annual induction will take place on June 5 at the Marriott Marquis Hotel in New York City.

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