Saturday, April 19, 2014

VladTV's Vixen of the Week: The Thickness of Bad Girl Ms. Cat (@mscat215)



Catya "Cat" Washington, aka Ms. Cat is no doubt one of the baddest chicks in the game. She's been featured in countless videos, magazine spreads and TV screens over the years, and shows no signs of slowing down.


The Philly native is best known for starring in Oxygen's hit series "Bad Girls Club" and for dating YMCMB rapper Drake, and in fact was the muse behind countless rhymes. She gets a name drop on Take Care's "Shot For Me" as well as a few bars from his verse on Game's "Good Girls Go Bad," where he spits:


"This song reminds me of Cat from Philly/A girl I use to love till she started acting silly/ Her heart is a 'lil chilly. She a 'lil too carefree/In 10 years whose payin' for all that therapy .....n***a not me."


Whether or not Drizzy was the one for her, she clearly could get just about whomever she wants with a body like that, making her a clear choice for VladTV's Vixen of the Week. Be sure to follow her on Twitter and Instagram, and check out some of her sexiest flicks above.


Chris Brown Before the Fame (@chrisbrown)


T.D.E. CEO Responds To Suge Knight Over K.Dot's Label Deal (@TopDawgEnt @sugeknight)



Over the past few weeks, Suge Knight has voiced his opinions about the record deals of popular West Coast rappers Kendrick Lamar and Game.


After an interview with BET this week, Knight clarified his claims and states that Interscope records receives revenue from Kendrick Lamar.


"Not only do these companies get the royalties and the publishing, if [the artist] do a show and $100,000 come in, the manager gets 20 percent, now it's $80,000," he said. "Kendrick gets half, the record company gets half, which is ridiculous."


T.D.E. CEO Anthony "Top Dawg" Tiffith fired back at Knight's claims via Twitter on Wednesday (April 16) offering his label for a dollar if Knight can provide proof from his claims.


"TELL SUGE I SAID IF HE KAN SHOW ME 1 CHECK WE PAID 2 INTERSCOPE OFF OF R TOUING..ILL SELL HIM TDE 4 $1, NOBODY GETS SHIT OFF OUR TOURS. #TOP" he tweeted.


Suge also added in his interview that rappers like Game and K.Dot get sketchy deals regardless of their influence in the community.


"[All I was saying was] it's not fair for two n****s from Compton to be gettin' f****d, and it's not good for me to have knowledge and not pass it on to them," he said. "It wasn't about putting them as men down or as artists down, it was about putting the person who's in control down, saying 'How are you f****ng over these dudes from Compton when they're making a difference for your company?"'


Source: rapradar.com


Reunited: Serge Ibaka Cuffs Keri Hilson Once Again (@kerihilson, @sergeibaka9)



NBA Baller Serge Ibaka and singer Keri Hilson split up late last year, but it seems that the Oklahoma power forward has woo'd his former lover back.


The two took a pic on the court which Ibaka posted to his Instagram with the caption "Had to get my girl back."


Take a look at the happy couple above.


T-Pain Says the Rap Game Needs Original Content [VIDEO]


Rapper T-Pain has been pretty much MIA in the R&B game but he’s still around. In fact, he’s currently on the road on his I Am T-Pain tour. Although he’s been away from rap for a period of time, the Auto-Tune crooner says he’s ready to come out with new material.


In his interview with 107.5FM radio personality Aaron Traylor, T-Pizzle believes the rap game is in dire need of fresh music.


“At this point, I’m proud of myself and ready to show the world that they need me,” he says. “I think the game needs me, they need original content.”


“I’ve always come out with something original and I don’t think anybody is doing that anymore,” he continues. “The game needs T-Pain and I’m the best to ever do this.”


True indeed. From 2006 to 2010, T-Pain has appeared and/or produced over 50 hit singles. The Florida-based artist’s most successful collaborative hit was Flo Rida’s debut single ‘Low,’ which has sold 6 million copies worldwide.


T-Pain is working on his fifth solo album, ‘Stoicville: The Phoenix,’ which has no release date as of yet.


You can catch the “Rappa-Ternt-Sanga” on his I Am T-Pain tour. Peep the remaining dates below.


April 19 — Great Falls, Montana | Mansfield Center Ballroom

April 22 — Missoula, Montana | Wilma Theater

April 23 — Billings, Montana | Babcock Theater

April 25 — Des Moines, Iowa | Val Air Ballroom

May 3 — Riverside, Calif. | University of California

May 10 — San Angelo, Texas | The Venue



20 Hip-Hop Personalities Share Memories of Nas' 'Illmatic [EXCLUSIVE]


Favorite Memory Involving 'Illmatic':


"I was a freshman in high school, and my boys I was running with, they were much older, I was running with a bunch of seniors. So, one of my best friends had come to pick me up from school, 'cause I had been talking to this girl on the phone for a couple days and needed a ride to get to her house. On the way over there, he had 'Illmatic' playing in the tape deck. If I remember correctly, he had 'It Ain't Hard to Tell' playing and that was one of my first times hearing it. So I was like 'Who is this n---- rapping over Michael Jackson?' And he was like 'Yo, this Nas.' And understand, I was like the biggest Micheal Jackson fan ever as a kid, so, to hear somebody rhyming over 'Human Nature,' at first it hurt me like, 'F---, I didn't get to do that, like, he beat me to it.' But, riding in the car, listening to that, and I just remember saying 'Aww s---, this s--- is dope as f---.'


I don't know if I liked the song that much because I knew I was about to get the girl as well, if that sweetened it. So, I got to the girl house and after that, she was my girlfriend. Well, at least for a couple weeks. But it was cool while it lasted."


Favorite Song From the Album:


"If you had me at gunpoint, I'd probably say 'Represent.' It's a favorite for me because it has all the elements that are not supposed to work. Like, the sounds that Premo used, it almost sounds like some Christmas carol s---. So, that's just not supposed to work in the hip-hop context. Two, there's no real hook other than his boy shouting 'represent.' Having your friends in the booth can go really good or really bad. And most of the time, it goes really bad. So, that was just a record where it was not supposed to work. If you was to just say on paper Premo gonna chop up this Christmas sounding s--- and I'm just gonna round up all the n----s in Queensbridge I can find and have them scream 'represent' and that's gonna be the joint. So, the fact that he was able to take those two things and actually make it work, I just thought that was genius.


I'm also a big stickler for the next to last song on a album being fire. Because it almost has to give you a bittersweet feeling that the album is about to be over. So, 'Represent' comes and kills s--- and then 'It Ain't Hard to Tell' is like the encore."


Favorite Beat From the Album:


"Let me think hard about this. Favorite beat, probably 'Memory Lane.' Again, for me it has a lot to do with placement. Being the age I was when 'Illmatic' came out, I listened to it on tape. So, a big experience with tape [back then] is your first song that kicks off side two has got to be the jam. Because it's almost like your starting a new chapter of your book. Another one of my favorites, just as a sidebar, the only other rapper that I can hear that kinda did that, around that era, was 'Street Struck' by Big L. It had that same kind of feel, it was a melodic track, but it also had a sense of eeriness to it as well. Memory Lane has a sense of nostalgia and it's like you have a sense of nostalgia of a person that it's reflecting. For lack of a better word, it's a pretty track, but he's spitting some good ass s--- over it. It was just something for me that I just really liked that beat and it was one of my favorite beats of that time."


If You Could've Added a Guest Verse to Any Track on the Album, Which One Would It Have Been?


"I don't know [laughs]. I'm listening to the album trying to think about what Nas song I would take Nas off of, and that's some pretty f---ed up s--- to think. Like that's some hard s---, like, what song or verse from 'Illmatic' I would take Nas off of. But if I could add a verse to any song, I would probably say 'Life's a Bitch.' At the time [of the album's release], I was 15 and that was the time that as much as my mother didn't want to hear anything hip-hop, it was just noise, for her to hear me over Gap Band's 'Yearning For Your Love,' that would've earned me a lot of points. That actually would have got me plays at our family reunion [laughs]. If I'm rapping over Charlie Wilson at 15, that would've been a go. So, I would pick that one because of the track and the subject matter.


Plus, I like the fact that 'Illmatic' only had one guest appearance on it, so, if I would have two guest appearances on the album, I would have them on the same song, so ain't nobody else coming in and getting in the way of Nas' verse. Like, lets get y'all two n----s on this one jam together, and then this s--- over. It's back to Nas again."



Exclusive! A$AP Nast: "Lords Never Worry" Named for Harlem Gang (@ASVPNVST @ygAddie)



A$AP Ant & A$AP Nast sat down with VladTV to discuss their upcoming album L.O.R.D.S., and the origin of its title.


Ant admitted that he doesn't know exactly what the title stands for, but that it was a play on the title of their first mixtape, Lords Never Worry. A$AP Nast then breaks down the gang's heavy presence in Harlem in the 1990s and their overall mentality of being "lords" of the game.


Check out the interview above.