I’m Pretty Sure Puffy Hates Jay-Z

This picture is pretty gay.

I remember a few years ago when Dame Dash had his TV show on BET called “The Ultimate Hustler” that he compared himself to Sean “Puffy” Combs. He went point for point about he and Puffy were very similar. Puff had Big, Dame had Jay. Puff had MTV on lock, Dame had BET on lock. Puff had Sean John, Dame helped start Rocawear, etc.

Point is, I thought Dame was pretty much full of sh*t. Not that he wasn’t successful during Rocafella’s run (while he was still in charge of a viable organization), but that in anyway, short of Jay, he was comparable to Puffy. Puff is a successful global brand manager and icon. For beter or worse. Dame Dash was pretty much relegated to Dame Dash things. Failed Armadale Vodka. His CEO brand of shoes. His alleged ownership of Pro-Keds that was really a licensing deal for CEO. And don’t even get me started on the iPod killer, the RocBox. Point of all this is that I always felt like Dame in some ways was envious of Puffy’s successes and ability to brand himself and make people give a sh*t. Read the credits on nearly every urban show on MTV and you’ll see that Puffy has his hand in all of it. Last time Dame saw himself on TV, he was watching State Property.

Puffy stays winning is the main point. And yet, I’m pretty sure that Puffy hates Jay-Z for some of those same reasons Dame probably hates Puffy.

How is that possible you say? Puffy is Diddy and P. Diddy is Puff. Why would he hate Jay-Z? I’ve got an inkling but it all comes down to this. It seems like Jay is ALWAYS f*cking up Puff’s money.

Allow me to explain to you why.

1. Jay somehow managed to convince Jay Electronica to come into the RocNation

It’s quite possible that some of you have no idea who Jay Electronica is. Three words: Erykah Badu’s babydaddy. But he’s also largely considered to be the future of hip-hop despite being old as hell. Yeah, okay. But he’d aligned himself with Puffy who had decided to attempt to get Jay out there. Internet heads have been swinging from Jay Electronica’s nuts for years now and Puffy figured this out and attempted to get into the fray. Well turns out that dude recently signed to RocNation instead and said to Puffy, “f*ck your couch”. Okay he didn’t but Puffy has to feel some kind of way that he done attempted to help mold this man’s career only to watch him walk right to Jay. And for no good reason. It ain’t like Jay has the best record as an exec either. RocNation and Bad Boy are currently where new acts go to die. So we’ll see. But I’m sure Puff is pissed about this. Twitter says so.

2. Jay-Z “killed” Autotune

Do you know why The Last Train to Paris has taken so long to come out? Because originally it was an autotune album. Hell do you remember, Puff brought in T-Pain to exec produce it and add his flavor to it. Enter “D.O.A. (Death of Autotune)”. Exit autotuned album from Puff. Mind you, that album was supposed to have come out a year and a half ago. Which isn’t a long time when you have to go back to the drawing board since nobody wants to hear that autotune sh*t no moooooore. Just ask T-Pain who can’t get a hit to save his life right now. It’s supposed to come out in December, but still, how much money did Puff sink into an album that Jay effectively caused him to start over. A lot that’s how much. 30 thousand, 100 million.

3. People actually care about Jay-Z albums

Not for nothing, but nobody gives a sh*t about a Puffy album. Yet and still he is determined to be an artist. Maybe it’s because he realizes that he’s the only viable artist on his own label, which is sad. While he has to realize that nobody will buy this album anyway, unlike Kanye (518K) or Nicki Minaj (371K), it has to rub him the wrong way that a new Jay album is an event and a Puff album is a…de-vent?

4. Jay ain’t dead

Biggie was Puff’s cash cow. He dead now. But Jay? He lives and keeps making albums and making dough while Puffy keeps raiding a dead man’s archives and putting the same lyrics over different beats. Peep it Puff…WE KNOW HE DEAD!

5. Nobody cares about Puffy, folks care about Jay

You don’t think Puff wants to visit Obama at The White House? Puff is a brand and a rich man. You don’t think he didn’t want to hang with Warren Buffet? Of course he did. But you know who was there? Jay. Hell Jay brought TREY SONGZ with him. Obama didn’t want to meet Trey Songz. People give a sh*t about Jay. People just want Puffy to, ya know, do Puffy things.

6. Beyonce

Cassie is no Beyonce.

7. Jay is an author

Puffy doesn’t even write rhymes, just checks.

That’s the case against Jay with Puffy. F*ck with a man’s money and you’re likely to draw his ire.

Random I know, but I’m a random kind of guy and it was on my mind since ElectronicaGate last week.

VSB, are there are any other artists, entertainers, or politicians, etc (folks in the spotlight) who you think REALLY hate a contemporary of theirs for any particular reason?

What say you?

-VSB P aka THE ARSONIST aka 21 KOOKAROO GANGSTA aka GIIIIIIIIIIIIIIRL HE A 3

Get Like We: The Biggest And Most Popular Trends in the Black Community in the last 20 years.

gregoden

Over the course of history, Black people have been quite the trendsetters.  We’re both followers and leaders at the exact same time.  For instance, there was the whole slavery problem where so many folks tried to be like their homies who they saw get on the Amistad party boats, only to never return from whence they came.

But then came the amazing trend that had to have been started by the parents of one Harriet Tubman (née Altamina Ross) who decided that they would be uber-creative with her name, which is a trend that lives on in hoods across America as every one of us knows at least one person with three capital letters in their first name.  Some of us even  know people with more than one apostrophe.

Some of us even know a person named N”DBiane’.  (Okay, I don’t personally know her, but I saw her name in the graduation program for Douglass High School (Atlanta,  GA) class off 2007 – Panama)

Fact is, Black America has seen its fair share of amazingly omnipresent trends.  Today, The Champ and I will discuss some of the biggest nationwide trends in Black America.  Get like us.

Panama’s Trendwatch

1)  Sprewells/Spinners – Though more people know them as spinners than Sprewells, the guy who choked out PJ Carlesimo is the reason for accidents galore over at least a 2 year span.  I can’t be the only person who hit the brakes prematurely as I was driving thru a green light because the idiot with the spinners looked like he was still moving into my path.  This trend was so big, K-Mart was even selling knock-off plastic spinners which made their way onto Mexican (no Gem) cars from San Diego to Maine.  Except it seems that most Mexicans were on the economy package and only bought 3.  Odd.

2)  L.A. Gang Culture – Boyz In Tha Hood and Menace II Society sparked a gang surge like none other in the early 90s.  I myself joined two gangs.  From Dickies to ’64s to the amazing sound of Dr. Dre and Snoop Doggy Dogg in suburbs across America, Black America’s fascination with all things LA sparked possibly one of the riveting HBO documentaries ever:  Banging in Little Rock.  Every major southern and midwestern city saw gang violence escalate like never before.  And jheri curls.  Which much like spinners, caused more accidents than it was worth.

3)  Throwbacks/Retro Culture/Skinny Jeans - At one point, people were wearing jersey’s of people and teams that never actually existed.  I should know, I am the proud owner of at least 20 jersey’s, at least 10 of which are for teams Wikipedia, Encyclopedia Brown, Nancy Drew or the League of Extraordinary Gentlemen have never heard of.  But nothing was/is worse than the skinny jean, overly colorful 80s retro vibe permeating Black America right now.  Gumbies, thick rope chains, jeans that outline your wheezer – all were bad ideas in teh 80s so they’re even worse now that we have a reference point of the 80s to remind us how bad we all looked.  Thankfully Jay killed throwbacks, though that unfortunately led to…

4)  Grown-and-sexxy – Jay says button ups, so Kanye throws on a sport jacket over his button up, with some tennis shoes and the next thing you know, metrosexuals everywhere where rocking the Kanye special.  Only problem is, striped button ups are pretty hideous by nature so the jacket didnt help at all.  But since nobody really knew what grown-and-sexxy meant, and since most of us don’t have daddies, we figured Kanye and Jay-Z were as good a role model as any.

5) Sagging – We’re black.  We like jail.  Amen.

trends the champ’s noticed and sh*t

1) the iverson effect

while jay-z, michael jordan, tupac, obama, and mr. marcus have each influenced in our community in some way, there’s no one who has altered as many lives as allen iverson, a man responsible for spear-heading two separate trends

a) the ceaser/even steven ***if you remember, fifteen years ago the fade was still the default go-to haircut for the majority of young black men. now, the fade is reserved for preachers, men from los angelos, mike tomlin, virgins, rapists, and retards. this mass eschewing of the fade begin when a.i. started rocking the ceaser his sophomore year at georgetown***

b) the ubiquitous tats ***while there has always been a certain segment of the population with multiple tattoos, people without multiple predicate felonies (basically, people like me) didn’t really start rocking them until after iverson’s second year in philly. now, you’re likely to see both bloods and black nuns rocking “thug life” tats on their necks and wrists

2. the frohawk

while kanye, kanye’s shag, and a few other ambiguously heterosexual contemporary male artists usually get the credit for this, the recent mohawk trend can be traced back to eva pigford on america’s next top model, proving once and for all that straight young black males have a strange tendency to pick and follow the gayest fashion trends possible.

3. the late 80′s-early 90′s black pride boom

i dont know if it was public enemy’s popularity, the airing of “a different world”, or a chemical reaction created by the last remains of jheri curl juice. whatever the cause, black america experienced an extremely sudden and extremely strange boom in black pride for a three year span, with 1990 serving as it’s apex.  sudden because it seemed to come and go with the same quickness, and strange because it wasn’t uncommon to see a person walking through the hood with some kinte cloth nikes and two giant african medallions over an all white polo jumpsuit. with that being said, my hbcu alliance hampton university short set and matching X hat was kind of hot.

4. knockoff fashion

anyone doubting the thundergoat’s popularity just needs to remember how much of an influence the “timberland boots” she rocked in her and jay-z’s horrible me and my girlfriend video influenced us. for a four year span, you couldn’t leave the crib without tripping over a bootlegged lime green manolo boot heel. when you combine that with the burberry knock off trend (which snowballed into louis, gucci, fendi, and every other high end label that pittsburgh strippers are likely to name their kids after) she also started in that same f*cking video, you have concrete proof that beyonce’s the brain to our human borg.

i’m sure we’re leaving a few out. people of vsb.com, are there any other transcendent trends that we missed?

—panama jackson and the champ