Tag Archives: diddy

Diddy Thanks Fans, Twitter For Last Train To Paris’ Top 10 Debut

‘Y’all made this project a success,’ he tells Dirty Money supporters. By James Dinh Diddy-Dirty Money’s Dawn Richard, Diddy and Kalenna Harper Photo: Joe Scarnici/ WireImage In his latest video blog, Diddy credits the early success of Diddy-Dirty Money ‘s long-delayed album Last Train to Paris to his fans and Twitter. The project, which was estimated to sell just 65,000 copies in its first week, nabbed the #7 spot on next week’s Billboard albums chart with 101,000 copies sold. “Anybody that knows me, it’s rare when I’m extra happy, but today … this last two weeks, I’ve just been blown away by all the support that I’ve gotten from you guys,” the rapper says in the YouTube clip. “You already know I deal with a lot of hate, and I talk about that. But it’s also important to talk about when I’m dealing with a lot of love, and the love that y’all have shown me and the girls on this project … y’all made this project a success, and I want to say thank you.” While Diddy acknowledged the fact that the group didn’t score any #1 singles with the project (so far), he revealed that the hits are on the way with “Coming Home” and “Ass on the Floor.” The media mogul stressed, however, that he considered Paris to be one of the first albums where Twitter and viral hype trumped radio support. In addition to the Bad Boy CEO’s video, the trio gushed about defying early estimates in a statement: “Well, they were wrong. With the help of our fans and the tremendous power of Twitter our debut album skyrocketed to #7 on The Billboard 200 chart scanning more than 100k units. Also this week, our new single, ‘Coming Home’ broke through to the top ten on iTunes. This is an amazing start for a brand new group and for a debut album. We are so thankful!” Earlier this month, MTV News spoke with Diddy about the LP’s many delays. “The wait is over,” Diddy said. “We pushed our album back a bunch of times because we felt, to be honest, we weren’t ready. I think a lot of times artists make that mistake. They get locked into a date and they’re like, ‘Well, I told everybody my date was this.’ ” Did you pick up a copy of Last Train to Paris ? Tell us in the comments below! Related Videos Justin Bieber Hangs In Diddy’s Studio Related Photos Diddy-Dirty Money Premiere ‘Last Train To Paris’ In New York Related Artists Diddy-Dirty Money Diddy

See the article here:
Diddy Thanks Fans, Twitter For Last Train To Paris’ Top 10 Debut

Diddy Says G. Dep ‘Did The Right Thing’ In Confession

‘You could always feel that … maybe something was troubling his soul,’ Bad Boy mogul says of his former artist copping to 1993 shooting. By Paul Cantor Diddy Photo: Statia Photography/ Getty Images Diddy called into Sirius’ Shade 45 radio show on Tuesday (December 22) morning to talk up his latest effort, Last Train to Paris. But the rap mogul also commented on his onetime Bad Boy artist, G. Dep , who has made headlines in the last week. G. Dep (born Trevell Coleman) , recently confessed to a shooting and botched robbery attempt in 1993, only to discover from the New York Police Department that his victim, John Henkel, had died. Thirty-six-year-old G. Dep is now facing murder charges for the 17-year-old crime and was indicted on Tuesday. “You could always feel that if you knew G. Dep, and I can’t say it was that, maybe something was troubling his soul,” Diddy said. ” ‘Cause he was real quiet. He’s the type of guy who wouldn’t hurt a fly. I don’t know what happened in that instance but he did the right thing and manned up to it.” Diddy also speculated on what G. Dep’s state of mind may have been back in 1993, not long before he signed to Diddy’s record label. “He had a real bad drug problem and that could have caused the situation,” Diddy said. “As a person, that wasn’t nothing that he would do. Drugs sometimes make people slip up and make mistakes.” Dep’s drug problem may have been a motivating factor behind his startling confession to a crime that he had essentially gotten away with. On Tuesday, the New York Daily News reported that his lawyer, Michael Alperstein, indicated the confession was in step with a 12-step Narcotics Anonymous detox program in which the rapper was taking part. “The power of the 12-step program and making amends,” his lawyer said. “He’s trying to remake his life. He’s trying to clean up.” Alperstein said Dep had twice tried to confess in the past, but that cops didn’t take him seriously and asked him to come back. A police source disputed that notion, saying that Dep was “high as a kite” when he first attempted to confess over the summer, and that interviews with him had been unsuccessful. Diddy remembered G. Dep as an artist who showed real promise. “Dep was definitely one of the favorite artists I signed to Bad Boy,” he said. “That’s something I really wanted to work out, but that was just like he had personal things he was dealing with and we tried our best with that.” Related Artists Diddy G. Dep

More:
Diddy Says G. Dep ‘Did The Right Thing’ In Confession

Diddy’s Party — Her Roots, Her Roots Are on Fire

Filed under: Diddy , TMZ TV , Miyoki Jones , Miyoki Gunz You know Diddy ‘s album release party left one model’s hair up in flames — but do you know its (thin) connection to a cow in the 1800s? It’s another strange — but true — tale from the TMZ newsroom. Check out TMZ on TV — click here to see your local… Read more

Read the original post:
Diddy’s Party — Her Roots, Her Roots Are on Fire

Diddy May Be Persona Non Grata After Hotel Fire

Filed under: P. Diddy Diddy has some serious ‘splainin’ to do if he ever wants to stay at The London Hotel in NYC again. Sources connected with the hotel say they are meeting today to discuss what happened inside Diddy’s hotel room when a model’s hair caught fire .

Diddy’s Burning Woman — I Might ‘Halle Berry’ My Hair

Filed under: Diddy , Miyoki Jones We just ran into model Miyoki Jones — y’know, the woman whose hair caught on fire during Diddy ‘s CD release party — and she’s already got big plans for her fried ‘do. Miyoki — whose hair was conspicuously up in a bun as she walked around NYC — told… Read more

Here is the original post:
Diddy’s Burning Woman — I Might ‘Halle Berry’ My Hair

Facebook Founder Mark Zuckerberg Named Time’s ‘Person of the Year’

Magazine praises Zuckerberg for wiring ‘a twelfth of humanity’ into single network. By Gil Kaufman Mark Zuckerberg Photo: Justin Sullivan/Getty Images Yes, being the youngest self-made billionaire at 26 is impressive. And having an award-nominated movie about your company’s origins become a big-screen hit is not to shabby either. But one of the reasons Time magazine chose Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg as its “Person of the Year” is this little fact: “In less than seven years, Zuckerberg wired together a twelfth of humanity in a single network.” Praising the Facebook boss for creating a universal living room that has brought the planet that much closer together, the magazine wrote that “we have entered the Facebook age, and Mark Zuckerberg is the man who brought us here.” In a year in which Zuckerberg’s American tale was brought to life by director David Fincher in the hit “The Social Network” — which didn’t always paint a flattering portrait of the billionaire boss — and Zuck joined an initiative among the mega-wealthy to donate the majority of his fortune to charity, the bottom line for Time was the way in which Facebook has fundamentally altered the way we communicate, spend our time and organize our social lives. Born in 1984, the same year the first Macintosh computer from Apple was introduced, Time said that Zuckerberg is both a product of his wired generation and an architect of our digital world. “The social-networking platform he invented is closing in on 600 million users. In a single day, about a billion new pieces of content are posted on Facebook. It is the connective tissue for nearly a tenth of the planet,” the magazine wrote about the platform created by the T-shirt-wearing Harvard dropout. “Facebook is now the third-largest country on earth and surely has more information about its citizens than any government does.” Zuckerberg beat out the year’s runners-up, WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange — who launched a nefarious digital revolution of his own — and the upstart Tea Party political movement, whose impact was felt in the 2010 midterm elections that swept Democrats out of the majority in the House of Representatives while narrowing the gap in the Senate. Like those two rogue movements, “Zuckerberg doesn’t have a whole lot of veneration for traditional authority,” the magazine wrote. “In a sense, Zuckerberg and Assange are two sides of the same coin. Both express a desire for openness and transparency. While Assange attacks big institutions and governments through involuntary transparency with the goal of disempowering them, Zuckerberg enables individuals to voluntarily share information with the idea of empowering them. Assange sees the world as filled with real and imagined enemies; Zuckerberg sees the world as filled with potential friends.” While his youth and relatively modest life experience might make the designation seem premature, Time noted that “Person of the Year” is not and never has been intended as an honor. Case in point, along with such winners as John F. Kennedy and Martin Luther King Jr., other designees have included dictators Adolf Hitler and Joseph Stalin and disgraced U.S. President Richard Nixon. “It is a recognition of the power of individuals to shape our world,” the magazine explained. “For connecting more than half a billion people and mapping the social relations among them (something that has never been done before); for creating a new system of exchanging information that has become both indispensable and sometimes a little scary; and finally, for changing how we all live our lives in ways that are innovative and even optimistic, Mark Elliot Zuckerberg is Time ‘s 2010 Person of the Year.” While they weren’t in the running for “Person of the Year,” among the other notable deemed “People Who Mattered” by the magazine were Justin Bieber, Sandra Bullock, Lady Gaga, the cast of “Glee,” Lebron James, the cast of “Jersey Shore,” Conan O’Brien, Kanye West and Betty White. Do you think Mark Zuckerberg was the right choice for Time ‘s Person of the Year? Sound off in the comments. Related Videos ‘The Social Network’ Clips

Read more here:
Facebook Founder Mark Zuckerberg Named Time’s ‘Person of the Year’

Justin Bieber Co-Signs Diddy’s Album While Recording New Track

‘Everybody, if you’re anybody, you’ll go get the album,’ Bieber says of Last Train to Paris. By Jocelyn Vena Diddy and Justin Bieber Photo: MTV News On Tuesday evening, MTV News was on hand when Justin Bieber was discovered laying down tracks at Diddy’s recording studio in New York City. “In the studio getting creative,” he wrote . “Just got to show luv to my big bro @iamdiddy and his new album ‘Last Train to Paris.’ ” Bieber’s manager, Scooter Braun, explained to us that the pop star had an idea for a song that he needed to “get off of his chest,” and that Diddy’s studio is like a second home for the teen superstar. MTV News was spending the day with Diddy , who just released his Last Train to Paris album. Though the rap mogul hardly ever stops working himself, he jokingly complained about Bieber being too busy for him these days. “Well, I mean, you try to get in contact with me through all my partners and whatnot, but you never really got my number, so you want my number?” the 16-year-old responded. After an exchange of phone numbers, Diddy made Bieber an official member of Diddy-Dirty Money and gave him and Braun

Diddy-Dirty Money Get AMA Crowd Swaying With ‘Coming Home’

Typically flashy rapper slows it down at the American Music Awards — but he still brings the fireworks. By Jayson Rodriguez Diddy performs at the American Music Awards on Sunday Photo: Kevork Djansezian/Getty Images/DCP Diddy knows a thing or two about showstopping performances, but during the 2010 American Music Awards, the hip-hop mogul had a more measured set as Dirty Money’s Dawn Richard and Kalenna flanked him through a reflective rendition of his latest, “Coming Home.” “What am I supposed to do when the club lights come on?” Diddy rapped, sporting all-black attire and a half-moon hair part. “It’s easy to be Puff, but it’s harder to be Sean/ What if my twins ask why I ain’t marry their mom?/ Damn, how do I respond?/ What if my son stares with a face like my own?/ And says he wants to be like me when he’s grown?/ Sh–, but I ain’t finish growing.” The rest of his Dirty Money crew wore white and followed Diddy’s lead in the elegant performance. The rapper arrived in a whirl of smoke while his orchestra played up the triumphant track, which will appear on Diddy-Dirty Money’s forthcoming Last Train to Paris. As he reached the stirring lyrics about his offspring, the camera panned to his youngest son, Christian Combs, who had a smile as bright as his father’s jewelry. Fireworks dotted the superstar’s performance, and the audience swayed their arms in unison throughout. “Let the rain wash away/ All the pain of yesterday,” Richard and Kalenna sang on the chorus. “I know my kingdom awaits/ And they’ve forgiven my mistakes/ I’m coming home, coming home/ Tell the world I’m coming home.” What did you think of Diddy’s AMA performance? Share your reviews in the comments! Related Artists Diddy-Dirty Money

Continued here:
Diddy-Dirty Money Get AMA Crowd Swaying With ‘Coming Home’

Nelly Says A Diddy Pep Talk Influenced His 5.0

‘He was like, ‘Let’s go! What are you waiting on?’ ‘ Nelly recalls of getting motivated after 2008 effort. By Jayson Rodriguez Nelly Photo: MTV News Diddy is wearing gold fronts, sporting enormous amounts of jewelry and riding shotgun with a superstar MC in videos these days as if it were the Bad Boy era of ’94 all over again. But while most attribute Diddy’s rejuvenation to his newfound affiliation with Miami rapper Rick Ross, to hear Nelly explain it, credit for the hip-hop mogul’s revitalized state belongs to the St. Louis star. “I got him back in that mode, ask him,” Nelly told MTV News. “I told him — that’s my big brother — I told him, ‘Listen, you’re going too fast: Where you at with the music — people ain’t caught up yet. It’s good, but where you’re at, you got to bring it down. You got to get their attention first, then you can take them wherever you want to take them. My exact words were, ‘We need that “Hate Me Now” Diddy,” Nelly said, referring to the 1999 Nas track featuring Puff. In turn, the Bad Boy boss told Nelly that he needed to “speed it up.” “He was like, ‘Let’s go! What are you waiting on?’ Nelly recalled. He admitted that the advice forced him to reflect on whether Diddy’s words of wisdom might have merit. With his last album, 2008’s Brass Knuckles, Nelly experienced his first commercial disappointment. Although the album was certified gold, selling more than 500,000 copies, his previous efforts were all multiplatinum smashes. The rapper replayed Diddy’s talk in his head, and the result of that conversation, according to Nelly, is “Just a Dream,” the rapper’s first top 10 hit since 2005’s “Grillz,” featuring Paul Wall. “I was like, ‘You know what? You’re right,” Nelly said. “And I left the party to go to the studio.” Nelly’s upcoming album, 5.0, is scheduled for a November 16 release. The project is set to feature collaborations with Kelly Rowland and Jim Jonsin (“Gone”) , as well as the Notorious B.I.G.-sampling “1000 Stacks.” Are you glad to hear Nelly’s new album? Tell us in the comments! Related Videos MTV News Extended Play: Nelly Related Artists Nelly Diddy

Read more:
Nelly Says A Diddy Pep Talk Influenced His 5.0

The 9 Most Unsettling Things About Joaquin Phoenix’s Mock-Documentary, I’m Still Here

Onscreen defecation. Back hair removal. Gay-shaming Newsweek reporter Ramin Setoodeh. Britney Spears’s vagina. What do they all have in common? They’re all featured in the insane Joaquin Phoenix documentary I’m Still Here , and if you can believe it, there are some things in it that are even weirder . Here are the 9 most unsettling things about the movie:

Visit link:
The 9 Most Unsettling Things About Joaquin Phoenix’s Mock-Documentary, I’m Still Here