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Donald Trump Dreamed Of Playing In The Majors, On ‘When I Was 17’

‘I was captain of the baseball team,’ the ‘Apprentice’ boss says on Saturday’s episode. By MTV News staff Donald Trump On “When I Was 17” Photo: MTV News So far this season on MTV’s “When I Was 17,” we’ve learned about Drake’s awful “neck afro,” and how Kevin Jonas attempted to tame his own unfortunate ‘fro with a flatiron. On this Saturday’s episode, Donald Trump — the real-estate mogul instantly recognizable by his signature ‘do — takes us back to his teenage years, though viewers will have to tune in to find out whether he opens up about that famous mane. We do discover, however, that the future “Apprentice” boss was a sports-obsessed teen growing up in the 1960s. “When I was 17, I loved sports,” Trump says on the new episode, airing at 11 a.m. on MTV. “I was always a good athlete. I played football, baseball, soccer. I wrestled. I think the thing I liked the best was baseball.” The New York City native attended an upstate military school, where he dreamed of going pro. Alas, Trump didn’t have the skills to make it in the big leagues, but things seem to have turned out well for the guy, no? “I was captain of the baseball team,” Trump explained. “I was supposed to be a professional baseball player. Fortunately, I decided to go into real estate instead. I played first base and I also played catcher. I was a good hitter. I just had a good time.” With his days on the baseball diamond behind him, Trump is happy to spend time on his country club links. “Now I play golf,” he said with a smile. “When I Was 17” — this week featuring Donald Trump, Nick Cannon and Aubrey O’Day — airs Saturday at 11 a.m. on MTV. Related Artists Donald Trump

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Donald Trump Dreamed Of Playing In The Majors, On ‘When I Was 17’

Styles P Says The LOX Are In The Studio For Group Album, Solo LPs

‘Now that we all there at the same time, it brings better energy and better thoughts,’ he tells Mixtape Daily. By Shaheem Reid The LOX Photo: MTV News The O.D.: A Mixtape Daily Exclusive Styles P says the LOX are cooking up a slew of products individually and collectively. All three members, Jadakiss, Sheek Louch and, of course, SP the Ghost, are recording together. “We working on the LOX right now and all the solos at once — Sheek solo, my solo, ‘Kiss solo, mixtapes. That’s our plan for the summer right now,” he said. “Since we all in the lab, we going in. Now that we all there at the same time, it brings better energy and better thoughts. Even while I’m working on my solo, I like that input: ‘All right, P, go here with it’ or ‘go there with it.’ ‘You should do that kinda song.’ I was in a Louch session the other day, and somebody was there for beats for him; he got two beats for me. It wasn’t nothing there for him in the beat session, but he heard two beats he knew I would like and go in on. It makes for a better energy and better fit. We just working and making our legacy grow. LOX forever.” Styles said there isn’t a distinct method of choosing which songs go for the LOX album or each MC’s solo project. “Follow your instincts,” he said. “The first thought that pops in your head. It depends on how it go. If I hear something, I might be like, ‘This is for the group, this sounds crazy.’ I’ll call them up, three-way: ‘Listen. You like?’ If one of them don’t like it, then I use it for myself. If they like, we use it for the group.” Although the squad is still making music, Styles said they will likely not go with the title they had revealed previously: Live, Suffer, Celebrate. “We’ll probably change it, ’cause we got a lot of ideas and thoughts in our brains. “We don’t let down when it comes to these bars,” SP added. “We really just trying to handle our business first. Business-wise, it looks like it’s being handled pretty well. We’re trying to keep our heads on our shoulders and make solid music. It’s well-known producers that’s definitely going to be out there. But we also giving a shot to anybody with mean beats that got that LOX sound that we can appreciate and the world can appreciate.” For other artists featured in Mixtape Daily, check out Mixtape Daily Headlines or follow the Mixtape Daily team on Twitter: @shaheemreid and @mongosladenyc .

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Styles P Says The LOX Are In The Studio For Group Album, Solo LPs

Raekwon Says His New Mixtape Is ‘Just Raw Product’

‘I still feel I’m in that same zone as far as rhyming,’ the Chef tells Mixtape Daily. By Shaheem Reid Raekwon Photo: Universal This Week’s Main Pick Street King : Raekwon Holding It Down For : ICE H20 Records Mixtape : Cocainism Vol. 2 Real Spit : As Raekwon prepares for his Shaolin vs. Wu-Tang LP to drop later this year, the Chef said he wanted to stay in the fans’ faces. “For me it’s like being on the street — you hustling,” he said about being active in the mixtape circuit. “You come out and you know it’s a thousand people on the block doing their thing. You gotta get in where you fit in. I might come out with a couple of extra jams just to get my name out — like, yo, give a couple of friends something for free, just to let ’em know. ‘It’s over here. Taste that. Taste that! Taste that and let me know how you feel. Get back at me.’ I think that’s the same rules that apply to the mixtape situation. “The title is something I thought about for a minute,” he added. “Just coming off the Cuban Linx 2 project, I still feel I’m in that same zone as far as rhyming. So I decided to come with Cocainism. It’s just raw product, B — raw product. Anything I give to the world, I just want it to be something that n—as will be like, ‘Yo, that sh– is raw.’ So that’s the word of the day. I asked my crew, like, ‘How y’all feel about the word?’ They was like, ‘It’s typical Rae slang.’ They felt it was groovy.” Joints To Check For “Alphabet Soup.” “I got this joint called ‘Alphabet Soup,’ ” Rae said. “I was inspired by making this record by checking out my man Papoose. I think this is probably something he did way back when his career started. To me, that made me like him a lot more. He was challenging different things. I wanted to do something from A to Z so we called it ‘Alphabet Soup’ because every letter, we came with words pertaining to that letter. If I said ‘A,’ I would say, ‘Attacking a–holes/ Assassinate ’em with mad holes …’ Everything was pertaining to that letter. I felt that concept was something good to bug out on the mixtape.” “City of God.” “It’s me back in my ‘Champion’ era,” The Chef explained. “It’s me rhyming a lot of strong lyrical content. When you think of a New York MC such as myself, you know what we talking about. So, yeah, I’m feeling that rhyme. That beat is underground. It’s nothing you gonna say is a commercial record. It’s me getting busy on the mic. I got inspired by the movie [‘City of God’]. Seeing the young n—as in certain situations where they growing up poor. It reminds me of my era — we ain’t get on, we was finding out a way where we could get on. Where we could make something happen.” “Ms. Sincere.” “We’re talking about a broad,” the Staten Island vet said. “The beat behind us is going, ‘Wuu-wuuuu.’ I don’t know, I been hearing a lot of slow sh– with the ‘Wu’ sound in the background. I’m like, ‘It must be meant to be.’ It’s a slow record; it’s kinda of, like, in a story mode. I’m talking crazy, the beat is crazy; I’m just having fun.” For other artists featured in Mixtape Daily, check out Mixtape Daily Headlines or follow the Mixtape Daily team on Twitter: @shaheemreid and @mongosladenyc .

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Raekwon Says His New Mixtape Is ‘Just Raw Product’

MC Hammer ‘Honored’ That Rick Ross Named A Song After Him

‘I don’t know nobody that named their record after another hip-hop artist ever,’ he tells Mixtape Daily. By Shaheem Reid and Jayson Rodriguez MC Hammer Photo: Getty Images The O.D.: A Mixtape Daily Exclusive Black Mafia Family’s Big Meech, Chicago street legend Larry Hoover and hip-hop’s supreme stage commander MC Hammer — Rick Ross salutes a few OGs on his new mixtape, The Albert Anastasia EP. “Bi—, I’m MC Hammer, I’m about cream,” Ross raps on “MC Hammer.” “I got 30 cars/ A whole lot of dancers, I take ’em everywhere/ I’m MC Hammer.” The stage great behind pop-culture explosions such as “Can’t Touch This” and “Pray” said he loves the tribute. “We’ve been back and forth on the tweets, but my thing is one thing only: face to face, man,” Hammer said. “I’m hollering at him face to face. I’m heading to Miami. You saw the tweets, and the bottom line is, it’s a very unique thing for a cat to use your name. I don’t know nobody that named their record after another hip-hop artist ever. The name of the record is ‘MC Hammer.’ That’s crazy. For an artist of Ross’ caliber, that’s a whole ‘nother thing. Arguably, right now, he’s the hottest dude in the game. He’s spitting fire. For a cat on that level, with his skill set, to have a record called ‘MC Hammer’ and do it the way he’s done it, because it pays a lot of respect and homage to what I laid down, you can’t help but be honored by that.” “MC Hammer,” as well as Anastasia ‘s “Blowin’ Money Fast (B.M.F.),” heated up the clubs in Miami over Memorial Day weekend and has had a steady presence in the streets since the tape came out last week. Hammer said he’s humbled by the Bawse’s show of respect. “I done got every award that a man can get in the music business — every one. I got ’em all. Diamond awards, Grammys, American Music Awards, People’s Choice Awards — you name it. Everything that you can do and every accolade you can receive. But that record that Ross did is on the level of all that. That’s how it feels to me.” Hammer, who also said he loved Ross’ “2 Legit 2 Quit” reference in “Mafia Music,” said he’s down to shoot a video for Ross’ theme song but is keeping quiet about any ideas he and Ross might have for the clip. For other artists featured in Mixtape Daily, check out Mixtape Daily Headlines or follow the Mixtape Daily team on Twitter: @shaheemreid and @mongosladenyc .

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MC Hammer ‘Honored’ That Rick Ross Named A Song After Him

Wu-Tang Clan’s Raekwon Says Rock The Bells Tour ‘Concept Is Great’

‘We never sung the whole album,’ Raekwon says of performing entire Enter the Wu-Tang (36 Chambers) debut. By Shaheem Reid Raekwon Photo: Universal This summer, the Wu-Tang Clan return to headline the heralded Rock the Bells Tour . But unlike the Killer Bees’ previous stage ventures for the annual outing, the Clan’s set will have a twist. The group will perform their classic debut, Enter the Wu-Tang (36 Chambers) — in its entirety. “We never did that before,” Raekwon the Chef told Mixtape Daily last week. “We never sung the whole album, the 36 Chambers. “That’s gonna be interesting to see these cats do some of the records that really bust hip-hop’s cherry open,” Rae said. “I can’t wait to see this because I never seen it like that before. The concept is great. It gives fans the opportunity to go back and rewrite their history, go back and check it out, see what made dudes who they are. … This [tour] is gonna allow races to come together and have fun for one night. This is gonna be the event of events. This is gonna be the Royal Rumble of hip-hop. I’m sure that everybody is gonna come out and represent this. It’s gonna be right. I can’t wait.” Rae said every time he gets to perform among the legends that Rock the Bells welcomes onto its treks, he feels another year younger. “It’s always good to get out there with my brothers. We going to get money, pay them bills, take care of them kids. Then getting back in front of them fans again and giving them what they want,” the

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Wu-Tang Clan’s Raekwon Says Rock The Bells Tour ‘Concept Is Great’

Joell Ortiz Explains Origins Of ‘Yaowa,’ Preps New Mixtape

‘It’s a term of endearment around my way,’ he tells Mixtape Daily of the invented word. By Shaheem Reid Joell Ortiz Photo: MTV News The O.D.: A Mixtape Daily Exclusive Brooklyn’s Joell Ortiz now has one of the most recognizable call-outs in hip-hop. If you’re not familiar, after his mixtape drops this month, you’ll be saying: “Yaowa!” “I got so many meanings of yaowa, it’s crazy,” Ortiz laughed. “First, it’s used as a term of endearment for dudes around my way. How you say, ‘What up?’ We say, ‘Yaowa!’ It came from my man Smash. Shout to Smash. He used to be really drunk around the way. It’s a distance between the buildings. He used to be saying, ‘Yo, what up?’ But he’d be so drunk, it sounded like he was saying, ‘Yawhuhup?’ He’d be twisted. I just turned it into yaowa. Every time I get on a beat, I say, ‘Yaowa,’ before I rap on it. Then I started playing around with it and turned it into [meaning]: ‘you’re actually one world away.’ I be feeling like my flow is not of Earth. I zone out, become an alien with it. On another freestyle, I said, ‘I’ll put you in a hospital because my flow is so sick.’ That’s ‘your ass on wild anesthetics.’ I just be spazzin’ out with the yaowa. But it’s a term of endearment around my way.” Joell’s new mixtape is named after his favorite word and hosted by DJ Green Lantern and Don Cannon. “Its called Yaowa. Green Lantern is hosting it along with Don Cannon. We been tossing around ideas,” Ortiz said. “We didn’t really get to the meat of it. But we have a few ideas to see how we gonna make it classic. Don Cannon’s got some ideas, Green Lantern’s got some ideas. I think we gonna make it a good one. “Green kinda hooked that up,” Joell added about how the Evil Genius and Cannon got involved. “Me and Green was hollering, he said it would be a good idea to hook up with Cannon. Cannon was like, ‘That’s nothing. I been fiending to do something like that.’ So we running a triangle offense with this tape.” Lantern and Green will have the primary production on the mixtape, but Joell said he’s open to submissions from everyone — as long as the tracks are hot. As for big-name guest appearances, which have become customary with tapes from Rick Ross, the Game, Fabolous, Jadakiss, T.I. and Young Jeezy this year, the Slaughterhouse member said he hasn’t thought about it yet. “I’m just thinking about zoning out,” he said. “I’m not thinking about who I’m reaching out to. I’m not thinking about who to bring to the tape. I’m just thinking about making a really, really good tape. Letting people know who Joell Ortiz is one more time. This time with Green Lantern and Don Cannon. Just rapping, that’s what I do the best. I rap. I’m concerning myself with rippin’ this tape and getting some good feedback on it.” For other artists featured in Mixtape Daily, check out Mixtape Daily Headlines or follow the Mixtape Daily team on Twitter: @shaheemreid and @mongosladenyc .

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Joell Ortiz Explains Origins Of ‘Yaowa,’ Preps New Mixtape

Lil Wayne And Shanell’s ‘Runnin’ ‘ Video — Check Out A Preview!

That clip, plus three other brand-new ones, will premiere during MTV Jams’ Lil Tunechi Weekend. By Shaheem Reid Lil Wayne in his video for “Runnin’ ” Photo: Young Money/Cash Money Lil Tunechi Weekend: ‘Runnin’ ‘ (Featuring Shanell) As the countdown continues to Lil Tunechi Weekend on MTV Jams and MTV2, our latest Lil Wayne video preview is a little different than the first two clips, “Da Da Da” and “Knockout.” The “Runnin’ ” video, with Young Money bombshell Shanell , finds Wayne void of his jovial mood and more reflective and serious. “The loser, microphone abuser,” Wayne raps in front of a TV screen that plays stock footage of turmoil across the world, including people starving in the streets and scenes of war and protest. “Feet hurtin’, I just walked from Jerusalem/ So you should get on the side with the movement/ I’m the proof, and I’ll die just to prove it/ Whatcha wanna know? Anything, whatever/ I can’t tell ya, I can show ya better/ Me and my gun, we took an oath together/ Said I will never die if we both together.” The record has the feel of a true duet as Shanell sings, “Somebody tell me when’s it gonna end/ Where’s it gonna end up?” She also has her own performance segment in the video to coincide with her verse. “I lost all my money/ I lost half my mind/ Can’t find my direction/ Where’s the finish line?” she sings. Earlier this month, while talking to Mixtape Daily, the YM songstress said Weezy’s camp is proud to play their part to keep his music in the spotlight. “With Wayne being away right now, there’s some people that wanna see you fail,” Shanell explained. “I’m so happy that Wayne put this team of people together so that we could support him when the tables turn. Not really turn, but he can pass the baton.” This weekend, MTV Jams will also be debuting “Knockout” (featuring Nicki Minaj), “Get a Life” and “Da Da Da.” Which of the four new Wayne videos are you most excited to see this weekend? Let us know in the comments! Related Videos Lil Tunechi Weekend Sneak Peek

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Lil Wayne And Shanell’s ‘Runnin’ ‘ Video — Check Out A Preview!

Drake Says He Could Never ‘Hold It Down’ For Lil Wayne

‘I can never hold down Young Money because I’m not Lil Wayne,’ Drake tells Mixtape Daily. By Shaheem Reid, with additional reporting by Sway Calloway Drake and Lil Wayne Photo: MTV News Celebrity Favorites: Drake From a Jamaican Gully Town to Jamaica, Queens, Young Money’s Drake and Lil Wayne have the mixtape circuit in a tizzy right now. Drake’s Wayne-featured “Miss Me” — which we told you about months ago — is a must-have for mixtape DJs right now. It may be the biggest new song to hit the circuit in weeks. Despite all the anticipation Drizzy has for his upcoming Thank Me Later LP (due June 15), the 23 year-old Canadian knows that he is not in any way filling Wayne’s shoes. Drake will correct you if you say he’s “holding it down” for Weezy during the New Orleans fireman’s time in jail . “You know what, man? I rap and I rap very confident. But in my actually head, I can never hold down Young Money because I’m not Lil Wayne. Lil Wayne is who we look up to. He’s our mentor. I will definitely do everything to keep the brand going, keep Young Money on people’s minds. But Lil Wayne is the only one — he’s the epicenter of that all. I definitely don’t wanna take on that responsibility. I just wanna put out this album, give the people this great music and have the people understand it’s coming from Young Money. If you do enjoy it, then please, give all the credit to Young Money because that’s who I represent. But as far as me being able to ‘hold it down,’ that’s not even a conversation. Lil Wayne is Lil Wayne. He’s my hero, my mentor and he’s the reason I’m here. I do it in honor of him as opposed to filling the void.” “Miss Me” has appeared on the mixtape circuit in a variety of forms. First it was just a Drake verse and an alternate chorus, then it was the Drake verse, alternate chorus and a snippet of Wayne’s verse. Finally, the mastered and complete version landed on the Internet and mixtapes this week. “It’s a pretty straightforward [song],” Drake told us when his Away From Home Tour kicked off several weeks ago. “It’s a song about being away from what you love and hoping that when you’re gone, doing you, somebody out there misses you. It goes for Wayne in his situation and it goes for me in my situation, ’cause I’m on the road for I don’t how long right now.” Drake also talks about marrying Nicki Minaj on the track, while Weezy bounces off the walls on a myriad of subjects. For other artists featured in Mixtape Daily, check out Mixtape Daily Headlines or follow the Mixtape Daily team on Twitter: @shaheemreid and @mongosladenyc. Related Videos Mixtape Daily: Young Jeezy

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Drake Says He Could Never ‘Hold It Down’ For Lil Wayne

Cam’ron Explains Why He Set Up Shop In Atlanta

‘We’re trying to just get a different vibe,’ he says of recording in ATL for a few months. By Shaheem Reid Cam’ron Photo: MTV News ATLANTA — Harlem rap king Cam’ron has enough bread to set up shop anywhere. He’s had ties to Florida and he’s heavy in the Midwest. Now, Killa has packed his bags and headed down South. Cam has temporarily relocated to Atlanta to record his next few projects. “We got a bunch of stuff going on,” Cam explained recently. “I got my solo album to do. We got ‘Killa Season 2’ soundtrack. ‘Cousin Bang, the Movie’ soundtrack. To keep it 100, down South, they got a lot of hot beats with no samples. We’re trying to just get a different vibe. I did four of my albums in New York, one in Chicago, one in L.A. But I never did an album recording in Atlanta. So me and Vado came down here to get a different vibe. We’re gonna be down here for a few months recording and working.” Killa has already started his next mixtape, a collaboration with DJ Holiday . Cam and Vado also just released their Boss of All Bosses tape with DJ Drama . The set features the new Vado single “Speakin Tongues.” “I don’t know what nobody thought,” Cam told Mixtape Daily of the song. “It’s me. This is what I do for a living. But shout to Vado. It’s his record. He got the beat and all that. I was like, ‘Nah, we gotta put that out immediately.’ “Let me break it down: We’re the U.N. That’s the name of the team,” Cam described. “The U.N. is ‘Us Now.’ We got an album coming out in August that’s gonna be stupid. Vado’s solo joint, look towards December [for that one]. But I want everybody to be focused on that U.N. album, ’cause when that comes out, it’s gonna be bananas. Stupid. This August. [‘Speakin Tongues’], this is the first single off of it.” “The song is about partying, living the Harlem life. Ballin’,” Vado added. “You already know.” What do you think Cam’s Atlanta music will sound like? Let us know in the comments! Related Artists The Diplomats

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Cam’ron Explains Why He Set Up Shop In Atlanta

Katharine McPhee Talks Reality Shows And Catfights On ‘When I Was 17’

‘American Idol’ wasn’t Kat’s first reality competition, she reveals on Saturday’s episode. By MTV News staff Katharine McPhee Photo: MTV News The world got to know Katharine McPhee in 2006 as a sweet-voiced breakout star on “American Idol” who ended up coming in second place. But as the now-26-year-old singer reveals on the upcoming episode of MTV’s “When I Was 17,” airing Saturday at 11 a.m. on MTV, she popped up on another reality-TV competition back in her teenage years. “When I was 17, I went on this show called ‘Ed McMahon’s Next Big Star,’ ” she said. “It was this competition, and, oh gosh, it was awful. And I didn’t even win! I never win those competitions. It sucks!” It also seems like McPhee didn’t always like competition with her friends either. As a high school senior, she was elected student body vice president, and ended up brawling with her best friend, who just so happened to be the school’s prez. The dispute came about over a disagreement on the school’s budget — specifically, whether their homecoming ceremony should be capped off by a massive fireworks display. “She’s like, ‘I think we should skip the fireworks this year,’ ” McPhee said of her friend. “And I was like, ‘Skip the fireworks? That’s the best part of the entire homecoming. Everyone looks forward to it.’ She’s like, ‘It’s a waste of money. We’re not doing it.’ I’m like, ‘Excuse me, this is a dictatorship? I see how this is.’ “We got into this really big fight and — I was so angry — I got up and she was standing by the door and I just rushed out the door and I brushed by her shoulder,” McPhee continued. “She thought I intentionally rammed into her shoulder. We’re in a catfight, and I was screaming hysterically, ‘Stay away from me! Stay away from me!’ because I was so angry, I was so upset.” Don’t miss “When I Was 17” — this week featuring Kat McPhee, Bret Michaels and Kevin Jonas — Saturday at 11 a.m. on MTV. Related Videos Sneak Peek: ‘When I Was 17’ Episode 4 Related Photos When I Was 17 | Ep. 4 | Celebrity Photo Flashback

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Katharine McPhee Talks Reality Shows And Catfights On ‘When I Was 17’