Tag Archives: personal

Kate Beckinsale Bikini Pictures For Labor Day

I totally forgot it was Labor Day. If I would have known, I most likely wouldn’t have done any post and taken the day off. Well, it’s a good thing for you guys I did forget because you wouldn’t have gotten these super hot Kate Beckinsale bikini pictures. Anyway, once again, Kate is proving that she’s still the finest MILF in Hollywood. Enjoy. more pictures of Kate Beckinsale here

Project Runway Castoff Peach Carr Talks to Movieline About the Contestant Who ‘Broke Her Spirit’

Peach Carr, the Project Runway contestant eliminated in last night’s episode, was the eldest and funniest member of the season eight cast, so it’s disheartening to hear that one of her fellow competitors said something disparaging about her personal life that “broke her spirit” before the bridesmaid challenge. Carr talked to us this morning about her fabric choices, her friendship with April, and the remark that left her brokenhearted.

Go here to see the original:
Project Runway Castoff Peach Carr Talks to Movieline About the Contestant Who ‘Broke Her Spirit’

David Brooks Discusses Iraq War’s Success Without Mentioning Bush

New York Times columnist David Brooks wrote an article Tuesday largely about the success America has had rebuilding Iraq without ever mentioning the name of former President George W. Bush. To be sure, ” Nation Building Works ” also addressed some of the failures: the absence of “social trust,” the lack of doctors and engineers, as well as rampant corruption to name a few. But in a column published the very day President Obama is to address the nation about Iraq, it seems particularly odd that the man at the helm when America invaded – and who against public sentiment as well as the will of the current White House resident orchestrated a surge of military forces in 2007 largely responsible for the success of this mission – is conspicuously absent: “Iraq has made substantial progress since 2003,” the International Monetary Fund reports. Inflation is reasonably stable. A budget surplus is expected by 2012. Unemployment, though still 15 percent, is down from stratospheric levels. Oil production is back around prewar levels, and there are some who say Iraq may be able to rival Saudi production. That’s probably unrealistic, but Iraq will have a healthy oil economy, for better and for worse. In the most recent Gallup poll, 69 percent of Iraqis rated their personal finances positively, up from 36 percent in March 2007. Baghdad residents say the markets are vibrant again, with new electronics, clothing and even liquor stores. About half the U.S. money has been spent building up Iraqi security forces, and here, too, the trends are positive. Violence is down 90 percent from pre-surge days. There are now more than 400,000 Iraqi police officers and 200,000 Iraqi soldiers, with operational performance improving gradually. According to an ABC News/BBC poll last year, nearly three-quarters of Iraqis had a positive view of the army and the police, including, for the first time, a majority of Sunnis. Sounds pretty darned good, right? Yet Bush’s name is not even mentioned nor is the fact that Obama as Senator voted against the surge and campaigned against the wisdom of it on his road to the White House. As such, who got the de facto credit for the current condition in Iraq as far as this piece was concerned? When President Obama speaks to the country on Iraq, he’ll be able to point to a large national project that has contributed to measurable, positive results. If he is honest, Obama will have to balance pride with caution. He’ll have to acknowledge that the gains the U.S. is enabling may vanish if the U.S. military withdraws entirely next year. He’ll have to acknowledge that bottom-up social change requires time and patience. He’ll have to heed the advice of serious Iraq hands like Crocker, Michael O’Hanlon of Brookings and Stephen Biddle of the Council on Foreign Relations, and shelve plans to withdraw completely. Yes, but nowhere did Brooks advise this President to congratulate or at least acknowledge the former one for going against Obama’s senatorial wishes by orchestrating a surge that made any of the success possible. I’m sure this was just an oversight on Brooks’s part.

Read this article:
David Brooks Discusses Iraq War’s Success Without Mentioning Bush

NYT’s Kate Zernike Does It Again, Suggests Tea Party Opposition to Minimum Wage Racially Suspect

New York Times reporter Kate Zernike, whose book on the Tea Party movement,”Boiling Mad,” is due out next month, led off Saturday’s National section by suggesting racism on the part of Fox News host Glenn Beck’s “Restoring Honor” rally at the Lincoln Memorial later that day. Beck has outraged the left with the timing of the rally, the 47th anniversary of Martin Luther King’s March on Washington and the “I Have a Dream” speech. Although Zernike and others in the media use “Tea Party faithful” as shorthand to mark the rally, the actual gathering on Saturday turned out to be far more religious than political, with Zernike herself likening it to a “large church picnic” in her Sunday coverage. But Zernike led her Saturday preview of the rally, ” Where Dr. King Once Stood, Tea Party Claims His Mantle ,” with accusations of racism: It seems the ultimate thumb in the eye: that Glenn Beck would summon the Tea Party faithful to a rally on the anniversary of the March on Washington, and address them from the very place where the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. delivered his “I have a dream” speech 47 years ago. After all, the Tea Party and its critics have been facing off for months over accusations of racism. But many of the busloads of Tea Party activists expected in Washington this weekend do not see any irony or offense. In fact, they have come to see the Tea Party as the aggrieved — its loosely affiliated members unfairly characterized, even persecuted, as extremists. Those same “accusations of racism” foisted on the Tea Party movement by hostile reporters like Zernike. (The rally itself turned out to be a largely apolitical celebration of patriotism and religion.) Zernike has a very sensitive ear for linking conservatism and racism, notoriously finding racial undertones where they don’t exist, as when she accused conservative speaker Jason Mattera of using a “Chris Rock voice” in a February 18 post for the Times’ political blog, ” CPAC Speaker Bashes Obama, in Racial Tones .” Mattera was in fact speaking in his usual thick Brooklynese. Zernike has long employed unsubstantiated racial accusations to boost her hostile coverage of the movement. On Saturday she made some stunning guilt-by-association leaps, one being that opposition to the minimum wage makes you racially suspect. In the Tea Party’s talk of states’ rights, critics say they hear an echo of slavery, Jim Crow and George Wallace. Tea Party activists call that ridiculous: they do not want to take the country back to the discrimination of the past, they say, they just want the states to be able to block the federal mandate on health insurance. Still, the government programs that many Tea Party supporters call unconstitutional are the ones that have helped many black people emerge from poverty and discrimination. It is not just that Rand Paul, the Republican nominee for Senate in Kentucky, said that he disagreed on principle with the provisions of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 that required business owners to serve blacks. It is that many Tea Party activists believe that laws establishing a minimum wage or the federal safety net are an improper expansion of federal power. Critics rightly note that Dr. King spoke over and over of the need for this country to acknowledge its “debt to the poor,” calling for an “economic bill of rights” that would “guarantee a job to all people who want to work and are able to work.” In Mr. Beck’s taxonomy, this would make him a Marxist. Even if Tea Party members are right that any racist signs are those of mischief-makers, even if Glenn Beck had chosen any other Saturday to hold his rally, it would be hard to quiet the argument about the Tea Party and race. Leaving aside the questionable assumption that minimum wage laws actually benefit blacks, the idea of King as a leftist or Marxist is hardly a new or controversial idea. King was an admirer of Marx, as reported on page 537 of the Pulitzer Prize-winning biography by David Garrow, ” Bearing the Cross: Martin Luther King, Jr., and the Southern Christian Leadership Conference .” Garrow encapsulated King’s discussions during a retreat with his SCLC staff: “Actually, he went on, there was much to admire about Karl Marx, who had ‘a great passion for social justice” but had fallen afoul of the theoretical errors of materialism.” Note that Zernike concluded that the “argument about the Tea Party and race” wasn’t going away, which is certainly true if reporters like Zernike fan the flames. In addition, liberal columnists Charles Blow and Bob Herbert both went after Beck on Saturday. Blow’s ” Glenn Beck’s Nightmare ” was more in sorrow: “Beck wants to swaddle his movement in the cloth of the civil rights movement, a cloth soaked in the blood and tears of the innocent and oppressed, a cloth his divisiveness and self-aggrandizing threatens to defile.” On the same page, Herbert’s criticism came more in anger : “Beck is a provocateur who likes to play with matches in the tinderbox of racial and ethnic confrontation. He seems oblivious to the real danger of his execrable behavior.”

View original post here:
NYT’s Kate Zernike Does It Again, Suggests Tea Party Opposition to Minimum Wage Racially Suspect

Unhinged Ed Schultz Goes on Psycho Talk Promo of Failing Show

Your pink slip is on the way. That is the fear that is probably driving Ed Schultz completely over the edge. And Big Ed probably insured the likelihood of that outcome when he recently threatened to go postal and torch MSNBC when that network neglected to promote his abysmally rated show on an election night. Brian Maloney at the Radio Equalizer has recorded the Schultz dementia from his radio show as he pathetically makes the case for the “success” of his failing MSNBC Big Ed show. The full transcript is below the fold but first an excerpt from his demonic rant which demonstrates why the MSNBC suits, for safety sake, might want to pass Ed through a metal detector whenever he enters their studio: And you have no idea, in my bones, in my very soul! In my heart! I want to kick Fox’s ass! I want to drive them into the ground! I want to spike the ball! I want to kick ’em in the teeth on the way back to the huddle! And then I want to turn around and lift my leg on ’em! Because that’s all they’re worth! Here is a transcript  of Ed Schultz in rabid rant mode but the full extent of his uncontrollable rage must be heard to be fully appreciated: Now, Beck has big ratings at 5 o’clock. But at 6 o’clock against me, they drop damn near through the floor. They lose half their audience. In the meantime, The Ed Show, right now, this month of August, we are beating CNN in the demographic 25-54 by 1.2 million people. In total viewers for the month of August, we are beating CNN by 3.77 million. We’re starting to play in the arena of the big boys now.  And it’s not because of me. It’s because you, the viewers and listeners to this show. Now, the other night we got as close as we’ve ever gotten to beating Fox. Bret Baier beat me by 103 points in the demo, 103. Now you see, you have to understand that, they have a big audience but, hell, they’re all old! In 25-54, we’re getting in the neighborhood. …And you have no idea, in my bones, in my very soul! In my heart! I want to kick Fox’s ass! I want to drive them into the ground! I want to spike the ball! I want to kick ’em in the teeth on the way back to the huddle! And then I want to turn around and lift my leg on ’em! Because that’s all they’re worth! MSNBC executives might want to listen carefully to the unhinged fury of their own host before handing him the pink slip. For your own safety, don’t do it while Schultz is still in the studio or you could risk the scorched earth that he threatened…or worse. It would be best to inform him while he is at home during a long weekend. Please be sure to deliver his personal effects to his front door so there would be no need for Big Ed to ever return to the MSNBC studio. Have a happy Labor Day weekend, Ed, and enjoy the music .

More:
Unhinged Ed Schultz Goes on Psycho Talk Promo of Failing Show

Sofia Coppola Talks Motherhood, Reality TV And ‘Somewhere’

Writer/director’s latest, starring Stephen Dorff and set at L.A.’s Chateau Marmont, premieres at the Venice Film Festival. By Josh Horowitz Elle Fanning and Stephen Dorff in “Somewhere” Photo: Focus Features You could say Sofia Coppola’s work is primarily concerned with stories of lives playing out in the heady glow of fame or notoriety: the talk-of-the-town death-wishers in “The Virgin Suicides,” the lonely wife lounging in the fancy hotel while her husband hobnobs with celebs in “Lost in Translation,” the mercurial public and private life of the young queen of France in “Marie Antoinette.” Now comes “Somewhere,” a film set at the famed Chateau Marmont in Los Angeles, where a restive hotshot actor (Stephen Dorff) whiles away his time until his adolescent daughter (Elle Fanning) shows up and forces him to reassess his ways of emptiness and agony. The settings might change — 18th-century France, modern-day Hollywood — but the themes and the existentially troubled atmosphere of Coppola’s films remain the same. Yet the director describes “Somewhere” and “Lost in Translation” as her most personal films, in that she also penned both scripts, and audiences are sure to make many connections between the two. The soft-spoken Oscar nominee doesn’t seem to mind. In a recent phone conversation with MTV News as part of our Fall Movie Preview, she spoke openly about her inspirations for the new film and how her own life — from her time living abroad to becoming a mother for the first time — have influenced her creative decision making. MTV : The title is “Somewhere.” Did you come up with it early on? Sofia Coppola : Yeah, when I was first writing, that was just a temporary title until I thought of a real title and then it became the title. MTV : Where did this film begin in your mind? What was the genesis? Coppola : I’m not sure if it was the character or the setting for this one, but I think it started with wanting to write about Los Angeles, and I was living in Paris at the time. So thinking about Los Angeles, this character came into mind, that Stephen Dorff plays, and then I wanted to do a portrait of this guy and it took its shape from there. And then the character of his daughter came after, and that evolved into kind of the father/daughter part of the story. MTV : What were you trying to capture about Los Angeles that may or may not have been captured in film before? Do you feel L.A. is ever captured well on film? Coppola : I like “Shampoo” and “American Gigolo,” and I feel there hasn’t been a portrait of modern-day L.A. And I was just looking at how tabloid culture was while I was living in France. You know, there’s always stuff about the Chateau Marmont. I remember going there when I was in college, and now it’s so different with our reality TV shows and paparazzi around there. There wasn’t Us Weekly when I lived there. It was a different world and I started with wanting to do something set in that world. MTV : Have you watched some of the reality shows that the people who sign my paycheck created? Coppola : I haven’t watched tons of it, kind of a little here and there, but it just seems when you look at these tabloids, they’re all reality TV stars and definitely a focus on celebrity culture more than ever. But I’ve seen a few. The twins in my movie are from “The Girls Next Door.” So we do have some reality TV stars in it. MTV : So Stephen’s character, can you not help but base your characters after different aspects of people that you know? Coppola : No, he’s a combination of a ton of stories I’ve heard or different people’s experiences, and I have put them all together into my imagination of what this guy’s life is like. So it definitely is from people I know or stories I’ve heard. MTV : Why was Mr. Dorff the guy for you? Coppola : I just felt like he was the right guy for this part and I think he’s a really talented actor and he has a lot of heart and sweetness that I thought was important for this role. And it’s nice to see someone that’s not in a million movies every year. You don’t know everything about their personal life and all that. MTV : As a parent, how much are you relaying your own experiences with the film? Coppola : The movie’s the first thing I wrote since having a kid. I definitely think that changes your point of view or that it had an effect on what I was thinking about. So the character had a kid, and how it affected him was definitely part of the story. MTV : What does the script for this one look like versus what I will see on the screen? Coppola : I don’t think [scripts are] a blueprint, and I kind of stay open to what could happen. I don’t storyboard everything and have an exact plan. I think you have an idea of what you want. So the script is definitely what the movie is. I think, if you look back on it, it’s definitely from that but there’s a lot of improvisation, especially with Chris Pontius, who plays the buddy from “Jackass.” Part of why I cast him is because he’s great at improvising and coming up with things and he’s really great with kids. So I knew he would have a great interaction with Elle’s character. MTV : Were there any exceptional improvisational moments that you captured that weren’t in the script? Coppola : Yes, there are always happy accidents because when you’re being creative, it’s always the mistakes or things that you look forward to that make it real. I can’t think [of one] specifically, but I think just putting Chris Pontius and Elle in a room together, and Stephen, the three of them, it was fun to watch that interaction. There are definitely surprises. MTV : Can you tell me a little bit about Elle? Coppola : She’s 12 now. She was 11 when we were shooting. I was always impressed by her because she’s so natural. When she starts a scene, she doesn’t shift. You don’t see a big difference even though the character is different from her in real life. But I feel that she is really talented and I tried to stay out of her way and not interfere too much. And we talked about it and she had the impression of what I was trying. At the beginning, we did rehearsals, and we rehearsed with her and Stephen together, so she got an idea of it. MTV : Would you say at this point in your career you’re a confident filmmaker? Coppola : I don’t think you’re ever totally confident because you’re always pushing yourself into new territory to do something you haven’t done before. So it’s always scary, but I feel like I have a clear idea in my head when I start a movie of what it should feel like and what it should look like. So I guess it’s an intuitive thing, but I don’t ever feel confident. It’s scary. Besides that, I do have a strong opinion. That’s why I like directing, because you can be very opinionated. MTV : Were you sensitive when making this to the comparisons to “Lost in Translation”? Coppola : When I started writing it, I didn’t know what shape it was going to take, so I really didn’t think about that. But then after finishing it, I can definitely see that there are similarities. I’ve only written two original scripts, so I feel this and “Lost in Translation” are my most personal stories because it originates from me. So there are going to be links, because I think, like all creative people, you’re interested in similar themes that you revisit. I think each one of my movies has been a continuation of the last one. MTV : Why use the Chateau Marmont? What are your memories from your time there? Coppola : I just thought for this young actor guy in a moment of transition, that’s where he’d be staying. And there’s something impermanent about a hotel. Chateau Marmont is legendary in L.A. and it’s kind of a setting for show business. So it seemed like the natural place for it to take place. And I have memories of going there as a kid and then as an adult in L.A., and we would go out there and it was always filled with interesting people for people-watching and it has great stories and a lot of history that I wanted to be a part of it. But I wanted the iconic L.A. backdrop. MTV : Do you feel the same need to pick the brain of your successful family members? Coppola : I always am glad to have my dad when I need advice or mentoring. Sometimes I’ll show him [something] earlier on, but this one I had a more specific idea of how I wanted it to be and then I showed him when I was done. And my brother is the producer and he helped me a lot in the preproduction phase. MTV : You’re premiering at Venice, right? Coppola : Yeah, next week. It’s the first time we’re going to show an audience. MTV : How do you feel about that? Do you get nervous? Coppola : Yeah I’m excited to share it with the audience and [in Venice]. And the guys from Phoenix are going to be with us. But I’m excited and it’s also scary and nerve-racking to put it out there in the world for opinions and reactions. But I’m really happy with the way it turned out. I like it, so I hope other people will connect to it. From the saucy Jessica Alba in “Little Fockers” to James Franco’s grueling journey in “127 Hours,” the MTV Movies team is delving into the hottest flicks of fall 2010. Check back daily for exclusive clips, photos and interviews with the films’ biggest stars. Check out everything we’ve got on “Somewhere.” For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com. Related Videos Exclusive Clips From The Fall’s Most Anticipated Films Related Photos Fall Movie 2010 Preview Week: Exclusive Photos

Read more:
Sofia Coppola Talks Motherhood, Reality TV And ‘Somewhere’

Lil Wayne Pens A Note About U.S. Open Tennis From Prison

Rapper sent the handwritten letter to Sports Illustrated. By Jayson Rodriguez Lil Wayne Photo: Johnny Nunez/ WireImage Lil Wayne knows his sports well enough to understand free agency: When you’re not signed, you go with the best offer. The Cash Money rapper was formerly a blogger for ESPN, opining about the NCAA Men’s Basketball Tournament, among other topics. Now, however, the incarcerated rap star has sent his latest athletic musings to ESPN the Magazine ‘s rival, Sports Illustrated. (He’s also been posting about sports on his personal blog .) Weezy sent a handwritten note to the publication with his predictions for the U.S. Open’s men’s and women’s tournaments. The rapper picked top-seeded Rafael Nadal in the men’s bracket and Belgian star Kim Clijsters to take the woman’s crown. “I’m definitely rooting for [Nadal] to get the Grand Slam and win the U.S. Open,” Lil Wayne wrote on SI stationary after the magazine sent him a letter. “He’s already became the 2nd youngest player to win 8 major titles before the age of 25. He’s halfway there to Roger [Federer]’s 16. And even while battling knee tendinitis, he’s still ranked #1. His Wimbledon performance was one of a kind. He simply plays with pure passion and leaves it all out there on the court.” Lil Wayne is slated to be released from prison in November. He was sentenced to a year in prison in New York after a 2007 gun bust. Next month, the Cash Money Records superstar will release an EP directly online. Since he began his jail time, the rapper has released a flurry of music videos, recently appearing in Drake’s “Miss Me” clip. Wayne’s prot

ABC News Issues "Reprimand" To Their Ground Zero Mosque Plant

ABC News has reprimanded one of its employees for trying to start some kind of ruckus during Sunday’s Ground Zero Mosque protest. A freelance audio operator covering a protest at the site of a proposed mosque and community center near Ground Zero has been reprimanded for his behavior. Andrea Lafferty , who was a speaker at the mosque opposition rally, first noticed the audio operator questioning a man in the crowd who was holding a sign which read, “No Sharia Here.” ABC News spokesman Jeffrey Schneider tells TVNewser the network has looked into Lafferty’s complaint and agrees that the tech “aggressively” questioned members of the crowd with his personal camera. Adds Schneider, “He was not instructed to perform interviews or to engage with protesters and was there solely as an audio tech. He has been reprimanded for his behavior at this event.” “Reprimanded”. Like, “Be cool about it next time”…?

Follow this link:
ABC News Issues "Reprimand" To Their Ground Zero Mosque Plant

Wyclef Jean Laments Failed Haitian Presidential Bid In Song

‘Prizon for the CEP’ goes back and forth between English and Creole. By Gil Kaufman Wyclef Jean (file) Photo: PictureGroup Wyclef Jean is protesting his exclusion from the upcoming presidential election in Haiti the only way he knows how: by releasing a song. The former Fugees leader posted a new track called “Prizon Pou K.E.P.A.” (which translates into “Prison for the CEP”) on Wednesday, in which he compares the rigorous scrutiny he faced to a child receiving a failing report card. The title is a pointed reference to the Haitian election commission, CEP, which ruled that he was not eligible to run for office in his birth nation. “I am contesting, I am going to the court, I am contesting/ I don’t agree, I am contesting, I am going to the court, I am contesting,” Wyclef sings. “Look, they gave Wyclef a report card/ They say Wyclef, you don’t speak Creole/ You are the Diaspora’s candidate.” Over a subtle, skittering beat and gently picked acoustic guitar, ‘Clef, 40, sings about his disappointment in the ruling in the island’s native language of Creole. “Even my own Haitians curse me out on Facebook when they hear I want to be president,” he says before calling out former bandmate Pras for the Fugees member’s negative reaction to Wyclef’s attempts. “Even my friends say to give Wyclef a report card/ Even the Catholic priests are surprised, they told me to leave Tigoav, come to Les Cayes/ All weekend I was celebrating Our Lady [Notre Dame].” His tone is sedate and conversational for most of the tune, but at just past the two-minute mark, he breaks into a Bob Marley-like wail, during which his vocals take on a pained, urgent quaver. The decision to pour out his heart in Creole in the nearly four-minute song is a pointed bid to speak directly to the Haitian people, as well as a possible winking rebuke to actor Sean Penn , who wrote a stinging column for the Huffington Post this week questioning ‘Clef’s motives in his failed presidential bid, as well as his fluency in the island nation’s two main languages: French and Creole. Jean has pointed words for the nation’s current president as well, Ren

Jay-Z To Discuss ‘Decoded’ Memoir At New York Public Library

Rolling Stones’ Keith Richards will also speak about his memoir, “Life,” this fall. By Mawuse Ziegbe Jay-Z and Keith Richards Photo: Getty Images Jay-Z is releasing his memoir “Decoded” this fall, but the superstar lyricist will have to keep things quiet during one of his upcoming public appearances. The Brooklyn MC is slated to speak at the New York Public Library on November 15. Jigga will chat about “Decoded” as part of the “Live From the NYPL” fall series, which also features literary stars such as Toni Morrison and Zadie Smith. The library appears to be down with making some noise next season, as Jay-Z isn’t the only musical artist hitting the library: Rolling Stones rocker Keith Richards will also dish about his upcoming tome, “Life,” on October 29. “We’re very excited to reveal to the public a different side of their personality — the literary side!” a rep for the library told MTV News. “Decoded,” which is scheduled to hit shelves the same month as his library appearance, is a memoir punched up by insightful explorations of Jay’s hard-hitting rhymes. The book was penned in collaboration with journalist Dream Hampton and delves into his steady rise from pushing product on the streets of Brooklyn to stacking hits as one of the most revered lyricists in the game. The publication of “Decoded” will cap a long period in which the MC’s autobiography remained in literary limbo. Hov and Hampton had initially begun work on “The Black Book” in 2003, which was set to be released in 2004 via a deal with MTV Books/ Pocket Books. Hov pulled the plug on the project in 2005. In an interview with Rolling Stone earlier this year, Jigga admitted that “Decoded,” which is now being published by Speigel & Grau , has been completed for years. The MC revealed that his hesitance to release the project stemmed from the personal nature of the subject matter, much of which Hov was confronting for the first time. “It’s too much. For the book, I was interviewed, people close to me were interviewed. So I was learning a lot of things I didn’t know as a child,” Jay-Z said. “It’s not anything I haven’t said in the past, in songs. It’s just more detailed. A song is three minutes long. A book doesn’t have to rhyme, and it has no time limit, so you can say exactly how everything went.” What do you think Jay-Z will discuss in his upcoming memoir? Let us know in the comments below! Related Artists Jay-Z

See the rest here:
Jay-Z To Discuss ‘Decoded’ Memoir At New York Public Library