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Thursday, December 8, 2011

#MYOL Music EXCLUSIVE: P&V ft. AG (D.I.T.C.) - One Of One (Nov 28th-Dec 3rd)


#MsLMstatus EXCLUSIVE: Denise Garcia (@DGarciaDenise) Stars In Marsh Ambrosius Video About HIV Prevention (Nov 28th-Dec 3rd)




#MsLMstatus: Beyonce Discusses Motherhood On 20/20 (VIDEO) (Nov 28th-Dec 3rd)


#MYOL News: Lionel Richie Honored by Harvard for Co-writing ‘We Are the World’ (Nov 28th-Dec 3rd)



The Renaissance man himself, Lionel Ritchie, will be honored by Harvard University on Monday. The pop singer-songwriter is set to receive the Peter J. Gomes Humanitarian Award, an annual prize for philanthropic work bestowed by the Harvard Foundation. Ritchie will be recognized for co-writing “We Are the World,” his 1985 benefit song for hunger victims in Africa and rerecorded in 2010 for the victims of the earthquake in Haiti, as well as for his longtime advocacy of breast cancer research.

“The students and faculty of the Harvard Foundation are pleased to present the 2011 Humanitarian Award to Mr. Lionel Richie in memory of the late Reverend Peter J. Gomes,” said Dr. S. Allen Counter, director of the Harvard Foundation, in a statement. “Richie is one of our nation’s most creative musical artists who has inspired many through his artistic and philanthropic endeavors.” Ritchie joins the ranks of past Gomes Award winners Chesley Sullenberger, Sharon Stone and James Earl Jones. - Rolling Stone

#MYOL News: Georgetown Class Focuses On Jay-Z’s Lyrics And Career (Nov 28th-Dec 3rd)



Michael Eric Dyson parses Jay-Z’s lyrics as if analyzing fine literature. The rapper’s riffs on luxury cars and tailored clothes and boasts of being the “Mike Jordan of recording” may make for catchy rhymes, but to Dyson, they also reflect incisive social commentary.

Dyson, a professor, author, radio host and television personality, has offered at Georgetown University this semester a popular – if unusual – class dedicated to Jay-Z and his career. The course, “Sociology of Hip Hop: Jay-Z,” may seem an unlikely offering at a Jesuit, majority-white school that counts former President Bill Clinton among its alumni. But Dyson insists that his class confronts topics present in any sociology course: racial and gender identity, sexuality, capitalism and economic inequality.
“It just happens to have an interesting object of engagement in Jay-Z – and what better way to meet people where they are?” Dyson said. “It’s like Jesus talking to the woman at the well. You ask for a drink of water, then you get into some theological discussions.”

Classes centered on pop culture superstars like Bruce Springsteen have sprouted on college campuses in recent years; Dyson himself says he’s previously taught classes on Tupac Shakur and Marvin Gaye at the University of Pennsylvania. He says Jay-Z, whose real name is Shawn Carter, is a worthy subject because of his diversity of business interests – a clothing entrepreneur, he’s also a part owner of the NBA’s New Jersey Nets (soon to move to his native New York borough of Brooklyn) – as well as his immense cross-cultural appeal and “lyrical prowess” in articulating contemporary black culture and his place in it. “I think he’s an icon of American excellence,” Dyson said.

Though hardly as rigorous as organic chemistry, the course does have midterm and final examinations and required readings, including from Jay-Z’s book, “Decoded.” The 75-minute classes – the final one is Wednesday – focus more on African-American culture and business than on the particulars of the rapper’s biography, which include millions in record sales, Grammy Awards, a marriage to Beyonce with a baby on the way and tours with Kanye West and Eminem.

#MYOL News: Diddy’s Son Justin Combs Commits To UCLA (Nov 28th-Dec 3rd)


Documentary: Backstage Watch The Throne Tour Episode 1 (VIDEO) (Nov 28th-Dec 3rd)


Documentary: Drake’s “Homecoming” Part 1-3 (Nov 28th-Dec 3rd)