Ooh…I want THEM now! *Say like Veruca Salt* LOL…


So, I decided to make a list of books that I want…as I get them, I will cross them off the list. I might even add some…we’ll see. I’m also planning on starting a new page for book reviews. I’m not a professional book reviewer, but an avid reader. If I LOVE a book, I’m definitely going to tell the world about it.

Love Heist by Jackie D.- PURCHASED!!!!!!!!

A Moth To A Flame by Ashley Antoinette

A Diamond in the Rough by Jacqueline McDuffie

The Dirty Divorce by Miss KP

Onyx and Eggshell by Wyatt Bryson- we’re fellow Winthrop alumni!!!!!! Can’t wait to read this one!

The Dopeman’s Wife by Jaquavis Coleman

Prince’s Donor by Sindee Lynn

When A Tattered Past Catches You by Tasha Wright

Black Diamond 2: Nicety by Brittani Williams

Pulpit Confessions by Peron F. Long

Memoirs of a Creole Crime Cartel by Red Snapper

Get N’ Serious by Rory Sheriff

Get N’ Serious 2: My Addiction by Rory Sheriff

Perfectly Addicted by Chermean Taylor Gregory

Giveaway: Win a free copy of Diamonds in the Rough!


 

 You will have to answer 5 short questions correctly in order to be entered into the drawing. Send your responses to blaq_pearls@yahoo.com. Do not post them on the site. If your answers are posted, you will be disqualified. Two winners will be chosen at random to receive one copy free of charge of Diamonds in the Rough. You will also receive a confirmation email that your responses were received.  Good luck! Deadline is June 30, 2010.  

  

  

1. What is the name of Carmen’s best friend?  

2. What is the name of the real estate tycoon who is pictured in the newspaper with Carmen’s father? 

3. What sorority does Tiara want to pledge? 

4. What is the name of the guy who was staring at Carmen at the diner? 

5. What is this guy’s special physical feature that draws Carmen to him? 

Taylor Swift covers Marie Claire


  

celeb****y.com

 

Yeah, I’m a Taylor Swift fan. Thought I’d share this article. This is straight from marieclaire.com:  

Earlier this week, Reba McEntire talked about the music industry and people in country music she looks to for inspiration and she mentioned you.
Wow. That’s the coolest thing I’ve heard in a really long time! It better be true! Reba is absolutely one of my favorite people on this planet. I think that when you’re making your way up in the music industry you have all these heroes and the reasons why they are your heroes. As soon as you get into the industry your guidelines change a little bit. For me, my heroes now are great people first and great artists second. People on that list are Garth Brooks, Reba McEntire and Faith Hill — people that I just feel strive to be great people and kind people first before anything else gets factored in. To hear something so wonderful from one of those people on that giant, huge, amazing list, that’s awesome. I love Reba!
 

It seems like you’re going 100 miles an hour right now. Is this too fast or just right for you?
This is just right for me. I’m loving it. I played Atlanta last night and got in at 3 a.m. this morning and then went straight to the Convention Center to sign autographs for five-and-a-half hours and that’s the way I want to live my life. This is absolutely my favorite time of year. I remember when I was 14-years-old and was holding a clipboard interning at the CMA Music Fest, just feeling like if there was ever a chance that one day people would line up to have me sign something of theirs, then that would be a really, really good day for me. I’m really happy to say that today was that day and it’s so wonderful to get the chance to do this.
 

Thanks to Twitter we know that you may be doing something with John Mayer and T-Pain. Could you talk about working with those artists, the freedom, and what’s that like for you creatively?
I love making new friends and I respect people for a lot of different reasons. For me, great music doesn’t just have to fall into one category or one genre and I love appreciating all kinds of music. Country music is obviously my favorite and that just goes without saying. But, I’ve always loved John Mayer and I think T-Pain is brilliant. Getting to work with people like that has been really, really fun for me. It’s something that I’ve always wanted to do and the fact that country radio has been so wonderful to me and has remained so true to me despite the fact that I’ve gotten to go and do all these things that I’ve dreamed about doing. It’s just been a really, really cool thing.
 

Your music is so personal; it’s almost like writing in a diary. Do you remember the first time you performed and were you nervous that the person you were singing about was in the audience?
For me, writing a song, I sit down and the process doesn’t really involve me thinking about the demographic of people I’m trying to hit or who I want to be able to relate to the song or what genre of music it falls under. When I sit down and write a song the only person that I’m thinking about in that room is the person that I’m writing the song about and what I want them to know and what I wish I could tell them to their face, but I’m going to say it in a song instead. So, for me, music is really more about a diary and a confession. I love it. I love getting to say things to people that I wouldn’t say to them if I was standing face to face with them. Music is a way of verbalizing those things that I feel that I can’t say.
 

What was the craziest thing you’ve had to sign?
I’ve had a lot of interesting things like a turtle shell with my face painted on it. That was the winning touch. My fans know me so well and they get me awesome presents. This girl brought me this bracelet [that I’m wearing] and I really like it. A lot of the jewelry that I wear are fan gifts because they’re so awesome and they give me great presents.
 

Thousands of girls are running around in sundresses and cowboy boots. Is this a fashion phenomenon for you?
Yes! That’s awesome. I wasn’t trying to start anything. I wasn’t trying to make people dress a certain way, but seeing girls coming to my shows wearing sundresses and cowboy boots and curling their hair is one of my favorite experiences ever because I remember when I was weird for dressing the way that I dressed and I was weird for having curly hair. It’s really fun to see that I’m not that weird anymore.
 

What do you do to keep from burning out?
As far as burning out, I get tired a lot, but I never get tired of it. I remember when I was a little kid and I used to sit there and think about how lucky I would be one day where people cared about the words that I wrote or how lucky I would be if someday I was just walking through the mall and saw some little girl walking by with my face on her t-shirt. 
 

When you spend so much time daydreaming about things like that, when that actually happens you don’t ever complain about it. When I go to a restaurant, yeah I know that a line is probably going to form in front of the table, but didn’t I always wish for that? Yeah, I did. So it’s like, I never want to be the girl who wanted something so bad her whole life and then gets it and complains about it. I’m not going to be that girl. 

Annie Reuter is a freelance writer and music blogger who covers concerts and music festivals around the country. In constant pursuit of the next show to attend and band to interview, Annie keeps up her own music blog, You Sing, I Write, where you can read more on the latest up-and-coming bands.  

  

 

The Journey to Diamonds (Part IV)


Maybe I should save this post as one of my guest blogging features for the Virtual Book Tour. Oh well, I feel I should unleash this now. To be honest, I should have unleashed this on June 1st when Diamonds in the Rough dropped.

I came into this industry, dumb. Yeah, I said it! Did I do my research like I was supposed to? No. I’m learning as I go, which can be hard at times, but exciting as well. I love to learn. If you can teach me something, you have made my day.

One thing that breaks my heart and will probably  never change is this: Great authors often go ignored because their with a small publisher. I’m not being bias and talking about myself. Let me say this…(shoutout to B. Swangin’ Webster!) I am  a READER and a WRITER. My plan is to buy 1 book everytime I get paid because there are so many authors I’ve met via Facebook whose books have me intrigued. Some of them I feel can potentially be bestsellers or should be, but the politics of the industry won’t allow it. Well, unless they go the literary agent route and sign with a major publisher. Why should we/they have to do that? Why can’t we/they just release a book and have it automatically on the shelves. I know, I know, that would only happen in a perfect world.

Like I’ve read online a gazillion times, its all about the money. Stores don’t want products that won’t sell. However, I’m sitting here looking at all of these authors who are with small publishers AND on the grind. Their books are probably better than what’s on the shelves, but will get ignored because their not with a major publisher. BAH FREAKING HUMBUG!

Or their not marketable because to industry standards, their a little unknown. If you’re talentless, but have a rich family then of course, you’ll get a book deal right off your name. It’s like, people know its going to sell so they will sign you even if your writing is crap (wait, did I just go in on Paris Hilton?-EEEEKKK- not saying her writing is crap, never read her book, but you get my point)

I know I have the option of finding an agent and getting with the “big dogs,” but you know what, I want to prove people wrong. It’s going to take HARD, HARD work, but I have the same ambitious spirit as Carmen Davenport (you should know who this is by now LOL)…I’m going to WORK now. PLAY later.

*Razzle~Dazzle*

just so you know…


  • “Ultra” by Jay-Z featuring Swizz Beatz is the official song for Diddy’s CIROC Ultra Premium Vodka.
  • So I remember talking about how Michael Jackson’s kids were set to inherit 33 million, well, yeah, its still being reported as that, but they can’t touch the money till their 40 years old. DAYUUMS!
  • John Mayer’s European tour has been canceled due to illness.
  • Wow, I didn’ t know that Patrick Stewart had been knighted. He’s now Sir Patrick Stewart. This happened on Wednesday in London. He was knighted by Queen Elizabeth.
  • Word is that Jennifer Aniston will be making a cameo in Scream 4. Come on, don’t look like that, you know Courtney Arquette is in it- remember, their Friends? Literally :-0)
  • From what I’ve been reading, some people (and not just bloggers, but regular ‘ol folks) is trying to make Hoopz, T.I.’s new jump off. She was at the Monique show when he was on there and was also at some club where he performed. Maybe, its just a coincidence that the two were in the same spot on 2 different occassions. Oh well, we all know that he’s marrying Tiny. People can speculate all they want.
  • Maybe Mariah isn’t pregnant according to Nick Cannon’s tweets. He basically said that if they were to make an announcement then they would do it personally. I believe them…
  • Khloe Odom is pregnant! I’m guessing this rumor is true…oh well, Congrats!
  • Miley Cyrus has teamed up with Lil’ Jon for the remix to her single “Can’t Be Tamed”
  • Haven’t seen Nelly in awhile…check her out on the cover of Flare:

thelifefiles.com

 

  • Check out Jessica Biel on the cover of Glamour:

thelifefiles.com

 

  • Tony Parker has a nice birthday cake….

latingossip.com

 

  • Check out T.I.’s new video, “Yeah You Know (Takers)” which is from the soundtrack for the movie he stars in with Paul Walker, Idris Elba, Chris Brown, Michael Ealy, and Zoe Saldana:

  

  • In Lupe Fiasco news, it has been confirmed that he is scheduled to make an appearance on Game’s new album, The R.E.D. Album. Lupe is also featured on the remix of “Tightrope” by Janelle Monet. The track also features B.o.B…check out the single cover:

lupefiasco-lupend.blogspot.com

The Twilight Saga continues…


So not only did the female stars of Twilight, complete a new Vanity Fair photoshoot, but there’s a new book on the way which is a spin-off from the Twilight series.

Peep one of the photos from the shoot:

popcrunch.com

In the photo are (and not necessarily in this order): Dakota Fanning, Ashley Greene, Nikki Reed, Elizabeth Reaser, Bryce Dallas Howard, and Julia Jones. This is for the July issue of the magazine.

wikipedia.com

Okay, now more on to Stephanie Meyer’s new novella…it comes out on June 5th…here’ s a synopsis, straight from breetanner.com (the official site):

Fans of The Twilight Saga will be enthralled by this riveting story of Bree Tanner, a character first introduced in Eclipse, and the newborn vampire world she inhabits. In another irresistible combination of danger, mystery, and romance, Stephenie Meyer tells the devastating story of Bree and the newborn army as they prepare to close in on Bella Swan and the Cullens, following their encounter to its unforgettable conclusion.

Complex.com interviews Lyor Cohen


bbc.co.uk

 

I know, I know. Some of you are probably like, Vogue, who is he? Well, Lyor Cohen is one of the prominent figures in hip-hop if you ask me. If you’re a true hip-hop head then you definitely know his name. Back when Run DMC was on the scene, he was their road manager, not only that, he was also President of Def Jam at one point in time. Now, he’s the CEO of Warner Music Group.

A lot of people say that the music industry is moving toward music becoming free. Is that a viable model going forward?

Lyor Cohen: If it’s free, then how would record labels support paying their staff and signing new artists? I think it would be bad for culture and the art if artists and people who develop the apparatus to support those artists don’t get paid. How about this: Look at the vibe around the world about America and Americans after eight years of Bush. People who adored us and aspired to our democracy and our society turned their backs on us. Content that’s generated out of America, whether it be film or music, has, in my opinion, much greater impact in sustaining our credibility and our place as a cultural capital. This is our great export. 

What does it say that Gucci Mane, one of your biggest artists, made his name by releasing a slew of original material for free?

Lyor Cohen: Well, I’m not convinced he didn’t get paid, because a lot of those mixtapes were sold. I don’t doubt that mom and pop stores sold them, but a lot of people got them for free. That has more to do with some of the corrections that need to happen in our business and the delivery of our music, whether it be radio or new Internet programming. He may have been frustrated that he wasn’t able to get his music out. 

You’ve played an integral part in hip-hop for 25 years. Nowadays, people complain about the state of rap. What do you say to people who think hip-hop’s best days are behind it?

Lyor Cohen: I like moments of staleness and mildew, simply because it creates the lane for change. Remember when everything was full of color and happy-dappy when Bad Boy was running everything and then we came with DMX? Do you remember that summer? How excited people got? That’s my favorite moment—when I sit on a porch in the summertime and the air gets really thick. There’s no breeze. The birds start darting around. And then all of a sudden a violent storm comes through­—raindrops as big as cups; lighting and thunder. I know when things get stale there’s someone making an opportunity. Rap now is multi-generational, which has its own issues. My son is a big Cudi fan, but he does not like talking to me about Kid Cudi. 

It’s not like you don’t know anything about Cudi. Why wouldn’t he want to talk to you?

Lyor Cohen: Fuckin’ kids don’t want knowledge from their 50-year-old dad. Kids want to have their own shit. It doesn’t matter if I’m in the business. 

Speaking of new artists, many people were expecting Drake to sign with you at Warner Music. Did it disappoint you that he ended up going with Universal Motown?

Lyor Cohen: A very disappointing thing. But I’m a lover of rap music. I want good things to happen to this industry. I have so much good fortune and already have everything. I feel like we have a terrific company, and we’re very old-school in that once we grip someone’s hand, fundamentally we believe that’s a deal. But that’s not this generation. They’ll grip someone’s hand and say they’re coming, but if someone offers them more they will renege. That’s not how we get down. 

Did Drake do that?

Lyor Cohen: I’ll keep that between Drake and myself. 

Have you met any young executives that you see a lot of yourself in?

Lyor Cohen: I haven’t. Only because this generation is handicapped by the era of excess. I grew up in an era of love and swimming upstream, determined to prove people wrong. We had chips on our shoulders, like, “We belong here.” But now it’s the most popular, biggest segment of the industry. We’ve had a decade of private planes and Maybachs. That’s not the era that I came from. The era I came from, I had zero expectation that I was going to make any money. I was determined to prove to the gatekeepers of the industry that we had a place here and we weren’t going to relinquish our opportunity. I never had to keep up with nobody because we were all on subways. So it was never like, “My subway is bigger and flyer than your subway.” And there was a real fraternal order. We were backstage with Andy Warhol, Jean-Michel Basquiat, and Keith Haring, and we had zero fucking money. But everybody wanted us in the VIP room because we were doing something that was so important to them. People understood that it wasn’t if it was going to happen, it was when it was going to happen. 

 

Sneak Peek of the Barbie in VIBE…


youheardthatnew.com

This is straight from vibe.com:

“People don’t get when you’re off, or you’re having a bad day,” she says, obliquely referring to the photograph that bounced around the blogs of her hand- in-hand with Diddy, looking especially miserable. The speculation was inevitable: Had she been crying? Was she just tired? Are they doing it?


“When I grew up I saw females doing certain things, and I thought I had to do that exactly,” she says. “The female rappers of my day spoke about sex a lot . . . and I thought that to have the success they got, I would have to represent the same thing. When in fact I didn’t have to represent the same thing.”


“I’m not abandoning the funny voices. I just did a crazy tribute to ODB’s ‘Shimmy Shimmy Ya,’” she says, perfectly impersonating the late Wu-Clansman. “But it’s coming up more with the album. I had a teacher in elementary who would stand on her table and whisper. We’d all turn around like, ‘What is this lunatic doing?’ But she would achieve what she wanted. She wanted us to stop talking and listen. I feel like I need to mellow it down so people can hear what I have to say.”

just so you know…


  • Director Antoine Fuqua is working on a biopic about Tupac Shakur.
  • Ted Koppel’s son, Andrew, has been found dead after an all-day drinking binge. He was 40.
  • I’ve seen this alternate cover of the upcoming issue of VIBE, but just didn’t bother to post it…yeah, its Meagan Good:

vibe.com

 

  • Check out Weezy’s “Get A Life”:

 

  • Check out Justin Bieber’s last video which featues Jaden Smith (Will Smith’s son):

 

  • Check out MIA’s latest single cover…

rap-up.com