Lil Kim got a rude awakening when she posted selfies recently which illuminated additional cosmetic alterations to her face. Fans tore into the rap pioneer…
LAS VEGAS — Celebrities spilled into one of America’s glam cities, cloaked in high designer wares with bling dripping from their extremities, for the 2014…
NEW YORK (AP) — Lil' Kim is pregnant with her first child.
The rapper-actress' publicist C.J. Carter confirmed the news Thursday, a day after pictures...
Ryan Lewis, left, Macklemore, center, and Ray Dalton accept the award for best hip hop video for "Can't Hold Us" as presenters Iggy Azalea, right, and Lil' Kim look on, at the MTV Video Music Awards on Sunday, Aug. 25, 2013, at the Barclays Center in the Brooklyn borough of New York. (Photo by Charles Sykes/Invision/AP) by Jineea Butler NNPA Columnist Recently Rapper Macklemore recognized that it is White privilege that catapulted him to success. In a Rolling Stone cover interview, Macklemore, born Ben Haggerty, said, “If you’re gonna be a White dude and do this shit, I think you have to take some level of accountability. You have to acknowledge where the art came from, where it is today, how you’re benefiting from it. At the very least, just bringing up those points and acknowledging that, yes, I understand my privilege, I understand how it works for me in society, and how it works for me in 2013 with the success that The Heist has had.”