Living The Life – Hip Hop Weight Classes
Who is the hip hop heavy weight measuring stick?
Who is the hip hop heavy weight measuring stick?
Thoughts on Usher’s last album and career?

ESSENCE.COM: What would you say was your biggest problem with the label?
DUPRI: It wasn’t giving me the open door that I thought it was going to. It wasn’t aggressive enough and it was a big letdown for me. I thought I was going to a place that understood the times we were in as a music business and how aggressive we needed to be with putting out new projects and records.ESSENCE.COM: There’s hearsay that your brief tenure was plagued by meager sales and a lack of new talent which resulted in the label ousting you. Is that true?
DUPRI: Island [Def Jam Records] is going to say what makes them look good. They are not going to tell the truth and say, “He just stopped dealing with us on a daily basis.” If you don’t put out my records, that’s all I have as a person. I’m a record person, so if I give you a record and you don’t put it out, then basically you’re showing me that it’s really no business. I never got a chance to put the records out. I had Johnta Austin, Ninth Ward and Dondria. I read the blogs and I’m thinking, How can they say that I’m not putting out records when anyone who knows my track record knows I’m about making music? My biggest problem is that I’m still the youngest president to have this kind of success.ESSENCE.COM: Although it’s been three months since you’ve spoken to L.A. Reid, would you be open to reconciliation?
DUPRI: I don’t know. I saw a side of him that I had never seen before and that to me was a jealous side. I don’t know if I should be around people who are jealous of me. Mariah Carey sold more records in that entire Def Jam building and all of that was through my singles; so I’m looking like the golden boy. I only started thinking about it after I left.

Video should be dropping within the next 2 days on PrinceBow.com

The ACLU of Southern California will fete Jermaine Dupri with its 2008 Bill of Rights Award next Monday (12/8) at the Regent Beverly Wilshire Hotel in Beverly Hills. The IDJ Urban music chief will be honored along with Magic Johnson. Dupri, a long time member of the board of the Hip-Hop Summit Action Network, has worked to repeal the Rockefeller Drug Laws, benefit the Hurricane Relief Fund and
been a significant voice on the “Rap the Vote” campaign. Past honorees include Barbra Streisand, Dustin Hoffman, Martin Scorsese, Rosa Parks, Antonio “LA” Reid, Kenneth “Babyface” Edmonds, Harry
Belafonte, Ellen Degeneres, Oliver Stone and Sarah Jessica Parker, among others.