Thursday, August 25, 2011

Here We Go Again! SMDH! Wayne Disses Hov...AGAIN!

Hip Hop has been known for its many feuds and bantering back and forth by Gotti rappers dissing each other in a plethora of rhymes.  These arrogant yet talented bunch of word play artists gain notariety and build wealth off the publicity garnered from disrespecting someone of greater stature typically.  However some do it for other reasons, like T.I. claiming "King of the South" when artists like Ludacris are obviously more talented. Then you still have to acknowledge the greats like OutKast. 


Here is the case. Hip Hop's net worth somewhat depends on these continued rivalries bringing forth shows like "Beef" and spawning rap moguls like Fifty Cent and Rick Ross to name a few.  Well, Jay Z has seen his share of wannabees stepping on his toes, and some of the rappers we call top notch drawing first blood. Most recently Cash Money's Lil Wayne, self proclaimed the greatest rapper alive" anticipates his new album, and what better way to promote it then to dis the dude that, some say, sits on the the throne.  Battling for number one, Kanyeezy and Hov launch "Watch The Throne" and Weezy awaits the release of "The Carter 4".  In his newly leaked track "It's Good" featuring Jada Kiss and Drake, Drake disses Jay Z while introducing Wayne and the disses then continue.


 

Wayne was interviewed and was heard basically blaming the perceived dis on perception because he never mentions Jay Z's name. Hmmmm. A little spineless I say.  Stand up and take claim, Al qaeda does.  I read through the many blogs mentioning this particular verse and the comments show how blood hungry this hip hop world is.  It's pretty much a consensus with Jay supporters that he doesn't need to respond, but the followers of Lil Wayne think otherwise. 

I think you have two highly talented rappers and this is a stunt to sell albums on Weezy's part.  I really don't think he needs it, but as one hip hop fan states "...It would be fun". Does hip hop need this sort of nonsense? Should Hip Hop feed this drama hungry world? Reality shows prove our hunger for drama and this event would definitely make money.  So if it's about the dollars, then throw away the sense. Lets get ready to rumble.

Warrick Buffett
Cosmopolitan Media Group



Thursday, August 18, 2011

The Plastic Ceiling: Credit Cards You Can't Have by Jeanine Skowronski



provided by
mainstreet.jpg

Consumers generally accept that the best credit cards are reserved for members of the credit elite, but there are some cards that even a perfect credit score can't guarantee.

"There are cards that are invitation only," Beverly Harzog, an expert with Credit.com, tells MainStreet.

The most widely known of these elusive credit cards is the American Express Black Centurion. Amex (NYSE: AXP - News) refrains from formally disclosing the terms and conditions of the card; the only thing that a curious visitor can learn from perusing the issuer's website is that the Centurion is "rarely seen, always recognized."
 
But experts have gleaned, largely through interviews with the cardholders they could find, that the Centurion is generally awarded to existing cardholders who have charged $250,000 or more onto their credit cards in one calendar year. These big spenders pay a $5,000 initiation fee, with a $2,500 annual fee after that if they choose to add the card to their already fat wallets.

While less is known about the particular perks these cards net for their holders, it is generally accepted that they receive some pretty swanky travel perks, including exclusive discounts and free upgrades on all sorts of carriers. "The concierge will basically do anything for you," Tim Chen, CEO of NerdWallet.com, says.

Curtis Arnold, founder of CardRatings.com, adds that the card doesn't only offer travel benefits. A current cardholder recently told the website about a dinner Centurion hosted at Bergdorf-Goodman in which the free meal came with a complimentary gift bag full of personalized swag.

Of course, the Centurion isn't the only invitation-only card out there. Chase offers the Palladium card, which Harzog says carries a much lower annual fee (around $595) than its Amex counterpart, but requires an equally full private Chase bank account, believed to be around $20 to $30 million.

Additionally, Chen says, to remain competitive "a lot of financial institutions have cards that they will only offer to customers who use their private wealth managers." This includes Smith Barney and Merrill Lynch, which both have their own cards tailor-made for their wealthiest consumers.

"There are probably a few others that we don't even know about," Harzog adds. "They're very secretive about these cards because that's part of the allure."
While the specific perks associated with these cards are guarded and can vary widely in terms and perks, there is one factor that seems to universally define them.

"They have a totally different look and feel from regular cards," Arnold says. The Centurion, for instance, is made of titanium, while the Palladium is made of the precious metal that shares its name and has the cardholder's signature permanently etched into it.

"They all have what I call a 'plunk factor,'" Arnold explains. "You're likely to get somebody's attention when you put it down."

"You've still got to look under the hood," Arnold cautions. He points out that Visa's Black Card, for instance — which touts limited availability and is largely considered to be Visa's answer to the Centurion — actually has more in common with cards in the tier below its billing.

Arnold says that there are plenty of top-tier cards that you don't need to be rich and/or famous to snag, and that offer stellar rewards for average consumers.

American Express Platinum Rewards Card

This Amex card carries a $450 annual fee in exchange from some pretty sweet travel rewards and is geared toward affluent consumers, but isn't closed to those who aren't in the highest income bracket.

United Mileage Plus Explorer Card

One of Arnold's new favorites, Chase's recently released United Mileage Plus Explorer card, lets cardholders book their first checked bag on United Flights for free (an estimated $50 savings per trip) and also lets them board their flight ahead of general seating passengers.

"I particularly like the Priority Boarding benefit," Arnold says.

You also get two passes to visit the United Club each year, which will gives you at least of taste of the high life.

Cardholders also earn and two miles per $1 spent on tickets purchased from United or Continental and one rewards miles for each $1 spent one everything else. The card has a $95 fee that is waived during the first year and carries a 14.24% annual percentage rate (APR).

Citi Thank You Prestige

One of Citi's elite cards, the Thank You Prestige carries a $500 annual fee, but "comes with a lot more travel perks" than other options, Chen says. This includes 24/7 concierge services similar to that of the Amex Platinum, though not quite in the class of the Centurion card.

Cardholders also receive unlimited access to swanky airport lounges, one complimentary ticket on a domestic flight per year and automatic gold status in the Hilton HHonors program. They also aren't subject to the pesky foreign transaction fees charged on purchases made abroad.

The card's APR is around 15.24%, depending on creditworthiness.

The Ritz Carlton Premium Rewards Card

Another new offering from Chase, the Ritz Carlton card offers 24-hour concierge services and exclusive discounts and upgrades at the well-known hotel chain it's affiliated with. This includes an automatic $100 credit to the hotel's restaurants or spa with each two-night stay.


Additionally, cardholders get five rewards points for every dollar spent at Ritz-Carlton hotels, two points for every dollar spent on airfare and one point on all other purchases. They also get admittance into airport lounges and a $200 credit for airline incidentals. The card has a $395 annual fee and variable interest rates around 15.24%.

Sunday, August 14, 2011

FLASHBACK!!! Hello Good Morning Remix....


Hey everybody!!! I had to throw this one back at you. This is a FIYA! tune! Check it...If you haven't gotten down to this one then you're just dead. I'm sayin. Diddy promoted the hell outta it. and rightly so.  Ricky Rozay made this one with his sick-wit-it intro! WHOOOO!!! Like I said, It's FIYA! Check the flashback,





Kanye and Hov! Come Together To Kill Em! OTIS!!! Official!


Gotta say I have been anticipating this one! When I heard the song I was blown away.  Lyrically, musically, and damn sure fun is how I explain these beasts of the rap game! These dudes have surpassed where many dream to be.  The video is simple yet where you wish you were.  Yep! The black chicks are gonna be livid because they were not represented in this one.  The lighter skinned chicks got their time in the light as the passengers in a dismantled, welcome to the terror dome, revamped Maybach! Uh huh, they entered the scene with blow torch and rotary saw headed towards a finely crafted Maybach! Had you thinkin, "What The Hell are they about to do"?  Well Peep the video and show love to these lyrical "MONSTERS"!!! UUUUHHHH!!!

The Maybach dismantled in this video will be auctioned and the proceeds will go towards the East African  Drought Disaster.




Friday, August 12, 2011

Entrepreneurship: Nothing to Lose and Everything to Gain


by Dan Schawbel, contributor




I recently caught up with Ryan Blair, who is a serial entrepreneur and author of the new book "Nothing to Lose, Everything to Gain." Ryan established his first company, 24-7 Tech when he was only twenty-one years old. Since then, he has created and actively invested in multiple start-ups and has become a self-made multimillionaire. After he sold his company ViSalus Sciences to Blyth in early 2008, the global recession took the company to the brink of failure resulting in a complete write off of the stock and near bankruptcy. Ryan as CEO went "all in" betting his last million dollars on its potential and turned the company around from the edge of failure to more than $150,000,000 a year in revenue in only 16 months winning the coveted DSN Global Turn Around Award in 2010. In this interview, Ryan talks about how he re-branded himself after being in a gang, the issues with the education system, and more.



How did you shake your criminal record and re-brand yourself?



I remember when I was working my way up in the first company that employed me, I used to have nightmares that one day they'd find out about that I had been in a gang, call me into the office, and fire me. In the beginning I didn't talk much about what I'd been through. But eventually when I got to a point where I had established myself as a professional entrepreneur, I embraced my past, used it as part of my branding, and crossed over.







Ryan Blair



In this day and age people want authenticity. Now that the world is social, people know all about you. Assuming you decided to join humanity, that is. It turned out that as I started showing my true identity, so did the rest of the world. One of the reasons my company ViSalus is one of the fastest growing companies in the industry today is because we share our good, bad, and ugly. Like sharing a video of me playing a practical joke on one of my employees, for instance. As a result of embracing authenticity, I turned the company around from near bankruptcy to over $15 million a month today. Unlike our competitors, our distributors and customers know exactly who we are, and I'd say that corporate America has a lot of catching up to do.



What's your take on the educational system? Will a college degree help or hurt your chances at starting a successful business?



As a product of Los Angeles's public school system, in a state with the highest dropout rate in the nation (about 20 percent), I can tell you from personal experience that some of our brightest minds are being misidentified because of a one-size-fits-all learning environment. Because I had ADD and dyslexia I never got past the 9th grade.



I recall sitting with a career counselor in continuation high school, being told that I didn't have the intellect or aptitude to become a doctor or a lawyer. They suggested a trade school, construction, something where I'd be working with my hands.



The irony is that today I employ plenty of doctors and lawyers. Would you rather be a doctor or a lawyer, or a guy who writes a check to doctors and lawyers?



If President Obama phoned me today and told me he was appointing me Educational Czar, I'd turn education into a business, a capitalistic, revenue driven system, creating a competitive environment where each school is trying to attract customers, based on quality of customer experience.



As an entrepreneur, having a college degree or getting classroom training won't hurt your chances for starting a successful business, but it's ultimately not necessary. In Malcolm Gladwell's book "Outliers," he makes a point that it takes approximately 10,000 hours to master a skill set at a professional level. That means experience, over traditional education.



What three business lessons did you learn from juvenile detention?



I learned a lot about business and life from my time spent incarcerated. I like to call these pieces of wisdom my Philosophies from the Jail Cell to the Boardroom. One of the biggest lessons I learned was that in Juvenile Hall, new guys always get tested. When I went in the first time, I was just a skinny little white kid and I had to learn fast. People will be bumping into you on the basketball court, or asking you for things, testing to see if you're tough.



And everyone knew that if a guy let someone take their milk during lunchtime, they weren't as tough as they looked. Soon you'd be taking their milk everyday, and so would everyone else. It's the same for business, if you give people the impression that you can be taken, you will be.



Also, adaptation is the key to survival. In jail the guy who rises to power isn't always the strongest or the smartest. As prisoners come and go, he's the one that adapts to the changing environment, while influencing the right people. You can use this in business, staying abreast of market trends, changing your game plan as technology shifts, and adapting our strategy around your company's strongest competitive advantages. Darwin was absolutely right — survival is a matter of how you respond to change.



The last lesson I got from jail is that you have to learn how to read people. You don't know who to trust. It's the same for business because a lot of people come into my office with a front. I have to figure out quickly who is the real deal and who isn't. Based on that fact, I developed an HR system that I use when interviewing potential new hires that I call the Connect Four Technique. Yep, you guessed it. I make my future employees — and I have hundreds of them — play me in Connect Four.



Can everyone be an entrepreneur? Can it be learned or do you have to be born with a special gene?



No. Not everyone can be an entrepreneur. There are two types of people in the world, domesticated and undomesticated. Some people are so domesticated through their social programming and belief system, so employee minded, that they could never be entrepreneurs. And they shouldn't even bother trying. The irony is that this is coming from a guy who teaches millions of people how to become entrepreneurs. I'm literally selling a book about becoming an entrepreneur, telling you that not everyone should read it.



To be an entrepreneur, you have to have fighting instincts. Are instincts genetic? I don't think so, but you 'inherit' them from your upbringing. Now, if you're smart you can reprogram your beliefs. But there are still some people that would rather watch other people be entrepreneurs, like the people in the Forbes "richest celebrity list" than take the time to reprogram themselves, and live their lives like rock stars, too.



Is there a need for business plans these days?



When you've really got the entrepreneurial bug, the last thing you want to do is sit down and write a business plan. It's the equivalent of writing a book about playing the guitar before actually knowing how to play the guitar. You don't know what your new business is going to be like. And just like a guitar, a business will have to be tweaked and tuned multiple times, and you'll need long practice sessions and repetition, before you can get even one successful song out of it.



In my book "Nothing to Lose, Everything to Gain," I actually included a chapter called "I Hate Business Plans" where I talk about this. Most business plans that get sent to me, I close within seconds of opening them up because they are full of fluff and hype. A business plan should be simple, something you could scribble on a scratch pad. No more than three pages of your business objectives, expected results, and the strategy to get there. But the best business plan is one built from a business that is already up and running and that matches the business's actual results.



The point is that you should be so obsessed with your business that you can't sleep at night because that's all you can think about. And that's your ultimate "business plan."



Dan Schawbel is the Managing Partner of Millennial Branding, LLC, a full-service personal branding agency, and author of "Me 2.0: 4 Steps to Building Your Future."