Sixshot.com has an interview with Mista Raja.
Sixshot.Com: What is it like working with Diddy?
Mista Raja: Working with Diddy is always a high pressure situation because he's such a beast in the studio honestly. He's demanding and he knows how to pull the best out of you at all times. He can test you but when he does the best will rise out of you, that’s for sure. Being around him just makes you better as an artist. ...
Sixshot.Com: You wrote on 'Come to Me', which was a huge record. Did you think it was going to be that big?
Mista Raja: I knew it was going to be a hit right off the bat because that's all Diddy does. The man makes hits and his track record speaks for itself. I was worried how people were going to react to him just because of the fact that he took such a long break between albums but Press Play was a great project and I thank God that I was on it. The whole process was amazing and it came out great. It was a real success for everybody involved in it.
While I was away, Diddy decided to release his own unique spin on Jay-Z and T.I.'s star-studded single "Swagger Like Us," calling it "Swagga Like Puff." You can listen to it in our audio player. I like it. Coinciding with the release of the song, two versions of Diddy Blog #20 were posted and named "Upclose and Personal" and "The Streets Are Watching." The first one features Diddy in front of a web cam while the second one is Diddy riding in a Jeep with Chase N. Cashe and Hit-Boy of the Surf Club. Check them out below.
Photographers caught Diddy doing, what else, stepping in some dog poop. Funnily enough, this made the cover of the New York Post. Okie dokey.
Diddy made fun of this in his most recent video blog, included below.
Via Liz Kelly.
Jose Martinez of the New York Daily News reports on the dismissal of a lawsuit filed against Diddy and Vibe Magazine, contending privacy violations due to the publication of a photo from the 2003 edition of Diddy's white party.
Maria Dominguez, now a hedge fund manager, had filed the suit, as she is pictured in one of the photos in a mermaid outfit and is not wearing a top.
Justice Doris Ling-Cohan rejected the suit, as she felt that it was unreasonable for Dominguez to expect privacy at such a widely publicized event.
This was pretty much a foregone conclusion due to previous remarks, but Diddy officially endorsed Barack Obama for the presidency of the United States on tonight's episode of Making the Band 4.
Complex has an interview with Nelly. On a Bad Boy related note:
Complex: What’s the deal with the Sean John ads?
Nelly: I did one for my man Puffy. He’s a cool dude.
Complex: How long are you locked into that? Is it just one season, or were you guys going to talk about expanding that?
Nelly: Nah, it’s a thing where Puff is my man. He wanted to do something that we thought would be special. He wanted to launch something, and I had an album coming out, and we thought that it would be a good thing for both sides. Puffy is a real, real good friend of mine. It’s very rare that you could have people that you can call directly when you have a problem and things of that nature. When I was trying to get Apple Bottoms off the ground, he would give me advice, and lead me in the right direction. He had Sean John, he had things poppin’ off, and he didn’t really have to do that, and I thought that was real hot. It meant a lot to me. Obviously we handle business, it’s not a thing where Nelly is officially a Sean John model, I just did an ad.
A new version of the Darkchild remix of the Pussycat Dolls' "When I Grow Up" has been released. Lil' Wayne has been taken off of the track and Rock City has been added. The intro is cleaner, as well, with Diddy's vocals being left uninterrupted as Fatman Scoop and Lil' Wayne have been removed. You can listen to it on DJBooth.net.
So, we've got this little "controversy" about Diddy owning a jet - or not. I find that most Diddy related controversy or criticism is fueled by a lack of knowledge or research. Alex Rodekrans of Halogen Guides puts to rest claims that Diddy doesn't own a jet.
Now, as a veteran of the rap game, P. Diddy hardly needs our help to brush off the haters, so to speak. However, it pains us to see fractional ownership programs like NetJets so misunderstood in the popular press. NetJets owners are not purchasing time aboard an aircraft, as some suggest. Instead fractional jet holders are the legal owners of a portion of an aircraft, which is then leased back to the fractional company who manages the plane and regulates its use.
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