T.I. Covers VIBE (Dec/Jan ’11)

T.I gave vibe one of his last interviews before he want back to prison.Below are a few excerpts from the cover story, which goes on sale Nov. 30th. Check out behind the scenes footage here.
If I place my value in the way humans treat me, then maybe. But they’re human, man―they can’t help themselves. They do that to people they know personally. So how can I expect them to treat me, only knowing me through television? They did that to Jesus. They did that to Martin Luther King, Malcolm X, Muhammad Ali. They did it to every great person you could possibly think of. When it was all good, they was with them. When things got bad, then they was against them.
Check out more after the jump.
But in this case things didn’t “get bad.†It’s something you did.
Let me just say this: [he sits up on the couch] If you look at a guy who came up, no pops in the house, moms on welfare, food stamps; started selling dope when he was 12, 13 years old, came up handling guns, being in shoot-outs; started going to jail when he was 15. In all of this chaos and this mischief and lawlessness, the person who was just in jail for machine guns and silencers turns his life around. And now you want to crucify him ―for what? Three pills. I mean, of course it’s wrong and unacceptable and inexcusable. No problem. But in the grand scheme of things, it’s rather petty. It’s rather petty to hold someone’s feet to the fire for something so small when they have overcame things that were so big. All that could have been going wrong―if I was riding with more guns, or if I had gotten into a shoot-out and killed somebody, then I could see that. But just think about it. I’ve gotten it down to this much.
How did you get a drug habit?
I had a lot of work done to my teeth. Oral surgery, extractions, six, seven, eight root canals. Between January to February. As soon as I got out, I had a lot of stuff done. In the joint, you eat shit that is unhealthy for you. I had fillings that fell out and stuff that had to get dealt with. Of course for the pain they gave me oxycontin and hydrocodone. And, mind you, on October 13, 2007, I had cut off everything―weed, alcohol. Then I get these pills and I start taking them for the pain at first. And then I’m like, Wait―this shit makes me feel good. And it’s legal. After the pain went away, I kept taking it. I had like five, six prescriptions. So I had, like 80 pills. Everybody else might have a drink or smoke a blunt, I took a pain pill. Times when I had 18-, 20-hour days, I’d take a pain pill. And eventually I developed―I guess―the beginning stages of dependence.
Have you talked to Eminem about addiction?
Sure. We got a record together, and we talked a lot. I asked him how he knew he was an addict. Basically if you put yourself in harm’s way… if you risk that, you’ve got to assume that there is something fundamentally wrong with your thought process.
Dirty Money Performs At AMAs
Lloyd Banks x Eminem – Where I’m At
The Board Administration Hosts Liv Fridays
Carmelo Anthony Presents: Become Legendary (Mixtape)
02 Bun B – Mastamind f. Diego Cash, Steel Bill & Scotty
03 Nas – Foul Breeze
04 Jadakiss – Goes Up f. Diego Cash
05 Styles P – M7′s
06 N.O.R.E. – Legendary f. Al Gator, Diego Cash & Mr. Kane
07 Young Dro – I’m On It
08 MC Lyte – Rockin’ With The Best
09 Young Dre – The Illest f. Nipsey Hussle & Bad Lucc
10 Ghostface Killah – The Eulogy f. Sheek Louch, Diego Cash & Bully
11 Tru Life – Stand Up f. Jay-Z
12 Cavi – Look How Far We Came f. PO & Omega
13 Cassidy – Hypnotized f. Diego Cash
14 Saigon – You Make Me Sick
15 SouthSide – Shoot You
16 Trifelon – Make ‘em All Come Out
17 Shawn Chrys – Catch Me If You Can
18 Jody Breeze – Rookie Of The Year
19 Big A & Al Gator – Jordan
20 Big Sean – Poster
21 2 Much – Here To Rock
22 Cavi – Become Legendary f. Diego Cash & Ja Miss
23 Al Gator – M7′s Freestyle
Inside The BOX.: Wale
We were pretty damn lucky to catch up with the number one rapper in this city of ours while at his (along with The Board Administration & CommunPR’s) Thanksgiving event, which began as Bar 7 and stretched out to various communities in the area. Two things we learned that day: 1) the brother really has haters (whom we learn time and time again to never believe in) and 2) you can’t say he isn’t about bettering the Washington, DC area. After you check out the quick interview up top, make sure to check out the extra footage from the Thanksgiving giveaway after the jump.
Shoutouts to Wale, Greg & the entire Board Administration and affiliates (including Black Cobain & YM, Basshedz Music Group, I Got It 4 Free, Fat Trel & the Slutty Boyz, and more), Patrice & CommunPR, Tony Lewis, Jr. and many more for not only creating this event for the community but allowing little old JukeBOX. to capture the day. The movement continues.
Jon Vs. Judah (Not Really.)
Jon: Very tru, but here’s an idea: DC-Area artists could also support their own as far as Hip-Hop blogs as well.
Judah: Not enough. Plus, it wouldn’t hold as much weight as a Nah Right, etc. I have had www.forthedmvonly.com 4 2 years. I know…they do support [though]. At least on [my website] they do!
Jon: True, but I would say that we (me and you) don’t hold as much weight because we as a city don’t give each other that value. Not to twist it because we recieve support as well…I just see a lot of DC-area artists putting DC media behind others……and by media i’m not talking about the radio. That’s another story.
Judah: You lost me but point blank is the local artists support my site, but we need the world to support. The world supports Nah Right, etc.
Jon: I guess what I’m saying is that I believe the world, blogs, etc. don’t see us because we aren’t as united as the other cities…
Judah: Other cities aren’t UNITED either. They’re going through what we’re going through, too.
Jon: You would think so. All cities have that conflict, but we’re WAY worse for different reasons.
Judah: There’s no measure to the degree of hate, but this problem is everywhere, not just here, so that’s no excuse.
Jon: Not trying to make excuses. I’m merely stating an unavoidable issue. Until certain things are addressed, we will remain where we are in Hip-Hop. I’m open to hearing why this is just an excuse. We are the only city without an actual state. we can’t even collectively decide on what “DMV” actually is to represent it.
Judah: Who cares what the DMV actually represents. The DMV is over if you ask me. Shit is fucked up everywhere as far as Hip-Hop.
Jon: A lot of people care, apparently. I hear you on that fully though, believe it or not. But we’re not the majority.
Judah: I’ve seen 11+ years of Hip-Hop music develop here and the issues aren’t the obvious.
Jon: OK…what would you say the issues are?
Judah: Besides the declining sales and money in the game, the outside doesn’t respect you Hip-Hop wise. They don’t acknowledge our Hip-Hop arts. We are Go-Go thugs down here. I’ve sat with New York oG dudes that blatantly said New York industry niggas don’t fuck with DC niggas. [With] R&B we’re good, but Hip-Hop back in the day was comparable to the drug game and I hope you know the history [between] DC vs. NY in drugs. Now the fact that there’s strife amongst the local artists adds on to the pre-existing problem. So let me give u a break down of the dick riding industry: an artist gets on from Florida, California, Texas or the Midwest, what does the game do? Go and sign other artist from that region. When an artist gets on from here, did the industry sign any other artist? I’ll wait for an answer. (laughs) [Look at] Texas: Mike jones, then Paul Wall, then Slim Thug, then Chamillionaire and others…[look at] Florida: Trick Daddy, DJ Khaled, Cool & Dre, Rick Ross, Flo Rida, etc…[look at] Atlanta…do I have to name all the Atlanta artists that got deals after Atlanta blew up? [Now look at] DC…Wale and who else?
Jon: (laughs) See, I agree with that, but WHY is what I’m asking…are you saying it’s because NYC still hates us because of drugs and Go-Go? Does NYC even still hold that precedent with the South doing what its doing?
Judah: No, it’s not because of drugs and Go-Go today. In the early 90’s and late 80’s, yeah, but now, NO!
Jon: That’s where I was saying its because of us as a city…trust, I agree with the whole NYC issue, but I still feel that we are still messing it up for ourselves more than anything.
Judah: In my opinion, it’s various reasons: weak music, our reps are not respected, we bite other Hip-Hop fads, etc…our identity is weak as a city. I respect your opinion & you’re my brother, so respect, but regardless, if we weren’t messing it up for ourselves it would still be tough. The industry is the SOUTH! There wouldn’t be no industry right now if there was no New Orleans, Texas, Atlanta or Florida. They saved the game from New York.
Jon: Hmmm…so back then when we had an identity, we were hated by New York City who was running it…now we’ve lost our identity…I think I’ve just been enlightened.
Judah: The music back then was street, dark, slow, gangsta, real, accurate…now our artists sound like 95% of the artist on Nah Right. Listen to the music that Section 8, Smash Task, Hood Life, Percell Records and Chocolate City put out and see what we’ve lost.
Jon: How can we worry so much about unity when we need to worry about the identity we’ve lost trying to become everyone else…true.