Nipsey Hussle On The Combat Jack Show

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On this week’s episode of The Combat Jack Show, we have Los Angeles, California’s rising star Nipsey Hussle. We talk everything from his early beginnings in LA, his rising fame to stardom, him almost doing a long stretch in prison after “hiding out” with a warrant on his head, his beef with Complex, his new $100 mixtape ‘Crenshaw’ and more. Also, riding shotgun with Nipsey is the beautiful media maven Karen Civil. KC speaks on her ascension in the industry from interning with Funk Master Flex to working with Dipset and the likes of Lil Wayne, Jeezy, being an integral part of the Beats by Dre empire etc. It.Does.Not.Stop.

@CynikalMusic – Toby (EP)

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The followup to last year’s Breakfast has arrived for your streaming pleasure (below). From the artist himself:

As both the artist and producer, writing this EP was the life challenge I’d been searching for.

I hope through this EP you can get to know me better, via the name my grandad has called me since my childhood… Toby.

ARTWORK/TRACKLISTING: Talib Kweli – Gravitas

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Talib Kweli’s upcoming effort drops December 15th. You can check out the tracklisting below.

01 Inner Monologue (prod. Khrysis)
02 Demonology f. Gary Clarke Jr. (prod. Lord Quest)
03 State of Grace f. Abby Dobson (prod. Lord Quest)
04 Violations f. Raekwon (prod. Thaddeus Dixon)
05 Rare Portraits (prod. OhNo)
06 New Leaders f. The Underachievers (prod. Statik Selektah)
07 The Wormhole (prod. OhNo)
08 What’s Real f. RES (prod. Rich Kidd)
09 Art Imitates Life f. Black Thought, Rah Digga & AlBe Back (prod. OhNo)
10 Lover’s Peak (prod. 6th Sense)
11 Colors of You f. Mike Posner (prod. J Dilla)

Billionaire Heiress Will Face No Jail Time For Vehicle-Related Death

Jacqueline Mars, heiress of the candy Company Mars Inc. and one of the world’s richest women will not serve any jail time for an accident where she fell asleep behind the wheel and resulted in the death of an 86-year-old woman.

NBC News Reported:

One of the world’s richest women will not serve any jail time for an accident authorities say resulted in the death of an 86-year-old woman.

Jacqueline Mars, a co-owner of the privately held candy company Mars Inc., entered the courtroom Thursday using a walker and pleaded guilty to the reckless driving charge she faced. The judge could have sentenced Mars to a year in jail for the misdemeanor charge, but three of Irene Ellisor’s family members read statements in court, forgiving Mars for the October accident and asked that she not be jailed.

The judge followed their request but ordered Mars to pay a $2,500 fine and suspended her license for six months.

“…[I]t’s important for this court and the families to know that I will always live with the grief and the loss caused by this tragedy,” Mars said in court Thursday.

Ellisor’s family embraced Mars in a private room after the judge followed their recommendation, News4’s Northern Virginia Bureau Chief Julie Carey reported.

Court papers state that Mars told a witness she fell asleep at the wheel just before the crash in Aldie, Va. The sheriff’s office says Mars’ Porsche SUV crossed the center line and hit a minivan carrying Ellisor of Huntsville, Texas, who died at the scene.

Ashley Blakeslee, who was 8-months pregnant at the time, was critically injured and lost her baby. The other four passengers in the minivan, along with Mars, were also hospitalized. Doctors told Blakeslee her unborn son, who the family named Charlie, protected her and was the reason she did not die.

The Blakeslees call Charlie their hero.

Ellisor’s family told News4 the group was in Virginia from Texas for Ashley Blakeslee’s brother’s wedding.

Fewer than 600 feet from the scene, her husband, Travis Blakeslee; father, Arnold Acker; and other family members heard the crash from outside an inn where the rehearsal was scheduled to begin. They ran to the scene and witnessed the emergency response.

Mars traveled to Texas Monday for a visit with the family Tuesday.

“I have been down to see Ashley Blakeslee and her husband and tried to begin to express my sorrow and my regret and my empathy with them,” she said.

Acker told the court he did not support jail time for Mars.

Forbes Magazine ranks Mars as the world’s seventh-richest woman. She tied for 15th place in the magazine’s 2013 ranking of richest people in America with a net worth of $20.5 billion.

That was up five spots from her 2011 ranking, when her net worth was listed at $13.8 billion and she was believed to be the richest person living in the greater D.C. area.

Mars’ father invented M&M’s and the Mars bar.

Nelson Mandela Dies at 95

Former South African President Nelson Mandela passed away today at age 95. The former president had been battling health issues in recent months, including a recurring lung infection that led to numerous hospitalizations.

Check out a Tribute to President Mandela!!!

CNN Reports:

Nelson Mandela, the revered statesman who emerged from prison after 27 years to lead South Africa out of decades of apartheid, has died, South African President Jacob Zuma announced late Thursday. He was 95.

The former president battled health issues in recent months, including a recurring lung infection that led to numerous hospitalizations.

With advancing age and bouts of illness, Mandela retreated to a quiet life at his boyhood home in the nation’s Eastern Cape Province, where he said he was most at peace.

Despite rare public appearances, he held a special place in the nation’s consciousness.

In a nation healing from the scars of apartheid, Mandela became a moral compass.

His defiance of white minority rule and incarceration for fighting against segregation focused the world’s attention on apartheid, the legalized racial segregation enforced by the South African government until 1994.

In his lifetime, he was a man of complexities. He went from a militant freedom fighter, to a prisoner, to a unifying figure, to an elder statesman.

Years after his 1999 retirement from the presidency, Mandela was considered the ideal head of state. He became a yardstick for African leaders, who consistently fell short when measured against him.

Warm, lanky and charismatic in his silk, earth-toned dashikis, he was quick to admit to his shortcomings, endearing him further in a culture in which leaders rarely do.

His steely gaze disarmed opponents. So did his flashy smile.

Former South African President F.W. de Klerk, who was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize with Mandela in 1993 for transitioning the nation from a system of racial segregation, described their first meeting.

“I had read, of course, everything I could read about him beforehand. I was well-briefed,” he said last year.

“I was impressed, however, by how tall he was. By the ramrod straightness of his stature, and realized that this is a very special man. He had an aura around him. He’s truly a very dignified and a very admirable person.”

For many South Africans, he was simply Madiba, his traditional clan name. Others affectionately called him Tata, the Xhosa word for father.

Mandela last appeared in public during the 2010 World Cup hosted by South Africa. His absences from the limelight and frequent hospitalizations left the nation on edge, prompting Zuma to reassure citizens every time he fell sick.

“Mandela is woven into the fabric of the country and the world,” said Ayo Johnson, director of Viewpoint Africa, which sells content about the continent to media outlets.

When he was around, South Africans had faith that their leaders would live up to the nation’s ideals, according to Johnson.

“He was a father figure, elder statesman and global ambassador,” Johnson said. “He was the guarantee, almost like an insurance policy, that South Africa’s young democracy and its leaders will pursue the nation’s best interests.”

There are telling nuggets of Mandela’s character in the many autobiographies about him.

An unmovable stubbornness. A quick, easy smile. An even quicker frown when accosted with a discussion he wanted no part of.

Despite chronic political violence in the years preceding the vote that put him in office in 1994, South Africa avoided a full-fledged civil war in its transition from apartheid to multiparty democracy. The peace was due in large part to the leadership and vision of Mandela and de Klerk.

“We were expected by the world to self-destruct in the bloodiest civil war along racial grounds,” Mandela said during a 2004 celebration to mark a decade of democracy in South Africa.

“Not only did we avert such racial conflagration, we created amongst ourselves one of the most exemplary and progressive nonracial and nonsexist democratic orders in the contemporary world.”

Mandela represented a new breed of African liberation leaders, breaking from others of his era such as Robert Mugabe by serving one term.

In neighboring Zimbabwe, Mugabe has been president since 1987. A lot of African leaders overstayed their welcomes and remained in office for years, sometimes decades, making Mandela an anomaly.

But he was not always popular in world capitals.

Until 2008, the United States had placed him and other members of the African National Congress on its terror list because of their militant fight against the apartheid regime.

All-American Singer Jennifer Grout May Win ‘Arabs Got Talent’

CNN reports:

When all-American Jennifer Grout first stepped on stage to audition, nobody could have anticipated how this 23-year-old from Massachusetts would take the Middle East by storm.

Now, she may very well win “Arabs Got Talent,” one of the biggest televised talent contests in the region.

During her debut appearance, she looked so out of place that many thought she’d flop altogether.

“It was nerve-wracking,” Grout said, “because I came on stage and I didn’t understand.”

The show’s judges were questioning her in Arabic, and Grout had great difficulty following, making for some very awkward moments.

But then she started strumming her oud, a traditional Arabic musical instrument, and the mood began to shift. She belted out a classic Arabic song. That’s when her life changed.

The American novice had chosen to cover an Egyptian diva, legendary songstress Umm Kulthoum, so revered throughout the region that many Arabic singers would be too intimidated to make such an attempt.

“When I’m performing, I’m in a different element,” Grout said. “So at that point, I wasn’t scared.”

To everyone’s surprise, her rendition of the classic “Baeed Annak (Far From You)” was a huge hit.

“When I finished, everyone was just shocked,” explained Grout. “Actually, when the judges were giving their comments after my performance, I didn’t understand them, either.”

She wasn’t the only one confused. Fans of the show wondered how a young foreigner who barely spoke Arabic could sing it so well.

Florida State QB Jameis Winston Will Not Be Charged For Rape

Today Prosecutors announced that Florida State quarterback Jameis Winston, will not be charged for allegedly raping a female Florida State University student.

CNN Reports:

Almost a year after a Florida State University student first accused quarterback Jameis Winston of rape, the state attorney for Lee County, Florida, was set Thursday to make an announcement involving the investigation.
Lee County State Attorney Willie Meggs gave no indication of what his announcement would be. Winston’s attorney, Tim Jansen, said he also did not know what would happen.
The woman said Winston, quarterback of the Florida Seminoles football team, raped her in December. According to police documents, the woman told investigators she was drinking with friends at a bar called Potbellys. They later left her after consuming several shots, according to the documents.
She said she does not remember much of what happened next, but told investigators she remembered winding up in a ground-floor apartment where a man took off her clothes and had sex with her despite her objections.
The woman came forward a month later to accuse Winston, but Tallahassee’s interim police Chief, Tom Coe, said last week that she “broke off contact” with investigators in February and at the time no longer wanted to go forward with the case.
The woman’s family has said that a detective had warned her attorney that Tallahassee is a “big football town” and that her life could be miserable if she pursued the case.
The case resurfaced after media outlets made public records requests for the initial complaint.
Last month, Winston’s attorney announced his client and the woman had consensual sex. The woman’s family shot back saying, “To be clear, the victim did not consent. This was rape.”

U.S. Citizen Killed In Libya, State Department Official Says

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(CNN) reports: — A U.S. citizen has been shot and killed in the eastern Libyan city of Benghazi, a U.S. State Department official confirmed to CNN Thursday.

The official did not identify the slain citizen. The news came after other reports that gunmen killed an American chemistry teacher working at an international school in the city of Benghazi.

Reuters reported the teacher was slain Thursday, citing medical and security sources.

“He was doing his morning exercise when gunmen just shot him. I don’t know why. He was so sweet with everyone,” Adel al Mansouri, the director at the school in Benghazi, told Reuters.

It was not immediately clear who was responsible for the killing, Reuters said. CNN is working to get details on the incident.

The U.S. State Department official told CNN that “we offer our condolences to the victim’s loved ones.”

“We are in contact with the family and are providing all appropriate consular assistance,” the official said. “Out of respect for the privacy of those affected, we have no further comment.”

Benghazi, Libya’s second-largest city, is where militants attacked a U.S. diplomatic mission in September 2012, killing four Americans, including Ambassador Chris Stevens.

More than two years after the fall of Moammar Gadhafi’s regime, the Libyan government has been struggling to control the country, which is awash in weapons and armed groups. The security situation has deteriorated over the past year, especially in Benghazi, which was the cradle of the 2011 revolution.

The United States blames one of the armed groups, Islamist militant group Ansar al-Sharia, for the deadly attack on the U.S. mission in Benghazi.