Civil Rights Leader Gives Interesting Take On Lil Wayne’s Emmett Till Line

From MTV:

Lil Wayne landed in hot water last February when a line name-checking tragic civil rights figure Emmett Till on Future’s “Karate Chop (Remix)”
 raised eyebrows and drew complaints from Till’s family.

The verse featured the line: “Beat the p—y up like Emmett Till,” drawing a dark reference to the teen who was brutally murdered after he whistled at a white woman in 1955. Till was beaten beyond recognition, but his mother insisted that he have an open casket funeral, so the world could see and remember the brutality. Future’s label quickly removed the lyric and then remixed the song again in a version featuring Birdman, Rick Ross and French Montana, but no Weezy.

At the time, the rapper attempted to reach out to the Till family in an apologetic open letter
, a gesture the family said at the time “[fell] short.”
 The controversy also lost Wayne an endorsement deal with Mountain Dew
.

But a year later, does the lyric still sting?

MTV News recently sat down with civil rights icon and Congressman Rep. John Lewis to get his take on the incident. “I think when a star, a singer, uses the name of someone like an Emmett Till in music … a lot of young people grow up not even knowing anything about Emmett Till,” he said. “So maybe it would help people go and [say], ‘Who was Emmett Till?'”

In fact, Lewis said that if it hadn’t been for music the civil rights movement might have been like “a bird without wings.” Imagine not having songs like: “We Shall Not Be Moved,” Bob Dylan’s “Blowin’ in the Wind,” Sam Cooke’s “A Change Is Gonna Come,” Nina Simone’s “Mississippi Goddamn,” Curis Mayfield and the Impressions’ “People Get Ready” and Mahalia Jackson’s “We Shall Overcome.”

“You can communicate with music. It’s a powerful instrument, it’s a powerful tool,” said Lewis. “Not just for enjoyment, but it helps to inspire, to push you on. Sometimes when we’d get out of jail in Alabama, in Mississippi we’d go straight to a club and play some records.”

Lewis said during those celebratory post lock-up listening sessions, he and his fellow marchers would spin songs including Mayfield’s “Keep on Pushin'” or Aretha Franklin’s “Chain of Fools.”

“The songs motivated us, they inspired us, so music played a major role within the movement,” he said.

Lil Wayne Hit With Tax Lien For $12 Million

lil-wayne-birdman-and-euro-we-alright

From TMZ:

Lil Wayne has not only stomped on the American flag, he’s now said F you to Uncle Sam, because we’ve learned he hasn’t paid his taxes — TO THE TUNE OF MORE THAN 12 MILLION BUCKS!

According to a tax lien — obtained by TMZ — Weezy failed to pay taxes for 2011 and 2012. For 2011 he owes a staggering $5,843,952. And for the following year, even worse — $6,311,132.

Wayne has had his financial issues. He owed $7 mil for back taxes in 2008 – 9, but he cleared the debt in 2012.

He’s also had legal issues. In 2012 … Wayne famously lost a case against Quincy Jones’ son after thumbing his nose at the court. A jury socked Wayne for $2.2 mil.

Wayne is reportedly worth $135 MILLION.

As Weezy says, “You got money and you know it. Take it out your pocket and show it and throw it.”

PIC: Possible Tracklist For Lil Wayne’s ‘Carter V’ Leaks

UPDATE: Mack Maine is calling false on the list (above).

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carterv-tracklist

Rap-Up got their hands on a photo snapped by a friend of engineer Mike B, revealing the song titles and features of Lil Wayne’s (supposed) final album, Tha Carter V. If this tracklisting is official, the album looks to include Birdman, Nas, Bun B, Rich Homie Quan, Kanye West, Future, J. Cole, The Weeknd, Young Thug, Meek Mill and more. Developing story….

UPDATE: A Rumored Tracklisting for Lil Wayne’s Carter V Leaks

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UPDATE: The note is addressed to “Mike B” possibly this Mike B, from Universal Music Group, Young Money/Cash Money’s parent label
I don’t know where this originally came from, but DJ Service Pack is claiming to have what might be the tracklist for Lil Wayne’s fifth installment of the Carter  series.  The listing has features from Drake, Meek Mill, Kanye, Young Thug and a lot from Future.