Booty Taxes
Is it ok to claim a man’s wife for taxes if money was spent on her? Better yet, is it appropriate to have the conversation with her husband or nah? […]
play_arrow
The $Billion Opportunity Hiding in Young Talent Development podcast
play_arrow
Trouble in Paradise? What’s Going On With Nicki Minaj & Kenneth Petty? podcast
13th Anniversary Live Show podcast
play_arrow
Yahya Abdul-Mateen II: Man on Fire, Oakland, Michael Bay, Keanu Reeves podcast
play_arrow
play_arrow
Thou Art No Russell podcast
play_arrow
The Psychology of People Who Fall In Love With Inmates podcast
play_arrow
BMM INDIE EP 183: Dedication podcast
play_arrow
Director Shareen Anderson & Producer Dominique Debroux podcast
This is a book only Questlove could have written: a perceptive and personal reflection on the first half-century of hip-hop.
When hip-hop first emerged in the 1970s, it wasn’t expected to become the cultural force it is today. But for a young Black kid growing up in a musical family in Philadelphia, it was everything. He stayed up late to hear the newest songs on the radio. He saved his money to buy vinyl as soon as it landed. He even started to try to make his own songs. That kid was Questlove, and decades later, he is a six-time Grammy Award–winning musician, an Academy Award–winning filmmaker, a New York Times bestselling author, a producer, an entrepreneur, a cofounder of one of hip-hop’s defining acts (the Roots), and the genre’s unofficial in-house historian.
In this landmark book, Hip-Hop Is History, Questlove skillfully traces the creative and cultural forces that made and shaped hip-hop, highlighting both the forgotten but influential gems and the undeniable chart-topping hits—and weaves it all together with the stories no one else knows. It is at once an intimate, sharply observed story of a cultural revolution and a sweeping, grand theory of the evolution of the great artistic movement of our time. And Questlove, of course, approaches it with not only the encyclopedic fluency and passion of an obsessive fan but also the expertise and originality of an innovative participant.
Hip-hop is history, and also his history.
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Is it ok to claim a man’s wife for taxes if money was spent on her? Better yet, is it appropriate to have the conversation with her husband or nah? […]
Copyright Blackpodcasting 2025