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Sean Diddy Combs Paper Boy

March 26, 2012 by · Comments Off on Sean Diddy Combs Paper Boy 

Sean Diddy Combs Paper Boy, Born Sean J. Combs on November 4, 1969, in New York, NY; son of Janice and Melvin Earl Combs; divorced; children: Justin and Christian Combs
Education: Attended Howard University, 1988-90.
Memberships: American Federation of Television & Radio Artists; American Federation of Musicians; Daddy’s House Programs; Sean “Puffy” Combs and Janice Combs Endowed Scholarship Fund, founder.

Career

Uptown Records, New York, intern, 1990-91, director of artists and repertory, 1991, vice president, 1991-93; record producer, 1994-; Bad Boy Entertainment, founder and chief executive officer, 1994-; rap musician, 1997-; Sean John clothing line, founder and chief executive officer, 1998-; actor, 2001-; television producer, 2002-; Broadway debut in Raisin in the Sun, 2004.

Life’s Work

Very few people can follow popular culture today without knowing the name of Sean Combs, whether it is as Puff Daddy, the rapper of the mid-nineties, as P. Diddy, the rapper/actor/entertainer of the new millennium, or as Sean Combs, the mind behind Bad Boy Entertainment, the Sean John clothing line, and the producer with sure-fire hit making instincts. While he has had monstrous success, Combs has had his share of rough times in the past decade. But, no matter where critics stand on Sean Combs the man, it is true that Combs’s name is synonymous with the rise of the hip-hop culture in America.

Combs has had a prolific presence in the media. He has grown from producing albums for other artists to being the artist featured on his own albums. He has moved from the music world to acting in movies like the 2001 acclaimed Monster’s Ball. His entrepreneurial exploits have allowed him also to depart from the entertainment industry to found a successful urban clothing line, Sean John. In 1997, he had a number one single “I’ll Be Missing You”. This single was replaced as number one on the Billboard Top 100 by a hit single by Notorious B.I.G., featuring Combs, “Mo Money, Mo Problems”. This feat was previously met only by Elvis Presley, the Beatles, and Boyz II Men.

Sean Combs was born in New York City on November 4, 1969, to Janice and Melvin Earl Combs. Combs grew up believing his father was killed in a car accident when Combs was three, but found out at age 14, through research at a public library, that his father had been a small time hustler who was shot in the head on Central Park West. His widowed mother worked three jobs, including as a teacher and a model, in order to scrape money together, to buy a house in suburban Mount Vernon, New York.

“At first I thought nobody would accept me as a rap artist,” Combs later told Chuck Phillips of the Minneapolis Star-Tribune. “After all, it’s not like I came from the ‘hood,” he added. But his mother maintained the family’s ties to New York’s Harlem, and it was there that young Sean Combs obtained a remarkable cultural education, soaking up the creations of the founders of rap music: Grandmaster Flash, Run D.M.C., KRS-One, and more. “I would be 12 years old, and sometimes I’d be out until 3, 4 in the morning, seeing the music. I had to sneak out to do it, but I was doing it,” he told Rolling Stone’s Mikal Gilmore. He obtained the nickname “Puffy” from a childhood friend. “Whenever I got mad as a kid, I used to huff and puff…. That’s why my friend started calling me Puffy,” he told Jet.

Combs enrolled at Howard University in Washington, D.C., in 1988. Although he spent much of his time promoting rap-music events, he managed to remain at Howard for at least two years. Recommended by rapper Heavy D., Combs parlayed his musical activities into an internship at New York’s Uptown Records in 1990. After just three months, he attracted the attention of label head and former rap artist Andre Harrell, who named his young protegĂ© director of artists and repertoire, a position of extraordinary influence for a twenty-year-old with a keen understanding of the city’s flourishing rap scene. Within a year Combs became vice president. He quickly became an accomplished producer, working on such successful Uptown releases as Jodeci’s Forever My Lady and Mary J. Blige’s What’s the 411?.

Things took a turn for the worse at a disastrous celebrity basketball event that Combs promoted at New York’s City College in December of 1991. Nine people were killed in a stampede at the gates. In the aftermath, Combs received some blame for the deaths, but was successfully defended in court by renowned attorney William Kunstler. In 1993 Combs was fired from Uptown Records. The split with Harrell was difficult for him. “It was like the old sensei [teacher] rejecting the student,” Combs told Rolling Stone.

A scant two weeks later, however, Combs finalized a deal with the large music conglomerate Arista to distribute the musical output of his new company, Bad Boy Entertainment. Bad Boy succeeded from the start and over the first four years of its existence posted skyrocketing sales; estimates of total sales over the period 1993 to 1997 range from $100 million to $200 million. Arista rewarded Combs with a $6 million cash advance when he renegotiated his relationship with the label in 1997.

Although Combs has produced top-chart-level recordings by Bad Boy artists Mase, Craig Mack, and others, and has worked with outside artists of the magnitude of Aretha Franklin and Sting, his greatest success at the helm of Bad Boy came with the recordings of New York rapper Christopher Wallace, better known as Biggie Smalls, who recorded under the name of the Notorious B.I.G. Smalls was Combs’s first major project at Bad Boy. “He saw things so vivid,” Combs recalled in a 1997 interview with Rolling Stone. “If you sat and listened to a Biggie Smalls record in the dark, you see a whole movie in front of you.” The first Notorious B.I.G. album, Ready to Die, attracted widespread attention; the second, the prophetically named Life After Death, was one of 1997’s top sellers, spawning an unprecedented two Number One singles after Wallace’s murder in March of that year. Combs had earlier moved in the direction of mainstream R&B and was credited by some with founding a hybrid named hip-hop soul; as executive producer of the Notorious B.I.G. recordings, he proved himself master of the hardcore gangsta’ rap style during its period of maximum sales.

Combs was to achieve even greater success on his own, recording with various other Bad Boy artists under the name Puff Daddy & the Family. The No Way Out album, released in July 1997, included “I’ll Be Missing You”; the album took the theme of a tribute or a requiem for the murdered Smalls. Musically, the album was marked by wholesale adoption of the melodies and rhythm tracks of familiar pieces of R&B and rock from the 1970s and 1980s. Writer Sean Piccoli of the Fort Lauderdale Sun Sentinel dubbed the practice “stapling,” as opposed to the “sampling” present on earlier rap recordings, where only short snippets of music would be borrowed from earlier sources. “I’ll Be Missing You” was directly based on the 1983 Police hit, “Every Breath You Take.”

Combs has taken criticism for this practice, both from other hip-hop artists and from fans of the artists whose work he borrows. Yet Combs was not the inventor of such wholesale borrowing; as he was putting the finishing touches on the No Way Out disc, movie star/rapper Will Smith recycled Patrice Rushen’s 1982 hit “Forget Me Nots” on the soundtrack of the film Men in Black. The style dated back at least to MC Hammer’s 1990 “U Can’t Touch This” (based on Rick James’s “Super Freak” of a decade earlier). Furthermore, those who claimed that Combs in “I’ll Be Missing You” was coasting along on the strength of the Police recording mostly failed to notice the other quotation contained in the song: the early twentieth-century Protestant hymn “I’ll Fly Away,” and, on the album, the classical orchestral work “Adagio for Strings,” composed in 1915 by Samuel Barber. Clearly, for millions of listeners, the works blended into a convincing expression of Combs’s grief over his friend’s death.

The end of the 1990s saw a rise in Combs’s presence in various courtrooms throughout the country as well as a rise in Combs’s presence in the business and philanthropic world. Daddy’s House Social Programs began in 1995. This charity organization, guided by both Combs and Executive Director Sister Souljah, seeks to promote the positive influence of parents, teachers and mentors for urban youth. Daddy’s House has spearheaded programs in academic tutoring, promoting higher education, and international travel for students. The charity even runs summer camping programs in upstate New York.

In 1997 Combs opened up Justin’s, a fine dining restaurant in New York and another in Atlanta in 1999, with plans to expand to new locations. In 1998 Combs made his run at a clothing line, Sean John. Designed with urban male youth in mind, the clothing line became an almost immediate success and has been nominated for a CFDA fashion award every year since its inception. In 2000 Combs appeared on his own reality show on ABC, called Making The Band. The series ran for two seasons on ABC, but moved to MTV under the name Making The Band 2 for its third season. Combs made his Broadway debut in a 2004 revival of Raisin In The Sun , and received excellent reviews for the effort.

In 1999 Combs was brought up on charges of assaulting record executive Steve Stoute. Stoute was one of the executives who allowed the airing of a video on MTV that pictured Combs nailed to a cross. Combs was upset at the disrespect he believed the video showed to God. After a public apology to Stoute, the charges were dropped. In 2000 Combs was charged with criminal possession of a weapon stemming from an incident at a New York nightclub on December 27, 1999. Combs was at the club with then girlfriend singer-actress Jennifer Lopez. A jury, in March of 2001, found Combs not guilty of all charges. On May 24, 2000, Combs settled the lawsuit that was a result of the 1991 New York City College tragedy. He received further vindication on June 1, 2004 when the North Carolina Court of Appeals reversed a $450,000 judgment against him for allegedly having a man beaten.

All of Combs’s legal and personal problems culminated in a public persona name change. In 2001, Sean “Puff Daddy” Combs made an announcement that the entertainment world would now know him by the name “P. Diddy.” The name change stemmed from the legal issues, but that was not the only reason. Combs believed that he was not given the respect and admiration he deserved for his entertainment work. He looked at himself as a person who, for the most part, stayed out of the east coast/west coast rap wars, looked to better the quality of hip-hop entertainment, and tried to become a role model and leader for people of his race. A name change would allow him to wipe the slate clean and start anew. However, Combs found that even as P. Diddy, his past still haunted him and his respectability was still in question. On New Year’s Eve 2003, according to Villa, Combs announced at a party, “First they called me Puff Daddy, then they called me P. Diddy. But now I’m just Sean Combs.”

Combs increased his focus on philanthropic causes in the early 2000s, making headlines on November 2, 2003 by completing the New York Marathon and raising $2 million for children’s charities in the process. On July 20, 2004, he unveiled plans for Citizen Change, a nonpartisan campaign to mobilize youth and minority voters to participate in the presidential election that year. Earlier, on February 4, he was named to receive the Patrick Lippert Award for his ongoing work with a similar nonpartisan organization, Rock the Vote.

Legal and political involvements notwithstanding, his entertainment career thrived also. Later that month he shared his second Grammy Award for best rap performance by a duo or group–his third Grammy overall–for “Shake Ya Tailfeather,”, recorded with Murphy Lee and Nelly. After announcing his pending retirement from solo recording in March of that year, he made his Broadway acting debut in a revival of Lorraine Hansberry’s Raisin in the Sun, at the Royale Theater, and received admirable reviews for the effort. In other 2004 honors, on June 7 Combs was named the top men’s wear designer of 2004, by the Council of Fashion Designers. Less than two weeks later, on June 19, he carried the Olympic torch for one lap, through the streets of New York City.

It is clear that with the success Combs has had through repeated name changes, the next few years will prove to be both exciting and profitable for Sean Combs.

Sean Diddy Combs

February 23, 2012 by · Comments Off on Sean Diddy Combs 

Sean Diddy Combs, Cable provider Comcast announced Tuesday that it will carry four new channels, each headed by a minority owner – Mr. Johnson, Mr. Combs, director Robert Rodriguez, and Spanish-language TV veteran Constantino “Said” Schwarz.

When Comcast acquired NBCUniversal last year, it made an agreement with the FCC to diversify the cable landscape. The four new offerings were chosen from among 100 proposals. Johnson’s “Aspire,” scheduled to start this summer, will be the first to launch, followed by Combs’s “REVOLT” in 2013, and Mr. Rodriguez’s “El Rey” the year after. The fourth, “BabyFirst Americas,” will be aimed at infants, very young children, and their parents.

The four channels will need to carve out their own niches in a minority media landscape already dominated by BET (Black Entertainment Television) and Univision, analysts say. Big, recognizable names and good intentions are not enough. Oprah Winfrey’s OWN Network, launched last year, is struggling, for example.

“These are commercial enterprises which have to collect eyeballs, so they are going to need content to draw them in,” says Len Shyles, a professor of communication at Villanova University in Philadelphia. “People will be drawn to the big names to check it out, but the cache of Magic Johnson and Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs will only last so long. If the programming is crummy, it won’t work. It’s a pretty simple formula.”

Johnson says Aspire “will be a network that encourages and challenges African-Americans to reach for their dreams and will appeal to all generations.”

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