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Oprah Vs. Hip-Hop: Round Three
05/30/2006 3:19 PM, E! Online
It really is hard out there for a pimp.
That is, if by "pimp," they mean hip-hop star, and by "there," they
mean Harpo studios.
Ice Cube is the latest rapper
to step up the offensive against unlikely beef recipient Oprah Winfrey,
crying foul over the talk show hostess' alleged refusal to book hip-hop
acts on her influential chatfest.
The Are We
There Yet? star followed in the footsteps of fellow rappers turned
critics Ludacris and 50 Cent, telling FHM magazine that Stedman's
better half has unfairly kept the arbiters of thug life off her
airwaves.
"I've been involved in three projects
pitched to her, but I've never been asked to participate," the
36-year-old told the magazine in its July issue. "For Barbershop
she had Cedric the Entertainer and Eve on, but I wasn't invited. Maybe
she's got a problem with hip-hop.
"She's had damn
rapists, child molesters and lying authors on her show. And if I'm not a
rags-to-riches story for her, who is?"
Ice Cube's
public denouncement of Winfrey—or at least her booking agents—is just
the latest lashing out directed at the daytime queen.
In an interview with the AP last month, 50 Cent voiced complaints
that the Tony-bound 52-year-old took issue with rappers and thus rarely
invited them on her show.
"I think she caters to
older white women," the "In Da Club" rapper said. "Oprah's audience is
my audience's parents. So, I could care less about Oprah or her show."
Of course, that could be because disagreeing with
the queen of suburban housewives only ups Fiddy's street cred.
"I'm actually better off having friction with her," he
told the AP.
If that's the case, he was likely
less than pleased to receive a recent endorsement from Winfrey, who made
a surprise appearance on New York hip-hop radio station earlier this
month to talk to DJ Ed Lover about her reported lack of support for rap
acts.
"I listen to some hip-hop," the media queen
said. "You know, I've been accused of not liking hip-hop, and that's
just not true. I got a little 50 on my iPod. I really do. Love 'In Da
Club'...Love that, and you know, love Jay-Z, love Kanye, love Mary J."
Reports of a biased brouhaha first picked up steam
in April, when Ludacris, born Chris Bridges, spoke out to GQ
magazine about his treatment on the show last fall, when he was
promoting the Oscar-winning Crash.
"She
edited out a lot of my comments while keeping her own in," he told the
lad's mag. "Of course, it's her show, but we were doing a show on racial
discrimination, and she gave me a hard time as a rapper when I came on
there as an actor.
"I don't see why people like
Chris Rock and Dave Chappelle, who I am huge fans of, it's OK for them
to go on Oprah. They speak the same language as I do, but they do
it through comedy, so I guess that's acceptable."
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