(From Entertainment Weekly)
Ashanti's had a remarkably successful year, but is the newcomer worthy of ''Soul Train'''s top honor, the ''Aretha Franklin Entertainer of the Year Award,'' which she is to receive at the show's eighth annual Lady of Soul Awards on Aug. 24? More than 20,000 people think not, according to an online petition started by a teen who says ''Soul Train'' has flamed him venomously as a result.
Rommel Zamora, a 15-year-old high school sophomore from California, started the signature drive at Petition Online on July 31 because ''I was bored and I had nothing to do,'' he tells E! He wrote on the petition that he thought the 21-year-old Ashanti lacked ''singing ability and stage presence,'' and that to give her the award was an insult to Franklin and to worthier candidates, including Faith Evans, Alicia Keys, India.Arie, or Aaliyah.
Zamora's own website contains what he says is a screen shot of a rebuttal that ''Soul Train'' posted on its own website, singling out ''white-owned'' BET.com for condemnation for linking to the petition, which the posting said might be more accurately named, ''I'm a f---ing loser, I'm not talented or successful, I don't know s--- about the music industry and I need to get a motherf---ing life!!''
If ''Soul Train'' did post such a rant, it's not there any longer, though the show's website does contain a statement that expresses outrage over ''the fact that a people, whose ancestry suffered 400 years of slavery, can be herded so easily into a virtually bottomless mud hole and be taught to sling such mud therein'' at an undeserving target.
While she's guaranteed to take home the Entertainer of the Year award, Ashanti is also up for five other prizes, more than any other nominee. The ceremony will be broadcast live in syndication from the Pasadena Civic Auditorium on Saturday.
(From AllHipHop.Com)
A month after rap artist Eminem released his latest album with 'uncrackable' copyright protection technology, pirated copies are on sale across eastern Europe.
Universal has invested considerable effort in stopping piracy of the Eminem Show, with technology embedded in the CD's from being copied and redistributed. Universal is using technology by an Israeli based firm, Midbar Tech Ltd.
Universal also limited the amount of promotional advances given to media outlets to try and prevent bootleggers from reproducing the album, which is being sold in such places as Bulgaria for as low as $1.50 in American currency.
The International Federation of the Phonographic Industry (IFPI), an industry trade body, said global music sales fell by 5 percent in 2001, hurt particularly hard by the rise of CD burning and Internet song-sharing sites. The RIAA has shut down such trading sites as Audiogalaxy, Napster and the organization recently stated it was trying to shut down listen4ever.com, but cannot find the owners, who are circumventing United States copyright laws by basing their company in China.
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