Posted on 09/30/2024 7:39:07 PM PDT by bitt
The Grand Wizard's spell has been broken and not a minute too soon
U.S. Attorney Damian Williams said: “As alleged in the Indictment, for years, Sean Combs used the business empire he controlled to sexually abuse and exploit women, as well as to commit other acts of violence and obstruction of justice. Today, he is charged with racketeering and sex trafficking offenses. If you have been a victim of Combs’ alleged abuse – or if you know anything about his alleged crimes – we urge you to come forward. This investigation is far from over.”
Absurdistan has been picking away at the sheer ghastliness of the entertainment business for two years, but this? The P. Diddy fall is a bonanza. People are literally running for the hills, CEOs and politicians resigning en masse and vanishing from the public stage. It is instructive and fascinating too, that the trigger, the arrest of the P. Diddy, and the revelations of his crimes, has roiled the black community like nothing I’ve seen before. Rappers, producers and comics have been telling these stories for a decade, but were dismissed. Their lives, the culture of black America, has been polluted by the worship of gangsters, rap and drugs, heavily and relentlessly promoted by Hollywood. Chief among those promoters, Diddy.
Now Katt Williams, Tina Torres, Corey Feldman, Ally Carter, Jaguar Wright and others are shown to be right. And they claim to know much much more about the corruption, the dark abomination among elites like the Obamas, Ashton Kutcher, Justin Bieber, Russell Simmons, Leonardo de Caprio, Princes Harry and Andrew, Tyler Perry, Will and Jada Smith, Kelly Osborne, Martha Stewart, Oprah, Rick Ross, Usher, Cuba Gooding Jr., Lebron James, TD Jakes. Clive Davis is identified as the puppet master.
The abuse lawsuits are mounting, including a class action, and yesterday the Buzbee Law Firm was appointed lead counsel for fifty individuals who were assaulted by Diddy and the sports, film and political stars who went to “freak-offs”. The J Lo marriage collapse was said to be triggered by her involvement - the FBI visited Ben Affleck, and Ashton Kutcher’s participation has led his wife, Mila Kunis, to move out of the family house.
Dozens of other resignations have occurred in the two weeks since. But within the first 24 hours:
...MORE
Clive Davis dedicates several chapters of his book 'The Soundtrack of My Life' to the many years he served as founder and president of Arista Records. and helped launch the careers of Sean 'Diddy' Combs, Notorious B.I.G. and Mase.
When the dirt on Oprah comes out, I hope you will change your mind.
If Trump ever went to one of those parties, pictures would have been released by now. If anything truly compromising, Jack Smith would have indicted?
Or will just the false smear be an October surprise to distract public attention away from the Harris Walz train wreck?
I’ve never had any respect for Oprah, and the things that came about her after the fires on Maui made that disrespect even deeper. If she was at all involved in this, I hope that it is exposed and she is defrocked.
Trump is 2 above Obama on whatever that list is .
Diddy and Hillary at 2004 dnc convention.
I’d sure enjoy seeing the Hussein Obamas “laid out horizontal” as a result of this.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Clive Jay Davis (born April 4, 1932) is an American record producer, A&R executive, record executive, and lawyer. He has won five Grammy Awards and was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, as a non-performer, in 2000.[1]
From 1967 to 1973, Davis was the president of Columbia Records. He was founder and president of Arista Records from 1974 through 2000 until founding J Records. From 2002 until April 2008, he was chair and CEO of the RCA Music Group (which included RCA Records, J Records, and Arista Records), chair and CEO of J Records, and chair and CEO of BMG North America.
Davis is credited with hiring a young recording artist, Tony Orlando, for Columbia in 1967. He has signed many artists who achieved significant success, including Sly and the Family Stone, Janis Joplin, Laura Nyro, Santana, Bruce Springsteen, Chicago, Billy Joel, Donovan, Bay City Rollers, Blood, Sweat & Tears, Loggins and Messina, Ace of Base, Aerosmith, Olivia Longott, Pink Floyd and Westlife. He is also credited with bringing Whitney Houston and Barry Manilow to prominence.[2]
As of 2018, Davis is the chief creative officer of Sony Music Entertainment.[3]
Davis was born in Brooklyn, New York City, to Jewish parents,[4] Herman and Florence Davis. His father was an electrician and salesman.[5] Davis was raised in Crown Heights, Brooklyn[5] and attended Erasmus Hall High School.[6]
His mother died at age 47, and his father died the following year when Davis was still a teenager. He then moved in with his married sister, who lived in Bayside, Queens.[5]
Davis attended New York University College of Arts & Science, where he graduated[5] magna cum laude with a degree in political science[7] and Phi Beta Kappa in 1953. He received a full scholarship to Harvard Law School, where he was a member of the Board of Student Advisers and graduated in 1956.[8]
Davis practiced law in a small firm in New York, then moved on to the firm of Rosenman, Colin, Kaye, Petschek, and Freund two years later, where partner Ralph Colin had CBS as a client. Davis was subsequently hired by a former colleague at the firm, Harvey Schein, to become assistant counsel of CBS subsidiary Columbia Records at age 28, and then general counsel the following year.[9]
As part of a reorganization of Columbia Records Group, group president Goddard Lieberson appointed Davis as administrative vice president and general manager in 1965.[10] In 1966, CBS formed the Columbia-CBS Group which reorganized CBS's recorded music operations into CBS Records with Davis heading the new unit.[11]
The next year, Davis was appointed president and became interested in the newest generation of folk rock and rock and roll. One of his earliest pop signings was the British folk-rock musician Donovan, who enjoyed a string of successful hit singles and albums released in the U.S. on the Epic Records label. That same year, Davis hired 23-year-old recording artist Tony Orlando as general manager of Columbia publishing subsidiary April-Blackwood Music; Orlando went on to become vice-president of Columbia/CBS Music and signed Barry Manilow in 1969.[12]
In June 1967, Davis attended the Monterey Pop Festival after his friends and business associate, Lou Adler, convinced him.[13] He immediately signed Janis Joplin with Big Brother and the Holding Company, and Columbia went on to sign Laura Nyro, The Electric Flag, Santana, The Chambers Brothers, Bruce Springsteen, Chicago, Billy Joel; Blood, Sweat & Tears, Loggins and Messina, Aerosmith, and Pink Floyd (for rights to release their material outside of Europe).[citation needed]
One of the most commercially successful recordings released during Davis' tenure at Columbia was Lynn Anderson's Rose Garden, in late 1970. It was Davis who insisted that "Rose Garden" be the country singer's next single release. The song crossed over and was a No. 1 hit in 16 countries worldwide. "Rose Garden" remained the biggest-selling album by a female country artist for 27 years.[citation needed]
In 1972, Davis signed Earth, Wind & Fire to Columbia Records. One of his most recognized accomplishments was signing the Boston group Aerosmith to Columbia Records in the early 1970s at New York City's Max's Kansas City. The accomplishment was mentioned in the 1979 Aerosmith song "No Surprize", where Steven Tyler sings, "Old Clive Davis said he's surely gonna make us a star, I'm gonna make you a star, just the way you are."[14] Starting on December 30, 1978,[15] Bob Weir of the Grateful Dead occasionally changed the lyrics of the Dead standard "Jack Straw" in concert from "we used to play for silver, now we play for life", to "we used to play for acid, now we play for Clive."[16]
One of the last bands Davis tried to sign to Columbia Records was the proto-punk band Death.[17]
After Davis was fired from CBS Records in 1973 for allegedly using company funds to bankroll his son's bar mitzvah,[18][11][19][20] Columbia Pictures then hired him to be a consultant for the company's Bell Records label. Davis took time out to write his memoirs and then founded Arista Records in 1974.[21][22][23] The company was named after New York City's secondary school honor society of that name, of which Davis was a member.[24]
At Arista, Davis signed Barry Manilow, followed by Aretha Franklin, Dionne Warwick, Patti Smith, Westlife, Al Jourgensen, The Outlaws, Eric Carmen, the Bay City Rollers, Exposé, Taylor Dayne, Ace of Base, Air Supply, Ray Parker Jr., Raydio, and Alicia Keys, and he brought Carly Simon, Melissa Manchester, Grateful Dead, The Kinks, Jermaine Stewart, Gil Scott-Heron (on whose episode of TV One's Unsung Davis was interviewed) and Lou Reed to the label.[citation needed] He co-founded Arista Nashville in 1989 with Tim DuBois, which became the home to Alan Jackson, Brooks & Dunn, Pam Tillis, and Brad Paisley.[25]
Davis founded LaFace Records with L.A. Reid and Babyface.[citation needed] LaFace subsequently became the home of TLC, Usher, Outkast, Pink and Toni Braxton.[citation needed] He founded Bad Boy Records with Sean "Puffy" Combs and it became the home of The Notorious B.I.G., Craig Mack, Combs, Mase, 112, and Faith Evans, although Davis would later admit that he never quite understood rap music.[citation needed] In 1998, Davis signed LFO from European Success. LFO charted #3 with "Summer Girls" in 1999, and went on to multiplatinum success.[citation needed]
During the Arista years, he set up his own production company Clive Davis Entertainment, for a two-year first-look agreement with movie studio Tri-Star Pictures in 1987.[26]
Davis was made aware of Cissy Houston's daughter Whitney Houston after he saw the Houstons perform at a New York City nightclub. Impressed with what he heard, Davis signed her to Arista. Houston became one of the biggest selling artists in music history under the guidance of Davis at Arista.[27]
Davis left Arista in 2000 and started J Records, an independent label with financial backing from Arista parent Bertelsmann Music Group, named with the middle initial of Davis and his four children.[28] BMG would buy a majority stake in J Records in 2002, and Davis would become president and CEO of the larger RCA Music Group.
Davis' continued success in breaking new artists was recognised by the music industry A&R site HitQuarters when the executive was named "world's No.1 A&R of 2001" based on worldwide chart data for that year.[29]
In 2004, BMG merged with Sony Music Entertainment to form Sony BMG. With the assets of the former CBS Records (renamed Sony Music Entertainment in 1991) now under Sony's ownership, the joint venture would mean a return of sorts for Davis to his former employer. Davis remained with RCA Label Group until 2008, when he was named chief creative officer for Sony BMG.
Davis was elevated to Chief Creative Officer of Sony Music Entertainment,[30] a title he currently holds, as part of a corporate restructuring when Sony BMG became Sony Music Entertainment in late 2008 when BMG sold its shares to Sony.[3] Arista Records and J Records, which were both founded by Davis, were dissolved in October 2011 through the restructuring of RCA Records. All artists under those labels were moved to RCA Records.[31]
As a producer, Davis has won four Grammy Awards.[32]
Award | Year | Artist | Results |
---|---|---|---|
Grammy Award for Album of the Year | 1994 | The Bodyguard by Whitney Houston | Won |
Grammy Award for Album of the Year | 2000 | Supernatural by Santana | Won |
Grammy Award for Best Rock Album | 2000 | Supernatural by Santana | Won |
Grammy Award for Best R&B Album | 2009 | Jennifer Hudson, Jennifer Hudson | Won |
Davis also received the Grammy Trustees Award in 2000[33] and the President's Merit Award at the 2009 Grammys.[34] In 2011, the 200-seat theater at the Grammy Museum was named the "Clive Davis Theater".[35]
In 2000, Davis was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in the non-performers category.[36] The same year, he received the Golden Plate Award of the American Academy of Achievement.[37]
In 2015, he was recognized by Equality Forum as one of the 31 Icons of the LGBT History Month.[38]
Davis was a 2018 Honoree at The New Jewish Home's Eight Over Eighty Gala.
An alumnus of New York University, Davis is a significant benefactor to it. The recorded music division of its Tisch School of the Arts, is named after him: the Clive Davis Institute of Recorded Music.
Davis was portrayed by Oscar nominated actor, Stanley Tucci, in Sony Pictures's Whitney Houston: I Wanna Dance with Somebody – a biopic about the life and music of Houston. Davis also served as a producer on the film.[39]
Davis has been married and divorced twice. He was married to Helen Cohen from 1956 to 1965 and to Janet Adelberg from 1965 to 1985. He has four children: Fred (born 1960), a prominent media investment banker,[40] Lauren (born 1962), an entertainment attorney and arts professor at New York University's Tisch School of the Arts, Mitchell (born 1970), and Doug Davis (born 1974), a music executive and Grammy award-winning record producer.[41] Davis has eight grandchildren.[42][43]
In 2013, Davis publicly came out as bisexual in his autobiography The Soundtrack of My Life.[44] On the daytime talk show Katie, he told host Katie Couric that he hoped his coming out would lead to "greater understanding" of bisexuality.[45] The autobiography was the basis for the two-hour documentary Clive Davis: The Soundtrack of Our Lives.
Obama and Hilliary Clinton are on the list.
If there's evidence of involvement in physical abusing others, the FBI will make sure it never sees the light of day.
Shock jock website, www.gowendy.com, reportedly displayed a “doctored image” of Bad
Boy Records’ Diddy Combs naked from the waist down having sex with a man (circa 1997).
And they said Pizzagate was a conspiracy.
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