Capital Preparatory Harlem was founded by Sean 'Diddy' Combs in 2016, but despite being advertised as a posh school with high-end facilities, it has recently come under fire
Did Kadafi see Raphael Perez? (The Real Killer of Tupac) boxden.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from boxden.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
The Mo Money Mo Problems spitter, who initially invited 500 people, is forced to cancel his famous annual bash for the second time as Omicron cases are rising.
Diddy Claims He Woke Up With 15 Roaches on His Face, Fans Call It Cap
Celebrity
While the rap mogul hopes that his Instagram post will motivate others to work harder, some people don t believe his claims about the roaches as many Twitter users troll him on the app. Jul 7, 2021
AceShowbiz -
Diddy (
P. Diddy) made a shocking revelation in a new post on his Instagram page on Tuesday, July 6. The rap mogul shared in the post that despite his now-extravagant lifestyle, it wasn t always like that when he was young.
Diddy took to his account to share a video of him eating a mango while enjoying a view of ocean in his backyard. You can be eating a mango with the ocean as your backyard too! so Diddy said to the camera. However, it was the caption that caught most people s attention.
photo: Courtesy of Heaven s Door Spirits
It’s been a half-century since one of our most enigmatic musicians and certainly our most shape-shifting Nobel literature prizewinner, Bob Dylan, turned to the South to re-invent himself artistically in Nashville. The result of those February 1969 recordings with Johnny Cash and Cash’s trusted backup band Bob Wootton and Marshall Grant, alongside Charlie Daniels, Norman Blake, Kenny Buttrey, Charlie McCoy and Pete Drake was the deceptively mellifluous, genre-smashing album
Nashville Skyline. The recording has since stood tall as a plinth upon which Dylan, now seventy-nine, was able to build his subsequent, and several, artistic lives. Like a sepia-toned Matthew Brady platinum print of the Civil War, the album serves today as an intensely detailed picture of its time, in its case revealing an intimate portrait of the artistic prowess of Cash, Dylan, and the deep bench of musical talent in Nashville of that day.