GAMES: GameSpot: Best of 2008 | GameFAQs | SportsGamer MUSIC: Last.fm | MP3.com MOVIES: Metacritic | Movietome TV: TV.com
MP3.com News Breakers: Diddy, Akon, Petty, Jeff Tweedy & Obama, Motown
By Jim Welte - MP3.com
December 5, 2007 at 12:17:00 PM | more stories by this author

Mogul featured in CNBC campaign; singer pleads not guilty; Petty to play super bowl; Wilco frontman to stump for candidate; museum deal dead.

Diddy featured in new CNBC campaign

Diddy in the CNBC ad. Diddy in the CNBC ad.

From music and film to perfume and vodka, Sean "Diddy" Combs is a one-man source of multiple revenue streams. In recognition of that, the mogul is being featured along with some of America's top business leaders in a new CNBC advertising campaign.

"My whole portfolio brand represents aspiration," Diddy says in the spot. "I came from Harlem, New York. It's about wanting the better things in life. I want to make history all the time." As in all 15 of the campaign's spots, Diddy, 38, then turns to the camera and says, "I am American business. I watch CNBC."

The CNBC campaign also includes Viacom CEO Sumner Redstone, BP Capital CEO Boone Pickens, Southwest Airlines cofounder Herb Kelleher, former GE CEO Jack Welch, Sirius Radio CEO Mel Karmazin, and Sacramento Kings and Palms Resort Casino co-owner Gavin Maloof.

Akon pleads not guilty

The kid Akon tossed off the stage. The kid Akon tossed off the stage.

Although the whole incident was caught on video and viewed by legions on YouTube, Akon pleaded not guilty this week to criminal charges for tossing a 15-year-old boy off the stage at a concert earlier this year. The Senegalese singer was released on his own recognizance following his brief court appearance Monday in Fishkill, New York, where the incident occurred. He was charged with endangering the welfare of a minor and second-degree harassment.

The teenage boy did not press charges in the case, but Abby Rosa, who claimed she suffered a concussion when the boy landed on her when he was thrown from the stage at the June 3 concert. The case was adjourned until January. "It was never Akon's intention to violate the law," the singer's Manhattan lawyer, Benjamin Brafman, told reporters. "This unfortunate incident was a spontaneous reaction during a live concert that Akon deeply regrets."

Tom Petty to play Super Bowl

Tom Petty Tom Petty

At the NFL Super Bowl last February, Prince turned the party out, putting on a dazzling show under a steady rain storm while wearing a hair net. Nearly 140 million people watched Prince perform, and Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers are getting the highly prized halftime slot this year, the NFL said this week. Petty and the Heartbreakers will play the Bridgestone Tire-sponsored halftime show at the Super Bowl in Arizona on February 3, joining the likes of previous Super Bowl performer, such as U2, the Rolling Stones, and Paul McCartney. Petty told Rolling Stone that fans shouldn't expect to hear "You Don't Know How It Feels" during his set because the song's "Let's roll another joint" refrain wasn't agreeable to the show's producers. "I think that whatever you do, you probably have to edit yourself a bit," Petty said.

"I doubt we'd do a medley. I think in a show that big in a place that big you need to play songs they know." Petty also said his next album will be a long-overdue Heartbreakers album.

Jeff Tweedy to play Obama fundraiser

Jeff Tweedy Jeff Tweedy

He already has Oprah, and now Barack Obama has Tweedy. Wilco frontman Jeff tweedy has signed on to headline Change Rocks, a fundraiser for the US Democratic Presidential hopeful on Friday at Chicago's Riviera Theatre.

Tweedy is joined on the bill by emerging hip-hop duo the Cool Kids, as well as Third Eye Blind frontman Stephan Jenkins and solo artist Jill Sobule, of "I Kissed a Girl" fame.

Obama has already grabbed the support of a host of celebrities and rock stars, including Oprah. Obama and Oprah are set to make four joint appearances in Iowa this week, in advance of the January 3 caucuses.

Motown museum falls through

Berry Gordy Jr. Berry Gordy Jr.

A Detroit museum honoring the legacy of Motown Records is dead. After six years of unsuccessful planning, the long-planned, $28 million interactive museum and entertainment facility was mutually terminated this week by city development officials and Motown founder Berry Gordy Jr., according to the Detroit News.

Gordy blamed lack of money on the project's demise, which occurred despite the fact that Motown began celebrating its 50th anniversary in October. "I may not live in Detroit now, but it is on those streets where my heart lies," Gordy, who moved the label to Los Angeles in 1972, wrote the paper in an e-mailed statement.

The termination of the deal gives the city of Detroit ownership of 15 properties that would have been developed by Gordy's nonprofit group, the Motown Center. The city has reclaimed the land and can sell it to the highest bidder or offer it up for redevelopment.

Back to Today's News »

6 Comments

Oldest First | Newest First
Oh man, that's really sad about the Motown museum deal.
Posted 12/05/2007 3:09pm
is it just me or did Tom Petty get really loooooooong in the face
Posted 12/05/2007 5:38pm
He did and the beard adds to it too.
Posted 12/05/2007 6:55pm
great info on this site
Posted 05/22/2009 4:02pm
Voulez trainer autrefois ?
Posted 05/24/2009 8:43pm
Je veux feliciter pour le travail
Posted 05/30/2009 6:33am
Sign up now to post a comment!

Picture Galleries

Related Artists

Diddy Diddy

The biggest hip-hop impresario of the mid-'90s, Sean Combs -- known as Puff Daddy both here and in the world of rap until his professional name change to P. Diddy -- created a multi-million dollar industry around Bad Boy Entertainment, with recordings by the Notorious B.I.G., Craig Mack, Faith Evans, 112, and Total, all produced and...

Akon Akon

Aliaune Thiam -- aka Akon -- grew up in Senegal before he and his family (including his father, jazz percussionist Mor Thiam) eventually settled in New Jersey. There he discovered hip-hop for the first time, as well as crime. He was eventually jailed, but he used the time to work on his musical ideas. Upon release, Akon began writing and...

Tom Petty Tom Petty

Upon the release of their first album in the late '70s, Tom Petty & the Heartbreakers were shoehorned into the punk/new wave movement by some observers who picked up on the tough, vibrant energy of the group's blend of Byrds riffs and Stonesy swagger. In a way, the categorization made sense. Compared to the heavy metal and art rock that...

Tom Petty & the Heartbreakers Tom Petty & the Heartbreakers

NONE

Jeff Tweedy Jeff Tweedy

Jeff Tweedy rose to prominence with Uncle Tupelo in the late '80s and early '90s, but with his own group, Wilco, he would step out from the shadow of that legendary alt-country group and his former partner, Jay Farrar.

Belleville, IL, high school friends Tweedy and Farrar started Uncle Tupelo as the Primitives in St. Louis in the...

Wilco Wilco

Wilco rose from the ashes of the seminal roots rockers Uncle Tupelo, who disbanded in 1994. While Jay Farrar, one of the group's two singer/songwriters, went on to form the band Son Volt, his ex-partner Jeff Tweedy established Wilco along with the remaining members of Tupelo's final incarnation, which included drummer Ken Coomer as well as...

Berry Gordy, Jr. Berry Gordy, Jr.

The founder of Motown Records, Berry Gordy did what many people of his time believed could never be done: he brought Black music into millions of White Americans' homes, helping both Black artists and their culture gain acceptance, and opening the door for a multitude of sucessful Black record executives and producers. Though the music of Motown...

Related Albums

"Press Play"
Diddy
Akon "Star Is Born"
Akon
Tom Petty "Highway Companion"
Tom Petty
Tom Petty's concept for his third solo album is laid bare in its very title: it's called Highway Companion, which is a tip-off that this record was made with the road in mind. As it kicks off with the chugging Jimmy Reed-via-ZZ Top riff on "Saving Grace," the album does indeed seem to be ideal music for road trips, but Petty changes gears pretty...
Tom Petty & the Heartbreakers "The Last DJ"
Tom Petty & the Heartbreakers
Tom Petty has always battled corporations and the music industry -- fighting for lower retail prices for Hard Promises, complaining about videos, and always fighting for old-school, artist-first '60s rock aesthetics. There's a lot to admire about this stance, especially since he's essentially right about corporations having too much of a...
Jeff Tweedy "Chelsea Walls"
Jeff Tweedy
The soundtrack album for the film Chelsea Walls -- which marks the directorial debut of actor Ethan Hawke -- also happens to feature the first solo recordings from Uncle Tupelo founder and Wilco frontman Jeff Tweedy. However, those expecting a healthy dose of either UT's punk-fueled roots rock or Wilco's smart and adventurous pop are in for a...
Wilco "A Ghost Is Born"
Wilco
It's hard not to wonder if Wilco's breakthrough 2002 release, Yankee Hotel Foxtrot, would have been such a critical success and so eagerly embraced by the indie rock community if it hadn't become such a cause célèbre thanks to the band being unceremoniously dropped by Reprise Records, and then signed by Nonesuch after the album had become...
"To Be Loved"
Berry Gordy, Jr.
Data Warehouse Clear Gif