https://www.blackenterprise.com/ti-business-partner-building-brands/

Hip-hop is one of those industries where most acts are here today and gone tomorrow. Behind-the-scenes, there’s usually a business-savvy wizard engineering the careful placement of that artist in the right space, at the right time. Jason Geter helped rap icon T.I. build a business angle into his brand. Geter also serves as co-founder of several companies associated with T.I. inducing Grand Hustle, AKOO clothing, and Culture Republic. 

Grand Hustle has produced five platinum albums, three double platinum albums, and 13 gold albums. Geter peeled back the layers of his success, explaining how he’s maintained consistency, lessons learned, and his new ventures. 

“More than anything, you have to educate yourself. That education can come from reading, observing, and having mentors. In music, the easy thing is that by the time I got in position I had studied the game so much through internships and other experiences, that it came natural,” he says.

“When it’s time to have more than one artist, you have to treat each one with priority and focus on them when it’s their time for that attention. It’s business, so the one that’s going to get most of your focus is the one generating the most business at the time.” 

In an industry where fame is fleeting, Geter helps artists create value for themselves in more than one arena. His approach to that is centered around being organic.

“It has to be natural, organic. First things first, each artist is different. I can’t expect the same thing from each person. You’ve got to tailor make the suit for the artist. We can’t build the skyscraper if the foundation isn’t right. More than anything, people want to diversify and have aspirations, but you’ve got to master one thing first. From there, branding is very critical. An artist is a politician in a sense. Their audience has to believe in them, and know they won’t try to just sell anything.” 

He talks about building AKOO Clothing. “We figured out the name, and I paid Max of Public School to do a book of designs for me. We took that inspiration and had meetings with Russel Simmons, Mark Ecko and his partner Seth, Damon John, and some others. I educated myself as much as possible. I was learning as I was meeting people and putting two-and-two together based off of what people said.” 

Geter doesn’t believe there are solid lines between music, fashion, film, and other forms of creativity. After building a lifetime’s worth of experience across multiple industries, he went on to create an imprint that would marry each world he lives in as an entrepreneur. Culture Republic was born in collaboration with colleagues Chaka Zulu and Bernard Parks Jr. 

“What’s interesting with Culture Republic is, I was always practicing the act of never seeing lines. Coming into the game seeing Master P, Russell Simmons, and Dame Dash, they showed me that there’s no boundaries. Once you have success in music, it’s a passport. I can walk into the room and talk about movies, fashion, and television. That was the premise of Culture Republic, being a boutique shop. We have experience in each sector. Whatever lane we want to go down, we have experience. Now with the resources, it can be made official.” 

 

The post T.I.’s Business Partner On Building Brands That Intersect Music, Fashion, and Art appeared first on Black Enterprise.

September 30, 2018

T.I.’s Business Partner On Building Brands That Intersect Music, Fashion, and Art

https://www.blackenterprise.com/ti-business-partner-building-brands/

Hip-hop is one of those industries where most acts are here today and gone tomorrow. Behind-the-scenes, there’s usually a business-savvy wizard engineering the careful placement of that artist in the right space, at the right time. Jason Geter helped rap icon T.I. build a business angle into his brand. Geter also serves as co-founder of several companies associated with T.I. inducing Grand Hustle, AKOO clothing, and Culture Republic. 

Grand Hustle has produced five platinum albums, three double platinum albums, and 13 gold albums. Geter peeled back the layers of his success, explaining how he’s maintained consistency, lessons learned, and his new ventures. 

“More than anything, you have to educate yourself. That education can come from reading, observing, and having mentors. In music, the easy thing is that by the time I got in position I had studied the game so much through internships and other experiences, that it came natural,” he says.

“When it’s time to have more than one artist, you have to treat each one with priority and focus on them when it’s their time for that attention. It’s business, so the one that’s going to get most of your focus is the one generating the most business at the time.” 

In an industry where fame is fleeting, Geter helps artists create value for themselves in more than one arena. His approach to that is centered around being organic.

“It has to be natural, organic. First things first, each artist is different. I can’t expect the same thing from each person. You’ve got to tailor make the suit for the artist. We can’t build the skyscraper if the foundation isn’t right. More than anything, people want to diversify and have aspirations, but you’ve got to master one thing first. From there, branding is very critical. An artist is a politician in a sense. Their audience has to believe in them, and know they won’t try to just sell anything.” 

He talks about building AKOO Clothing. “We figured out the name, and I paid Max of Public School to do a book of designs for me. We took that inspiration and had meetings with Russel Simmons, Mark Ecko and his partner Seth, Damon John, and some others. I educated myself as much as possible. I was learning as I was meeting people and putting two-and-two together based off of what people said.” 

Geter doesn’t believe there are solid lines between music, fashion, film, and other forms of creativity. After building a lifetime’s worth of experience across multiple industries, he went on to create an imprint that would marry each world he lives in as an entrepreneur. Culture Republic was born in collaboration with colleagues Chaka Zulu and Bernard Parks Jr. 

“What’s interesting with Culture Republic is, I was always practicing the act of never seeing lines. Coming into the game seeing Master P, Russell Simmons, and Dame Dash, they showed me that there’s no boundaries. Once you have success in music, it’s a passport. I can walk into the room and talk about movies, fashion, and television. That was the premise of Culture Republic, being a boutique shop. We have experience in each sector. Whatever lane we want to go down, we have experience. Now with the resources, it can be made official.” 

 

The post T.I.’s Business Partner On Building Brands That Intersect Music, Fashion, and Art appeared first on Black Enterprise.


September 30, 2018

Prince Awarded Posthumous Honorary Degree By University Of Minnesota

https://madamenoire.com/1042306/prince-honorary-degree-university-of-minnesota/

Prince may be gone, but he has done for music and for his hometown of Minneapolis, Minnesota will never be forgotten. Two years after his death he is still receiving honors. The University of Minnesota has warded the Purple one …


September 29, 2018

Recycled Halloween Candy Pail

http://dollarstorecrafts.com/2018/09/recycled-halloween-candy-pail/

Recycled milk jug Halloween candy pail

Don’t throw that milk container away! Recycle it into a Halloween Treat Bucket, perfect to take along with you when you go trick-or-treating. Kids will have fun making this recycled Halloween container, and taking it along on night to collect their candy haul.

Recycled Halloween Treat Bucket Materials:

  • 1 recycled milk container, washed well
  • 2 sheets of orange paper (construction, card stock, or scrapbooking)
  • 1 sheet of black felt or craft foam
  • 2 green chenille stems (pipe cleaners)
  • markers
  • glue dots
  • scissors
  • hole-punch
  • pencil

Recycled milk jug halloween candy pail tutorial

Instructions:

1. Fold a piece of paper in half and draw pumpkin stem in the top area of the paper. To draw it, make a round or oval shape, then draw a few lines going down from the side edges and the middle.
Recycled milk jug halloween candy pail tutorial

2. Draw the round part of the pumpkin around the stem, and add a few wrinkle lines coming down from the stem. Draw 3 more pumpkins the same way on your remaining orange paper. Note: make two of the pumpkins shorter, to better fit on the handle sides of the jug.
Recycled milk jug halloween candy pail tutorial

3. Cut out each pumpkin around the outline.

4. With a washable marker, draw a line around the lid area of the milk jug, and down around the front of the jug. Cut around this line with a pair of sharp-pointed scissors, leaving the handle intact. (See photo.)
Recycled milk jug halloween candy pail tutorial

5. Attach the four pumpkins to the sides of the milk container with glue dots.
Recycled milk jug halloween candy pail tutorial

6. Make a hole in one of the front pumpkins with the hole-punch.
Recycled milk jug halloween candy pail tutorial

7. Thread a chenille stem through the hole. Twist the stem to secure it to the pumpkin, and then twist it around the pencil to make the curly pumpkin vine tendrils.
Recycled milk jug halloween candy pail tutorial

8. Do the same with the other front pumpkin so it also has a chenille vine.
Recycled milk jug halloween candy pail tutorial

9. With felt or craft foam, cut pumpkin eyes, noses, and mouths to decorate your pumpkins as jack-o’-lanterns. Attach the facial features with glue dots. Alternately, draw faces on the pumpkins before you attach them to the container.
Recycled milk jug halloween candy pail tutorial

Additional Recycled Halloween Bucket Tips:

Different Decorations: Instead of jack-o’-lanterns, cut out different shapes to adorn your treat bucket. How about black cats or ghostly shapes?

For Younger Tots: Give your toddler or pre-schooler a half sheet of paper and let them draw or color. Cut scribbles into a pumpkin shape.

Personalize: Use foam letter stickers to put your child’s name on the container and keep everyone’s treat bucket straight!

Recycled milk jug Halloween candy pail

 

The post Recycled Halloween Candy Pail appeared first on Dollar Store Crafts.


September 29, 2018

Foxy Talks to ‘Night School’ Director Malcolm D. Lee

https://thenerdsofcolor.org/2018/09/28/foxy-talks-to-night-school-director-malcolm-d-lee/

Extra Hard NOC Life this week! Foxy Jazzabelle goes one-on-one with the director of the new hit comedy starring Tiffany Haddish and Kevin Hart, Malcolm D. Lee! http://traffic.libsyn.com/thenerdsofcolor/HNL126.mp3 All this and more on Hard NOC Life! Watch it on your screen, hit “play,” and check this. Subscribe to all of podcasts in the Hard NOC […]