Toni Braxton Lucky She Didn’t Have Massive Heart Attack
Toni Braxton says undergoing heart surgery was ‘traumatic’ after emergency situation. Read more.

Toni Braxton Inks Production Deal With Lifetime
The R&B legend has a long history with the network.

Toni Braxton Remembers Funny Wedding Request From Lil Kim
Toni Braxton stopped by Jennifer Hudson’s talk show and told a story about Lil Kim seeking a wedding singer.

Mary J. Blige Refuses Verzuz With Toni Braxton – Or Anyone Else
Mary J. Blige has no plans to do a Verzuz battle with anyone!

John Legend, Toni Braxton, Teyana Taylor Ari Lennox & More Curate Playlists For Apple Music’s “Soul September”
Some of the biggest names in the genre select their all-time favorite R&B tunes.

Swizz Beatz Announces Teddy Riley Versus Babyface Battle Rematch
“Less will be more & sounds will be fixed🙏🏽 Sound checks done 🙌🏽.”

Toni Braxton Aims To Marry Birdman This Year, Damn The Pandemic
Toni Braxton says she will be married to Birdman this year, even though a global shutdown is taking place because of the coronavirus.

Toni Braxton’s “Anxious” Over Her Relationship With Cash Money Mogul Birdman
TONI BRAXTON ‘ANXIOUS’ ABOUT BIRDMAN ROMANCE

Birdman By Toni Braxton’s Bedside As Singer Battles Serious Illness
BIRDMAN IS HOLDING TONI BRAXTON DOWN!

BMI R&B/Hip Hop Awards Honors Toni Braxton, Performances From DJ Khaled, Ludacris & More
AN EVENING OF STARS!

Did Birdman Buy Toni Braxton A New $250K Bentley?
BIRDMAN IS SPENDING THAT CASH MONEY

Did Toni Braxton Confirm That She’s Dating Birdman?
AWKWARD COUPLE!

Are Birdman and Toni Braxton Dating?
NEW RANDOM COUPLE ALERT?

Toni Braxton Talks Lifetime Biopic 'Unbreak My Heart' & Upcoming Music Projects
THE GRAMMY WINNING SINGER SAYS HER MOVIE WILL BE HONEST

Toni Braxton Biopic ‘Un-Break My Heart’ Headed To Lifetime
THE R&B GREAT IS SERVING AS EXECUTIVE PRODUCER FOR THE FILM

Hip-Hop Rumors: Over The Weekend BS!
RAZ B…off life support. Was he ever on? I don’t know, but they are saying he is now off life support. But his career stayed on the machines. Raz B is now responsive, according to TMZ. This kid ain’t even 30 yet. Its going to be hard to move forward. Justin and Jay? And Kevin Hart. They were spotted hanging out over the weekend. HUMPH! MFers living the life! Toni Braxton still got that thang. She had a wardrobe malfunction over the weekend and showed that rump. Unfortunately your browser does not support IFrames. Toni Braxton — Wardrobe Malfunction On Stage – Watch More Celebrity Videos or Subscribe Rumor has it, Jay-Z has blackballed Foxy. Nobody can work with her now. But,if this is true, why? WELP! “They keep us talking, but if we stop talking about them then they should worry!” -illseed. Illseed, Out. GET INTERACTIVE WITH ALLHIPHOP.COM! Follow us on Twitter! Like us on Facebook! Email illseed rumors: kingillseed@gmail.com

Fast Life, Fast Fall: The Price Of Fame
We live in a quick moving world. We watch others live the fast life, and we often desire the same. But as the saying goes, ‘easy come, easy go.’ While it’s not just society’s fault, and while we see people make millions and acquire the lifestyles that accompany it, each one of these elements, plus others, have fed into financial immaturity. ESPN’s “30 For 30: Broke” recently touched on the astronomical percentage of athletes who end up with nothing. According to Sports Illustrated, 60% of former NBA players are broke within five years of retirement. For the NFL, two years after they walk off the field, 78% are under financial woes. But, athletes aren’t the only ones living outside of their comfort zones, or to impress those who won’t help once it’s all gone. When is enough, enough? If you grew up with nothing, does that imply you will never learn how to keep anything? Music glorifies it, but there isn’t much good that comes from blowing money fast. The strip club theme songs, flashy cars, lavish gifts, and once in a lifetime trips, are an almost hourly recurrence on the radio stations from ATL to L.A., and back. But the rented mansions and clothes the stylists will return once the shoot is done should actually show an up-and-coming entertainer that many of their realities are actually just the opposite. And while we aren’t what we listen to, we become engulfed in things the more we hear it. Even “YOLO” insinuates that living for now far outweighs planning for tomorrow. [youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U8TREN0CkB4] Ignorance is bliss. Ignorance is also the life code of some of the biggest names out there. Chances are, the hot artist that millions love now will someday run cold – once the shows stop, singles fail to catch a buzz, and they don’t make the most of fame while they have it. Many miss the business side while chasing success; from starting other ventures to starting to learn money management, they don’t take heed to what they should. Then they are left with stacks of bills and still plenty of people with their hands out for the last bit of money they’re attempting to hold onto. Some familiar names in music such as Toni Braxton, TLC, MC Hammer, and Young Buck, have all had face the ugly side of the music business known as bankruptcy. While they aren’t the only ones, the sad fact is they probably won’t be the last ones either. When you enter a world where everyone has all the most exclusive things, things become your focus. You work hard the same way they do, you put in hours in the studio, you start from the ground up, so now it’s time to stand up and show the world all you have. Actually it’s time to hold on tight to every penny, so you can count them after the spotlight dims. At any income level, the only way to ensure that you’ll continue growing wealth is to spend less than you earn. That sounds simple enough – basic, if you will – but is one of the most complex principles in entertainment, from the looks of it. Fame isn’t easy for some, and the price tag can be heavy, to the point of breaking one star after another. Yet and still, several houses, way too many vehicles, and cute women who make even cuter babies, keep putting those on TV and stages in the same predicament. Much of nothing leaves nothing. Living a dream shouldn’t end in a nightmare. At some point, these celebrities should use some common sense – or borrow some. After all, that’s better than having to borrow money. It’s always easier from the outside looking in, but when are those on the inside going to start looking at what fame could be doing to them? It’s never any of us until it hits home, or until that home is taken away. Tawni Fears is a freelance writer and contributor to AllHipHop.com. Follow her on Twitter (@brwnsugaT).

Alternative Pick: Toni Braxton “I Heart You”
[ahh_audio src=/3-10-12/ToniBraxton-IHeartYou.mp3]

Shanti Das: The (Lady) Hip-Hop Professional
James Brown said it best: “This is a man’s world.” A pitbull in a skirt, a bombshell in the boardroom, a scantily-clad video vixen – women have played lots of roles in rap over the years. There are both good and bad images of girl power in Hip-Hop, but if longtime industry vet Shanti Das has anything to do with it, young women who aspire to jump into this crazy, changeable world will be equipped to keep their pockets and their reps in check. Even in 2011, women find themselves trying to break through that invisible glass ceiling that says they can only go but so far. In the music industry, and Hip-Hop in particular, women are few and far among the top leaders as artists and industry leaders. Das, with her new book and priceless years of wisdom gained from boosting the careers of legends like TLC, Outkast, and Goodie Mob, is set to help others bust through that same ceiling – the same one that didn’t hold her back. AllHipHop.com checked in with Das to learn more about her “ladies first” motivational message and the “Queen” who helped inspire her: AllHipHop.com: Hi, how are you, Shanti? Shanti: Good! How are you? AllHipHop.com: The first thing, Shanti, as I look through the book, it is clear that you’ve been a mover and a shaker in the industry for some time, but for our audience that isn’t familiar with you, can you tell them why your name is so well known in the music industry? Shanti: Sure. I am a 20-year music industry veteran. I got my start back in 1991 with Capitol Records while I was still in college at Syracuse University. I had the good fortune of working with a lot of really great artists over the years that I mention in the book, i.e. Outkast, Goodie Mob, Busta Rhymes, Akon, Run DMC, and well into the R&B arena, such as TLC, Toni Braxton, Erykah Badu, Prince, and so on. AllHipHop.com: Okay, so a lot of those people you named have, you know, like 20+ year careers. Would you say that has anything to do with their affiliation with you over the years? Shanti: I would like to think so. I’m not really one for tooting my own horn. But I have been told, you know, by the artists themselves and many others in the industry, that I’ve definitely made a contribution to, I think, the longevity of a lot of these artists in the industry today. AllHipHop.com: Okay, cool, so the book is geared towards women. It’s called The Hip-Hop Professional: A Woman’s Guide to Climbing the Ladder of Success in the Entertainment Business. So, why was it important for you to gear this specifically for women? Shanti: It was important for me to gear the book to Hip-Hop professionals, towards women, because I feel like women sometimes don’t support each other enough – although I’ve seen a lot more of it over the last few years with organizations such as W.E.E.N., the Boss Network, N.A.B.F.E.M.E., and Diva Lounge. I am very happy that a lot of women are supporting one another, but when I was coming up there weren’t a lot of female organizations out there to help mentor other young women on the come up. I also saw a lot of women, and I even had experiences, you know where women were hating on one another and just really not try to help each other move forward and succeed in the business. AllHipHop.com: Okay, well, as I was looking through it, it seems geared towards younger women, like maybe college age, women who are starting their careers. So was that your goal to target it towards, sort of, that up and coming young woman? Shanti: It was. As you mentioned, my primary demographic is college students. I do a lot of speaking and lectures at colleges. I feel like it is so tough to get into the music industry as it now, because there are so fewer labels, but I find that there are still so many young women that want to work in the music business and in the entertainment industry. So, I felt like it’s my guide to hopefully offer a lot of insight into what goes on in the music business, and how to get your foot in the door. AllHipHop.com: Right, okay. Well, you call it a guide but to me, it read more like a personal story, or like an autobiography of your time. Shanti: Well, yeah, like my memoir. AllHipHop.com: Right, like a memoir, exactly. So, can you tell me, like what were some of the best of times and some of the worst of times for you as a woman in the Hip-Hop industry? Shanti: I think some of the best of times, well one, being able to see your get work manifested to greatness. I spent a lot of hours working on the Outkast project and the Goodie Mob project. With Outkast being rappers from the South, you know, back in the day it was all about East Coast and West Coast. Whether it was Biggie or Pac or even with all the groups like Naughty by Nature and Ice Cube, and all those guys breaking on those coasts. But you know, as we used to call it, the South Coast if you will, you know, it wasn’t as easy for us breaking into the mainstream arena. So, I think one of the great highlights in my career was back in 1995 when Outkast won “Best New Artist” at the Source Awards. It was really like, wow, we are finally breaking barriers and, you know, accomplishing something here. I know how hard the group worked, as well as I did and the label, to really put those guys out there and put them on the map. So, that was, you know, a really good time for me. [youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oyPKvpfyKWU&w=420&h=315] Some of the worst times were me being […]

The Braxtons Host Private Dinner For Reality Show
Last night, the Braxtons hosted a private dinner celebrating the second season of their hit TV show, “Braxton Family Values.” Last night, Tamar, Trina, Towanda, and Traci (Toni was in LA filming) screened the new season’s premiere episode at Frank Ski’s Restaurant in Atlanta. The new season of “Braxton Family Values” premieres Thursday, November 10 ET on WE tv. Check out these exclusive pictures: [slideshow]