
Why the music industry is skeptical of a Diddy comeback
In fact, they see little to no path for him to return to the hip-hop empire he ruled so successfully for decades.
Combs was convicted on two charges of transportation to engage in prostitution in cases involving two former girlfriends. Though he was acquitted of the more serious charges of sex trafficking and racketeering, the depth of testimony that emerged during the eight-week trial will make Combs virtually untouchable as a marketable entity, they say.
'It's not just somebody found guilty of bank fraud,' said Jeff Jampol, whose JAM Inc. manages the works and images of classic artists, including the Doors, Janis Joplin and Juan Gabriel. 'It was a crime against women. It was that horrible video of him dragging Cassie down the hall by her hair. That's a heavy load to come back from,' he said, referring to video involving singer Casandra 'Cassie' Ventura.
Rey Roldan, a music publicist who once represented Britney Spears and R. Kelly at Jive Records in the 1990s, likened Combs's fall to 'an overthrow of the patriarchy.'
'That fact that he was exerting his influence and his power, over women especially, that becomes a rallying cry,' he said.
Roldan noted three entertainers who faced scandals far less damning than Combs, none convicted of crimes. Ryan Adams, the singer-songwriter accused of taking advantage of younger artists and sexting with a teenager, has resumed his career with a fraction of his former audience buying tickets to shows. Ellen DeGeneres has not yet recovered from the reports of her mistreating workers and creating a toxic workplace that prompted her to end her long-running talk show.
'Even somebody like James Corden, who was accused of being rude to waiters,' took a reputational blow, Roldan says.
Jim DeRogatis — whose reporting in the Chicago Sun-Times on sexual-abuse allegations against R. Kelly formed the basis for the case that got the R&B superstar sentenced to 30 years in prison — now teaches college-age students and notices they are far less willing to forgive those whose views they disagree with. That includes once-beloved Harry Potter author J.K. Rowling, whose critical comments on transgender people have created controversy.
Another barrier for Combs: He's actually better known now for being a mogul and advertising icon than a musician or producer. He hasn't had a chart-topping album since the George W. Bush era, and his most recent record, 'The Love Album: Off The Grid,' never cracked the Top 10.
'Look, his career over the last 15, 20 years was over except through branding,' DeRogatis says. 'Both Diddy and Kelly aged out of the core audience they had when they were at their musical peaks, and my students have no problem whatsoever with never listening to Kelly and walking out of the room when he's playing. And I imagine it'll be the same with Diddy.'
The trial damaged Combs in other ways. A prominent record executive, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to preserve industry relationships, said the first person he thinks of when Combs is referenced is Harvey Weinstein, the disgraced and convicted former film mogul. He also thinks of rapper Ye, formerly Kanye West, who has also not found anyone willing to work with him after public scandal.
'He's going to have a very tough time because he still has civil charges up the wazoo that harken back to the MeToo era [of] rampant sexual harassment and sexual abuse scandals,' the executive said. 'There are no circumstances under which I'd work with him again.'
But one music executive believes there is an important difference between the convicted Combs and the work he produced.
Merck Mercuriadis, who has specialized in acquiring and managing song rights, was horrified by what he saw during the trial. But he thinks that many of Combs's songs, with which listeners formed deep connections, will still resonate.
'Diddy consumption is at an all-time high in the streaming era, which is the perverse nature of people,' says Mercuriadis, founder of Hipgnosis Songs. 'There is no way back for Diddy as an artist or a public person. But these songs, whether with Biggie or Faith Hill, they have a life of their own.'
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CNN
26 minutes ago
- CNN
Trump wants DC to charge 14-year-olds as adults. Here's where the district's laws stand
As hundreds of federal law enforcement officers and National Guard troops descend on Washington as part of President Donald Trump's public display of force against crime in the nation's capital, the president and his allies have increasingly directed their ire toward the city's juvenile crime laws. More than two weeks after a 19-year-old former DOGE staffer was allegedly assaulted in DC by a group of teens, the president suggested that decades of Democratic leadership in the district were to blame for a system that seems to let violent juvenile offenders off the hook. Youth arrests reached a post-pandemic high in 2023, before falling the following year, according to DC government statistics. But from January 2025 until the end of June, DC Metropolitan police had arrested juveniles at the highest rate in that time period since 2019. 'Local 'youths' and gang members, some only 14, 15, and 16-years-old, are randomly attacking, mugging, maiming, and shooting innocent Citizens, at the same time knowing that they will be almost immediately released,' Trump said on Truth Social earlier this month. 'The Law in DC must be changed to prosecute these 'minors' as adults, and lock them up for a long time, starting at age 14.' Trump and US Attorney for the District of Columbia Jeanine Pirro's criticism of DC's juvenile justice system highlights a longstanding rift between the US attorney's office and that of the DC attorney general, which prosecutes juvenile offenses in the district. The district's current laws don't allow juvenile offenders younger than 15 to be prosecuted as adults in the vast majority of cases. But offenders under 18 can still end up in the adult justice system in one of two ways. Federal prosecutors from the DC US attorney's office can unilaterally charge 16 and 17-year-olds as adults when facing four of the most serious criminal charges on the books: murder, sexual assault, armed robbery, and assault with conspiracy to commit the three offenses. Alternatively, the district's attorney general's office – which has jurisdiction over most juvenile crimes – can petition a judge to charge juvenile offenders 15 and up as adults but must prove that the defendant lacks 'reasonable prospects for rehabilitation' in the juvenile system. In a statement, a spokeswoman for the DC attorney general's office touted the office's prosecution rates for violent juvenile offenses, writing that the office 'prosecutes all serious and violent crimes committed by juveniles where we have the evidence required to do so, and we seek to hold young people accountable if they harm others.' Trump ally Pirro, who was confirmed this month as US Attorney for DC, has targeted three laws to change or overturn. The top DC federal prosecutor last week attacked the district's 2018 Youth Rehabilitation Act, which was enacted to 'separate youth offenders from more mature, experienced offenders,' citing the case of a 19-year-old who shot another Metrobus passenger and was sentenced to probation under the act. The law raised the upper age limit of juvenile offenders for sentencing purposes from 22 to 24 in 2018 – and permits judges to seal convictions after offenders serve their sentences, except in cases of homicide and sexual abuse. Pirro similarly criticized the 2021 Incarceration Reduction Amendment Act, which lets all offenders convicted before age 25 to ask for a sentencing reduction after serving 15 years in prison. The law requires judges to evaluate 11 factors – ranging from the defendant's own childhood abuse history and mental health evaluations to victims' statements – in determining whether the petitioner poses a danger to any community member, and that the 'interests of justice' warrant a sentence modification. 'I know evil when I see it, no matter the age – and the violence in DC committed by young people belongs in criminal court, not family court,' Pirro said in a statement to CNN. 'We're not dealing with kids who need a pat on the back – we're dealing with a wave of brutal violence that demands a serious response. While others debate causes, families are burying loved ones, and the only way to stop this is to treat violent offenders like the criminals they are.' She also claimed that the 2022 Second Chance Amendment Act allows for the 'stunning erasure of criminal convictions' by allowing all defendants to move for certain criminal convictions to be sealed or expunged. Some criminal justice experts and local officials say that Trump and Pirro's vision for DC is out-of-date and harkens back to the rhetoric of historic crime waves in the 1990s. Compared to their counterparts at the US attorney's office, the DC attorney general's office 'is much more grounded in research about what works and what doesn't work and about what is developmentally appropriate,' said Eduardo Ferrer, an associate professor of law and policy director of the Juvenile Justice Initiative at Georgetown University. 'I'm not prepared to just throw away the key on our young people, and most people are not,' said DC Councilmember Christina Henderson, adding that she believes that attacks largely ignore the complexities of the city's justice system. 'I feel strongly that the district should be able to make that decision for themselves, because these are our kids.'
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
How Former 'GMA 'Anchor Eva Pilgrim Is Leading 'Inside Edition 'into a New Chapter After 30 Years (Exclusive)
Pilgrim will succeed Deborah Norville as only the fourth-ever anchor of the newsmagazine on Aug. 18 NEED TO KNOW Eva Pilgrim is kicking off her tenure as the newest anchor of Inside Edition on Aug. 18 She succeeds Deborah Norville, who anchored the newsmagazine for the last 30 years Pilgrim comes to Inside Edition from GMA3: What You Need to Know Eva Pilgrim was made for this. Having grown up in a home where Inside Edition was always on TV, Pilgrim tells PEOPLE that she's admittedly still "slightly floored" that she gets to be the new anchor of the beloved newsmagazine. She'll be the program's fourth-ever host, succeeding Deborah Norville, who wrapped her tenure on the show in May. "I look back at my first job, and my mom was still sending me money to eat because she was worried I wasn't eating. I think about the countless people who've poured into me and helped me get better at this to then get to this point," says Pilgrim, who shares 3-year-old daughter Ella with her husband Ed Hartigan. "My mother, when I told her I was interviewing for this job, lost her mind. I watched Inside Edition growing up. It was on in our house, but also in my first TV job, it was a show that came on between newscasts," Pilgrim adds of the serendipity of her new gig. Still, the former GMA3: What You Need to Know anchor admits that she certainly feels "the weight" of stepping into a new role at an institution of a show like Inside Edition. "It's a legacy," she says, adding that doing the show after Norville is no small task, either. Never miss a story — sign up for to stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. "You feel overwhelmed," she says. "To be in this job now at a point where I really appreciate everything that it is? I can't believe the job [was] open! Deborah was really nice and sent me an email, and at the end of the email she was floored that she had been in the job for as long as she had. She said that was because it was just such a great job, so why would you leave? It's one of those jobs that people don't leave because it's great." Pilgrim was born into a military family in Seoul, South Korea. Her mother is Korean, and her father hails from South Carolina. She grew up as a self-proclaimed Army brat. "We moved all over the place, literally four times in first grade, I always tell everyone that," Pilgrim says with a laugh. "But what's nice about that is I feel like traveling a lot is good training for a journalist because you learn how to make friends, you feel uncomfortable when you meet people you've never met before, and you know that that's going to happen every time. It conditions you to just say the first thing and make the first move to have a conversation." The innate curiosity and interpersonal skills Pilgrim developed early would continue to serve her well — by the time she was in high school, the family had settled back in South Carolina. "We grew up eating kimchi and country-fried steak and collard greens. It was a weird collision of cultural differences that ended up all one thing," she says. "And I think the luxury of having a parent who's not from where you grow up — a different country — very different than South Carolina, you realize how small the world is because you're traveling back and forth between those two different families. Pilgrim decided to pursue journalism while in college after taking classes in the subject and working for a local TV station while she was still in school. "I liked the access that it gave me. Whether you were covering a sporting event or a community event, you got to be there in the middle of it. That I found to be kind of addictive," she says. After working on a story where her subject confessed to a crime mid-interview and was subsequently arrested thanks in part to her reporting, Pilgrim knew she'd found the line of work she was meant to be doing all along. "[That man] said all the things to me that day because I was in many ways naive, but I was curious and very human with him. I wasn't asking him probing or prying questions. I was letting him talk and giving him human responses," Pilgrim explains, "and our news director at the time, she said something to me that I've never forgotten and I try to hold on to no matter how many interviews that I do. 'Always lead with your humanity,' she said, 'that's why you are good at this.'" Tune in to Inside Edition on Aug. 18 for Eva's first broadcast ahead of the season 38 premiere on Sept. 8. Check local listings for times and stations in your area at Read the original article on People Solve the daily Crossword


CNN
an hour ago
- CNN
University peers describe a creepy, domineering Bryan Kohberger in months before Idaho killings, newly released files show
In the days and weeks after Bryan Kohberger was arrested in connection with the brutal killings of four undergrads at the University of Idaho, students and instructors at nearby Washington State University told investigators the suspect seemed creepy and intense, with one predicting Kohberger could become the type of professor that harassed and stalked students, according to a trove of newly released documents. Kohberger pleaded guilty to the killings in July and has been sentenced life in prison without parole. One student who was in a class with Kohberger in the fall of 2022, when he worked on his PhD in criminology, told police he would act aggressively, staring at his classmates when he wasn't dominating group discussions. In a December 2022 interview conducted on the day of Kohberger's arrest at his parents' home in Pennsylvania, the student said the class often sat through his hours-long verbal sparring with professors as he tried to come across as the 'strongest, smartest, most important person in the room,' according to the records. The student described having a 'bad feeling' about Kohberger from the moment they met at orientation in the fall of 2022, months before the November 13 murders of Ethan Chapin, Kaylee Goncalves, Xana Kernodle and Madison Mogen. Over the distressing semester that followed, she told investigators, Kohberger would trail her after class, block her path when she tried to leave conversations and stare with such intensity that she kept a tally of the encounters. Her account is one of many in the latest release of investigative files from the Idaho State Police around the murders, where classmates, professors and other university staff describe alarming interactions with Kohberger to police before he was apprehended. The accounts, scattered across classrooms, offices and hangout spots, carried the same refrain: Kohberger's presence often set people on edge. They captured the reflex in his peers to become shields for one another against a man who would soon be accused of murder. Kohberger appeared to be well known on campus for his silent, unblinking stares, which several of his colleagues described as his attempt to assert 'dominance.' One WSU faculty member described Kohberger's 'keen interest' in her fall 2022 undergraduate assistant, whom he watched fiercely. She said Kohberger would stand at the assistant's desk, even directly behind her at times, looking over her shoulder as she worked. Another professor was asked to escort the assistant to her car after work because of Kohberger's behavior, according to the documents. One student said whenever she looked up, Kohberger, who was a teaching assistant in her class, was 'always' staring, according to the records. He rarely spoke to students, she told police. She felt he would time his exit to leave when she did and then follow her to her car. The graduate student who met Kohberger during orientation said she caught him 'aggressively' staring at her as many as nine times in one class and said she was also followed after class. 'Kohberger always seems to want to be in the general area of her and others in the program that did not want to have anything to do with him,' the student told police, according to the documents. CNN has reached out to WSU for comment. Professors and faculty were troubled by Kohberger's behavior, according to the documents, and had fielded several complaints from students and colleagues. Multiple WSU staff members told police that faculty met before Christmas 2022, days before Kohberger's arrest, to discuss each of their students, but discussions about Kohberger dominated because he was 'highly problematic.' The files show that faculty swapped stories about Kohberger and debated pulling his funding and TA position, citing unnerving classroom conduct. 'Mark my word, I work with predators, if we give him a PhD, that's the guy that in many years when he is a professor, we will hear is harassing, stalking, and sexually abusing … his students,' one of Kohberger's teachers told her colleagues during the meeting, according to the documents. One professor said Kohberger tried to keep him from leaving his office, an act he described as 'power tripping,' according to the files. Kohberger would show up late in the day and keep talking as the professor tried to go home. When the professor pushed back, Kohberger called him 'snarky,' the documents said. Kohberger then refused to leave when the professor asked, following him down the hall when the professor decided to walk away. 'Preventing him from leaving his office was a way of controlling,' the documents said. Students described to police how Kohberger stood close enough to trap them at their desks. In an office used by female students, one of his professors said Kohberger would position himself in the doorway, physically blocking it until she stepped in, 'allowing the female students to leave.' In several separate interviews, students and professors described stepping between Kohberger and others – intercepting him in hallways and inserting themselves in conversations for others' security. One WSU faculty member said her 'maternal instinct' wouldn't allow her to leave a female student alone in an office on campus with Kohberger, so she kept herself busy until he left. She didn't say any specific behavior of his prompted her to feel this way, the documents said. When he left, she told the student to email her with the subject line '911' if she ever needed help. In August 2022, a University of Idaho student said she met Kohberger in an apartment lobby and pointed him toward a pool party. She said she became uncomfortable with his staring and awkward conversation. During the party, 'Kohberger made very direct eye contact with her and made a bee line towards her' and a friend 'got up to intercept him' after realizing the student was uncomfortable, according to documents. In another instance, a male worker at a bookstore on WSU's campus described acting 'as a buffer' between his female coworker and Kohberger as he frequented the store, the documents show. The man believed Kohberger 'was attempting to flirt' with the woman 'and was absolutely zeroing in on her.' The man started 'telling Kohberger she was on the phone when he would come in so she wouldn't have to interact with him,' according to the documents. CNN's Jean Casarez, Lauren del Valle, Dakin Andone, Andy Rose, Nicquel Terry Ellis and Nicki Brown contributed to this report.