
#BMF Exclusive Clip Meech & Terry Intimidate Trell
As previously reported, the fourth season of BMF picks up with Demetrius 'Big Meech' Flenory and Terry 'Southwest T' Flenory continuing to build their empire while navigating the dangerous world they helped create. Inspired by the real-life rise of the Black Mafia Family, the new episodes follow the brothers as they fight to preserve their version of the American Dream. But with mounting pressure from rivals and law enforcement, their once-solid bond begins to fracture. As tensions rise, the fallout from a pivotal trip to Mexico threatens to change their lives—and their legacy—forever.
In an exclusive clip from today's new episode, we see Meech and Terry surprising Trell at his home. The music producer is shocked to see them (and their crew) at his house. Meech tells him he 'had a dream,' and in it, harm comes to him and his family.
Terry threatens Trell with one of his (many) awards, and Meech reminds Terry who's in charge.
'You can either sign this s***, or you can make my dreams come true,' says Meech.
Episode 5 of BMF is titled 'See It, Touch It, Mixtape It,' seee an official episode description below.
Meech and Terry prepare for the Stomping Ground launch party. Meech has a new love interest, and B-Mickie takes a major step in his relationship. Back in Detroit, members of the Flenory family get surprising news. Meech considers new partners in St. Louis.
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#BMF Exclusive Clip Meech & Terry Intimidate Trell was originally published on globalgrind.com

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NBC News
2 days ago
- NBC News
The Atlanta club where pleasure and hip-hop dealmaking collide
In the early 1980s, Michael Barney and his wife left his hometown of Camden, N.J., and relocated in Atlanta, where he started working in telecommunications and earned the nickname 'Mr. Magic' from colleagues. One night out with friends at a popular strip club, he got the inspiration for what would become a cultural hotspot in the heart of the city. Soon enough, Barney signed the lease for a defunct print shop, repurposed the building and named it 'Magic City.' The club opened in 1985 with just one dancer. After 40 years of deals, networking and hip-hop history at the club, Magic City is the subject of a five-part docuseries executive-produced by producer and rap mogul Jermaine Dupri. 'Magic City: An American Fantasy' premiered Friday on STARZ, showcasing the outsized national impact of the Atlanta strip club and others like it on hip-hop culture and the industry. 'We would fly back home to go to Magic City from out of town,' Dupri told NBC News. 'It's like going to Orlando and not going to Disney World — you have to go.' To the So So Def producer, there's more to Mr. Magic's establishment than the women. 'You could be standing by the biggest thief in Atlanta, the biggest drug dealer in Atlanta, the biggest rapper in Atlanta, the biggest basketball player in the world, a movie star, a politician, and they're all in the same area — treated the same, having the same conversations and you wouldn't know the difference, because the club doesn't cater to just one person,' Dupri said. Strip, as the club is known among regulars, has provided a gauge for hip-hop and R&B hitmaking. 'The connection is very authentic,' Dupri said. 'Hearing your song play in a club is like hearing your song on the radio. You feel like you actually made it.' In some cases, the aspiration for hip-hop fame comes from the people onstage. Bronx-native Nya Lee used the money she made dancing to fund her rap career. 'In the earlier years, I invested in myself,' she said to NBC News. 'A lot of people didn't think that being a stripper and a rapper could work.' But it did, and her story was compelling enough to land her a spot on VH1's popular show, 'Love and Hip-Hop: New York.' Not long after, another dancer was introduced to the world through the series: Cardi B, who has since become a global force in entertainment. Stripping can have a dark side. Outside of Magic City, some dancers have unionized to fight for better work standards, fairer pay and protection from sexual harassment or abuse. Clubs are, after all, an environment in which men are paying for access to women's bodies, whether it's making full contact or at a distance. And while some perform with the goal of escaping the club and improving their lives, others escape to the club. That was the case for a Memphis, Tennessee, native with two years of undergraduate college credits and a boyfriend who was facing federal charges. Rapper and TV personality Jessica Dime, who is featured in the docuseries, went to the sprawling King of Diamonds in Miami after two friends advised her to leave Memphis. 'It was so much going on in the streets at the time,' Dime said to NBC News. 'When I left, it was the best decision I could have made. Dancing was something that saved me. I would have been in jail or probably dead if I wouldn't have went to Miami.' Within a few years of performing, she got the attention of Flo Rida and signed to his IMG record label as a rapper. 'What they were giving me to sign, I would have made more in one night at King of Diamonds,' Dime said. She said she knew that if she signed the contract, 'God is going to make sure I stay out of here.' But the people who work in the clubs don't need to be aspiring rappers to still make an impact on music. Last year, Muni Long's track 'Made for Me' became a hit at Magic City, which Dupri said helped him gauge how well the song would do more broadly, especially since traditional R&B is hard to place in clubs. 'The dancers were singing the song,' Dupri recalled, and so were the patrons. Rapper Rick Ross' debut single, 'Hustlin,' about the everyday grind in any capacity, was a major success in strip clubs across the country. 'They was playing my record without my requesting it, and I said, 'This is different.' I believe the record was speaking for everybody that was in the club,' Ross said to NBC News. 'You talking to the parking man, you talking to the dancers, you talking to the DJs.' In 2005, dancers at Magic City introduced South Carolina rapper Young Jeezy's music to DJ Nando, who was the club's resident DJ at the time. With the backing of BMF (Black Mafia Family) and Big Meech, author Joe Cosscarelli says in the docuseries that Jeezy became 'this larger than life, King Pin figure.' Jeezy's album 'Let's Get It: Thug Motivation 101' was the go-to record throughout Magic City dancer Gigi Maguire's career. During her time at Magic City as a headlining dancer, Maguire became friends with some of the rappers that would frequent the club. She had been testing different stage names when rapper Lil' Wayne gave her a hand as she sat in on a writing session on his tour bus in Atlanta. 'Wayne was a close friend of mine,' she said. The Young Money emcee was testing lyrics and happened to say, 'Weezy Maguire, show me the money.' Maguire fired back, ''Gigi Maguire, show me the money,' and he said, 'Yoo! That's fire. You should keep that.' Literally, it stuck.' Maguire also took her roommate Trey Songz's music to Magic City during her featured spots on Mondays. 'We still are, to this day, like family,' she said. 'He's literally like my little brother.' This docuseries will be part of STARZ's roster of projects on hip-hop culture. The network's hit drama series, 'P-Valley,' is set at a fictional Southern club and includes two cast members from Magic City's Snack Pack trio of pole dancers, which includes Maguire. When the retired dancer got a call for a guest appearance for a 'P-Valley' episode on featuring icons of strip, there was controversy over who those legends would be. 'They wanted Cardi B, Blac Chyna and Amber Rose. I used to work with Amber and Chyna and am friends with them. I love Cardi B down. But those are not women that the dance community goes to, to say, 'Hey, I aspire for my dance career to be this,'' Maguire said. To the women who admire Maguire and the stars she mentioned, their accomplishments and influence in the culture and hip-hop extends beyond strip and has allowed them to leverage their popularity into business ventures that wouldn't have necessarily been available a decade or so ago. Nya Lee, 32, was 17 when she won a stripping contest two times, using a fake ID at Sin City in the Bronx. The now-DJ has collaborated with Fabolous, Jadakiss and Ultimate Rap League battle rap legend T-Rex on her projects. Her mixtapes include features with Kash Doll who also started as a Detroit-based stripper. 'Girls seeing me knock down doors made them feel like they could do it too,' Nya Lee said.


USA Today
2 days ago
- USA Today
When does 'Power Book IV: Force' Season 3 release? Date, time, more
"Power Book IV: Force" fans know Tommy Egan (Joseph Sikora) is going to go out with a bang. The popular show, executive-produced by Curtis "50 Cent" Jackson, is coming back to Starz for its third and final season this fall. In the crime drama, Tommy will work to dodge his enemies and "take over Chicago's drug game, while also protecting those he loves the most," the TV network said in a news release. In an Aug. 14 Instagram post, Sikora said that the wait for Season 3 "will be worth every second." Here is what we know about the final season of "Power Book IV: Force". Miss Ghost and Tommy? What to know so far about 'Power: Origins' spinoff When will 'Power Book IV: Force' Season 3 premiere? The show is scheduled to premiere on Starz on Friday, Nov. 7, at midnight ET on the TV network's app. Fans can also watch on all streaming and on-demand services where Starz is available. 'Power Book IV: Force' Season 3 Teaser Cast of 'Power Book IV: Force' Taylor Ardrey is a news reporter for USA TODAY. You can reach her at tardrey@ '


Forbes
2 days ago
- Forbes
‘Outlander: Blood Of My Blood' Is An Entertaining Prequel With One Big Problem
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Star Wars has lots of prequels and prequels of prequels. It's less known for profound character studies and brilliant explorations of revolution and political upheaval, but Andor managed to do all that and more in its 24-episode run. Of course, we knew the fate of Cassian Andor, and the Empire and the Rebellion, but the show helped fill in so many gaps, while giving us a darker (and better written) portrayal of a galaxy far, far away, that it quickly became my favorite piece of Star Wars media since the original trilogy. But Better Call Saul and Andor are diamonds in the rough. Far too often, prequels are little more than another way to squeeze more content out of an IP. A prequel faces many hurdles. It's rarely as good as the original but always compared to the original. A prequel often gives us too much information, like explaining how the Force works in Star Wars. It rarely stands on its own two feet as a story, with many of its best gags or moments inextricably tied to work that came before. Unlike a sequel, a prequel isn't tasked with ending a story, but rather with making up some new story altogether which can somehow lead to the one we've already been told. This can make many prequels seem hamfisted or unsurprising. Which brings me to Outlander: Blood Of My Blood. Outlander: Blood Of My Blood Credit: Starz I Wanna Go Back, When You Were Mine Spoilers follow. The new series takes place some years before the events of Outlander, though given that these are stories about time-travelling 'before' and 'after' are rather hazy prepositions. We are introduced to Jamie Fraser's parents, Brian Fraser (Jamie Roy) and Ellen MacKenzie (Harriet Slater) before they become his parents. We are also introduced to Claire Beauchamp's parents, Henry Beauchamp (Jeremy Irvine) and Julia Moriston (Hermione Corfield), though in the timeline of the prequel their daughter has already been born (though we get to see how they meet during WW1 briefly before the main story kicks off). The casting is quite superb. It's so uncannily good that it throws me off at times. Hermione Corfield's Julia looks and sounds and acts so much like Claire (Caitriona Balfe) at times that they could have just as easily cast her to play a younger Claire rather than her mother. It's quite extraordinary. I'm less thrilled by how similar their personalities are. Mothers and daughters are often quite different people, but with Claire and Julia, the apple didn't fall far from the proverbial tree. Claire and Julia Credit: Starz I rolled my eyes a few times at how Strong and Independent Julia happens to be, a generation ahead of Claire, who was already quite uniquely strong-willed and opinionated for her time (and took those views back with zeal to the 17th century where they were even more foreign). To have her mother not only look but act and think almost exactly the same is peculiar. Sure, kids learn from their parents and often hold similar views, but just as often they fight to distinguish themselves from their parents or even rebel against them, even if only intellectually or politically. A more conservative, traditional Julia would have helped make her more distinct and feel less like a clone of Claire. It doesn't help that Jamie's mother, Ellen, is also fiercely independent and progressive for her time. The daughter of a Scottish laird, she was promised by her father that she would never have to marry. And so the two main female protagonists each possess strikingly similar personalities, very out of place for their respective times, that also happen to mirror Claire's personality from the original show. Brian and Jamie Fraser Credit: Starz The fathers, meanwhile, are both handsome, progressive, noble and brave. Again, the casting is exceptional. Jamie Roy looks a lot like a young, dark-haired Jamie Fraser (Sam Heughan). His voice sounds like Heughan's as well. And he is every bit the gentleman, chivalrous and kind and self-sacrificing. He's the one man, it turns out, that might tempt Ellen away from her commitment to spinsterdom. But her family loathes the Frasers and the Frasers loath the MacKenzies, so we have two star-crossed lovers. It's Macbeth meets Romeo and Juliet. In some ways, the fact that Jamie and Claire's parents are all so fierce and good and independent and stubborn makes sense. They passed these qualities down to their children. In other ways, it strikes me that this makes Claire and Jamie much less unique. This is all made much, much worse by the fact that Claire's parents end up time-travelling . . . directly into the same time and place as Jamie's parents during the early days of their forbidden courtship. If you told this story chronologically rather than having this be a prequel, it would seem very strange. You'd have these two couples meet thanks to pretty random time-traveling, and then (I assume, I haven't watched the whole season) fall in love and make some babies, and then somehow they separate and then . . . miraculously . . . their babies, born in different centuries, end up falling in love a generation later. MORE FOR YOU Now, Claire is hardly special at all. Her parents always wanted to visit Scotland and go there on honeymoon there, so her trip there with Frank was just a weird repeat of theirs. Only now, she didn't go to Scotland because of all the wonderful stories they told her but because Frank was researching his genealogy. Recall Claire of the first season. She really knows very little about Scotland. Frank is always teaching her things. Isn't that a little odd given her parents' story? They even went through the same exact stones that Claire travels back through! Meanwhile, we are given a long parade of characters from the main show, only in younger actor's bodies. Murtagh is a dashing young man played by Rory Alexander. Colum MacKenzie is played by young Seamus McLean Ross, who reminds me of a young (and Scottish) Joaquin Phoenix; Sam Retford plays his brother Dougal, with a full head of hair and a full belly of fire. There are even young versions of Ned, Angus and Rupert. The characters face some of the same problems I noticed in Dexter: Original Sin. That was an enjoyable prequel, but the younger versions all started to have the 'high school play' effect. It's not that any of the casting is off. I'm pleased with all the actors. But it's just a lot of 'Oh look, that's young Angus! Oh look, that's young Colum! Oh look . . . ' and so on and so forth. The first two episodes of Blood Of My Blood still get a lot right. I enjoyed the setup, introducing us first to Jamie's parents and secretly to Claire's parents (as a maid in the Fraser household and the bladier of House Grant) before revealing their story in the second episode. You meet both Julia and Henry as characters in the past before realizing later that they came from the 20th century. That's clever, and would have been even better if we were given more time to make this connection on our own, with perhaps a midseason reveal that they came from the future. The costumes and music and cinematography are all great and lovingly crafted, though at times a shot here or there looked weirdly fake. We're not quite at Outlander levels of detail and production value here, but it's close enough for cannonballs. I also love that the show takes place in Scotland rather than the New World. I've had a harder time staying invested in Outlander's main story ever since it left Scotland for the high seas and the Americas. As much as I might gripe that we're treading old ground or hewing a little too close to the characters in the original show, it's still good to be back. I'm not sure what to think of Blood Of My Blood just yet. I remain optimistic despite my worries. I'm not sure this is a prequel that will justify its existence beyond throwing fans a fun new story. Who knows, maybe that'll be enough.