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The Game Expresses Solidarity With Fellow L.A. Residents Amid Anti-ICE Protests
The Game Expresses Solidarity With Fellow L.A. Residents Amid Anti-ICE Protests

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

The Game Expresses Solidarity With Fellow L.A. Residents Amid Anti-ICE Protests

As protests against U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) intensify across Los Angeles, Compton native and rapper The Game is making it clear where he stands. On Monday (June 9), the veteran artist took to Instagram to voice his support for immigrants and the city's growing resistance against what many residents see as a targeted assault on minorities. 'Ever since I could remember… it's been black & brown in this city,' The Game's message began. 'From the early days of my childhood til now, we've been side by side through it all. All of us. All the time. Not always seeing eye to eye but we've shared Los Angeles for a very long time.' The post included a powerful series of black-and-white photos from recent protests, including one particularly striking image of a protester holding a sign that read: 'BORN AND RAISED IN LOS ANGELES. DEPORT ME??? WHERE YOU GOING DEPORT ME TO??? BACK TO THE HOOD???' The Game continued, emphasizing unity and shared struggle while quoting lyrics from late rapper 2Pac Shakur's 1996 track, 'To Live & Die in L.A.' 'I stand with y'all like I know you'd stand with us. We might fight against each other… but I promise you this… we'll burn this b!%?! down get us pissed !!!!!' He concluded with a familiar sentiment that resonates deeply across generations of Angelenos: 'To live & die in L.A.' The rapper's post comes in response to escalating tensions in Southern California after former President Donald Trump reportedly ordered the deployment of 2,000 National Guard troops to L.A. to bolster ICE's deportation efforts. Protesters and activists have flooded the streets, arguing that the crackdown represents a broader war on marginalized communities. The recent detainment of international TikTok sensation Khaby Lame by ICE agents while in Las Vegas has further inflamed tensions. Despite his global fame, Lame's detention underscores what many view as the indiscriminate and unjust nature of current immigration enforcement, affecting individuals regardless of class or notoriety. See The Game's Instagram post below. More from The Game Loses California Home To Sexual Assault Accuser Over $7M Debt The Game Bombs On Ye For Attempting To Call Him Out: "F**k You!" This Legendary MC Refuses To Guest On 'Drink Champs,' But Watches Faithfully

Shaq's Dad Once Showed Him A Homeless Family And Said: I'm Tired Of You Spoiled, Rich Athletes Who Don't Perform And Blame It On Pressure
Shaq's Dad Once Showed Him A Homeless Family And Said: I'm Tired Of You Spoiled, Rich Athletes Who Don't Perform And Blame It On Pressure

Yahoo

time02-06-2025

  • General
  • Yahoo

Shaq's Dad Once Showed Him A Homeless Family And Said: I'm Tired Of You Spoiled, Rich Athletes Who Don't Perform And Blame It On Pressure

Shaquille O'Neal is a Hall of Famer and one of the most dominant NBA players in history, but even he had moments early in his career where he struggled to handle the spotlight. One of those moments resulted in a life lesson from his late stepfather that would stay with him forever. After a rough game against the New York Knicks during his rookie season with the Orlando Magic, O'Neal felt overwhelmed. 'I let the pressure get to me,' he recalled in a 2024 interview. His stepfather, the late Army drill sergeant Phillip Harrison, wasn't having it. He called his son and told him to come home immediately. 'Be here tomorrow at 0500 a.m.,' Harrison instructed. 'Yes, sir,' Shaq replied. Don't Miss: Hasbro, MGM, and Skechers trust this AI marketing firm — Shaq showed up on time the next morning, and they drove in silence. When O'Neal spoke, his stepfather snapped, clearly angry that Shaq had let pressure get to him. As they drove under a bridge, they saw a homeless family sleeping in a tent. They waited in the car, silently, for more than an hour as the family slowly woke up — first the man, then his wife, and finally two young children. 'He said, 'What happened to the game yesterday?' I said, 'Man, I don't know. I let the pressure get to me.'' Harrison then gave it to him straight: 'That's pressure. Pressure is when you don't know when your next meal is coming from.' O'Neal retold the same story in a recent interview on 'The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon,' where he emphasized his stepfather's frustration with athletes who complain. Harrison had said, 'I'm tired of you spoiled, rich athletes making all this money who don't perform at the level that you're supposed to perform to, blaming it on pressure.' Trending: Invest where it hurts — and help millions heal:. That moment changed O'Neal's perspective. He got out of the car and spoke to the man, who had recently lost his job and was struggling to take care of his wife and two kids. Moved by the encounter, Shaq called a friend and arranged a three-bedroom apartment for the family for $36,000. He also found the man a job through another contact. Two years later, the man had started his own lawn service business and was cutting Shaq's grass in Orlando, Florida. 'Pressure to me is when you don't know where your next meal is coming from,' O'Neal told Jimmy Fallon. 'So I don't really believe in the word 'pressure' anymore.'Shaq's appreciation for his parents showed up in other major ways. When he signed his first NBA contract in 1992, he didn't just buy them gifts—he put them on the payroll. 'The first thing I did was incorporate 'Shaq,' and then I put my mom on salary and put my dad on salary,' he said in a 2022 interview on 'Drink Champs.' His stepfather was earning $60,000 in the Army. Shaq asked him, 'How much you make in the Army?' When Harrison said the number, Shaq replied, 'Now you making half a million a year.' Harrison cried. Shaq asked his mom what she wanted to make and ended up paying her $750,000 annually. Read Next: The average American couple has saved this much money for retirement —?UNLOCKED: 5 NEW TRADES EVERY WEEK. Click now to get top trade ideas daily, plus unlimited access to cutting-edge tools and strategies to gain an edge in the markets. Get the latest stock analysis from Benzinga? APPLE (AAPL): Free Stock Analysis Report TESLA (TSLA): Free Stock Analysis Report This article Shaq's Dad Once Showed Him A Homeless Family And Said: I'm Tired Of You Spoiled, Rich Athletes Who Don't Perform And Blame It On Pressure originally appeared on © 2025 Benzinga does not provide investment advice. All rights reserved. Sign in to access your portfolio

Shaq's Dad Once Showed Him A Homeless Family And Said: I'm Tired Of You Spoiled, Rich Athletes Who Don't Perform And Blame It On Pressure
Shaq's Dad Once Showed Him A Homeless Family And Said: I'm Tired Of You Spoiled, Rich Athletes Who Don't Perform And Blame It On Pressure

Yahoo

time02-06-2025

  • General
  • Yahoo

Shaq's Dad Once Showed Him A Homeless Family And Said: I'm Tired Of You Spoiled, Rich Athletes Who Don't Perform And Blame It On Pressure

Shaquille O'Neal is a Hall of Famer and one of the most dominant NBA players in history, but even he had moments early in his career where he struggled to handle the spotlight. One of those moments resulted in a life lesson from his late stepfather that would stay with him forever. After a rough game against the New York Knicks during his rookie season with the Orlando Magic, O'Neal felt overwhelmed. 'I let the pressure get to me,' he recalled in a 2024 interview. His stepfather, the late Army drill sergeant Phillip Harrison, wasn't having it. He called his son and told him to come home immediately. 'Be here tomorrow at 0500 a.m.,' Harrison instructed. 'Yes, sir,' Shaq replied. Don't Miss: Hasbro, MGM, and Skechers trust this AI marketing firm — Shaq showed up on time the next morning, and they drove in silence. When O'Neal spoke, his stepfather snapped, clearly angry that Shaq had let pressure get to him. As they drove under a bridge, they saw a homeless family sleeping in a tent. They waited in the car, silently, for more than an hour as the family slowly woke up — first the man, then his wife, and finally two young children. 'He said, 'What happened to the game yesterday?' I said, 'Man, I don't know. I let the pressure get to me.'' Harrison then gave it to him straight: 'That's pressure. Pressure is when you don't know when your next meal is coming from.' O'Neal retold the same story in a recent interview on 'The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon,' where he emphasized his stepfather's frustration with athletes who complain. Harrison had said, 'I'm tired of you spoiled, rich athletes making all this money who don't perform at the level that you're supposed to perform to, blaming it on pressure.' Trending: Invest where it hurts — and help millions heal:. That moment changed O'Neal's perspective. He got out of the car and spoke to the man, who had recently lost his job and was struggling to take care of his wife and two kids. Moved by the encounter, Shaq called a friend and arranged a three-bedroom apartment for the family for $36,000. He also found the man a job through another contact. Two years later, the man had started his own lawn service business and was cutting Shaq's grass in Orlando, Florida. 'Pressure to me is when you don't know where your next meal is coming from,' O'Neal told Jimmy Fallon. 'So I don't really believe in the word 'pressure' anymore.'Shaq's appreciation for his parents showed up in other major ways. When he signed his first NBA contract in 1992, he didn't just buy them gifts—he put them on the payroll. 'The first thing I did was incorporate 'Shaq,' and then I put my mom on salary and put my dad on salary,' he said in a 2022 interview on 'Drink Champs.' His stepfather was earning $60,000 in the Army. Shaq asked him, 'How much you make in the Army?' When Harrison said the number, Shaq replied, 'Now you making half a million a year.' Harrison cried. Shaq asked his mom what she wanted to make and ended up paying her $750,000 annually. Read Next: The average American couple has saved this much money for retirement —?UNLOCKED: 5 NEW TRADES EVERY WEEK. Click now to get top trade ideas daily, plus unlimited access to cutting-edge tools and strategies to gain an edge in the markets. Get the latest stock analysis from Benzinga? APPLE (AAPL): Free Stock Analysis Report TESLA (TSLA): Free Stock Analysis Report This article Shaq's Dad Once Showed Him A Homeless Family And Said: I'm Tired Of You Spoiled, Rich Athletes Who Don't Perform And Blame It On Pressure originally appeared on © 2025 Benzinga does not provide investment advice. All rights reserved. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

Shaq's Dad Once Showed Him A Homeless Family And Said: I'm Tired Of You Spoiled, Rich Athletes Who Don't Perform And Blame It On Pressure
Shaq's Dad Once Showed Him A Homeless Family And Said: I'm Tired Of You Spoiled, Rich Athletes Who Don't Perform And Blame It On Pressure

Yahoo

time02-06-2025

  • General
  • Yahoo

Shaq's Dad Once Showed Him A Homeless Family And Said: I'm Tired Of You Spoiled, Rich Athletes Who Don't Perform And Blame It On Pressure

Shaquille O'Neal is a Hall of Famer and one of the most dominant NBA players in history, but even he had moments early in his career where he struggled to handle the spotlight. One of those moments resulted in a life lesson from his late stepfather that would stay with him forever. After a rough game against the New York Knicks during his rookie season with the Orlando Magic, O'Neal felt overwhelmed. 'I let the pressure get to me,' he recalled in a 2024 interview. His stepfather, the late Army drill sergeant Phillip Harrison, wasn't having it. He called his son and told him to come home immediately. 'Be here tomorrow at 0500 a.m.,' Harrison instructed. 'Yes, sir,' Shaq replied. Don't Miss: Hasbro, MGM, and Skechers trust this AI marketing firm — Shaq showed up on time the next morning, and they drove in silence. When O'Neal spoke, his stepfather snapped, clearly angry that Shaq had let pressure get to him. As they drove under a bridge, they saw a homeless family sleeping in a tent. They waited in the car, silently, for more than an hour as the family slowly woke up — first the man, then his wife, and finally two young children. 'He said, 'What happened to the game yesterday?' I said, 'Man, I don't know. I let the pressure get to me.'' Harrison then gave it to him straight: 'That's pressure. Pressure is when you don't know when your next meal is coming from.' O'Neal retold the same story in a recent interview on 'The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon,' where he emphasized his stepfather's frustration with athletes who complain. Harrison had said, 'I'm tired of you spoiled, rich athletes making all this money who don't perform at the level that you're supposed to perform to, blaming it on pressure.' Trending: Invest where it hurts — and help millions heal:. That moment changed O'Neal's perspective. He got out of the car and spoke to the man, who had recently lost his job and was struggling to take care of his wife and two kids. Moved by the encounter, Shaq called a friend and arranged a three-bedroom apartment for the family for $36,000. He also found the man a job through another contact. Two years later, the man had started his own lawn service business and was cutting Shaq's grass in Orlando, Florida. 'Pressure to me is when you don't know where your next meal is coming from,' O'Neal told Jimmy Fallon. 'So I don't really believe in the word 'pressure' anymore.'Shaq's appreciation for his parents showed up in other major ways. When he signed his first NBA contract in 1992, he didn't just buy them gifts—he put them on the payroll. 'The first thing I did was incorporate 'Shaq,' and then I put my mom on salary and put my dad on salary,' he said in a 2022 interview on 'Drink Champs.' His stepfather was earning $60,000 in the Army. Shaq asked him, 'How much you make in the Army?' When Harrison said the number, Shaq replied, 'Now you making half a million a year.' Harrison cried. Shaq asked his mom what she wanted to make and ended up paying her $750,000 annually. Read Next: The average American couple has saved this much money for retirement —?UNLOCKED: 5 NEW TRADES EVERY WEEK. Click now to get top trade ideas daily, plus unlimited access to cutting-edge tools and strategies to gain an edge in the markets. Get the latest stock analysis from Benzinga? APPLE (AAPL): Free Stock Analysis Report TESLA (TSLA): Free Stock Analysis Report This article Shaq's Dad Once Showed Him A Homeless Family And Said: I'm Tired Of You Spoiled, Rich Athletes Who Don't Perform And Blame It On Pressure originally appeared on © 2025 Benzinga does not provide investment advice. All rights reserved.

Ashanti Blasted By Chris Gotti For Denying Relationship With Irv Gotti: 'I Was Their Therapist'
Ashanti Blasted By Chris Gotti For Denying Relationship With Irv Gotti: 'I Was Their Therapist'

Yahoo

time13-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

Ashanti Blasted By Chris Gotti For Denying Relationship With Irv Gotti: 'I Was Their Therapist'

Chris Gotti, elder brother of the late music mogul Irv Gotti, recently addressed comments made by Ashanti regarding her relationship with Irv during her time at Murder Inc. Records. He called her recollection 'disrespectful' and dismissive of the deep personal and professional history they shared. Speaking candidly on the Let's Keep it 100 podcast, Chris expressed frustration over Ashanti's portrayal of her past with Irv, particularly her assertion that their involvement never amounted to a real relationship. 'She says they wasn't in a relationship. They was in a relationship,' Chris stated. He went on to describe himself as a frequent mediator during their private conflicts, saying, 'I was they therapist. Like come on now, don't do that. But at the end of the day that's what makes what went on with them so real.' Chris also took issue with Ashanti's downplaying of Irv Gotti and Murder Inc.'s contributions to her success, suggesting her rise in the music industry wouldn't have happened the same way without Irv's influence. 'For her to act like it ain't Murder Inc. that made her is f**king bullsh*t or Irv made her. She had three deals before him. Like, something with y'all chemistry worked out! Respect it! That's all. Not saying you have to talk about the ni**a, but respect the magic that was made. That's all I said.' 'I'm not gonna let no one talk about my brother, [we're] gonna have a problem, simple and plain. Especially someone who he made their career. Like, I was there. He made you sing records the way you sang them cause you would've never sang it that way if it was up to you,' he continued. Chris's comments were made in response to remarks Ashanti gave during her 2022 appearance on Angie Martinez's IRL podcast, in which she addressed Irv Gotti's earlier statements on Drink Champs. 'Let's clear this up,' Ashanti said. 'We're not gonna say relationship. We dealt with each other, but was Irv my boyfriend? Was I his girlfriend? Never… Irv had several girlfriends, so I'm a little confused by the label and the description.' She continued, 'I think that Irv definitely has his side and his version… you may think that it's something and the other person knows that it's not… Irv has flat-out lied about a lot of things.' Ashanti added that manipulation played a role in their dynamic, sharing, 'He would say stuff like, 'No one wants to record with you, nobody f**ks with you like that.'' Despite their complicated history, Ashanti insisted she had no interest in exposing Irv's secrets, stating, 'I'm happy, I'm in a different space… I don't play in the mud.' The heated back-and-forth between the two camps has simmered in the wake of Gotti's death, with Ashanti paying tribute to the Queens, N.Y., native in a public statement on social media. Ashanti and Irv Gotti were at the heart of Murder Inc.'s meteoric rise in the early 2000s, creating hits like 'Foolish' and 'Happy' — tracks that dominated the charts and cemented the label's place in Hip-Hop and R&B history. Tragically, Irv Gotti passed away in February 2025 after reportedly suffering from a 'major hemorrhagic stroke' stemming from his longstanding bout with diabetes. Gotti was 54 at the time of his death. More from Nelly And Ashanti Embody Relationship Goals With Recent Serenade 50 Cent Speaks To Joe Budden At Knicks Game, Cracks Joke About Their Feud Ashanti Gives Masterclass In Performance On 'American Idol'

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