Archive for the ‘interviews’ Category

Nate Parker The “Blood Done Sign My Name” Interview

nate-parkerNate Parker was born in Norfolk, Virginia on November 18, 1979 to a 17 year-old single-mom who never married his biological father. He and his younger sisters were raised mostly in Bath, Maine which is where his stepfather was stationed by the U.S. Air Force.

Nate only started acting after graduating from the University of Oklahoma, when he was spotted by a talent scout while waiting for a friend at an audition. Signed by an agent, Parker immediately moved to Los Angeles where he soon landed work in commercials and bit parts on several TV shows before he found his breakout role as Hakim in the desegregation drama Pride.

He has since starred in other sagas with civil rights themes such as The Great Debaters and The Secret Life of Bees, and later this year he’ll be playing a Tuskegee Airman in the WWII epic Red Tails. Here, Nate talks about his current release, Blood Done Sign My Name, a bio-pic about the rise to prominence of a young Ben Chavis, who went on to become Chairman of the NAACP, in the wake of a lynching in North Carolina. He also discusses his preference to make socially-significant projects.

Kam Williams: Nate, thanks so much for the time.

Nate Parker: Of course, any time, brother.

KW: What interested you in doing Blood Done Sign My Name to play an important civil rights figure like Ben Chavis? 

NP: To put it plainly, it was the fact that it fit my model. I prefer to make movies which not only have a message for “then” but a message for “now.” Here was this 22 year-old brother who had no idea what was about to happen, and yet, when it did, he stepped into it in a way which changed an entire community. There was leadership and a sense of accountability in this young man, and those are qualities I can talk about in 2010. So, when I read the script, I knew that it could serve as a tool in the present for some of what ails our community.

KW: How did you prepare for the role?

NP: I read everything I could about the period, including the book the film is based on. http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1400083117?ie=UTF8&tag=thslfofire-20&linkCode=as2&camp=1789&creative=390957&creativeASIN=1400083117

The book was incredible because it deals with racism, white supremacy and the black inferiority complex in a real way, and it illustrates how they can be a cancer on a community.

KW: And how does that relate to today?

NP: I look around today, and I see the Prison-Industrial Complex, and how 50% of our brothers and sisters are behind bars, and how half of us are dropping out of school. And I look at the escalating HIV rate in the black community. These are issues now, and we need leaders to address those crises in the way that Ben Chavis was effective at inspiring a whole generation of kids.

KW: Is it true that your showbiz career got started when you were spotted by a talent scout?

NP: Yeah, I was working in computers when this stranger approached me out of the blue, saying I should become an actor. I took it as a gift from God, because I had been praying for clarity about what He wanted me to do, since I wasn’t happy in computers. So, I gave my employer notice, and moved to L.A. in two weeks. It was definitely Divine intervention. And six year’s later, here I am, and Jon Simmons, the guy who signed me up, is still my manager.

KW: Praise the Lord! I guess you were surprised by your meteoric rise, huh?

NP: It’s been surprising in the sense that it happened so quickly. But I’d say it’s been more of a blessing than a surprise because I believe it was God’s plan to give me this platform. That’s where my passion comes from, to use it to benefit people, especially people from my community.

KW: Why are these message movies you make so important?

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Valentine’s Zane! The ”Sex Chronicles” Interview

zaneZane (not her real name) is the best-selling author of a plethora of African-American-oriented erotica, including Dear G Spot, Afterburn, Gettin' Buck Wild, The Heat Seekers, Addicted and The Sex Chronicles, to name a few. This iconoclastic phenom has also edited and/or contributed to such other titles as Love is Never Painless, Caramel Flava, Chocolate Flava, Best Black Women's Erotica, Brown Sugar 2, Twilight Moods, Dark Dreams, and Becoming Myself. Besides writing, Zane is the publisher of Strebor Books International for which she is responsible for acquiring dozens of titles per year and currently has nearly 50 authors signed to her imprint.

She serves as the moderator of PlanetZane.net, where thousands of her fans who call themselves "Zaniacs" converge on a daily basis to discuss her work, as well as love and relationships. Zane has more than 35,000 MySpace friends and nearly 400,000 friends at BlackPlanet.com. Here, she talks about "Zane's Sex Chronicles" the daring Cinemax television series loosely based on her own real life sexploits, which premiered on Cinemax in October of 2008 and whose first season was recently released on DVD.

Kam Williams: Hi, Zane, I don’t know whether you remember me, but we met last year in Manhattan at the boat party thrown by Troy Johnson on the Hudson River during the Book Expo America Convention.

Zane: Yes, Absolutely!

KW: How have you been?

Z: I’m fine, how are you?

KW: Everything’s great! Thanks for the interview. You are one of the most ambitious people around. Where does that drive come from?

Z: I have always had it. I guess I got it naturally, from my parents. [Chuckles]

KW: You have so many projects in the pipeline besides your erotica, like a line of cosmetics. How’s that coming?

Z: I actually have it all laid out. I have the logos done and am getting ready to place the first order. So, that’s pretty much done.

KW: What about your plans to launch a line of sexual devices?

Z: With anything I do, I feel that if I’m going to be a bear, I want to be a Grizzly. [Laughs] So, while I definitely could launch that today, I want to make sure it’s branded as my line of toys, and that takes a little bit longer. I don’t want to just jump out and start selling adult toys. There’s no challenge in that, honestly.

KW: I read that you’re also planning to produce several movies.

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Mz Berry ‘For The Love Of Ray J 2′ Interview

mz-berry

Below Ray’s second-season pick talks about winning Ray’s heart, what communication has been like since taping the show, the stress and ridicule she had to endure throughout her stay in the mansion and why she thinks so many women relate to her.

Congratulations!

Thank you.

How has communication with Ray been since the show wrapped?

Really, Ray and I aren’t allowed to speak to each other. We aren’t allowed to meet or anything like that.

Do you have a good feeling about where things are going?

We just have to see. You can’t really base on everything that happened with us three, four months ago. I wouldn’t say feelings change, but you just have to see. In any type of relationship, you just take it one step at a time. We’ll definitely both talk about what we want, and we’ll see where it goes from there.

Are you excited to see him at the reunion?

Yes, very excited. I’m a little nervous, but very excited.

What about the other girls?

I feel fine about seeing them.

When Ray picked you, was there any sense of accomplishment, especially considering the way you were treated by the other girls?

No. They never really harassed me to my face. A lot of what was said on the show was said when I wasn’t present. Nobody really came at me crazy, except for the one incident when we were all outside. Other than that, there was no other time when anybody except for Danger said anything to me. Nobody.

Has it been hard, then, to watch the show and see what people are saying about you?

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Joumana Kidd ‘Let’s Talk About Pep’ Interview

Headline: Jason’s Ex Expounds on Life and Love Post-Divorce

Born in Beirut, Lebanon on September 28, 1972, Joumana Kidd is a joumana-kiddgraduate of San Francisco State University with a degree in Speech Communications. She launched her career as a model while still in college, making appearances as a Bud girl for Anheuser-Busch. 

After graduation, she joined the company as a marketing representative, an opportunity which paved the way for her entry into the field of broadcasting. Ms. Kidd’s resume’ includes stints as a television correspondent for both Extra and NBA Entertainment.

Joumana has consistently been active in many non-profit organizations, such as the International Children’s Foundation, which raises money to help children with medical needs in impoverished countries. With her then-husband, NBA All-Star Jason Kidd, she founded the Jason Kidd Foundation, an organization which focuses on improving the welfare of youth in the community.

She is also the national spokesperson for the North Shore Animal League, and is active on several boards including the Yogi Berra Museum, the Nets/Devils Foundation, the Arizona Heart Ball and Crisis Nursery.

In the wake of the tabloid attention devoted to both her very rocky marriage and her messy divorce, Joumana devoted herself to raising her three children: son TJ, and twin girls Miah and Jazelle.  Here, she talks about the delicate balance of her home and love lives, now that she’s decided to date again and to let the cameras chronicle her every intimate moment on the new VH1 reality show “Let’s Talk about Pep.” 

Kam Williams: Hi, Joumana. How are you?

Joumana Kidd: Good, how are you?

KW: Thanks so much for the time.

JK: Sure!

KW: What interested you in doing Let’s Talk about Pep?

JK: Well, first, I got to know Salt [of the hip-hop group Salt-n-Pepa], we became close friends, and I did a couple of cameos on the Salt-n-Pepa Show for fun. Then, I got to know Pep, and we became so close, too, and had so much fun that this wasn’t even a decision when she said, “VH1’s interested in this. Are you in?” I was like, “Yeah, totally!” I felt that it’d be worth it, if I could inspire just one woman out there who’s been divorced. Divorce is so painful. You go through stages where you feel like you’ve failed yourself, you’ve failed your kids, your life is over and everything’s coming to an end. It was enough for me to be able to inspire other women to embrace the moment and to get back out there to date and to have fun with their girlfriends. That was my main reason for doing it, because it is a little scary when you know you’re getting into a reality show.     

KW: Salt’s not on the show, right?

JK: No, it’s Jacque, Kittie, Pep and myself. But Salt is one of the show’s producers.

KW: Did you see the film Good Hair? Pepa was featured in it.

JK: I did. I attended the premiere with her. I thought it was hilarious.

KW: In terms of Let’s Talk about Pep, do you feel pressured by the producers to behave differently from how you naturally are? Do you feel they’re editing you to create a certain TV persona?

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Soledad’s Eyewitness Report on the Haitian Relief Effort

In the wake of the Haitian earthquake, CNN’s Soledad O’Brien rushed to cuban-doctorsthe region to deliver the same sort of high-quality, eyewitness coverage that she has dependably broadcast in the past on location after location from such disasters area as the Indian Ocean Tsunami and Hurricane Katrina. Because of her seemingly effortless style and her People Magazine’s 50 Most Beautiful People List looks, what tends to get lost about this intrepid, Emmy-winning reporter is that she’s also a Harvard grad with a keen intellect, a razor sharp wit, a great sense of humor and an ever-inquiring mind. 

I’ve interviewed a bunch of bright people in my day and, trust me, Soledad might very well be the brightest. You’ll instantly see what I mean, if you ever have the pleasure of engaging her in conversation one-on-one. Until then, I hope that this revealing tete-a-tete about the Haiti relief effort effectively conveys the essence of her brilliant mind and very likable spirit.

Soledad is never one to shy away from a difficult or probing question, but is rather refreshingly frank and forthcoming in addressing in considerable depth whatever issue she’s asked to address. That’s the reason I sought her out in the first place to get the scoop on what’s really happening in Haiti. 

Keep in mind that this interview was conducted soon after her return to the States, while she was cooking for and frequently distracted by a house full of rambunctious kids, and she even paused briefly from our conversation to pull one of her 5 year-old twin’s baby teeth, all without ever missing a beat.   

Kam Williams: Hi, Soledad, thanks again for the time.

Soledad O’Brien: Hey, how’re you doing? I hope you don’t mind but the kids are running around so we might have some interruptions. The conversation’s definitely going to be like that from my end. That was Charlie [one of her 5 year-old twins] who answered the phone.

KW: Of course, I understand. The kids missed mommy while she was away, and now they come first. 

SO: Cool!

KW: Well, I guess my first question is, how’s Haiti?

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Tyrese The “Legion” Interview

Fresh off the phenomenal success of Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen, tyrese-legionwhich was the #2 movie at the box office in 2009 (behind Avatar), Tyrese is back with another apocalyptic sci-fi adventure. Legion, however, is a horror flick with a rather novel, religious premise revolving around a struggle to survive the wrath of a vengeful God who has lost faith in humanity.

Kam Williams: Hey, Tyrese, thanks for the time. You had quite a year with Transformers 2. How does it feel riding that wave?

Tyrese: Honestly, everybody that’s in my life will tell you that I enjoy the highs of life, but I’m always that guy with the big fan in his hand trying to clear the smoke out right away in order to get back to the mission, back to the focus. It’s not that I don’t like to marinate in the blessings, because I do. But I’m very ambitious, very motivated to reach beyond what I’ve already mastered. I never get complacent. I’m not the type to relax and just kick my feet up as if I’ve made it. I’m always looking to go to the next level. Transformers has literally changed my life in so many different ways. I’m known around the world now, because so many men, women and children have seen the film at some point. What a blessing that is. And now that I have that international stage, I’m all about maximizing and taking it to another level.

KW: Last summer, you also released your own comic book, Mayhem. How is that doing?

T: Oh, man, it’s doing beyond well. It’s selling like crazy. You know it’s available on iTunes in 38 countries now. I’ve partnered up with Apple and it’s being sold digitally. Basically, I have a digital comic book. I did the voiceover for all of Mayhem’s parts, and hired a bunch of other actors to do the other characters. And when you see a car crash in the comic, you can actually hear it. So, it’s like you’re watching a still yet motion comic.

KW: When I interviewed you last summer, you said that you would personally call anybody who purchased 25 copies of Mayhem. I guess it’s too late for fans to take advantage of that offer. 

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