Music Industry Unions

Beautiful, (USA) singer/choreographer/songwriter Ms. Beyonce married Bad-Boy Rapper?
Jay-Z, from hard-core, slum infested New York?
Mr Brother definitely has issues. Totally the opposite of Ms. Beyonce who comes from a well rounded, working class family (& she is from Texas,(like myself)). And very talented.
She could had -with no effort- married someone who would promoted her talent. Examples: American or Foreign: A Fashion Designer, a Movie Director, a CEO of the Music Industry, &, yes, a Texas Tycoon(They are worth Billions).
I pray with all my heart, that this union does not end up like Ike & Tina Turner, or Whitney Houston & Bobby Brown marriages.
My question is, Why do Talented, Successfully Black-American women marry below the means, marry out of pity, &/or marry to be “Black enough” reasons?
And, What is Ms Beyonce last name?
girls like bad boys, nice guys finish last ALWAYS
Todd Lamb standup “Music Industry” from Union Hall NYC
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O Brother, Where Art Thou? $6.78 Excellent 19 track soundtrack from the Clooney film. Digipac has a little wear. Light scuff on disc will not affect play…. |
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Raising Sand $8.41 Perhaps only the fantasy duo of King Kong and Bambi could be a more bizarre pairing than Robert Plant and Alison Krauss. Yet on Raising Sand, their haunting and brilliant collaboration, the Led Zeppelin screamer and Nashville’s most hypnotic song whisperer seem made for each other. This, however, is not the howling Plant of “Whole Lotta Love,” but a far more precise and softer singer than even the… |
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Lonely Runs Both Ways $7.55 Nobody makes somber sound more exquisite than Alison Krauss. She’s come an awfully long way from her days as a teenage fiddle prodigy, as her glamour gown on this CD’s cover suggests and the bittersweet maturity of the music confirms. Krauss exchanges her bluegrass fiddle for the chamber strains of viola on much of the material, including four songs by Robert Lee Castleman (whose “The Lucky One,” … |
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Two Can Play That Game [VHS] $2.33 Two Can Play That Game In reducing the rules of romance to a 10-day plan for repairing a breakup, Two Can Play That Game tickles a few funny bones while “keepin’ it real” about heartbreak and human behavior. Our hostess through this marathon of head games is 28-year-old Shanté (Vivica A. Fox–emphasis on the fox), who speaks to the camera so much that critic Roger Ebert nicknamed this movie “Wait… |