Even though Laurence Fishburne is not speaking to his porn star daughter Montana, he is secretly footing her legal bills, TMZ reports.

Laurence has hired Lohan lawyer Shawn Chapman Holley to represent Montana – but not in connection with her sex tape or 2009 prostitution bust.

Holley is reportedly representing Montana in an an ongoing assault with a deadly weapon case. Montana was arrested in February for breaking into the home of her boyfriend’s ex, dragging the woman into the bathroom and violently assaulting her.

The next hearing in the battery case is set for Wednesday.

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Hip hop artist and CEO Birdman has been criticized in recent days for what some see as promulgating the negative stereotypes commonly associated with the Hip Hop genre generally and rap music specifically given his recent purchase and promotion of a 2.1 million dollar car.

Story here.

Today in The Mo’Kelly Report we’re taking a conversation which has lit up the Black blogosphere, barber shops, and beauty shops and brought it to the mainstream. For this discussion, it’s not about the politicians or pundits, it’s about the people, real people. For this special panel discussion, Mo’Kelly was joined by 3 of his “people.”

First, there’s Will Demps, an old Georgetown University college classmate says for the most part, the brotha can spend his money how he chooses, who are we to judge?

I was also joined by Ms. Wendy Kelley, a 38-year-old divorcee and mother of 3 three boys — who thinks the actions of Birdman and others like him negatively influence her sons and impacts her ability to keep them grounded.

And speaking of her boys, her youngest son, 10-year-old Myles will also join in the conversation to give his thoughts on these issues. Get ready, Myles is more than able to hold his own in this discussion.

Click here for the special two-part audio panel discussion.

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It was the poet Shelley who wrote that “the poet is the unacknowledged legislator of the world.” Not much has changed since he wrote those words nearly three hundred years ago.

But, after watching these most captivating minutes of video, one may certainly walk away with the sense of how poets change the world not merely by their words, but by their example.

Every War Has Two Losers is a documentary based on the journals of midwestern poet William Stafford who declared himself a conscientious objector to World War II and, from 1942 through 1946, was interned at the Civilian Public Service Camps as a pacifist. The film has already aired on selected PBS stations, and features some of this country’s finest poets, W.S. Merwin, Coleman Barks, Robert Bly, Maxine Hong Kingston, Alice Walker, reading from Stafford’s work

Stafford, who was born in 1914, was the author of some 67 volumes of poetry, winner of the National Book Award in 1963, and a close friend of another legendary American poet, Robert Bly.

It is fair to say there is something in Every War for everyone who has either served, known someone who has served, has lost someone on the battlefield, or has had to face losing someone on the battlefield. There is something in this film, too, for anyone who thinks about what it means to do the right thing.

“Armies are the result of obsolete ways,” Stafford says, and he is right, but those ways are not obsolete enough. They are still very much with us. Stafford’s words resonate even more now, and his recognition that warfare doesn’t solve the problem, but only creates more problems. Or, as Robert Bly rightly suggests, many more lives were lost in an attempt to put an end to the murderous agenda of a rogue nation, Germany.

Essentially, it is the arbitrary nature of assignations like “enemy” that is at the core of what Stafford examines when he asks whether setting up an adversarial relationship with another country requires making enemies of its inhabitants.

One has only to think back to the 2008 presidential debates to remember then candidate Obama’s insistence that he is not against war, but only wrong wars. And, William Stafford asks whether going to war is ever the right thing. His are good questions, and as timely now as they were more than half a century ago. The DVD, which is available at the film’s website, includes a second documentary that captures the Whitmanic comradery of these two American legends, Stafford and Bly.

Producer Haydn Reiss has done the right thing in bringing to light a thought-provoking, and sensitive portrait of the artist as an ageless dissenter. Time spent watching this film will be time spent wisely.

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Love and lust are in the musical air this week. Katy Perry plays the part of a teenage tease, Fantasia plays with fire (and some weak songs), Little Big Town plays hard-to-get, and Usher moves directly to the bedroom. Meanwhile, the Pretenders’ Chrissie Hynde celebrates unrequited love with a man half her age. You hear that, kids? Sometimes it’s cool to leave a little mystery. Take it from the ’80s rocker chick — you don’t always have to pose naked on a cloud to get attention.

WATCH: Check out this week’s top pick: JP, Chrissie & the Fairground Boys.

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SKIP: Katy Perry, “Teenage Dream”

If you’ve seen the cover, you’ve heard the album. Katy Perry occupies that space between Lady Gaga’s machine-gun bra and Miley Cyrus’ cage dance. “Teenage Dream” is as infectious as a venereal disease and as self-conscious as the purple-haired poseur crashing the prom. I’ll stay at home with my National Geographic magazines.

WATCH Katy Perry’s music video for “California Gurls” (featuring Snoop Dogg).

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PLAY: Usher, “Versus”

Five months after Usher aired his dirty divorce laundry on March’s “Raymond v. Raymond,” he’s now getting his freak on. Usher’s all about the ladies, unless you’re the one he’s leaving behind. Still, “Versus” is made in the tradition of the best bedroom albums — just ignore the fact that 16-year-old Justin Bieber shows up on a remix of “Somebody to Love.” That’s just not right.

WATCH the music video for Usher’s single “There Goes My Baby.”

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SKIP: Fantasia, “Back to Me”

Fantasia needs two things: a good shrink and better material. “Back to Me” is the sound of a talented singer making the most of some mediocre songs. Once you get past the unintended irony of songs like “Trust Him” and “Who’s Been Loving You,” there’s not much that’s more interesting than Fantasia’s real-life drama. With any luck, she’ll heal herself and return with the songs she deserves.


WATCH the video for Fantasia’s single “Bittersweet.”

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PLAY: JP, Chrissie & the Fairground Boys, “Fidelity!”

It took a 31-year-old, sandpaper-voiced Welsh singer nearly half her age to make silky Chrissie Hynde ditch the Pretenders brand and go solo. Sort of. Hynde and JP Jones’ collaboration is very much a band borne from their mutual stories of unrequited love. “Fidelity!” is the not-so-made-up tale of a star-crossed couple recorded by two musicians who clearly love being each other’s muse. It’s Hynde’s best music in years and a reminder that true love goes deeper than the skin.

WATCH the music video for JP, Chrissie & the Fairground Boys’ single “If You Let Me.”

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PLAY: Little Big Town, “The Reason Why”

Pegged as a countryfied latter-day Fleetwood Mac, Little Big Town is really… a countryfied latter-day Fleetwood Mac. Is that so wrong? “The Reason Why” is unapologetically corporate country music. But it’s the one floor of the corporation where everyone shows up for causal Fridays. You’ll hate yourself for singing these hooky songs in the executive wash room. Little Big Town will destroy all the cool, indie cred you’ve been working so hard to build. Still, show me any Brooklyn noise band that can sing harmonies so sweet, write so infectiously, and play with such enthusiasm. There, I said it. And there goes my Coachella pass for next year.

WATCH the music video for Little Big Town’s single “Little White Church.”

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Danielle Staub has reportedly been fired from ‘The Real Housewives of New Jersey,’ but she appeared on NYC local news station WPIX on Tuesday morning to talk about her feuds and perform her single. Danielle has hinted that she will have a spinoff project post-Housewives but didn’t confirm.

“Right now I’m just focusing on now and surviving being chased through country clubs and meeting at another club to have a showdown,” she said. “And surviving the reunion.”

Here is Danielle, her supposed girlfriend Lori Michaels and backup singers performing a dance remix of ‘Real Close.’

WATCH:
 

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