
NEW YORK, NY. (Top40 Charts/ Hip Hop Weekly) - The latest issue of Hip Hop Weekly hits stands this week with an exclusive interview that will blow the lid off all the
Jay-Z rumors. Hip Hop Weekly broke the story about Jay-Z's secret 5 year-old son two issues ago and now has the exclusive interview with a source very close to the Trinidadian model rumored to be the mother of Jay-Z's child. In our interview our source tells ALL, stating that "Jay-Z is definitely the father of Isa-Jael" and that
Beyonce has known about the child for quite some time.
Jim Jones responds to comments made by Dipset member Max B in his exclusive interview with Hip Hop Weekly last month. Rumors were swirling that Max B was left high and dry in a New Jersey jail by Jones. Jones sets the record straight and says he has no hard feelings.
Following Don Imus' racist comments, talk show host Oprah Winfrey devoted 2 hours of her show to a town hall meeting on hip hop music. Hip Hop Weekly and the Hip Hop community respond to Oprah in a special report, while rap pioneer Melle Mel gives his explanation of the evolution of the "N" Word in his column "Really Real."
Check out an exclusive interview with Eve in this issue, as well as interviews with Ice Cube, Paul Wall and Trey Songz. R&B singer Joe talks food in "Belly of the Beats" and supermodel Tyson Beckford talks motorcycles in "310 Whips." Also this week, Pretty Ricky discusses their latest release "Late Night Special" and mom Monica talks about music and motherhood.
Chris Rock's paternity suit lands him on thin ice with wife Malaak; Jay and B are all smiles despite endless rumors and Nick Cannon and girlfriend Selita Ebanks married? Get the scoop on celebrity couples in "Couples 411." In "Catfights!," HHW asks: Does Nelly Furtado have beef with Fergie? Are the claws coming out between Ciara and Rihanna? Does Britney blame Paris for all of her problems? Hip Hop Weekly has the inside scoop.
Hip Hop Weekly is the world's first entertainment and news weekly for the Hip Hop Generation. The magazine covers celebrity news, music, film, TV, fashion and sports from the perspective of the tens of millions of young Americans who identify with hip hop culture. Hip Hop Weekly is published every two weeks and is available nationally at stores such as Barnes & Noble, 7Eleven, Walgreen's, Rite Aid, Kmart, Pathmark and Walmart, as well as airport magazine retailers and magazine outlets in the UK and Canada.