JASMINE’S JUICE featuring KANYA KING’S BIRTHDAY, R&B SUPERSTARS and NUZ SHUGAA!


JASMINE WITH TRIDENT CHAIR WOMAN CLAUDIA WEBBE and MOBO CEO KANYA KING.

I started the week guiding my LONDON360 news reporters with their latest stories which last week included Chinese new year celebrations in London’s west end-I’ve lived here all my life and never experienced it so seeing it captured on TV was amazing!, global singing superstar Amy Winehouse’s Foundation and their work with the New Horizons Youth Centre- her dad Mitch handed over a cheque for £35,000 which shows her lasting legacy for our city continues, Love Etiquette on the Tube-what with Valentines Day being in focus and so many tube travellers spotting their love crushes we explored the right way to make tube romances happen, What it takes to be a Busker-they actually have busking auditions at TFL!, our Londoner of the week was actor, director and inspiration to many youth-Ladbroke groves Noel Clarke, and our regular weekly Olympic London strand revealed why there are going to be millions of condoms handed out during the event-some of the young athletes thoughts on the matter was fascinating!. To see just what I’m talking about catch the latest show at communitychannel.org/london360 and watch the show!

I spent a very cultured night at Hammersmith Apollo watching the uber talent musician Yolanda Brown performing alongside the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra, I watched 2 talented young music ladies perform at YoYo- number 1 chart star Rita Ora and London lass Ruby Goe, attended a mates housewarming party and juggled being a carer for 2 men in my life!. More on all that next week.


JASMINE AND TEAMUK’S LATEST FEAMLE SUPERSTAR-RITA ORA!

Friday night saw me celebrating MOBO founder Kanya Kings birthday with a bit of dinner and spot of bowling with a small group of her closest friends who were fiercely competitive on the bowling alley. Trident chair woman Claudia Webbe showed she puts as much effort keeping her eye on the ball and striking down those pins as she does at work and won the session whilst lovely TV news presenter Ronke Philips was happy to just bowl her best alongside Kanya and the rest. Kanya’s actual birthday was on the Sunday-that Whitney passed-so Kanya and I spent most of the day speaking to broadcasters like BBC and LBC radio about her legacy.

I made it my mission to watch the R&B SUPERSTARS show at Hammersmith Apollo with featured a classic 90’s line up of male group Silk, male group Dru Hill, solo heart throb Genuwine ,and female trio SWV! I was looking forwards to going anyway but after hearing that morning that the legendary Whitney had passed away I felt I needed to be around like minded music lovers to commemorate the day and remember her positively. As expected throughout the show the dj’s played Whitney and the sell out very passionate audience sang her lyrics at the top of their voices. It’s the old adage played out true that even if the person was at times a car crash in life, we still cherished them as one of our own. Whitney was a musical inspiration to generations of would be singers and young women of colour. When she began her career it must’ve been even more of a minefield to be a woman of colour making black soul music than it is now. Can you imagine the politics and bullshit she has had to deal with in her career? No wonder the pressures lead to a negative side in her personal life. I felt ashamed that so many times my industry had used Whitney’s personal dark times as entertainment. When our celebs are reaching out for help we respond by relishing in their downfalls. So sad. I wanted to sing loud at the concert to honour her memory.
I missed Silk as I came in they were onstage-but I could hear their voices booming through the foyer and they still sounded great. the show was clearly organized well as all acts were on time, came on immediately after one another with no long waiting around or shabbiness that is sometimes associated with these shows. Dru Hill were amazing! Still so strong with their voices! Sisqo was as ever a strong focal point but it was Jazz and Woody-the bigger boys-that showed off their booming vocals prowess. They weren’t as energetic on the ‘’Tell me’’ piano dance moves but more than made up for it with their pipes! Genuwine who I’ve never been a massive fan of (in my MTV days when interviewing him I recall him being very effeminate and a bit full of himself in a comical manner), as expected had the ladies all in a frenzy, he looked a lil too throwback with his all white jeans and shirt combo but sang well. I wish this were my lasting memory of his performance but all I recall now is his bitterness at not being the final headline act which he moaned about onstage a few times-so unprofessional! He worked the serenading the ladies angle by not crooning to 1 but 3 ladies that were picked from the audience! The headliners SWV looked and sounded great-as strong as ever and sung all their hits in matching red blazers and black leggings with high black patent shoes. The only negative thing in their set was that they had left their own backing vocals off their backing track making their set feel a little flatter than the previous acts. The after party in the venues upstairs bar was nice, a nice selection of grown folk drinking and reminiscing with the acts, lots of fans excitedly taking pictures of and with the 4 acts in front of the branded ‘’urban arts’’ (promoters of the show) board. all in all a great night showing that R&B certainly isn’t dead-it just lives elsewhere. Apparently there are lots more exciting shows to come from them in 2012 -keep updated at www.urbanartsent.com

I ended the week at one of my fave spots THE BEAUTY LOUNGE for a celeb facial with celeb facialist Nuz Shugaa (who’s fingers touch Hollywood stars, global singers and your better than average London radio dj) who told me she was giving me a facial great for jet setters ‘’as travelling can cause skin to have fatigue and look aged’’. Eek with the amount of travelling I’ve done my skin is lucky its not looking 234 years old right now! Many people like a nice quiet facial where they can nod off, I prefer to engage in the experience and ask a million questions about what’s being plastered all over my skin. I smell things and go ‘’ooh yummy what’s that?’’ every few seconds, so Nuz now talks me through my skins session. Firstly after getting my kit off and lying in the aromatic relaxing room, my skin was cleansed with organic palm of coconut, aloe vera, , sugar crystals, bamboo powder and co enzyme gel for a super deep cleanse. After which papaya, oatmeal and manuka honey was bespoke to my facial needs and used to exfoliate and clear my dead dry skin cells. (you know I refused to believe I had any dry dead cells as my nightly cleansing regime is close to a scientific laboratory session). This was followed by an apple pectin skin booster masque to draw up blackheads and comodones (yep-I couldn’t pronounce it either!). Next my skin was toned with witch hazel and menthol mixed with manuka honey as an antiseptic to heal any redness. This smelt so good I confess to licking my upper lip for a cheeky taste.
In the next step my skin was massaged with the following oils and pomades; vitamin e to help hydrate and nourish, vitamin a, caviar to repair, African potato wax, collagen with vitamin c to help circulation, then Nuz’s special blend of several oils to help skin bond, green tea and rose was sprayed on m face and neck, collagen and q 10 eye lift patches were applied. I was most fascinated by the caviar on my face –it felt like squishy velvet! Then Nuz painted onto my face with a paintbrush a face masque which contained vitamin c, fish oil, collagen which had been whipped up like a soufflé and applied. Finally Nuz told me something that had me laughing away at product PR teams and their gimmick names. She announced ‘’and now I am applying to you dragons blood gel- this forms a clear shield on your skin to plump and hide fine lines’’. Oh how I laughed as I skipped out of her parlor laden down with a good bag of lovely new products to try out! they’ll come in really handy as I’m now off to Caribbean fashion week to have dinner with the icon that is Grace Jones!

JASMINE’S JUICE featuring EQUALITY/DIVERSITY UK MUSIC and HOLLYWOOD/BRIT STAR NOEL CLARKE!


JASMINE WITH NOEL CLARKE.
Did you know that 92% of the UK music industry is white? Do you think that matters when you consider that its totally unrepresentative of the music scenes artists, promoters, record labels workers and fans? It does matter. The music industry here is one of the last areas that doesn’t have an active organization that champions equality within this world. Well now that’s been put right!. Last week saw the launch of the Equality & Diversity charter for UK music! The event was hosted at London’s Commonwealth Club, where the UK music industry launched a commitment to increase equality and diversity within the commercial music sector. At a time when our musical talent and audience is as diverse as ever, the UK Music’s Equality & Diversity charter will encourage organisations, businesses and individuals to commit to two or more actions in 2012 to help improve equality and diversity in the industry. The charter can be found www.ukmusic.org/edc, this morning was all about getting people from the industry behind the charter and pledging and we saw players from leading industry company’s come together and sign the charter! Jo Dipple, chief executive UK Music said: “Diversity is a massive asset for the UK music industry. Our creative talent and the audience who enjoy our music is, without doubt, diversity personified. Promoting that key strength to the companies and organisations in between can only be good for our business.”
This week’s been mostly about juggling the stresses of work and personal life strands. Don’t let anyone kid you-we all juggle joy and pain. Some of us just choose to put on a happy face. The happy face actually works-you should try it).
I also managed to pop to a couple of fabulous places like the “A” Lifestyle Magazine launch party at The Grange St Paul’s Hotel, where there was a VIP reception. It’s a very brave concept in this day and age starting a magazine as most print press have either gone out of business or online- I was told that ‘’this International luxury lifestyle magazine was aimed towards the main stream South Asian community in the UK as well as International territories’’. The quarterly publication targets today’s young and vibrant professionals, combining entertainment with fashion, travel and arts, fusing them together with the underlining themes of lifestyle and luxury. They added ‘’Intellectually stimulating editorials, light hearted, informative, fast pages and strong photography, which all merge to present the readership with a unique appreciation for the finest things in life’’.

Finally just before my friend, actor, writer and director Noel Clarke flew off to shoot his next film STAR TREK 2 in Hollywood, he caught up with me to let me and my LONDON360 young reporters grill him about all things London and life in the BBC’S biggest studio in Whitye City where all were gathered to hear the great man speak. Unlike many of my circle, Noel isn’t interested in any of the good life party perks that fame brings- he says ‘’Life is just work, work, work and looking after my family, that’s all that counts really. I don’t head out to all those events and stuff I just stay home and do my work, look after the missus, looking after the kids and that’s what its about, writing, writing writing. Getting jobs, working hard’’. (Embarrassing hearing that when my feet were still throbbing from the vertiginous heels I had worn to the national TV awards the night before where I had totally jollied it up).
He continued ‘’ I don’t go to a lot of premiers, because I don’t think I need to flash myself everywhere it’s not really me, I don’t want to be famous, I’m not interested in being famous. I’m just interested in working hard and hopefully having the results speak for what I do. Not just turning up at events with champagne glasses self-[promoting, it’s not me’’.

We congratulated Noel on his Hollywood role but he was as unaffected as ever claiming ‘’It’s just an audition like all the others really, you kind of just do your lines and see what happens and luckily this time I got the job., they didn’t test me on my knowledge. When they called to tell me I got it I was at home, in my kids room, and I was told I got it and I was happy, I don’t get overexcited about things because I’m just kind of like that. I was happy but it was like you know a job is a job, some you get and some you don’t get and you cant get overexcited about stuff because that would mean if you got a review that was good then you would have to be really happy and if you got a bad review then you would have to be distraught. I think its just one of those things where its another level of accomplishment where you’ve done another job that is bigger than the ones you’ve done before and all of that stuff helps in your career so hopefully it will just help me in mine but I have no idea, how people look to me is up to them’’.
Just to test Noels knowledge of STAR TREK we decided to do a quick fire round to see how good he was. (If you know Noel, you know that he isn’t always up for any silly foolishness so it was good to see him half squirm and get involved). This is how it went down;
So first of all, can you tell me the Vulcan sign for live long and prosper?
(NOEL CLARKE DOES SIGN) That’s the sign.
What would you say if you wanted to be teleported back to the ship?
Am I on my own or with someone else?
You are on your own
One to beam up. You won’t say beam me up Scotty, no one really says that
Why not?
Because they don’t, and that was in the original star trek and since then there has been Next Generation, Deep Space Nine, Voyageur and Enterprise.
Who would be your captain? Jean-Luc Picard or James Kurk and for what reason?
Cant really get that question right or wrong, My captain would be Jean-Luc Picard probably because that’s the one I grew up with really, the original series was done when I was little, but the Next Generation I watched quite a lot when I was growing up.
Are you a fan of tight lycra and will you be sporting any in the film?
No idea, not a fan of tight lycra, no idea, no comment.
So clearly Noel had done enough research on his up coming role.

Once we’d finished the tomfoolery we went back to asking noel about the other 3 films coming out this year. He revealed ‘’We have Fast Girls, which is about four runners in a 100 metre female relay team and their quest from being girls who don’t always get on, to see if they win the event in the end, it’s a really good sporty movie, really exciting and I’m the lead writer on that. There is Storage 24, which is a sci-fi film about five people stuck in a storage facility and there is something in there. Sci-fi should give away what’s in there but I don’t want to reveal more, and that’s really exciting as well, that’s a Universal Picture. And then we have a wedding rom com called The Knot, which is sort of like a UK Bridesmaids Hangover type thing and its really quite funny ‘he says’ LOL’’

Clearly it’s realty impressive that noel isn’t stuck in a one sided genre. I bet many out there think he just does ‘’urban road movies’’. Clearly they forget that he cut his teeth on BBC dramas like Dr Who and others. He’s even written a MMA Mixed Martial Arts movie which he said ‘’it was supposed to be in February, now its indefinitely delayed but maybe in the summer or when I get back or like I said if something else interests me more, I don’t know.’’
Noel described his process of writing a film as thus ‘’Well I formulate the idea in my head for a long time, I keep going over it and once my head is full of the idea I get up one morning and I write it in a sort of flow of information on one page or how many pages it takes and then basically the whole thing will be written in prose, story kind of terms and then I copy and paste it onto a script document and I start writing the script by looking at that and as the script gets longer, that gets shorter and that’s kind of how I do it’’.

Noel described his highs and lows to me ‘’I started in 1999 and it didn’t really work that often, I kept a full time job until 2002 and then after that I did Auf Wiedersehen, Pet and I thought, ‘wow this is where things are going to take off’ and then you would finish that job and then nothing would happen. There have been loads of downs. There’s been films I’ve done of my own where I have had producers that were of the unsavoury variety and not being paid on my own film you know, it’s just, these things happen. Its not as big as people think it is and its not like America where they can just throw loads of money at stuff and so there’s been loads of downs, how you pick yourself up is the same way you carry on like when you win an award and you don’t get overconfident and arrogant about it, you put it on the shelf and move on, that’s how you pick yourself up because when your at your lowest point you can’t dwell on it and get depressed you just have to go, ‘alright, I’ve done all that work and I haven’t been paid or I’ve done this and this happened’ or you know, people you helped get far go and do things to you that you would never do to them. You’ve just got to move on’’.

We laughed about the fact that so many critics suggest that Noels films like Kidulthood and Adulthood are either changing the images of young people in London or cementing them?
Noel didn’t agree with either ‘’I think anyone who’s actually inspired enough by a film to go and behave like that is an idiot. That’s like people are saying that computer games make people go out and do stuff… I haven’t been zombie hunting in years; I don’t know about you, you know what I mean? I think the films themselves never claim to represent young people. The films represented those young people in the film on that particular day. Just because you do something on a Monday doesn’t mean you will do it on a Tuesday firstly. Secondly, it’s a film so they were all slightly exaggerated, the things that happened in Kidulthood in one day and the things that happened in Adulthood in one day don’t usually happen to people, so there is dramatic licence there. But I don’t think for a second that anyone other than saying the lines ‘are you dizzy blud?’ or whatever I don’t think anyone is really influenced by the films and if they are then they need to be educated a little bit more and I think that’s probably a problem’’.

When asked if Noel regrets anything in his career thus far he barked ‘Nah you cant have regrets in front of the camera, what you do is what you do. You have to try and perform as best you can and you know I always watch myself back, I know actors that are like ‘I cant watch myself’ I always watch myself because that’s how you learn because I’m not the best at anything. People say ‘you think you are big out there‘ I’m not the best at anything at all. The reason I do better than a lot of people is because I work hard because half of it is preparation. You can have someone is this talented and I’m here this talented but they aren’t doing any work because they think they are number one. My whole focus is that I’m going to knock you off your perch, that’s my whole focus everyday I get up it’s like ‘you see you there? You’re lazy, you are sitting there, lazy, your number one, I’m going to knock you off, I’m going to knock you off, I’m going to knock you off. And they’re like ‘Man it’s good up here’, not doing any work. And eventually you knock him off. The difference with me is I don’t stop working. I just continue working because I don’t ever want to be number one. I’d always rather be number two because you are always chasing someone’’.
It’s better to chase the dream then live it.
Yeah. If you become number one, you get lazy. I wouldn’t but people do get lazy so I’m quite happy always.. Even in some people’s mind they are like ‘but you are number one’, in my mind I’m not because I’m always refocusing. There used to be a couple of actors that would be like ‘why am I never going auditions with this guy? I want to go to auditions with that guy’ And my agent is like, ‘he is there and you’re here. My whole focus is, ‘Alright. One day I’m going to audition with that guy.’ Work hard, work hard, work hard, you get on set and you work hard. You’re not the best, you learn, you watch yourself and you learn. Eventually I went to auditions with that guy. Then I became friends with him. And then I didn’t see him anymore, why? Because I was up there and he was still there. Then you focus on the next person.
When noel worked with young people at BBC blast he told them to broaden their minds. he elaborated ‘’I feel like a lot of young people who have been inspired by maybe what I’ve done or what other people have done around me are focused on doing that, and I want them to broaden their minds because you don’t need to focus on what I did. The reason I just don’t write ‘this hood that hood’ ghetto this knife that, the reason why I don’t do that is number one, it’s for me, I cannot physically pigeon hole myself like that but also for you guys in the future. If you come from a similar environment or a similar place and you go to a film company, you’re like ‘I want to write about fairies, or I want to write about aliens’, and they go ‘well, who is the blueprint of this person?’ ‘Oh it’s that Clarke guy all he did was knife this, gun that, hood that’ he might look at you and go, ‘yeah we don’t think you can do that.’ If I’ve shown that someone from my environment can do different things when you go in and say you want to write about aliens they can’t question you because you might be able to do it. So I want young people to broaden their minds and go ‘actually you know what, just because I was raised in a one bedroom single parent council estate it doesn’t mean that I can’t write about trolls or whatever, you can. But you have to believe you can and you have to go in there confidently, knowing you can and when they go ‘yeah but you’re from a one bedroom council home’ you can say ‘hold on, but that Clarke guy did it.’ They can’t argue’’.
Noel added ‘’you can’t regret anything you have to make mistakes to grow as a person. I’ve made choices of people I’ve worked with, the producers like I’ve said have done things and I don’t get paid for my own film, I’ve made choices of actors I’ve given jobs that if I could go back in time I would never give them a job. But you know what; you don’t know how people are going to treat you. You can only treat people how you want to be treated. If someone helps me out then I would never s*** on them but there are people out there that do that’’.

Asked finally about young actors we should be looking out for in 2012 noel smiled ‘’People to watch in 2012? I have no idea. You can never tell who is going to do well, what people need to do is to stop watching other people and concentrate on themselves and hopefully they will be one of the people to watch’’.
Noel finished by telling the LONDON360 team why it was important for him to be a London 360 Ambassador. ‘’It’s important for me to be a London 360 Ambassador because I’ve always been about people having the opportunities to do things they wouldn’t always have the chance to do. I think what London 360 provides young people to be journalists and to be in this industry, I look at the people here today and I can already see future big time journalists, hopefully they’ll all be nice to me when they’re reviewing stuff if any of them become reviewers. In all seriousness you can see the future and I think that’s what’s important. There’s a big old guard out there trying to control us and have certain set ways and certain views but luckily for us they’re all retiring and getting out of there and getting young people that can represent the country the way it should be represented and I think that’s important’’.
ENJOY HOLLYWOOD NOEL! #TEAMUK!

JASMINES JUICE FEATURING THE NATIONAL TV AWARDS!


JASMINE IN THE ADIDAS VIP SUITE AT THE O2 WITH….(DEEP BREATH)…..GEORGIA (SBTV), COMEDIAN EDDIE KADI, MUSIC MANAGER RICHIE P, CLOTHES DESIGNER WALE ADEYEMI, MUSIC ACT BASHY, ACTOR JAY BROWN, ACTOR JASON LEWIS, ACTOR ASHLEY WALTERS, ACTOR JASON MAZA, ACTOR DANIEL KALUUYA, LONDON360 REPORTER ROSA DOHERTY, ADIDAS HEAD LADY PAOLA LUCKTUNG AND HER TEAM ADIDAS LADIES AKUA AND AISHA.
This week, aside from D’Angelo tickling our fancy with his shows whilst he was in town (did I ever tell you about when we were both in a bath together for an MTV interview? no-I’ll leave it there then), Sonys former big don Mervyn Lyn (VP strategic partnerships at Sony Music Entertainment UK-Vice President of Sony Entertainment, ) threw a party for his 50th birthday in east London. His former colleague Jennifer Mills and I both soberly cited ‘’we would never venture to E14 for anyone else’’ as the room full of Merv’s mates, family and huge number of SONY-BMG colleagues came out to celebrate his turning half a century old. From famous ex footballers, to record label execs and street teams, to his dearest and dearest a great night was had by all doing what the new generation refer to as the ‘’candy dance’’, the old generation refer to as the electric slide. The dj even laughed as he told us ‘’you kids think you made up that dance? You really don’t know’’ as the elders broke out into a few more old skool routines that had us standing back looking confused and shrugging our respective shoulders! Food nibbles were passed around on silver platters by Chef Collin Brown and we left at 3am dripping from a sweaty fun night-happy half-century Merv!

FULL CLIQUE!
The National TV Awards took place at the 02 Arena and it seemed that the Adidas VIP box was the only place to be as it was heaving full of movers and shakers from all industries having a sumptuous dinner and clinking drinks together.

JASMINE WITH PETER ANDRE.
Ex atomic Kitten Kerry katona was in the box next door so we all had a bit of a giggle with her before her management colleague Peter Andre popped by to be a part of the most fun box in the Arena on the night. artist manager/producer Richie P brought Peter in to meet us all but a bizarre spell came over all the men and ladies around me as peter came to join us. the ladies made him pose for pictures where he was kissing their cheeks which he was more than happy to do-and the men cleared their masculine throats and said ‘’oh well I might as well grab a picture with peter too’’ LOL. everyone loves them some peter andre!
We were over 20 strong with a cast that saw (deep breath. here we go..)…..actors Ashley Walters, Jay Brown (in lots of new TV and films this year!), Jason Maza, Daniel Kaluuya , comedy writer and actor Jason Lewis, comedian Eddie Kadi, musician Bashy, clothes designer Wale Adeyemi, London360 reporter Rosa Doherty, SBTV’s leading lady –presenter Georgia, Adidas head honcho Paola lucktung, team adidas ladies Akua and Aisha!.

SILLY ANTICS WHILST WE WERE ”WATCHING” THE LIVE AWARDS!
Adidas are a brand that have supported the UK urban scene whether it be music acts, dj’s, comedians , style setters and more as well as athletes. Their commitment to not only helping dress up and coming acts, films, putting on music events, organising community uniting events all across the country, is impressive and commendable and shows their non commercial pro-social department are clearly connected and in touch with the youth as well as the David Beckhams of this world.
The hot food feast provided was scrumptious! Salmon, salads, chicken, vegetarian fare-all amazing for a live concert venue! The drinks game was off and popping but most of the box were well behaved and sipped soft drinks or 1 cheeky alcoholic beverage (I think when there are this many movers and shakers around each other no one wants to get too tipsy-although Ashley Walters was having such a good attempt that at the end of the night he was the party with his shirt open and fans mobbing him!. Ashley’s most recent BBC drama is currently onscreen on Thursdays (INSIDE MEN) -this guy just underplays his achievements but look his role cast credits up and its staggering how long he’s been doing his thing humbly grinding away-and he’s a family man-well impressive! He bounced over to impressionist Jason Lewis at one point in the night and laughed as he asked him when he could expect an asher d impression/skit. Eddie Kadi arrived late so we all had to pose again to take our group posed pictures on my camera timer-0but he and the other gents had all made such a wonderful effort at looking amazing in their black tie outfits-and they all smelt so fresh-it was all okay in the end-how could we be mad?. When we weren’t all having too much fun we did catch parts of the TV Awards and I noted that clearly CELEBRITY JUICE is an “urban ting” cos everyone around me in the Adidas box went wild as it won.
JASMINE WITH THE 2 ASHLEYS! (WALTERS/ BASHY)
I was just about to do some crazy poses that I saw Ashley doing with Jay Brown when West London gent scooted over to us and recommended we just stick to the ladylike pose-thanks bash! Speaking of ladylike-SBTV’s leading lady Georgia is a breath of fresh air in a field of wanna female media ladies. She’s professional, intelligent, sassy, got ambition and respectful of all those around her-sure to go far-watch out for her!.

JASMINE’S JUICE FEATURING KOJO’S HACKNEY ONE MAN SHOW AND ADAM DEACON!


JASMINE WITH MAN OF THE NIGHT-KOJO, MIS-TEEQ’S SABRINA, SIMON WEBBE AND HIS LADY AND LISA MAFFIA.
A week of the usual work hard play hard antics. To start it was roadblock time at Hackney Empire where the Fresh Prince of Hackney aka Kojo was hosting his first one man stand up show for a few years-this one for DVD recording so if you weren’t able to make it in person you can buy the DVD on your shelves in the very near future.
As we pulled up outside the queue was trailing all around the high street and into side roads, cars were traffic blocking and the excitement was in the air. We were handed our VIP passes and guided very slickly into the media reception where numerous celebs and power players in urban media were already gathered to welcome Kojo pre-show and wish him good luck.
Kojo swaggered into the backstage room wearing dark sunglasses and flanked by his whole business team a la a presidential Obama moment-I teased him. Come on-I had too LOL!
Eager to get into our seats we slid into the dress circle where I noted I was sat amongst Eastenders actors Preeya Kalidas (in a very bright fur hat a la Russian) and Fatboy, Simon Webbe from Blue (in an expensive Moncler looking puffa and his mate James Bond baddie actor Rick Yune, (who always mesmerises me as I recall his diamond scarred face in the movie!), So Solids first lady-Lisa Maffia who was looking as cute and lithe as ever, singers Jamelia (all glam hair and smile) and Mis Teeqs Sabrina Washington (sexy minx in black ripped jeans and curtain of luxurious hair) , ITV news reader Charlene White, THE VOICE newspapers Dionne Grant, PR donnette Vanessa Amadi, and many more.

JASMINE WITH PR MAVEN VANESSA AMADI.
The first half of the show saw comedian and host Mister Cee lead proceedings, a very funny white comedienne Maureen Younger who was absolutely hilarious and made a really unique niche for herself with the character she was playing (I think she was playing a charterer-in fact I hope she was). Loved her!

JASMINE WITH EASTENDERS ACTRESS PREEYA KALIDAS.
And we were treated to a live performance by new record label signing Cleo sol, who’s first cover track wasn’t the best received by the audience but she really came into her own singing her own stuff and is clearly a very beautiful and talented young lady.
Part 2 started and swept by so fast-time flies when you’re having fun. The audience loved it-Kojo was on fire and had the audience in stiches roaring with laughter. He commented on the riots, parenting, relationships and so much more-a great night!


ADAM DEACON AND JASMINE.
BAFTA nominee 2012 Adam Deacon came in to see the UK360 news team and record links for their show. He was a sweetheart who did really well on autocue considering he’s an actor not a presenter and was really keen to do takes over and again even when we said that was a take-he’s want to do another one even better-the measure of a perfectionist that’s mega ambitious!
After he finished hosting links we asked him about current news worthy topical issues like the 696 MET FORM that insists that music show promoters or anyone having an event that includes ‘urban music’ or ‘urban clientele’ have to fill in the form and bring in extra security and insurance. This has stopped many acts from performing live. Adam agreed ‘’I think it’s all to do with misconceptions in the urban scene, people think it’s going to be a certain way when really it’s not. something might have happened in the past at one event and people think it’ going to happen in every single event and it’s a shame because it stops artists from doing the work that they want to do. At the end of the day if the artist has a fan base and people want to hear their music then they should be able to put it out’’.

Recently Adam was in the press not just for his BAFTA nomination but also as he was touring schools across the UK and speaking to students about inspiring them in their assembly’s. Midway through his schools tour an ignorant headmaster cancelled Adams visit to his school at the last minute as apparently he had looked up Adam and his films and apparently Adam wasn’t quite the right time of character to be speaking to his pupils. Talk about outrageous ignorance and racism! Can’t a headmaster tell the difference between an actor and a role he is playing? If the BBC can have Adam on question time why does he think Adam isn’t good enough for his school? Adam retorted ‘’I’ve always been doing school visits, especially recently we went around loads of schools in hackney and we always got some good feedback from the students to the teachers. We were booked in to do a talk at the school and basically the head teacher told the students I was coming and plastered posters all around the school, it got the kids very excited about it. I was getting a lot of tweets saying that they were excited that I was coming and at 5 o clock that same day, my manager told me that the talk had been cancelled, the head teacher made the decision, he apparently saw a poster of my films and thought it wasn’t the right image for the school, people know me as a writer and director and I’m guessing people wanted to hear about that, so he told the school I cancelled when I didn’t. The last thing I’d want is for young people to support what I’m doing and then cancel on them in the last minute. So, I put it up on twitter and there was a protest in the school, which turned into a little riot and the teacher made it out like I cancelled. There are people that don’t understand young people that’s why we need younger teachers in schools and there are in those in positions of power who just don’t understand young people. It’s not right’’.
If you haven’t voted for Adam in this weeks BAFTA race make sure you do- http://bafta.orange.co.uk/rising-star-award/adam-deacon/
#TEAMUK is not just a myth-it’s a movement!

JASMINE’S JUICE featuring UK360, SIR TERRY WOGAN and POET LAUREATE BENJAMIN ZEPHANIA!


JASMINE WITH BROADCASTING LEGEND SIR TERRY WOGAN!
Many of you know I am the executive editor of a TV and multi media brand called LONDON360. It’s a regular weekly TV show that is on TV on the Community Channel (often segments are also used where appropriate on our corporate partners channels-BBC, ITV, C4, C5 and SKY).
120 young London based reporters between 18-25 make the show from a grass roots level. They speak to Londoners from EVERY walk of life whether a resident, local business owner, MP, councillor, TV star, Music star and more.
The reporters learn to hone their multi media skills and get their feet into doors they wouldn’t usually be able to get in. they make TV, radio for BBC RADIO LONDON’s top show hosted by Eddie Nestor, written weekly print press columns for one of the newspapers in the country-THE VOICE and online 24 hours a day.
Many of the stories covered by the team have led to bigger exposure for Londoners and the success of LONDON360 has now led to a sister show that focus’ on the whole country- predictably called UK360!
Both shows are filmed at the BBC in White City and so far we’ve managed to give a voice to thousands across the country.
Celebrities that have so far been involved in news features include; our ambassadors Alesha Dixon and Noel Clarke, Alicia Keys, BBC host Matt Allwright, Ade Adepitan, George Michael, Chipmunk, Channel 4 News presenter Jon Snow, Nigerian music superstar 2face, Lethal B, Boris Johnson, comedian Kojo, Lisa Maffia, ITV News Presenter Charlene White, Bashy, David Lammy MP, Trevor Nelson, Lord Sebastian Coe, Jay Sean, Celeb chef Marco Pierre White, Akala, Goldie, Rodney P, Sir Steve Redgrave, MC Ty, Glee star Cory Montieth, Levi Roots, Estelle, BAFTA nominee Adam Deacon (vote for him this week-last chance!) and many more.
The most recent UK360 shows are presented by poet laureate Benjamin Zephania and broadcasting legend Terry Wogan.
Both are openly, comfortable opinionated and have very sharp minds. Benjamin has managed to make a career in the written word whilst being dyslexic and Sir Terry is the greatest autocue reader I have ever met-(closely followed by Trevor Nelson LOL!). About his dyslexia Benjamin revealed to London360 reporter Helena Poole ‘’ I’m very dyslexic but I’m also very lucky. I work in the creative arts. I left school at the age of 13 unable to read and write. Its just about reading and writing and that’s an artificial thing to do’’
Then when I learned to read and write I discovered that I was dyslexic.Now I’m a professor at Brunel University. Fortunately, in the creative world you have a lot of understanding people around you. And if I have a problem with words I just invent words and I can get away with it because in my back pocket I have a thing called a Poetic license. But I can understand at school how difficult it can be for some young people struggling with dyslexia.But dyslexic people just look at the world differently. And the most important thing that dyslexic people should know that it is NOT a mark of your intelligence”.

Benjamin could’ve had letters after his name too but famously rejected his OBE from the Queen many years ago. He explained ‘’ It is almost impossible for me to sit here and tell you why I turned down the OBE.At the time I turned it down I wrote a 2000 word article in the Guardian newspaper, and I remember reading the article back and thinking, I could have wrote much more. Basically, I write to connect with people. I don’t write to impress governments, politicians, and Her majesty the Queen and things like that. I write to connect with people. I am Benjamin Zephaniah NO B.E.I don’t want order of the British Empire on my name. I have spent my life fighting against empire. Empire means to my family, slavery, and brutality. Why would I want to celebrate that? Why would I want to put that on to my name?
No, Benjamin Zephaniah NO B.E is me!!’’
We talked to Benjamin about the riots. He was passionate ‘’ Well, it’s too easy to say that people who are uneducated riot.
I was once asked by a very well known TV channel to write a poem about people who riot.
And I thought about it, and I said you know what I’m going to write a poem about people who don’t riot.
(He says Poem)….’’The point is, if you have a job to go to tomorrow and you have a lot to loose why would you be on the street rioting, why would you be doing crime anyway. It’s about hope and if you have nothing to lose then you’ll do anything. Not all people who don’t have a job are uneducated. The media picked up on a couple of people who had jobs that were rioting but there were only a handful of them. Most people were desperate and I’m not saying that taking trainers and stuff like that is making a statement, but there is a political reason why they did that. I know that if I went out and rioted now, or if I stole something from a shop, I will begin to think about what I have to lose. I have my career to lose. What will my fans think of me, what will my parents think of me? What will happen to my students at my university? But if I had nothing to lose, gosh I’m not so sure’’.
Benjamin excitedly remembered me from this column as he stated ‘’I know you-you write that column in THE VOICE with all those stars. I’ve been in the VOICE but usually in the more serious part of the paper. I reassured after this week he would have seen himself in my star area too! LOL.

JASMINE WITH POET LAUREATE BENJAMIN ZEPHANIA.
Terry Wogan was charming too. An absolute sweet heart. He has been in the industry years and experience the media from the ground up but is still the humblest of men. He told me ‘’ I always use extra strong braces on TV as the sound battery packs are so heavy they pull my trousers down’’. He also had my reporter Emily Jane brown in stitches as she interviewed him on anything and everything. When asked would he ever consider going into politics? He retorted ‘’It would be the last thing in the world I would ever want to do would be to go into politics, with the possible exception of Boris Johnson, I haven’t really met a politician that I liked’’.
He’s been on TV with his own chat show whilst I was growing up, has a radio show but is currently best known for hosting the BBC’S Children In Need but here is what he revealed he would and wouldn’t do for charity in our CRAZY FOR CHARITY METER. ‘’
‘’A sponsored walk: I can walk, yeah.
Sponsored fancy dress: No
Sponsored silence: I can be silent, but not for very long.
Would you lay in a bath of cold baked beans for an hour: Absolutely…not.
Would you busk for a day in the London tube station: Wild horses would not drag me to the London underground stations to busk
Would you work in a kissing booth: No, you could catch anything
Full body wax from neck to toe: That is probably my idea of hell
Appear in a reality TV show: I have been offered several hundreds of thousands of pounds, under no circumstances in a million years would I go on a reality TV show, or ever be that close to Ant & Dec.
Naked charity calendar: No it might frighten the horses
Climb Everest: If I had my health and strength, I’d give it a go. But I’d probably die at Call 1’’.
Finally we asked why was it important for him to present UK360? he might be getting on a bit but he certainly knows what’s what as he responded enthusiastically ‘’Well I think UK360, it was new to me and I think it’s a relatively new idea as well. But I think it’s the future. I think everything is going to become more and more accessible. And people should be able to use the television to get their message across. This is a fantastic idea and I really do applaud it. Any time you want me to help, I’ll be delighted’’.
Truly a pair of total legends!

JASMINE’S JUICE featuring CHART STAR WRETCH32/ MP DAVID LAMMY-TOTTENHAM REGENERATION, 3V SALON!


JASMINE WITH WRETCH32
What a wonderfully diverse week! This week I’ve had dinner with a huge group of music industry movers and shakers where we debated what’s going to be big in 2012 as well as all other frivolous industry tittle-tattle. I’ve been running in and out of celeb hair salon 3V in Notting Hill practically daily for a blow to keep my bonce looking shipshape- especially when I had a shoot with the British broadcasting legend that is Terry Wogan.

JASMINE AT HER HAIR SALON 3V WITH CO-OWNER JULIEN AND HER HAIR STYLIST MELISSA.
I’ve spent a day at the Telegraph TV offices discussing new media and had lunch with no 10 Downing Streets head of digital communication-Mr Nick Jones! (My new years resolution is to actively stick with winners in their field!)

My LONDON360 news team have been working on numerous TV news reports this week which included the fall out of the Stephen Lawrence sentencing, interracial/interfaith adoption, the Amy Winehouse foundation, London’s tube buskers, young people and body image, the Palestinian state, love on the tube, female boxers in the Olympics and the regeneration of Tottenham.
Much has been said in the media about this North London borough in the past regarding riots both past and more recently but not many are focusing on the reasons behind the social discord. The LONDON360 reporters hit the ground running as they spread across the Tottenham community to ask residents, local MP’s and local celebrities their thoughts.
We went down to Tottenham’s much loved venue-the Bernie Grant Centre to speak to a local resident called Jermaine Sinclair who you may know better by the name Wretch32.
Wretch has grown up in Tottenham on the Tiverton Estate and has a lot of passion for his community and the late Bernie Grant…. ‘’Bernie Grant being such a legendary figure they thought it was necessary to make a centre and build something, it holds quite a lot of events, it is really for the community, I’ve performed here quite a lot of times, yeah Bernie Grant Centre is definitely the place to be in Tottenham.’’
Tottenham has clearly shaped Wretch as a person. His memories are very vivid-this he uses in his lyrical content…’’Mostly my estate -Tiverton Estate, Growing up in a estate it is like your friends become your family, and your surroundings outside your house almost become your home. My school I went to Northumberland Park, Broadwater Farm we used to go and play football up there, they always used to have a rave in the farm and all dayers always going on over there’’.
Estates can be depressing places for young people to grow up but Wretch who used to listen to a lot of bashment and So Solid Crew in his early days says things have most definitely improved ‘‘in Tiverton they got something called the NDC it is a organization which I think is stands for New Deals in Communities, and they got a 50 million pound bonus to boost up the area, they rejuvenated the flats to make it really new, they improved the youth clubs that were already open. They put basketball stuff up in the cage and they have really tried to make it look like a better place and really executed on the areas that are going to benefit the youths so it is really cool’’.
Wretch was lucky enough to have a fathers influence in his life-unlike many young people today and cites his dad as his main reason for making music ‘’Growing up anything my dad done made me want to do it. So if he was a Plummer I’d be fixing toilets right now I’ll be honest. He kind of was the biggest role model I had, when I saw him in a club and he was on the mic and on the turntables it just set something in my head and it made me really feel like you can be the most quietest person but once you come on the mic you’re the most important person in the room, and just looking at that from a kids perspective really excited me. I went home was messing around on the decks, got in trouble for it!’’.
Wretch is really proud of his area and named other acts that he was proud of that were his peers like Skepta, Chipmunk and Adele but wanted to highlight a new act called ‘’Hard Palm Dun- you know the kids really love him round here he is going to come through and do big things next year. They call him Dun Dee as well. I think he has done great stuff and the kids really love him. I think you have got to listen to who the kids are listening to you know cause the kids are the future, they know what is happening. When the whole area is screaming Dun Dee you know he must be big’’
I think Tottenham is definitely a place where we are really hunger driven we have got a lot to prove all the time so we want to conduct ourselves in a professional way. We want to make better music than all the other artists, we want to be the best’’.
Wretch has seen the journey that his area has made in recent years and has his own thoughts on how to rejuvenate Tottenham …..’’ ask the really young kids what they are into and really try to execute and implement some of their ideas. It is difficult asking someone like me who is 26 because I am still going to have to ask a 15 or 18 year old but if we go straight to the source what they are in to, it is weird because the next generation might be into writing films they might be really inspired by noel Clarke -people like that and think I want to write a film it is about setting up anything we can to really help benefit the kids in the direction they really want to go in’’.
Whilst Wretch’s area homes one of the biggest football teams in the capital, he looked around concerned as he confided in me that he is not a Tottenham hotspur fan…..’’
I’m just going to be honest I am an Arsenal fan! My dad is a Tottenham fan so I’m not quite sure how he allowed this to happen LOL. I think I just remember in my early years playing football in primary school the idol was Ian Wright you know if you had a red top, I remember a mate of mine wrote the number 8 on his back obviously no body had the money to go and get it printed on, so he drew it on. Everything was Ian Wright orientated hence why I support Arsenal. But you know Tottenham are a good club one day they might be as good as us!’’
Most kids look to music stars like Wretch as role models but he understands that the people that make changes are politicians and had a straight message for them ‘’any MP can just look at this place and see a lot of good things have come out of it. It is easy to shine a light on the negative things that are happening, but it is better in the long run if we shine a light on the positive things, and add to them. They really should focus on getting into the schools and talking to the youths and finding out exactly what they need and what they are after and help them with any of their requests’’.
Tottenham is clearly somewhere wretch is zealous about as he states ‘’there is a certain way we lace our trainers here is a certain hair cut we get there is a certain line everything is set and trimmed and designed-Tottenham has everything to do with how I am today’’.
I talked to Wretch about the sadness I felt at many of London’s libraries closing down. most of my childhood has great memories from weekly library trips. Wretch revealed something fascinating…’’ It doesn’t sound like a good thing. I think a library is probably a home for a lot of people.I think in this day and age when you are able to read a book online in your house for free I would see why it is probably not as popular as it used to be. Books are everything, but the funny thing is the first book I ever read other than kids books was Tinie Temphas book and that was the other day. I just made the decision I haven’t read a book I need to read and I read Tinie Temphas book. What was really funny about that is it made me realize that I didn’t feel to read anything before because no book interested me. What did interest me was that Tinie Tempha had a book and I could relate to it. It is about finding out what people are into and if there is enough stuff you are into then you will read it. See I have now gone on to Jay Z ‘s book Decoded it is massive. It made me feel like what UK artists and urban artists are doing is a big thing, because if Tinie made me pick up a book, he has done that to a lot of other people as well that are not book readers’’.

The LONDON360 congratulated him on his last album ‘black and white’ going gold, and were most keen to hear about Wretch’s new album about which he said ‘‘the new album is going to be the next chapter to Black and White. I’m trying to give you my life as it changes my life before Black and White it was like this and I gave it to you up to that point. Now after Black and White it has changed again so I can give you to this point and as long as I keep progressing and I see different things I meet new people I will always have things to talk about. It is a progression from Black and White’’.
Regards any collaborations on his new album wretch revealed ‘’I am a firm believer in making the album first and then pulling in the missing pieces to the jigsaw I think if you were baking a cake you would not start with the cherry and then the icing you would make your cake first. So that is how I look at it my album is my cake I make the cake and then I think ok maybe Tinie Tempah will kill this verse I give him a call and see if he likes that track and we see about that after there isn’t any collaborations at the moment it is all myself’’.
(For the full interview transcripts with WRETCH32 and DAVID LAMMY MP SEE BELOW…….!).

-END

WRETCH32 INTERVIEW TRANSCRIPT-BY JASMINE DOTIWALA

Tell us about this place any memories of this place?

This is one of the most renowned places in Tottenham. Bernie Grant being such a legendary figure they thought it was necessary to make a center and build something you know massive. Basically After he passed away and it holds quite a lot of events it is really for the community I’ve performed here quite a lot of times as well and there is a office which I use, which is a minuet from here just around the corner, so yeah Bernie grant center is definitely the place to be in Tottenham.

Where else in Tottenham did you hang out growing up and what memories do you have of those places?

Mostly my estate Tiverton estate (1.36) and that is up the road. Growing up in a estate it is like your friends become your family, and your surroundings outside your house almost become your home. A lot of time in the estate of course and school I went Northumberland park as well that’s just up the road. Also Broadwater farm we used to go and play football up there and chill out they always used to have a rave in the farm and all dayers always going on over there. Literally anywhere in Tottenham but mainly my estate.

Tell us about the changes you’ve seen happen over the years what it used to be like and how has it changed?

Yeah the changes in Tiverton they got something called the NDC it is a organization which I think is stands for New Deals in Communities, and they got a 50 million pound bonus, don’t know what you call it, to boost up the area in Tiverton they made the flats, they rejuvenated the flats to make it really new, I think they improved the youth clubs that were already open. I think they put basketball stuff up in the cage and they have really tried to make it look like a better place and really executed on the areas that are going to benefit the yutes, like the football pitches the youth clubs so you know it is really cool.

So growing up in the Tiverton area what kind of music were you listening to? What music shaped your life growing up?

Growing up? I used to listen to a lot of Bashment! A lot of my bredrins used to listen to Wu Tang clang and things like proper deep Hip Hop but I was more into listening to Bashment. You know of course when things like So Soild came in to play that was the new frenzy that was the take over, you know heartless crew being from North London as well theses are like before we get into Dizzee and that. Them time we were young but definitely like So Solid and that definitely

You come from a musical family your dad is a dj tell us about the musical effect he had on your music taste growing up?

Growing up anything my dad done made me want to do it. So if he was a Plummer I’d be fixing toilets right now I’ll be honest. He kind of was the biggest role model I had anything he did I wanted to do, when I saw him you know in a club and he was on the mic and on the turntables it just set something in my head and it made me really feel like you can be the most quietest person but once you come on the mic you’re the most important person in the room, and just looking at that from a kids perspective and him being my dad as well it really excited me. I went home was messing around on the decks, got in trouble for it! And really I just started to write lyrics when I got older.

Name check other music artist that have come from music and North London.

Loads of us you know, of course we’ve got the Skeptas the Chipmunks Double s, Marvel, and that I think there is a lot of drive in north London we always want to take it to that next level and there is also so much new artist coming through. There is a new artist called Hard Palm Done you know the kids really love him round here he is going to come through and do big things next year. I think it is definitely a place where we are really hunger driven we have got a lot to prove all the time so we kind of want to conduct ourselves in a professional way. We want to make better music than all the other artist we want to be the best and I think that really shows.

Of course Adele where did she say she was again? I think she was from Landsdown road didn’t she (5:34) that is only up there when I found out Adele was from Tottenham I was surprised I was like woh.

How should Tottenham be rejuvenated?

I think the best way to rejuvenate Tottenham would be to ask the really young kids what they are into and really try to execute and implement some of their ideas. It is difficult asking someone like me who is 26 because I am still going to have to ask a 15 or 18 year old but if we go straight to the source what they are in to, it is weird because the next generation might be into writing films they might be really inspired by noel clark people like that and think I want to write a film that to me I think once we find out exactly what is needed it is about setting up anything we can to really help benefit the kids in the direction they really want to go in.

Are you a fan of the very known football team in Tottenham? What does having a big team in the area do for the area?

So I’m just going to be honest I am a Arsenal fan! It is really random me living in Tottenham my dad is a Tottenham fan as well I’m not quite sure how he allowed this to happen but he was alright with it. I’ll be honest I think I just remember in my early years playing football in primary school the idol was Ian Wright you know if you had a red top, I remember a mate of mine wrote the number 8 on his back obviously no body had the money to go and get it printed on, so he drew it on. Everything was Ian Wright orientated hence why I support Arsenal.

But You know Tottehham they are a good club one day they might be as good as us don’t shoot the messenger just saying. The new improvements they have made to the station makes Tottenham look better as well, they have opened up new shops and created a bit more space by the school and it looks pretty cool. It is a nice stadium as well I’ve been in there a few times to watch American football (laughs)

How do you think having a club like Tottenham has helped with the unity of the area/ community/ borough?

The community will always benefit when there is stuff like football stadiums and music venues, stuff like that, because people are coming from all over the globe, well not the globe but at times yeah, to come to these places it is almost like London having the Olympics. It feels like that every Saturday when all the Tottenham fans are walking about you won’t be able to walk out there but its not like there is any problems everyone is cool they all walk in the same direction they are going to the match. A bit of unity it is nice it is cool.

So you think with the worlds eye on Tottenham when there are football matches and so many artists coming from here you would think that the government really want to put money into it. What message do you have to the MPs?

Just hope that any MP or someone in that Government area of life, will just look at this place and think a lot of good things have come out of it. It is easy to shine a light on the negative things that are happening, but it is better in the long run if we shine a light on the positive things, and add to them. That will really rejuvenate they really should focus on getting into the schools and talking to the youths and finding out exactly what they need and what they are after and help them with any of their requests.

Do you think young people who come from Tottenham are proud to come from here or do you think recent events have stigmatized things slightly?

I think people from Tottenham are proud to be from Tottenham. I think especially the kids they are really proud because they know that they have got a lot to scream and shout about. I think it is more the adults that will feel like “oh gosh” I don’t want to seem like I am a part of this or anything like that. But you know, what they have got to realize is we have all got a part to play and people really like pointing the finger. It was easy to point the finger at me to do stuff but I was like, well my kids are well behaved and stuff and I do that as a parent before a artist.

Anything I can do for my area as an artist or a parent is done. Consider it done I think it is definitely the kids that are really happy. I think the adults just need to realize that we want what’s best and we do want to be doing good stuff and positive things we just need a bit of help sometimes.

How Important is Tottenham been in shaping you and what attributes would you say came from growing up in this area?

I think in terms of who I am as a person it is everything because I think when you grow up in England you are not Jamaican you are English. So when I grew up in Tottenham there is a certain way we lace our trainers there is a certain hair cut we get there is a certain line everything is set and trimmed and designed to your surroundings, so I think if I grew up somewhere else I would be completely different. Tottenham has everything to do with how I am today.

You are really good at championing new people who should we be championing from this area who should we be looking out for?

I definitely think a guy called Caliber he is definitely going to come through he has done F64 SBTV stuff Grime Daily ect there is another guy called Hard Palm Done they call him Dun Dee as well. I think he has done great stuff and the kids really love him. I think you have got to listen to who the kids are listening to you know cause the kids are the future, they know what is happening, so you ask them when ever I come across someone new I ask them. I want to know why they are listening to them, who they are tipping. When the whole area is screaming Dun Dee you know he is a mate of mine too so year look out for him.

Black and white has gone gold tell us about that where were you when you heard did you expect it?

Yeah we got gold I’m happy about that. When I heard I was inside at home and it was weird it took me back to a few conversations that we were having before everything really kicked off, and I’m a big dreamer but I’m really realistic and our initial goal was like anything to do with, with me it was going to be more album driven we should go for like 50 thousand albums, lets look at top 40s, and not necessarily consider top tens, and it is weird because when Tractor came out that whole ethos just changed. And it was like ok that one has gone in there, this wasn’t where we were planning to be but we are here, lets see if we can keep it going.

So it is really weird it’s done better than we expected. The position that has put me in now is just I feel like I might as well go for the world now and I’m literally just going to go for it the new album we are recording is a lot bigger you know we are getting in with bigger producers bigger sounds the same producers as well but we are making everything sound bigger.

Why are you surprised black and white has done so well you have put in your work?

It is one thing wanting something and another thing achieving it I think you can really set your self up to be depressed if you aim for platinum and you only sell 1. So I think it is better to aim for something that is realistic but still something that is pushing you and we thought 50 thousand is a good push lets go for it first time round and when it surpasses it it just goes to show that maybe we were under thinking and this time I’m going to think big and hopefully I’m not left depressed.

Did you have to worry about illegal downloads when it came to releasing music and do you still have to worry about that how do you combat that?

In terms of illegal down loads I look at it like this, any body that is going to download it will do it and anyone who is going to buy it will buy it. I don’t really know how to download alums. Someone’s album could leak and I’ll be there for 4 hours to find it, I don’t even know where to go but if that is the way you are you know exactly where to go and you get the leak the minuet it happens and I think there is no way to stop it unless we stop leaking or we cut off whatever sites they are using I honestly believe that if you are a downloader you are a downloader if you are a buyer you are a buyer. With me I’m just so excited to hear a album when it has leaked I’ll still buy it when it is out but out of excitement I’m like I need to hear this everyone is talking about it.

How do you tread the line between being commercial and credible?

It is definitely a hard line to tread you know the whole credibility thing while being commercial at the same time but I think the thing is with me I have always continued to make the same kind of music so I’d have something vibey like ‘Tractor’ I would put that in the same vain as ‘be cool’ I did before, it has that same sort of vibe. ‘Don’t go’ there was a song on my other cd called ‘all that I need’ and before that nothing last forever it is like I make the same songs I just tell you about the next chapter. Where I’m really honest I am talking about my life I am just talking about what effects me over good instrumentals so I think it is not for me it is ok because people don’t class me as someone who sold out. It just so happens that the songs are being played on all the stations now.

Tell us about the new album and any new exclusives you can give London 360?

The new album is going to be the next chapter to Black and White. I’m trying to give you my life as it changes my life before Black and White was like this and I gave it to you up to that point. Now after Black and White it has changed again so I can give you to this point and as long as I keep progressing and I see different things I meet new people I will always have things to talk about. It is a progression from Black and White.

In terms of progression and collaborations I am a firm believer in making the album first and then pulling in the missing pieces to the jigsaw I think if you were baking a cake you would not start with the cherry and then the icing you would make your cake first. So that is how I look at it my album is my cake I make the cake and then I think ok maybe Tinie Tempah will kill this verse I give him a call and see if he likes that track and we see about that after there isn’t any collaborations at the moment it is all myself.

There is a trend that artist do think too much about collaborations before the body of work

Yes I think it can be a problem being too calculated. You know I have had conversations with people who have calculated their career to a number 1. Like ‘so I’ll put that out it will get top 40 and then that well go there and then I will have my number one’ and I’m like how can you do that maths it is impossible? The main thing people should want is to buy that album because of you and anything else should come as a bonus.

When it comes to a wretch video the one thing that we notice is it is not like the rest how involved are you in your videos?

We are really involved when it comes to the visual thing. I like to pick a person I can trust and I look at it like this when I am writing my song no one will come and tell me change that line add that change that don’t say that. So when I comes to a video director we are going to talk about he concept and discuss it for a while. I am going to let him do his job and he will direct me cause he has his vision. The hardest thing is trusting and finding someone you trust. You know with the last campaign we used the same director three times Tractor Unorthodox and Don’t Go after Tractor I could literally do everything he said and the video would be fine.

It is like having a 9-5 and going to work every day you know what you are going to get. That is the beauty of having the familiarity with someone.

You don’t follow the cliché video honey scantily clad women in a video how much do you think that is to blame for young people with body image videos and how much pressure are young people under when it comes to body image?

I think that when you are young you are impressionable you get familiar with seeing things a certain way and think that is how it should be and I think it is definitely a issue when it is effecting people that are real young and they are being mislead I think adults are adults and they can make their mistakes cause they are old enough to know better and they are old enough to know where your trying to go in life.

How do we fix it?

I think it is difficult to fix because it starts in the home I think firstly parents have got to get hold of it. It is extremely difficult but being a parent I know what I mean I would not expect somebody else to guide my children you know if I was watching a cartoon with my son and I saw something funny in the cartoon I would explain to him and we get that wiped out of his head completely I wouldn’t send a email to the cartoon company unless it was something really ridiculous.

In Terms of airbrushing I don’t have the whole super sexy thing going on in my video I just think what works for me is being really realistic. I never shave my beard I’m just like this and I cut my hair when I think I should and that is just how I am it works for me I am your average neighbor people can relate to me.

Some people are really into fantasy and they need to see that perfect girl and need to think I need a girl like that and you know I suppose if people who do fantasy type videos if we were to banish them it could have a back lash because maybe if people stop fantasizing they might end up depressed I think it can work both ways it is a funny one. But personally it is not me it is not my kind of style.

London the Olympics what are you looking forward to most? Do you think it will benefit the city and residents of London?

Yeah I think I terms of the Olympics I am excited things like this don’t happen in my life time and I’m 26 so I would have to assume it is once in a life time it does happen.

Are you going?

Yeah a million percent I am going to go to the ones that I am really interested in 100 meters 400 meters the women’s 100 meters that is just for the running of course. Yeah I think it is something to bring kids to, go with your family and I think it is interesting.

It is not every day you get to see the height of athletics. In terms of enhancing the country we will be looked at very good, providing everything runs smooth you know?

I think it will benefit us as a country and if you are into property and stuff and you have anything around there it will also benefit you as well it is win win! Of course it will be extremely busy but that is to be expected it will help, businesses will capitalize off it. It is a chance for New talent for team UK and their will be a lot of performances around it so everyone will benefit.

Do you think football breads racism any experiences you can think of?

I don’t think football breeds racism I think racism is just racism if you are a racist you could be a conductor one day somebody plays the wrong key and you might say something you thought in your head. I think it is just a person is a person. I don’t think it comes from a sport. But I think professionals should always try and conduct themselves in a professional manner I don’t really agree with miss conduct in that sense in that way as well.

What about those that say it is just banter?

I don’t think it is banter I think it is a lot more than banter and it shouldn’t happen.

Does it affect you?

I have never really experienced racism like that being called a name or anything in jest, I don’t recall having it like that. The type of racism I have experienced is being in a foreign place and being looked at funny or asking for directions and not feeling wanted in that town. I think it is what it is, but as a country I feel like it is getting a lot better. I feel like it is a generational issue when we are going back there are people who are not use to seeing another certain amount of people I think as time has gone on that has changed. I think from 5 and under with that generation it just shouldn’t happen, it would be ridiculous it wouldn’t make sense because a white kid is growing up with a mix raced brother and it is normal, where as before it was something more like gosh. It is in society in the culture so in generations to come it should be finished.

In light of Stephen Lawrence Do you think race relations have improved?

I think it has had an impact. Stephen Lawrence is a person that we all feel connected with I think we almost feel like we know or knew him and he is definitely iconic, him and his parents. They have gone through such a tragic experience and they have, the right word feels like they have triumphed, but you should not have to go through such a great loss to feel like you have won anything. I wouldn’t say they have won something but I feel like they have made a impact in peoples lives. Which they will never be forgotten as people and I think when you have done something like that you are on that iconic level and they are icons.

Closure of libraries around the capital, what do you make of councils carting half their libraries how important is it for kids to have libraries in their lives?

It doesn’t sound like a good thing. I think a library is probably a home for a lot of people.

I think in this day and age I think when you are able to read a book online in your house for free I would see why it is probably not as popular as it used to be.

Books are everything, but the funny thing is the first book I read other than kids books was Tinie Temphas book and that was the other day. I just made the decision I haven’t read a book I need to read and I read Tinie Temphas book. What was really funny about that is it made me realize that I didn’t feel to read anything before because no book interested me. What did interest me was that Tinie Tempha had a book and I could relate to it. It is about finding out what people are into and if there is enough stuff you are into then you will read it.

See I have now gone on to Jay Z ‘s book decoded it is massive. It made me feel like what UK artists and urban artists are doing is a big thing, because if Tinie made me pick up a book, he has done that to a lot of other people as well that are not book readers.

Do you think it is possible to meet the love of your life on the underground have you ever met any one on the tube and thought woah she is cute?

Um the tube scenario for me, I haven’t been on a tube for a while but I always remember you know when you go to a particular place say I would be going studio five times that week and then you get on at the Monday at that time you might see someone and you might see them the next day and then you might think well if I see her again then im going to say something tomorrow but you never see them again that is the kind of scenario I’m use to in regards to the train. I think it is really cool proposing on the train and underground. It probably takes along time for her to get upstairs and phone someone and announce it no reception and that but I think you can propose to any one anywhere I think the train is a bit random it is very random.

Do you have any pet hates about being on the tube?

Being on the tube what I always used o worry about when you see in a film they get stuck and people have to get out and walk I always have that in my head when I’m on the train for more than half a hour thinking ahh man do I have to get out and walk if it gets stuck but it never gets stuck!

If you had to get on the tube now would you have to use disguises?

Some how I have managed to just get though life not being recognized as much as I probably would be. I think I move really quick head down and im on the phone and you don’t really look at me twice so I get away with a lot of public places and not been recognized. It takes skill though. Woolly hat.

How much has Amy had a impact on music as a whole and what kind of legacy has she left?

Amy is a name that is embedded in the world for a long time. I think the beauty of her is that everything is wrong but in being so wrong it is so right and I think what that does for people in generally is strong motivation I think on top of having one of the best voices ever heard and being able to sing effortlessly the beauty in her other than her vocals is almost that story of being anything you want to be as long as you are talented and she definitely is that type of figure. She is the type of person when you are thinking I can’t do this she is the type of person who makes you think yes you can. Without her trying to be that figure she just is herself she is definitely iconic in that sense one of the best voices this country has ever heard her as a character and talent and a person is legendary on all fronts. Being ever so un normal but normal and being so wrong and so right and she was a north Londoner.

What are your thoughts on inter racial adoption?

I think inter racial adoption should be allowed I think as long as to be able to adopt they check you out as a person as long as you are capable of being a parent to somebody who doesn’t have a parent then I think that is perfectly fine. If I was every in a situation where I would have to decide about a child of mine or a child I knew to be adopted I wouldn’t effect me what colour they were as long as the home was going to be loving and looked after and they were going to be a parent it would not effect me.
I am sure that in life as a person you would check out about your back ground any way and that would be down to the parents which I am sure they would do I don’t see the problem with it.

-END

DAVID LAMMY MP INTERVIEW TRANSCRIPT-IV BY L360 REPORTER TOM WHITER
TW What are your memories of growing up in Tottenham, as one of the only MPs to grow up in the area they now represent?
DL My memories growing up in Tottenham in the 1970s/1980s are mixed in the sense that I came from a typical West Indian family it wasn’t always easy, my parents didn’t always get on, it was a tough time socially in London in terms of relationships with the police and sometimes the ability to do well at school, but Tottenham has always been a happy place, it’s actually a very residential place; rows and rows of terraced housing with people from all over the world living side by side actually relative to other London boroughs we haven’t got as many estates so very much a neighbourhood where people get on and I remember a lot of time outside in the parks playing football so positive generally but pressures lying behind in family life and that would be the same today, for a lot of people it’s not easy because income isn’t easy and there are pressures in family life.
TW What changes in Tottenham have you seen since then?
DL I think there have been some changes, I think the schools have got hugely better, we take for granted now that people ARE going to university and are succeeding that wasn’t happening before and I think the schools and the hospital have been rebuilt. But there are still huge pressures and the big challenge of big infrastructural regeneration in the area hasn’t happened although neighbourhood renewal has taken place in different wards.
I think the public sector has got a lot better but there’s a lot more to do.
TW How much of the changes are to do with the legacy of Bernie Grant?
DL I think that Bernie’s legacy was a legacy of defiance and fighting against what was a Conservative government, but of course he died in 2000, only 3 years into the New Labour Government. I think he would have loved to have seen some of the things beginning to flower in the constituency but be concerned with many of the things yet to happen.
TW What kind of regeneration have you overseen when you took over from Bernie Grant in 2000?
DL My principal aim when I came in in 2000 under a Labour government was to see the schools improve. At that stage I’m afraid the schools were on 15% of kids getting 5 good A-C GCSEs and we have seen a transformation; now around 60% of them getting 5 good A-C GCSEs, often with English and Maths, and the schools have been renewed.
The hospital has been rebuilt, the public services that people in this area need to rely on are there, we also have a new deals for communities area in the Seven Sisters ward, so we’ve seen big changes, particularly to our housing estates, where kitchens, bathrooms, the conditions people were living in were seriously grim here in Tottenham and again we’ve seen some of that renewed. So I think that that would be the principal advance over this last period, primarily in the public sector and also employment. Unemployment was huge in the 1980s and 90s, it came down in the last ten years, of course it has gone back up again, not quite to the levels of the 1980s, but it’s definitely going in the wrong direction.
TW So the Mayor of London’s regeneration taskforce has put £100 million aside to help areas affected by the riots, you’ve said a lot more money is needed, why?
DL Well my bottom line, is that Tottenham is in need of huge regeneration, that was the case before the riots and that’s why I fought so hard to make sure Tottenham Hotspur football club did not leave the area, I believed that was unacceptable for them to go to Stratford and I was one of the lone voices saying that they should not go to Stratford and we won that battle. It’s interesting that in Tottenham and Croydon, the two areas that were asking for an enterprise zone from the Mayor, were the two areas that saw most devastation during the riots. So I want to see about a billion pounds worth of investment in my constituency, the mayor has set aside 30 million, that is not going to hit the mark for the people of Tottenham, Tottenham deserves the same kind of regeneration that we’ve seen in the Olympic zone, it is as depressed, it is as deprived, it is time now, not just the mayor, got serious about the regeneration we need. Of course all that money can’t just come from the public sector, but we will need about a billion pounds worth of investment.
TW Where have you got this figure of a billion ponds from, studies in your area?
DL If you look at the sort of regeneration we’ve seen in Salford, with half the BBC moving to Salford, if you’ve seen the Gateshead development in the North East of the Country and then again if you look at the Olympic zone and the huge investment in Tower Hamlets, in Newham, in Waltham Forest, in Hackney and in Redbridge, I think you have to recognise in the constituency of Tottenham, with the highest unemployment, with the highest amount of people on benefits, with a tremendous amount of need and a very young population, we need the sort of financial investment that amounts to a billion.
We need jobs, there are not sufficient jobs within the constituency, and it is not enough to expect people to travel into the centre of town for those jobs, we need to be driving jobs here and I think that needs a commitment from the government, a think we need a big government department, a passport office, a student loans company, proper employment from my constituents.
TW You’ve mentioned a few things there you’d like to see and the schools and hospitals that have improved, what infrastructure would you build with a billion pounds?
DL I would start with saying that I think that the Seven Sisters/Victoria line should be extended up through Tottenham, through Northumberland Park into Enfield, connecting people quicker into jobs and infrastructure. I think the link between Tottenham Hale and Stansted which takes an hour is too long and should be quicker and I’m concerned that the government is happy to spend billions on the link between London and Birmingham but it still takes an hour to Stansted because my constituents need those jobs in that airport and they need to get to them quicker and I am pleased that Spurs are staying and that they are going to regenerate their stadium but much needs to happen around that area, as I said I want to see a government department there, I want to see private investment there and if we look at what’s happening in London, look at the Olympic Zone, look at that huge, new Westfield Centre that’s opening up in Stratford, that’s the kind of regeneration we need to see in Tottenham.
TW You mentioned TH, that would be big private investment, do you agree with their assertion that the stadium development will bring more jobs?
DL I think that the plans Tottenham have are good and ambitious they need support to deliver those plans I’m clear that a football stadium on its own is not sufficient, there aren’t enough jobs attached to a football stadium. A lot of regeneration these days seems to be driven by housing, and I don’t think that’s the need here in Tottenham, I think there are density issues already actually in the constituency. What we need are big drivers of employment and that must involve the government, it must involve the private sector, I’d like to see some companies put their HQ here in Tottenham. I’m not convinced at all under the previous government that we should have been driving jobs to different parts of the country, when suburban London is in tremendous need. So as the local MP I’m pretty fierce and actually pretty angry that some of the need that is demonstrated in my constituency is nor being borne out with the levels of investment that are driven, let us remember that the Northumberland Park ward, the ward that surrounds the football club, we have the highest levels of deprivation and the highest levels of unemployment in the country and yet my constituents can look in the papers, can look on television and see footballers getting some of the biggest salaries, there’s a real inequity here and we need to sort it.
TW We’ve spoken to private companies, like Workspace who are on the better buildings for London committee, their CEO is on the regeneration taskforce and they’ve said to us they need some kind of incentive to come to areas like Tottenham, what incentives would you be willing to offer them?
DL Well incentives are the Mayor’s gift, not mine,

(TW, interrupting, “Well what would you say the mayor should be offering?”)

Well I think Boris should have put in place an enterprise zone in my constituency, that’s what I was asking for last year, we didn’t get one. He gave one, funnily enough, to the Olympic area, who already had regeneration going on, so I think that was a mistake. I think you need to attract private investment to areas like Tottenham, I think you need to look very carefully at business rates, capital allowances, you need to make sure you drive businesses to be attracted to the area, staying in the area, and choosing the area over other areas in London. It’s not clear to me the incentives are in place to make sure this happens. I think I would agree with Daniel Levy, the chairman of the football club; we need to see more in that area if we are to attract people to Tottenham over other areas of London.
I am worried that the East is getting a lot, the West was always slightly wealthier, Heathrow and that area, it’s not clear to me what is happening in the North East and in a sense I stand up here for Tottenham, Edmonton and this area of town that needs to see real drivers in regeneration.
TW You’ve also said you’d like to see business with a sense of accountability and that they should look after their employees as well, are you worried businesses that come to the area might be scared that you’ll be pressing on Boris to make them do a lot of things they don’t want to do and drive them away?
DL Look, business is hugely important if you want to drive and area, Tottenham historically has not had enough big business, it’s had small businesses, obviously people have had businesses here all the time, many ethnic minority groups start their own businesses. It’s important we don’t drown these businesses with red tape and regulation, but equally if we’re talking about big business, if we’re building a hospital, we’re building a stadium I think it is right that we say for example that they should take apprentices, and local apprentices, now some big business might take that as regulation, I don’t think that’s regulation, that’s just fair, it’s employment and I think it’s very necessary and it’s my job to say so, robustly.
TW Are you engaging with the youth population and asking what they’d like?
DL Well of course I’m engaged with the youth, this morning I was at the youth centre with the St Anne’s church community, who are doing a lot of work on our estates principally and I think it is important that any regeneration takes in and the views of local residents and local people. But I also say this, it is important that the vision for this community is ambitious and it can be the case in deprived communities that your average 15/16yr old doesn’t know what is possible because they haven’t seen what is possible. I remember that very well because I grew up here and so my challeng as the local mp is to challenge the mayor PM and private invesetors who might come into the area, to be ambitious about this community and to stand up for it. My constituency hasn’t even got a cinema, it hasn’t got a bookshop, there are too many betting shops on our high road because our planning regulations think its ok for every betting shop that wants to, to set up on Tottenham High Road. It’s also about ambition for this community and to challenge those in power to deliver. As an MP in the opposition, I don’t have the purse strings, I haven’t got the money to deliver those things, but what I can do, often pretty vociferously for what I think are the best interests of my constituents.
TW Talking about ambition, shouldn’t we be celebrating the musical success stories from Tottenham, only you’ve said fathers and a sense of community can shield people from, amongst other things, rap culture. It’s conflicting isn’t it, that yes, we should be ambitious, but no we can’t have rap culture?
DL Well, one, let’s not stereotype rap culture. A lot of rap music is great, I listen to a lot of it and it’s fantastic, but equally a lot of it isn’t great. It’s fine if you’re white and middle class and you listen to rap music but you’ve got a lot of other things going on in your life.
If you’re stuck on the 15th floor of a tower block in my constituency and you’re getting the same type of message which is negative about authority, which is alienating and angry, that’s not going to do anything for you.
It’s my job to challenge men who do not want to be responsible for their children. I say that coming from a background where I know what that feel’s like. We cannot have communities where 65% of fathers are not engaged and therefore you have no male role models.
What happens is you get a postcode lottery, people finding their masculinity in peer groups, you get gangs and knife crime. That is a reality for people growing up in my constituency and it’s important I speak out against it in the strongest terms.
That isn’t about dissing rap stars, great we’ve had a few rap stars, but that is not serious regeneration in a community, not all of us can be a rap star. Actually there’s a challenge to those rap stars that exist, and footballers, to put their money where their mouth is financially and give something back to the community.”
TW Do you think parts of Tottenham are stigmatised, like generalising rap music, or, as you referenced in your speech to Dunhill primary on Tuesday, Michael Gove painting a cruel caricature of the borough in an attempt to foist academy statues on a school that doesn’t want it?
DL I think that it is always easy to stigmatise areas that you don’t’ understand. I think that we have a long history, in fact the whole concept of the inner city is a stigma is of itself; I have to say there should be no inner city, just one city. Inner city is often code for something that is separate and different. So I think it is appropriate to challenge political leaders who’ve been to expensive public schools – Michael Gove has never been to a school in Tottenham ever – to demonstrate they understand the situation of parents and teachers in this community and that the business of being in politics is travelling alongside and empathising with and serving people. I’m afraid I see a lot of talking to people and not a lot of getting alongside people and understanding where they’re coming from in relation to our national politicians.
TW Do you think that’s a prime example of the ‘hyper-individualistic age’ you talk about in your book?
DL I’m very concerned that we live in times of gross materialism and consumerism, of big businesses paying CEOs 500 times more than the cashier on the shop floor. Most of my constituents don’t have a living wage, if you are a cleaner, you are also a dinner lady, if you are a security guard, you are also a minicab driver, if you have to work those long hours, how much time have you got to look after your kids to take time with your family? Not very much at all. So our economy is not functioning properly when people have to work these hours and do those kinds of jobs in order to succeed.
These are also tough times for young people, from whatever background, to find proper employment, but for many of my constituents, it’s even harder. They’re facing discrimination in the employment market, and they haven’t got into Oxford or Cambridge. These are real issues, that’s why I continue to return to this issues on behalf of my constituents, because there is a real issues in terms of cutting EMAs, charging £9,000 for university, significant cuts to youth services, these decisions have consequences. These people in power, in government have to stand by the priorities they’ve determined and obviously I would like to see funds spent to deliver for that young people and I worry the decision to spend money elsewhere in areas I think are less important are not good.
TW Hypothetically, with that billion pounds to regenerate Tottenham, how long do you think it would be for the social chage to happen?
DL I think you can get pride back very quickly and actually in areas like Tottenham, people are getting on with it, they’re doing stuff everyday, they are a resilient bunch. So small injections of money can make a difference: in schools by putting extra teachers in the classroom for not that much money, £500,000 would be enough in our schools. You can build passion and resilience, people can start up their own businesses with a small amount of seed money; we’re a very mercantile community here, we’re quite good at being entrepreneurial , all we need is a little bit of money to get going and a little bit of leaning on the banks to lend money so that people can get going. So small things can make a difference pretty quickly.
In terms of real transformation it will take decades. If you look at East London and you look back to before Canary Wharf, which I remember, and then you think of the Olympics building on Canary Wharf, that’s about 3 decades of investment and change in that area and that’s what we need here and that’s what we’ve got to aim towards in North London.
TW So what does a regenerated Tottenham look like?
DL The regenerated Tottenhamis a mixed community, diverse, but mixed income as well. If you think about areas that were similar to Tottenham just a few years ago, think of Stoke Newington, think of Notting Hill where the initial riots were 30 years ago, think of Brixton, these communities now are mixed communities, high incomes and low, side by side and they remain diverse communities as you would expect, so I want to see more of a mixed community, more mixed neighbourhood. It helps our schools succeed. It helps people come back to an area and not feel like they want to leave and area and not return. It helps create the vibrant atmosphere we need in London. Tottenham is the last area where every ward is on the index of deprivation and that what makes it different to parts of Lambeth, parts of Hackney where actually what you get is cheek by jowl rich and poor.
TW I forgot: Do you think your proposed extension to the Victoria Line is more important than the Northern Line extension through Nine Elms to Battersea?
DL I’m very concerned actually, it’s funny isn’t it that the American Embassy moved to Battersea and they get a new tube station when actually we need to connect Tottenham through Edmonton through to Enfield, make it easier for people to get into town for jobs, we get nothing. That seems to me to be brutally unfair when Ken was mayor, he was committed to North East London, I havent seen that with Boris.

-END

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JASMINE’S JUICE FEATURING A CAREY-CANNON CHRISTMAS and a (Trevor) NELSON NEW YEAR!

JASMINE WITH MARIAH (pic by Liron)
JASMINE AND MARIAH.
Christmas wouldn’t be the same if I didn’t spend it with my Christmas family, Mr and Mrs Cannon (Mariah and Nick) and their extended family annually in Aspen. This year was as wonderful as past years where we attend Midnight Mass, ride horse sleighs through the snow, take the dogs (JJ, Cha Cha Jill E Beans and crew) for their snowy walks, go to the top of mountains and watch as skiers and snowboarders do their thing, visit Joan Boyce’s diamond store, eat Mariah’s delicious home cooked treats and decorate the Christmas tree!

JASMINE AS EVER-ON TOP OF THE WORLD!

JILL E BEANS TAKES JASMINE ON A SNOWY MOUNTAIN WALK!
As if those treats weren’t enough, this year we were joined by 2 new additions that had been in mummy’s tummy last Christmas- the Cannon baby twins otherwise known as Ms Monroe and Moroccan Scott aka #dembabies!. Many fun hours playing, feeding and cuddling were had by us all! -What an amazing way to kick off 2012-being Auntie Jasmine to 2 little gorgeous bundles of fun! Give me another couple of years and I will have them putting on English accents and playing dress up!! sadly nick then came down with a kidney problem and was hospitalised-get well soon brother! London wants to see you out here soon with your Mrs when you come to do your comedy specials!

JASMINE WITH HER MATE TREVOR!
Then we flew home on New Years Eve, got practically straight off the jet, had a mini panic as BRITISH AIRWAYS informed us our luggage was still in transit via LOS ANGELES and slid into our emergency plan B frocks and glad rags for my mate TREVOR NELSONS NEW YEARS EVE PARTY which he held at the Camden centre. When Trevor throws a party you can be rest assured the crowd, ambience and music will be on point. The venue was heaving inside and out on our arrival merely minutes before midnight. Trevor’s right hand business lady for the night- Rachel- thrust glasses of champers in our hands and shoved us into VIP where our tables awaited us. Scarily-drinks were free all night and by the time we arrived many peeps were more than a little merry. Ladies were en masse doing the candy dance (otherwise known to the 80’s generation as the electric slide), stepping on each others toes with their vertiginous heels, we jumped onstage with Trev to clink and congratulate him on such a festive night, men were running around trying to persuade the sexy ladies to slow dance-oh we had fun! In fact in one night-I-who never drink more than 1 glass of alcohol per night, put away a glass of wine, 3 glasses of champers, a rum shot, a double baileys and wasn’t sick or drunk! Admittedly I felt too wobbly to drive home and so crashed at my mates flat right across the road from the venue and did the very un-classy walk of shame out of the hotel block of flats the next morning in the previous nights heels and frock-shame!

A big sigh of relief as Stephen Lawrence’s murderers were sentenced to prison. They should have got at least 18 years for the amount of time they avoided jail though. A sense of justice for the parents of Stephen but lets not confuse the atrocity with knife crime-this was not about knife crime-it was pure racist hate. Is our society any different now than centuries ago? Whilst we of colour prove our talent in many worlds including law, music, Medicine and sport have we really won any mutual respect from our Caucasian Brits? Was tram lady representative of more of the UK population than we would like to admit to? Is it easier for racists now more than ever as black people are killing each other in such vast numbers that the BNP and EDL can sit back and let us do their jobs for them? All worth pondering as we begin this new year with positive intentions!

Now I’m off to do some interviews for the TV shows LONDON360 and UK360 with Sir Terry Wogan, the Right honourable David Lammy and BAFTA winner Noel Clarke (who is off to Hollywood next week to film his new role in Star Trek 2! . I need me some letters before or after my name-I can see it now Lady Dotiwala, or Jasmine Dotiwala MBE. Sort it out someone!
I’m also off to plan my impending birthday party-its my birthday week this week- I’m wondering how I can make my next 12 months even more fabulous and self fulfilling than my last year. It’s a tough job-but only I can do it!

JASMINE’S JUICE featuring ADIDAS PARTY and a HAPPY NEW YEAR!


JASMINE WITH BASHY, ADIDAS HEAD CELEB HONCHO PAOLA LUCKTUNG AND ADAM DEACON!
Happy New Year readers! And yes! Whilst many of us are complaining about our lot in life there are many that didn’t wake to see 2012 start so lets be thankful for our lot in life. It surely could be worse! And once upon a time it was!
If you’re under 30 you wont remember how it used to be. But the UK urban entertainment scene wasn’t always this unified and connected. We’ve comer a long way. Back in the day I recall rival music awards hating and sabotaging each other, UK radio DJ’s and play-listers refusing to play British urban acts, film companies not taking UK urban actors or film makers seriously and artists themselves seeing themselves as an island not to be mixing with each other.
To use a cliché, ‘back in the day’ acts would ridicule each other, record label exec’s would snigger at the concept of British youth making it in our charts and this countries youth had pretty much accepted that their worlds were going to be musically reflected by American urban music.
Just this Christmas season gone I realised that we as a community have progressed in certain areas in leaps and bounds.
One blisteringly cold Sunday night just before Christmas whilst juggling emotional visits to my hospitalised dad and writing Christmas cards on my sofa I thought I’d try and balance my life out with a bit of fabulosity and so popped to the Adidas Christmas party at UNDER THE BRIDGE in Fulham where all the sports brands most valued celebrity clients were in attendance. Earlier that day a huge basketball event called Adislam had taken place in Brentwood, Essex (it seems like these days the only way is Essex!), and a host of celebs and music stars that had taken part were having a well deserved party drink to finish their day. The invitation said ‘’festive’’ so not having planning any outfit I threw on my favourite white satin Adidas tracky top with long fringing on the arms and matched it with black jodhpurs and black knee length fringed boots and to top it off plonked a huge fluffy pair of black ear muffs on my pony tailed head. (This is me on an understated night! LOL).
The party was a lovely evening as the stage was in full festiveness with a silver Christmas tree and the legendary giant Adidas shoe DJ booth and in the house were….deep breath before I kick off-this list is long…Wretch32 (who’s neck was aching him after nodding his head too much onstage whilst performing but he was still the charming handsome young man that he always has been pre-fame), Bashy (who looked festive as if he’d really made the effort to look fly-good ole bish bash bosh!), So Solids Megaman (who I don’t see out often but when I do the party is around him with him jumping up and down hard all night especially to the old skool jungle beats!), Chipmunk (who had an extra busy night as he joined Sneakbo onstage at the 02 arena earlier in the night) , G Fresh, Baby Blue (who looked as cute as ever-I must see her perform soon!) , Adam Deacon (who always acts in the humblest manner and seems embarrassed by the attention by his fans-but I know he loves it really!) , Scorcher (the ladies heart throb LOL!) , designer Wale Adeyemi (who always joins me in our dance routine to Jay and Kanye’s n****** in Paris), DJ Dodge who had flown back home from his L.A pad to see how the UK does!), industry head Ugo, MC Ty (who I had to convince/drag into the festive photo booth for silly pics!), DJ Swerve (who was still ecstatic and loved up with his newly born baby girl), girl group Rogue and their manager JP, one half of 1Xtra’s radio duo Vis, vocalist and soon to be star Josh Kumra, , former 1Xtra playlist head/now The Hub entertainment CEO Austin Daboh with his clients the ever vivacious blonde Mac Twins, hip hops photographer to the stars Paul H, and of course DJ Manny Norte who had everyone running to the dance floor with his as ever hyper than hype set! I looked around and thought’ there’s something missing?’’. Then it became clear ,there were no groupies in the room-impressive-cos it would’ve been groupie heaven!)
MUSIC mystro Richie P had brought along a very dangerous rum cake which we all devoured and forced Ashley Walters and Megaman to get stuck into too!

JASMINE AND THE RUM CAKE MASSIVE- JP, NADIA, RICHIE P, MEGA AND PAOLA!

JASMINE AND ASHLEY WALTERS GET MERRY ON THE RUM CAKE!
The Adidas head honcho celeb ladies Paola, Aisha and Akua were skanking hard on the dance floor and as I looked around the room I couldn’t help think what a great sense of positivity and unity there was in the room between everyone. If we can bottle this and gift it to all 2012 then there’s no holding us back! #TEAMUK are destined to be even bigger this year! Lets go!

JASMINE’S JUICE featuring KOJO, PRINCE AZIM, MARIAH, EVA!


JASMINE WITH KOJO!
Its that time of year! Full of Christmas cheer and numerous Christmas parties to attend. this past 6 days alone I have had 3 work parties, dinners and cocktails, attended the very fabulous posh peoples puffa jacket party for designer Mon Clare at their Christmas cocktails evening, shook my booty at the Adidas EIM end of year bash at under the bridge at Stamford bridge, congratulated the Spirit of London ambassadors at the SOLA Christmas ball at the Mayfair Hotel,
So last week Mariah flew into town to attend Prince Azim’s NOBLE GIFT GALA ball at the Dorchester Hotel in Park Lane. The Noble Gift Gala is an event that pays ‘tribute to those who help support and foster awareness for children and the empowerment of women around the world.’ Mariah was the guest of honour at the event and received the 2011 Noble Gift Humanitarian Award for her efforts in helping disadvantaged children. Mariah has generously donated her time and energy to a range of philanthropic causes near to her heart, including Save the Music and The Make-A-Wish Foundation. A tremendous supporter of children’s charities, both domestic and international, Mariah, in partnership with the Fresh Air Fund founded Camp Mariah, a retreat for inner city children to explore career development. So you can see that Mariah’s impact transcends the music industry to leave an indelible imprint upon the world at large.
On the Saturday morning Upon her arrival, MC was welcomed by a huge crowd of her fans outside the Dorchester who congratulated her on her new baby twins otherwise known as “dembabies” and sang her original Christmas tunes “All I Want For Christmas Is You,” “Oh Santa,” and “When Christmas Comes”. MC spoke to the fans, signed autographs and even took pictures with the fan gifts later posted on her twitter. We hung out in her suite all afternoon and then made our way down to the red carpet where my favourite desperate housewife- Eva Longoria looked sweet in a long flowing purple gown and she bought along her boyfriend of 10 months, Eduardo Cruz, brother of Penelope Cruz. I also spotted legendary model Jerry Hall on our table who wore a knee length black dress and opted for flat shoes as she arrived with her husband Warwick Hemsley. Wealthy lady about town and new reality TV star Tamara Ecclestone arrived in an attention grabbing black sequined dress but none outshone our girl Mariah who was the guest of honour at the event and received the 2011 Noble Gift Humanitarian Award for her efforts in helping disadvantaged children. The event was held at the Dorchester Hotel and honoured Mariah Carey for her charity work. Proceeds went to Eva’s charity-The Eva Longoria Fund and there were plenty of celebrities on hand to donate. We were treated to musical performances by Leona Lewis, Dionne Bromfield and a wonderful band and Mariah made a very heartfelt touching speech when awarded her award by Prince Azim. A great night!

Finally I caught up with my old MTV BASE talent and friend Kojo who has been plonking his fingers in many pies in a way that makes me stay proud of him. As well as hosting comedy nights across the country and performing onstage weekly Kojo is also now the main breakfast show presenter on ChoiceFM radio and his star looks to expand even more next year! Kojo popped into the BBC staff canteen for a catch-up. He explained to me that after his very successful stint at MTV BASE (he was even nominated for a CDN Award for Kojo’s comedy funhouse!), he had gone to America to learn and grow as a person and comic. He won a place in the American stand up show “last comic standing” and so got a visa so thought he could use the visa to stay and work with one of his mentors –hip hop godfather Russell Simmons. he explained to me that he ‘’wanted to learn how to really do well because at one stage I really lost my hunger’’. He continued ‘’I had done MTV Base, Fresh Prince of Hackney and many more and was giving to many others but felt slightly lost so went to get his hunger back in the USA’’.
‘’I did that for a year’’ he explained ‘’I wanted to just go away and live. Richard prior wrote about what he lived, his real experiences. It took me a lot of courage to pack and move. It was character building. I knocked on a lot of doors and everyone was too busy. In New York I had no time to worry about others. All of us were on our own grind and hustle. It was about how to survive’’. But proving he still does have the Hackney boy in him Kojo hustled and got himself onto New York radio stations like Hot 97 with DJ cypher sounds.
After a year Kojo was ready to return home. He told me felt like he had enough experiences to talk about. Kojo gushed ‘’People think the USA is great etc but I really missed the UK’’.
Kojo had decided that his Game plan on his UK return was to do mainstream shows. He took no bookings for a year except his corks wine bar regular Sunday comedy cub and jongleurs comedy club to pay the bills. ‘’I was Looking at other big British comics like Michael McIntyre etc so I spent 2 years doing mainstream festivals like the Edinburgh festival so people could see I was credible. My experience with the BBC and MTV Base all adds to my stand up. Hanging with Russell in New York and accompanying him on yoga classes and business-this all opened my eyes’’.
Kojo admitted that he really wanted to write a film with producer Damien jones who produced Kidulthood /Adulthood. He learnt that writing was a good talent to have credits for so he wrote a film and a cartoon series. He wrote numerous scripts and 2 are about to go into production. One is a film called “The Weekend”. Another is a cartoon animation titled “The Hoodz” about a black family who win the lottery and think all their troubles have gone. But they’ve just begun. Kojo’s film is in production from march and expected to be out in October.
Keeping the whole scene unified is important to keep pushing more new talent out into the nation and one man helping do that is my friend and film director/actor Noel Clarke who has put Kojo in his new movie titled ‘’The Knot’’ which is out on valentines day 2012. In THE KNOT Kojo plays a delivery guy in a strong role in 5 scenes!
As many of you already know, ChoiceFM approached Kojo to become the breakfast show presenter earlier this year in March too. Kojo said he felt like this was a natural transition and progression. Kojo stated ‘’ I wanted to have a voice’’. Next he brought in his co host- DJ Max, as he wanted a female co-host with experience. Now he is talking to a very diverse audience-he has his comedy fans as well as a captive daily morning radio audience. When asked who his favourite radio host was from ChoiceFM’s history Kojo immediately stated old favourite Geoff Shuman due to his daily morning prank calls. ‘’I always respected Geoff’s co-host DJ martin jay too who was there 14 years, Martin gave me a lot of good advice and supported me when I took over from him’’.
Next Kojo is putting on another one-man live show called ‘‘live n kicking’’. This was inspired he says as ‘’I’ve spent 11 years doing things on MTV and online and there just aren’t enough big opportunities for us to do our own thing-so I’m doing my own thing again. Now its time for me to get something on the public’s shelves. People buy DVD’s. And I want to be on shelves with Michael McIntyre and other mainstream comics. Live and kicking will take me in a different direction and we are filming it for DVD release. . I’m much more mature now than I ever was. In the show I will be talking about my thoughts on the riots and why they happened. And Obama. Will we ever have a black prime minister? And why David Lammy isn’t it. I have invited David Lammy but have no idea if he’ll turn up. I’ll be talking about my own experiences of being in foster care and many other things that the ethnic communities are afraid to talk about. I’ll have a section on Relationships. I’m in a relationship now. (And yes my lady will be in the house!)’’
Live n kicking IS all about the stories. It’s about Kojo’s progression. No doubt all his mates from the press, celebs, footballers and more will be in the audience. Lets continue to catapult our ethnic young talent up and all make this night a huge success! Will you be in the house? I will!
To get on board the next stop in Kojo’s rise to fame check www.OFFICIALkojo.com for tickets-see you there!

JASMINE’S JUICE feat CREATIVE DIVERSITY AWARDS and ESTELLE!


CDN AWARD NOMINEE FILM MAKER YEMI BAMIRO WITH JASMINE AND MUSIC ARTIST AKALA
The great and the good from the TV world all upped sticks and made their way to Manchester this past week for the annual CDN TV (CREATIVE DIVERSITY AWARDS) AWARDS.
I found myself on a train with one of my MEDIA TRUST DIRECTORS as well as SKY TV’S bigwig lady (managing director-entertainment and news) Sophie Turner Lang speeding to the BBC’s new northern home in Manchester called media city. Media city is a massive small town like development built in Salford on the quays so very pretty location-even though the wet rain and torrential winds didn’t greet us with warmth.

On arrival at the event we were greeted by trays of wine and champagne and a canapé reception where I caught up with music artist Akala-who was presenting an award and also nominated for 2 awards, ITN news reader Charlene White, former radio 1 producer for Trevor Nelson/ current BBC radio producer-Devon Daley, TV producer Yemi Bamiro-nominated for his TV show on channel 4-life of rhyme starring Akala and many more.
Former channel 4 head of diversity and mayoral candidate Oona King was dressed more casually than ever in lilac pants and shirt, the BBC big wig Pat Younge was looking well, coronation streets Shobna Gulati (Sunitta) looking very foxy in a tight pencil skirt and sequinned top that showed off her full cleavage with killer designer heels and a long flowing high ponytail, a few Hollyoaks presenters, and other TV power players.
Tameka Epsom from Eastenders hosted the night with Cherlee Houston. Both had a few autocue problems. The script that was written was quite wordy and long winded-not the best set up for a comedienne actress but she did her best.
Director of the BBC Mark Thompson did a great intro where he mentioned that BBC’s 3 new main aims include wanting to represent young people better and more fairly. From there it was award after award. Jimmy Akingbola and Ellen Thomas onstage-presented Best Drama Award- winner to the BBC show Luther which stars my friend and yours-the delectable Idris Elba. Chief Exec from Channel 4 David Abraham presented TV company of the year (for diversity behind and in front of screen) to Endemol who make reality shows like Big Brother and Survivor! Coronation Street’s Shobna Gulati presented best comedy and entertainment programme award to Phoneshop! The Diversity Innovation Award went to Battlefront! Best News Award went to the BBC Journalism Trainee Scheme.
Best Factual Programme winner was the amazing series Panorama-undercover care-the abuse exposed. All in all a great night that really showed diversity is in a good place with more of a focus on it than ever before. An amazing man called Clive Jones CBE who founded the CDN spoke at the end when he was awarded the Fellowship Award and said that when he was heading up many mainstream broadcasters like ITV back in the day he was astonished that with the UK’s diverse population that they weren’t represented fairly or equally on TV. He had his team add a black actor to coronation St years ago and sat back in his chair to watch the great moment and then held his head in his hands as he noted the black actor was portraying a thief that had broken into Emily Bishops store!. Clive added facts that made the audience sit up and note that if you have an African or Asian surname you will have to send at least 20 more CV’s out to jobs to even be considered for an interview. That Chinese boys perform better than Caucasian boys but still get paid 20% less, by 2051 the black and ethnic minority population in the UK will be 20million-so 30% of the TV audience will be ethnic-isn’t it time to start investing in our diverse cultures now? food for thought for all media makers.


JASMINE WITH INTERNATIONAL STYLIST TO THE STARS-KAREN BINNS AND INTERNATIONAL MUSIC STAR-ESTELLE!
I ended the week by having dinner with Estelle who was back in her hometown of London on some promotion before heading out to Asia for some promotion. I took her and a few friends to the IVY CLUB- next door to the infamous IVY RESTAURANT but even more exclusive as it’s not for the public but members only. We had a great evening reminiscing and catching up over Bellini’s.
Ending on a great note- YOUNG PEOPLES QUESTION TIME has been given the green light for BBC3-so finally our youth will have their thoughts, hopes, frustrations and voices heard. The greater population will be able to see just what the young are going through and hopefully a greater connection between society will bring forth a lil more harmony- whoop whoop!

JASMINES JUICE featuring MICHELLE WILLIAMS!


JASMINE WITH MICHELLE WILLIAMS!
This week I’ve been up to Manchester to the BBC’s new media city and back for the CDN CREATIVE DIVERSITY AWARDS, West London’s finest superstar Estelle popped back home for a few days to talk about her forth coming new music, attended 4 early business Christmas parties, 2 dinner parties and launched one new TV show-UK 360! PHEW! IM TIRED JUST READING THAT!

In a week that’s seen Chipmunk celebrate his 21st birthday, Game, Miguel and Jill Scott pop through our capital city for shows I made time for only velvet toned singer with the sveltest figure ever from Destiny’s Child-the diva that is Michele Williams invited me to a very special, opulent night to watch her perform her Single ‘’On the run’’ at The gallery at the Westbury Hotel in Central London. As we arrived the paparazzi were already there awaiting that ‘’stepped out of the car’’ shot and the queue was lined up with guests going all around the block. On entry we were offered unlimited silver trays of prosecco and tiny canapés that were delicious! at the drinks reception where I spotted former eternal singer Vernie, Multi-award winning Casting Directors for commercials, film, TV, dance, music videos, world tours and more-Mark Summers, Shakazulu restaurant owner and man about town roger Payne, MOBO head Kanya King, music PR maven Fiona Ramsay and many other movers and shakers from the more glitterati scene.
I had a lovely catch up with ex eternal singer Vernie who still looks as classy and sophisticated as she ever did and is living her life like it’s gorgeous!

JASMINE WITH EX ETERNAL MEMBER VERNIE AND MUSICAL DIRECTOR JOSEPH ROSS.
Someone also mentioned to me that whilst we were hob nobbing with Michelle Williams, the original line up of girl group Sugababes were in the studio that very night (Mutya, Keisha and Siobhan) and that they were coming back with a vengeance. Well done to them all I say-that was the bestline up and how ironic what with the latest line up already having broken up and been dropped by their current label!
Next a camera crew from SKY LIVING came over to ask if we would mind commenting on a young lady they were making a lookalike programme on. They pointed across to a young lady that they said was a Beyonce lookalike and asked us to comment on her. Well it was awkward. The lady was beautiful in her own way but by no means resembled Bey. In fact I felt bad for her cos it felt like the TV people might be for TV purposes making her look a bit of a fool. the lady was tall, wearing a very un Beyonce style pair of shoes, wrongly matched to skin colour flesh coloured tights, a cheap gold sequinned tunic that barely covered her bum, and had huge bouffant styled black hair! Bey would never have hair darker than honey, her waist would betightly cinched in with a corset and this lady was not in any way a lookalike. She was clearly very nervous and felt out of place. I felt bad for her. The Beyonce I know and love would be smiling 100% of the time in public through her teeth even whilst talking and be extremely confident and work the room. Oh dear. I can’t wait to see the finished show.
Anyhoo-I digress-0the main reason everyone was actually there was to see a REAL destiny’s child. Once we had all finished gossiping we were led to the basement area into a beautifully extravagant room with paintings and plushness where Michelle performed her song alongside 2 female dancers and totally rocked the place with her sassy vocals.
At the end of the night we were all sent home singing the single as we left and handed a beautifully bespoken cupcake made by ‘’cute as a cupcake’’ with an image of Michelle on top. So we literally ate Michelle Williams!

JASMINE’S JUICE featuring LONDON360 AT CITY HALL and PARIS!


ME. TRYING TO FIGURE OUT HOW TO SLIP THE ‘MONA LISA’ INTO MY POCKET DISCREETLY.
Bonjour readers! I’ve just returned from a short break in Paris where I experienced 4 very extravagant days and nights which included showing a Paris virgin (someone who’s never visited Paris-not a sexually inexperienced Parisian!), the sights of the city!
The Eurostar tipped us out at the infamous gare du nord train station and a taxi scooped us up and delivered us to our hotel based in the trocadero district in the 8th arrondissment just off the world famous champs elysee. We spent days exploring the Louvre where my friend pondered how difficult it would be to steal the Mona Lisa painting, taking silly photos in front of the Eiffel tower in strange perspectives that make it look like we are touching the tip of the tower, and walking into every designer store along the bling covered rue saint-honour exciting the assistants by insinuating we were buying up the store, especially when we walked into D&G with American music star Florida!!
We had 3 extremely expensive dinners at opulent establishments, the Buddha bar (extremely stush, great setting under a giant Buddha-but awful food and service), KONG restaurant (designer / architect Philippe starks place-stunning ariel views, sexy venue and people and amazing food!), and finally my favourite-L’Cantine- (a very sexy restaurant with a live dj playing classic soul and r&b as diners dined in a beautifully decorated modern dimly lit sexy venue). Things I pondered whilst out there; is it a requirement by law that every French citizen wear a mon clare puffa jacket? Has anyone tested whether raw minced meat eaten as a French delicacy can cause food poisoning? Is wine a mandatory accompaniment with absolutely EVERY meal? Do French kids have style genes from birth that mean they look as if they were styled by a vogue editor? Why are Japanese tourists so obsessed with Louis Vuitton clothing-the stores looked like a rave was in full swing with 24-7 queues outside? Are most French people rude to the English or is it just that they refuse to try and communicate with us in English? Can we teach British cafes how to make real hot chocolate the way the French do with real cocoa? Do the Paris tourist board realise what a faux pas it is that they demolished the café outside the Louvre that Carrie Bradshaw visited in sex and the city? Did you know that Frances president Sarkozy has real big pimping merit- no one is allowed to toot or beep their car horns at any time outside his residential palace in case they wake him-now that’s gangsta! Hilariously French taxi drivers explained to us that the British, American and Japanese embassies were so stingy they didn’t want to pay towards the rue saint honour Christmas lights all the way down the street outside their buildings hence the beautifully lit street is all unified in twinkling decorations until you arrive outside these 3 buildings where its just dead as if Christmas forgot it! Idiots guide to Paris tourist tip; flag down your own taxis as the concierge requesting it for you incurs a 15-euro surcharge before you’ve even stepped into the car!


SWAY, ADAM DEACON AND BASHY WITH US AT CITY HALL!
Before that though London was a buzz with the London 360 event at city hall where we began with a drinks reception before escorting everyone into the main city hall amphitheatre chamber for a talk and screening of the highlights for series 1.
TREVOR NELSON, ADAM DEACON, EDDIE NESTOR AT LONDON360!
Supporters like Alesha Dixon, Trevor Nelson, Eddie Nestor and I spoke in the Mayor’s chamber in front of an audience of 300 of London’s movers and shakers. The event was to celebrate London 360 series 1 and its impact on the residents and stories about London’s communities.

LONDON360 SERIES 1 AND 2 REPORTERS WITH ME!
Reporters from series 1 and 2 talked about their experiences. Trevor emphasised his love of London and why a show like this is necessary. Organisers from a variety of organisations like Orin Lewis from the ACLT explained how involvement in getting his story out there had helped his profile and Eddie Nestor spoke about the career progression for our reporters from TV to radio and beyond.

ACLT’S ORIN LEWIS WITH ME AND MY L360 REPORTER FUNMI OLUTOYE.
Many of our reporters have gone onto a wide variety of jobs within the media like Sky News, ITN, the Jeremy Kyle show, Tiger Aspect production company, SBTV and Shine TV. Many of London’s most influential press and bloggers (Grimedaily, the Mactwins/Hub entertainment, 3AM girls-The Mirror, THE VOICE, OHTV and more) scrambled around at the end to grab press interviews with acts like Sway, Bashy, Princess Nyah and the big wigs that run London from City Bridge. If you know any youngsters between 18-25 years old that want a start on their media career ladder get in touch with me at hiphop.com! We are London-. People. Powered. Change!.

JASMINES JUICE FEATURING Evening Standard’s most influential 1000, TINIE TEMPAH show, ALESHA DIXON LONDON360 AMBASSADOR!


JASMINE AT THE ES 1000 CELEBRATION NIGHT!
The very posh Evening standard 1000 most influential gathering party at Covent Garden transport museum was a who’s who of London. The transport museum is a fascinating space that every Londoner should check out-its history of the capitals transport with real old skool buses and trains on display and a real gem in the centre of town. On arrival on the drizzly wet night, the red carpet was surrounded with heaving paparazzi and just inside A lister after A lister were having theirpics taken up against the evening standards branding board. Once we had navigated the museum and led to the main central stage space I spotted Jemima Khan, Boris Johnson, Ken Livingstone, Dragons Den panellists,
A very fancy food menu and champagne were distributed the whole night. There was atower of cupcakes and the room was like a James Bond party and the over powering scent of money and power were not to be sniffed at. Boris Johnson kept a wide berth from his old nemesis Ken Livingston, The former Mayor posed alongside Lib-Dem rival Brian Paddick. “Where’s Boris?” asked Mr Livingstone. “We want Boris to make it a threesome. We want a threesome with Boris.” cringe.com. Vivienne Westwood and Kids Company charity founder Camila Batmanghelidjh had an unspoken outfit competition to see who could be more eccentric. Pop star Holly Valance and her billionaire boy friend Nick Candy made a striking couple. My mates tried not to ogle male model David Gandy too hard. Brian Paddick, Jemima Khan, Riz Lateef, Kathy Lette, Henry Holland. BA head Willie Walsh Ian Duncan Smith and Toby Young were all chatting and laughing hard. It was good company to be in!

Next Tinie Tempah and his manager Dumi invited me to come and watch his gig at Wembley. The whole arena was packed out and I sat in wonder observing the crowd and how far we’d come since the days when a UK urban act couldn’t even get a gig at the jazz café let alone a few nights at Wembley to a sold out crowd!. The support were a class with Tinie’s mate Labrinth warming up alongside DJ Zane Lowe and DJ Nero who turned the whole rave pre-Tinie into a hot sweaty rave. a real jump up and down, to every beat including the one in your head , mosh pit of madness!. By the time Tinie came onstage they were amped up to hysteria and the show was magic! Fantastic visuals and graphics that were mesmerising alongside a simple but structured framed stage set that lit up in a variety of guises throughout kept us engaged. Tinie performed hit after hit alone and with his buddy Kelly Rowland and left the crowd overly hype and content as they left at the end of the night.

Like many parts of the country West London has its own gang and youth issues and the drama between Kilburn and Mozart Estates in that part of the city has been well documented. Not all the youth in these areas are into negative pastimes though and as proof there was a massive turn out at Ladbroke Groves Tabernacle Centre for The Avenues Show where all the young people from the club performed a variety of song, dance and spoken word sets for a very happy audience. The talent was of a brilliant standard and I was more than impressed! The youngsters raised £3000 in ticket sales and hopefully that money will go back into funding their club and regenerating their area!

Next I attended the JAMAICA HIGH COMMISSION’S CELEBRATION OF KINGSTON at the Jamaica High Commission in Kensington where there were presentations from key travel and tourism officials on howKingston will be supported on a world stage into 2012 for the Olympics in London. I know from my inside contacts that a certain part of London is going to be transformed into a mini Jamaica city where no doubt there will be much excitement!


Alesha Dixon invited me to come and see her on set as she made her charity video for this years poppy appeal event in Central London. She was paying homage to Dame Vera Lynn with a modern more up-tempoversion of the war classic ‘’We’ll meet again’’. She looking drop dead gorgeous in a floor length slinky ball gown and dramatic make up. She also wished the LONDON360 TV show luck with our City Hall event (more on that event next week) that celebrated series 1 with the mayor, youth, reporters, press, celebs and more. Alesha spoke at the event and said ‘’ as soon as I heard London 360 involved London’s young people uncovering grass roots news stories, I wanted to get on board and support it. I’m part of a generation of Londoner’s that believes in positive stories about our capital and its communities.it can be difficult for young people in today’s climate and it is important to encourage and support them through mentoring, training and real industry experiences like those offered by media trust. It’s vital for young people and local communities to have a voice in mainstream media, to talk about the things that matter to them and showcase the great work they are doing in their communities. Earlier this year London 360 highlighted an issue i feel passionate about, female genital mutilation. It’s really important to raise the profile of issues like this and encourage debate in the wider community. Thanks to London 360 this feature aired on TV and online, as well as subsequently being picked up by BBC Radio London and in a national newspaper. It’s amazing that the young reporters have captured so many untold stories about our city over the past few months! London 360 has enormous potential and will continue to affect the capital with positive change’’. Then I had some good news for Alesha. Because of the success of LONDON360 the TV show is now being extended across the country so UK360 begins at the end of this month. As if that wasn’t enough a YOUNG PEOPLES QUESTION TIME is being planned for our screens next year too! All change for a positive impact between adults, youth and society!
Next Boris Johnson called us and said ‘’’this is a great celebration of talent, and shows how gifted and creative young Londoners from across the capital are. It is important for young people to have a chance to get together and debate, as well as hear from experienced professionals in the media industry as they start their own careers. I’m pleased to endorse the Media Trust’s work and wish them well’’.
With Alesha and every other major celeb nowadays paying serious attention to giving back and charitable issues to help society we are all #WINNING!

JASMINE’S JUICE featuring DAVID GEST’S-LIFE OF AN ICON MOVIE PREMIERE and AKALA’S HIPHOP SHAKESPEAR SHOW!

Its easy to become complacent about fabulous events in London town as there are so many every week, but once in a while one comes up that still excites everyone and has the whole city buzzing. One such event was the film premier for ‘’MICHAEL JACKSON- THE LIFE OF AN ICON’’ (a David Gest production) that was held at the Empire, Leicester Square. As you can imagine it was pandemonium in the square with security, fans and tourists all bustling through. The red carpet was heaving with celebs but we all persevered through the rain and finally found our seats. I had kindly been given a set of 10 tickets for the film premier and the dinner afterwards (worth £15,000!) at the Connaught rooms and invited amongst my guests music manager Richard Pascoe, graphics design guru Troy Davies (Interscope), the D&G celeb team ladies Ruth and Chandni, former Honeyz lead singer Celena and her man, celeb facialist Nuz Shugaa and PR maven Jodie Dalmeda. Sitting next to us was magician Dynamo and just behind us MOBO’s Kanya King and BBC reporter Brenda Emmanus.
Michael’s sister Remi and brother Tito Jackson along with one of Michael’s closest long-time friends David Gest did the film intro onstage and Michael’s abuse-trail lawyers including Susan Yu (who proved MJ innocent in court) were also onstage all talking about Michael and their favourite memories and anecdotes about him which was lovely as it reminded you of how human he was. . David Gest interviewed the Jackson family members about the innocence of Michael Jackson. Lawyer Susan stated ‘’There was no doubt that Michael was innocent when we 1st met him”. She added ‘’Martin Bashir was a disaster and refused to answer q’s”.
They told us that in the recording studio “Michael would jump onto the studio desk and dance and scream his songs until the speakers blew up. That’s how he knew he had a hit”. Tito revealed “Michael had 7 Bentleys and offered me one, I said Michael I cant take your Bentley-Michael said sure you can and so I took the one that had been signed by numerous stars like Beyonce…and.(he hesitated)…Liza Minelli..LOL’’. David Gest and the audience laughed as Tito paused before mentioning David’s ex wife Liza! The MJ film is fascinating. What a man. What a life. How hounded he was by vultures. It also included many amazing anecdotes from his friends and family over the years. A totally powerful and mesmerising film. Michaels mum Katherine said ‘’it’s a truly remarkable film that captures the true character, wit and sensitivity of my son. Producer David Gest takes you on an emotional rollercoaster that will bring people to tears as well as really understand who the man behind the music was and is’’.
Straight after the film the entire cinema load of tuxedo clad men and ball gown draped ladies trotted up the road to Covent Gardens Connaught Rooms for the star-studded gala reception, where the paparazzi were out in full force snapping away.
Outside I caught up with Capital Radios entertainment reporter Kevin Hughes before a pap asked me to pose alongside Tito and Dynamo. Anytime this happens I cringe inside wondering if they’ve mistaken me for someone else and how peeved they’ll be when they realise they have a nobody in their press photo LOL. David Gest and his friend –man about town-Imad Handi -greeted and caught up with us at the entrance of the ballroom and guided us to our table where we were treated to a slap up 3 course meal where much fun and jokes were had before a few of the Motown legends attending sang for us until the early hours as we slow danced. We had performances by legends like Martha Reeves, Peabo Bryson, Deniece Williams and more!
Dancing up a storm after dinner to the live performers was Kanya, Brenda, Ricky and Bianca from Eastenders, Celena Honeyz, actress Preeya Kalidas, stylist Richard Shoyemi and more. What a surreal night at the ‘Michael Jackson; life of an icon’ premier and dinner.


Next I went to church with Akala and Bashy. It was St Peters Church in Notting Hill where First Direct bank were holding a ‘’dialogue’’ festival in the church where fascinating acts like Pérez Hilton, Tim key, will self and many more were performing sets across a week. Akala’s Hip Hop Shakespeare Company were part of the line up one night so we went to check them out. Pre-show Akala invited us backstage to the dressing room where he was chilling out before he hit the stage by kicking around a football with a young fan. There were an abundance of red velvet cupcakes, which he asked us to help ourselves to. Stunningly I declined after seeing a photo of myself last week next to a ridiculously skinny person that made me look like a ridiculous obese person! The church venue had been transformed into a theatre setting and it felt right. It felt community like and important and the positive vibe testified to that fact. Akala introduced his band and vocalists who were of a very high standard especially a female rapper and singer, he explained to the audience that there were many stereotypes about hip-hop and that acknowledged poets and writers like Shakespeare weren’t far from a rappers skill set. He did this by quoting lines from rappers like Eminem, Jay Z, Wu Tang’s Inspectah Deck and Shakespeare and asking the audience to guess which line belonged to a rapper or Shakespeare. I was particularly impressed with an MC called Rowan ‘’Disraeli’’ Sawday who was very dynamic and animated and in my humble opinion has the potential to be huge. And then finally Akala introduced his friend and artist Bashy. Between them all they were by far the strongest act onstage that night. I paused to wonder at the juxtaposition of religion and music as I noted the branded logo being projected onto the churches beautifully painted frieze ceiling but then my mate told me not to worry as God would co-sign community events in his house as they were inclusive, made the church money and he has a sense of humour and needs to laugh and sing too!.

JASMINE’S JUICE featuring GOLDIE, AUDLEY HARRISON and TOP BOY!


JASMINE WITH MUSIC LEGEND AND BROADCASTER GOLDIE.

Its been a week full of top boys !
Drum and bass legend, actor and artist Goldie invited me down to view his Athleticizm” (adidas) Art Exhibition art exhibition of 13 paintings of TEAM GB Olympians that he was holding in the arch tunnels of South East London. The evening was choc-a-block full of tastemakers from the worlds of art, sport and music and Goldie excitedly showed us all his paintings of athletes like Jessica Ennis and tom Daley. Goldie used to be a very accomplished graffiti artist before he ventured into music so he’s always dabbling away at his art even now and the paintings were very impressive and reminded us all of the impending event that hits our shores next year! Goldie emphasised his respect for the athletes discipline ‘’ you look at people like Tom Daly and Jessica Ennis. You could literally pass them in the street if they weren’t as well known. You would think they’re literally quite superhuman these characters. The one thing that you have in common with them that I think that a lot a people don’t seem to see is the dedication they’ve had in doing what they love, they spend many years. You might see them coming off the high board at the Beijing Olympics and thinking it’s great. Did we see how many times he got that dive wrong? Did we see how many times he was there in the pool, in that pool time and time again?’’. Goldie summed up the amazing night by stating ‘’Street culture has come a long way and I think the way we look at graphics and the way that we look at art in general we know has changed and I wanted to have my take on it, my spin on what is only of my opinion, it might not be your cup of tea but it’s what I like and a lot of my young friends or people that are around who are into art and music that’s what they like, they like that kind of style’’.


JASMINE WITH BOXER AND STRICTLY COME DANCING CONTESTANT AUDLEY HARRISON AND HIS WIFE RAYCHEL.

Next Olympic boxing champ and now strictly come dancing contestant Audley Harrison invited me to his 40th birthday dinner party at Cottons restaurant. Seated next to his American wifey Raychel and their adorable daughter, Audley hosted a very fun night for 35 of his nearest and dearest that included his dad, brother, cousins and lots of tough he-men boxer types. They all warned me I wouldn’t want to bump into them in an alley on a dark night if we vexed Audley! Originally they had booked the original Cottons restaurant in Camden but then had to move it to the new Cottons in Islington. Whilst the staff were polite and lovely, the food it has to be said wasn’t a touch on the Camden restaurant. In the Camden branch the curry goat is so tender it melts in your mouth-in Islington my plate was full of bones-no meat-so many bones that guests teased me with ‘’did you order curried bones and rice?’’ Not good. Will stick to the Camden branch moving forwards. The dinner party had Audley and his missus playing perfect hosts introducing all their guests to each other and entertaining us. Audley made a touching speech about all his achievements thus far and said he couldn’t imagine sharing this special moment with anyone else anywhere else, then proceeded to demand ‘’absolute smooth lump free custard’’ from the waitress to go alongside his apple pie! A memorable evening with lovely people, great conversation and much family love!

JASMINE WITH MC SWAY, ACTOR AML AMEEN and ADIDAS HEAD MAVEN PAOLA LUCKTUNG!
In recent years there have been major swings in areas of success for young British youth. The main winner for so long was making it as a music star, especially since #TEAMUK stars like Wiley, Chipmunk, Wretch32, and Tine staked their hold on the UK charts. Then came the new wave of young comedians spearheaded by Kojo. Next in line has been the new eruption of young actors and filmmakers led from the front by Noel Clarke. Noel and other film makers and actors like Ashley Walters and Aml Ameen have been working hard and steadily at their craft for many years now with noel having starred in Auf Wiedersehen, Pet and Dr Who as well as writing and directing his films Kidulthood and adulthood. Similarly Aml Ameen has starred in the bill, Kidulthood and is now a Hollywood star appearing in Harry’s law. Ashley Walters has had a career as a musician with so solid crew as well as numerous acting roles in Grange Hill, Get Rich or Die Trying, London’s Burning and now the Channel 4 4- part series Top Boy which had the urban world buzzing so hard last week that it was trending worldwide on twitter!
Ashley Walters, Kane ‘’Kano’’ Robinson and Channel 4 invited me to a red carpet TV launch event for the major new TV drama from the award-winning producer of the Last king of Scotland and writer Ronan Bennet-TOP BOY. Aside from Ashley and Kano the film also featured Scorcher, Sway and Giggs.
We arrived at the plush Mayfair Hotel to view episode 1 whilst it also aired on public TV, where a drinks reception over flowing with wine and apple martini’s was in full swing whilst excited fans were taking photos of the cast. Bashy rocked a bright orange Adidas jacket and dark shades on the red carpet, I nearly didn’t recognise rapper Sway as he reached out for a hug as he was in full sharp grey suit, white loafers and a trim! Singer Kel Le Roc looked as fierce as she ever did, Davinche in his bleach blonde Sisqo hair, J2K bantering away loudly, Aml was looking as well as ever having flown in from L.A with his lady friend. After an hour or so of drinks and tiny canapés going around we were invited to the basement private screening room where instead of introducing us to the film and requesting we turn off our phones we were asked to keep them on and add to the twitter conversation as everyone talked about the show live whilst it was going on both in our screening room and on real TV. It was interesting to read the comments live and unedited as celebs like Rio Ferdinand and more tweeted their approval at the show!
Many guests were left standing for the viewing so popular was the turn out, Bashy and singer Loickk Essien were seated directly in front of me and the Adidas celeb press team led by Paola Lucktung. Bashy had a silver tray of drinks delivered to him in his cinema seat, Loickk offered the Adidas team a drink ‘’even though you sent me the wrong size trousers!’’ LOL.
Once the show began there were cheers and whoops as we all recognised the cast, the viewing was rawkus and fun. Everyone agreed at the end that we would all make an appointment to view the next 3 nights before making our judgement of the series. I did hear many complaining that it was ‘’just another one of those dramas that glamorise gang life and hood mentality’’. On the other hand many were pleasantly impressed by the high production qualities. I thought it was representative of many real life stories (except the TV version didn’t seem to have any police?).
I also think broadcasters and film makers need to commission a variety of content. I agree so much of our content is extremely stereotypical. In America they have balanced representation of ethnic people, they can have African American drama like the wire and the Cosby Show. Here its all very one sided. Take the example of film company Revolver (they that brought us other deep titles like ‘’Anuvahood’’ and ‘’Shank) who this month have churned out yet another ‘’UK hood film’’ called Sket. ‘’Sket” is a term of abuse for a worthless woman, another word for slag. This is lazy and insults females and puts a very negative message out there to young people. I don’t want females in my scene described as Sket’s to the nation as if this is what we’re about. Also how many post Kidulthood dramas can there be? Revolver will keep exploiting our culture-and we will keep buying into it. They get rich. The community stays poor-financially and mentally. The vicious circle continues. Until all of us collectively take responsibility for our output nothing will change and we’ll all continue to blame each other. We need film makers that are brave enough to invest in it or a UK Spike Lee character that will stand up to the film companies that exploit our talented young people and culture, but whilst no-one is brave enough to do this-they continue to win and we wonder where its all going wrong!

JASMINE’S JUICE featuring RON JEREMY at RUMFEST, ESTELLE and SOME LIKE IT HIPHOP!



JASMINE WITH RUMFEST ORGANISER IAN BURRELL AND LEGENDARY PORN STAR RON JEREMY.

So last night I had dinner with some Motown legends including The Stylistics and a legion of Motown legends. As you do. But that’s another story-for next week. (Yes-every time I write a sentence like that, I repeat it in my head and think ‘’wow I have a blessed and surreal life!’’).

Before that I had a date with a porn star. That I wasn’t expecting. My big brother Richie called and invited us to the annual Rumfest- the world’s biggest festival to celebrate the diversity of rum and its rapidly growing popularity. A celebration of rum and all things related, that was taking place at Olympia in London. Before attending I had a dilemma; as neither myself nor my partner were drinking alcohol we pondered as to what joy we would possibly get from the event.? We were sternly informed it was about more than just drinking and we should give it a go. So determined not to waste an opportunity we took my friends 90-year-old granddad- a Dominican rum connoisseur and headed up to the west London venue on a Saturday afternoon. On arrival the exterior of the venue resembled carnival with families and groups of friends of all class, colour and nationality all swarming through the doors. Once inside it was clear that 2pm was not too early for any of these rum fans to be knocking it back, and at all the various stands that were fashioned into authentic looking rum shacks or slick uber modern bars, the cocktails were flowing like biggie smalls in his element. Granddad (who prefers to be called ‘’pops’’) was immediately initiated into the throng when Richie plonked a hard double shot into his hand and from then it was a marathon of visiting a variety of rum blenders, distillers and more where pops was encouraged to taste with abandonment. Suddenly big bro Richie called me yelling’’ Jas-come over here and take a picture with this man’’. I duly stepped up to find a near hysterical crowd had gathered around a short, tubby, balding guy that looked like a typical dirty music tour roadie. As the man threw his arm around me for our photo he smiled muttering in my ear ‘’whilst we’re here taking this photo, my d***’s upstairs parking my car’’. I smiled through gritted teeth as he added ‘’I may look short right now but I’m much taller when I’m lying down’’. Stepping away I was informed by my lovely family of male friends and brother that the gent was a legendary porn star called Ron Jeremy. I couldn’t believe it? This man was a visual car crash of vile. ‘‘That’s the point’’ my friend informed me ‘’its because a very regular man like him slept with over 10,000 stunning females that he became a symbol for all normal men’’. Apparently Ron was in attendance as he has his own line of rum. Honestly-the things corporations do these days to sell their products!. You thought Gary Linekar and walkers crisps was a brand partnership that was tenuous? Pops was smarter than me and when offered a picture with Ron gracefully stated ‘’no thank you-I am a man of the church’’. As the afternoon drew closer to finishing time the stage area saw a reggae band performing old reggae and lovers rock classics and the whole of Olympia was dancing wildly to the music with wild rum-fuelled abandon.
That night we attended the Rumfest awards and dinner and I was delighted to find Ron Jeremy seated with us at our table. Most of the night women of all ages and states shimmied across to him and draped themselves across him for photos-one blonde strumpet got quite out of hand clearly imagining she was starring in a movie with him there and then. ‘‘Oh well’’ I reasoned with myself ‘’don’t judge-it takes all sorts’’ as I continued applauding Rumfest organiser/ cottons restaurant manager Ian Burrell for such an eye opening, ear burning, heart warming experience!


JASMINE WITH ESTELLE
Next my west London home girl Estelle flew back from new york for 3 days and as she always does on touch down on Heathrow she bbm’ed all her peeps and advised us we were rolling with her that night.
So that morning I was required to figure out an outfit that would take me seamlessly from a best friends birthday lunch, the theatre to see SOME LIKE IT HIPHOP, a 45 minute session at a spa, and then accompanying Estelle to the NFL after party where she was performing and then onwards to west end nightclub Anaya where she was hanging out. It’s a tough job but I did it with fancy black suede high-fringed boots, black jodhpurs and a change of blouses.
SOME LIKE IT HIP HOP is a musical theatre show, at the peacock theatre where the dance troupe ZOO NATION headed up by choreographer Kate Prince, dance their hearts out. After her critically acclaimed first INTO THE HOODZ show there was much pressure for the follow up. Not knowing what to expect accept a hip-hop version of the old classic movie SOME LIKE IT HOT, I was pleasantly surprised. The show has definitely moved more into the contemporary dance style tone with its staging, music and choreography which many liked but I would’ve preferred the tone to have kept it a little more street/hood. The sets were all dimly lit olde world environments, which made it hard for me to stay visually engaged-like a kid I like drama, colour and fanfare-all which the show had snippets of but was not as hype as INTO THE HOODZ was at its time. its not fair to compare but INTO THE HOODZ used commercial music which had audiences bouncing in their seats whereas SOME LIKE IT HIPHOP had an original score which was accompanied by fantastically strong vocalists .The dancers choreography was on point and dancer Teneisha Bonner’s elegance really stood out from the rest as did singer Royston Legore with his deep Luther Vandross vocals. a fun, entrancing show for all the family-definitely worth a visit if you love this genre!

After 37 minutes sitting poolside up the road from the theatre at the St Pancras Renaissance I threw on the heels and skipped into Estelle’s hotel suite in Mayfair where a room full of females were sexing themselves up for the night ahead. As we dressed we caught up, laughed, shrieked loud enough to wake the dead and finally we piled into cars that transported us to the opulent, 1 Marylebone church style venue where the NFL party was in full swing. Estelle swung straight onstage and had the corporate partiers jumping around wildly in minutes as she turned ‘’calm, sophisticated and grown’’ into ‘’wild, frivolous and fun’’. Straight after shutting that party down we returned to the hotel where we ravished piles of Nando’s and then danced around to old skool tunes as ‘’DJ ESTELLE’’ picked the swing beat tunes, she and singer Roses Gabour re-enacted TLC, SWV and Jodeci and I played video camera woman.
2 nights later after we had all recovered from the sleepless Saturday we all met for a big group dinner at Shoreditch house (which included Estelle, Adidas PR maven Paola Lucktung, singer Roses Gabour, Vis from Radio1xtra, producer/ artist Daley, Atlantic Records Taponeswa and Linda, and other special friends) where we once again were probably overly loud- but we added flavour to the surroundings-and that’s ALL that matters!.

JASMINE’S JUICE featuring THE ASIAN AWARDS, JAY SEAN and RUSSELL PETERS!

JASMINE with INTERNATIONAL CHART STAR JAY SEAN , his brother renowned video director AMIT (AMIT & NAROOP) and their family at THE ASIAN AWARDS!.

A week full of fun and frolics all in the name of work as I swept through the annual Rumfest at Olympia where porn legend Ron Jeremy intrigued me with his wit! (More on those next week!)

I was late for the Asian awards. I was supposed to arrive at the great room at the Grosvenor House Hotel by 6pm. at 5.55pm my reporter Tom, called as I was having a 12-minute power nap and had over napped. Like a bat out of hell I raced to my wardrobe picked the first long frock I saw as the dress code was black tie or national dress, threw it into a bag with heels and accessories and legged it out of the door. I raced up the motorway, parked at the hotels back entrance and was whisked down to the make up room where Abbi Rose and her highly glam make up team were ready to give me the total make over experience. I sat in Abbi’s chair at 7pm and was done by 7.20pm as all hands on deck were poking my barnet and face. It was a tougher job than usual as I had brought along an extra guest that Abbi wasn’t expecting- a big, sore red spot on my cheek. ‘‘Don’t worry she reassured me-we’ll cover it’’. I love Abbi’s make up room- full of black clad glamazonian make up ladies all conversing a la ‘’only way is Essex’’- pure entertainment whilst getting glam!.

Once given the over haul I rushed into the red carpet area where celeb’s were falling over each other as they backed up for the TV crews. It was a mouth dropping visual moment where hundreds of stunning olive skinned beauties in full sequined, satin-ed, bling-ed out jewelry and flowing long ball gowns in jewel colors were flitting about everywhere clinking their champagne glasses. This is why I LOVE Asian events! The gene in me that loves sparkle and colour can let loose! Honestly-I’m like a magpie-blame my Indian mum! In its 2nd year this years awards were supported by luxury brands; Bulgari, Christian Louboutin (who attended in person), Quintessentially, Audemars, Piguet ,Meridian , Audio ,Lloyds Banking Group and Smythson’s. The night attracted some of the wealthiest and most successful Asians on the planet and covered 14 awards on the night.

There was a charity auction in aid of Save The Children, which was the most fun to witness. A room full of millionaire Asians all trying to outbid each other is fascinating. Prizes for the Live auction included; a Signed Ferrari Opus-, a Private Travel Lot (Private Jet, 5* stay, Maserati car for the week)-, a Stay in a Campbell Gray Hotel, a trip to Antigua or Lebonon with a luncheon with Mr Cambell Gray himself-, Amir Khans boxing glove’s, Opera Tickets-, a1 day visit and meet and greet with the cast of Emmerdale-, a Signed Arsenal shirt, a personally couture gown and Christian Loubotin Shoes and much more.

There were an overspill of VIP’s attending that included (take a deep breath-this list is abundant!)…..Russell Peters – Comedian ,Meera Syal – Television actress and writer, Jay Sean – Singer, Amit Singhal – Head of Search at Google, Murali – cricket player, Anand Mahindra – CEO of Mahindra, Irene Khan – Sec Gen of Amnesty International, Asha Bhosle, Anoushka Shankar, Freddie Mercury Family (mum, sister and in laws), Brian May and Roger Taylor – Queen, Cliff Richard, Boris Johnson – Mayor of London, Nina Wadia – Television actress, Gurinder Chadha – Director, James Caan – Entrepreneur / Television, Kiran Sharma – Manager of Prince (the artist), Christian Louboutin and me LOL! Most of the VIP’s were millionaires, in short I felt like a Big Issue seller amongst them all! As we were all seated at our tables it was stunning to take in the glitz and opulence of the venue.

I’ve been to hundreds of up market events over the years but I can truly say the Grosvenor Great Room is in an opulent league of its own! The stage looked stunning with huge film screens and coloured podium. The table centerpieces were alternately chandelier candelabras or long stemmed red flowers. The over flux of always hovering waiters, were offering drinks of any choice all night- an 18 year old aged whiskey was going round and round-so were most guests heads after a while. The service and quality of food was outstanding and put many a recent function I’ve attended to shame. The starter was a salmon and prawn delicacy. Main was a full tasty thali of Indian curry and dessert was a mouth-watering mango cheesecake and chocolate piece of art.

Sitting right next to me was Radio 1 DJ Nihal and my old Southall brethren international music star Jay Sean whose table was full of his brother Amit (1 half of the TEAMUK Urban music video directors collective Amit and Naroop), their respective ladies, his mum and dad-a very sophist acted looking and mannered couple, his grandma-an adorable elderly lady who was clearly just so proud of her grandson! Jay was very gracious to a constant stream of fans of all ages that consistently approached him to chat and for photo’s-what a truly lovely mannered man! On my table were owner of west end nightclub Anaya, Jonathon Ross’s media company business partner Olly Bengough – an entrepreneur in the media, film, music and entertainment business, the Asian awards organiser Paul’s parents and TV presenter, model, social media kitten Sharon Prasad who’s lil black book of contacts is one to rival mine.

JASMINE WITH COMEDIAN RUSSELL PETERS.

Canadian originated comedian Russell Peters took great pleasure in taking the mickey out of my surname and sang ‘’DUTTY WALA’’ in the manner of Sean Paul repeatedly when he wasn’t laughing at my ‘’crazy eyes’’. I got ball excited when Mayor Boris Johnson presented an award. He called the event “Stupendous” and mentioned that via his wife he had an Asian mother in law!. Prime minister David Cameron sent a video message and MP Teresa may attended and introduced the night which was hosted by lord Sebastian Coe.

Most celeb’s (especially comic Russell peters) got very excited and were in awe of Google ranking chief Amit Patel who won an award on the night. Aging but still beautiful Asian musical legend backing vocalist Asha Bhosle (she who the hit BRIM FULL OF ASHA was based upon) was inducted on the night into the Guinness book of records for recording over 11,000 songs throughout her career-which started at the age of 10!

The last award of the night went to the Asian (Parsi) legend that is the late, great Freddie Mercury whose mother and sister picked up the Founders award on his behalf. it was handed to the family by Queen member and Freddie’s old friend Brian May who told the audience “Freddie loved Indian food, glamour, success and he loved to be heard. And he would’ve loved that he’s still being heard now’’.

A hilarious moment (for me at least) ensued when my guest dropped chocolate on his crotch whilst dinning and then attempted to use his fork to scrape frantically away at his stain under the table. This must have looked quite vulgar and intriguing to our fellow table guests who luckily pretended not to notice. After he rubbed ice on the area and scraped away the whole area looked like a very unfortunate accident, at which point we realized it was well past midnight and like Cinderella, thought it best to depart!

JASMINE’S JUICE feat CHIPMUNK, SOME LIKE IT HIP-HOP,DR DRE and SPIRIT OF LONDON AWARDS.

JASMINE with SPIRIT OF LONDON AWARDS host EDDIE KADI

I was invited to the Spirit of London Awards to sit in the Adidas VIP box. The Spirit of London Awards (SOLA) were created as a fusion of all the great celebrity award shows such as the BRITS and MOBO with the one big difference being – The stars of the show are the unsung young heroes of our local communities and the celebrities are there to applaud and pay homage to them – The Community Oscars! The Damilola Taylor Trust developed the awards to address the imbalance in the way young people were perceived due to a small minority who create negative media headlines. The awards are now the standard bearer for the majority of the fantastic young people of London

What an amazing night. We really need more events like this to validate our youth and shoe the mainstream and general public that young people are doing amazing things- its just the positive ones aren’t being noticed. The awards was held at the royal Albert hall and hosted aptly by comedian and DJ Eddie Kadi alongside his less capable co-host Stacy Solomon. (Another case of organisers getting celebs to do presenters jobs-she’s a great singer- a wack presenter). We were informed that as well as hearing the inspirational stories of youth we would be entertained by Tinchy Stryder, Beverly knight, diversity and Dionne Bromfield. I was fascinated by an 8-year-old boy- Lucas pinto- who was named YOUNG HERO for persuading the chief executive of Tesco to reconsider the minimum wage it pays workers. He was articulate and confident and spoke with passion and I had no doubt this kid could one day be prime minister! He thanked everyone. No really. His family, friends, ‘’mister Johnson (Boris), his youth club teams and so many more-what a stone winner!

We watched TeamUK actors Ashley Walters and Adam deacon present awards, Bluey Robinson sang, we had choirs, pianists-hell I was so inspired and proud I even compared Tinchy Stryder and Dappy’s song words to Marvin Gaye LOL! …’’See I don’t understand how you’re number one, when it was just a fling before now, you’re the one, see all i did was blink twice from my homie to my only, number one .you lift me off the ground, I always want you around’’…..

Diversity and Tinchy got the packed venue on their feet, snapping away on their phones and jumping around-even the old blonde coiffed within an inch of their lives Essex wives were up and mouthing along to Tinchy’s set!. Finally when I thought it could get no funnier, Jermaine Defoe walks onstage. He’s there to present an award to his manager Harry Redknapp. The MC narrator has already announced that this is the winner of the LONDON LEGEND award. THE winner. so sharpest tool in the box Jermaine announces ‘’and the nominees are….’’ to an awkward long pause with much giggling amongst the audience. He tries at least 3 times before the MIC announcer says ‘’just announce the winner!’’. Oh how we laughed! a funny upbeat ending to a great night full of amazing stories about young people that are achieving high. a low ending though as organiser Gary Trowsdale informed everyone that the nightclub up the road-AMIKA-had cancelled the after party as they wanted a high turn out of celebrities and the kids just weren’t good enough for them. I hope as these new generation tastemakers and power players come up in their respective worlds they boycott venues like this. How disgusting!

Next I caught up with a young person doing positive things to further her career- dancer/ actress Teneisha Bonner who has been a part of the dance troupe Zoo Nation for the past 10 years- she was one of leads in their amazing production ‘’ Into The Hoodz ‘’ more recently and is now starring in the new hip-hop theatre musical- Some like it Hip-Hop….Loosely inspired by the musical ‘’Some like it Hot’’. Teneisha told me ‘’it’s a  comedic tale of love and mistaken identity, about 2 female characters journey about adapting in a mans world. the show includes an all original musical score. It’s a family show-no age group are excluded, its for everybody. Hip-hop theatre at its best. With all the bad press that hip-hops been getting it breaks down the stereotypes’’. With that pitch how could I not be there!

JASMINE with #TEAMUK champ CHIPMUNK!

I ended the week speaking to one of my favourite TEAMUK acts- the inimitable Chipmunk. Chippy popped into LONDON 360 NEWS to talk about his recent music mix tape SPAZZ.COM , his future path and thoughts on loads including pirate radio stations, life, love and more!. He highlighted the importance for making ‘’pop songs that are grime based’’ to get a wide fan base and get out his music to as many people as possible. Chippy said he understands that ‘’love and hate are simultaneous-if you roll out more success you get more love, but you’ll also reap more hate’’. Commenting on his recent release from his record label Jive he revealed ‘’‘‘Jive as a label is in a situation and therefore I’m now an independent act-it’s a good space to be in, I’m currently independent and I’ve had calls from every major label here in the last fortnight cos they understand I’m only 20 years old and still fresh and ready to elevate me and my team to the next level-The plan is to go with my own label-a lot of people forget that I charted independently before I got my record deal’’.

Chippy said he wanted his album Transition to be an event for the country but he admitted ‘’ if I’m dead honesty I think it was my single  ‘’Champion’’ with Chris Brown that made my mark. In years to come when I’m 30 and people look back think they’ll see Transition as a milestone in my musical career’’

talking about his early days he reminisced ‘‘Youth club’s are what formatted me as an artist, I spent many days there MC’ing and learning how to make the best out of the worst facilities, so when I have a radio mic with drop down compression or 3 cameras on me I know how to confidently deal with it’’

He looked back on the riots poignantly ‘’‘‘Now that the riots are all done with the message I put out is that young people are young adults, the older generation look at us as if we’re kids but we’re not. There is a need for young people to have money that people overlook. The only means a lot of young people have to make money is by negative actions and illegal means’ ‘Everyone has a need for currency-the unfortunate don’t care about what the fortunate have to say- they’re not putting money in their pocket. I’m here living well, someone else suffering will never listen to me-their experience is different. I try not to judge. A lot of young people just need money and I would advise them to do it the positive way’ ‘I had a few mishaps growing up in Tottenham but I saw everything in my area, how quick you could die, seeing this at a young age made me focus my energy correctly-like my fellow area peers like wretch32 and Adele we focused in the right direction’’

Chipmunk was the first UK act during my time at MTV BASE that openly championed his smartness whilst others (who shall remain nameless were ashamed of their education and asked me never to talk about it as it would ‘mess with their street cred’’). Chip stated strongly ‘‘If anyone can tell youth the importance of being intelligent I’d like to do it. I was read to as a child and I’m proud of that and telling people that education was a big part of my life, I never struggled with reading but probably would’ve enjoyed it more if it wasn’t given to me as a punishment. Parents could start by making their child’s first presents a book so subconsciously they are brain fed the idea that you read books as a positive activity-make their first present a book!. ’’

‘’I was never the best MC in my crew but I carried on practised and developed my craft-my school Gladesmore school was great they let me attend interviews with you at MTV and were helpful so I worked with them to make it work’’.

With that Chipmunk left a whole room full of CEO’s and young people in the BBC building all inspired and gushing as new fans-.

You go young soldier! –Onwards and upwards!

What a week of contradictions. Finally the West Coast legend that is Dr Dre throws a party to promote his ‘’Dre beats’’ headphones with HTC at London’s Round House. If a party like this had gone done a few years ago it would have brought the city to a halt. With big names like label mogul Jimmy Iovine and artist Will I Am in attendance this party would’ve shut it down. But as no one knows how to make a party pop off any more it had the worst reviews and was flatter than a pancake. Here’s who attended; Beardyman, Nero, Martin Solveig, Fredde Le Grand and Zedd, Lady Gaga, Cheryl Cole, Fazer, Dynamo, Emmanuel Frimpong, and a whole lot more, fans queued around the block in their hundreds to celebrate. Honestly could you have written a worse press release for a hip-hop inspired party? Seriously what’s happened to our social scene? Can no one throw a cool guest list together anymore? When we had the P Diddy party at Café de Paris we shut it down. The Maxwell party at The Qquarium-shut down! Janet Jackson at the London Dungeon-a shut down. Destiny’s Child at Porchester Hall- a roadblock. You bring in Dr Dre and even he’s bored at his own party? That’s a crime. Even the music that was played at the party-guests said ‘’it was dead’’. What? A Dr Dre party where the beats are not live? A terrible contradiction! Party planners now get the vibe totally wrong. This is one thing that back in the day record labels and PR companies knew how to get right. The crowd has to have some ‘’real street heads’’ and taste makers in the house. Mix this up with a scattering of current celebs and skimpy attired ladies with a dash of a superstar DJ party spinner and you have a sure fire hit. In fact-many still cite my birthday party a few years ago in Kensington as the 1 London party that shut it down for good. With all my friends and family- not-real people that know each other and therefore get down, we had in the house all UK music, sports and power players as well as heart throb singer Usher, R&B vocalist Joe and then heavy weight champ Lennox Lewis. My music was spun by DJ friends Tim Westwood, Manny Norte, Rampage and others who took over the decks organically like an old skool house party. The mic was live; people were sweating so much on the dance floor that by 6am there were bodies lying all over the red-carpeted staircases and private rooms. There was no VIP area- (a rule that Puffy taught me )– if you need help party planning just holla. Dre deserves better!

JASMINE’S JUICE feat MOBO AWARDS 2011.

MOBO’S UNSUNG STAR AND THE PEOPLE’S CHOICE-WRETCH32 with JASMINE.

I wasn’t supposed to attend the MOBO AWARDS this year. I had so much on at work with 10 new staff starting, a multitude of meetings and interviews and the very next day post MOBO I was speaking at a big important news press seminar in central London so all aspects of my diary said no to going to Glasgow for the annual urban music event. However that was soon to change when MOBO CEO Kanya King asked if I wanted to come, and then Adidas big wig Paola Lucktung persuaded me to sit on the Adidas superstar filled table full of their athletes and music acts that the brand support.

So I found myself Tuesday night at the VIP screening for new film THE HELP (in UK cinemas from October 26th) at the Walt Disney buildings private screening rooms with PR maven Jodie Dalmeda (SONY, VIRGIN UNITE, RICHARD BRANSON) and branding consultant DAREN DIXON. I had been warned that the film, which has been number 12 on top of the American movie charts this year for many weeks, was a tear jerker and I would need tissues. Nothing had prepared us for the depth of emotional and reflection this story would bring. Having said that it also contains numerous hilariously funny, entertaining moments too. Based on the number 1 best selling book by Kathryn Stockett, the film is set in Jackson, Mississippi in the 1960’s and tells the story of 3 women of different ethnicities to tell the story of the ‘’coloured help’’. I hope that everyone reading this column will go and see it with friends and family and particularly young people so they can put their current options and lives in perspective of what’s possible and how their ancestors fought for equality. It’s interesting that even with the huge stateside success of this film that I’ve hardly seen any UK press about it. Are media embarrassed or do they feel awkward about the topics and themes of race and class involved?

It was tragically ironically that I went straight from the film, home to quickly pack an over night bag and jump on the 8am train to Glasgow with the adidas team and their table of superstar guests.

Blearily eyed and struggling with all our bags we excitedly boarded the train with me thinking about exactly 24 hours later when I would be on a 4am train returning from Glasgow to go speak at a national news press seminar all day and how exhausted I would be. But then the naughty angel on my left shoulder said ‘’oh who cares-you can do it-you only have one life and in the words of Jill Scott, you’re living your life like its gorgeous’’. I agreed and got on with joining in the naughty gossipy salacious banter that we then indulged in for the 5-hour train ride. So much for the sleep I was going to catch up on!.

ADIDAS LADY PAOLA, ACTRESS PREEYA, STYLIST RICHARD SHYEMI & JASMINE- pre show backstage.

I pondered so much…. Will Boyz to Men have us at our tables doing every old skool dance to “cooliharmony”? Will Rihanna jump into a helicopter from her gig at the o2 to Glasgow to shoot a man down?  Will Dappy do a Chris Brown and fly on wires in his live performance as rumoured?  Will Tinchy really be butt naked whilst dancing on a table surrounded by painted body dancers in his set?.  Will Wretch32 really be crashing through the back of the stage to make his entrance in a Traktor?  Will Adam Deacon and Preeya Kalidas really snog a la Madonna/Britney as they present an award?Dr Dre, RiRi,Gaga, Kanye and Snoop were all in London- would any of them make it up to Glasgow?  Would Ciara jump on the Eurostar to Glasgow from Paris where she just had her wardrobe malfunction?.  With those questions I was also being told from backstage at the arena that an urban music British lady had had all the other back stage dressing rooms cleared so she could have the largest and that another uk lady had had £3000 of human hair extensions couriered into Glasgow!

The banter on this train between the Adidas team and the artists was unrepeatable. (I attempted noting it all down for you all but was then threatened with banishment from the carriage and as I love my life decided to forego any drama). J2K entertained us all through the train journey by playing old skool classics liker ‘’love come down’’ by Evelyn champagne king which had me most impressed cos many young uns aren’t even aware of that era of music!

As we discussed our outfits for the night I recalled the 3 dresses which were currently rolled with tissue paper in my overnight bag. normally I’d have been sent a lovely number by D&G but as it was a last minute decision to attend I’d had to make do with my own wardrobe (how terribly undiva!). I had packed a lime green D&G classic, a plum Vercase cocktail dress and a floor length green sequinned number. as we discussed options a top hard-core TEAMUK rapper told me “Sequins are for yardies” which had me quickly kicking my sequinned number to the kerb mentally.

The Adidas team were bringing wretch32’s stage performance outfit to Glasgow and the package was being handled, over seen and treated like a precious new born baby so I couldn’t resist every now and again pretending that it was missing to the shocked PR team! LOL. 5 hours is a long time to ponder and I also felt sad that whilst all UK urban acts were mostly well represented by the MOBO AWARDS now that our initial champion Dizzee Rascal was never a part of it. There was a Mobo-Dizzee fall out a few years back when Dizzee swore never to be  a part of it. I wondered if Dizzee cared that he’s never part of the ceremony due to his long running feud with the brand. it would be good to see him there.

On arrival in Glasgow we had a big boisterous lunch before heading off to change clothes and go. the hotel lobby area was like carnival with lots of ladies in their skimpy outfits and stripper shoes accompanied by hoodies that hadn’t bothered to dress up for the occasion. That old cliché of ‘’I’m not bothering to dress fam-I always look fly’’. no love you don’t and you wont get anyway looking like you’re off to do a Tesco’s shop whilst all around you have made the effort!.

COMEDIAN, DJ AND TV PUNDIT EDDIE ”THE JACKET”  KADI , CHIPMUNK and JASMINE.

MYSELF AND THE ADIDAS LADIES-(NOT WEARING THE SAME DRESS!)

Myself and Paola met in the hotel lobby and stopped dead in shock as we acknowledged that we were both wearing similar plum/purple dresses. what a fashion faux pas! but we reassured ourselves that they were totally different shades and styles and so we were okay. Luckily industry peeps understand this. Island records A&R extraordinaire Ben Scarrs was looking slick in his stripy shirt and matching socks combo. Eastenders actress Preeya Kalidas was in a black asymmetrical number-all sexy and dark.

BEEB REPORTER BRENDA WITH JASMINE.

BBC reporter Brenda Emmanus looked serene in a long Grecian style gown, stylist Richard Shoyemi was all smoky dark eyes and glam, according to the Atlantic Music ladies Taponeswa and Mel comedian Eddie Kadi apparently won the prize for most creative jacket blazer, fashion designer Wale Adeyemi rocked a cute dickey bow tie and one of his new look shirt styles. This led to a hilarious moment as another man sitting on our table caught Wales eye. the man was wearing a one off sample shirt that had that very day been requested from Wale’s PR team apparently for a wretch32 video shoot. Well the man rocking the shirt was most certainly not wretch and the shirt was way too tight for him. As Wale sat in bewilderment, Adidas head Paola Lucktung and I roared with laughter.

ATLETICS CHAMPION-PHILLIPS IDOWU with JASMINE.

Sitting on our Adidas table were also acts like Angel with Chipmunk and Wretch next to us. We were easily the loudest and flyest table there!

THE LOUDEST,CRAZIEST MOBO TABLE!.

The Mobo goody bag on each table seat contained a chocolate Lolly pop and Mobo bath oil. My evil angel popped up again on my shoulder and blurted out ‘’hose stripper chic’s later are in for a good time!’’.

Once the show kicked off it was flowing and organised well with the gorgeous Alesha Dixon working her professional magic in a yellow frock-I was disappointed that she hadn’t had more outfit changes-her gorgeous dresses are one of my favourite things to take in! Also not only did her co-host Jason Derulo not add anything to the proceedings, he was awkward and Alesha actually had to nudge him to read his lines a couple of times- in fact I can only assume that the hugest autocue I’d ever seen in my life was cos Jason must be short cited-it was so large even Stevie wonder could’ve read it! (Tim Westwood naughtily stood in front of the autocue jumping around t one point trying to shield the words-hilarity!)

JASMINE with DESIGNER WALE, THE HUB ENTERTAINMENTS AUSTIN and COMEDIAN EDDIE KADI.

People kept questioning why Reggie Yates wasn’t co-hosting. I have no idea why but I know MOBO weren’t particularly pleased that he had thrown his own after party last year detracting from the OFFICIAL MOBO party and that he may be in their bad books.

The crazy one from N –DUBZ -Dappy and Tinchy were reporting from backstage. We noted they were like an urban ant & dec! then the really talented one in N DUBZ- Fazer and model Jourdann Dunn presented best hip-hop and grime to Tinie Tempah who more than deserved the accolade. Fazer also played piano like Alicia keys alongside Dappy onstage. For me its really Fazer that gives the group any credibility. He may be the quiet one-but I think he’s the most musically gifted. I noted that Tinchy was rocking his brand – STAR IN THE HOOD tee shirt. What happened to BBC product placement rules?

Wretch32’s on stage set was by far the best of the jight with an acoustic intro before an all out female drumming dance crew took over- the whole arena were up on their feet bouncing for the 1st time!

As artist Yasmin and actor Adam “my size” Deacon presented the best video award to Dappy and Tinchy I wondered whether N DUBZ manger Jonathon Shalit had bought shares in MOBO this year as Dappy continued to over take the show. (Or was it his new solo management team jack and Archie-the MP’s sons?)

During Katy B’s performance most of the audience were socialising around their tables but then her featured act ms dynamites joined her and all were focused again.

Mr Hudson and Mann presented the best international award to Rihanna who not only didn’t turn up but hadn’t provided a thank you pre recorded video speech either. Baffling as she was in London simultaneously! Record label folks-Ever heard of a live link?

Half way through the night I was shown the winners complete list. I was really disappointed and completely pissed that Wretch32 hadn’t won anything this year. I know the wines are chosen by fans but for wretch to walk away empty handed and Jessie j to dominate winners surely there’s something very wrong with the system. Jessie j is extremely talented but all those awards strictly on her fan base size seems unfair. Maybe industry and fans should vote together moving forwards?

As predicted when it was Jason Derulo’s live set happened most of the audience visited the loo-oops. On my return I noted a guy wearing a full bear fur walking around. What a nutter I thought before realising he and his mate were the comic duo ‘’Shadrack and the Mandem’’ who were looking like an old version of an R Kelly video and serenading Alesha.

As publicised Dionne Bromfield sang a haunting tribute to Amy Winehouse sounding just like her godmother.

As Dappy and Tinchy did their performance someone quipped loudly that they were our version of Eminem and Jigga, which had our tables rolling.

Whilst I obviously love MOBO and all the UK music acts, it did look as the recession must’ve hit hard because there seemed to be no thought or creativity behind the stage sets and performances this years. Wretch32 was the one A class one but the rest were bare stages, dancers in what looked like rehearsal gear and in Professor Green and Emile Sandi’s set whilst their performance was better than most of the rest, it resembled an end of term school Xmas show with a basic gold tinsel curtain!?

Next Alexis Jordan performed. She’s a lovely girl with talent that is still to be fully realised but her onstage performance had no excitement. She had a Riri thing going on but many around us were muttering that they’d rather have seen chipmunk sing his huge hit “champion”.

Later during the show Dappy came to sit with Chipmunk at his table. The mood was sombre. There were lots of disappointed faces regards wretch not having won an award. he and chipmunk have been major players this past 12 months.

When JLS bounced onstage all in their slick black suits the audience went mad! they introduced Boyz to Men who didn’t wow with a set as good as their recent performance at Hammersmith Apollo. Brandy’s old boyfriend Wanya was rocking some really awkwardly ugly boots and many were questioning why the band was 1 member short (Michael left years ago-do keep up!)

We noted that the vibe between N DUBZ boys Dappy and Fazer was awkward. Many a time they passed within inches of each other with no acknowledgement. Coincidence?

THE BOYS GET EXCITED BACKSTAGE- ARTIST ANGEL, TV PRODUCER SHURWIN, COMIC EDDIE, DESIGNER WALE, DJ TREVOR NELSON.

Post show we had a huge crew rolling with DJ Trevor Nelson to his after party where we bust out a few dance routines and Charlie’s angels poses backstage. The dance floor at Trevs party was crazy from the moment my Chrissie Lou shoe stepped on it until the minute we left. Special mention must go to Trev , Mr Play and DJ Charles (Tinie’s DJ) who threw down classic old skool R7B classics and the young un’s all jammed hard to every tune! Wretch, angel, Tinchy and Chipmunk were dancing hard-I was impressed cos I mostly see them head nodding at parties. The dance moves and routines that DJ Abrantee, Wale Adeyemi , Eddie Kadi and J2K were doing were ridiculously impressive! the party was overly sweaty leading to all us ladies scraping sweated out hairstyles into pony tails and taking their shoes off. I was thankful my mum schooled me to carry flat ballet pumps in my handbag-no floor is touching my princess foot-no sir! The clubs dry ice machine was slightly OTT as it was so strong at intervals that we couldn’t see in front of us whilst busting moves. I could’ve been dancing with ANYONE!!! Most of this was recorded by the Grimedaily website for prosperity so check their footage out soon! Adidas head Paola snuck out with me at 3am so I could jump in a cab, head back to the hotel, shower and jump into cab number 2 to whizz me back to the train station. As we exited the car and gripped onto each other as our feet were so sore from dancing and staggered back into the hotel a passing couple yelled ‘’oh you two look cute-are you bridesmaids?’’. !!!

JASMINES JUICE featuring INSPIRATIONAL YOU and CHANNEL 4’s new urban champion for #TEAMUK- TABITHA JACKSON!

MOBO AFTER PARTY VIP- group banter with EDDIE KADI, WALE AEYEMI, ADIDAS PR MAVEN POALA LUCKTUNG, TREVOR NELSON and friends.

Our scenes been on and off planes, trains and automobiles this week toing and froing from Glasgow for the annual Mobo Awards -more on that next week!.

The night after MOBO I had to take a 4am train back to London to make it to the journalist full day ‘’NEWS REWIRED’’ day where many reporters speak and engage their experiences together. I attended specifically to hear and meet one of my favourite reporters Paul Lewis, who is special projects editor at the Guardian. During the London riots his were the most up to date, reliable, trustworthy, balanced stories.

JASMINE WITH INSPIRATIONAL YOU founder SONIA MEGGIE and branding consultant DAREN DIXON.

Before all that though I was asked to chair the regular INSPIRATIONAL YOU seminar at the very opulent Pearson building in Charing Cross that focused on ‘succeeding in the entertainment and media industry”. Organizers told me ‘’you are Ms Entertainment and know the business inside out, as well as doing a fantastic job on London 360.  we therefore wondered if you would consider being our host on the night and bringing your team down, we have been trying to identify a host who understands the industry and can also give insight at the same time’’. Readers-how could I refuse? Especially when they told me the panelists were DJ Steve Sutherland, ITN HEAD NEWS EDITOR Robin Elias, BBC BREAKFAST TV Producer Anthea Lee, former Head of CHOICEFM and BANGFM radio Ivor Ettiene and tinie tempah’s manager dumi Oburota. I arrived to find a delicious spread of Caribbean and Indian canapés and drinks on offer to settle our rumbling post-work stomachs. The panel introduced themselves and the advice, experience and anecdotes came thick and fast. Many young people don’t know about how to get into or attract an employer to their cv so we shared tips on this as well as take questions from the floor. one thing that became very apparent to me was that many newcomers to TV don’t understand the structure of jobs within the TV structure. So I promised to run up a chart and so it was up on my personal blog the very next day. Next? Steve shared tips on how artists should and shouldn’t approach DJ’S. Robin talked about how he saw the news room platforms changing and his top 5 things he looks for in future staff. Anthea talked about elements she looked for in a music act to see if they fit the ‘’bbc sofa commercial household name’’ remit. Ivor talked about networks and career moves within the radio industry and Dumi told his fascinating story about learning all he knows about music management by reading books, observing the scene and asking loads of questions as well as the branding of the superstar they call tinie tempeh. Want to know the answers to all this? you might want to become a part of INSPIRATIONAL YOU.

JASMINE WITH CHANNEL 4’S ARTS COMMISSIONER-TABITHA JACKSON.

I ended my week catching up with Channel 4’s Tabitha Jackson, a lady I’ve admired from afar for a while now. I became aware of her after noticing the Channel 4 street Summer Season which recently featured CONCRETE CIRCUS, LIFE OF RHYME, GRAFFITI WARS, HOW HIP-HOP CHANGED THE WORLD, ONE MAN WALKING and STREETDANCE. When I watched all these shows I was blown away. Both excited and gutted. Excited cos finally a mainstream broadcaster had covered the vast uk urban scene in a respectful and qualitative manner. Clearly big budgets, an attention to artistic detail and getting the right talent involved was considered with akala, jonzi d, cookie crew, noel Clarke and many many more from the old skool and new skool urban worlds combining to make a great documentary series of shows. I was gutted cos clearly this is the stuff I’d been dying to make myself during my years at MTV and other broadcasters and felt it should have had air time many years ago. I know how tough it is to convince senior TV management teams to make content like this and how hard it is to get it right. So I joined Tabitha Jackson for a conversation to see just how she’s made all this happen. id expected a London born and bred hiphop cultured lover. I couldn’t have been more wrong. Tabitha is a beautifully mannered, friendly, softy but authoritivly-spoken lady who knows what’s current and has her finger on the pulse. But as she told me…..she was ‘’born in Coventry and I was brought up in a tiny rural village  in Warwickshire called Napton on the Hill. With a windmill and lots of canals, a really really rural upbringing. I was adopted, my dad was the local vicar so I think when people look at me they don’t expect that was my upbringing’’. Tabitha explained that her speciality might not have been hip-hop but it was TV just cos she ended up watching so much ‘’living in small village without a driving licence meant that I watched a enormous amount of television and I remember actually watching the first night of channel 4 absolutely glued to it -it was amazing. I think that’s why I have feel that connection with channel 4 because I was 12 and as I was being shaped then channel 4 was part of that’’.  I understood exactly how Tabitha feels. I recall channel 4’s launch too as I attended the opening night party and grew up thinking they were my generations broadcaster that were connected to me. and of course my first few years in TV were at channel 4. unlike me though who has a degree in related media subjects, Tabitha did a philosophy degree and when she finished that she worked for some composers in Soho for a couple of years. ‘’They were doing music for films which was interesting.  But my big break was going to the BBC where I worked in publishing in my university holidays and the BBC were doing a massive oral history series -26 episodes called ‘people century’.  And I went there to work on the book.  Then I soon thought wait a second I liked the bits with pictures more. So I ended up slipping in across into the production team and worked on that for a couple of years.  That was absolutely my biggest ever break because it was a huge team it was protected it was intelligent public service television and we had a reunion just last weekend’’.

So Tabitha clearly understands how to manoeuvre in this manic media world and make the jump from platform to platform but I was most impressed with the length of time she’s taken to perfect her craft. She revealed ‘’I slid in as a researcher and than an AP and then producer and then a director. But it took long time but that was good thing actually, you would effectively be serving an apprenticeship with people who would be very experienced and this wealth of knowledge that they could share with you and you were on a realistic contract so you felt safe’’.

Unlike today where reporters are expected to research, script, shoot, edit and promote their content, Tabitha explains she’s not a shooter ‘’I did do some shooting have but its not very pretty.  Now it’s a skill that I wish I had but in a way I look back on fondness on those times where you just have to concentrate on one thing and in doing it well rather than everything else at once’’.

Tabitha also wrote a book and lived in New York for a bit, and whilst she was out there was approached by channel 4 to see if she would like to join the commissioning team. ..’’Coming into channel 4 after being at the BBC for good few years.  Firstly it was fantastic because it was small it was an institution -You know the first thing I noticed when I came up was how many people that were non-white faces were coming out of the door and I don’t usually seethe world in the terms of colour.  So it was a real first impression, but my biggest shock was the culture shock being commissioner editor rather than a producer or director’’.

Obviously Tabitha having gone from programme maker to commissioner means she’s not so hands on anymore ‘’well the thing I miss most is that complete immersion into a subject matter that you get when you are making a film or going places that I will never normally go to. So that’s being a filmmaker but the commissioner editor side of it I love the fact that you could go into so many peoples edits and you can talk about ideas and you can see how’s it all done and you can be there when the magic happens when its put together. If you do it right you can be a real enabling force.  The downside to commissioning is having to say no really when ideas are perfectly good but is just not right for us and you know people have spent thousands of pounds hours of pounds in developing stuff, the best moment is saying yes and worst moment is saying no’’.

Tabitha broke down her current job remit for us ‘’I am the commissioner editor for arts at channel 4 and the remit is really anything that is art. I am taking it in its broadest sense because I think coming in I felt that art television not arts but arts television was very narrow in what it focussed in and quiet dull and scholastic almost that we going to be lectured and sometimes its absolutely fascinating ways but it was in lecture mode of you need to learn about this make you into a more civilised person so I am going to tell about it. They are expressing it creatively so I think, in my egomaniacal of way I want people in 50 or 100 years to look back at the channel 4 arts output and somehow understand of who we are now.  Whereas if you do that for most of the arts output from all the broadcasters then we would think; we are a people obsessed with impressionist painting or obsessed this school and you don’t have a sense    of all the amazing creative expressions what’s going on now and what people preoccupation are.

being aware of your competitors content is important and when i asked her about the BBC’s current ”mixed race season” this is what she had to say ”As a mixed race person I’m delighted that there’s a mix race season.  I also think that actually when I heard about the mixed race season and I heard about the white season I was really jealous. Working at channel 4 that’s our territory we should be doing that.  I do have slightly mixed feelings about the mixed race season just in the sense of mixed race I have mixed feelings about using the word race as a kind of.. as a reality. …but I don’t describe myself as mixed race really. What’s a race? What races I’m I mixing in? What’s a race in the first place? So yes certainly I got mixed ancestry but everybody does, I’ve got dual heritage but lots people do. So it will be great. I am not sure what’s in the BBC season but if they go into and have a discussion about what mixed race actually means… and also I hope it reflects not just African Caribbean white mixed race or African white that it can be, you know, Jewish and Turkish mixed race”.

Tabitha explained how STREET SUMMER came about ‘’it happened when just before I started the job and I went for a drink with Roy Ackerman  who’s been in the business for years.  So his advice was never give up the mainstream yes you’re doing arts but don’t think that means you have to be on the side-line’s and then we were talking about Hip-hop. Those two things came together and I just I thought I know I want the arts to be about what’s around us in what people are doing.  You can’t look out the window and walk down the street without some manifestation of it. Street dancers on the television, Banksy making films .  This stuff is not niche its mainstream and yet I thought in my egocentric way I don’t understand it and I want to, I don’t understand the discipline and the rigour of it and I want to in the same way that I have been taught I should understand the rigour and the discipline of ballet.  So it was born out of curiosity’’.

Having seen the content of all the urban shows i assumed Tabitha was a big urban culture specialist. instead she revealed ”Massive learning curve. There were meetings; almost every meeting for the first couple of months, people would just talk. There just be words that I had no idea what they were and they would turn out to be incredibly famous rap artist or, you know, hip hop artists or dancers and just hadn’t heard of them. So it was a huge learning curve”.

This summer Tabitha made all young people feel connected and engaged with our media by screening STREET SUMMER. we need more Tabitha’s in our world!