Tag Archives: JayZ

Blue Ivy gave Jay-Z goosebumps on Beyonce’s Renaissance tour – Entertainment Weekly News

  1. Blue Ivy gave Jay-Z goosebumps on Beyonce’s Renaissance tour Entertainment Weekly News
  2. ‘If She Don’t Understand Now She Will Later’: Fans Defend Jay-Z’s Status After He Reveals Daughter Blue Ivy Doesn’t Think He’s Cool Yahoo Entertainment
  3. JAY-Z Shares the Name That He and Beyoncé Initially Picked Out for Daughter Blue Ivy PEOPLE
  4. Jay-Z tried to tell daugher Blue Ivy that she has ‘cool’ parents Yakima Herald-Republic
  5. Jay-Z Can’t Help But Gush Over Beyoncé and Blue Ivy in a Sweet, Rare Interview Harper’s BAZAAR
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

Read original article here

Kim Kardashian and Tom Brady get flirty as they bid on same painting at Reform Alliance gala with Jay-Z, Matth – Daily Mail

  1. Kim Kardashian and Tom Brady get flirty as they bid on same painting at Reform Alliance gala with Jay-Z, Matth Daily Mail
  2. Tom Brady, Kim Kardashian ‘sparked’ bidding war over painting at star-studded benefit Fox News
  3. Kim Kardashian outbid by American football legend Tom Brady for George Condo work at charity auction—but both won in the end Art Newspaper
  4. Jay-Z Fundraiser Sparks Tom Brady, Kim Kardashian Rumors Casino.Org News
  5. A Cheeky Bidding War Broke Out Between Kim Kardashian and Tom Brady Over a $2 Million George Condo Artwork. Ultimately, They Both Got Lucky artnet News
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

Read original article here

Calls Out Roc Nation and Jay-Z

Photo: Michael A Walker Jr (Shutterstock)

As Tory Lanez was being taken into custody in Los Angeles on Friday afternoon, (much to his chagrin, I’m sure), there were a few other unhappy campers in the courtroom. Namely, Tory, Sr. also known as Sonstar Peterson, father of Daystar, or Tory Lanez.

In camera footage obtained by The Shade Room, Sonstar is seen walking out of the courtroom and straight into the lion’s den of reporters, eagerly awaiting the emotional statement he was to deliver.

Read more

“You wanna know exactly how I’m feeling?” he shouted as he walked directly towards the cameras. “I just stood here, in this Los Angeles County, and witnessed the worst miscarriage of justice this world has ever seen.” Peterson was surrounded by other members of Lanez’ family. All of whom were visibly upset following the announcement of the guilty verdict in the felony assault trial between Megan Thee Stallion, whose real name is Megan Pete, and Daystar Peterson.

“You wanna know exactly how I feel? I got some names I wanna call out.” Lanez’ father continued. “Alex Sipiro, Desiree Perez, and the whole wicked system of Roc Nation, including you Jay-Z.” While rapper Megan Thee Stallion is signed to label 1501 Certified, she is managed by Roc Nation, which is how the statement eventually came around to its founder.

“You who say you rose from the gutter, but you have traded and bargained, and tortured the souls of young men, and you’re still doing it.” The women behind Peterson continued nodding and snapping in approval of his speech.

Lanez’ father also implied that the trial was corrupt, and that witness Sean Kelly had been manipulated by prosecutors. “I have seen so much evidence buried in this,” Peterson claimed.

“And I know exactly what the public out there will say,” he continued his impassioned speech. “You will say, ‘I say this because I’m a father.’ See I am a father of thousands around the world. I am a father of my kids, but a spiritual father to many. And I don’t make stupid allegations cause I ain’t got nothing better to do…It’s not over, it’s not over…God does not lose.”

And perhaps it’s just my personal opinion here, but to me, the jury’s verdict is evidence of just that.

More from The Root

Sign up for The Root’s Newsletter. For the latest news, Facebook, Twitter and Instagram.

Click here to read the full article.



Read original article here

Beyoncé and Jay-Z Are the Proud Family in Rare Pic With All 3 Kids

Beyoncé got her family into formation for a rare joint photo.

Queen Bey and husband Jay-Z, along with all three of their kids, showed off their family’s Halloween costume on Instagram Nov. 3, with the tight-knit Carters embodying another famous group: The Proud Family.

In the photo, Blue Ivy, 10, embraces main character energy as Penny Proud. The young Grammy winner is seen wearing red leggings, an off-white top with an oversized collar and a maroon cardigan. Her hair is styled after Penny’s signature pigtails from the animated series, which originally aired from 2001 to 2005.

Beyoncé poses as both Trudy Proud and Suga Mama. As Trudy, the Renaissance musician stands with her hands on her hips, sporting a green blazer with an orange top and sparkly orange jeans. She channeled Suga Mama by wearing a grey wig and a blue dress with a pink coat over the gown. She nailed the grandmother figure down to the details, adding in hot pink shoes and square-shaped glasses.



Read original article here

Jeff Bezos interested in bidding on Commanders, possibly with Jay-Z

Comment

A day after the Washington Commanders announced that Daniel and Tanya Snyder are considering selling the team, speculation about a potential buyer was widespread, and at least one prominent name was confirmed as having interest: Amazon founder Jeff Bezos.

Bezos has interest in bidding for the NFL team, according to a person familiar with the situation, and his bid might include music mogul Jay-Z as an investor. The person spoke on the condition of anonymity Thursday because the potential sale of the franchise is in its early stages.

“I don’t know if they will partner on it,” that person said, adding that each is “interested.”

Daniel Snyder considers sale of Washington Commanders

Bezos owns The Washington Post. Amazon currently carries the NFL’s “Thursday Night Football” package.

The news of Bezos’s interest was first reported by People.

Some within the league have said for several years that Bezos was interested in purchasing an NFL franchise at some point. But he apparently did not enter the bidding for the Denver Broncos, who were sold by the Pat Bowlen Trust in June for $4.65 billion to a group led by Walmart heir Rob Walton. NFL owners officially ratified the sale in August. It was the record sale price for an NFL franchise and it made Walton, with a net worth estimated by Forbes at $59.2 billion, the league’s richest current owner.

Bezos has an estimated net worth of $113.2 billion, according to Forbes, which currently ranks him as the world’s fourth-richest individual.

The Commanders said Wednesday Daniel and Tanya Snyder, his wife and the franchise’s co-CEO, had hired an investment bank to “consider potential transactions” related to the Commanders. The team did not specify whether the Snyders intend to sell all of the franchise or a minority share. A Commanders spokesperson said Wednesday: “We are exploring all options.”

Forbes estimated in August that the Commanders are worth $5.6 billion. On the day after the Commanders’ announcement, those in and around the NFL began to consider a list of potential buyers that could include some of the world’s wealthiest individuals.

The group being mentioned by industry analysts and other observers includes Bezos and Jay-Z; Tesla and SpaceX chief executive Elon Musk; Washington Wizards and Capitals owner Ted Leonsis and his partner in bidding on the Washington Nationals, Carlyle Group co-founder David Rubenstein; and Clearlake Capital co-founders Behdad Eghbali and Jose E. Feliciano, along with other former bidders for the Broncos.

“Owning an NFL team is the ultimate trophy,” Jack Evans, a former D.C. Council member, said in a phone interview Thursday. “More so than a baseball team, more so than anything else for those who have that kind of money. It limits, though, the field of who can buy it. The leagues want a person. They don’t want a group.”

Evans, as head of the council’s finance committee, orchestrated deals that brought the new Convention Center, Capital One Arena and Nationals Park to the city. He said he believes “there is no turning back” for Snyder and that he must sell the entire team. The price could be as high as $7 billion, Evans estimated.

Musk, who just completed a $44 billion deal to buy Twitter, is the world’s wealthiest person, with a net worth estimated by Forbes at $200.7 billion. There has been no indication to this point that he is interested in purchasing the Commanders or any other NFL team. Neither he nor his representatives responded to requests to comment.

Leonsis, Rubenstein, Eghbali and Feliciano declined to comment through spokespeople. Eghbali and Feliciano reportedly bid on the Broncos after a previous effort to purchase a minority stake in the Commanders was rebuffed by Snyder.

Brewer: Daniel Snyder is trapped — and now Washington fans can dare to dream

The Post reported in November 2020 that Snyder’s former limited partners Dwight Schar, Fred Smith and Robert Rothman had received a $900 million offer from Eghbali, Feliciano and Feliciano’s wife, Kwanza Jones. The sale was blocked, people familiar with the situation said at the time, because Snyder was attempting to exercise his right of first refusal by matching the offers made to Smith and Rothman but not the offer made to Schar. That resulted in a dispute over whether Snyder was entitled to exercise such rights in a selective manner.

NFL owners ratified a resolution in March 2021 granting Snyder a $450 million debt waiver that enabled him to buy out, for $875 million, the ownership stakes of Schar, Smith and Rothman, which had totaled about 40 percent of the franchise.

Bloomberg reported that media entrepreneur Byron Allen, who previously bid on the Broncos, is preparing a bid for the Commanders. His spokesperson did not respond to a request to comment. Allen, if successful, would become the NFL’s first Black principal team owner after the owners approved a resolution in March endorsing diversity in franchise ownership.

Other NFL owners in the past have expressed a strong desire to have Bezos buy a team.

Amazon became the exclusive national carrier of the Thursday night package as part of the NFL’s new broadcasting deals announced last year. The Amazon deal reportedly is worth about $1 billion annually.

Bezos attended the opening Thursday night game of the season carried by Amazon — the Chiefs-Chargers game on Sept. 15 in Kansas City, Mo. — and sat alongside NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell for at least part of the game.

“I’m sure that eventually it would be in everyone’s best interests if someone that’s as community-oriented as him gets involved in the Seattle situation,” New England Patriots owner Robert Kraft said in a 2019 interview with The Post.

The Seattle Seahawks likely will be sold in the coming years by the trust of late owner Paul Allen, the former Microsoft co-founder.

Jay-Z, whose given name is Shawn Carter, formed a partnership with the NFL in 2019 to make his Roc Nation agency a co-producer of the Super Bowl halftime show. He is a former part-owner of the NBA’s Brooklyn Nets and has an estimated net worth of $1.3 billion, according to Forbes. Another person familiar with his thinking left open the possibility of a bid for the team but added that Jay-Z would not pursue a minority stake in the franchise if Snyder remains the majority owner.

The consideration of a sale comes with Daniel Snyder and the Commanders under investigation by the NFL, the House Committee on Oversight and Reform and the attorneys general of D.C. and Virginia. Investigators for the U.S. attorney’s office for the Eastern District of Virginia have interviewed witnesses about allegations of financial improprieties involving the team, multiple people familiar with the situation said Wednesday. The team has denied committing any financial malfeasance

Indianapolis Colts owner Jim Irsay said last month that NFL team owners should give serious consideration to voting to remove Snyder from ownership of the Commanders.



Read original article here

Jay-Z says Bacardi is trying to underpay him in suit over cognac brand D’Usse as he calls for audit

Jay-Z says Bacardi is trying to underpay him in suit over cognac brand D’Usse … as he calls for audit of company

  • The 52-year-old mogul has filed a lawsuit against the major spirits company as he wants to know how much his alcohol line is making as they are 50/50 partners
  • TMZ Hip Hop obtained documents on Tuesday which show that his company SC liquor had demanded for financial clarity when it comes to D’Usse 
  • SC Liquor, Jay-Z’s company, is requesting for all the financial books and records in addition to the location of all the warehouses storing barrels, bottles, and accessories for the cognac brand 
  • They also want all the pertinent information regarding Bacardi’s physical inventory as well as the inventory process
  • It does remain unclear why Jay-Z and partners are pushing this process forward but it is obvious there is distrust in the business partnership 
  • SC Liquor says that it needs to ‘monitor the conduct of [Bacardi’s] business to protect SC’s rights as’ a partner in the company
  • Jay-Z and Bacardi have had a partnership on D’Usse since 2012 

Jay-Z is looking to sell a share of the upscale cognac brand D’Ussé, and saying that Bacardi is trying to lowball him on the sale total.

The rapper, 52, has filed with the court a request to see Bacardi’s figures on its D’Ussé brand, TMZ reported after reviewing court docs in the case.

The partnership between the rapper and the liquor brand, which has been in place since 2012, is supposed to be set at 50 percent each.

Taking a stand: Jay-Z (seen in October 2021) is looking to sell a share of the upscale cognac brand D’Ussé, and is saying that Bacardi is trying to lowball him on the sale total in new legal docs 

Jay-Z, via his company SC Liquor, sought to exercise a buyout clause with Bacardi, which is contractually stipulated to ‘negotiate in good faith’ on the final total, his legal team said court docs.

Reps for Jay-Z’s company said that the corporation linked with Bacardi, Empire Investments Inc., has been stalling and stonewalling the rapper’s efforts to get accurate financial totals for D’Ussé.

Jay-Z said through his legal team that he feels Bacardi has intentionally mismanaged aspects of its business in an effort to hinder profits ahead of a potential buyout.

While both of the valuations are redacted in legal docs, TMZ reported, Jay-Z said Bacardi’s estimation was ‘well below’ a reasonable total.

Giant: The 52-year-old mogul has filed a lawsuit against Bacardi as he wants to know how much his alcohol line is making as they are 50/50 partners

The rapper is asking the court to force Bacardi to comprehensively reveal its finances in regards to the D’Ussé, as he wants ‘financial clarity’ regarding his top-shelf cognac brand D’Usse. 

TMZ Hip Hop obtained documents on Tuesday which show that his company SC liquor had demanded for financial clarity when it comes to D’Usse.

According to the site, Jay-Z’s company is requesting for all the financial books and records in addition to the location of all the warehouses storing barrels, bottles, and accessories for the cognac brand.

They also want all the pertinent information regarding Bacardi’s physical inventory as well as the inventory process. 

It does remain unclear why Jay-Z and partners are pushing this process forward but it is obvious there is distrust in the business partnership.

Serving it up: TMZ Hip Hop obtained documents on Tuesday which show that his company SC liquor had demanded for financial clarity when it comes to D’Usse

The ROC: According to the site, Jay-Z’s company is requesting for all the financial books and records in addition to the location of all the warehouses storing barrels, bottles, and accessories for the cognac brand, he is pictured with wife Beyonce in June 2021

TMZ notes that one of the statements in the legal documents is very interesting as it read that SC Liquor says that it needs to ‘monitor the conduct of [Bacardi’s] business to protect SC’s rights as’ a partner in the company.

Jay-Z and Bacardi have had a partnership on D’Usse since 2012.

He regularly name checks the brand in his songs and in 2014 even poured some of the cognac into one of his Grammys and drank it in order to promote it.

Shot: Jay-Z and Bacardi have had a partnership on D’Usse since 2011

Meanwhile earlier this month the 99 Problems rapper was featured in outtakes from wife Beyonce’s Club Renaissance Paris celebration in partnership with Tiffany & Co. earlier this month.

The 41-year-old megastar stunned in a silver ensemble as she posed in an elevator with husband as she added a sporty oversize jacket.

The Break My Soul songstress wrote in the caption to her loyal legion of followers, ‘CLUB RENAISSANCE Paris with partner @tiffanyandco.’

She then added hashtags, ‘#TiffanyAndCo #CLUBRENAISSANCE.’ 

Going up: Meanwhile earlier this month the 99 Problems rapper was featured in outtakes from wife Beyonce’s Club Renaissance Paris celebration in partnership with Tiffany & Co. earlier this month

Read original article here

Pusha T Delivers “It’s Almost Dry” Ft. Jay-Z, Kanye West, Kid Cudi, Pharrell & More

Hip Hop has been waiting on pins and needles for the arrival of Pusha T’s latest and finally, it has hit streaming services. The build-up to the release of It’s Almost Dry has been quite the rollout as Pusha went on a full publicity tour to speak about his new record. The 12-track project features looks from Jay-Z, Pharrell Williams, Lil Uzi Vert, Don Toliver, Labrinth, Malice, Kid Cudi, and Kanye West. 

The latter two artists appear on a track together, and their collaboration comes following their controversial fallout after West insulted Cudi online. Cudi has recently come forward to say that he approved the feature for Pusha, but told fans that his friendship with West is no more and there wouldn’t be any other collaborations in the future.

Meanwhile, Pusha T spoke with Rolling Stone about It’s Almost Dry and said: “I’m always creating a masterpiece and in the creation of that in terms of a painting, you end up telling people while they waiting on it, ‘It’s almost dry,’ because they’re always asking, ‘When will it be done?’ And you have to wait on masterpieces. Also in drug culture, a lot of times you’ll have people waiting on the product and it’s not dry yet. You can come get it when it’s dry.”

Stream It’s Almost Dry but Pusha T and share your thoughts.

Tracklist

1. Brambleton
2. Let the Smokers Shine the Coupes
3. Dreamin of the Past ft. Ye
4. Neck & Wrist ft. Jay-Z, Pharrell
5. Just So You Remember
6. Diet Coke
7. Rock n Roll ft. Kid Cudi, Ye
8. Call My Bluff 
9. Scrape It Off the Top ft. Don Toliver, Lil Uzi Vert
10. Hear Me Clearly
11. Open Air
12. I Pray For You ft. Malice, Labrinth, Clipse



Read original article here

‘Jay-Z needs to decide which side he’s on’: Chateau Marmont workers to picket star’s Oscars after-party | Los Angeles

Nestled at the foot of mansion-studded hills, just north of Los Angeles’ legendary Sunset Boulevard, the seven-story Chateau Marmont has been a mainstay of Hollywood socializing for nearly a century – including in recent years, the venue for Jay-Z and Beyoncé’s ultra-exclusive post-Oscars bash.

But the storied Hollywood playground has become a rallying point for a growing labor movement, and this Sunday, scores of Chateau Marmont workers, alleging longstanding rights violations and discrimination by their employer, plan to protest outside the Academy Awards afterparty. That means the Carters and their star-studded guestlist will have to choose whether to cross a picket line to get in.

“Hopefully our presence will educate people that they need to go somewhere else,” said Kurt Petersen, the co-president of Unite Here Local 11, a union supporting the service staff, who are not unionized. “This hotel should not be seen any more as the go-to spot in Hollywood until they change the way they treat workers. We’re in a moment in our history where people need to decide which side they are on.

“That’s the question everyone needs to ask themselves, including Jay-Z.”

A pseudo-European castle, Chateau Marmont has long been a favorite retreat for some of America’s most celebrated cultural figures. Built in 1929 by a Los Angeles attorney and originally intended as a top-flight apartment building for wealthy New Yorkers moving West, the Chateau was converted into a hotel after the Great Depression and has cultivated an air of exclusivity ever since.

Jay-Z’s and Beyoncé’s Oscar party guests will be met this year with protesters. Photograph: Jeffrey Mayer/WireImage

Luminaries from F Scott Fitzgerald to Sofia Coppola have produced work at the building, and the hotel has made countless appearances in popular music, film and literature, including references in songs by the Grateful Dead, Miley Cyrus and Lana Del Rey. Since 1990, the hotel has been run by André Balazs, an elite hotelier and celebrity in his own right, known for his romantic relationships with A-listers. All these associations with stars have only added to the hotel’s premier reputation over the years.

That’s all changing now. Since last February, the Chateau’s staff – some of whom have worked at the hotel for decades – have led a fierce boycott that has drawn the support of Hollywood figures including Jane Fonda, Spike Lee, Issa Rae, Gabrielle Union, Samira Wiley, Robin Thede, Ashley Nicole Black and Alfonso Cuarón. Director Aaron Sorkin scrapped a shoot at the hotel for Being the Ricardos; Paramount Plus series The Offer also pulled out of filming there.

It’s a dramatic fall from grace for the hotel’s management. In an emailed statement, a spokesperson accused the union of trying to “damage the Chateau Marmont” by orchestrating protests using “paid agitators … most of whom are not former employees and have no connections to the non-union Chateau Marmont”.

But the movement has been a vital boost for the workers, whose discontent runs deep over what they have called a toxic environment.

Bias appeared to be rife at the hotel. Darker-skinned employees have said they were subjected to racist remarks and passed over for promotions. According to an investigation by the Hollywood Reporter, the Chateau’s managing director, Amanda Grandinetti, referred to one staff member as a “blackie”, and told another that they should respond to her by saying “Yessa, massa,” apparently in reference to a slave owner. In a lawsuit filed against the Chateau last year, April Blackwell, a black woman who worked at the Chateau, said Grandinetti fired her after she complained about a pattern of racist abuse from guests.

Grandinetti did not respond to the Guardian’s requests for comment, but she previously acknowledged to the Hollywood Reporter that she “could have advocated more quickly for [her] team”.

The Chateau’s female employees have said they were subjected to frequent sexual harassment. Workers painted a grim portrait of Balazs, alleging that the owner would get drunk on the premises and grope female workers – an accusation Balazs has denied. Management also failed to take action when guests touched female employees without their consent, workers alleged.

The hotel’s spokesperson said, “These meritless allegations are all unproven for one simple reason: they were manufactured in lawsuits bought and paid for by Unite Here Local 11 as part of their targeted efforts to unionize Chateau Marmont. Contrary to the bogus claims in these already-dismissed, union-backed sham filings, Chateau Marmont has a long and well-documented history of diversity and inclusion among both our employees and our guests.”

Things came to a head in 2020. Just before the pandemic hit, Chateau staff approached Unite Here to discuss how they could push for better working conditions, Petersen, the union organizer, said. That effort was shattered in mid-March, as the coronavirus began to spread, when the Chateau’s management abruptly laid off the vast majority of its staff – 248 people – with no severance or extended health insurance.

One of those workers was Alejandro Roldan, a 33-year-old full-time housekeeper, who told the Guardian he was making just over $15 an hour at the Chateau before he lost his job, and with it, his health insurance. Then he caught Covid – and decided against a costly hospital visit. But then his symptoms became severe. “I was afraid I was going to die,” he said.

Alejandro Roldan in front of the Chateau Marmont. Photograph: Damon Casarez/The Guardian

It was a blow on top of a workplace accident he suffered just over a month before the layoff, when he was setting up for Jay-Z’s last Oscars party and a glass coffee table shattered, sending shards into his eyes. He made a full recovery, but was hit with more hospital bills, which his employer didn’t help cover. “I was frustrated,” he said. “I was like, I’m losing my vision for someone that doesn’t even support us.”

That July, Balazs announced he was reorganizing the property as a members-only club, and would not hire back most of the staff.

“It was the best union-busting campaign ever,” Petersen said. “Just fire all the workers and make sure that none of the ones who were standing up for their rights come back to work.” When Roldan and other workers began to protest, members of the Chateau’s management responded by showing up to film and warn them, “we’re watching you.”

Fired workers and supporters protested outside Chateau Marmont, 23 April 2021.
Photograph: Dania Maxwell/Los Angeles Times/Rex/Shutterstock

But the Chateau’s staff pressed on. In May 2020, the hotel workers and Unite Here 11 won the passage of a “right of recall” ordinance in Los Angeles, requiring employers to hire back workers laid off during the pandemic instead of replacing them with new ones. A similar statewide law was passed the following year.

In January 2022, the National Labor Relations Board found that Chateau Marmont had illegally surveilled its laid-off workers at protests, in order to disrupt their efforts to organize. The federal labor board negotiated a settlement with the Marmont, requiring that the hotel respect workers’ labor rights and cease its interference with worker organizing.

Petersen sees the victories as part of a broader strengthening of labor solidarity between Hollywood’s entertainment and hospitality industries in the wake of the pandemic. “We wouldn’t have this boycott without the solidarity from actors, or from Sag-Aftra, from the Iatse [International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees], from the Teamsters, who have been extraordinary,” he told the Guardian. “Both of our industries suffered tremendous losses during this time in terms of business. Those unions and those members have stood by us.”

But Chateau’s workers’ demands are still far from met. They want their jobs back, and they want clear commitments from Chateau Marmont’s management that it will reform its workplace environment. And they want to form a union, so that they’ll no longer have to feel “alone”, said Roldan.

The Chateau Marmont spokesperson said that the hotel had hired more than 50 former employees under the new ordinance, and said the union’s protests had “slowed the process of rehiring former workers”. But Petersen believes that it’s the hotel that’s “slowed the reopening purposely to wear down folks and their willingness to go back”.

This Sunday, Roldan will be among the workers picketing Jay-Z’s party. The former housekeeper is still thinking about the injury he suffered at the rapper’s last event.

“I just want Jay-Z to support us,” said Roldan. “Every time they go to the hotel, we serve them, we get whatever they want and we’re there for them. So they have to be there for us.”

Representatives at Roc Nation, Jay-Z’s company, did not return the Guardian’s request for comment.

Read original article here

Jay-Z and Beyoncé Begged by Fired Chateau Marmont Staff to Not Cross Picket Line for Oscars Party

For several years, Jay-Z and Beyoncé have thrown an ultra-exclusive Oscars bash at Chateau Marmont, a quasi-notorious hideaway for Hollywood’s crème de la crème.

And if this Sunday is anything like the power couple’s past Academy Awards afterparties, guests can expect delicacies like caviar by the gallon, truffle quesadillas, and bottles of Hov’s own Armand de Brignac Brut Gold champagne—plus a star-studded invitation list that’s previously included Mary J. Blige, Adele, Drake, Rihanna, Stevie Wonder, Michael B. Jordan, Serena Williams, Reese Witherspoon, and Leonardo DiCaprio.

But this time, celebrities may face down a picket line to get into the annual “Gold Party” at the bar of the Los Angeles hotel, and Jay-Z is under pressure to cancel altogether.

Workers say they plan to protest outside the storied Chateau Marmont and its Bar Marmont as part of a continued boycott against the company, which is under fire for terminating a majority of its staff at the start of the COVID pandemic in March 2020. Roughly 250 employees—some who had worked there for decades—were left without severance and health care.

Martha Moran, who worked at Chateau Marmont for more than three decades as a housekeeper—until she was unceremoniously let go after COVID emerged—will be among them.

Moran, 56, told The Daily Beast she will be protesting outside the hotel on Sunday night in hopes of getting her job back.

“For me, after 33 years, they left me out on the streets without any money, without any healthcare,” Moran said on Thursday. “I am asking the hotel to respect the law. I need the support of the community…the hotel threw us out like trash.”

For Moran, the Chateau Marmont was her “life’s work,” and she now feels bereft. She is older, and said it is “hard to start anew.” Moran, who has two sons, has had great difficulty paying the bills since the layoffs, and was without any income whatsoever for a few months while waiting for her unemployment benefits to kick in.

“That was a really scary feeling,” she said, adding that her family has still not fully recovered from the financial hit they took.

It is my hope that Jay-Z moves his afterparty

Sepi Shyne, mayor pro tempore of West Hollywood

The picket line is organized by the union UNITE HERE Local 11, which is also spotlighting some employees’ accusations of racial discrimination and sexual harassment. Two former workers filed now-dismissed discrimination lawsuits against the hotel in 2021, and the matters are currently in arbitration.

Employees also claim that the hotel inordinately stopped and questioned Black guests upon their arrival—including actress Tiffany Haddish, whose representative confirmed to The Hollywood Reporter that “two such incidents” occurred.

Kurt Petersen, co-president of Local 11, told The Daily Beast that “Chateau Marmont has been the absolute worst in terms of employers who tried to exploit the pandemic by throwing workers out to the curb without health insurance and pay.”

“Everyone needs to decide which side they’re on, including Jay-Z,” Petersen added. “Are you with a hotel that has tried to profit off and exploit the pandemic, or are you with the workers who’ve built the hotel and now sit outside wondering how they’re going to pay for their rent?”

Other prominent Black artists—including Gabrielle Union, Spike Lee, Issa Rae, Ta-Nehisi Coates, and Roxane Gay—are reportedly supporting the boycott.

“It is my hope that Jay-Z moves his afterparty and joins the many leaders in entertainment that have chosen to courageously stand with the many workers who are the backbone of our community,” Sepi Shyne, mayor pro tempore of West Hollywood, told The Daily Beast.

Representatives for Jay-Z and Beyoncé didn’t return messages left by The Daily Beast.

A spokesperson for Chateau Marmont told The Daily Beast that the hotel has never been unionized in its 92-year history and thus UNITE HERE’s description of its protest as a “picket line” isn’t accurate. Chateau Marmont was just one of many hotels in Los Angeles, the rep argued, that let go of the bulk of their workforces during the coronavirus pandemic.

“These meritless allegations are all unproven for one simple reason: they were manufactured in lawsuits bought and paid for by Unite Here Local 11 as part of their targeted efforts to unionize Chateau Marmont,” the spokesperson said in an email. “Contrary to the bogus claims in these already-dismissed, union-backed sham filings, Chateau Marmont has a long and well-documented history of diversity and inclusion among both our employees and our guests.”

The flack claims that the hotel has rehired as many as 50 employees as it works to reopen at full capacity, but that the union has waged an intimidation campaign that’s hampered its ability to hire more of them and has resulted in lost business—including Amazon’s Being the Ricardos and Paramount+ series The Offer scrapping shoots on the property because of the labor dispute.

Chateau Marmont, the spokesperson added, is rehiring workers based on the city’s right-of-recall ordinance, which requires hotels to reinstate staff based on seniority. The person said that some of the employees who were offered their old jobs have opted not to return.

He also suggested UNITE HERE has deployed paid agitators to protest outside the hotel even though many of them supposedly aren’t former employees and have no connection to the business.

Petersen, however, dismissed the hotel’s talking points.

“There’s no excuse for their behavior both in terms of how they’ve handled accusations of racial discrimination and sexual harassment and how they fired all their workers after the pandemic began,” Petersen told The Daily Beast. “What does that say about their credibility and moral compass? They need a sea change.

“Jay-Z standing with the workers would help us move in that direction.”

At least three former employees have filed lawsuits accusing Chateau Marmont of creating a hostile work environment for people of color.

In December 2020, a Black employee named Adrian Jules sued the Chateau’s owner, celebrity hotelier André Balazs, and the company for discrimination, sexual harassment, invasion of privacy, bullying and workplace harassment, among other alleged violations.

According to the federal lawsuit, Jules “was aware of internal practices” which were “carried out by Hostesses and front-of-the line staff, to ensure Black Staff and Guests were not highly visible to their desired predominantly white core demographic.”

I want them to respect the boycott until I am back to work.

Jules “often saw celebrity guests of color treated differently and denied entry to Chateau Marmont by White Employees,” the complaint alleges. (Court records show discovery in the case is on hold pending an arbitration in California.)

Thomasina Gross, another Black former staffer, filed a suit in Los Angeles County Superior Court in January 2021, alleging race discrimination, sexual harassment, and retaliation. The complaint alleges that, “One byproduct of the Chateau’s carefully cultivated ‘exclusive’ party environment is that the company selects its management and most visible front-of-the-house employees in a way that fits the story it sells.” The filing states that “upper management and the heads of all departments other than housekeeping are entirely white.”

The hotel’s most coveted role is restaurant server, the lawsuit alleges, and offers workers a chance at “lavish tips and mingling with A-list clientele,” but it’s often reserved for people who are “young, thin, and light-skinned or white.” Black workers, the complaint argues, are placed in less desirable jobs like housekeeping which typically don’t come with tips.

Gross claimed she was “repeatedly passed over” for promotions that instead went to white applicants. She also alleged the hotel’s managing director was “generally hostile” toward Black employees and made “overly racist or racially tinged comments,” saying, “Yes a’massa,” and referring to a colleague as her “favorite blackie.”

The complaint states that Gross, as an events server, was subject to “unwanted touching from guests on a near-daily basis.” Gross’s lawyer asked the court to dismiss the case three months later and the matter is now in arbitration.

In an April 2021 lawsuit also filed in L.A. County Superior Court, former Chateau Marmont employee April Blackwell made similar accusations to Gross.

Blackwell, who worked the overnight shift at the property’s front desk, alleged wrongful termination, whistleblower retaliation, harassment, discrimination, and negligence by the hotel.

As a Black employee, Blackwell claimed she not only faced discrimination from guests—one of whom she accused of drunkenly shouting racial slurs at her for refusing to hand over someone else’s room key—but from her supervisors, as well.

She claims the hotel’s managing director, who did not respond to The Daily Beast’s request for comment, “made numerous racist comments to employees of color.” The director “used her final stamp of approval in hiring decisions to carefully maintain the ‘look’ on which the Chateau’s glamorous brand depended,” the lawsuit stated.

After being verbally abused by a guest who raised his hand as if he was about to hit her, Blackwell discovered that she was being fired by the managing director for raising her voice during the confrontation.

Blackwell and Gross were represented by the same lawyer, Lauren Teukolsky, who filed motions to dismiss the lawsuits before the hotel responded to them. In Blackwell’s case, Teukolsky asked for a dismissal just a month after filing the complaint.

In a statement to The Hollywood Reporter in 2020, after the outlet published a scathing feature on the allegations that included interviews with some 30 Chateau Marmont employees, the property’s lawyers said “workplace issues are regularly raised, as at any business, and swiftly investigated and addressed.” The Chateau has a “whistleblower line…in place for employees to report issues or concerns directly to outside integrity counsel,” the statement said.

Balazs, for his part, was quoted in the piece as saying, “I view the curation of a boutique hotel as similar to hosting a delightful dinner party, the secret to the sauce is ‘in the mix’—the success of this recipe allows for no discrimination based on race, color, creed, sexual orientation, gender, age, or even the slightest hint of such bias.”

For now, Martha Moran would like for Jay-Z and Beyoncé to find another venue for their Oscar-night bash.

“I want them to respect the boycott until I am back to work,” she told The Daily Beast. “If they go, it’s just going to tell André [and other Chateau Marmont execs] that they can do anything they want.”

Read original article here

‘Jay-Z needs to decide which side he’s on’: Chateau Marmont workers to picket star’s Oscars after-party | Los Angeles

Nestled at the foot of mansion-studded hills, just north of Los Angeles’ legendary Sunset Boulevard, the seven-story Chateau Marmont has been a mainstay of Hollywood socializing for nearly a century – including in recent years, the venue for Jay-Z and Beyoncé’s ultra-exclusive post-Oscars bash.

But the storied Hollywood playground has become a rallying point for a growing labor movement, and this Sunday, scores of Chateau Marmont workers, alleging longstanding rights violations and discrimination by their employer, plan to protest outside the Academy Awards afterparty. That means the Carters and their star-studded guestlist will have to choose whether to cross a picket line to get in.

“Hopefully our presence will educate people that they need to go somewhere else,” said Kurt Petersen, the co-president of Unite Here Local 11, a union supporting the service staff, who are not unionized. “This hotel should not be seen any more as the go-to spot in Hollywood until they change the way they treat workers. We’re in a moment in our history where people need to decide which side they are on.

“That’s the question everyone needs to ask themselves, including Jay-Z.”

A pseudo-European castle, Chateau Marmont has long been a favorite retreat for some of America’s most celebrated cultural figures. Built in 1929 by a Los Angeles attorney and originally intended as a top-flight apartment building for wealthy New Yorkers moving West, the Chateau was converted into a hotel after the Great Depression and has cultivated an air of exclusivity ever since.

Jay-Z’s and Beyoncé’s Oscar party guests will be met this year with protesters. Photograph: Jeffrey Mayer/WireImage

Luminaries from F Scott Fitzgerald to Sofia Coppola have produced work at the building, and the hotel has made countless appearances in popular music, film and literature, including references in songs by the Grateful Dead, Miley Cyrus and Lana Del Rey. Since 1990, the hotel has been run by André Balazs, an elite hotelier and celebrity in his own right, known for his romantic relationships with A-listers. All these associations with stars have only added to the hotel’s premier reputation over the years.

That’s all changing now. Since last February, the Chateau’s staff – some of whom have worked at the hotel for decades – have led a fierce boycott that has drawn the support of Hollywood figures including Jane Fonda, Spike Lee, Issa Rae, Gabrielle Union, Samara Wiley, Robin Thede, Ashley Nicole Black and Alfonso Cuarón. Director Aaron Sorkin scrapped a shoot at the hotel for Being the Ricardos; Paramount Plus series The Offer also pulled out of filming there.

It’s a dramatic fall from grace for the hotel’s management. In an emailed statement, a spokesperson accused the union of trying to “damage the Chateau Marmont” by orchestrating protests using “paid agitators … most of whom are not former employees and have no connections to the non-union Chateau Marmont”.

But the movement has been a vital boost for the workers, whose discontent runs deep over what they have called a toxic environment.

Bias appeared to be rife at the hotel. Darker-skinned employees have said they were subjected to racist remarks and passed over for promotions. According to an investigation by the Hollywood Reporter, the Chateau’s managing director, Amanda Grandinetti, referred to one staff member as a “blackie”, and told another that they should respond to her by saying “Yes, Amassa,” apparently in reference to a slave master. In a lawsuit filed against the Chateau last year, April Blackwell, a black woman who worked at the Chateau, said Grandinetti fired her after she complained about a pattern of racist abuse from guests.

Grandinetti did not respond to the Guardian’s requests for comment, but she previously acknowledged to the Hollywood Reporter that she “could have advocated more quickly for [her] team”.

The Chateau’s female employees have said they were subjected to frequent sexual harassment. Workers painted a grim portrait of Balazs, alleging that the owner would get drunk on the premises and grope female workers – an accusation Balazs has denied. Management also failed to take action when guests touched female employees without their consent, workers alleged.

The hotel’s spokesperson said, “These meritless allegations are all unproven for one simple reason: they were manufactured in lawsuits bought and paid for by Unite Here Local 11 as part of their targeted efforts to unionize Chateau Marmont. Contrary to the bogus claims in these already-dismissed, union-backed sham filings, Chateau Marmont has a long and well-documented history of diversity and inclusion among both our employees and our guests.”

Things came to a head in 2020. Just before the pandemic hit, Chateau staff approached Unite Here to discuss how they could push for better working conditions, Petersen, the union organizer, said. That effort was shattered in mid-March, as the coronavirus began to spread, when the Chateau’s management abruptly laid off the vast majority of its staff – 248 people – with no severance or extended health insurance.

One of those workers was Alejandro Roldan, a 35-year-old full-time housekeeper, who told the Guardian he was making just over $14 an hour at the Chateau before he lost his job, and with it, his health insurance. Then he caught Covid – and decided against a costly hospital visit. But then his symptoms became severe. “I was afraid I was going to die,” he said.

Alejandro Roldan in front of the Chateau Marmont. Photograph: Damon Casarez/The Guardian

It was a blow on top of a workplace accident he suffered just over a month before the layoff, when he was setting up for Jay-Z’s last Oscars party and a glass coffee table shattered, sending shards into his eyes. He made a full recovery, but was hit with more hospital bills, which his employer didn’t help cover. “I was frustrated,” he said. “I was like, I’m losing my vision for someone that doesn’t even support us.”

That July, Balazs announced he was reorganizing the property as a members-only club, and would not hire back most of the staff.

“It was the best union-busting campaign ever,” Petersen said. “Just fire all the workers and make sure that none of the ones who were standing up for their rights come back to work.” When Roldan and other workers began to protest, members of the Chateau’s management responded by showing up to film and warn them, “we’re watching you.”

Fired workers and supporters protested outside Chateau Marmont, 23 April 2021.
Photograph: Dania Maxwell/Los Angeles Times/Rex/Shutterstock

But the Chateau’s staff pressed on. In May 2020, the hotel workers and Unite Here 11 won the passage of a “right of recall” ordinance in Los Angeles, requiring employers to hire back workers laid off during the pandemic instead of replacing them with new ones. A similar statewide law was passed the following year.

In January 2022, the National Labor Relations Board found that Chateau Marmont had illegally surveilled its laid-off workers at protests, in order to disrupt their efforts to organize. The federal labor board negotiated a settlement with the Marmont, requiring that the hotel respect workers’ labor rights and cease its interference with worker organizing.

Petersen sees the victories as part of a broader strengthening of labor solidarity between Hollywood’s entertainment and hospitality industries in the wake of the pandemic. “We wouldn’t have this boycott without the solidarity from actors, or from Sag-Aftra, from the Iatse [International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees], from the Teamsters, who have been extraordinary,” he told the Guardian. “Both of our industries suffered tremendous losses during this time in terms of business. Those unions and those members have stood by us.”

But Chateau’s workers’ demands are still far from met. They want their jobs back, and they want clear commitments from Chateau Marmont’s management that it will reform its workplace environment. And they want to form a union, so that they’ll no longer have to feel “alone”, said Roldan.

The Chateau Marmont spokesperson said that the hotel had hired more than 50 former employees under the new ordinance, and said the union’s protests had “slowed the process of rehiring former workers”. But Petersen believes that it’s the hotel that’s “slowed the reopening purposely to wear down folks and their willingness to go back”.

This Sunday, Roldan will be among the workers picketing Jay-Z’s party. The former housekeeper is still thinking about the injury he suffered at the rapper’s last event.

“I just want Jay-Z to support us,” said Roldan. “Every time they go to the hotel, we serve them, we get whatever they want and we’re there for them. So they have to be there for us.”

Representatives at Roc Nation, Jay-Z’s company, did not return the Guardian’s request for comment.

Read original article here

The Ultimate News Site