Boy Band Guru, Alleged Pedophile, Is a GOP Donor

Lou Pearlman - Boy Bands

Via the New York Post, we learn that the architect of several famous boy bands, Lou Pearlman, has allegedly taken something more than a professional interest in the talent he’s, er, mentored, over the years. He’s currently in federal custody on other charges related to a ponzi scheme, wherein he scammed more than one thousand investors of more than $315 million. According to Wikipedia,

After being on the run since December 2006, Pearlman was finally arrested in Indonesia on June 14, 2007 after being spotted by a German tourist couple. Pearlman was then indicted by a federal grand jury on June 27, 2007.

I wonder what he may have been up to in Indonesia? But now, according to the New York Post, there’s even more news (emphasis in the original):

October 2, 2007 — LOU Pearlman – the hog-fat, boy-band honcho who created *NSYNC and the Backstreet Boys and launched the careers of Justin Timberlake and Nick Carter – was a pervy pedophile who preyed on the young men he mentored, Vanity Fair reports.

“I would absolutely say the guy was a sexual predator. All the talent knew what Lou’s game was,” Steve Mooney, an aspiring singer who was Pearlman’s assistant, told VF’s Bryan Burrough. “Some guys joked about it. I remember asking me, ‘Have you let Lou you yet?’ ”

Mooney said he once asked Pearlman, who was known as “Big Poppa,” what it would take for him to get into a band. “I’ll never forget this as long as I live. He leaned back in his chair, in his white terry cloth robe and white underwear, and spread his legs,” Mooney told Burrough. “And then he said, and these were his exact words, ‘You’re a smart boy. Figure it out.’ ” Mooney added that a singer groped by Pearlman told him, “Look, if a guy wants to massage me, and I’m getting a million dollars for it, you just go along with it. It’s the price you got to pay.”

Phoenix Stone, an early member of the Backstreet Boys, tells Vanity Fair Pearlman was “definitely inappropriate” with Nick Carter. Nick’s mom, Jane Carter, wouldn’t get into specifics, but said, “Certain things happened and it almost destroyed our family. I tried to warn everyone. I tried to warn all the mothers . . . I tried to expose him for what he was years ago.”

Tim Christofore, a member of Take 5, recalls that during a sleepover at Pearlman’s house, the music czar swan-dived onto his and another boy’s bed and wrestled with them wearing only in a towel, which came off. “We were like, ‘Ooh, Lou, that’s gross.’ What did I know? I was 13,” Christofore told Vanity Fair.

Rich Cronin, lead singer of LFO, recalled Pearlman told him of an “ancient massage technique that if I massage you and we bond in a certain way, it will strengthen your aura.”

Um, say it with me. . . EEEEEWWWWWW!!!!!

– Huffington Post

What do you think of this post?
  • Interesting (3)
  • Sucks (1)
  • Awesome (0)
  • Useful (0)
  • Boring (0)

Unauthorized Posting of Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority Ritual

Alpha Kappa Alpha

Dear Sir or Madam:

We represent the Sorority with respect to her intellectual property matters. AKA, the U.S. first and oldest collegiate Greek lettered Sorority, is a highly-respected, internationally renowned, private non-profit public service sorority. AKA was founded in 1908 and has a membership of over 200,000 African-American, college-educated women, with hundreds of chapters worldwide.

AKA owns numerous trademarks and service marks that are registered with the U.S. Trademark Office for various word and design marks incorporating her Alpha Kappa Alpha brand (“Sorority Marks”). More specifically, a non-exhaustive list of marks that AKA owns include: Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority, Inc. (U.S. Reg. No. 3,153,908 ); AKA (U.S. Reg. No. 3,298,147; 3,733,169; 3,694,726; 3,601,432; 3,601,425; 3,601,347; 3,495,918; and 2,094,598; ); Ivy Leaf (U.S. Reg. No. 3,148,749), her shield (U.S. Reg. No. 1,442,550); the combination mark of AKA in the colors pink & green (U.S. Reg. No. 3,694,726) and her founding year 1908 (U.S. Reg. No. 3,653, 283). In addition, the Sorority has federal protection under the Lanham Act for the following marks: Alpha Kappa Alpha, AKA1908, 20 Pearls and others. Please note, we recently enforced our rights against a major U.S. company that was using the combination of our founding year and colors on their goods without our permission. We were also successful in getting a Washington DC nightclub to change its name wherein it deleted the mark “AKA”.

AKA diligently protects her goodwill and reputation associated with her marks. Merchandise, communications and videos bearing the Sorority Marks may be distributed, published and shown through the Sorority’s authorized licensees only. In addition, the Sorority’s policies strictly prohibit its licensees from displaying, showing or performing videos or any other medium over the internet that contain her intellectual property.

It has recently come to our attention that your company is posting its ritual which is a Sorority protected trade secret. The posting can be found using URL
http://www.conspirazzi.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/03/ritual-books/alpha-kappa-alpha-ritual-circa-1977.pdf.

More specifically, the posting consists of a Sorority ritual circa 1977. Please be advised that your company’s unauthorized posting and publication of the Sorority’s Ritual constitutes, among other things, trademark infringement, unfair competition, trademark dilution, trade secret violation and other causes of action under state and federal law. In particular, your posting is likely to cause irreparable harm by disclosing some of the Sorority’s most cherished secrets, which are and should always be, known only to its membership.

We therefore demand that Conspirazzi immediately (1) cease and desist from any further posting or publication of the Sorority’s Ritual and that all references to it be immediately removed from your website and from all other mediums that you enable or allow another to view, post and/or publish such works. We respectfully request your confirmation that you have ceased all further use of the Sorority Marks together with the complete accounting demanded above by no later than September 2, 2011.

We trust that you will govern yourself accordingly. This letter does not constitute an exhaustive statement of the Sorority’s position, nor does it constitute a waiver or limitation of any of the Sorority’s legal or equitable rights, all of which are expressly reserved. In addition, the Sorority has a good faith belief that use of the material in the manner complained of above was not authorized by it, its agent, or the law.

Further, the information in the notification is accurate, and under penalty of perjury, I am authorized to act on behalf of the Sorority.

Alpha Kappa Alpha

Sincerely,
/John/
John S. Kendall, Esq.

cc: Ms. Carolyn House Stewart, Esq., President
Ms. Deborah Dangerfield, Executive Director

What do you think of this post?
  • Awesome (4)
  • Boring (2)
  • Interesting (1)
  • Useful (0)
  • Sucks (0)

Kanye West Jokes About Devil Worship, Illuminati Rumors

‘Question … can you devil worship on the new iphone?’ MC quips on Twitter.

By Mawuse Ziegbe, with reporting by Sway Calloway (@realsway)

Kanye West’s latest artistic endeavor, the musically-driven, short film “Runaway,”has been a hot topic among his fans, with #runaway and #askkanye becoming Twitter trending topics after the film’s Saturday night premiere on MTV. Apparently, some viewers felt the project invoked symbolism of the Illuminati, an ancient secret society that has been linked to contemporary conspiracy theories suggesting an elite group of leaders control the world unbeknownst to the general public.On Sunday (October 24), ‘Ye took to his Twitter page to humorously address rumors that he’s a member of the purported society and worships the devil. Apparently, Yeezy has no clue what the society even is.

“I’ve got question about “the illuminati” … what is it exactly ??? … and why do people think pop stars have a membership???!!! LOL,” he tweeted. “Is illuminati and devil worshipping like the same thing … do they have a social network that celebs can sign up for?”

The MC also joked about which new tech gadgets and social media outlets would work for his so-called satanic lifestyle.

“Question… can you devil worship on the new iphone??? LOL!!!” he typed. “What’s better for devil worshipping Iphone or the Droid… Does lucifer return text… is he or she on Skype? Don’t wanna be sexist.”

‘Ye even took a crack at sparking a devil-friendly trending topic.

“#DoyouthinkLucifer uses in in ear monitors or signature Beats by Dre headphones???!!!” Yeezy wrote.

The MC did say he was cool with legendary hip-hop spinner and producer DJ Clue, who’s known for lacing many of his projects with a chant that sounds similar to Illuminati.

“I am down with Cluemanotti though,” he wrote. “That’s my boy.”

Yeezy joked about claims that he’s down with the devil on Twitter, but he has also recently addressed one of his lyrics that may have riled up fans. In a sit-down with MTV News after the premiere of “Runaway,” broke down the meaning of a rhyme from a freestyle he kicked last year that lit up the blogosphere.

“There’s this line where I say, ‘I sold my soul to the devil, that’s a crappy deal,’ and all these people said, ‘What you mean you sold your soul to the devil?’ But when I say it, I’m saying, when I allow other people’s ideals to interfere with what I know is true to myself, that’s the devil,” West explained. “So, it’s like, people talking mess on the blogs is the devil or …trying to call me names, that’s what the devil is. And me thinking twice about what it is that’s really in my heart because of what people’s reaction would be is me selling my soul to the devil.”

The lyricist maintained that he will no longer let others’ opinions stifle his creative expression.

“You’re on earth for only 80, 90 a hundred years,” he said. “I have to create from my dreams, from the dreams I had as a 5-year-old, and use everything — all the greatest people and all the tools I have around me — and ask as many questions as I can to help facilitate and bring this out. And this [film] is one of the first examples of a dream coming true.”

Yeezy isn’t the only hip-hop star to catch heat about a visual supposedly packed with satanic imagery. Jay-Z and Swizz Beatz batted away rumors, earlier this year, that the slick video for their collabo “On to the Next One” was riddled with demonic references.

What do you think about the rumors about Kanye West? Let us know in the comments!

– MTV

What do you think of this post?
  • Interesting (2)
  • Awesome (0)
  • Useful (0)
  • Boring (0)
  • Sucks (0)