Tuesday, March 10, 2026

Legendary Producers Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis Announce ‘Nothing but Hits’ Las Vegas Run

Legendary producers Jimmy Jam, left, and Terry Lewis are shown in a promotional image for their upcoming Las Vegas residency. The duo's "Nothing But Hits" shows will debut at Voltaire at The Venetian Resort this spring, featuring special guest appearances by vocalists Ruben Studdard and Shanice Wilson to perform their massive catalog of R&B classics.
The architects behind the Minneapolis Sound are officially taking their legendary, multi-decade catalog to the Strip.

Rock & Roll Hall of Fame production duo Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis have announced a limited-run Las Vegas residency titled "Nothing But Hits," set to debut this spring at Voltaire at The Venetian Resort. The immersive live experience will mark the first time the iconic songwriting and production team will take the stage to perform and share the stories behind their staggering catalog.

The residency is currently scheduled for six performances on April 17–18, 22, and 24–26.

"We've been fortunate to do so many incredible things in our careers," Jimmy Jam said in a statement regarding the announcement. "But we've never had the chance to perform our catalog live. Being able to share these songs — and the stories behind them — is going to be special".

With a record-breaking 42 Billboard No. 1 hits and over 100 gold, platinum, and diamond albums to their credit, Jam & Lewis aim to deliver upwards of 40 hits per night. To handle the massive vocal requirements of their discography, the duo will be backed by a live band and a rotating cast of special guest vocalists, with "American Idol" winner Ruben Studdard and "Star Search" legend Shanice already confirmed to appear.

The Las Vegas run coincides with the 40th anniversary of Janet Jackson's landmark 1986 album, "Control," a project that fundamentally shifted the landscape of R&B and pop and cemented the duo's status as super-producers. Fans can expect a heavy emphasis on their defining work with Jackson, alongside anthems they crafted for Michael Jackson, Prince, Usher, Mary J. Blige and Boyz II Men.

"The show will feel like traveling through the soundtrack of your life," Terry Lewis added. "It's not just the music — it's the memories and moments connected to it."

Michael Jordan, Jay-Z, and Now Dr. Dre: How 90s Icons Dominate the 2026 Forbes Billionaires List

Record producer and entrepreneur Dr. Dre is shown in a May 2014 file photo. Twelve years after the landmark sale of Beats Electronics to Apple — which prompted Dre to prematurely declare himself hip-hop's first billionaire — Forbes officially added the Aftermath founder to its 2026 World's Billionaires List on Tuesday. Dre is currently back in the studio producing tracks for T.I.'s upcoming final album.
Twelve years ago, in a grainy, celebratory video alongside Tyrese Gibson, Dr. Dre infamously declared
himself the first billionaire in hip-hop following Apple's massive acquisition of Beats Electronics. Forbes quickly corrected the math at the time, noting he was still a couple hundred million dollars short. But as of this morning, the financial record has finally caught up to the brag.


Dr. Dre has officially joined the three-comma club. The legendary Aftermath founder made his debut on the Forbes 2026 World's Billionaires List on Tuesday, boasting an estimated net worth of exactly $1 billion.
"Dr. Dre has become the latest hip-hop artist to join the billionaire club. On Tuesday, March 10, Forbes confirmed the veteran rapper-producer landed on its World Billionaires List for the first time. The business outlet attributes his billion-dollar fortune to the success of his Aftermath Entertainment record label... and Beats Electronics."

— Forbes 2026 Billionaires List
Source: Forbes

According to Forbes, Dre's historic wealth is still primarily driven by the foundational $3 billion sale of Beats to Apple in 2014, combined with the enduring value of his Aftermath Entertainment record label — the launching pad for generational icons like Eminem, 50 Cent, and Kendrick Lamar. Recent business ventures, including his "Gin & Juice" ready-to-drink cocktail brand with Snoop Dogg, have also padded his portfolio.

The Billionaire Class: Where Dre Ranks Among the Culture's Elite

Dre’s induction into the billionaire ranks places him in highly exclusive company, making him only the sixth musician in history to cross the threshold.

He becomes just the second hip-hop artist currently on the list, trailing his longtime peer Jay-Z, who remains the wealthiest musician in the world with an estimated net worth of $2.8 billion. Jay-Z famously became hip-hop's first viable billionaire in 2019. The two moguls are now standing alone following the financial falls of Kanye West and Sean "Diddy" Combs. West, who peaked at over $2 billion, dropped to an estimated $400 million following the termination of his Adidas partnership. Combs, previously hovering near the milestone, has seen his net worth plummet to an estimated $400 million to $800 million amid mounting legal battles and lost partnerships.

The women of the golden era are also commanding massive fortunes. Rihanna remains America’s youngest self-made billionaire, sitting at $1.4 billion thanks to her Fenty Beauty and Savage X Fenty empires. BeyoncĂ© has also officially solidified her billionaire status, boasting an even $1 billion valuation driven by decades of record-breaking music sales and world tours.

"As of December 2025, six music artists have reached the billionaire status... Jay-Z leading the list with $2.5 billion, Taylor Swift—the richest female musician—and then Rihanna, the first female artist to become a billionaire."

— Industry Wealth Rankings

Outside of music, the sports icons beloved by the 90s and 00s crowd continue to dominate the financial rankings. Michael Jordan towers over the athlete category with an estimated net worth of $3.8 billion, fueled by his enduring Nike royalties and the sale of the Charlotte Hornets. He is followed by Magic Johnson at $1.5 billion and LeBron James at $1.2 billion, both of whom crossed the milestone through savvy real estate, sports ownership, and business investments.

Back Behind the Boards

However, the newly minted billionaire is proving he has no intention of retiring his legendary ear. As his financial status hits a historic high, Dre is stepping back behind the boards to help craft a highly anticipated farewell for another rap pioneer.

Atlanta legend T.I. recently confirmed that Dr. Dre has contributed production to his forthcoming final album, "Kill the King". During a recent interview, Tip revealed the two collaborated on a track titled "Where I'm From," which also features Grammy-winning vocalist Anderson .Paak.

Monday, March 9, 2026

Hip-Hop Heavyweights File Supreme Court Brief in Dallas Capital Murder Case

Rappers T.I., left, Lecrae, center, and Killer Mike pose on the set of the music video for their collaborative track "Headphones." T.I. and Killer Mike joined a coalition of hip-hop artists who filed an amicus brief with the U.S. Supreme Court on Monday, challenging the use of rap lyrics by Texas prosecutors to secure death penalty sentences.
The fight to protect Black art from being weaponized in the courtroom has officially reached the highest court in the land — again.

A coalition of hip-hop heavyweights — including Killer Mike, T.I., Young Thug and Travis Scott — filed an amicus curiae brief on Monday urging the U.S. Supreme Court to intervene in a Dallas County death penalty case. The artists are challenging the prosecution's use of rap lyrics to secure a capital murder sentence, arguing the practice violates constitutional protections and invites juries to make life-or-death decisions based on racial bias.

The filing centers on James Garfield Broadnax, a Black man who was sentenced to death in 2009 for a double homicide outside a Garland, Texas, music studio. During the punishment phase of the trial, prosecutors presented more than 40 pages of Broadnax's handwritten rap lyrics to a nearly all-white jury. The state argued the lyrics reflected a "master plan" for violence and proved he posed a "future danger" to society — a specific finding required by Texas law to impose the death penalty.
"In too many instances, we have the justice system blessing this practice when it comes to rap, when it would never be tolerated with any other kind of artistic expression. When prosecutors treat them as literal evidence of future violence, they invite jurors to decide a death-penalty case based on fear and stereotypes instead of the law."

— Chad Baruch, Lead Appellate Attorney
Source: Amicus Curiae Brief, Broadnax v. Texas (Docket No. 25-939)
Lead appellate attorney Chad Baruch, who authored the brief alongside leading hip-hop scholars, blasted the tactic as a direct attack on creative expression.

"Rap lyrics are creative expression," Baruch said in a statement released Monday. "When prosecutors treat them as literal evidence of future violence, they invite jurors to decide a death-penalty case based on fear and stereotypes instead of the law."

The brief points out a glaring double standard: Broadnax's lyrics were not introduced during the guilt or innocence phase of the trial, which the defense argues is a tacit admission by the state that the art had no actual relevance to the facts of the crime. Instead, the lyrics were introduced solely during sentencing to depict Broadnax as a "gangster" and secure his execution.

For the artists involved, the Supreme Court filing is the latest front in a grueling, decade-long war over the criminalization of hip-hop.

This new filing serves as a direct continuation of the landmark 2019 "Hip-Hop Brief" in the Jamal Knox case, where Killer Mike first rallied artists like Meek Mill and Chance the Rapper to explain the posturing and poetic traditions of rap to the Supreme Court. Seven years later, the justice system is still struggling to separate the art from the artist.

"The State weaponized cultural expressions common to rap to improperly portray Broadnax as dangerous and threatening... stoking racial and anti-rap bias."

— Excerpt from the Amicus Brief filed March 9, 2026
Source: Supreme Court of the United States Filing

Young Thug understands those stakes intimately. The Atlanta superstar recently spent years at the center of the massive YSL RICO trial in Georgia, where prosecutors controversially entered his own song lyrics into evidence to allege criminal conspiracy. During that ordeal, artists like Travis Scott rallied behind the "Protect Black Art" campaign, arguing that rap is the only fictional art form routinely treated as an autobiographical confession by the American justice system.


Meanwhile, Killer Mike continues to leverage his platform to protect and elevate the culture on multiple fronts. When he is not drafting briefs to the Supreme Court, the Grammy-winning MC is physically rebuilding his hometown. Just last week, it was announced that he had joined fellow Atlanta legends Usher and 2 Chainz as major celebrity investors in the sprawling $5 billion Centennial Yards redevelopment project in downtown Atlanta.

With Broadnax scheduled to be executed by lethal injection on April 30, the coalition is urging the Supreme Court to grant a stay and issue a definitive ruling on whether the First Amendment protects hip-hop from being used as a lethal weapon by the state.

"In too many instances, we have the justice system blessing this practice when it comes to rap, when it would never be tolerated with any other kind of artistic expression," Baruch stated.

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