Tuesday, March 31, 2026

Watch: R&B Icon Brandy Honored With Star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame on Official ‘Brandy Day'

"The Vocal Bible" has officially cemented her legacy in stone. 

On Monday morning, R&B icon Brandy Norwood was honored with the 2,839th star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in the Recording category, a milestone so significant that city officials officially declared it "Brandy Day" in Los Angeles.

The ceremony served as a massive celebration of 1990s and 2000s Black pop culture. Brandy was joined by her parents and her daughter, Sy'rai, alongside a star-studded crowd of peers and collaborators that included Monica, Babyface, Kehlani, Jenifer Lewis and Tisha Campbell.

Issa Rae and Babyface served as the afternoon's guest speakers, delivering powerful tributes to Brandy's massive influence across music and television.

"The most inspirational part of her career is just how she had no lanes. As her career progressed, so did her ambitions," Rae told the crowd. "To me, Brandy was and is the blueprint. Without Brandy as Moesha, there's no The Parkers, no Girlfriends, no Insecure... Thank you for showing a little girl from L.A. that her story was worth telling."

Babyface, who famously tapped Brandy for the "Waiting to Exhale" soundtrack in 1995, praised her unmatched vocal agility. "You're like an athlete. No one can do it the way you do it," he said. "With everything that you sing, you put your whole heart into it. That's what I appreciate about you most."

When Brandy took the podium, the Grammy-winning artist delivered an emotional, deeply personal speech reflecting on her journey from McComb, Mississippi, to global superstardom.

"I was just a little girl with a big dream," she recalled of her early days attending junior high in Los Angeles. "But growing up in Hollywood made those dreams feel close enough to touch. Seeing the stars on the Walk of Fame lit something in me. It made me believe. It made me affirm over my own life, 'I'm going to sing my way onto one of these stars.' And I did."

Reflecting on a career that includes 40 million records sold worldwide, genre-defining albums like "Never Say Never," and a historic cultural milestone as the first Black Cinderella in a television adaptation, Brandy emphasized the permanence of the honor.

"A star on the Walk of Fame is a definition of legacy. It doesn't just celebrate your success, it cements your story," she told the cheering crowd. "It doesn't just honor your work, it immortalizes your light. It is a symbol that says you didn't just arrive, you endured. You didn't just dream, you became."

Closing out the ceremony, Brandy left the audience with a powerful reminder of her enduring impact: "Dreams don't have an expiration date. Faith can carry you where fear said you never go. And when your purpose is real, your light will make room for itself."

Monday, March 30, 2026

Tlc’s Chilli Denies MAGA Affiliation, Claims She ‘Did Not Read the Fine Print’ on Trump Campaign Donations

ADDRESSING THE FANS: TLC vocalist Rozonda "Chilli" Thomas speaks directly to her followers in a video apology posted to her official Instagram account on Saturday. The R&B icon addressed a growing social media firestorm, claiming she is "not very computer savvy" after accidentally reposting a transphobic conspiracy theory, and attributing her 2024 financial contributions to Trump-affiliated PACs to a failure to read the "fine print." (Screengrab/Instagram/@therealchilli)
R&B royalty usually glides above the daily fray of internet politics, but Rozonda "Chilli" Thomas is currently learning that the digital news cycle takes no prisoners.

Just days after TLC announced their massive co-headlining "It’s Iconic" summer tour with Salt-N-Pepa and En Vogue, the group's legendary vocalist found herself executing emergency damage control to quell a growing social media firestorm over her political and financial footprint.
@tmz

🚨 EXCLUSIVE: TLC’s Chilli claims she accidentally shared a negative post about former first lady Michelle Obama on social media and that any political donations she made were meant to help veterans.

♬ original sound - TMZ
The controversy ignited over the weekend when Federal Election Commission records surfaced showing that Thomas made 17 donations totaling nearly $900 to Republican fundraising platforms — including WinRed and the Trump National Committee JFC — between April and November 2024. The backlash intensified when eagle-eyed fans noticed Thomas’s Instagram account had recently shared a transphobic conspiracy theory regarding former First Lady Michelle Obama.

On Saturday, the "No Scrubs" singer took to Instagram to issue a swift, unequivocal denial of any right-wing affiliations.

"I WANT TO BE CLEAR: I am not MAGA and do not support any of the many policies that are causing great harm to the American people," Thomas wrote in a lengthy statement.

TLC vocalist Rozonda "Chilli" Thomas issues a public statement on her official Instagram account denying any affiliation with the MAGA movement. The R&B legend faced intense social media backlash over the weekend after Federal Election Commission records revealed she made multiple financial contributions to Republican fundraising platforms in 2024, an oversight she attributed to not reading the "fine print." (Screengrab/Instagram/@therealchilli)
She explained that her financial contributions were the result of a philanthropic blind spot rather than a political endorsement. Thomas claimed she believed her money was going strictly toward organizations aimed at combating human trafficking and assisting military veterans, admitting to her followers that she "did not read the fine print" regarding where the recurring funds were ultimately funneled.

As for the highly offensive repost that set Black Twitter ablaze? The singer pointed the finger squarely at user interface design and her own lack of tech fluency.

"I have the utmost respect and admiration for Michelle Obama," Thomas said in an accompanying video, noting that she is "not very computer savvy." She detailed her confusion over Instagram's layout: "I'm looking for this repost button, and I see that all of them, all of these buttons are very, very close to each other, and clearly I was scrolling and my thumb hit the repost button."

Whether the "slip of the thumb" defense and the "fine print" explanation hold water with the group's fiercely loyal fanbase remains to be seen. But as TLC prepares to hit the road in August for what is supposed to be a triumphant victory lap, Thomas’s weekend headache proves that even a diamond-certified legacy can be momentarily derailed by the unforgiving proximity of a touchscreen.

Mixtape Era Icon and Roc-A-Fella Staple Jha Jha Passes Away; Diplomats Peers Pay Tribute

Rapper Natoya Handy, known to hip-hop fans as Jha Jha, is shown on the cover art for her 2007 solo album, "Git It Girl." Celebrated as the unapologetic "First Lady of Dipset" during the Harlem collective's mid-2000s commercial dominance, the influential artist has reportedly died. (Courtesy of Giti Entertainment/Diplomat Records)
In the early 2000s, Harlem rap was defined by oversized pink minks, sped-up soul samples, and an unparalleled level of swagger orchestrated by the Diplomats. But amidst the booming bravado of Cam'ron, Jim Jones, and Juelz Santana, a distinct, commanding female voice helped anchor the movement's gritty street-level authenticity.

Today, the hip-hop community is mourning the loss of that voice. Natoya Handy, universally known to mixtape aficionados and Roc-A-Fella purists as Jha Jha — the "First Lady of Dipset" — has passed away. She was 42.


Fellow Diplomats member JR Writer honors the late Natoya "Jha Jha" Jasmine in a tribute shared to his official Instagram account on Monday. Remembrances from peers and early-2000s mixtape fans flooded social media throughout the afternoon following reports of the Harlem rapper's passing. (Screengrab/Instagram/@jrwriter_)
While her immediate family and core Dipset founders like Cam'ron and Jim Jones have understandably maintained their privacy during this difficult time, the news was confirmed over the weekend by her extended musical circle. Diplomats affiliate J.R. Writer was among the first to confirm the tragic news to the public, taking to his Instagram Story to post the cover of Handy's 2007 album, "Git It Girl," alongside a simple, heartbreaking caption: "RIP Jha Jha." Official memorial pages and tributes from the broader New York hip-hop media soon followed, validating the community's sudden loss.
Jha Jha’s defining mainstream moment arrived on the Diplomats’ seminal 2003 double album, "Diplomatic Immunity." On the track "Bout It Bout It... Part III," a high-octane reimagining of Master P's Southern anthem, she completely hijacked the record. Trading bars with Cam'ron and the No Limit tank commander himself, she delivered a verse dripping with Harlem arrogance and raw grit, proving she could easily hold her own in one of the most fiercely competitive rap collectives in history.

But Handy wasn't just a one-off feature. She cemented her "First Lady" status on the 2004 follow-up album, "Diplomatic Immunity 2," delivering a standout vocal performance alongside Cam'ron and Santana on the track "Get From Round Me." She later became a crucial pillar of Jim Jones' ByrdGang offshoot, anchoring posse cuts like "What You Drinkin' On" (which featured Paul Wall and Diddy) and trading legendary mixtape bars with the likes of Max B and 40 Cal.

Unlike many female artists of the era who were often pressured by major labels to soften their image for mainstream crossover appeal, Jha Jha remained remarkably authentic to her roots. As tributes continue to pour in from peers and fans, her legacy serves as a poignant reminder of an era when a scene-stealing guest verse on a classic album could immortalize you in the streets forever.

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