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Rick Ross' Credibility Takes a Bullet

When gunfire erupted outside Carol City Park last Wednesday during Rick Ross' Second Annual Be Out Day, it turned what was billed as a positive charity event for the community into a negative feeding frenzy about Ross himself.

Although nobody on the scene was hit with any bullets (at least ten to 12 rounds were fired into the air during a brief melee), perhaps the shot that will have the longest-lasting effect is the one centered on Ross' character and credibility. The media's trying to attack Ross at his core seemed unthinkable to many only a few months before.

This past March, Ross' second album, Trilla, debuted at number one on the Billboard charts and catapulted the rapper into national star status. He sold nearly 200,000 copies of the album its first week out, and the Ross persona as "the biggest boss that you've seen thus far" (as he raps on his hit single "Speedin,'") seemed unshakable. He's built a career out of writing rhymes about his days as a former drug kingpin, and at the national level, his rep as a street lord rarely came into question.

But how quickly things have changed.

These days, there's no denying that Rick Ross' name is in the media, perhaps more now than it has ever been. But it's not for the best of reasons. The 32-year-old Carol City MC, born William Roberts, is in the middle of a fight to save his career. Allegations have swirled around the internet nonstop for the past month that Ross used to work as a correctional officer in the mid-'90s before he became a rapper, something that Ross staunchly denies.

Photos of Ross dressed in a correction officer's uniform that surfaced on the web seem to contradict his story, however. And internet "gotcha" site thesmokinggun.com even released a tell-all report with damning evidence gathered under a Freedom of Information Act request. In the article, Ross' job application, Social Security number, and dated paycheck stubs all show overwhelming evidence that Ross used to work locally for the Department of Corrections.

What does all of this have to do with a "random" shooting at Carol City park last week? Technically, nothing at all, but blogs across the country are on fire with comments that Ross set the shooting up to regain some of his battered street credibility. And others are suggesting that the streets are angry with Ross for lying about his past and that the shots fired in the air were really a warning.

Regardless of the validity of those allegations, what stands out the most is how people are quick to overlook the good that Rick Ross Charities was trying to bring to residents of Carol City, where the rapper grew up. We're talking about an event designed not only to entertain community members with live music but also to give out school supplies to children, feed local residents, provide free HIV/AIDS testing, and foster a sense of hope to a neighborhood that desperately needs it.

I was at the event before, during, and after the shooting took place and can attest to the fact that it was a brief but unfortunately newsworthy event that took away from a positive day. I saw the people gathered in line registering to vote (many of them for the first time in their lives) and hundreds of children running around with smiles on their faces out of appreciation for what Ross was trying to do. I watched as performers took the stage, one by one, and were adored by fans in the crowd, mainly because most of the rappers on stage and the youth in the audience were from the same neighborhoods.

But much of the positive spirit that surrounded last Wednesday was lost in the wake of this shooting, and the question is, why?

If this had happened two years ago, people would be coming out in droves to support Ross for his efforts and to blame the gunfire on ignorance. Instead, a good number of comments on websites like Allhiphop.com and Sohh.com (both respected hip-hop sites) show that an overwhelming number of rap fans are turning their backs on Ross. At least temporarily, they seem unwilling to forgive him for possibly lying about his past. Is that really warranted? Maybe it is, as nobody likes to be lied to. But regarding the Ross' Be Out Day, the shooting, if anything, probably had more to do with Flo Rida than Ross.

Several young males in the crowd wore T-shirts that read "Fuck Fla Rida" across the front, a play on words essentially saying that Flo Rida is flawed. Word on the street is that those individuals are from Flo Rida's old neighborhood and basically feel like the rapper, whose hit single "Low" was omnipresent on urban radio stations earlier this year, hasn't done enough for his community since he became famous.

To me, that's a minor detail — hell, Flo Rida was at a charity event for the hood when this all went down. But I definitely didn't sense that anybody at the event was angry or even disappointed with Ross. This was probably the one day in recent weeks where the large-and-in-charge rapper was able to escape criticism and just be free.

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  • Bobby 08/29/2008 2:03:00 AM

    Rick Ross is an idiot for lying about his past. It's so unneccesary and it's really coming back to haunt him now. This shooting sounds like PR cover up to me. And he used to be my favorite rapper! But now, Rick Ross the Boss, is just a joke.

  • Sonny 08/15/2008 7:20:00 PM

    On da real, i went to school with Rick Ross really known as "big will" on the streets down here. Im 2 years older than Ross, so in a sense when u a lil older, u got a perspective of watchin cats under you grow up. Dog always been savy, and if u know anything bout miami, u know the only way to grow up a bitch down here is to be raise in Boca Raton or something. Just knowing miami, u gotta know niggas dont go to carol city and find your way as a ho... The peeps Ross was running with - Boobie Boys - ran the streets of miami in da d-game... Ross was "Boobie's" (aka Kenneth Williams) lil protege. All the gangstas in miami got a few jits up under them to push work, cause of laws are relaxed againt youths under 18yrs old - so da hustlers down here exploit that fact to be exact. To know Ross, you gotta know Boobie, cause Boobie was a mastermind. Boobies game was so tight, that although he wsa the biggest d-boy in the game, they ddnt even indict him on dope charges. They got him on suspected murders. So in a sense Ross reflects on his time being next to the man when he speaks, and speaks from experience for what he witnessed and took part in. Read up on facts: http://www.ca11.uscourts.gov/opinions/ops/200013083.pdf Long story short, Boobie was indicted by the feds, of whom discovered he had miami-dade police on payroll etc... So the fact that Ross went CO aint no thang to me To explain himself might mean indicting himself... So what the media might not know, the hood respect, that's why the hood still behind him now...

  • Lizzie 08/15/2008 4:58:00 AM

    Damn Hip Hop crowds for their ignorance. They are like crabs in a bucket, they pull each other down. Big Ups to Rick Ross for trying to make a living both as a correctional officer and now as a rapper. Can't keep a this good man down!

 

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