In Hip-Hop, sometimes truth is stranger than fiction. This week has been one of those weeks for the embattled "Bible of Hip-Hop." Last Friday, the magazine exited its Midtown New York offices to avoid eviction and has since relocated to smaller offices in the Financial District. Then, owners Raymond "Benzino" Scott and Dave Mays demoted key editorial staffers and Mays, who also serves as the mag's publisher, named himself acting Editor-in-Chief.
Meanwhile, the magazine has enough legal woes, including a sexual harassment suit and the attempted murder charges facing its General Manager Leroy "Bum" Peeples, to baffle both Murder Inc attorney Gerald Shargel and Matlock.
And if all that weren't enough to keep heads talking, sources are saying that the dynamic duo of Benzino and Mays plan to put themselves on the cover of their annual Power 30 issue, which typically profiles Hip-Hop's best and brightest.
Source: sohh.com
Meanwhile, the magazine has enough legal woes, including a sexual harassment suit and the attempted murder charges facing its General Manager Leroy "Bum" Peeples, to baffle both Murder Inc attorney Gerald Shargel and Matlock.
And if all that weren't enough to keep heads talking, sources are saying that the dynamic duo of Benzino and Mays plan to put themselves on the cover of their annual Power 30 issue, which typically profiles Hip-Hop's best and brightest.
Source: sohh.com
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