50 Cent EXPOSES The Truth Behind Oprah Using Steve Harvey To Steal From Taraji P Henson

50 Cent EXPOSES The Truth Behind Oprah Using Steve Harvey To Steal From Taraji P Henson

Monique, why is she canceled? Mhm, I had to revisit that because it was like it didn’t make sense to me, babe. I’m like, what did she do? She said something you didn’t like? So, she didn’t work for 13 years after that, right? And then, I know Tyler wouldn’t support that. He never told anybody, nobody, not to work with her. Tyler Perry, yeah. When I talked to him, he was like, “No, I never told no one not to work with her.” And I said, “But you, Tyler Perry, and you never told anyone to in a game, this the money game. This ain’t the black man’s game. This ain’t the white man’s game. This the money game. We in the money game, and you cannot sacrifice yourself. The best thing you can do for poor people is not be one. You cannot in the money game. But let me tell you what the game is. Before the money game, before the money game is called the Integrity gang. And we’ve lost the Integrity, worrying about the money.” Then, Tyler Perry and I had a conversation at the hoodie award. At the time, it was called the hoodie award when they were trying to get me to go do all of this press internationally. And for those that don’t know who put on that hoodie, Steve Harvey. Buckle up, folks, ’cause 50 Cent has just entered the conversation. And he is allegedly tearing into Oprah for trying to cancel black actresses for years. 50 Cent and Oprah have been cooking up a cold stew of a feud, but things are getting heated real fast right now. 50 is dropping bombshells about Oprah exploiting black actresses working under her and is making connections to one of her puppets, Steve Harvey. We’ve known for years that Oprah and Steve both built an empire of their own but never really questioned the close bond that they have with each other and what kind of stuff they do behind the scenes. And as it turns out, Harvey has been working under O’s order to keep the other talents at bay. 50 himself allegedly hinted on the matter. So stick with us as we break down the whole fiasco for you.

At this point in time, you all might be aware of the whole Taraji and Oprah thing that went down. Well, it was mostly Taraji exposing the injustices she had to face while working under Oprah on the movie “The Color Purple”. Things have not been the same since Taraji decided to out Oprah. The projects on her table are allegedly getting canceled, and opportunities have been avoiding her lately. Now, 50 Cent has come forward exposing that it is actually Oprah who has been pulling the strings behind the scenes to punish Taraji for being rebellious. This whole situation has boiled over causing a hot mess. “I’m just tired of working so hard, being gracious is at what I do, getting paid a fraction of the cost. I’m tired of hearing my sisters say the same thing over and over. You get tired. I hear people go, ‘You work a lot,’ or have to. The math ain’t maing.”

We know that 50 Cent has been trolling the status quo for years, raising his voice against the Hollywood Mafia that wants the artist to get the shorter end of the stick. And right now, he has stood up with his fellow entertainer, Taraji P. Henson. Not only did he shake the world by telling Taraji to drop the people who don’t value her, aka Oprah, but also went ahead and gave her a working opportunity. He just reached out to Taraji via Instagram and said, since people were trying to steer clear of Taraji in these turbulent times, people thought that 50 wasn’t serious about the offer. It’s quite strange because 50 has always stayed true to his word if we look back at his track record. But according to Jill Monroe, 50 was so serious about his offer that he allegedly discussed the salary of Mary J. Blige who worked with him on “Ghost”. He was being BSing about working with Taraji. He said, “Until he told them what he made stars pay the real Mary J. Blige to be on ‘Ghost’ and you know tomorrow’s Mary’s birthday. Shout out to Mary, Capricorn. How much did he pay her?” So, Mary is being paid allegedly $400,000 per episode, which is over $200,000 more per episode than Taraji was receiving on “Empire”.

You might be wondering how badly the film performed for 50 to go to such lengths to help Taraji. Well, Forbes reported that all the press releases have been focused on the low paycheck and the difficult situations the actresses have dealt with. It was noted that the film, in all its glory, was actually muted and not considered for award shows, allegedly due to all the backlash. The film missed a nomination for Best Motion Picture, Musical, or Comedy at the Golden Globes, which was deemed a snub by Fantasia Barrino and Brooks. Both secured Globe nods for their performances, the only nominations for the film, though neither won their respective categories. In addition to that, after its strong Christmas box office opening, “The Color Purple” ranked fourth at the domestic box office in its first full weekend from December 29th to December 31st, with $1.7 million in gross ticket sales. It fell to 5th in this past weekend’s box office ranking with just $4.7 million. The film, which has grossed $54.6 million to date, reportedly cost $90 million to produce and an additional $40 million to market. Despite the lackluster box office performance and award show snubs, “The Color Purple” has been met with strong reviews. The film scored an 87% rating on Rotten Tomatoes, with Variety critic Peter DeBruge stating, “The film feels even more monumental than Steven Spielberg’s 1985 adaptation of Alice Walker’s Pulitzer Prize-winning ‘The Color Purple’ novel.”

Which projected as if Taraji and the cast’s comments did that, but it was just karma biting back, Oprah’s behind. Just check out these reviews. “Once I heard about it, I thought it was a money grab. But once I found out that it was a musical, it confirmed for me that it was exactly that for Oprah and her white producer friends. As much money as Oprah must have made off of this one story alone, there should have been no reason for Taraji to almost walk away from this movie just because she wasn’t going to get paid enough. There was lots of money made off of the book, the two Broadway shows, and the two films. I love Danielle, I love Fantasia, and I love Taraji. However, I don’t love that Oprah and her white producer friends are making money yet again off of this story and it’s based on black trauma. And when someone shows you who they are, believe them. So now, Media Takeout is saying, ‘Oh, the movie is currently flopping in theaters badly because of the negative press surrounding treatment of black actresses.’ No, that movie was going flop regardless. And the reason why I was going to flop regardless is because we are not the same black people that our parents were. We’re not falling for that. Okay? The old trope of, ‘Oh, the black

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