Nicki Minaj New York City Photo Shoot “Its not all about the booty”

Nicki Minaj Booty Pictures
Nicki Minaj got a change to link up with Fader Magizine this month for an up close and personal photo-shoot and interview on the street of New York City (Nicki Minaj’s home town) – Here is the Article

Nicki Minaj is chilling on Bowery, her petite glamour neutralizing the dank of Manhattan’s original Skid Row. Buxom and physically expressive, wearing a plush black fur jacket and thigh-high patent leather stiletto pumps, she looks like a snow bunny lost in the frigid city, except instead of a designer pocketbook, she’s clutching an open box of Cinnamon Toast Crunch. Half a block from her luxury room at The Bowery Hotel, a small crowd is gathering and gawking at her silhouette, a couple dudes weakly trying to holler from across the street. One 40-something Boricua with a camera phone musters the courage to ask for a picture, excited to send it to her son, and Minaj sweetly obliges. The scene’s not quite paparazzi status, but in the middle of winter, on a block half flophouse and half condo, this buzzing group of various
onlookers is a testament to Nicki Minaj’s universal appeal.

Nicki Minaj Booty Pictures

The 25-year-old rapper is hanging around town after her
second appearance on BET’s 106 & Park in a week, the latest,
to perform “Shakin’ it for Daddy,” her cheeky strip club anthem
with Robin Thicke. Though Thicke is presently the bigger star,
and it is his song, the crowd (mostly young girls by the sound
of it) was clearly there for Minaj, shrieking wildly when she
appeared and chanting along rapt during her Thicke-hyping
call and response. Immediately after the show aired, the eyepopping,
red lace bodycon minidress she wore was a trending
topic on Twitter, but even more people are talking about her
performance, which completely eclipsed the charismatic Thicke.
She was a bespandexed ball of fire, her accents weaving as
they do through feminine New York bark, lilting British brogue,
valley girl gangsta and the occasional wild tones that came
from who knows where but sound like the dialect of a planet
not yet discovered.

Nicki Minaj Booty Pictures

As Minaj emerged and rapped audacious
lyrics like Money in the air it’s a festival/ Cause I ba ba ba ba
ball (no testicles), her eyes grew wide and wild as if temporarily
possessed. But right now she’s not sweating all of that. She’s
just trying to get her photo taken as quickly as possible without
freezing to death. She’s also trying to snack on some cereal.
“You know when I like cereal? At 2AM, right before you go to
sleep,” says Minaj. “It’s not the best tip, I don’t think, if you’re
trying to lose weight, but I like it right before bed.

Nicki Minaj Booty Pictures

And you know what I like when I wake up? Leftovers. Like, real food.” Nicki Minaj is down to earth in more ways than her eating habits, but as anyone who’s heard her rap can tell you, she
is superhuman on the mic. The sheer force of her character, whether rapping or occasionally singing (she’s got a great voice), is one of the main reasons so many people are drawn to her,
including the aforementioned legion of young females. Scour MySpace and you’ll find hundreds, if not thousands, of girls whose profile pics mimic Minaj’s signature “Harajuku Barbie”look: stone-washed jeans, black tank, pink bra, pink extensions. She artfully peppers the most voracious of her verses with totally unexpected but extremely girlish punchlines, as on the Young Money sex anthem, “Bedrock,” when she turns I’ll be coming off the top/ Asbestos into one of the most peculiar descriptions of an orgasm in rap history. “I had so many people over the years tell me that I should sound a certain way, and I never thought my personality came out when I rapped that way,” she says. “Anybody that knows me knows that I have a very, very bipolar personality, so one minute
I’m excited and the next minute I’m crying and the next minute I’m cussing and yelling and the
next minute I’m singing Enya. I’m not kidding. And the point is, my rap style now reflects my
true personality. Because I am so weird.” Weirdness is the great unifier of her fanbase.

Nicki Minaj Booty Pictures

Straight men are drawn to her ability to stand on Mars with Lil Wayne (her looks are a bonus).
Gay men love her theatrical flair and strength. Her young female fans look up to her; the more
mature ones are just glad to have a woman of note back near the top. And then there are
the women who really like Minaj, allowing her to cultivate the rather rock star-ish habit of
signing women’s breasts after shows. “I wish I could fricking remember the first boob that I
signed,” she says. “I don’t know why I did it, but now I can’t go anywhere and not do it. People
come up to me wherever I am, girls—sexy girls— like, ‘Can you sign my boob?’ I mean, niggas in
the club look at me like I’m a pimp. They like, Whaaat? Cause they be fly chicks. I don’t know, but I do know it’s a great thing.” Minaj’s resistance to convention is part of what makes her one of the most promising
new rappers to emerge in recent memory—and certainly the most interesting New York rapper
since Cam’ron helmed the Dipset epoch of the early ’00s.

Nicki Minaj Booty Pictures

With the ubiquitous Lil Wayne as her label head and mentor, and radio heartthrob Drake as one of her closest confidants, Minaj is also in good company at Young Money. Even as the rest of the music industry slowly asphyxiates, her crew is building a legacy in the mold of old Bad Boy or Roc-A-Fella, with Minaj as its warrior princess. Born Onika Maraj in Jamaica, Queens, Minaj grew up with her parents and older brother and attended LaGuardia High (“the Fame school”)for acting. But despite the appearance of
a nuclear family, behind the scenes was
tumultuous, her father addicted to drugs and
alcohol, and her mother supporting them on a
nurse’s aid salary of $200 a week. “From a very
early age, I didn’t know what peace was like,”
she says. “I didn’t know what it was like to go
to sleep and not know if something crazy
was going to happen, so I think I was always
kind of crazy, loud and random. My father was
out of control. Stealing our furniture, selling
it, stealing our money to get drugs.” Minaj’s
mother held the family together, was her first
strong female role model and fostered her
interest in music. “My mother was my best
friend all my life. We would sing together. I
knew every Diana Ross by the age of eight.
Nobody would expect me to know those
songs, but my mom would be singing ‘I Hear
a Symphony’ and all this crazy stuff. That’s
what I grew up on, loving how music allowed
me to escape.”
Minaj started rapping when she was 12,
doing verses for her friends on the street,
cipher-style, a young fan of Capone-N-Noreaga.
“The first rap I ever wrote went, Cookie’s my
name/ Chocolate chip’s my flavor/ Suck up my
rhymes/ Like a cherry LifeSaver!” she recalls.
“Oh my god that‘s so embarrassing! Cause
my name was Cookie, but I don’t know why it
was Cookie’s my name/ Chocolate chip is the
flavor! Only when I got older did I realize that
in rap, dark-skinned girls would be called, like,
chocolate or something. I don’t know what the
hell I was talking about. But it was my favorite
rap. I said it to everybody that I met, and I
remember all the boys in the neighborhood
would gather around to hear me spit this rap.
And then they would all crack up laughing. I
thought it was because my rap was so hot,
you know?”
Suck up my rhymes/ Like a cherry LifeSaver
is actually a telling first lyric, a precursor
for a slew of charming metaphors and
inherent bad-assitude. Minaj’s rhymes have
evolved from the playful innocence of a girl
unaware of her sexual power, to a savvy
woman’s complete ownership and control of
it. She was discovered on MySpace in 2006
by Dirty Money CEO Fendi and released her
first mixtape, Playtime is Over, on his Brooklyn
imprint. After a couple years sharpening herskills, Minaj flipped Notorious BIG’s “Warning”
into a biting tale of a cheating man in Fendi’s
street video The Come Up. Lil Wayne saw it,
signed her to Young Money, and not long after,
she appeared with him on “Can’t Stop Won’t
Stop,” from the wildly popular Da Drought 3
mixtape. She rapped the unforgettable line Now
it’s not hard to find me/ Top behind me/ You be
Harry Potter/ and I’ll be Hermione in a breathy,
but tough Marilyn Monroe drawl, setting the
stage for her own frenetic, gutsy mixtape, Beam
Me Up Scotty, which came in early 2009. On it,
Minaj proved she could rap over anybody else’s
beats and own them no matter the tempo,
showcased her raw Queens ferocity, invented a
clutch of quirky catchphrases from the lexicon
she calls her Nictionary and established herself
as the completely mesmerizing, freaky spirit
she is. She’s supposed to be working on her
debut album now, slated for later this year, but
has been touring constantly and keeps getting
paid to rap on other people’s singles.
Lately, the list of artists blowing up Minaj’s spot
for a verse is noticeably female: Mariah Carey,
Keri Hilson, Cassie and Rihanna. Though Minaj
has made a habit of sonning the hottest male
rappers around with inspired and empowered
guest appearances, it’s her tracks with other
women that are the potential gamechangers. In
the past, these women have chosen men to add
some dimension to their songs, and usually what
they get is a very traditional and very predictable
gender dynamic: they are in love or they are
falling out of love, et cetera. Minaj, on the other
hand, is like a life coach, an unapologetic voice
supporting whatever the singer is saying. If a man
has been disrespectful, move on to something
better. If he has been amazing, make a move to
keep him. But above all, own your decisions. Be
about it. She recently wrote a song for Rihanna’s
Rated R, over Brit dubstep producers Chase &
Status’ “Saxon.” It didn’t make the album, but
the guide track leaked to the internet, much to
Minaj’s chagrin. “This wasn’t supposed to come
out in the world with Nicki Minaj on it,” she says.
“This was written for someone else, and I felt so
fucked up behind it. But I thought the beat was
very different, and I wanted to write something
for Rihanna that showed like, I already shut
the shit down.” Listening to Minaj sing Switch
my hair, dey gon’ copy her/ Switch my gear, dey
gon’ copy her/ Look at how they stare just to copy
her/ Roger dat, did ya copy dat, copycat? in
pitch-perfect Rihanna patois, you have to
wonder if maybe Rihanna just wasn’t ready to
be that tough. Even if that’s the case, Minaj will
most likely hold a controlling interest in many
female anthems in the future.
Her own album, though, will be the first
real measure of her reach. So far, nothing has
officially been leaked from it, but one of the
best recent examples of her ability to roll solo is
the song “Itty Bitty Piggy.” “That’s the craziest
one I’ve written yet,” says Minaj. “I sound like
a Martian. I just really didn’t give a damn, just
being as crazy as I could possibly be.” Over a
spare handclap, she charges out of the gate
with an exaggerated twang, Flyer than a kite, I
get higher than Rapunzel/ Keep the Snow White
I can buy it by the bundle/ Step ya cookies
up ’fore they crumble/ Don’t be actin like the
Cardinals and go ’n’ fumble, launching into a
machine gun barrage of cultural references and
wily fairytale repudiations. By the time the song
ends with the line And if you see a itty bitty
piggy in the market/ Give that bitch a quarter
and a car tell her park it/ I don’t fuck with pigs
like As salaam alaikum/ I’ll put them in the
field and let Oscar Meyer bake ’em, it feels like
Minaj has just grabbed your brain by the hand
and whipped you through a hurricane. Like
Wayne, she is a walking cultural aggregator,
referencing everyone from the obvious (Biggie,
Foxy Brown) to the random (Melissa Joan Hart,
Monica Lewinsky). But whereas former female
rappers under the tutelage of men either had
them write their lyrics (BIG and Lil Kim) or
were rumored to (Jay-Z and Foxy Brown), Minaj
writes everything. Anyone who doubts this
should consider the specific slant she takes
on testicles in her punchlines. In addition to
the aforementioned Thicke verse, on Young
Money’s “Finale,” she says You at the bottom
of the pole/ Totem/ Like Lamar Odom I ball/
Scrotum. In these times of “pause,” what
man would ghostwrite that knowing he would
inevitably be put on blast? The reality is that
Minaj’s grasp on cojones is as much a natural
part of her humor as it is a sly assertion of her
prowess. “I am so territorial, that [from the
start] I just felt like whatever I was gonna do I
was gonna write it myself,” she says. “It’s my
personal preference to always be in control of
everything I do in life.”

Since the beginning, female rappers have grappled with the
conventional wisdom that they were secondary players in rap’s
hierarchal sausage party. Though many of rap’s frontierswomen
were viewed as equals by virtue of their determination
and liberated lyrics—Salt-n-Pepa, Queen Latifah, MC Lyte,
Roxanne Shante, Yoyo—the last two decades have seen the
essentialized, sexually explicit and subservient personas
pioneered by Lil Kim and Foxy Brown become the norm. Barring
Remy Ma, who went to prison in 2007 for shooting her best
friend in the stomach and is currently serving an eight-year
sentence, there hasn’t been a new rapper since the heydays
of Missy Elliott and Eve with the potential to transcend her
gender. Lil Kim and Foxy Brown put their sexuality on a platter,
which was complicated, but at times felt revolutionary, like
a reclamation—the sexual power gleaned from the money/
power/respect-era became diluted and sad as the years went
by. Sexual power as a tactic is a futile effort—it pigeonholed
Kim and Foxy into caricatures of what they thought
men wanted, and eventually felt farcical, personas that
overshadowed their true personalities. Early in her career,
Minaj did a photo shoot paying homage to Kim’s Hardcore
by squatting in a bikini licking a lollipop, but the cover of the
Beam Me Up Scotty mixtape, her Wonder Woman leotard
juxtaposed with the Starship Enterprise, was the last time
she’d be in public with that much flesh on view. “I don’t know
where I fit in the spectrum of rap yet,” says Minaj. “I think
now I’m kind of proving myself, but before, people thought
I was more of a sex symbol or a wannabe sex symbol—and I
never wanted to be a sex symbol. Now they’re seeing. That’s
why I make the goofiest faces, I don’t want people to think
I’m up there trying to be cute. I’m trying to entertain, and
entertaining is more than exuding sex appeal. I don’t think
that’s fun. I don’t find it fun watching someone trying to be
sexy. It’s wack. I’m trying to just show my true personality,
and I think that means more than anything else. I think when
personality is at the forefront, it’s not about male or female,
it’s just about, who is this weird character?”
If Minaj’s reaction to the insanity of her childhood was to
be “random and crazy” as a shield, her craziness is now her
greatest weapon, offsetting the reductive stereotyping female
rappers have been so subjected to over the years. Underneath
her outrageousness, though, Minaj possesses gifts that not
many, regardless of gender, can match. She has a presence
that could crossover beyond music, and the talent to choose
whatever path interests her. She is not only the best rapper
with the most personality, she is an icon in the making, or
maybe more accurately, an iconoclast. Already, Minaj is forging
a new path for her hordes of pubescent female fans to follow,
and a new feminine image for men to admire, one based on
intelligence and achievement rather than subordination and
conformity. And the best part is that she doesn’t appear to be
sweating it for a minute. As we walk back down Bowery, a man
who claims to have been a friend of Grand Wizard Theodore
rolls up and tells Minaj she’s keeping hip-hop alive. She grins,
looks down sheepishly, thanks him, and struts off, her stilettos
clacking the pavement.

(773 days ago)

HYPEEATER.com is your #1 source for Hip-Hop celebrity news, photos, exclusive music videos, interviews and all the latest in the world of hip hop and R&B music.

About - Anthony is the man behind the scenes here at Addicted-2-Retail . . . If you are trying to get your Music, Art Work, Clothing Line or Brand featured on the blog than he is the dude to talk to. Anthony is a 24 year old Blogger / Web Designer from New York City.

Facebook

Get the Facebook Likebox Slider Pro for WordPress

Join the Hype Eater fam on Facebook, click the "Like" button!

button_close