[youtube autoplay=1 start=125]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fWPzBDT9tNc[/youtube]
I remember thinking she slayed as a kid. :plzstop:
She moves like her legs weigh a TON
Nnnn
Wasn't that bad
nnn this is when I stopped stanning for her and started stanning for Bey
I was like 6 :plzstop:
Quote from: Kaeli. on June 11, 2016, 12:18:59 AM
nnn this is when I stopped stanning for her and started stanning for Bey
I was like 6 :plzstop:
:damselindistress:
But she's terrible.
Quote from: Kaeli. on June 11, 2016, 12:18:59 AM
nnn this is when I stopped stanning for her and started stanning for Bey
I was like 6 :plzstop:
s
I thought she slayed Bey tbh.
ssssssss
Kaeli we get it. You're YOUNG. :plzstop:
sis finds anyway to squeeze her age into the mix.
This MJ cover is nauseating
you actually posted the best part
it was only awkward when she was all by herself
Quote from: merkaba on June 11, 2016, 12:21:10 AM
ssssssss
Kaeli we get it. You're YOUNG. :plzstop:
sis finds anyway to squeeze her age into the mix.
omg do I rly
Sry
she redeemed herself during the Get Me Bodied two step bit. Stiff heavy legged self
c
Quote from: merkaba on June 11, 2016, 12:21:10 AM
ssssssss
Kaeli we get it. You're YOUNG. :plzstop:
sis finds anyway to squeeze her age into the mix.
:kii: :kii: :kii: :kii: :kii:
zxxxxcxhmbcvvvv
Don't u fckn laugh @ that
Quote from: Don't Hurt Yourself on June 11, 2016, 12:20:43 AM
Quote from: Kaeli. on June 11, 2016, 12:18:59 AM
nnn this is when I stopped stanning for her and started stanning for Bey
I was like 6 :plzstop:
s
I thought she slayed Bey tbh.
:kii:
Were you half sleep
The fact she had to perform AFTER bey just finished dancing ON TOP of her name... And then she comes out with these PowerPoint graphics and coconut oil
Quote from: 1Rig on June 11, 2016, 12:29:02 AM
Quote from: Don't Hurt Yourself on June 11, 2016, 12:20:43 AM
Quote from: Kaeli. on June 11, 2016, 12:18:59 AM
nnn this is when I stopped stanning for her and started stanning for Bey
I was like 6 :plzstop:
s
I thought she slayed Bey tbh.
:kii:
Were you half sleep
klmddddd
Rock Wit You was my favorite MJ song so when I heard her break out into that I was stanning. :plzstop:
This was ok
Quote from: Hotep. on June 11, 2016, 12:29:11 AM
The fact she had to perform AFTER bey just finished dancing ON TOP of her name... And then she comes out with these PowerPoint graphics and coconut oil
djhsajhsdhsdhsdhsdhsdhsdhsdhsdhsdhsdhsdhsdhsdhsdhsdhsdhsdhsdhsdhsdhsdhsd
I always thought it was weird af
Quote from: merkaba on June 11, 2016, 12:21:10 AM
ssssssss
Kaeli we get it. You're YOUNG. :plzstop:
sis finds anyway to squeeze her age into the mix.
ccccvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvb
Quote from: Kaeli. on June 11, 2016, 12:23:52 AM
Quote from: merkaba on June 11, 2016, 12:21:10 AM
ssssssss
Kaeli we get it. You're YOUNG. :plzstop:
sis finds anyway to squeeze her age into the mix.
omg do I rly
Sry
I agree
guys, did i mention that im 17 today LOLZKaeli, OKAY :plzstop:
nmdndicodpsbsususjsmsm
I'm sorry guise don't do it on purpose :plzstop:
& 18* :justabit:
Dbndjsjdjsjdjdjjdjdjzjsjsjsksidijdjdsjjdjs
My mess.
:stressed: :stressed: :stressed:
Only U is iconic tbh
Her last good mess.
I knew it was Ashanti before I came in hea. LOL!
Quote from: FAM? on June 11, 2016, 01:04:38 AM
Her last good mess.
n
Yea.
The Way That I Love You & The Woman You Love kinda tugged @ my scalp a bit tho
Quote from: Mo on June 11, 2016, 12:25:32 AM
Quote from: merkaba on June 11, 2016, 12:21:10 AM
ssssssss
Kaeli we get it. You're YOUNG. :plzstop:
sis finds anyway to squeeze her age into the mix.
:kii: :kii: :kii: :kii: :kii:
sdDSDSDSDSDSDS
cv;v;vvvvvvvvbvvb oh wow. 3 pages! reminds me of my 3rd birthday. that was last year btw lolz
jdkdkdodkdkd
bbb
I think that's enuff guys
:watchit:
I always knew this was terrible smh
Why'd she continue petting herself throughout :dead:
It was times like this that made that trained dancer lie she was peddling even more laughable
This type of song IS awkward to perform. It isn't a gown requiring ballad, it's not a break dance needing uptempo, and there's no rap feature to come save the day. It's kind of hard to put on an EXCITING performance to a laid back, flirty, summer mess. The MJ thing was a nice try but fell short.
I really dig this girl.
n
Beyonce really came in and changes the way R&B girls performed
They all tried to give 'performer' after she went solo
Dddddddddddsssss
Quote from: Zinc on June 11, 2016, 04:07:37 PM
:rthosehotwings:
That wig looks heavy ass shit :plzstop: :plzstop: :plzstop: :plzstop: :plzstop:
Quote from: Gilgamesh. on June 11, 2016, 04:19:22 PM
Quote from: Zinc on June 11, 2016, 04:07:37 PM
:rthosehotwings:
That wig looks heavy ass shit :plzstop: :plzstop: :plzstop: :plzstop: :plzstop:
Every performance her wigs looked heavy ass shit.
:plzstop: :plzstop: :kii: :kii:
Quote from: Zinc on June 11, 2016, 04:07:37 PM
:rthosehotwings:
s
This looks like Karoke night Beyonce special :kii:
These greasy legs RVVVVVVVVSFFVSBSBBBSMMM
Did she juat get through frying some fish
Quote from: Vonc2002 on June 11, 2016, 02:47:52 PM
It was times like this that made that trained dancer lie she was peddling even more laughable
Nothing more laughable than them telling the story when her mother first discover she could sing. LOL
Quote from: Zinc on June 11, 2016, 04:32:40 PM
Quote from: Vonc2002 on June 11, 2016, 02:47:52 PM
It was times like this that made that trained dancer lie she was peddling even more laughable
Nothing more laughable than them telling the story when her mother first discover she could sing. LOL
sddddddddddddddsdddd
Girl, turn down that radio :usuresis:
This thread made me get back into Ashit. She really used to slay.
never was a good performer but her music made up for it + personality. Her laugh was so bubbly. But I heard behind the scenes she is difficult to work with n has a chip on her shoulder. Still love her but u can tell her personality isn't same as was back in day
Her laugh is one of her most disgusting characteristics
Quote from: Vonc2002 on June 11, 2016, 04:45:28 PM
Her laugh is one of her most disgusting characteristics
u joking I loved it :ohwow: n when she used to say banasas it was so like ummm original :raycharles2urmess:
This video was a kii :plzstop: :plzstop:
Can't believe Beyonce really destroyed her.
Ugh and that was so damn corny
Its BANANAS! Woo, so craz' AHHAHAHAHA :jackiessales:
:uhh: :uhh: :uhh: :uhh:
Quote from: Don't Hurt Yourself on June 11, 2016, 04:48:18 PM
Can't believe Beyonce really destroyed her.
STAWP. Ashanti destroyed herself when she let Irv fuck her career up with that long wait for The Declaration. She didn't have strong material her mom was forever stuck in 02 promo wise
Quote from: Don't Hurt Yourself on June 11, 2016, 04:48:18 PM
Can't believe Beyonce really destroyed her.
Shit, i can. Ashanti aint built for longevity
Quote from: iheart4everbrandy on June 11, 2016, 07:33:03 AM
I always knew this was terrible smh
Yeah, I was old enough to know this wasn't good when it came out. I remember being thoroughly confused about Ashanti's popularity.
QuoteMUSIC; The Solo Beyonc?: She's No Ashanti
A FEW years ago, Beyonc? made her declaration of independence: ''All the women who independent, throw your hands up at me.'' The song was called ''Independent Women Part I,'' and it was an anthem of self-reliance sung by Destiny's Child, a feisty pop republic made up of three women.
But they weren't equally independent: everyone knew that Beyonc? didn't need the others. That was the not-so-subtle message of ''Survivor,'' the title track from the third and most recent Destiny's Child album. Beyonc? taunted her former bandmates (two original members had left, and so had one of their replacements) while warning the current ones that they, too, were expendable: ''You thought I wouldn't sell without you, sold 9 million.'' That pronoun -- ''I'' -- is as specific as the sales figure.
If Beyonc? has a mirror-image rival, it's Ashanti. You might call her a dependent woman, though that's not an insult. She made her name by telling gruff rappers how much she loved the singing stylized duets with Fat Joe and Ja Rule. She was, we were constantly reminded, the first lady (or, more often, ''princess'') of the Murder Inc. record label, and everywhere she went, some guy was shadowing her, shouting the label's catch phrase: ''It's murder!''
Ashanti's self-titled debut album, released last year, was a huge hit, thanks largely to a song called ''Foolish,'' on which she pledged loyalty to a man who didn't deserve it: ''I keep on running back to you.'' This was the antithesis of Destiny's Child's dogma: Ashanti sang like a woman who just couldn't help herself.
Both singers have new albums: Beyonc?, 21, just released her inevitable solo debut, ''Dangerously in Love'' (Columbia), and Ashanti, 22, just released her follow-up, ''Chapter II'' (Murder Inc./Island Def Jam). Each singer says her new album is a step forward, an evolution, a triumph -- that's what singers always say. But only one of them is right.
Even at its lewdest, Destiny's Child always had a knack for sanitizing the sleazy world of R & B. The group's 1997 debut single, ''No, No, No,'' had seductive lyrics, but the singers sang it like a nursery rhyme: ''You be saying no, no, no, no, no/ When it's really yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah yeah.''
Most of the time, though, it didn't really matter what the words were. By 1999, they had perfected a style -- close harmonies, quick delivery -- that made it difficult to pay attention to the words. ''Say My Name,'' which helped revolutionize R & B with tricky rhythms and nimble vocals, stands as one of the great pop songs of the last decade, but singing along is nearly impossible.
R & B singers are supposed to be warriors in the battle of the sexes, but Destiny's Child stayed above the fray, keeping suitors at arm's length with a series of mild rebuffs. Despite the title, ''Bootylicious'' was more of a go-away than a come-on: ''I don't think you're ready for this jelly/ My body's too bootylicious for you, babe,'' they sang, and the chorus left no room for argument.
Then, having worked so hard to make herself seem unattainable, Beyonc? changed course. Over the last year or so, she has often been spotted with Jay-Z, and while she's been careful to avoid confirming or denying rumors that the two are a couple, she hasn't exactly quieted speculation by recording a series of duets with him; one of them, ''Crazy in Love,'' is the lead single from her new album.
''Crazy in Love'' is the best song on ''Dangerously in Love'' (the album is, oddly enough, named after an old Destiny's Child song); it's a simple, irresistible combination of triumphant horns and a wicked hip-hop beat. But the song also hints at what's wrong with the album: its vision of romance is profoundly unconvincing.
If Jay-Z and Beyonc? really are a couple, that might explain why their collaborations sound so tepid. When he teamed up with Mya for ''Best of Me Pt. II,'' Jay-Z spat out one clever, rude pick-up line after another (''That's high-school, making me chase you 'round for months/ Have an affair, act like an adult for once''), and on Missy Elliott's ''One Minute Man (Remix),'' he quoted ''Independent Women Part I'' while explaining the rules of a one-night stand. When he records with Beyonc?, though, Jay-Z's mischievous wit disappears; on ''Crazy in Love,'' he barely even makes reference to her.
For her part, Beyonc? explains how ''Your love's got me looking so crazy right now,'' but her vocals -- as deft and accurate as ever -- convey none of the giddy rush that the lyrics describe. Near the end, when she trills, ''You're making a fool of me,'' she sounds decidedly unfoolish, as Ashanti once put it.
The first half of ''Dangerously in Love'' has some impressive moments -- Beyonc? arpeggiates her way up and down the scale whereas most of her contemporaries merely slide, and it's fun to hear her mimic the pizzicato line in ''Naughty Girl.'' But it's not much fun to hear her try to sing like a ''naughty girl,'' and by the time the album's ballad-heavy second half arrives, you may start hoping that the other two Destiny's Children will show up to set things right.
They don't, and it's not just their harmonies that are missed; it's the girl-group exuberance. Together, the three might have found an amusing way to flirt with Jay-Z, or Sean Paul, or Big Boi, from OutKast. Without them, Beyonc? hedges her bets, retreating to the safety of torch songs, like the creepy bonus track ''Daddy,'' where she croons, ''I want my unborn son to be like my daddy/ I want my husband to be like my daddy.''
Maybe this album is merely a misstep, and maybe Beyonc? has yet to record the brilliant solo album that people expected. Or maybe it's proof that she isn't quite as versatile as she seemed. She's a strong and independent singer, no doubt, but maybe she seems strongest and most independent when she's got a posse behind her.
By contrast, Ashanti's new album doesn't arrive bearing the burden of high expectations. Because of her gentle, breathy vocal style, she's been dismissed as a lightweight; when she was nominated for a Soul Train award last year, tens of thousands of people signed an online petition of protest.
This should be a terrible time for Ashanti. Her label, Murder Inc., is under investigation for alleged ties to drug dealers. And these days, her former duet partner Ja Rule is keeping a low profile -- still licking his wounds, perhaps, after losing a vicious war of words with 50 Cent. Barely a year removed from her successful debut, she is already an underdog.
But Ashanti's greatest asset has always been her blitheness. Groomed for stardom ever since she was a kid, she treated Murder Inc. as if it were her own personal Mickey Mouse Club; if she felt out of place, she never showed it. And so she floats through her new album as if nothing's amiss, never pausing to wonder whatever happened to Ja Rule, who's conspicuously absent.
The lead single is ''Rock Wit U (Awww Baby),'' and it shows off everything that's right about the album -- it's the kind of song that drifts into your head before you even realize you were listening to it. The lyric sheet reproduces every ''awww'' and every ''baby''; the words form a pattern on the page that mirrors the song's hypnotic appeal.
Nearly every song on ''Chapter II'' is this appealing, and although the beats are diverse -- ''I Found Lovin' '' resurrects the squiggly sound of 1980's pop, and ''The Story of 2'' is a swinging piano ballad -- Ashanti's approach never changes. The singing is restrained, the lyrics are simple (there are virtually no three-syllable words), and the attitude is breezy.
There are hardly any guests on this album, but Ashanti does fine without them -- in fact, her sweet nothings sound even better when they're not interrupted by the salty nothings of rappers. ''Chapter II'' isn't perfect, but once you edit out the skits (which are, without exception, excruciating), you're left with an album that's graceful, beguiling and above all, light, in the best sense of the word.
There's more than one way to declare independence, after all, and whereas Beyonc? announced hers with a brassy single, Ashanti tucks a similar spirit into every not-quite-heartbroken lyric. She's not trying to convince us she's crazy in love. On the contrary, she dismisses old boyfriends (and, perhaps, duet partners) with the same noncommittal sigh she uses to welcome new ones, and this unflappability suggests a kind of strength. In her own willowy way, she's a survivor, too.
Media definitely tried to make Ashanti Beyonce's rival.
Quote from: 1stsecuritybank on June 11, 2016, 04:42:24 PM
never was a good performer but her music made up for it + personality. Her laugh was so bubbly. But I heard behind the scenes she is difficult to work with n has a chip on her shoulder. Still love her but u can tell her personality isn't same as was back in day
Yeah i heard she had a bad attitude AND her mom made it worse
Did yall see how she acted on punkd? Total stuck up diva
:blessed: I remember vividly listening to radio and how they used to pit them against each other.
and for the LIFE of me even at the age of 11 I couldn't understand it. Bey was then nowhere the performer she is now but she was a million lightyears above the rest and especially Ashanti :diddraispoot:.
Quote from: Vonc2002 on June 11, 2016, 04:51:01 PM
Quote from: Don't Hurt Yourself on June 11, 2016, 04:48:18 PM
Can't believe Beyonce really destroyed her.
Shit, i can. Ashanti aint built for longevity
All of her hits were samples of older songs :kii:
Ashanti is terrible at everything but she always seemed down to earth to me
Quote from: Genesis on June 11, 2016, 05:09:58 PM
Quote from: 1stsecuritybank on June 11, 2016, 04:42:24 PM
never was a good performer but her music made up for it + personality. Her laugh was so bubbly. But I heard behind the scenes she is difficult to work with n has a chip on her shoulder. Still love her but u can tell her personality isn't same as was back in day
Yeah i heard she had a bad attitude AND her mom made it worse
Did yall see how she acted on punkd? Total stuck up diva
yeah I sense her attitude is outta this world but its all good still a fan. Her mom kinda another Debb (Waka's mom) but less aggressive
Quote from: Baphomet. on June 11, 2016, 05:11:03 PM
:blessed: I remember vividly listening to radio and how they used to pit them against each other.
and for the LIFE of me even at the age of 11 I couldn't understand it. Bey was then nowhere the performer she is now but she was a million lightyears above the rest and especially Ashanti :diddraispoot:.
I remember the gorls on BET would swear Ashanti would be here forever and Bey was just a flash in a pan :plzstop:
Quote from: Genesis on June 11, 2016, 05:11:32 PM
Quote from: Vonc2002 on June 11, 2016, 04:51:01 PM
Quote from: Don't Hurt Yourself on June 11, 2016, 04:48:18 PM
Can't believe Beyonce really destroyed her.
Shit, i can. Ashanti aint built for longevity
All of her hits were samples of older songs :kii:
wjen u think about yeah this is correct so is most of Kanyes
Quote from: Vonc2002 on June 11, 2016, 05:11:36 PM
Ashanti is terrible at everything but she always seemed down to earth to me
Yeah I never got bitch from her.
kjns
Of all the R&B girls outside of Bey, Ashanti had to most mainstream appeal to me.
She just didn't have the quality to back it up.
iF Shan knew how to dance she'd still be here. She just need to stop writing her music n find better producers
Quote from: MelMel on June 11, 2016, 05:13:29 PM
Quote from: Baphomet. on June 11, 2016, 05:11:03 PM
:blessed: I remember vividly listening to radio and how they used to pit them against each other.
and for the LIFE of me even at the age of 11 I couldn't understand it. Bey was then nowhere the performer she is now but she was a million lightyears above the rest and especially Ashanti :diddraispoot:.
I remember the gorls on BET would swear Ashanti would be here forever and Bey was just a flash in a pan :plzstop:
!!!!!!!!!!!!!
No one really knew how much HUNGER Bey had :dead: Bey has continued to make smart business moves and has continued to improve herself and create her own niche. Ashanti was over that following summer. :plzstop:
Quote
If Beyonc? has a mirror-image rival, it's Ashanti.
nd dddddd
Quote from: Don't Hurt Yourself on June 11, 2016, 05:20:47 PM
Quote
If Beyonc? has a mirror-image rival, it's Ashanti.
nd dddddd
:plzstop: :plzstop: :plzstop:
Quote from: Don't Hurt Yourself on June 11, 2016, 05:15:10 PM
kjns
Of all the R&B girls outside of Bey, Ashanti had to most mainstream appeal to me.
She just didn't have the quality to back it up.
Ashanti has no mainstream appeal lol
She got lucky on her first cd and her fan base diminished greatly after that. She's bland in every category besides her looks.
I see the appeal. :ohwow:
well she slayed that part u posted