If You Never Stormed Your Record Label's Office, Were You Really An Artist In The '90s?
Here’s to the ones who were bold enough to include it in their biopics.
Part two of BET’s New Edition Story aired Wednesday night and it focused on the financial troubles the group went through as a result of some seriously shady record deals.
BET
I mean, think about it: There was TLC in VH1’s CrazySexyCool: The TLC Story…
After only receiving $50,000 each from their hit album CrazySexyCool — which sold 11 million copies and made $75 million — the ladies of TLC were both fed up and in debt. According to the VH1 bipoic, Left Eye came up with a plan for them to storm Arista Records with some women she'd met in rehab, take “everything they saw with TLC's name on it,” and demand more money from the label's president, Clive Davis.
The plan did get Davis to give them some more money, but it wasn't enough to outweigh what they owed. The group filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy a year after the album was released.
VH1
Ice Cube in Straight Outta Compton…
After he failed to get an advance on his album, as promised by his label Priority Records, Ice Cube stormed the office of its president, Bryan Turner, and proceeded to destroy it with a baseball bat in retaliation. As he walked out of the office, he told Turner to take the damages out of the money he owed him.
It's definitely the most intense version of record-label-office-storming that's been displayed in a biopic, but Ice Cube has gone on record saying that's how it went down.
New Line Cinema
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