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ABOUT KJ THE KID REPORTER

KJ the Kid Reporter aka Rapper/Singer Kay Jeezy STARTED WRITING AT 6-YEARS-OLD. He is a 10-year-old 6th grader born on Nov 11th 2000 in Baltimore Maryland, USA. KJ will be 11 on 11/11/11 and is very active in school and the community. He also sings and raps.

He strictly blogs his own site and has been interviewed by Canadian media outlets like CityTV, Toronto, CTV, Toronto Sun, Good News Toronto, The Kingston Whig Standard, Kingston This Week newspapers, 680News Radio Toronto and hailed by Z103FM and Flow 93.5FM Toronto for his community advocacy for Autism and mentally disabled people. He has also been featured on BCK (Black Celebrity Kids) and Celebrity Dog watcher blogs.

He was the first and only media Dr Timothy Shriver , Chairman of the Special Olympics spoke to after the Obama Jay Leno joke. Shriver called him a "HERO at 8-years-old" KJ was also hailed in a letter from the United States Consulate General in Toronto, Mr John Nay for his hard work educating Canadians and Americans alike about disabilities.

Resume Credits
2003: Heinz Ketchup Commercial USA (TV).
2006: Radio Nigeria West African Idol (Audio).
2008: Interviewed Rappers FloRida, Classified, Waka Flocka, Drake, Corey Miller, K'naan, Rockers Simple Plan, British singer Estelle, R&B singer JSTAVO, Grammy award songwriter Nate Walka (Blame it on the alcohol-Jamie Foxx) and lots more.
2011: Major music video debut and starred and rapped in a major music video by Canada's #3 rapper Shaun Boothe's Child soldiers.
2008: Winner Chalkfarm Park Summer Dance Contest.
2010: My Mom's a Snitch Crimestoppers song and video.

Kayode Joshua Taiwo dances, acts, sings and talks a lot! Very computer and internet savvy and excellent with popular culture questions. KJ owns the Kay Jeezy Grassroots Foundation mobilizing other kids in bringing peace to their streets of Toronto.

www.thekidreporter.com © 2004-2011 Keminications Media

UPDATE :KJ is now a 15 yo young man and the new domain of his blog is www.KJtaiwo.blogspot.com. His new nickname is also KJT.

Tuesday, 14 February 2012

WHITNEY HOUSTON REMEMBERED FOR HER BEST DAYS.


My mom was Whitney's FRIEND!! However I was 4 then and she told me about the saga of her life. I have done all her cover songs and plan to put it on my YouTube soon. Above is the Toronto Sun yesterday.

“I am completely devastated by the loss of the greatest voice of all time! R.I.P. Whitney Houston. I will always love you!” – Producer/X Factor judge L.A. Reid

On her death, L.A. Reid was not the only Tweeting celebrity to invoke I Will Always Love You, the Dolly Parton-penned song that became Whitney Houston’s biggest hit.

Real Housewives of Atlanta’s Niecy Nash used it too, with four exclamation points – which meant by extension that she was four times as grief-stricken (Nash is typical of the kind of “celebrity” that is first off the gun whenever a legend dies, two Kardashians being at the front of the pack posting Tweets early Sunday morning).

But what struck me most about Reid’s under-140-character tribute was the idea that we didn’t just lose a person, we lost a voice. In fact, many Twitter users, famous and not, expressed more or less the same sentiment.

Two thoughts: (a) Alas, we lost that voice years ago. Chalk it up to Bobby Brown, the effects of years of various burnt substances on the throat or the disease that is addiction, but Houston had not, since the ‘90s, been able to hit any of the crazy notes that replay in our mind’s ear. A sad postscript is the brief stage appearance (watchable on YouTube) she made at the pre-Grammy concert the night before she died, trying to sing Yes, Jesus Loves Me. Sadly, the woman whose influence is all over shows like American Idol and The Voice would have been ushered out the door at audition for not holding a melody.

And (b), Reid’s comment brings to mind the anecdote usually attributed to the author Graham Greene after being told that a second-rate movie adaptation had “destroyed your book.”

“No it didn’t,” he is said to have replied. “There it is, still on the shelf.”

That is the truth about Whitney Houston. Look at any of the articles about her, and the image is circa the ‘80s, of the apple-cheeked ex-gospel choirgirl with the ridiculously royal musical bloodlines (mom Cissy Houston, cousin Dionne Warwick, godmother Aretha Franklin), and the sense of fun (I Want To Dance With Somebody) and the arrangement-adventure (who else would make five syllables out of the word “I” in I Will Always Love You?).

Rare is the shot of the gaunt, tragic shadow-of-Whitney who occasionally appeared in public to the shock of witnesses.

Whether someone should have helped her over all those recent years, or could have, is now irrelevant. The unguarded, drugged-out, foul-mouthed Whitney Houston we saw - on the reality show Being Bobby Brown and the weird “crack is whack” interviews she’d occasionally give to the Oprahs and Diane Sawyers - was a ghost of the person we thought we knew secondhand via Grammy speeches and roles in movies like The Bodyguard, Waiting To Exhale and The Preacher’s Wife.

We’ve seen that ghost before – sometimes against the wishes of the subject, as with the Meryl Streep movie The Iron Lady, which spends much of its time with Margaret Thatcher under the spell of senile dementia, a state the actual ex-PM has gone to pains to keep hidden from public view.

That ghost could be named Elvis or Michael Jackson or Judy Garland. Whether the ghost gets to squeeze into the post-mortem picture of pop cultural memory seems to be something of a fluke. At the time of his death, the plus-sized “Vegas Elvis” was vivid in the public mind. But the years have tended to airbrush that image away in favour of the immortal, young, pelvis-swinging truckdriver from Tupelo. Similarly, no one remembers that “other,” less-Adonis-like Jim Morrison. (The troubled, fish-netted, pill-popping Garland, on the other hand, has survived as a gay iconic stage image that supersedes the work of Mickey Rooney’s onscreen gal-pal.)

I suspect that, whoever that was playing the role of Whitney Houston the last 10 or 15 years, will also soon be forgotten. Whitney was born as a star shortly after the birth of music video. That powerful image-making mojo will keep her most magic moments alive for decades.

Source: Toronto Sun

KJ THE KID REPORTER 2011

KJ THE KID REPORTER 2011