Rick Ross on Living the American Dream and Not Fearing Death
By
Allison Kugel
One
conversation with rapper Rick Ross will have you questioning the definitions of
success, wealth and opportunity; how to identify opportunity, how to achieve
success and how to maintain it while keeping your soul and bodily faculties
intact. Ross, born William Leonard Roberts II, rose to prominence in 2006 with
his breakout single, Hustlin', a word that defines his character and approach
towards life. Though Ross doesn't speak like a scholar, his wisdom permeates our
conversation. He is an alchemist; aware of his power to transmute base metals to gold. Rick Ross' fans are believers in his
use of language, and his unabashed celebration of riches. He's proud to remind
people that he created a palatial oasis out of the urban desert that was his
early life.
Where
many others in the Carol City district of Miami where Ross grew up saw few
options, Ross saw the opportunity to translate his experiences into music. He
came on the scene as hip hop left its golden era behind in favor of corporate commercialism,
and then helped to usher in a rap renaissance of which he has become one of the
genre's most powerful voices.
The
way Rick Ross explains it to me, the flash and cash his lifestyle portrays goes
deeper than flagrant materialism. It leaves a roadmap for others behind him to
follow - from no way out to a yellow brick road of possibilities. Even Ross'
palatial Georgia residence can be dubbed rap's incarnation of The White House,
with A-listers paying homage to the famous property (once owned by Evander
Holyfield) on occasion.
With
eighty-seven singles under his belt, Rick Ross moves through the music business
with the urgency of being on borrowed time. Not since the late Tupac Shakur has
an artist been quite so cognizant of, nor vocal about, his own mortality, and
for good reason. Witnessing the loss of life has been a constant for Ross since
his childhood. In recent years Ross survived a grisly drive-by shooting and
multiple life-threatening seizures. He's emerged more prolific than ever with
his tenth studio album, Port of Miami 2 and the release of his new book,
Hurricanes: A Memoir.
From
sleeping in his car in the early 2000s while doggedly pursuing the American
dream, to holding tremendous clout among the most successful artists of the
moment, Port of Miami 2 features guest appearances by Swizz Beatz, Meek
Mill, the late Nipsey Hussle, John Legend, Lil Wayne and Drake. The relationship
between Rick Ross and Drake goes back nearly a decade, when Ross showed tremendous
support for Drake's career after the release of his early work, with the breakout
mixtape So Far Gone. The two have been allies and collaborators since.
The
focus of our conversation was Ross' memoir, Hurricanes, and the rags to
riches story he loves to illustrate for his fans.
Allison
Kugel: You come across as nostalgic in your memoir, Hurricanes. If you
could travel through time and bear witness to the making of any classic album,
which one would you love to be a part of?
Rick
Ross: A rap album? That would have to be Paid In Full with Eric B. and
Rakim. Rakim was such a supreme lyricist and B. was the epitome of a DJ/dope
boy. They were the center of style and fashion with their Gucci suits on the
album covers, sitting on the hood of a Mercedes Benz S550. It was the epitome
of what rap music really represented.
Allison
Kugel: Generational wealth or artistic legacy… which means more to you?
Rick
Ross: Generational wealth, without a doubt.
Allison
Kugel: You've had some close calls between your health issues and an attempt
that was made on your life. What was the greatest lesson or insight gained from
those experiences?
Rick
Ross: Ha! Something just ran across my mind, and I want to say that if it was
the end, I would want to make sure I smoke all the roaches down until they're
by my fingertips (laughs)! But it boils down to appreciating and
enjoying every day.
Allison
Kugel: Do you believe in destiny, free will, or both?
Rick
Ross: Destiny, for many different reasons. When there was [sic] twenty shots
fired at my Rolls Royce, I had the audacity to go back and get my Cuban link
chain. Not only did I go back to get my Cuban link chain, I went back to go get
my girlfriend. It had to be destiny.
Allison
Kugel; It's nice that you went back for your girlfriend but thank God you
didn't lose the Cuban link(laughs). Kidding!
Rick
Ross: (Laughs)
Allison
Kugel: What is the source of your drive and ambition?
Rick
Ross: Other than my DNA, it comes from my neighborhood, and being so blatantly aware
of the haves and the have nots. I knew I was one of the [have nots]. It may not
have been traumatic at all. It could have been something as simple as me not
having the Nintendo with the Mike Tyson Punchout game.
Allison
Kugel: That was my favorite game! You're taking me back…
Rick
Ross: Mine too. Mike Tyson Punchout and Double Dragon. When you're the one on
the block, where your friends have to bring the game and cartridges in a Winn
Dixie bag to come spend the night at your crib, you kind of know.
Allison
Kugel: Do you pray? And who or what do you pray to, and what do you pray for?
Rick
Ross: Daily. I call him The Big Homie because there's only one Big Homie; I don't
care what nobody else calls him. I just let Him know I'm appreciative of
everything, and I'm really under his command. The second he calls for me or is
ready for me, I'm going to open my arms to him.
Allison
Kugel: What are you here in this life as Rick Ross to learn and to teach?
Rick
Ross: Just that others like me, who never learned math, that you can still be
the CEO, you can still become authors and artists. Nobody ever told me that. I
had to learn that on my own. When I was in school, I sat in the back of the
class making jokes, trying to cover up the fact that I never learned
multiplication or algebra. I want to let youngsters who are in the position I
was in, know that they can be in this position I'm in now. My father
wasn't there to tell me that, and I never had a big brother. The people I
looked at were the ones in the street. I know the advice I always got from
them, but I want to teach others that you can become a CEO, a huge success. I'm
not only the CEO of one company, but close to a dozen. That's what I want to be
able to teach people on a major scale.
Allison
Kugel: To divert a bit, let's talk about a song from your recent album, Port
of Miami 2, Gold Roses featuring Drake. It's a great song. Describe
the dynamic between you and Drake, musically and personally.
Rick
Ross: Drake is a genuine human being, and I think that is what I admire and
respect about him so much. The role I've always played with him was Big Homie,
and he always played my Lil' Homie. That dynamic has always been as natural as
it comes, and that's when we're in the recording booth and when we're outside
the recording booth. He's not afraid to show his sensitive side, and that's
what makes him the artist he is.
Allison
Kugel: You've been quoted as saying that you never question God. Even in your
darkest moments, you've never asked, "Why?" or questioned Him in any
way?
Rick
Ross: If I have, it was many years ago before I began to understand what life
is. Life can be a cruel place; it can be a cold place. But it also can be as
beautiful as you make it. I didn't even question Him on the morning I woke up
with my closest friend dead in the room next to me. We had just been together
three hours earlier, and now three hours later, he's dead and gone (Ross
recounts this story in his book, Hurricanes: A Memoir/Hanover Square Press). I never questioned when
my other closest homeboy was gunned down in a home invasion in front of his
two, three and four-year-old sons. I'm not going to question the Big Homie.
Whatever his plans are, that's his plans. However I go out, it's destiny.
Allison
Kugel: Have you ever stopped to reflect on, and question, the violence that's
surrounded you throughout your life?
Rick
Ross: Growing up where I grew up, I never questioned it because questioning it
did nothing for it. Hearing AK 47s going off for sixty seconds at a time, you
can cry, you can pray, you can question it, but you better just sit back, shut the
f--- up, and wait for the ambulance to come. Year after year of seeing and
hearing it and walking to school while passing a dead body ,it gets to a point
where you don't question it. You got to decide, am I going to survive or am I
going to die?
Allison
Kugel: You discuss your solid financial prowess in your book. What do you teach
your children about money?
Rick
Ross: The disadvantage my children have is that they're my kids, and my entire
family is in a different position. They're receiving money from everybody. I
could put my kids on an allowance, but my daughters have credit cards. I do
explain the importance and the value of building a brand. I don't speak to my
daughter about coming up from the mud to the marble and starting with nothing, because
that's not her life. She's not in the position me and my sisters were in. Instead,
I talk to her about the importance of maintaining our brands and bringing
something new to the brand. By the time she was fourteen, my daughter knew how
to run a Wingstop (one of Ross' several business interests). If we left
her in a Wingstop [restaurant] with two other people, they would be able to run
it for a full day. With my hair care line, RICH Haircare (RICH by Rick Ross),
I allow her to be in the conference calls and to sit in on the meetings. At the
same time, she gets to live and enjoy life much more than I did at her age. You
have to take the good with the bad, but I most definitely let them see
firsthand what hard work is.
Allison
Kugel: You're raising your kids in the Holyfield Mansion (Ross' 44,000
square foot Georgian estate, once owned by Evander Holyfield). I would
imagine there has to be a sense of entitlement when your kids are growing up in
what is, for all intents and purposes, a palace.
Rick
Ross: It's not something I over think. As parents, we need to set examples
because we have to let our children grow into what and who they are going to
be. I really don't put a lot of pressure on my kids, because they're good
students and they are very respectful of me and of everyone else around them.
I'm allowing them to become young adults, and to decide what college they want
to go to, what they want to be, what they want to do, how they want to do it, and
where they want to do it. I'm pretty free about that. But it's true. It's not
an upbringing I would know about firsthand, and I'm pretty sure I would feel
entitled if Eddie Murphy was walking around my dad's home and Coming to
America 2 was being filmed at my father's estate. They're filming Coming
to America 2 at the estate right now.
Allison
Kugel: Okay, well that's awesome! Are you in it?
Rick
Ross: I have a small role and I did my first scene a few days ago.
Allison
Kugel: I'll have to look out for you when it comes out.
Rick
Ross: Most definitely. You'll have to look out for Rozay in the movie when it's
out (laughs).
Allison
Kugel: I love how in the back of your book you thanked a jeweler who let you
browse his watch collection for hours and ask him a bunch of questions years
ago, when he knew you couldn't afford to buy one. Do you think you envisioned your
dreams into existence?
Rick
Ross: Without a doubt. I think that's a part of destiny. I believe that if you
believe in something or anticipate something coming to you, you try your best
to prepare for it. For example, I'm trying my best now to prepare to be a huge
actor one day. Before I finished my book, I wanted to thank Mr. Morgan; that
was the name of the jeweler. He was extremely kind and patient with me. For
some reason he would always let me, for two hours at a time, look and ask
questions about the jewelry. He knew I didn't have money. I probably didn't
have money for a damn soda at that time. He'd take the time to describe the
different watches to me, and my mind was just blown. I was fascinated by the
idea of having jewelry. He would let me stand there for a long time and I never
got the opportunity to purchase anything from him. I just wish he knew who I
was, and I wish I knew where he was now, because I would personally want to
thank him.
Allison
Kugel: How do you feel about your fans getting to know you on a more intimate
level when they read your book? Does that make you nervous or excited?
Rick
Ross: I would never be nervous at the idea of my fans getting to know me, and I
feel like if they really knew who I was, they wouldn't even believe me. The
book paints some pictures for you but can never really give you an idea of what
the real play was, because I came up in the era of some real things happening.
Neil [Martinez-Belkin] did a great job of putting the book together. He spoke to
maybe sixty or seventy of my closest friends and family, because talking to me
there's only some much conversation I'm going to give you. The sh-t I've seen, when
we talked, it got no realer. When I talked about getting real money it got no
realer. That's what made me the businessman I am. Unlike a lot of other
artists, I was familiar with money before the music came. Most artists, by the
time they get their first advance, they got to go get a car or a home. I
already had these things, so by the time I got money in the music business I
was ready to invest in other things and do other things.
Allison
Kugel: At the end of your book, you also pay tribute to the late Nipsey Hussle.
Why do you think his life ended the way it did and when it did?
Rick
Ross: As painful as it is to watch this type of sh-t online (referring to
surveillance video footage of the shooting), that's what I grew up seeing.
As painful as it is, I almost became numb to it over the years. I've always
been the one that's been the shoulder for others to cry on. Why did it happen?
I can't answer that. Was he a special individual? An incredibly special
individual! Would I still consider Nipsey Hussle blessed and highly favored?
Yes, I would. I've stood in those shoes before, and I was blessed to walk away.
But for some reason, if it was to happen to me and that's how the Big Homie
upstairs chose for me to go, I'm going to open my arms to him. I don't fear
death, personally. I'm sure if Nipsey was here, Nipsey would still love and
support his community the same way. Would Nipsey still love flossing in
Crenshaw? I believe so. I would still love Miami 305, even if that was the city
that took my life.
Allison
Kugel: What do you hope fans are getting out of reading your book?
Rick
Ross: I just hope the youngsters that are from where I'm from can see the
potential in them in becoming authors, becoming CEOS or whatever they want to
become. Do I really think I'm going to make money off this bulls--t? Probably
not. Do I think it will be successful? Really, anything with my face on it
could be successful, but I didn't do it for that. I wrote the book because I'm
another youngster from a failing situation that's seeing some success.
Ultimately, that's what it's about. Going from being the hunted to becoming the
hunter.
Hurricanes:
A Memoir
by Rick Ross with Neil Martinez-Belkin is available on Amazon and wherever
books are sold.Port of Miami 2, Ross' 10th studio album, is
out now. Follow him on Instagram @RichForever.
Allison Kugel is a
syndicated entertainment columnist, author of the memoir, Journaling Fame:
A memoir of a life unhinged and on the record, and
owner of communications firm, Full Scale Media. Follow
her on Instagram @theallisonkugel and atAllisonKugel.com.
Photos
Courtesy of Bob Metelus. Creative Consultant: Sheldon Wright
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