Mr. Questlove is coming to town! That’s right ladies, round it up. The class act, cool man from Fallon’s now house band, The Roots, is going to be jamming and serving it at The Mezzanine on April 22nd.
Would you, our cherished reader, like to win a pair of FREE tickets? Just post a comment below sharing why you love Ashley Judd’s illuminating words on hip hop.
Find more Questlove songs at Myspace Music
Posted on 13 April 2011.

Ashley Judd is hot, but that homegirl is crazy!
Who is Ashley Judd? Is she the fat one!?!
And why do we care about what Ashley Judd thinks about anything?
I wants it, I need it, my lil sister is in town from Philly. pick me. Please
I don’t know how hip hop savvy Miss Judd is, but I’d be stoked, happy, thankful, smiley with them questlove tickets!
I think that Judd’s message of no more misogyny in rap music should be well taken. Considering that hip-hop has so much control in our youth with respects to cultural influence; producers, writers, and artists should be a little more cognizant of what kind of message that they’re conveying to today’s impressionable youth.
With that, I give much more respect to hip-hop artists that can maintain relevant style without being oppressive to others. Questlove is definitely a great example of that. Being progressive and classy in his art form without degrading women to show how much of a man he really is.
In Judd’s “All That Is Bitter and Sweet”, she definitely shows her roots in Country music based morality, but it should be something that all influential artists should consider.
Here’s to the artists that can draw people into the music for the beauty of composition, not the size of a girls “apple bottom” and penchant for fellatio.