A change.org petition has been established to try to remove R&B artist and serial sexual predator R Kelly from the Soulquarius Festival lineup. The R&B festival dropped its incredible lineup a couple days ago, and is set to feature artists including Erykah Badu, The Internet, Kelis, BJ The Chicago Kid, Ja Rule and Ashanti, DMX and more, with R Kelly billed as the first name on the poster.
While Kelly is one of the most successful R&B artists of all time, he has also been accused of sexual assault, statutory rape and possessing child pornography among other violations, including allegedly marrying Aaliyah at 15 years old when he was 27. Although he was acquitted of 14 counts of sexual violations in 2008, more than two dozen women reportedly then came forward with additional claims of sexual abuse.
The horrific nature of these accounts should not be overlooked or forgotten – ever. And one petition is attempting to do just that, by demanding his removal from the otherwise-fantastic lineup.
The petition reads, “Despite an endless flood of abuse allegations and widespread knowledge of his notorious “romance” with the late singer Aaliyah, who was age 15 to his 27 years, Kelly has maintained a relatively successful career.
“2017 is around the corner and many of us still have to look on in disgust as a proven predator, rapist, and serial abuser of young Black girls and women remains embraced in the world of music. Stop booking this man. Stop supporting this man. There’s great power in having a voice. Let’s send a message that the music is not “separate” and the abuse of girls and women is *never* okay, no matter who you are or how many timeless ballads you’ve contributed to the world.”
For some reason, people are still giving R&B singer R Kelly a chance to tell his side of the story. In a totally undeserved and unprecedented move, the singer – who has numerous sexual abuse allegations against him to match a history of systemic predatory behaviour – has given a candid interview with GQ magazine. Or at least, as candid as his lawyers permit.
The article suggests that Kelly holds nothing back in his responses. In reality, it seems he continues to evade questions regarding his history of sexual abuse and gives half-arsed accounts of his relationship with the late Aaliyah – who was fifteen when they were allegedly married.
The article opens: This is a story about an entertainer named R. Kelly. It is a story about the remarkable, but also very strange, pop talent he has. It is a story about the difficult places he came from and the ways they may, or may not, have shaped who he has become. It is also the story of a man who has been publicly accused of multiple sexual offenses with underage women, and who stood trial for making child pornography. He was eventually acquitted of that charge, and his career has continued uninterrupted, but for the most part he has evaded even the most basic questions that might help people understand what is true about him.
But, when asked directly about the sexual assault allegations against him – specifically those pertaining to a video of him having sex with an underage girl and urinating in her mouth, Kelly continues to evade these questions by giving the typical cop out response,
“[pause] Because of my lawyers, to this day I cannot have those kind of conversations. Being advised by my lawyers in this.”
Tastelessly titled The Confessions of R Kelly, Chris Heath‘s article also gives the singer air to defend his relationship with the late Aaliyah when she was just 15-years-old.
Yes. I would say I loved ‘liyah… there’s a lot of ways to be in love with a person. I was in love with my grandfather, you know. But yeah, I would say I was in love with Aaliyah just like I was in love with anybody else. But in a different, friend type of way.
Whatever the fuck that is meant to mean…
Then, for some reason, the interview gets even worse when Kelly is asked to share his view of the ongoing court case against actor Bill Cosby, for some reason.
Well, my opinion on that is, I don’t know what happened. I’m a fan of Bill Cosby’s from the Bill Cosby show, of course—who’s not?—and for me to give my opinion on something that I have no idea if it’s true or not, all I can say is that it was a long time ago. And when I look on TV and I see the 70-, 80-, 90-year-old ladies talking about what happened when they were 17, 18, or 19, there’s something strange about it. That’s my opinion. It’s just strange.
Yeah, strange. Strange that hoards of women have finally found the confidence to speak out about a huge celebrity sexually abusing them. Real strange.
Kelly isn’t the first celebrity to question the authenticity of the claims being made against Bill Cosby by numerous women; most recently, rapper Waka Flocka recently tweeted that he felt someone was framing Cosby.
https://twitter.com/WakaFlocka/status/683032839907053569
Considering Kelly’s own history with sexual abuse allegations, his words leave a particularly sour taste. Throughout the interview, he goes on to describe the sexual abuse he endured as a child, stating that he feels it is perhaps a generational problem. A generational problem, he asserts, ended with him.
I, well, definitely forgive them. As I’m older, I look at it and I know that it had to be not just about me and them, but them and somebody older than them when they were younger, and whatever happened to them when they were younger. I looked at it as if there was a sort of like, I don’t know, a generational curse, so to speak, going down through the family. Not just started with her doing that to me…
It’s really not about breaking it. There’s things that you don’t want to do that you’re not gonna do. It was just as simple as that. I want to be able to be a father to my kids, where I’ve never seen my father, but my kids can see me whenever they want, so that was broken... The poverty part was broken. And I feel the child-molestation part, that definitely was broken. But of course you gonna be misunderstood because you R. Kelly, and the success and things get mixed up in the music, and people take the words you sing in your songs and try to pound that on your head and say, ‘Ahh! You did do it—look what you just wrote over here.’
If you’d like to spend the rest of your day questioning why in 2016 we are still allowing people with a history of sexual abuse to defend themselves so that we might “understand what is true about” them while their victims’ claims and motives are brought into question by powerful and influential people, you can read the interview its in entirety on the GQ website.
If there’s one person to benefit in any way from the career of Chris Brown it’s R. Kelly, whose previous horrendously misogynistic indiscretions crimes (all of which he continues to hide behind the word ‘alleged’ because he was stunningly never convicted), by virtue of time and his near total lack of relevance today, often fly under the radar while everyone (still justifiably) gnashes their teeth in Brown’s direction.
It may be a decade on but people don’t forget. Especially not today either, as R. Kelly enjoyed a guest spot on HuffPost Live to be interviewed. Kelly probably swanned into this one thinking he was going to be pandered to a little bit, asked a few nothing questions about the process behind his latest mediocre and wholly self-serving album The Buffet.

All-you-can-eat awful.
Naturally those album sales were somewhere between ‘non-existent’ and ‘in the toilet’ and so the interviewer for the Huffington Post, the fantastically take-no-prisoners Caroline Modarressy-Tehrani, asked him if his past history, a history littered with battery charges, illegal marriages and sex tapes with minors among other pleasantries, may have had a negative impact on his current album sales. This is a totally reasonable question and one that somebody who was truly repentant and remorseful for their crimes would answer without any fuss whatsoever. Not R.Kelly though, oh no. R. Kelly didn’t write I Believe I Can motherfucking Fly to put up with trivial bullshit like this, no sir. His reaction was a lot of this face:

As well as a rather butthurt hissy fit to go along with it. He didn’t just storm off the set though, not until he’d gone full meltdown and asked Caroline pretty inappropriate questions like whether she drank, questioned her intelligence and then said he’d rather go to McDonalds. Have a watch of the more interesting bits of this hilariously awkward interview here:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=40Rj2XSfC4k
It’s actually comical how hostile he reacts towards being told that some of his fans might not support The Buffet (an album which is somehow projected to sell 100 000 less copies than his previous effort Black Panties in some kind of Terrible Olympics world record). ‘Fuck that’ was his initial response before saying ‘the only people who can fire me are my fans’.

Is there some kind of petition you guys can sign?
It would certainly save us from the 40 (!!!) more very unnecessary chapters of Trapped In The Closet R.Kelly reportedly has waiting to be released. ‘What a shame that interview didn’t last longer’, said nobody ever. Major props to Caroline Modarressy-Tehrani for not acquiescing to this pseudo-star and being intelligent and quick-witted enough to make him look like the absolute crumb that he is. Almost right after the interview was over, Kelly showed the world that he would have the last laugh with this ‘I’ll show them’ Tweet:
It just wouldn’t be a picnic without the ants! https://t.co/j4oYoZ5gjdpic.twitter.com/FKGIE5oJm4
— R. Kelly (@rkelly) December 22, 2015
The Shyamalan twist here is that you are actually the ants R. Kelly. Now bugger off.
Apparently R Kelly still won’t come out of the closet.
The famous crooner was revolutionary in his time, combining sultry R&B with storytelling, to grace the world with his trapped in the closet project, a series of tracks and accompanying music videos, debuting in 2005, with the most recent release in 2012. The “story” ( for lack of a better word) begins with R Kelly trapped in the closet after sleeping with a married woman, a tale which escalates into a ballad of forbidden love, revenge, and a whole lot of weird shit.
[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zFosUj6A22c]
For those unaware, I implore you to at least watch part 1 of this 33 ( I kid you not) part series, and marvel at the cringe worthy attempts at musical narration, featuring such lyrical gems as:
“Throws her in the bed
And start to snatchin’ her clothes off
I’m in the closet, like man, what the fuck is going on?”
“He hopped up and said, “There’s a mystery going on
And I’m gonna solve it”
And I’m like, “God please, don’t let this man open this closet”
If 33 parts simply wasn’t enough to quench your thirst for narrated nonsense, R Kelly has now revealed in an interview with Complex that there are no less than 40 more chapters of this modern day epic.
According to Kelly, all 40 tracks have been written and recorded; the music videos just need to be shot, with part 34 to debut on the fictional “out the closet” TV show ( are you confused yet?)
The man himself seems to be undergoing a renaissance of sorts; he of course shot to notoriety after much publicised legal drama tarnished his reputation. The damage has never truly been repaired; but R Kelly has recently appeared on tracks with Kanye West and has even jumped on the latest release from Ty Dolla $ign.
At his peak, R Kelly was the undisputed King, and while the remix to ignition still gets a solid workout at nightclubs, his career remains one giant what if. Who knows what he would have become if he was not embroiled in such scandals.
R Kelly’s new album The Buffet is due to hit stores by the end of November.
[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BqDYu7ejpNA]
New York Magazine has recently published an article about R. Kelly stating “he’s a musical genius — and he’s been accused of some awful things. Is it okay to listen to him?” Which might have seemed like a fair question whenhe was accused back in 2002, or even when he was found ‘not guilty’ of said ‘awful things.’ Now I’m not defending the R&B artist, I am only saying that we shouldn’t be wasting our time worrying about whether or not to listen to him based on a decade-old allegation. It is hard to think about now cutting Bump N’ Grind, Down Low and Space Jam’s I Believe I Can Fly out of my life when the man was found ‘not guilty’ so many years ago.
The R&B singer was arrested in 2002 after a video emerged which allegedly showed him engaging in sexual intercourse with – and urinating on – an underage girl. Police also found 12 images of an allegedly underage girl in Kelly’s home. R. Kelly was cleared of all counts by a Chicago court in 2008.
Kelly is also alleged to have married late R&B singer Aaliyah in 1994 when she was 15 and he was 26. The marriage was supposedly later annulled in February 1995, although both denied that the marriage ever took place.
In the New York Magazine interview with journalist David Marchese, R. Kelly was questioned about these claims, replying: “That’s a rumour that comes from the Earth, like all rumours… It’s not true. I love women, period. If I wasn’t a celebrity, people wouldn’t be saying these things about me.”
[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uAXxkNaRkp8]
Marchese also referred to previous comments made by his brother, his former manager and his former publicist who have all suggested that Kelly has engaged in sex acts with underage girls.
The singer responded: “All those people have been fired by me. If you’re going to ask me these questions, you have to make sense out of it. It wasn’t until after they got fired that they said these things. Go figure. I got one life, and I don’t want to spend it talking about negativity. I’ve moved on. Maybe you haven’t.”
Marchese went on to say even Jim DeRogatis, the former Chicago Sun-Times reporter and pop critic, who has done more than anyone else to spread the word on Kelly’s alleged unlawful sexual behavior, admits: “The man is a musical genius.”
“People need to be aware of, given the subject matter of his art, what he is really about,” DeRogatis says. “You can despise the individual and appreciate the art, fine, but you need to be aware that you’re making a conscious decision to overlook some very, very bad behavior. You’re either ignorant of what he’s been charged of, or you’ve thought it through and said, ‘That all matters less to me than his cool grooves.’ What I want is for people to at least think about it.”
[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GIQn8pab8Vc]
If none of us are denying the man’s genius and he has been found not guilty, surely we can now move on.
Some of the greatest rappers of all time have had some shocking allegations (though none as explicit as R. Kelly) brought against them and many have served jail time. This has never had an impact on record sales – in fact, it usually has the contrary effect. Most notably for Tupac; he and three associates were accused of sexual assault and Pac was sentenced to four and a half years in 1995. While locked up, Me Against The World reached number one on the Billboard 200, which made him the only artist ever to have an album at number one while serving a prison sentence. After serving only a few months, Tupac went on to release All Eyez On Me, arguably his most successful album.
Tupac is just one notable example, and there are plenty of other rappers who have served time, including Lil’ Wayne, DMX, Flavor Flav, Gucci Mane – and the list goes on. However, none of them are hassled about their pasts as much as R. Kelly. Why is this? Is it the nature of the accusation? The fact that it pertained to minors? Shouldn’t we have faith in Chicago’s judicial system? I, for one, will still listen to R. Kelly’s new album The Buffet which will be released in December. If you want to read the full interview between R. Kelly and Marchese you can find it here.

