Sean Combs Playboy Interview
Sean Combs, aka Diddy, Puffy, Puff Daddy sat down with Playboy to chat about sex, his status as an artist and other rather entertaining topics. Read highlights from the Sean Combs Playboy interview below.

Picture of Sean Combs Playboy Interview [source:celebrityviplounge.com]
Read some of the highlights of Sean Combs Playboy interview below.
PLAYBOY: You recently turned 40. The younger rappers want the older artists to step aside. Does that make you feel less relevant?
COMBS: No. It will take any young artist a long time to reach my status. It will take them a long time to be looking at themselves on a billboard in Times Square as they eat lunch doing a PLAYBOY interview. It will take them a long time to get mobbed in Africa, Bolivia and Russia. It will take them a long time to drop an hour of hits. I have become the American rap star dream.
COMBS: I dont get involved in hate in any capacity. I dont feel anybody can fuck with me, end of discussion. Im not even trying to be young. In hip hop years, Im about 55. [laughs] I look prettier, Im healthier, I can run faster. Now that Im 40 Im going to have a big party and tell people Im 55.
PLAYBOY: You sound like one of your idols, Muhammad Ali. Are you saying youre the greatest?
COMBS: If Im not inspiring you at this point, youre a lost hope. Im one of the baddest motherfuckers to ever do this shit, and Im not saying that in an arrogant way. Thats a fact, in black and white. I dare you to write down all my achievements. It will be overwhelming. Break it down and then say whos number one in hip hop. Who else has conquered television? Who else has conquered fashion? I dont want to hear you have a fashion line. Do you have a Council of Fashion Designers of America award? I need to know. Have you run a marathon? If you all still want to fuck with me after I ran the marathon, I dont know what else to do.
PLAYBOY: Youre feeling kind of defensive, huh?
COMBS: It is important to defend yourself and make sure historys written the right way.
PLAYBOY: Lets get into some of the criticisms. Youve been attacked for being one of the few rappers who dont write their own rhymes. Is that a fair accusation?
COMBS: My instrument and my tone represented Harlemmy swagger, my lazy flow. Nobody came in and told me how to do that. I was spoiled because my first rhyme was written by Biggie. People dont know that Biggie was the one who pushed me to be an artist. I was afraid to do it, but he said, The crowd goes crazy when you come out. Im gonna write you some rhymes. We did Its All About the Benjamins and Cant Nobody Hold Me Down.
PLAYBOY: Other people continued to write rhymes for you, even after Biggie died.
COMBS: Nobody just sits down and writes lyrics for me. If its Jay Z, he puts me to work. I give him information; I have to tell him which melodies Im hearing. Hell use me as a muse. My strength as a songwriter is having ideas and melodies, and I need somebody to put them together. If you have a relationship with some of the best writers in the game, youd be a fool not to take advantage of that. Im not trying to out rap Jay Z, you know what Im saying? I dont even see us in the same weight division. Him, Kanye West, Lil Wayne, Draketheyre in the heavyweight division; theyre in contention for the belt. Jay doesnt dictate what I do or dont do.
PLAYBOY: But you did write more on your new album.
COMBS: [Nods] I want to say that on this album I dont settle for mediocrity. That has been a weak point with me. Lyrically this is one of the best albums out there, and Im proud to say I co wrote almost the whole thing.
PLAYBOY: People say youve lost your passion for music.
COMBS: I agree. Its hard to stay passionate. Its hard to go from working with artists such as Biggie, Mary J. Blige, Jodeci and the LOX to the new generation of artists. The rules of the game have changed.
COMBS: Artistry is not encouraged. Youre expected to deliver a record that fits in a nice comfortable box for everybody. Wack shit gets played on the radio and becomes number one. If you look at the records made in the past five years, which ones are going to be played 10 years from now? Im not hating; thats real talk. People can say whatever they want about me, but six or seven of my records are played every night. Its All About the Benjamins is the most played hip hop record of all time. What other record is played in every country at a party every night? Theres only one other record, and thats the second most played hip hop record, Ill Be Missing You. How in the hell does P. DiddyPuff Daddyhave the number one and number two most played songs? Lets talk about the factual information, and after that leave me alone and let me get on this last train to Paris and ride into the sunset. [laughs]
PLAYBOY: You sound frustrated about the state of hip hop.
COMBS: This is not something I need to do financially. At the end of the day, I question what my future is in music. Do I still want to play the game under these rules?
PLAYBOY: How does your music fit into whats going on now?
COMBS: Its a risk. It doesnt sound like anything thats on the radio. I didnt make it to fit in or blend in. Its a culmination of my experiences, a story of my search for love. If I wanted to make three number one hits I could go into the studio and do that, but that doesnt interest me.
COMBS: I think we are probably responsible for Obama being in office, yes. If nobody else is gonna say it, then Im gonna say it. The confidence, the swagger we instilled in our communities made that possible.
COMBS: I met him twice. I aint gonna lieif God said I could pick one person to be my father, Id want to be Sean Combs Obama. Thats how dope he is. [laughs] I hope he reads this interview and adopts me. I wouldnt even have to be in the will. I got my own money!
COMBS: Heres one: People say if you sign with Puff, you wont be successful. They try to break it down by asking where past artists from Bad Boy are. If you look at who was on Def Jam seven years ago, those arent the same people who are on Def Jam now. Same for Sony and Universal. Its the life expectancy of somebody on a label, thats what it is. Also, Ive protected a lot of artists whove had drug problems or have been arrested. Im a label, not a babysitter.
COMBS: He came to a party I had in Beverly Hills at Ron Burkles house, after the MTV awards in 2008. I invited young Hollywood to network and let them know I was coming out there and doing my thing on the acting scene. In the middle of the party, security said, Mr. Combs Michael Jackson is here to see you. He wasnt on the guest list, and he wanted to make sure it was all right to come in. I said, Michael? Shit. We sat in a booth, and he said, Let me see your ring, as if he was ready to buy it off me. He was acting as if he was from the hood. Then he whispered in my ear, Wheres Beyonc at? Im trying to meet her. So I introduced her to Mike. I thought he was coming in to meet me, but he was focused on Beyonc. [laughs]
PLAYBOY: When Michael died, did you think about your own mortality?
COMBS: No. Ive had so much death around me, Im kind of numb to it.
COMBS: I was introduced to death at a very early age. My father was murdered, and one of my best friends, Notorious B.I.G., was gunned down in L.A. Then my other two best friends, who were living with me, were killed at the same time in a shoot out in Atlanta over a girl. They had a double casket funeral. Its been painful. Its sad to have all your friends taken away like that. When I see death, I accept it as Gods will.
PLAYBOY: Youve done a lot of research on your father, Melvin. Did you find out why he was killed?
COMBS: My father was a real heavy in Harlem. He had the Italian connection from a guy he went to Catholic high school with. When my father was driving a limousine, he bumped into that guy, who was the son of someone very high up in the Mafia. The guy said, You dont need to be driving no limousine. Im going to put you on.
COMBS: Back then you were either getting the drugs from the Italians or the French connection. And my father became the connection to Harlem. You had to see my father. Im not glorifying it. Im not proud of itIm telling the story as it was told to me.
COMBS: He also got hooked up with the French connection. So that pissed off the Italians a little bit, and also the cops, because the cops didnt have a hold on the French connection. The French connection would get pure stuff from the Italians and cut it up. So they were able to make four, five times on it. That was the big problem on the streets. Then my father got arrested. They couldnt take the risk.
PLAYBOY: They couldnt take the risk he would talk to the police?
COMBS: Yeah. So when he got out, they put a hit on him. Thats the rumor. But there are also records that show the guy who put out the hit was killed five days later.
COMBS: I dont want to say his name, to be honest.
PLAYBOY: Youve spoken to notorious Harlem drug dealer Frank Lucas about your father. What insight did he have for you?
COMBS: He came to my office and said, Your father was a stand up guy. Everybody loved him. My father wasnt a gangsterthugkiller type of guy. He was the life of the party and a nice dresser, and all the girls loved him.
PLAYBOY: There are many similarities between you and Melvin.
COMBS: If my father was alive, Id probably have followed in his footsteps, because I have a street hustler mentality, and thats what I would have looked up to.
PLAYBOY: What was the dynamic between your mom and your dad?
COMBS: My mother was my fathers queen. He had his other situations, as a lot of men do, but she was the one he had on a pedestal. She was the one he decided to marry.
PLAYBOY: Did your mom not want you to know about your dad?
COMBS: My mother lied to me and told me my father died in a car accident. Youve got to understand, growing up in my neighborhood you didnt want to be a basketball player or a rapper. You wanted to be a drug dealerthat was a great job to have. If you had a chance to be a doctor and make $300,000 a year or be a drug dealer and make $300,000 a year, most people would have picked drug dealer. [laughs] Its a ridiculous, stupid, ignorant way to think, but thats the way we were programmed.
COMBS: Some of my friends were selling drugs in the Maryland and D.C. area. I remember them having all this jewelry and new BMWs. I was eating ramen noodles, stealing from the 7 Eleven to get some food. I thought, I need to get some money like yall have. So I go out on the block, the strip where theyre selling drugs, and my man says, Okay, Im going to give you this. You wait there. Theyll come up to you. Im out there five minutes when three cop cars pull up and officers jump out and start chasing me. I ran and got away.
COMBS: Yeah, it was The Wire. We reconvene in the same place two hours later. This time its dark, and all of a sudden a van pulls up. Cops jump out and start chasing me again. Theres a helicopter overhead with a light following me through the woods. Me and my friends meet up at these little triplex projects, and nobody got caught.
PLAYBOY: Based on the time period, were assuming you were trying to sell crack.
PLAYBOY: Why didnt you call it quits at that point?
COMBS: I wanted to go home, but I didnt know how to punk out and tell them. The cops were outside, and we heard them coming up the stairs. They were responding to a couple having an argument below us, and Im panicking and about to jump out the window. I turned into a scared white Harvard student. God was sending me signals. I told my friends, Thanks, yall, but no thanks. This game is not for me. I walked out that door, and I aint been around nobody with no drugs. I dont want to see no drugs.
PLAYBOY: Relatively speaking, thats a tame rapper sells drugs experience.
COMBS: I have the corniest drug dealer story of all time. Im probably the shortestduration drug dealer in history. Thats why you never heard me talk about it in my rhymes.
PLAYBOY: Did you ever tell Biggie that story when he was dealing drugs?
COMBS: I told him. I said, I lost my father to this game, and youre too talented to have to go in that direction. We could make the kids in the hood say they want to be the next Puffy, the next Biggie, instead of them wanting to be the next drug dealer.
PLAYBOY: Youve never told your theory about who killed Biggie. Do you have one?
COMBS: People have speculated about it being a remnant of the East Coast West Coast feud. Maybe people in L.A. saw us as disrespectful and took matters into their own hands. It would be wrong for me to speculate, so Ive always waited for the truth to come out.
PLAYBOY: Have you heard people say you know something but dont want to talk to the police?
COMBS: Im not holding up a street code or anything. Its not as if I know something and Im out there handling it on my own. I just dont know. Its such a shocking thing. No matter what people say, its not the norm for musicians to get gunned down in mob hit fashion. That right there was serious. Thats not a regular drive by, thats assassination.
PLAYBOY: Youre saying there was a thought out plan?
COMBS: It was a professional hit. There were bullets in one door of our car and nowhere else.
PLAYBOY: Do you ever play the what if game when it comes to that situation?
COMBS: Yeah, in retrospect I should have gone with my instinct. I didnt want to go to a party. I felt as if things werent cool out there. Big was supposed to go to London, but he called me that morning and said he needed two days with me to celebrate finishing his album, because we never hung out in clubs.
PLAYBOY: It seemed as if you two partied all the time.
COMBS: We were interested in different things. He liked smoking weed and going to underground spots, and I liked chasing girls and drinking champagne. Our worlds connected in the studio. He said he wasnt going to London, and he was coming to my house to get me to go to the Vibe party. In retrospect, I should have flipped out as I normally do and made sure he got on that plane to London.
PLAYBOY: Your sexual history is renowned, but a lot of things have probably been exaggerated. If you were writing a book.
COMBS: Spit it out. I know youre trying to figure out how to say this to another man. I feel as uncomfortable as you.
COMBS: Im gonna tell you about me. I got into porn at an early age. They used to have this show called Midnight Blue on public access TV. When I was in junior high I used to strategize how I could turn that on after my mother fell asleep. There was this woman, Vanessa del Rio?
COMBS: We used to have sex every Thursday night. I was masturbating so much I started feeling bad, because I was going to Catholic school and believed it was a sin. As soon as I would bust off, I would be on my knees asking for forgiveness.
COMBS: By my junior year in high school there was no more whacking off. I was too afraid to upset God. On the flip side, it unleashed me on women. I had to have sex every day.
COMBS: I tried to lose my virginity when I was seven years old. I was on top of a girl who was nine or 10, but it didnt happenso everybody doesnt have to bug out. My mother and the babysitter whipped my ass, but it didnt knock me off my mission.
COMBS: When I was 13, and I felt I was a porno star because Id been watching porn for so long. In the Bronx you could get a hotel for an hour. I always had $20 or $30 to take a chick to a hotel. Im proud to say I love sex. You might catch me in a porn store at any given momentit aint nothing Im ashamed of. If they start sending freaks to jail, Im guilty as charged.
PLAYBOY: Youve talked about having 30 hour sex sessions.
COMBS: Im not exaggerating. When I heard about Sting doing it, I thought, Yo, is this possible? I studied up on the breathing techniques and the focus. Now I think to myself, I cannot believe Ive been going this long! [laughs] Night is turning into day and Im still goin at it.
PLAYBOY: You went to an all boys Catholic school. Some kids cant handle that.
COMBS: Going to Mount St. Michael made me love women more, because absence makes the heart grow fonder. As soon as that bell rang I wanted to be around some chicks. I was running to the bus stop. I needed to smell a woman, see a woman, walk past one.
PLAYBOY: Were you obedient to the school dress code?
COMBS: I loved wearing a uniformthats one of my secrets. I used to have to get dressed up and wear a suit and tie at an early age. Everybody else was always complaining about it. It got me to understand how a shirt should fit, how a suit jacket should fit.
PLAYBOY: Is it possible for a celebrity at your level to be monogamous?
COMBS: Its hard. Im going to say, for any woman trying to please me, that is a real tall order. She has to have poise. She has to be classy. But when we get in that bedroom she got to turn me out, Jack. She has to put a porno to shame and shes got to be sexually open.
COMBS: It aint gonna hurt for my woman to surprise me and bring a girl home. Thats not gonna hurt our relationship. [laughs] Im not gonna say, Well, honey, whats going on? I mean, Im not saying Im a swinger, but Ive been told that swingers have some of the best, most longlasting relationships.
PLAYBOY: There have been a lot of pictures of you partying in Ibiza and St. Tropez. Whats the appeal?
COMBS: Its more enjoyable to party overseas. Americans go too hard with their partying. Overseas its done more as recreation, and theres a balance to it.
COMBS: Theres not a bunch of crackheads walking around Paris. Or crystal meth addicts. We take drugs to another level.
COMBS: Not at all. Its more about the intimacy and partying with the world. In every pocket different languages are being spoken, and its dreamlike. The music is flowing, the wine is flowing, and everybody is talking in their own language.
COMBS: Because Im known as the king of parties, they said, Yo, you have to come be a part of this community, and when I got there they treated me as if my arrival was in the scripture or something. And on the hundredth day he will come and grace us. I was the first one to expose a lot of young African Americans to St. Barts, to yachts, to the Hamptons. I went to St. Tropez to represent for all the cats from the hood. Oh shit, we didnt know black people had big boats. Yeah, we do. Make room for us.
PLAYBOY: Can you enjoy that playground if youre not pulling in seven figures?
COMBS: I tell people you dont have to stay on a boat. You could be from the South Side of Chicago, save up your money and go to St. Tropez. And you should. Its an experience. Its not as if all of a sudden a plane ticket to St.Tropez is $20,000.
PLAYBOY: You had a high profile romance with Jennifer Lopez. Why did you two break up?
COMBS: It was too much. Thats the best answer. And I didnt close the door all the way with Kim. I think thats something Jennifer felt.
PLAYBOY: Youre talking about Kim Porter, the mother of three of your children.
COMBS: I was with Kim close to nine years, and I didnt have closure with it. But I met Jennifer and it was a perfect match. We definitely loved each other.
PLAYBOY: The breakup came in 2001, shortly before you were acquitted of firing a gun during a nightclub fight. Did that cause the breakup?
COMBS: There was a lot going on with the gun charge and the publicity around the trial. That changed the dynamic of the relationship and put a wedge between us.
PLAYBOY: Did her handlers think you were damaging her career?
COMBS: Im sure there were people having her consider if it was worth it.
COMBS: Were still cool. Ill always cherish her. There are people who come into your life that youll always love and respect. Shes definitely one of them. I feel as though we changed each others lives.
COMBS: Oh man, it was a different type of feeling. It was being in love with somebody who understands who you are because they are exactly like you. A lot of times in relationships, the other person cant understand you because theyre not like you. We were alike in terms of being ambitious, where we were from and our passions.
PLAYBOY: You consider Frank Sinatra one of your heroes. Why?
COMBS: Hes my hero because of the way he lived, manthat cat lived to the fullest. I want to be sitting back one day and say I had an impact, that I helped change part of the world. I also want to have some good laughs and memories. Sinatras my hero for having a good time.
PLAYBOY: Does his relationship with Sammy Davis Jr. make you appreciate him even more?
COMBS: Hell yeah. You had the most popular guy in the world doing the most unpopular thing, you know? He treated Sammy and black people in general as friends.
PLAYBOY: What do you most have in common with Sinatra?
COMBS: The biggest parallel isnt showmanship or partying. The way he loved Ava Gardner is the way Ive loved a woman. And the way he was hurt by the John Kennedy betrayal is the way I was hurt.
COMBS: Well, II mean, Im not trying to throw anybody under the bus.
COMBS: Ill explain it in a way that leaves it to the imagination of the reader. Ive been in a situation that was a combination of Gardner and Kennedy for me. There was a point when the world perceived me as a bad guy and people had to distance themselves. It is convenient to stand next to the bad boy when things are hot and going well, but when things go down it isnt as sexy. That hurts.
PLAYBOY: It sounds as if youre referring to Jennifer Lopez. Whats your definition of loving hard?
COMBS: When you love hard, you would actually die for somebody. And it hurts to know the person youd die for wont even handle lifes pain for you. When you experience that, it makes you scared to love, but its the most beautiful love to have.
PLAYBOY: If you met Sinatra, what would you ask him?
COMBS: I always wondered if he was ever able to get over it. Did it always haunt him the way it haunts me? Will I be able to overcome that?
COMBS: Im saying that Ive got only one more in me.
PLAYBOY: You have only one more relationship left in you?
COMBS: If I find somebody and it doesnt work, Ill be ruined forever. Its scary because I have only one more lifeline.
COMBS: Yeah, Ive had a bunch of different woman tell me no. Whether I was willing to accept no for an answer, thats another story.
PLAYBOY: There must be a story that comes with that.
COMBS: Yeah, there was a young lady whos an actress. Shes famous. I liked her, so I was willing to do whatever I had to do. I told her, I will sneak up the side of the building to see you. I was persistent.
COMBS: We started spending time together, but we were prisoners of our celebrity. She took me to dinner after we got to know each other and hit me with a line that was straight out of the movies. She said, You know this will never work, right? [laughs] I knew she was right.
COMBS: The only person Im gonna tell is God. If he says I cant get into heaven I may whisper it in his ear. She was so cool the way she let me down softly, and she offered me a ride back to my hotel.
PLAYBOY: Sienna Millers name will get linked to that story. You know that, right?
COMBS: I can clear that up right now. It wasnt her. This was going to shake up the world. It would have been a Puff and J. Lo situation, part two.
COMBS: Im not getting into that. Privacy is a sexy thing to have. Its important to be trusted and to be able to have secrets and moments that are your own.
PLAYBOY: A lot of your life happens in public. From watching you throw tantrums on Making the Band and I Want to Work for Diddy, do people know who you are?
COMBS: That is reality but also some acting, to make sure its good TV. I may have pushed too hard and hurt my brandpeople perceive Im difficult to work with. This industry is life or death to me, you know? So I set a tone that lets people know how seriously I take things. Ive been a tyrant, Ive been crazy and Ive been eccentric, but I have never been mean spirited.
PLAYBOY: Lets talk about the fight you had in 1999 with Steve Stoute, a music executive you hit with a champagne bottle in his office, leading to your arrest for aggravated assault. Was it worth it?
COMBS: Thats in the past. We want to get some things uncovered that havent ever been uncovered. Ive already uncovered exactly what that was.
COMBS: Ive gone to therapy for relationships Ive been in, for tragedies Ive been through. I think therapy is good. Ive been called bipolarIm not; I just have very drastic mood swings. I went to therapy when Big died, but a lot of my therapy has been with love and relationships. Ive had therapy about my relationship with Kim, about my relationship with Jennifer. Therapy helped me through those situations.
PLAYBOY: You promoted a City College of New York event in 1991 that resulted in nine deaths. A court ruled that you and rapper Heavy D were responsible for 50 percent of the incident. Does that still haunt you?
COMBS: It is beyond something that haunts me. It scars me inside.
COMBS: I contacted all the families. I went to the memorials. My grandmother said, You gonna have to grow up and be a man on this one. She made me handle it like a man, and thats what I did.
PLAYBOY: Does it ever feel weird that you grew up in a fatherless home and now youre in business with Ron Burkle, a billionaire friend to Bill Clinton?
COMBS: Hes the godfather to my twins. Its a blessing to have people who want to invest with me, but Im a pretty sure bet. I feel Ive proven myself. Ive always had a great return on my investment. I almost feel its the other way around: If I give people a chance to invest in me, Im giving them an opportunity. Thats not being arrogant or cocky. As hip hop businessmen weve been able to generate so much income, we deserve to be treated in the same light as companies on Wall Street and get value from our earnings.
COMBS: Its greed. In the music business it is every man for himself. This wouldnt happen in the Screen Actors Guild or the Writers Guild. Were the only multibillion dollar industry that has no union. Now its so far gone that an artist whos thinking about making money from a record is a caveman.
PLAYBOY: Why couldnt the heads of the major labels sit down and work out a solution?
COMBS: The music industry was getting so much money. [laughs] They were on too many jets, playing in too many arenas to have time to sit down and do a meeting. It was only about the now.
PLAYBOY: Is this bad karma coming back to bite the record industry in the ass?
COMBS: All the stealing, all the false accounting, shit was like Babylon. It makes me sick how people straight up robbed other people. You can call me a murderer, a womanizer, but I aint no motherfucking thief.
PLAYBOY: The person who benefited most from this is Steve Jobs with iTunes.
COMBS: Steve Jobs came in and went crazy with it. He took the industry and made it another billiondollar industry that we still dont control. Jobs is one of the baddest motherfuckers on the face of the earth. Im not mad at him. Hes one of my heroes, as far as business is concerned.
PLAYBOY: Judd Apatow cast you in the spin off to Forgetting Sarah Marshall. Your being cast in an Apatow movie is unexpected.
COMBS: He saw Made, the movie I was in with Vince Vaughn and Jon Favreau. That movie is a cult classic to comedic actors because they know Vaughn is big into improvisation. Hell rip up the script on the first day. Thats the whole Apatow, Nick Stoller, Seth Rogen, Jonah Hill style: a lot of improv. Made opened the door, and then I blew the audition out of the water.
PLAYBOY: Weve seen a lot of rappers who cant act and have failed at movie careers. What made you think that on top of everything youve done you could handle improv?
COMBS: One of my secrets is Im a funny motherfucker. Thats one of the things people like about me and one of the things nobody knows about me. To play at that level of the game youve got to be funny. If youre not naturally funny theres no way. Thats like throwing the ball around with Michael Jordan and LeBron James.
PLAYBOY: So now that youre a player in Hollywood, what type of movies inspire you?
COMBS: One of my favorites is Marty, with Ernest Borgnine. Its a love storyhe wants love so bad. He finds his girl at the right time, and shes a regular, damn near ugly duckling. Its a rap clich, but Scarface is my favorite movie. Not for the violence, the cocaine or the cars, but because theres passion and wanting to be somebody. He wanted to make it so bad. He went too far, of course, but I can relate to coming from nothing and having big dreams.
PLAYBOY: Youre the first person weve met who has both Scarface and Marty on his Netflix queue. Your life is kind of a mix of those two movies, isnt it? Theyre both about quests.
COMBS: So much has happened to me. Thats why I dared you to write it all down, to go through every dramatic point in my life. Its scary: my father, the City College situation, Biggies death, the death of my two best friends, running a marathon, winning a Grammy, selling out Madison Square Garden. Its a lot to digest. Its five lives in one.
Related Posts Lady GaGa Cocaine Use Inspired Wacky Outfits? Quote of the Day: Sean Combs Brooke Hogan Needs A Quarter. Is Miley A Racist? Lindsay Speaks! [source:celebrityviplounge.com]