Master P and his son Romeo Miller
One of the greatest minds to emerge from the
1990s hip hop pantheon, Percy “Master P” Miller transcended a childhood of
poverty in New Orleans’ Calliope Projects, to sell one hundred million records
as the first rap artist to own his own record label and masters. He became a
beacon of generational wealth, divested business interests, and ownership in an
industry once notorious for exploiting its artists. From music, movies and real
estate, to the food and automotive industries, his portfolio continues to grow.
Master
P’s example and mentorship has guided artists from Snoop Dogg, Lil’ Wayne, and
2 Chainz, to his eldest son, rapper, actor and entrepreneur, Romeo Miller.
Master P understood the power of ownership long before Instagram and the age of
celebrity branding. Romeo Miller credits his father’s example as the driving
force in his own life. He tells me, “Growing up watching one of the best and
most powerful businessmen to ever do it guided me to be the man I am today. And
according to Romeo, his father’s lessons went well beyond material success.
“The biggest lesson I learned from him was to simply be a good person. Owning a
business and brand doesn’t matter if you aren’t giving back.”
Master P’s latest project is the upcoming
film, #Unknown,
premiering on Amazon Prime, October 1st. The following are
excerpts from the latest episode of the Allison Interviews podcast with host and
entertainment profiler, Allison Kugel, interviewing Master P. The full podcast
is available on Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, and Spotify.
Read Allison's interview with Master P here:
Sitting among carved mahogany
wood paneled accents and with displayed awards gathered from an unrivaled multi-hyphenate
career, Master P began our conversation by allowing me to take the floor. Not
surprisingly, he is a master delegator with a brilliant sense of when to shoot
the ball and when to pass it. One of the greatest minds to emerge from the
1990s hip hop pantheon, Percy “Master P” Miller transcended a childhood of
poverty in New Orleans’ Calliope Projects, to become a beacon of generational
wealth, diversified business interests, and ownership in an industry once
notorious for exploiting its artists. From music, movies and real estate, to the
food and automotive industries, his portfolio continues to grow.
A true gentleman who prefers
to remain above the fray of controversy and relishes sharing the spotlight with
those around him, Master P’s example and mentorship has guided artists from
Snoop Dogg, Lil’ Wayne, and 2 Chainz, to his eldest son, rapper, actor and
entrepreneur, Romeo Miller. Master P understood the power of ownership long
before Instagram and the age of celebrity branding. Romeo Miller credits his
father’s example as the driving force in his own life. He tells me, “Growing up watching one of the
best and most powerful businessmen to ever do it guided me to be the man I am
today. And according to Romeo, his father’s lessons went well beyond material
success. “The biggest lesson I learned from him was to simply be a good person.
Owning a business and brand doesn’t matter if you aren’t giving back.”
Master P’s latest project is the
upcoming film, #Unknown, a creative collaboration with his son and
co-executive producer, Romeo Miller; and the film’s producer, writer and
director, LazRael Lison. Lison describes the film as, “a mystery thriller that
gets pretty intense, and great for this Halloween season.”
Master P plays the mayor of a
town in a string of alleged unsolved murders, as a local novelist abandons his
second book to attempt to solve the mystery of these crimes; his own life unraveling
in the process.
When it comes to directing the
man who is used to calling the shots, LazRael Lison sings his praises,
recalling, “Master P went over and beyond,” adding, “it’s always so cool when
you can see the Executive Producer also be a student. As a businessman, P wears
so many hats and that requires flexibility. As a director I’m always flexible
in a sense that I can write it on paper, but when you give a soul to that
character, it’s all you. Watching P bring [this role] to life, when people see
him, they’ll think, ‘Wow, I really enjoyed that!’”
Allison Kugel: What are the
top three things that have shaped the person you are today?
Master P: I would first say
God, my kids, my family, and just being able to be blessed.
Allison Kugel: But is there anything
in your life that was a turning point, that completely transformed you?
Master P: I started realizing
that we don’t have to dwell on our past, that it’s okay to move forward; it’s
okay to better yourself. It’s ok to have
faith. Nobody is perfect. That’s what it was for me. I feel like once I started having kids, I
realized I have more to live for and I wanted to be around to watch them grow up,
so I had to start making the right choices. And I want other people to say, “If
P can do it, I can do it. It’s okay to better yourself.” One thing my grandfather
always told me was, “If you want to better yourself and you want to live longer,
mind your business and stay out of other people’s business.”
Allison Kugel: Growing up
where you did, what gave you the power of belief that you could become
everything you ultimately became?
Master P: It was my grandfather,
but it was also knowing if you don’t have anything, you can still make the best
out of what you have. I think a lot of people don’t realize that just having life,
even with what we are going through now, through this pandemic, you never know
when somebody is going to walk out that door and you’re never going to see them
again. When you live in poverty, you know the only way is up. That’s what
pushed me and motivated me, and I think we shouldn’t want to be around people
that hold us back. Even in poverty, I started realizing that if I’m going to be
successful, I have to cut the negative people around me off. Everybody has 24
hours. A lot of people are mad at other people and judging what other people
have. That hate ends up being more important than the positive. It becomes more
important than you making it out or bettering yourself. So, I started
celebrating people. When I was living in poverty, I started looking at other
people who had a nice car or a nice house, and I started being happy for them. When
you can be happy for somebody else’s success, blessings will start coming to you.
Everybody wants to get to the bag, but you are never going to get to the bag
being negative, envious, and jealous. Pride took the devil out of heaven, and
he took three fourths of the angels with him. We have to stop that pride, put
that to the side and say, “Let me invest my time into something positive, and
into me being a better person.”
Allison Kugel: You started
off as a basketball player. Was music your Plan B?
Master P: I was good at
music, but I didn’t know I was that good until I actually got into it
when I got [injured]. You might think you’re going in one direction, but God
will put you in another direction. When I got hurt playing basketball in college,
I felt like I had failed everybody in my family. I was supposed to go to the
pros, and I’m thinking I’m on my way and I’m about to take care of my family
and get them out of the ghetto. But then I got hurt. I always tell people, let
your failures take you to the next level and let your failures make you great.
I remember my grandfather saying, “Look son, don’t sit around here and just
keep worrying about what happened. You
gotta go make something else happen.” I had to find something else that I loved,
and God opened up a bigger door. Most of my friends that played basketball at
the time I played didn’t make that much money in the NBA, and what I was able
to do [with music] was just unheard of. And
I could have easily just been in the music business, but I went to college and
educated myself. Without the right education, I don’t think my mindset would
have been the way it is today, and the way I was thinking about business.
Allison Kugel: Everybody I asked
about you said the same thing, that you were never owned by a record label;
you’ve always owned your own music. Was
that also part of the plan?
Master P: It happened with my
grandfather. He was in the war, and when he came back home, they were supposed
to give him ten thousand dollars to buy a house, and they never gave it to him.
He always said, “Grandson, you need to start your own business. Start your own
army.” That’s where No Limit (the name of Miller’s record label and
production company) came from. My grandfather instilled that in me; “You’re
not going to make it in their system. We have to create our own.” I always went
against the grain. I knew I couldn’t just work for a paycheck, because I was living
in the projects with sixteen people in a three-bedroom apartment. I had so many
people and so many mouths to feed, and I couldn’t do that with a regular
paycheck. I had to own it, and I’ve always kept that mentality, to where, when you
look at African Americans and Latinos, we don’t own anything. My mindset was to
change that narrative, to be able to own my own masters, to be able to build other
executives. That’s where education and knowledge come in. We search and seek
and pray for money, but we don’t search and seek and pray for knowledge and
information. That’s what’s going to get us to our destiny.
Allison Kugel: Yes! I love
that you said that. I pray every night with my son, and we never ask for things.
We say, “Thank You,” and we pray for wisdom, knowledge clarity, health, and so
on. Gratitude is what attracts things to you.
Master P: When you bless others,
blessings will come. My most important job is to be a servant. It’s not about being a boss. It’s about being
a servant and being able to serve my community, to serve underprivileged kids, being
able to serve the elderly, and being able to educate the next generation.
Allison Kugel: Early on in
your music career, you were Tupac Shakur’s opening act. What was that like?
Master P: It was crazy,
because everyone was there to see Tupac. They didn’t care about me (laugh). I was happy to have just one person [in the
crowd] jump up. One guy was just going crazy for me in the audience. And being
on the road with Tupac, I said, “I’m going to turn that one fan into millions.”
To then be able to sell 100 million records is just incredible. Knowing that if
you believe in something… and you don’t have to be the best, because I wasn’t
the best at first. I had to get into the studio and work hard. I was living on
the West Coast, and I had this Southern slur in how I talked, so I had to become
better. They say the best way to do that is to stay in the gym, which was the
studio. I wasn’t afraid to outwork everybody. I outworked those guys. While Tupac
and all those guys were partying, playing, and just having fun on the road, I
was in the studio working. I said, “While
they sleep, I’m going to be working.”
Allison Kugel: What did Tupac
think of your music?
Master P: At first, he didn’t
understand it. Then they started seeing as we are getting into some of the
southern markets, how people were gravitating to my music. They started
listening and saying, “This is alright.” In the end, Tupac really started
liking my music, and that was a blessing, because he was the biggest star in
the world of hip hop at the time. To have him jamming to my music, I knew I was
on my way.
Allison Kugel: Considering history and what happened to him
and Biggie, what are your thoughts on the feuds going on now, like with Kanye
West and Drake. Kanye posted Drake’s home address on social media, and Drake’s
fans vandalized Kanye’s childhood home. Things start becoming public and
crossing the lines of safety.
Master P: I don’t think
people realize they have all of these fans that might even be crazy and take things
into their own hands. We have to watch what we do. There’s a lot of selfish
people out in the world, and there are a lot of snakes in this world. I think
when you are at this level and you are making this type of money, even with
some of these young artists that were losing their lives in hip hop, which is
sad, we have to be thankful and take this as a blessing and grow. I think it’s
the people around them. You have to have people giving you better advice, and
you have to hold yourself accountable. I’ve always had self-accountability. And
start thinking about what you say or what you do, and how it effects and hurts
other people, and how you wouldn’t want that to be happening to you and your
family. A lot of this is self-hate. I would rather sit in the sewer and eat
cheese with rats than sit at a nice restaurant and drink champagne and eat
lobster and steak with a snake, and I think that’s what a lot of us are doing.
When you get to that level of the game like some of these artists, why lose
what you have? Once you get killed or go
to jail there’s no turning back.
Allison Kugel: If you could
travel back in time and alter any famous historical event, where would you go
and what would you attempt to change?
Master P: The Martin Luther King
shooting. I feel he left too soon. I feel like that guy was on to something incredible.
I have so much respect for him, and sometimes I imagine what would have
happened if somebody had told him not to go to that hotel. He didn’t have that
much security with him, and it just didn’t seem right. I feel like we just had
so much more to learn from him. This
guy was nonviolent, and he wanted to bring people together: blacks, whites,
Asians, Latinos… I’ve never seen a person like that. I’m not saying he was perfect, because nobody
is perfect, but it’s what he stood for when he brought people together. It’s
the reason why we are able to have our freedom today and be able to work with
each other, and not be judged by color.
I think that is what I would want to be a part of.
Allison Kugel: Wow!
Master P: He was a dreamer,
so being able to have somebody dream like that is incredible.
Allison Kugel: What do you
think you came into this life as Percy Robert Miller to learn, and what do you
think you came here to teach?
Master P: I came into this
world to be a student of the world. I’m constantly learning every day and
getting better, and I also realize I came into this world to be a father to my
kids. When I use the word “father,” it’s different from being a daddy. I have a
lifetime commitment to my kids, and as a single dad you have to stay focused on
your kids. My kids mean everything to me.
Allison Kugel: How many kids do
you have?
Master P: Altogether, I have nine.
Allison Kugel: No way (laugh)!
Damn, okay!
Master P: I don’t drink or
smoke so (laugh)…
Allison Kugel: (Laughs)
That’s a much better hobby. That’s funny. What is your philosophy for raising
happy, well-adjusted kids?
Master P: You have to deal
with [each kid] as their own individual. Some kids you have to scream at, some
kids you have to talk to softly, and some kids, you have to take them to the side
and nourish them. I think basketball prepared me to be a father. When you are
on the court with certain people, it’s all these different personalities and it’s
the same way with raising kids. Some kids want a lot of your attention, and some
kids want to go off and do their own thing, so you have to know that and be
prepared to sacrifice. My life is not about me anymore. I’ll do anything for
them, and I think a lot of parents are not prepared for that. They still want
to go off and live their best life, but if you have kids, you don’t get a
chance to do that anymore.
Allison Kugel: One hundred
percent. What’s something you have yet to master?
Master P: I have yet to
master technology. It just keeps changing. Every time you think, “I got this,”
something else new is coming out, which is a good thing. We are growing and
constantly getting better. In a couple of years, we are supposed to be flying
in automobiles. It doesn’t even seem right, but you know it’s going to
happen.
Allison Kugel: I read in Black
Enterprise that you’re backing the launch of a new car called Trion
SuperCars (trionsupercars.com).
Master P: I didn’t create the
car. It is actually a guy that has been working on building this car for a
while, and I was able to get behind the project. It’s great to have a guy who’s
been working with so many other car companies (including Tesla) create
this supercar, and me being a part of helping him market and promote that.
That’s what it’s all about for me, to be able to help people like that and
bring their dreams to life, so it’s a blessing.
Allison Kugel: What makes it
a supercar?
Master P: What he is creating
and the technology, and that he knows about building cars. What makes it a “supercar”
is that it’s able to compete with all the other supercars out there and has
just as much technology.
(In a recent statement,
Miller dubs Trion SuperCar “the first black-owned supercar manufacturer in
America.” He credits the soon-to-be-launched car company with “adding diversity
to the automotive industry, which will offer a high-end line of models and a
line of affordable luxury vehicles.” Miller calls the fledgling automotive
company, “history in the making.”)
Allison Kugel: When will
Trion SuperCars hit the market?
Master P: I think in two years. I can’t wait until it’s
done!
Allison Kugel: What is still
on your bucket list?
Master P: Being able to put
together a superhero movie that is owned by us, and not by Hollywood. When you
look at Black Panther, that movie made more than a billion dollars, but
it wasn’t owned by us. It looked like us. I want to change that narrative. That
is a real bucket list item of mine.
Allison Kugel: You don’t
think the success of Black Panther made big budget, studio backed movies
with an all-black cast that much more marketable and in-demand?
Master P: See, but think
about this, right… after the movie was over, we went back home, and nobody
really benefited. Chadwick Boseman, his salary was $500,000, and he ended up
making maybe two or three million dollars from a billion-dollar movie. Robert
Downey Jr. makes $70 million when he does Iron Man, and [Black
Panther] was way bigger. I’m just saying, to be able to put money back into
our culture and into our community off of our own work, I think that is a game
changer.
Allison Kugel: Your hand is
in so many different things these days, and your movie #Unknown will
be released next month. What is it about acting that appeals to you?
Master P: When you get to a
certain level, you want to bring projects to life. For me, it is almost like
being two different people. I can go be a businessman on this side and come
back and utilize my acting skills and my fanbase, and just feeding them. It’s
connecting to the audience and letting people see me in different ways. In this movie I play the mayor, and it’s a
suspense thriller. It’s about being able to let people see me in different ways.
In my next movies, I want to go beyond what you think you would see me doing in
a movie. I’m even thinking about, like how Arnold Schwarzenegger played his
role in Kindergarten Cop. I want to do a movie like that, set in an
elementary school, playing a teacher or a principal. It’s fun to be able to
portray other people and to bring a character to life.
Allison Kugel: Tell me about
the plot of this movie.
Master P: #Unknown is
a suspense thriller, but it’s also about a relationship and about trust and
faith in somebody. The main character, his girl doesn’t believe him about what
is going on with all these murders that happened years ago in this town. The
movie has a great plot to it, but at the same time, throughout the story your
mind is constantly trying to figure out what’s true, and did this happen, and when
did it happen? I think it’s also about a couple trying to figure out if they can
trust each other. Is this guy who he says he is? This film asks the question: in
life, do you really believe in the person you are with?
Allison Kugel: And do you
ever really know somebody?
Master P: Exactly, that’s
what it is. That’s the unknown.
Allison Kugel: You’re used to
being the boss, and on a movie set, when you are playing a character and you
are working with someone like filmmaker LazRael Lison, who produced, wrote, and
directed this film, are you good at taking direction from someone else?
Master P: It’s all about
being a team player. When you are making a film, you have to know that we are working
together to bring something to life, so it is never about me. I learned that
from playing sports, there is no “I” in team. We had a great group of people, and
everybody was professional, and everybody did their job. When I get on a movie
set it is not about me being a boss or an executive producer. If I’m an actor,
I have to play my role and you have to let the director play his role, and
everybody else in the cast has to play their role if we are going to win. To be
a good teacher, you have to be a good student. I’m constantly learning how to
get better. I know I’m on my way to doing some great things and bringing some
great projects to life, because I want to keep getting better and you have to
put in the work. Even when you look at somebody like a Samuel Jackson, he
didn’t get stronger in his game until he was older. This is about growing for
me. I don’t compare this to my music or my business or anything else I’ve done.
I take acting seriously, because I want to constantly keep growing and getting
better.
Allison Kugel: So many films are
now being released, simultaneously, in theatres and on streaming services,
because of this pandemic. It’s re-shaping the entire movie industry. What are
your thoughts?
Master P: I think it’s great,
because people are able to enjoy these movies and get a chance to see it when
they want to see it. Streaming is so important, and we are focusing on that.
You’ll be able to go to Amazon Prime to see this movie, #Unknown, and
it’s incredible. It’s the new way, and a lot of people want to be safe during
this pandemic, so this is a great way to put movies out now.
Allison Kugel: Do you think a
movie release can be as exciting of an event, and be profitable, when the
majority of people elect to watch it at home instead of in the theatre?
Master P: We’re going to have
to adapt to the times. People have a choice. Some people still want to go to
theatres and see films, but some people are more comfortable at home right now.
This is about safety, right now. A lot of these movies are not going to make
the money they normally would make, but when you look at the streaming right
now, those numbers are about to start going up, so it’s just a new way.
#Unknown, starring Master
P, Judd Nelson, Tom Sizemore, Denise Boutte, and Hal Ozsan; and produced,
written, and directed by LazRael Lison, premieres October 1st, exclusively
on Amazon Prime. Follow Master P on Instagram @masterp and follow filmmaker LazRael Lison @lazrael_lison. Watch the trailer for #Unknown.
Listen to the full
conversation with Master P and filmmaker, LazRael Lison, on the Allison Interviews Podcast on Apple Podcasts and Spotify. Follow Allison Kugel on Instagram @theallisonkugel and at allisoninterviews.com.
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