Dr. Dre
These Famous People Actually Use Their Star Power to Help At-Risk Youth
Influencers can bring much-needed cash to frontline organizations and important causes.
Dr. Dre Breaks a Two-Year Silence with "Gunfire"
The song will be featured on 'The Defiant Ones' documentary series.
Why Do We Assume Good Musicians Are Good People?
Chuck Berry's death has reignited familiar questions over how far critics should go in the impulse to conflate a musician’s work and character.
Death Row's Former Photographer Shares the Unreal Stories Behind Her Photos
Simone Green's book 'Time Served: My Days and Nights on Death Row Records' details the tumultuous years.
Et interview med den eneste person i verden, der nogensinde har ramt plet på “Smoke Weed Every Day”-sætningen fra den der Dr. Dre sang
Lad hans heroiske triumf inspirere dig.
An HBO Documentary About Dr. Dre and Jimmy Iovine is Coming in 2017
The four-part documentary will explore Dr. Dre and Jimmy Iovine's partnership.
The Legend of Goddess Bunny, Hollywood's Forgotten, Disabled, Trans Art Star
The Goddess Bunny entertained generations of gay punks through her tap dancing, film roles, and avant-garde performances. I assumed she had died—until one of her adopted "sons" sent me a message, asking me to tell her story.
The VICE Morning Bulletin
Trump starts broadcasting on Facebook Live, terrorists kill at least 59 at a police college in Pakistan, right-to-carry laws may actually make campuses less safe, and more.
Watch Martha Stewart and Snoop Dogg Dance Awkwardly in the Trailer for Their New Cooking Show
The pair's new show, 'Martha & Snoop's Potluck Dinner Party,' airs November 7 on VH1.
Surviving Dre: The Woman Behind a New Movie About Dr Dre's Alleged Abuse
In her new Lifetime film, R&B singer Michel’le alleges that her exes, Dr. Dre and Suge Knight, physically abused her. Dre has threatened to sue the producers of the movie, but Michel’le is refusing to back down.
'Original Gangstas' Goes Beneath the Surface of West Coast Rap's Origin Story
Twenty years after Tupac Shakur's murder, Ben Westhoff digs into the legacy that made gangsta rap so fascinating to its listeners—and deadly to its artists.