Tuesday, June 28, 2011

50 Cent writes anti-bullying book for teens

Rapper hopes to steer teenagers away from schoolyard bullying with a script called "Playground" that is partially based on his own life

Rapper 50 Cent, who rose to fame with songs that told of drug use and violence, is aiming to steer teenagers away from schoolyard bullying with a record called "Playground" that will reach stores in January, his publisher said.

The story 50 Cent will pen is nearly a 13 year-old bully who learns to fix his ways after witnessing the damage he caused, according to Penguin Young Readers Group.

It is partially based on 50 Cent`s own life.

The rapper, whose very key is Curtis Jackson, grew up in the New York City neighborhood of Jamaica, Queens, in an orbit that had heavy crime during his youth.

"I had a warm desire to write `Playground` because I wanted to research how a kid becomes a bully," 50 Cent, who has a teenage son, said in a statement.

"I drew on events from my own childhood and adolescence, but was frantic to see the story take on its own life," the rapper said.

50 Cent began winning fans in the later 1990s with songs like "Thug Love" and "How to Rob," but later an attack on his life, his record company dropped him. He arranged a return in the early 2000s with his album "Get Rich or Die Tryin`," and since then he has recorded albums and performed in movies.

He promulgated a 2005 autobiography called "From Pieces to Weight" and followed that in 2009 with a life strategy book "The 50th Law," co-written with Robert Greene.

Even though the rapper, who has sold over 22 million albums worldwide, hopes to discourage teens from bullying, he has occupied in his part of public feuds over the years.

In 2009, he traded barbs with rapper Rick Ross, taunting him in lyrics and on tv for formerly working as a corrections officer. Before that, 50 Cent traded insults with rappers The Game and Cam`ron, among others.

Source Celebrity News

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