
Rihanna's former business manager, Patricia Williams, who has represented some of the richest and biggest names and companies is "livid" at the Barbadian singer. Williams claims that she was fired and called all sorts of names because of the actions of Rihanna's own manager, Marc Jordan who is the owner of Rebel One Management. She reveals all to Page Six, in order to prevent any tarnish on her name. And it looks like Rihanna may have jumped the gun when she cussed out Williams. Thank God she has a super rich boyfriend, Chris Brown; although their relationship is why she has to wear hater blockers...LOL! Below is the article:
Rihannaâs now ex-business manager Patricia Willliams has been recently fired as she recalls âfor no good reason, all in ignoranceâ and is âlividâ with Rihanna & her management company Rebel Oneâs decision to axe her.
Rihanna recently met with Willliams to check on her accounting affairs and was shocked to see that almost all her money was missing. She instantly accused Willliams of âstealing her money.â
âIâm a professional Business Manager, I have a staff of more than a dozen, I have worked for many high profile actors, musicians and multi-million dollar corporations. Why would I steal from Rihanna?â She continues, âI showed her all the paperwork and tried to explain to her the circumstances but she wouldnât listen. She called me all sorts of horrible names and stormed off. I now feel compelled to share with the world the background story as I will not allow my name to be slanderedâ
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The Barbados born singer has had four back-to-back albums, including a re-release since her debut of âPon De Replayâ in 2005.
According to Willliams, Marc Jordan, manager and owner of Rebel One Management has been taking care of Rihannaâs financial situation with her. âDef Jam doesnât fund Rihanna properly, so Marc uses the money Rihanna makes from third-party endorsements and from tours to fund her album and music videos.â Since 2005, Rihanna has been sponsored by the likes of JC Penny, Samsung, Covergirl, Secret, Venus Breeze etc,. and has gone on two major tours, most recently label-mate Kanye Westâs âGlow in the Darkâ Tour and with PussyCat Dolls across Europe.
âI donât want to disrespect Marcâs name. He is a fantastic manager and genuinely believes in Rihanna. But he uses her money to fund her future projects because he believes he can break her in the world-market. Her album sales are not nearly as close to her single sales and he knows that if she is only known as a âsingles artistâ she will only be as good as her last hit. Unfortunately, he didnât inform his client and Iâm receiving the brunt of it.
âWhy is Def Jam lacking in funding support for there act? Why was so much money spent? How much exactly? Williams continues,
âHer record label Def Jam has put out 3 albums in a time span of 2 years. A lot of that was orchestrated through her management Rebel One. It was never Def Jamâs intention to release so many albums back-to-back but Marc Jordan found loop holes and ways to make it happen. A lot of the money Rihanna made through her endorsements between CoverGirl Cosmetics, Samsung.. Notice that the majority of Rihannaâs videos have a cell phone in it?â
âAfter the release of Rihanna and Teairra Mari, Def Jam had intention to drop both acts because their album sales were not successful. Her manager fought to get [S.O.S (Rescue Me)] and quickly tried to negotiate with as many companies as possible. Nike picked up the song and funded a video. This brought the hype back for Rihanna in the companyâs New York office. Majority of the official âS.O.Sâ video was funded by Samsung because the record label was only willing to put up a small amount. Once âS.O.Sâ picked up digitally and at radio, Def Jam agreed to fund the rest of her album. Jordan instantly got a video shot to âUnfaithfulâ (he negotiated with video director Anthony Mandler to drop his price and would be given more videos from Rihanna in return). Then they shot âWe Rideâ which was an extremely cheap video to create. âBreak It Offâ was released as a third album, but again, Def Jam was unhappy with the sales of her album âA Girl Like Meâ and refused to shoot a video. At this point Rihanna was opening up for the Pussycat Dolls in Europe. She was making 30,000 a show but she didnât see any of that money because it was needed to fund her next album.â Which is now known to the greater public as a âGood Girl Gone Badâ.â
The song âUmbrellaâ was found & Jordan fought again for Rihanna to have it. They shot the video, which CoverGirl funded half of, and the song became a success. When the record label had there meeting with Music Stores across the U.S to order her album for shipment, the numberâs werenât coming in the way that they expected. When the albumâs first week numbers came in at less than 150,000, the label was shocked. Def Jamâs President LA Reid was livid! Umbrella was #1 for 11 weeks! Any other artist would have sold way more first week. T-Pain even did better in sales than her that week. Def Jam told Jordan they were no longer funding the album, so Jordan needed money again to pay for music videos âShut Up & Driveâ and âDont Stop The Musicâ. Almost 250,000 was spent to have those videos created. Plus, an additional 120,000 to shoot âHate That I Love Youâ. Jordan was noticing that âDont Stop The Musicâ was picking up, so her persuaded the label to support it at radio in the U.S and the remaining singles, and they did.â
âThen came for the repackaging of her album âGood Girl Gone Badâ, which is called âGood Girl Gone Bad: Reloadedâ, that entire project was funded through Rihannaâs money. âTake A Bowâ was bought through her money, the video was created with her money and so is her most recent video and single âDisturbiaâ. The label didnât even want to pay a dime for anything! Close to 750,000 was spent on those two songs alone. And now she expects to see money in her account?â
Williams states that Jordan, her publicist from well-respected public relations firm 42-West, Alicia Silverman has built alot of hype around Rihannaâs name but the singer has only made âa little bit above a millionâ and âall of it was spent on making her as big as she is now. Itâs not my fault that she only has 20,000 to her name.â
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