
On
January 27, 1991, at a record-release party for the rap duo Bytches
With Problems in Hollywood, producer/rapper/then-N.W.A. member Dr. Dre brutally attacked Dee Barnes,
the host of a well-known Fox show about hip-hop called Pump It Up! Dre
was reportedly angry about a Pump It Up! segment hosted by Barnes that
aired in November 1990. The report focused on N.W.A., and concluded with
a clip of Ice Cube, who had recently left t
he group, insulting his former colleagues. Soon after the attack, Barnes described it in interviews: She said Dre attempted to throw her down a flight of stairs, slammed her head against a wall, kicked her, and stomped on her fingers. Dre later told Rolling Stone, “It ain’t no big thing – I just threw her through a door.” He pleaded no contest to assault charges. Barnes’s civil suit against Dre was settled out of court.
he group, insulting his former colleagues. Soon after the attack, Barnes described it in interviews: She said Dre attempted to throw her down a flight of stairs, slammed her head against a wall, kicked her, and stomped on her fingers. Dre later told Rolling Stone, “It ain’t no big thing – I just threw her through a door.” He pleaded no contest to assault charges. Barnes’s civil suit against Dre was settled out of court.
Barnes agreed to watch F. Gary Gray’s just-released film about N.W.A, Straight Outta Compton, and reflect on it for Gawker.
I never
experienced police harassment until I moved to California in the ‘80s.
The first time it happened, I had just left a house party that erupted
in gunfire. A cop pulled me over and ordered me out of the car. I was
19, naive, and barefoot. When I made a move to get my shoes, the cop
became aggressive. He manhandled me because he supposedly thought I was
grabbing for a weapon. I’m lucky he didn’t shoot me. There I was, face
down on the ground, knee in my back. In June, I was reminded of what
happened to me when I watched video of a police officer named Eric
Casebolt grabbing a 15-year-old girl outside the Craig Ranch North Community Pool in Texas, slamming her body to the ground, and putting his knee in her back.
Three
years later—in 1991—I would experience something similar, only this
time I was on my back and the knee was in my chest. That knee did not
belong to a police officer, but Andre Young, the producer/rapper who
goes by Dr. Dre. When I saw the footage of California Highway Patrol officer Daniel Andrew straddling and viciously punching Marlene Pinnock
in broad daylight on the side of a busy freeway last year, I cringed.
That must have been how it looked as Dr. Dre straddled me and beat me
mercilessly on the floor of the women’s restroom at the Po Na Na Souk
nightclub in 1991.
That event isn’t depicted in Straight Outta Compton,
but I don’t think it should have been, either. The truth is too ugly
for a general audience. I didn’t want to see a depiction of me getting
beat up, just like I didn’t want to see a depiction of Dre beating up
Michel’le, his one-time girlfriend who recently summed up their relationship this way: “I was just a quiet girlfriend who got beat on and told to sit down and shut up.”
But what
should have been addressed is that it occurred. When I was sitting there
in the theater, and the movie’s timeline skipped by my attack without a
glance, I was like, “Uhhh, what happened?” Like many of the women that
knew and worked with N.W.A., I found myself a casualty of Straight Outta Compton’s revisionist history.
Dre, who executive produced the movie along with his former groupmate Ice Cube, should have owned up to the time he punched his labelmate Tairrie B twice at a Grammys party in 1990. He should have owned up to the black eyes and scars he gave to his collaborator Michel’le. And he should have owned up to what he did to me. That’s reality. That’s
reality rap. In his lyrics, Dre made hyperbolic claims about all these
heinous things he did to women. But then he went out and actually violated women. Straight Outta Compton
would have you believe that he didn’t really do that. It doesn’t add
up. It’s like Ice Cube saying, “I’m not calling all women bitches,”
which is a position he maintains even today at age 46. If you listen to the lyrics of “A Bitch Iz a Bitch,”
Cube says, “Now the title bitch don’t apply to all women / But all
women have a little bitch in ‘em.” So which is it? You can’t have it
both ways. That’s what they’re trying to do with Straight Outta Compton: They’re trying to stay hard, and look like good guys.
I knew the guys of N.W.A. years before they blew up. I first met Andre (who’s wonderfully portrayed by Corey Hawkins in Compton)
when he lived with his cousin Jinx, who would later introduce me to
O’Shea Jackson, a.k.a. Ice Cube. I was at Lonzo’s house when Andre and
Antoine Carraby, a.k.a. Yella, were both still in the World Class
Wreckin’ Cru. I was there at the radio station KDAY with Greg Mack.
Later, while they were creating the N.W.A and the Posse album, I would meet MC Ren and Arabian Prince. It was at Lonzo’s studio that my best friend Rose Hutchinson and I formed the rap group Body and Soul.
We spent countless days and nights at Lonzo’s house, and in his studio
we recorded a demo produced by both Dr. Dre and DJ Pooh. It was there
where I also met Eric Wright, a.k.a. Eazy E. These men became my
brothers.
I wasn’t in the studio to hear them record their disgusting, misogynistic views on women in songs like “A Bitch Iz a Bitch,” “Findum, Fuckum & Flee,” “One Less Bitch,” and perhaps most offensively, “She Swallowed It.”
(On that track, MC Ren brags about violating at 14-year-old girl: “Oh
shit it’s the preacher’s daughter! / And she’s only 14 and a ho / But
the bitch sucks dick like a specialized pro.”) I heard the material like
everybody else, when I was listening to the albums, and I was shocked.
Maybe that was their point. Maybe they said a lot of that stuff for the
shock value. There were always other girls around, like Michel’le and
Rose, and we never heard them talk like that. We never heard them say,
“Bitch, get over here and suck my dick.” In their minds, only certain
women were “like that,” and I’ve never presented myself like that, so I
never gave them a reason to call me names.
Accurately articulating the frustrations of young black men being constantly harassed by the cops is at Straight Outta Compton’s
activistic core. There is a direct connection between the oppression of
black men and the violence perpetrated by black men against black
women. It is a cycle of victimization and reenactment of violence that
is rooted in racism and perpetuated by patriarchy. If the breadth of
N.W.A.’s lyrical subject matter was guided by a certain logic, though,
it was clearly a caustic logic.
It was so
caustic that when Dre was trying to choke me on the floor of the women’s
room in Po Na Na Souk, a thought flashed through my head: “Oh my god.
He’s trying to kill me.” He had me trapped in that bathroom; he held the
door closed with his leg. It was surreal. “Is this happening?” I
thought.
Their minds were so ignorant back then, claiming that I set them up and made them look stupid.
That wasn’t a setup. It was journalism and television, first of all,
and secondly, I had nothing to do with the decision to run the package
as it did. After an interview with N.W.A., the segment ended with Ice
Cube saying “I got all you suckers 100 miles and runnin’,” and then,
imitating N.W.A. affiliate the D.O.C.: “I’d like to give a shoutout to
the D.O.C. Y’all can’t play me.” I was a pawn in the game. I was in it,
but so was a true opportunist: the director of Straight Outta Compton, F. Gary Gray.

That’s right. F. Gary Gray, the man whose film made $60 million last weekend
as it erased my attack from history, was also behind the camera to film
the moment that launched that very attack. He was my cameraman for Pump It Up! You may have noticed that Gary has been reluctant to address N.W.A.’s misogyny and Dre’s attack on me in interviews.
I think a huge reason that Gary doesn’t want to address it is because
then he’d have to explain his part in history. He’s obviously
uncomfortable for a reason.
Gary was the one holding the camera during that fateful interview with Ice Cube, which was filmed on the set of Boyz N the Hood.
I was there to interview the rapper Yo Yo. Cube was in a great mood,
even though he was about to shoot and he was getting into character.
Cube went into a trailer to talk to Gary and Pump It Up! producer
Jeff Shore. I saw as he exited that Cube’s mood had changed. Either
they told him something or showed him the N.W.A. footage we had shot a
few weeks earlier. What ended up airing was squeaky clean compared to
the raw footage. N.W.A. were chewing Cube up and spitting him out. I was
trying to do a serious interview and they were just clowning—talking
shit, cursing. It was crazy.
Right
after we shot a now-angry Cube and they shouted, “Cut!” one of the
producers said, “We’re going to put that in.” I said, “Hell no.” I
wasn’t even thinking about being attacked at the time, I was just afraid
that they were going to shoot each other. I didn’t want to be part of
that. “This is no laughing matter,” I tried telling them. “This is no
joke. These guys take this stuff seriously.” I was told by executives
that I was being emotional. That’s because I’m a woman. They would have
never told a man that. They would have taken him seriously and listened.
It
was that interview that was the supposed cause of Dre’s attack on me,
as many of his groupmates attested. My life changed that night. I suffer
from horrific migraines that started only after the attack. I love
Dre’s song “Keep Their Heads Ringin”—it
has a particularly deep meaning to me. When I get migraines, my head
does ring and it hurts, exactly in the same spot every time where he
smashed my head against the wall. People have accused me of holding onto
the past; I’m not holding onto the past. I have a souvenir that I never
wanted. The past holds onto me.
People
ask me, “How come you’re not on TV anymore?” and “How come you’re not
back on television?” It’s not like I haven’t tried. I was blacklisted.
Nobody wants to work with me. They don’t want to affect their
relationship with Dre. I’ve been told directly and indirectly, “I can’t
work with you.” I auditioned for the part that eventually went to
Kimberly Elise in Set It Off. Gary was the director. This was long after Pump it Up!,
and I nailed the audition. Gary came out and said, “I can’t give you
the part.” I asked him why, and he said, “‘Cause I’m casting Dre as
Black Sam.” My heart didn’t sink, I didn’t get emotional; I was just
numb.
Most
recently, I tried to get a job at Revolt. I’ve known Sean (Combs) for
years and have the utmost respect for him. Still nothing. Instead of
doing journalism, I’ve had a series of 9-5 jobs over the years to make
ends meet.
There’s
a myth that I was paid so well by the settlement I received from Dre
that I’d never have to work again. People think I was paid millions,
when in reality, I didn’t even get a million, and it wasn’t
until September of 1993. He and his lawyers dragged their feet the whole
way. He stopped coming to court, they kept postponing it. I was tired,
and, toward the end, pregnant, but I still tried to show up for
everything. And I never thought I was going to have to stop doing what I
loved for my job. That was the furthest thing from my mind.
The last time I saw Dre, and was up close and personal with him, we were cordial but not friendly. That was years ago, before “Guilty Conscience,”
the 1999 Eminem/Dre collaboration that references me (“You gonna take
advice from somebody who slapped Dee Barnes?”). I most recently saw Cube
at the Kings of the Mic show at Los Angeles’s Greek Theater in 2013. We
talked briefly and he was very unfriendly. Standoffish, even.
There were two things that made me emotional while watching Straight Outta Compton.
The first was the scene where D.O.C. is in the hospital after a car
accident that nearly decapitated him. I went to see him then, and I was
devastated. I thought he was going to die. I saw him fresh, when he was
hooked up to life support and had blood and cuts still visible.
The other
scene was Eazy’s death. I got a chance to see him prior to his dying of
AIDS-related complications in March of 1995, maybe about a month before.
I briefly owned a production company. Our office was on Melrose, and we
shared it with another production company. Eazy came in to the other
production company to look for a director for a Bone-Thugs-n-Harmony
video. I didn’t know he was coming, he didn’t know I was going to be
there. It was just a pure blessing. I am so grateful I had the
opportunity to make peace with him before he passed. We hugged, we
kissed, we talked, and I felt good when I saw him, but I knew something
was wrong. He didn’t look well. I thought maybe he just had a cold. He
wasn’t coughing, the way it was dramatized in the movie. He sounded
congested and he looked skinny. We had a nice conversation and I felt
really good about it.
I believe that if Eazy were alive, neither Tairrie B., nor JJ Fad wouldn’t have been ignored in the movie.
Eazy was the straight shooter of the group and he just would have kept
it more real. JJ Fad was a trio of female rappers from Rialto,
California, whose debut album was released by Ruthless in order to
establish and legitimize the label. It was commercially successful and
featured the mega hit “Supersonic,” produced by Arabian Prince, who appears only briefly in Straight Outta Compton. JJ Fad’s success paved the way for the release of the Straight Outta Compton
album. It’s a very pivotal moment that was erased from N.W.A.’s story.
It’s easy for them to be dismissive of women, because they don’t respect
most women.
With
the exception of short scenes with mother figures and wives, the rest
of the women in the film were naked in a hotel room or dancing in the
background at the wild pool parties. Yo Yo, a female rapper who worked
with Ice Cube after he left N.W.A., was nowhere to be found. Nor are
women who worked with Dre later in his career, like Jewell and the Lady
of Rage. They both contributed tremendously to the ultimate sound of the
classic album The Chronic. What about Ruthless R&B
singer-song-writer Michel’le, who at the young age of 17 was singing
vocals on World Class Wreckin Cru’s “Turn Off The Lights”? Michel’le and Dr. Dre developed a personal and professional association and he went on to produce her two best-known hits, “No More Lies” and “Something In My Heart.”
Both songs reflected their volatile relationship. Then there is
Ruthless Records/Comptown Records solo female artist/Eazy E’s protege
Tairrie B, the first white female hardcore rapper. A bold blonde at the
time who wasn’t afraid to speak her mind, Tairrie B released an album
named The Power Of A Woman (how fitting!) and dropped singles like “Murder She Wrote” and “Ruthless Bitch.”
In
1990, at a Grammys party in front of an A-List crowd, Dr. Dre assaulted
Tairrie B. This was a year before my assault. In an interview, F. Gary
Gray said these were considered “side stories” and not important to the narrative.
If that’s the case, it’s too bad for the movie and it’s too bad for its audience. Straight Outta Compton
transforms N.W.A. from the world’s most dangerous rap group to the
world’s most diluted rap group. In rap, authenticity matters, and
gangsta rap has always pushed boundaries beyond what’s comfortable with
hardcore rhymes that are supposed to present accounts of the street’s
harsh realities (though N.W.A. shared plenty of fantasies, as well). The
biggest problem with Straight Outta Compton is that it ignores
several of N.W.A.’s own harsh realities. That’s not gangsta, it’s not
personal, it’s just business. Try as they might, too much of N.W.A.’s
story ain’t that kinda shit you can sweep under no rug. You know?
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