#DXCLUSIVE: Yo-Yo Says Joining “Love & Hip Hop: Hollywood” Season 6 Was A “No Brainer”

Los Angeles, CA – VH1’s hit series Love & Hip Hop has always managed to bridge the gap between newer and older generations in quirky ways only reality television can provide.

For the sixth season Love & Hip Hop: Hollywood, former Ice Cube protégée Yo-Yo made her premiere in this week’s episode after what seemed like decades being out the limelight.

Throughout the years, there have been a handful under the radar collaborations, some acting and the overseeing the Yo-Yo School Hip Hop in both Los Angeles and Detroit.

Taking some time to speak withHipHopDX, Yo-Yo talks joiningLove & Hip Hop Hollywood and getting back to music among other topics.

HipHopDX: This week is your debut episode Love & Hip Hop: Hollywood season six. What was your reasoning for hopping on the show?

Yo-Yo: It wasn’t a second thought at all to be a part Love & Hip Hop. I’m accustomed to branding and always wished I had the platform that this new generation has. For me, it was a no brainer. I know who I am and I know what I represent. I know what I bring to the table.

HipHopDX: The show has received a lot criticism for its portrayal the culture. As an elder stateswoman in Hip Hop, do you feel people missing something they aren’t seeing past that criticism?

Yo-Yo: It’s who I am. I’m always in the middle some nonsense. I work with the youth. I’m teaching kids literacy and I work with the Intelligent Black Women’s Coalition. Parents call me when their thirteen or fourteen-year-old daughters are messing up. I’m in school with the kids when they’re calling people “bitches” and spitting on their parents. It’s no different for me.

HipHopDX: The trailer featured the Yo-Yo School Hip Hop which has been around for a while now in both Southern California and Detroit. How important was it for that to be featured?

Yo-Yo: The School Hip Hop saved me. It really did. I was at a point in my life where I didn’t know where I was going to go or what was next for me. I thought about many things. Of course, I had my sisters and close family members in my ears saying just get a job. Hip Hop was changing so drastically as was the whole industry. I started working at KDAY when they started rebuilding the station in L.A. Just listening to people like I always do, there wasn’t a program where kids could learn beat production in the city. There wasn’t a place for a kid to learn how to rhyme. I put my kids in various programs that the city fers but, there wasn’t a place for Hip Hop. Once I did that and realized that there was a literacy problem. I knew it but didn’t know the extent it. Our community was dropping out school at a fast rate, that led me to the academic side teaching art. In a way, my journey directed itself.

HipHopDX: You were in the latest Slick Rick video for “Can’t Dance If It Ain’t Got No Soul / Midas Touch.” How far back does your relationship with Slick Rick go and what’s it like growing older with within the culture?

Yo-Yo: To me, my idols like him started way before me. First all, anything involving Slick Rick, I’m just dumbfounded. I am always a fan. He never disappoints me with his style and just the mystery him. He just gives that to you so I’m always in awe every time I see him. It was an honor to be in the video. Our culture music doesn’t respect the legends who paved the way. To someone like him push through with a crowd that pushes back, it’s to be commended.

HipHopDX: You’ve also taken Tyeler Reign under your belt who recently won season five The Rap Game.

Yo-Yo: Yes, I crowned Tyeler Reign the princess the city. I love her so much. She reminds me me not just by her performance but, being around her and her parents. I know the conflicts that she has because she represents a strong woman not catering to the current trend Hip Hop which can be hard. We’re chameleons as an artist and we transform when needed. To see her not transform into that person where she talking so much about sex and how she want it in every song. I commend her. I know it’s tempting though. I understand I’ve tried to transform and trend in.

HipHopDX: Any thoughts on Jermaine Dupri’s comments in regards to female MCs where he alleged that many were “stripper rappers?”

Yo-Yo: I understood where he was coming from. This sex trend is a big trend that’s hard to really touch without fending someone. Somebody has to be the gatekeeper. Someone has to talk about it. Women are dying from this trend. I grew up f Figueroa so I’m used to seeing prostitutes, johns and pimps. It’s not a good thing for me. I even tell some those girls to get another corner or at least try to talk to them. I try everything you can imagine. It’s not a trend when it comes to Hip Hop. There are women who have different styles and can provide their own take on things.

Then there’s this trend and if Jermaine Dupri can’t speak on this trend then it’s just another testament to the younger generation not respecting anyone.

HipHopDX: Many Love & Hip Hop castmates normally use the series as a platform for their own music releases. Should we expect anything from you in the near future?

Yo-Yo: I have a new single “Out Control” and it’s really just a relationship song. I put Tyeler Reign on it alongside Brittany B who is also on the show. I love it. I get back in the studio for this three-generational thing. It took me a long time to do it. Second all, I didn’t hesitate because I still love music. I’m a lot more confident now and not because the show. I’m testing the water with singles with this new style music. It’s a whole new set up for me the way music is produced and put out. So for me, I’m an independent contractor. With the platform the show, I want to test the waters, working in the studio with other artists and helping them get their project f the ground.

HipHopDX: Also, why aren’t your albums You Better Ask Somebody and Black Pearl album on streaming platforms? “Bonnie and Clyde Theme” is a pivotal single from my childhood. The only album available is the Make Way For The Motherload.

Yo-Yo: We’re working on getting them up there now. I think the relationship with Cube and I, I’m not so sure. I think he was giving me access to do my own thing with it and I never moved forward with it. I think now the doors are open. I think it’s the business part it. There are issues with the business that we’re trying to work out.

HipHopDX: So is there an issue with Cube?

Yo-Yo: No. Cube and I don’t have a problem but, I did a business deal with him. It’s a little bit a hang-up but Cube is on my side though.

HipHopDX: There seems to be an issue with veteran artists such as yourself making that transition over to streaming including the most recent issues De La Soul has with Tommy Boy Records. How do you feel about the current platform streaming coming from an era where you had to actually purchase music?

Yo-Yo: I love it. I’ve been a part the industry when people were illegally downloading music. I love it. I think it’s a bigger platform for the artist. The labels weren’t going to be able to manipulate artists like they used to. Nowadays, artists can manipulate and push themselves forward. It’s an open market right now and a market that they can’t completely control. I love it because it gives new up-and-coming artists or independent artist a way in as if they were a major.

HipHopDX: I’m a huge fan your role as Kendl Johnson in Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas.

Yo-Yo: They probably going to get rid it at Walmart now. Laughter]

HiphopDX: Can you recall the moment you got the opportunity, the voice-over process and watching the reception it following its release?

Yo-Yo: I never knew how big it was. I do remember DJ Pooh calling me and telling me about this project he was working on with Rockstar. He was telling me about how it was supposed to blend Hip Hop, various L.A. culture and video games. Remember, video games really started to take f during my generation in the 80s and 90s. There were even attempts to blend Hip Hop and video games earlier.

HipHopDX: You’re referencing Rap Jam: Volume One right?

Yo-Yo: Exactly and we never heard back from them at all! When Pooh came to me, I thought nothing it and it was a nice check. I didn’t think it would go anywhere because I had done that before in the past. I went in, did the recording and didn’t think anything it. It wasn’t until one day where I was talking and this kid asked me if I was Kendl. I was like what the hell? I totally forgot. That was crazy for me. When I started meeting people who are gamers, I just tell them I’m Kendl. That’s when I realized how big gaming had become.

Catch Yo-Yo on LHHH this season and follow her on Instagram @yoyearless for more updates.