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Illuminati in the Music Industry

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Famous pop stars and rappers from Jay-Z and Rick Ross to Rihanna and Christina Aguilera are believed by many to be a part of the infamous Illuminati secret society. These stars allegedly use Illuminati and satanic symbolism in their music videos and on their clothes that goes unnoticed by those not “in the know.”Since these stars appear in our livings rooms on family friendly mainstream shows like Good Morning America, Ellen, and dozens of others—and are loved by virtually all the kids—they couldn’t possibly have anything to do with the infamous Illuminati or anything “satanic,” could they? Some famous musicians have even publicly denounced the Illuminati in interviews or songs.Illuminati in the Music Industry takes a close look at some of today’s hottest stars and decodes the secret symbols, song lyrics, and separates the facts from the fiction in this fascinating topic. You may never see your favorite musicians the same way ever again. Includes 50 photographs.Discover why so many artists are promoting the Illuminati as the secret to success. Why an aspiring rapper in Virginia shot his friend as an “Illuminati sacrifice” hoping it would help him become rich and famous. How and why the founder of BET Black Entertainment Television became the first African American billionaire.Why popular female pop stars like Rihanna, Christina Aguilera, Kesha and others are promoting Satanism as cool, something that was once only seen in heavy metal and rock and roll bands. Some musicians like Korn’s singer Jonathan Davis, rapper MC Hammer, Megadeth’s frontman Dave Mustaine and others, have all denounced the Illuminati and artists promoting them. Les Claypool, singer of Primus wrote a song about the Bohemian Grove.Muse singer Matt Bellamy recants his belief that 9/11 was an inside job after getting a taste of mainstream success with his album, The Resistance. Bono said he attended an Illuminati meeting with other celebrities. Was he joking or serious?Why rap and hip hop is filled with Illuminati puppets and wannabes more than other genres of music.Learn about media effects, the power of celebrity, what the externalization of the hierarchy means and how you can break free from the mental enslavement of mainstream media and music. By the author of The Facts & Fiction-About the Author-Mark Dice is a media analyst, author, and political activist who, in an entertaining and educational way, gets people to question our celebrity obsessed culture and the role the mainstream media and elite secret societies play in shaping our lives. Mark's YouTube channel has received over 150 million views and his viral videos have been mentioned on the Fox News Channel, CNN, the Drudge Report, TMZ, the New York Daily News, the New York Post, and other media outlets around the world.He has been featured on various television shows including the History Channel's Decoded and America's Book of Secrets, Conspiracy Theory with Jesse Ventura, Secret Societies of Hollywood on E! Channel, America Declassified on the Travel Channel, and is a frequent guest on Coast to Coast AM, The Alex Jones Show, and more.Mark Dice is the author of several popular books on secret societies and conspiracies, including The Illuminati in Hollywood, Big The Orwellian Nightmare Come True, The New World Order, Facts & Fiction, Inside the Illuminat

236 pages, Kindle Edition

First published October 31, 2013

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About the author

Mark Dice

16 books165 followers
Mark Dice is an expert on secret societies and conspiracies. He is also a media analyst, YouTube personality and best selling author. His YouTube channel has over one million subscribers and his humorous videos expose fake news, main stream media manipulation and "liberal lunatics". His viral videos have been mentioned on several mainstream media outlets around the world and he has been featured on various television shows.


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5 stars
56 (41%)
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32 (23%)
3 stars
20 (14%)
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16 (11%)
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11 (8%)
Displaying 1 - 12 of 12 reviews
1 review2 followers
May 26, 2014
Disappointing and superficial

This is the first and only book I have read by Mark Dice. He has not made want to read more, although I am interested in the subject named in the book's title.

He made it very difficult for me to put faith in the value of his views in this book as anything other than an interesting perspective. I was hoping for something much more definitive.
His structure seems almost academic, with his abundant footnotes that occupy a full 25% of the Kindle version.

It made me think of a student paper, not a professional piece. His frequent juvenile name calling -- Kanye Pest, bellowing bimbo bitches, scumbags, sluts, skanks, whores -- showed a fundamental disrespect of his chosen subject. Well no, I won't let that pass, because he is so critical of the use of getto language by hip-hoppers and rappers, suggesting that they have no command of the English language and ignoring that the origins of the genres were on inner city streets.

He is clearly a conservative Christian and a homophobe, who in spite of his acquaintance with the music of the day seems strangely out of touch with the times. He knows the main Illuminati symbols, players, and purpose, but he isn't clear on what that means in music, other than creating stars whose popularity with fans works towards the distraction and dumbing down of the listening populace which he is against.

He is clearly disgusted with the music industry. But, that disgust is as much, if not more against homosexuality, bisexuality and anything other than monogamous heterosexuality, than it is about anything else, except for violence and Satanism. He seems equally adverse to each and he links them all to symbols and to the Illuminati.

Too bad he chose to approach the topic as a music who's who is somehow related to the Illuminati, instead of delving more deeply into how the Illuminati are using the music industry, other than which stars are the biggest pawns. He was far more successful at showing how current music is focusing on the unseen Illuminati.

It would have been great if I'd been looking for a superficial guide to Illuminati references in music.
23 reviews1 follower
February 20, 2014
I, like many others, was curious about this rumor of the illuminati connection to the music business. I'm not too knowledgeable on the illuminati all together and figured I'd start here after hearing good things about Mark Dice from friends, book reviews, and Alex Jones on Infowars. This book goes into extraordinary detail on exactly how the connections in the music business are made and Mark Dice does a good job of showing that not every big time rapper or rocker is in the illuminati, in fact most of them are just posing because they think that somehow it will bring the riches and fame. I read through this book really quickly, and it gave me a lot of perspective on the music industry and the unbelievable garbage they promote to impressionable children. It's amazing how many artists use satanic and illuminati imagery in their music and videos. This book was very well written and the author stays on topic 100% of the time.
April 25, 2020
This is a very well researched book and very good and interesting. Most is facts that are quoted but this is a very informative book that you should read and at least think about what it says and quotes! So many facts that are great and are referenced so that you know that all the artists he talks about is true. It talks about the Illuminati, MK Ultra, Operation Mockingbird and a lot more. I read it so fast because I love knowledge and facts that speaks about the real reality of the world!
Profile Image for Perry Hogarth.
3 reviews
December 27, 2020
Astonishing.

Most of the Rap artists I grew up listening to, in the 90’s, were all Puppets, As always, your only as good as the, last book, you read, the last dream you had, and the last dream you had, I Heart your Books, Please keep writing, we need Mark Dice, in this Information Age, looking forward, to you Next Books, Thank You Mark Dice.
2 reviews
November 24, 2021
Nice info but too much PERSONAL opinions of the artists.
Profile Image for Alex Frame.
260 reviews22 followers
December 8, 2023
Poorly written hotchpotch of rubbish about the influence of the illuminati in popular music.
Is there some form of hedonistic insiduous message being sent out through popular music like rap , pop and heavy metal stars?
Most definitely.
Who is doing it and organising it behind the scenes?
Plenty of triangles, all seeing eyes and devil symbolism inhabiting popular music these days, but is it just to look cool so that the artist appears on the other side of good or is there more to it?

This book is not clear and talks in generalities with plenty of personal opinions.

Was a waste of time for me.
10 reviews
January 13, 2021
Good stuff. Badly written.

Lots of inconsistencies in terms of male female segregation, bands/artists that are illuminati and those that are not. He has mixed up a lot.

Seems like he wrote this book in a hurry, without much thought to flow or systematic design flow.

Information is okay.
But presentation could be better.

Profile Image for Tanya.
34 reviews
March 30, 2022
Did not provide enough written proof. Left out a lot of artists who are pawns for the devil. It was not what I thought it was going to be. There were no testimonials from the artists and no real facts behind his theories. This book was an opinion piece. Was real research done?Interesting read none the less.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
22 reviews
December 30, 2019
Real easy to understand

It's dark,deep,intelligent and funny but mostly filled with great info
If you're new to this understanding get ready to throw away your CD records etc turn the tv off and study, if not, turn the tv back on and continue to watch Hellywood
Profile Image for SilverReader.
115 reviews
August 9, 2019
Interesting and surely awakening book. A lot of times though, he seems to be getting to a point or presenting information structured towards a specific conclusion and then straightforwardly contradicting the info and therefore his very self.
He also maintains the "judge, jury, executioner" mentality, without backing it up enough in more than one occasions.
Props for the edited source links all throughout the text.
Displaying 1 - 12 of 12 reviews

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