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Uh Oh! The ‘Video Vixen,’ Who Dished About Her Hook ups With Rappers, Is Baaaaack With A Whole New Vibe But More Juice

In honor of the book's 20th anniversary, Steffans is out with a new edition of the steamy memoir.

In the early 2000s, Karrine Steffans was one of the most recognizable faces in hip-hop music videos, appearing in Jay-Zโ€™s โ€œHey Papi,โ€ Mystikalโ€™s โ€œDangerโ€ and Ja Ruleโ€™s โ€œBetween Me and You.โ€ To some, Steffans appeared to be living her best life, rolling in circles with some of the hottest athletes and artists at the time.

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But underneath it all, she was carrying the weight of years of mental, physical and sexual abuse while trying to raise her son, Naim, as a young single mother.

Steffans told her story in โ€œConfessions of a Video Vixen,โ€ her 2005 memoir which chronicled her journey as a young woman from a troubled home in St. Thomas, U.S. Virgin Islands to someone who partied with A-listers all over the world.

At the time, Steffansโ€™ book was shocking. She gave readers intimate details about her sexual relationships with the likes of Ice-T, Ja Rule, Ray J, and yes...Diddy. But 20 years later, in a post-#MeToo Movement era when survivors are telling their stories and seeking justice for the abuse they suffered at the hands of larger-than-life entertainment moguls, it hits different.

This week, Steffans released a 20th anniversary edition of her bestselling memoir with a new foreword that is reflective on what she survived and how sheโ€™s healed. Steffans doesnโ€™t consider herself a victim, but rather a person who made conscious choices โ€œinformed by childhood trauma.โ€

โ€œAwaiting you are recollections of abuse and the mismanagement of a little girl destined to fail, who stumbled and fell more times than she can recount before blossoming into a woman determined to win,โ€ she writes.

Ahead of the bookโ€™s release, Steffans told The Root she didnโ€™t believe the news around Diddyโ€™s legal issues made her book any more important, adding that she wonders why this day of reckoning took so long.

โ€œIt has just taken twenty years for this twisted society to question why it exalts men who lie and assaults women who tell the truth,โ€ she said. โ€œIโ€™ve heard people say I was before my time. But, I was not before my time; you were all late to the revolution, and the publicโ€™s delayed reaction to recent but repetitious headlines that are as old as time only underscores that fact.โ€

Straight From The Root

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