Makin’ It Rain: A Tax Write Off?

Rapper Jim Jones is figuring out how to deal with Uncle Sam next month, and he’s considering deducting expenses on his income tax for making it rain.  Well guess what, in theory he might have a fighting chance of winning. Jones is not alone. Bizzy Bone tells TMZ, “I’m giving charity to females who need their light bills paid.  So, of course, that’s a write-off.  You write off your kids, don’t you?” The Game tells TMZ … making it rain “is good for business and promotion that comes with the lifestyle of a rapper.  They bump our music in a strip club, so me giving the girls a little bit of change to shake their ass — that comes with the business.  Everybody wins.” Daz Dillinger tells us, “Hell yeah.  I’m going to see about getting my taxes fixed as soon as possible.” And Lil’ Flip tells TMZ he’s actually done it … deducted making-it-rain expenses from his taxes. (TMZ)

There are two possible ways that the money spent at the strip club can be written off and this actually has been a standard practice in corporate America for a while.

So here’s the deal … There are 2 possible ways a rapper could justify deducting strip club tips as a business expense: 1.  ENTERTAINMENT EXPENSES. These costs could be deducted if the rapper is entertaining a client, customer or employee and the expense is not “lavish or extravagant.” So it might be hard for Drake to justify dropping 50K in a club, but another rapper who lets a grand fly would have a much better argument. 2.  ADVERTISING OR PUBLICITY. These expenses could be deducted if they are “reasonable … and are directly related to [the rapper’s] business.” Funny thing … a lot of rappers say making it rain is something they have to do to build their image so people will buy their records, so as crazy as it sounds, they may have a leg to stand on. But there’s another problem — those pesky receipts. Strippers don’t typically take a time-out to pull a receipt out of their G-string. (TMZ)

Legit ratchet strip club tax write-offs.  Well, if you gonna ball might as well ball with a purpose.  Funny thing though, real charity has always been a tax write-off and a purposeful way of righting some of the offspresent in our society.

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