50 Cent
Curtis Jackson, better known as rapper 50 Cent, survived being shot nine times in 2000. Luckily, Jackson survived and has since thrived. He left his drug dealing past behind, to became one of the world's most successful recording artists, a budding actor, and a very rich investor and entrepreneur.
By CBSNews.com senior producer David Morgan
Street life was not so easy to escape for the rapper born in Queens, N.Y., who was a boxer and drug dealer. At age 24, Jackson was shot nine times in front of the house where his grandma was tending the garden. There are still bullet fragments in his body, including in his tongue.
He was born to a single mom who made a living selling drugs. She died when Curtis was only eight, and he moved in with his grandmother; he started dealing drugs when he was 12 years old.
He saw music as his ticket out, and by the spring of 2000, he had a record deal, and a new rap name: 50 Cent.
His bestselling CD was 2003's "Get Rich or Die Tryin'," with sales of approximately 8 million copies.
Jackson debuted as a boxing promoter with former Cuban Olympic gold medalist Gamboa on the undercard of the Pacquiao-Marquez match, and Gamboa won a unanimous 12-round decision against Michael Farenas.
He is also behind a new energy drink where some of the profits are going to the United Nations World Food Program. Donations, he said, have paid for almost four million meals in famine-plagued areas.
Left: Rapper Curtis Jackson, a.k.a. 50 Cent, with schoolkids in a Nairobi slum.
He's now back in the studio working on his first CD in three years. "I like what it feels like," he told Smith. "It feels like magic. Feels like magic to create something that is just my idea."
For more info:
50 Cent (Official site)
By CBSNews.com senior producer David Morgan