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Angel Amor

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Everything posted by Angel Amor

  1. Will should do a duet with LL Cool J or Queen Latifah :thumb:
  2. I would like to see him on SNL. :angel:
  3. I been hearing it on Mix 96.1 which is pop station. But yeah never heard the hiphop stations play it. I guess all the so called hiphop station plays gangsta rap. :angel:
  4. Jeff has always look so cool in those glasses :kool: I like those pix of him. Classic Jeff :kekeke: Jeff looks cool in those shades and fade. :kool:
  5. :angel: Me2. I never knew that Will had a little sister name Ashley until 106 & Park. I didn't even know about Sterling or Ashley until now. Maybe AJ can fill us in.
  6. "Woman Thou Art Loosed" by Bishop T.D Jakes. It's about a girl that was raped for most of her life grows up to be a woman that is leading a troubled life. You probably have heard of this b4 it was featured on the Oprah.
  7. I believe that the remix with Elephant Man was just business nothing personal. I think Will probably doesn't agree with Elephant Man beliefs, Will just likes the style of his music and likes the way he presents it. O and I don't think Da Breaks looks like Ele. :angel:
  8. Thats so cool. thanx wes :thumb:
  9. I was watching ABC World News Now and showing clips of Nightline report on it. And they were talking to Wendy Williams about violence in HipHop. She said that the reason for violence in hiphop is because that is what is selling today. She goes on to say that you can't take the thug out of a thug. Cause if you did change all that then all rappers will should like Will Smith.Iguess you can take that as a compliment. If your wondering why they are talking to Wendy about this she used to be a DJ on Hot97 or as she calls it Shot97. Now she works for the rivel of Hot97.
  10. Is Corporate America to Blame for Hip-Hop Violence?Criminal Activity Becoming Rap Music's Selling Point By JAKE TAPPER and MARIE NELSON April 22, 2005 — From Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart to Alice Cooper, musicians have long tried to project a "bad boy" image, often to help pique public interest in their music. But what's going on these days in the world of rap music — and its surrounding culture, known as hip-hop — is really something else. The very first rap record — 1979's "Rapper's Delight" by the Sugar Hill Gang — was a revelatory paean to fun and equality — with even a dash of patriotism. But here's the new message of rap and hip-hop, courtesy of the top-selling artist Curtis Jackson, also known as 50 Cent: "I put a hole in a n—— for f—-ing with me / Better watch how you talk, when you talk about me / 'cause I'll come and take your life away." Is Corporate America to Blame for Hip-Hop Violence? Ordinary Iranians Soften Toward U.S. 1/18/05: Warren Buffett (1999) It's telling that Jackson chose the moniker 50 Cent to pay homage to Kelvin Martin — a legendary Brooklyn stick-up kid from the 1980s, who is believed to have committed more than 30 murders and was also known as "50 Cent." This outlaw quality is not just an image from a music video on MTV or BET — it has, in some cases, become a reality. On February 28, after 50 Cent criticized his former protégé, Jayceon "Game" Taylor, during an interview on New York City's popular hip-hop radio station, Hot 97, members of the two stars' entourages got into a confrontation that erupted with a spray of bullets. In January, Irving Lorenzo, aka "Irv Gotti" — CEO of the major rap label The Inc. (formerly known as Murder, Inc.) — was indicted for his alleged ties to a notorious New York drug syndicate that according to prosecutors was "a crime partnership that dealt in three commodities: drugs, murder and money laundering." In March, hip-hop diva Lil' Kim was convicted of three counts of perjury for lying to a grand jury about another hip-hop shooting. Punches were thrown and a man was stabbed in November at the nationally televised awards show hosted by Vibe Magazine, which covers hip-hop culture. Feuds have long been a part of hip-hop, but are supposed to be kept in the realm of performance. Clearly, something has changed in the world of hip-hop in the last 26 years. Enter the Rev. Al Sharpton, former presidential candidate and civil rights activist. He is now leading a crusade against what he sees as an increase in violent criminal acts that are becoming hip-hop's major selling point. "We must do something about this pattern of violence that is then used to promote product and records," Sharpton told ABC News. "I think that that is the wrong signal to send to young Americans." Sharpton says that record companies and radio stations often glamorize criminality and promote the feuds — sometimes with bloody consequences. He wants to hold the hip-hop industry accountable. "They ought to announce a 90-day ban on any artist who's found to engage in violence or allow those around him to engage in violence for the purpose of some kind of disagreement in the industry," Sharpton said. Sharpton says if the government can get involved with steroids in baseball or obscenity in broadcasting, it should certainly involve itself when the marketing and promotion of hip-hop on the public airwaves results in violence. for more go to abcnews.com and click on nightline
  11. All the best man, checkin now and again, GOOD LUCK :thumb: :peace: :angel:
  12. I always knew Ali was like the first one to show hiphop to streets. He was a rapper. I mean all those little rhymes he would say. Like Young man rumble :ali: . Hey if u put all his little rhymes together and put it with a nice beat, u probably have a pretty good rap song. :angel:
  13. wow. cool read. good lookin out man :thumb: :angel:
  14. can't wait to see the Spurs play the Heat. Go Spurs Go!!! :julie: :kimmie: Spurs beat Heat4-3 :ali:
  15. Never heard that they "battled" b4. :confused3:
  16. I love that scene 2 :hilarious: :hilarious:
  17. That's cool you have a sign CD and Jada's auto. I just have Will's auto. I would like to have one of Jada's. Yep that would be sweet if you had Jeff's 2. I would love to have an auto of Will and Jeff together on my Rock The House cd.
  18. Well Will said he'll do Bad Boys III if they write up a good script he'll do it. I would love to see Bad Boy3 and MIIIB those would be great sequels. But Hitch and ID4 I don't see the need for them to have sequels.
  19. I want to Will and Martin again in Bad Boys III. I love the Bad Boys movies. So I want to that one the most.
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