Friday, March 26, 2010

VIDEO:Dondria - You're The One

DONDRIA "YOU'RE THE ONE" from SO SO DEF on Vimeo.



Friday's are now dedicated to the women. Can't forget about them!!!

Tuesday, March 23, 2010

Wednesday, March 17, 2010

AUDIO:S.L.A.S.H. – The Best (Prod. By S.L.A.S.H.)



To say that Huntsville, Alabama’s S.L.A.S.H. (Some Love And Some Hate) was next up would be to sell her short. Longevity is something she seems and sounds destined to attain, and as soon as you hear her aptly titled, self-produced, overly lyrical track ‘The Best’ you’ll be one of many adding to the impending buzz.

Lest we forget this is the same artist that held her own alongside Ghostface protégé Trife Diesel on What Did I Do Wrong and who had the internet going nuts as part of new hip-hop supergroup DB49 on their debut track as a collective Ready To Go.

Unadulterated, deeply considered but effortless, classic material from the city they call Huntsvegas via the lady they call S.L.A.S.H.. But what did you really expect?



S.L.A.S.H. – The Best(Prod. By S.L.A.S.H.)

Shout out to www.southernhospitality.co.uk/blog/

AUDIO:DB49 – Club Pictures



Another new one from DB49 (ST 2 Lettaz, Bentley & Kristmas) off their upcoming project Happy Hour. This one is produced by ATX.

DB49 – Club Pictures

Props to Trapsntrunks.com

AUDIO:PRG’z – Trap Like Mine



PRG’z – Trap Like Mine

Shout out to Trapsntrunks

Friday, March 5, 2010

VIDEO:Yo Gotti - Women Lie, Men Lie

VIDEO:G-SIDE LIVE


PROPS TO ALABAMAHUSTLETV

VIDEO:G-SIDE LIVE @ The Bottletree


PROPS TO ALABAMAHUSTLETV

Thursday, March 4, 2010

Dunn Dunn Media Group

NEW MUSIC COMING SOON!!!

VIDEO:Webbie Live @ Crossroads



Props To Pixel P.I. Graphics

VIDEO:Money Addict - Chef 2Nite



Props To Pixel P.I. Graphics

Wednesday, March 3, 2010

Tuesday, March 2, 2010

VIDEO:Mook & Zaytoven Recording


PROPS TO @Mook256

BLOG:Growth and Development!


Black street gangs will never be destroyed. You cannot destroy the side effects of a disease unless you destroy the disease. Black gangs are the by-product of racism, unemployment and the American prison industrial complex. These are not the sole reasons gangs exist in the black community, but they are three major contributing factors.

Without the Spook Hunters, a white group that preyed on helpless blacks in the middle of the last century, there would be no Spook Town Crips. If jobs and industry were still in places like Westside Chicago, the need for the 4 Corner Hustlers would not exist. If we were not sending nonviolent young drug offenders to prison with violent adult felons, there would be no need for them to join the ranks of prison gangs simply to survive.

Marry those real problems with a media machine that has figured out how to glamorize “gangsterism” (“American Gangster,” “Gangland,” “Locked Up”). You have a revenue stream that will continue to pay so long as the public’s morbid fascination with violence and perversion exists. BET, History Channel, Fox and CNBC win, and gangs and the community continue to lose.

I, unlike most critics, do not believe gangs are simply community pests that need to be terminated like sewer rats. I believe gangs can evolve. Gangs can grow and develop into what the community really needs: manpower for organizers like Feed the Hungry and Get Out the Vote; safety patrols on street corners; small business supporters/owners; and social clubs that organize at the local, city and state level for the benefit of the community.

This starts with self perception. Gangs see themselves as outcasts, outlaws and unwanted. This limits the organization’s ability to evolve.

Gangs must first incorporate like motorcycle clubs. This will give them a much different perception of themselves and begin to change public perception. I cite the Conservative Vice Lords of the 60s and bike clubs, like the Hell’s Angels and the East Bay Dragons, as examples of organizations that have done this successfully.

After the change in perception, there must be a community outreach effort: toy giveaways and active participation in local politics, like the GD’s did at Hoover’s request in the 90s. The organizations must become more like the Masons and Shriners and less like loosely organized cells of rogue criminals.

Gangs have members and sympathizers in every walk of American life. If they can alter their image, they can gain public backing and support, but the change must be authentic. There has to be a goal of legitimization like Japan’s Yakuza.

Corporate leaders and gang leaders share similar personality traits, and with proper tools and training, gang leaders can become businessmen. No longer can gangs hang in front of the liquor store, they must desire to own them.

Unlike the current store owners in the black community, the gang members and leaders live there. Thus this money will stay in that community, helping youth athletic programs, after-school tutorials, and attracting federal empowerment zone monies to build and grow more ventures.

NASCAR, with its ability to legitimize outlaw moonshiners and produce an American money-making monster, is proof that this is possible. This sport is still owned and run by the families that took up arms against the Feds during prohibition in the south.

I watched “Gangs of New York” often, and the fact that sticks out most in that film is that gangsters and gangs were and are tools for politicians. Democrats and Republicans are the product of a gang mentality and manpower. They used them in old America, and the CIA used them in Jamaica. They use them in America today as trigger words to get voters to vote for more money to be thrown at “The War on Gangs and Drugs and the Poor.”

If gangs and gangsters seek to survive, they must seek to thrive within the bigger society. They must plot, plan, strategize, organize and mobilize their greatest resource – manpower – and become a real force in the community. They must end their 40-year street beefs and reconcile with one another for the betterment of the greater economic good for all.

This is working on the continent of Africa, where the crimes were far more heinous. Why not here?

When gang leaders have expressed their desire to do this, they are crushed (Hoover, Fort). And when the community has supported organizations that became what gangs can be, those organizations were crushed (Panthers).

When people have proposed what I did in this blog, they have been killed (Hampton, Pac). So my days may be numbered, but remember this can be done, it must be done, and I believe it will be.

Black street gangs must grow and develop into what we need them to be or remain a tool for the incarceration and modern-day slavery system called federal and state prison that only profits the most corrupt gangsters – politicians. Fin. -It’s Bigga!

Words By Mike Bigga

VIDEO:Swagzilla - I Need More


FREE SWAGZILLA!!!!