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Video After The Jump

Kayla Harrison joins Ariel Helwani's MMA Show after her PFL win vs. Mariana Morais to discuss her victory, her epic promo after the fight and more.

0:00 Kayla Harrison discusses her epic "promo" after the fight.
2:12 Do you have a chip on your shoulder?
3:30 What she's learned over the past year.
4:40 Are we headed toward a divorce between Kayla and the PFL?
6:46 Can she achieve her goals outside the UFC?
8:29 Was she annoyed with all the attention given to Claressa Shields?
13:05 Does it annoy her when people call Amanda Nunes the GOAT?
16:07 She doesn't want another "Colby-Masvidal" situation with Nunes.
18:58 Reacting to Dana White's quotes about her.
20:38 How long until she's the GOAT?
21:38 Does she have an interest in fighting Claressa?
23:41 Is Kayla studying old wrestling promos?
25:55 On her next fight.

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Video After The Jump

Stephen A. Smith and Max Kellerman react to Zion Williamson’s comments about the New York Knicks after the New Orleans Pelicans’ 122-112 loss.
#FirstTake​ #NBA​

0:00​ Max Kellerman reacts to Zion’s comments on the Knicks.
3:40​ Stephen A. Smith says Zion definitely wanted to be a New York Knick.
6:00​ Stephen A. says the Knicks can’t have Zion.

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Video After The Jump

Colin Cowherd talks NBA. Hear what he had to say about both Kyrie Irving and LeBron James on today's show.

SUBSCRIBE to get all the latest content from The Herd: http://foxs.pt/SubscribeTHEHERD

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pdg1.jpg
Dec 8th, 2014 - Chicago, IL
Chicago born hip hop artist Polie Da Great (PDG)  has partnered with Stack Or Starve Approved
 for the release of his mix tape project  “Famous Stranger” via Live Mixtapes, Orange Mixtapes , Spinrilla, Datpiff & many other outlets.
Dubbed as one of Chicago’s most promising, upcoming &  prolific artists to date, 
Polie Da Great has a talent that represents innovative concepts, quality production and party like anthems for those who enjoy having a good time. 
His flow and creative process as Polie puts it, hasn't changed at all. "My writing process hasn't changed since I started rapping. Beats talk to me and take me into another universe. I listen to a lot of beats from various producers and pick my favorites. I sit down with my girlfriend Mary Jane and we put our heads together and come up with greatness; because remember Good ain't GREAT.
In addition, Polie breaks down the "Famous Stranger" title and concepts:
"It took a little more time than usual for me to come up with the album title. I been grinding and rapping for years. I been traveling around the country and some of the places that I have visited I always seem to bump into a fan. Some of my fans already feel like I'm famous, but there are a ton of people who don't know me yet. I live in the third biggest city in the country. As far as who knows me, for every one hundred there is about one hundred thousand that does not know me. My fans always tell me how I deserve a shot and to them I'm famous but to the world I'm a stranger. "
The first official leak off the "Famous Stranger" project titled "No Comments" (Prod.HB On The Track) Went viral today to many blogs & music outlets, Polie breaks down the process of how this track came about: "This is another track that already had the chorus on it. When creating this I was thinking about all the "foo foo" stuff that had been transpiring. For example, recently a few card crackers were caught. Then out of nowhere someone leaks them to about 25 other people. The whole time I'm reading and hearing about this all I could think was the main person who was probably talking about how real they were was the one snitching. I just figured I would add my two cents on how people need to plead the fifth and shut the f*** up." 
 Stream & Download "No Comments" Below:



"Famous Stranger" Available Feb 2015, be on the lookout for this A1 release!
STAY UPDATED
 
Twitter @Wtf_Is_PDG
Instagram: Wtf_Is_PDG
Email: PolieDaGreat83@Gmail.com
Media Contact: DoughFromDaGo@Gmail.com
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Fox News pundit Glenn Beck (r.) called President Obama a 'racist' during a 'Fox and Friends' morning show on Tuesday. NYDailyNews Reports Fox News Channel executives are distancing themselves from controversial — and popular — host Glenn Beck, who Tuesday morning branded President Obama a "racist." The combustable Beck ignited a firestorm when, during a Tuesday morning appearance on FNC's freewheeling "Fox and Friends," he said the President's reaction to the Henry Louis Gates Jr. arrest situation in Cambridge, Mass., suggested a "deep-seated hatred for white people or the white culture." To his credit, "Fox & Friends" co-host Brian Kilmeade — who recently had to apologize for comments he made about racial issues — immediately responded, saying that most of the faces people see of the Obama administration are white, such as spokesman Robert Gibbs or chief of staff Rahm Emanuel. "I'm not saying he doesn't like white people. I'm saying he has a problem," Beck responded. "This guy is, I believe, a racist." Beck did not address the point further in his own show on FNC Tuesday night. A Fox representative said there was no comment from Beck. However, Fox executives made it clear that although they encourage free speech, the "racist" remark was Beck's and his alone. "During Fox & Friends" [Tuesday] morning, Glenn Beck expressed a personal opinion which represented his own views, not those of the Fox News Channel," Bill Shine, senior vice president of programming for Fox News said in a statement. "And as with all commentators in the cable news arena, he is given the freedom to express his opinions." Reaction to Beck's comments on the Daily News Web site ranged from outright approval to dismissing them as coming from a conservative white commentator trying to drum up an audience. "Glenn Beck is another example of showboating, mostly male, mostly conservative radio and TV commentators who don't speak from fact but rather from their well-considered opinion of how much what they say will rile up their fan base and make them more famous and make them more money," wrote one reader. "Beck just exposed himself as a racist to the whole world," wrote another. "Half of President Obama's family is white. I hardly think he hates white people. It is clear that Beck is insecure with himself as a white man if all he sees is color in people and not just a person. Many people still need to grow up." Beck's comments on Obama came out of a discussion another President might have reacted to when asked about the Gates case. Gates, a renowned Harvard professor was arrested July 16 on disorderly-conduct charges by Cambridge police who had responded to his home after a report of a break-in in progress. Gates and the police disagree on what happened next. The charges were dropped. But the case took on an elevated level of scruitiny after the President, on prime-time television, said the police acted "stupidly." After realizing he had inflamed the discussion, Obama backtracked and then invited Gates and the arresting officer, Sgt. James Crowley, to the White House for a beer. The Gates-Crowley incident — heightened by the Obama comment — has raised the discussion of racial relations in the United States to a larger level. Gates, who said he hopes to use his experience as part of a study of racial profiling for a PBS documentary, said he was pleased the President wanted to use the incident to create a teachable moment. "If my experience leads to the lessening of the occurrence of racial profiling, then I would find that enormously gratifying," Gates said in a statement posted at Theroot.com. "Because, in the end, this is not about me at all; it is about the creation of a society in which 'equal justice before law' is a lived reality."
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NYDailyNews Reports Glenn Beck Wednesday defended calling President Obama a "racist” and saying the President must be held accountable for his actions. Beck told his radio audience that he would exercise his right to free speech whether or not he had a radio or television show. "Just know, you are never going to shut me up,” Beck told his listeners. The comments came after the combustible host ignited a firestorm Tuesday, when, during an appearance on FNC's freewheeling "Fox and Friends,” he said the President's reaction to the Henry Gates Jr. arrest situation in Cambridge, Mass., suggested a "deep-seated hatred for white people or the white culture." "Fox & Friends" co-host Brian Kilmeade immediately responded, saying that most of the faces people see of the Obama administration are white, such as spokesman Robert Gibbs or chief of staff Rahm Emanuel. "I'm not saying he doesn't like white people. I'm saying he has a problem," Beck responded. "This guy is, I believe, a racist." Beck took to the radio airwaves Wednesday with an emotional defense of his comments. "Ever notice the one making the charge of racism is never the one on trial until it's a conservative making the charge,” Beck said. "I am not willing to bow before the king, I will never bow before the king. In America, we do not have kings,” Beck said. "The President of the United States is not above the law, or above criticism. I will never, ever say the emperor is wearing clothes — if he's not.” Since the story emerged, Fox executives have made it clear that although they encourage free speech, the "racist” remark was Beck's and his alone. "During Fox & Friends" [Tuesday] morning, Glenn Beck expressed a personal opinion which represented his own views, not those of the Fox News Channel," Bill Shine, senior vice president of programming for Fox News, said in a statement. "And as with all commentators in the cable news arena, he is given the freedom to express his opinions." Reaction to Beck's comments on the Daily News Web site ranged from outright approval to dismissing them as coming from a conservative white commentator trying to drum up an audience. "Glenn Beck is another example of showboating, mostly male, mostly conservative radio and TV commentators who don't speak from fact but rather from their well-considered opinion of how much what they say will rile up their fan base and make them more famous and make them more money," wrote one reader. Beck was reacting to Obama's initial handling of the Gates case.
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