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Video After The Jump

Director Mills Miller has crafted a genius piece of work in the form of an unofficial music video for Kanye West's single, "All Day," featuring Paul McCartney, Theophilus London and Allan Kingdom.

The song is off of Yeezy's forthcoming album titled "Swish."

Follow Mills Miller on Twitter @millsmiller and the web

http://www.millsmillermedia.com

https://twitter.com/millsmiller

Video inquiries contact info@millsmillermedia.com

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ABN boss Trae Tha Truth reaches into his stash and pulls out a new collaboration with Young Thug entitled "Try Me." The song was produced by Killa Quise and Bizness Boi. Peep it up top.

Follow Trae Tha Truth @TRAEABN

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Jadakiss drops off a real sleek music video for his smooth track "Cuz We Paid" featuring Emanny. The track is featured on Jada's Consignmentmixtape.

 

Directed by Philly Fly Boy and Blew Fittit Films

 

@PhillyFlyBoy

@TheRealKiss

 

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Download Consignment now for free from Datpiff.


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NEW VIDEO FROM DOUG E. FRESH'S SONS, SQUARE OFF "LOVE OF MONEY" FROM THE ALBUM, 'MONEY MOET AN MEMORIES'

 

DIRECTED BY: Colincameraman

 

DOWNLOAD THE ALBUM NOW FROM iTUNES!

http://itunes.apple.com/us/album/moet-money-and-memories/id446166284

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SHAKA - A DAY IN THE LIFE (Mixtape)

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Shaka - A Day In The Life @shakamuzic

Featuring: GRIMEY, INTERNATIONAL BLIZZ, CASH BILZ, ILL PHIL

CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD OR STREAM THIS MIXTAPE FOR FREE!

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TRACKLIST
  • 1. INTRO
  • 2. I GOT IT
  • 3. BEANTEAM ANTHEM (ON ONE)
  • 4. AFTER HOURS
  • 5. BOSS OF ALL BOSSES
  • 6. IT'S YOUR WORLD FT. GRIMEY PROD. BY DUDDAMAN
  • 7. THE MARTYR'S ROOM
  • 8. OTIS FREESTYLE FT. INTERNATIONAL BLIZZ
  • 9. SHOW YOU HOW
  • 10. TROUBLE ON MY MIND
  • 11. NIGGAZ IS WACK
  • 12. GO, GO, GADGET FLOW FT. CASH BILZ
  • 13. LABOR DAY
  • 14. GHETTO SUPERSTARS FT. INTERNATIONAL BLIZZ
  • 15. BONKERS ON YONKERS FT. CASH BILZ & ILL PHIL
  • 16. Y'ALL DON'T REALLY FT. P. GENERAL
  • 17. ENEMY OR FRIEND
  • 18. REALLY THO FT. GRIMEY
  • 19. MYXER.COM RINGTONE COMMERCIAL
  • 20. BONUS TRACK
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Trae Tha Truth and D4L/G-Unit's Shawty LO link up for visuals for 'Hood Sh*t.'

The track which also features Young Quis appears on Trae's new album 'Street King,' which is in stores now.

 


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Best of the Best Concert 2011 Official Mixtape (@bestofthebest_) | Mixtapes | Coast 2 Coast Mixtapes

Featuring: Jeremih, Chris Brown, Keri Hilson, Miguel, Trina, DJ Khaled, Ace Hood, Shabba Ranks, Sanchez, Demarco, Vybz Kartel, Chino, Stephen Marley, Damian Marley, Jabba

CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD OR STREAM THIS MIXTAPE FOR FREE!

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12348743469?profile=originalVideo After The Jump

Written by Rev Al Sharpton via New York Daily News

In April of this year, it will be 43 years since the assassination of this nation’s premier civil rights leader, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. During that tumultuous and volatile time in 1968, it would have been unfathomable to even think of having an African-American President or a billionaire named Oprah Winfrey who could own an entire television network. Even as recently as the 1980s in New York, when we were forced to tackle racial outbursts like those in Howard Beach and Bensonhurst, it would be difficult to imagine a day where we would be living side-by-side with one another in harmonious neighborhoods.

I still look at my scar from a stab wound at that protest in Bensonhurst, but I take comfort in the fact that I can look at my TV and see a black President salute a gay Latino Congressional aide who saved the life of a Jewish member of the House of Representatives in the state of Arizona. Dr. King’s vision is nearly fulfilled.

 

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As we take pride in our tremendous collective progress, we must remember to utilize all of this renewed energy and apply it toward some of the areas in which we still can equalize the playing field.

We have harnessed the ability to heal and relate to one another on a very real and personal level, but now we must transfer that capability in the direction of education, employment and our criminal justice system. The vast majority of New Yorkers work alongside one another without racial or ethnic strife. We thankfully do not have open mob attacks on people, nor lynchings, nor segregation.

But what we do have is unequal access to jobs, quality education and an imbalanced prison culture. Once we rid society of racial discrimination on an institutional level, then and only then will Dr. King’s dream be fully realized.

An integral platform of my work has consistently centered on serving as a voice for the voiceless and shedding light on injustice wherever feasible. Unfortunate incidents of police brutality like those involving Abner Louima, Amadou Diallo and, more recently, Sean Bell required immediate attention and action to hold the perpetrators accountable. But these horrific incidents also served as a teachable moment for everyone — despite his or her ethnic background — to acknowledge the very real existence of abusive and biased police conduct. And during these times, we were all forced to take a stern, hard look in the mirror to see how our own shortcomings and preconceived ideas may have contributed to a climate of hatred and animosity.

 

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The violent assaults in Howard Beach and Bensonhurst during the 80s highlighted the very real and very grave extent of racial intolerance. But these two tragic periods afforded us the opportunity to engage in an honest dialogue surrounding ideas of bias, hatred and equality. We openly tackled these obstacles and thankfully today, we do not see instances of white mobs hunting down black men — or vice-versa.

It’s now 2011, and after decades of marches, non-violent protests, calls for action, education and organizing, people as a whole are finally more accepting of each other. An Indian-American female can serve as a governor, a Latino Congressman can represent all of the constituents in his or her respective district and an African American man can be elected to the highest office in the land. In our city alone, even the number of unwarranted police shootings is finally dwindling. Thanks in part to a concerted effort that forced us to confront these issues, we have been able to transcend many of the social barriers that impeded our progress just a few years ago.

So if there are no longer any polarizing conflicts like Howard Beach and Bensonhurst, why must we still continue to discuss race? If we are more socially accepting as a society, why then do we still protest and organize? If young people of color can achieve superstardom, attend Ivy League schools and serve at the highest levels of government, why is race still relevant? If we are in fact closer to sustaining racial peace now than at any other point in history, why do people like myself continue the good fight against discrimination?

The answer is really quite simple: We are still awaiting institutional justice.

In the wake of the economic crisis of 2008, young black men have been disproportionately hit the hardest. In cities as diverse as ours, it is an incomprehensible reality that unemployment rates within the black and Latino communities are astronomically higher than in other ethnic groups. According to several studies, nearly 50% of all young black men in New York City are unemployed. Other studies put that figure even higher when taking in to account the number of underemployed.

As our economy makes a slow recovery, unfortunately not everyone is feeling the effects. When jobs are few and far between, oftentimes managers, executives and decision makers will bring aboard those who most closely resemble themselves.

And though we may have begun to recognize and accept one another, regrettably, certain segments of the population are still deemed as threats.

Without adequate employment and stability, a family structure diminishes, as does any notion of providing long-term wealth. The racially unjust measures of the moment will have repercussions for years to come.

An unfortunate reality of poverty and lack of employment is a rise in crime. Without livable wages, more and more young people of color fall victim to a life of illegal activity. Equally disheartening, however, is the imbalanced way in which our criminal justice system operates. Receiving harsher sentences, and oftentimes unfairly profiled, these young folks are housed in overcrowded prisons that are bursting at the seams.

 

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If we all agree that locking an individual behind bars for petty crimes only hardens him or her, we must work to seek alternatives instead of expanding our prison industrial complex.

Over the course of approximately the last two years, I spent much of my energy and time focused on another impending dilemma — our crumbling education system.

Putting aside political differences and teaming up with former Republican Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich, former schools chancellor Joel Klein and Secretary of Education Arne Duncan, I focused heavily on the dire and urgent need for reform.

It should come as no surprise that much of the inequality in our education system falls along racial lines. Overwhelmingly receiving unequal access to good education from the onset, many young black and Latino students find themselves at a severe disadvantage in obtaining success. Countless studies and reports have proven that children who begin reading and writing later than average fall years behind their counterparts. Playing a game of catchup through high school and college, if they get there, they are consistently vying for a fighting chance — when we as a society have failed them.

How can we expect greatness when we don’t even provide the basic necessities for a proper education — mainly, the quality teachers every child deserves?

And how can we blame these children for not attending college and bettering themselves when we deliver a message of hopelessness from the beginning? Before we criticize the youth, we must take a look at our own priorities as a nation, and as a people.

Everyday, I am encouraged by the changes I witness around me. And everyday we inch a step closer toward racial equanimity. It took years of protests, organized marches and the sacrifices of many to achieve the success we enjoy today. As a country, we are far more accepting than ever, and racially biased incidents will hopefully be confined to the history books.

But in terms of education, employment and incarceration, much work remains.

It is my hope, and the hope of many, that we can in fact apply our new racial attitudes toward ensuring a new, more racially just reality in our national institutions. In the spirit of our great civil rights leader Dr. King, we will continue to peacefully seek these measures so that one day we can truly say race is no longer relevant.

We as a nation have achieved ardent success; let us now continue until we see the dream all the way through. We have borne witness to the detrimental effects of institutional racism; let us now continue to strive for the day we experience institutional justice.

Sharpton is president of the National Action Network.

 


Martin Luther King "I Have A Dream Speach"


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Video After The Jump 1017 Brick Squad loves the kids. Gucci Mane and Waka Flocka came to Southside Jamaica Queens, New York yesterday (August 29) to take part in a charity event, giving back to the community. The two played hoops, handed out free school supplies and took pictures with the kids there. Others at the event included French Montana, Lethal Lipps, Grafh, Frenchie, Debra Antney Wooh Da Kid and Rah Diggs. Good to see an event like this. These dudes deserve a lot of credit for taking time out to show the kids how to be a positive role model. twitter-5d.gif
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While the police have seemingly given up on solving the murder of rapper/actor/poet, Tupac Shakur, fans and certain members of the media continue to look for clues. Tupac died September 13, 1996 in Las Vegas at the age of 25 from gunshot wounds sustained six days earlier. That is pretty much the only thing everyone can agree on. A new movie coming out about the man who has had more albums released since his death (8), than when he was alive (6) will focus on his last day of life, with flashbacks to the final four years leading up to it. Trying to shed light on why he was killed. Stephen J. Rivele is one of two screenwriters hired to write the film. He spoke to Vulture about the direction the project would be taking. "This is the story of an artist whose character is at odds with his medium. He was a really sensitive, very romantic, talented young poet who also could sing, dance, and act. But the realities [of the hip-hop record business] were that he had to create this persona of the gangster," Rivele says. "He was obviously very angry, and had been subjected to a great deal of violence at home, in the streets and in prison. But he was just beginning to shed that anger and look for a purer voice...He was in the process of changing himself, and entering a new phase of his life — essentially a Romantic vision — and had set up a new label, and a new production company to create it. He saw the contradiction between the musical persona of 'Thug Life,' and his essential nature as a gentle, sensitive person. And that was partly responsible for his murder: He was not a gangster, but the people around him were. They saw he was going to leave, that they were going to lose him, and so I think they decided to kill him." The movie is expected to begin production in November, and will be directed by Antoine Fuqua, who also directed 'Training Day.' twitter-5d.gif
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Attention starved Spencer Pratt, the dude who once proclaimed himself "the white Jay-Z" although hardly anyone has heard him rap, is about to put his soon to ex-wife's assets on public display, for a fee of course. Vivid Entertainment is in negotiations with Pratt to buy a sex tape featuring Pratt and Heidi Montag according to TMZ. Steven Hirsch, the man who brought us Montana Fishburne's "leopard booty" told TMZ earlier today. "I just got off the phone with Spencer Pratt about a sex tape with Heidi Montag." I'm wondering if we're going to see the Heidi before or after the 10 plastic surgeries in one day. I kind of think she looked better before the fake boobs and botox injections.

Spencer is bragging that this sex tape "makes Kim Kardashian look like an amateur." Considering Kim's tape was boring as hell, that shouldn't be hard to do. twitter-2a.png
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LMAO: 50 Cent Loves Fat Joe [Video]

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CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD/STREAM THIS MIXTAPE FOR FREE!


TRACK LIST:


01. INTRO
02. GAMES HERO
03. MOVIE
04. SEVEN DAY FRIDAY
05. MONEY RIGHT
06. CADILLAC WHIPPIN
07. YES I
08. STALLION FT CUZZO
09. WE RIDE FT RUDY
10. FAST OR SLOW FT CUZZO
11. HOPES AND DREAMS FT BLUE MARLEY,AKILA
12. KNOW ITZ CRAZY
13. SHE LUV IT FT AKILA
14. PLAY DA GAME
15. MIDNIGHT RIDE FT SMITTY,PIMPZILLA,WIL WALLACE
16. LIVIN IN DA STREETZ FT AKILA
17. SELL IT TOO FT BLUE MARLEY
18. OUTRO


TO PROMOTE YOUR MIXTAPE THROUGH THE COAST 2 COAST NETWORK VISIT WWW.COAST2COASTPROMO.COM

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Video After The Jump

Four years after a shooting left an unarmed Sean Bell dead (on the eve of his wedding) and two of his friends wounded following a tragic incident with New York City police, the city has agreed to pay $7 million dollars to settle a federal lawsuit filed by Bell's family and his friends.

According to The New York Times, in the early hours of November 25, 2006, five New York City police officers fired 50 shots into the car Bell — who was to be married that day — was driving outside a club in Queens, New York. The car reportedly struck a detective in the leg and hit a police van before the officers began firing. None of the three men in the car — Bell and his friends Joseph Guzman and Trent Benefield — were armed, although the officers apparently believed at least one was.

In what's seen as the closing chapter in one of the most controversial police shootings in New York City history — three officers were acquitted of manslaughter and reckless-endangerment charges in 2008, a ruling many activists and rappers spoke out against — the families of the victims are looking to move past the tragedy.

As part of the settlement, Bell's two young daughters (whom he had with his fiancée, Nicole Paultre Bell) will receive $3.25 million; Guzman (who was shot 17 times) and Trent Benefield will receive $3 million and $900,000 respectively, according to Times.

Earlier this week, Foxy Brown — a close friend of Bell's fiancée — said Paultre Bell is a strong woman who remained in high spirits throughout the four-year ordeal.

"She just handled everything so gracefully," Brown said. "She just did everything with grace and class."

G-Unit member Tony Yayo, whose G-Unity foundation gave proceeds from a recent event to Bell's family, said the settlement is long overdue.

"I think it's a beautiful thing, but rest in peace to Sean Bell," Yayo said. "I mean, you have times now when a police officer can shoot you in your back, handcuffed on the floor, in a train station in front of everybody and get two years," Yayo said, referring to the Oscar Grant shooting in Oakland, California, in which found a transit officer was found guilty of involuntary manslaughter last month. "So Sean Bell's people deserve that money, definitely, and blessings to them."

Source: MTV

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Video After The Jump

G-Unit Capo Tony Yayo chops it up with Doggie Diamonds of Forbez DVD about beefs.

He explains why G-Unit was able to dead the beefs with D-Block & The Diplomats, but not Fat Joe
.

Very interesting interview, peep it below.

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The General, 50 Cent caled into Shade 45 and chopped it up with DJ Whoo Kid. They talked about 50 giving back to the community on his recent "Forever Day" in Queens New York. 50 goes in on Diddy, calling him a bitch with feminine ways. Wonders why Diddy named his super group with Officer Rick Ross the 'Supreme Team' Fif says Diddy wants to be the pretty bitch in Dirty Money. 50 also talked about Alicia Keys great doggy style poses when she's on the piano, and Cassie's full blown porn pics that the public never got to see.
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AP – Joan Griffith-Lee, left, and her husband Don Lee share a moment as they pose for a photograph Thursday.

NEW YORK – For Kenny and Lynette Seymour, last weekend's black marriage gala was about celebrating their seven-year marriage. They got to meet other black couples while spending a romantic evening together.

"Every time you meet another couple, you learn something new about yourself and relationships in general," said Kenny Seymour, a 39-year-old Broadway music director who lives in Queens. "It was beautiful to be around a bunch of married people in love."

Other black couples will be marking the eighth annual Black Marriage Day this weekend, by attending workshops, black-tie dinners and other activities. Some groups have held events throughout the month, although Black Marriage Day, which celebrates matrimony in the black community, falls on the fourth Sunday in March.

The founder estimates more than 300 celebrations are being held this weekend. The aim is to try to stabilize, if not reverse, the trend of non-commitment within the black community. Studies show blacks are less likely to marry than other ethnic groups and more likely to divorce and bear children out of wedlock.

Experts blame the disparities in part on high black male unemployment, high black male imprisonment and the moderate performance of black men in college compared with black women.

They also note the lack of positive images of black marriage in the media and several misperceptions about matrimony — that it's for white people, that it's a ball and chain, that fatherhood and marriage are not linked.

"They have either seen really bad examples of what marriage looks like or no examples at all," said Yolanda "Yanni" Brown, 42, a divorced mother of two in Chicago, who is hosting black marriage events. "They are saying, 'Why bother? This works for us,' not knowing there are so many other benefits of being married."

Brown says she wishes she had fought for her marriage.

Joseph Arrington II, a 38-year-old black entertainment attorney in Atlanta, said there was a time when he wanted to get married, but his interest has waned. He hasn't had a girlfriend in 15 years. His parents celebrated their 50th anniversary last year. He said he focuses on his work.

"It's a combination of two things," he said. "I haven't found anyone, and I'm not actively seeking someone."

Gerard Abdul, 45, a who lives in East Orange, N.J., and runs an entertainment company, has never seen himself as the marrying type. He has nine children by five women. He said he cared about them all, and each wanted to marry him. But he wasn't interested.

"Because I'm so independent and on my own, I really didn't see the science of marrying them when I really didn't have to," Abdul said.

"I'm a great father," he added. "But I probably would have been a lousy husband."

Despite those attitudes toward marriage, there are a handful of campaigns to get blacks to walk down the aisle, from the federal government's African American Healthy Marriage Initiative to Marry Your Baby Daddy Day, with 10 unwed couples with children tying the knot later this year in New York.

"You Saved Me," a documentary that explores the marriages of eight black couples, will be screened in more than 20 cities this weekend as part of a Black Marriage Day premiere.

"We want people to take away that successful positive (black) marriages do exist," said Lamar Tyler of Waldorf, Md., who produced "You Saved Me" with his wife, Ronnie. The Tylers started their blog "Black and Married With Kids" in 2007 and released "Happily Ever After: A Positive Image of Black Marriage" last year.

Don Lee and his wife, Joan Griffith-Lee, of New York's Staten Island, who have three children, will be watching "Happily Ever After" Friday night and participating in a discussion at a coffeehouse. The couple have been married almost 20 years.

Several of their friends are divorced, and Griffith-Lee, 45, who works at Columbia University, said she and her husband often talk about why.

"We hope to leave there with a new awareness and maybe some tools that can help as we get older," she said.

Black Marriage Day founder Nisa Islam Muhammad is encouraging couples to renew their vows in front of friends and family in honor of Tyler Perry's movie "Why Did I Get Married Too?" which opens April 2.

Muhammad points out that many black children come from single-parent households and contends that the media are not helping. There's never been a black "Bachelor" on the popular TV show, and the star of the 2008 movie "27 Dresses," about a 27-time bridesmaid, was white.

"We're going to focus on the positives," said Muhammad, executive director of Wedded Bliss Foundation, which helps people develop healthy relationships and marriages. "We're going to show ourselves and our community that marriage does matter and we have some fabulous marriages in our community worth celebrating."

Those include the marriage of President Barack Obama and his wife, Michelle, said Roland Warren, president of the National Fatherhood Initiative in Germantown, Md. He credits the couple with setting a positive example and creating more discussion about the issue. In a way, their marriage is evidence of the importance of marriage in the African-American community, he said.

Most blacks already think that marriage is a good thing, said Andrew Cherlin, a professor of sociology and public policy at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore. But many can't find anyone they think would make a good spouse.

But at least Black Marriage Day will get people thinking about marriage, says Tammy Greer Brown, 43, executive director of Celebrating Real Family Life and organizer of the Staten Island event, who said she hopes to spark a discussion about marriage. She said she grew up in a single-parent home and didn't want that for her kids. She has been married for more than 10 years.

"My daughter is already talking about getting married," she said. "She wants to be like my husband and I."

Source: Yahoo

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Videos After The Jump 106 and Park had by far the best New Year's Eve Show. They brought together some of the hottest acts in the game today in both rap and r&b. The star studded show featured performances from Maino, Omarion , Trey Songz , New Boyz, Pleasure P and Dorrough. As well as Yo Gotti featuring Nicki Minaj, Clipse, Jerimih, Day 26 and Mishon


Trey Songz Performing "Say Ahh"


Clipse Performing "I'm Good"


Yo Gotti Performing "5 Star Chick" ft Nicki Minaj


Omarion Performing "I Get It In"


Mario Performing "Thinking Bout You/Break Up ft Sean Garrett Jerimih Performing "Birthday Sex"


Pleasure P Performing "Boyfriend # 2/Under"


Day 26 Performing "Imma Put It On Her"


New Boyz Performing "You're A Jerk/Tie Me Down


Maino Performing "Million Bucks"


Mishon Performing "Just A Kiss"


Dorrough Performing "Walk That Walk/Ice Cream Paint Job" Follow Me @Twitter.com/ChasinMoPaper
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