Football (9)

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Joey Majors is pleased to announce the release of his new single and video, "Raiders Nation". The track is an impassioned statement about the current state of his favorite team.

Available on all streaming platforms:

iTunes/Apple Music: https://music.apple.com/us/album/raiders-nation-single/1680632948

Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/album/2IV8pwsYmVeNnLUHtcQAKX

© 2023 VIP Life Music Group

Hip-hop artist and CEO of VIP Life Music Group, Joey Majors, is a Las Vegas Raiders fan through and through. Majors is from a small city in Western New York named Batavia. It's right in the middle of Rochester and Buffalo. But he's been a resident and has called Vegas his home for years. When asked why he made this song, Joey says, "As a fan and a loyal member of the Raider Nation, I wanted to express some of my feelings about the recent moves made by the team's Head Coach and Management. Many people in our community are disappointed about the organization trading away some of the team's best players. And we are noticing that these changes are reminiscent of the Patriots. We want to send a clear message that this is "Raiders Nation," not Gillette Stadium."

Majors recently released his album "Wolf In Sheep Clothing" The deluxe version was released late this March. With features from Splash God, Big Yount, ETO, and many more. Over the past two years, Joey has collaborated with Mobb Deep, Benny The Butcher from Griselda, Jadakiss, 38 Spesh, Boldly James, Mooch (Da Cloth), Rigz (Da Cloth), Stove God Cooks, and Smif-N-Wesson. And he also released the hit single "The Plug" with The Game. "Raiders Nation" was produced by the young musical phenom producer JXSAMURAI. The passionate anthem "Raiders Nation" and the video are being released via the VIP Life label.

Available on all streaming platforms:

iTunes/Apple Music: https://music.apple.com/us/album/raiders-nation-single/1680632948

Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/album/2IV8pwsYmVeNnLUHtcQAKX

© 2023 VIP Life Music Group

For interviews, features, hooks, bookings contact PR Dean at prdean.business@gmail.com

Follow Joey Majors @joeymajorsviplife
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/joeymajorsviplife/

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Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/jxsamuraiprod/

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#JoeyMajors #RaidersNation #VLMG #VIPLife

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COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — 2 former Ohio State football players were acquitted Thursday on charges of rape & kidnapping stemming from a sexual encounter they had with a woman in an apartment the 2 players shared.

Amir Riep & Jahsen Wint embraced each other & both cried after the jury verdict was read. Their attorneys argued at trial that the woman had consensual sex with both men but regretted it afterward. They also accused the victim’s father of pushing her & authorities to pursue criminal charges.

Franklin County Assistant Prosecutor Daniel Meyer said the woman went to the apartment expecting to hang out with Riep, but that the 3 men violently raped her.

The jury deliberated for less than 4 hours before finding Riep & Wint both innocent of 2 counts of rape & a kidnapping charge. Each man could have faced more than 30 years in prison & registration as sex offenders if convicted.

The two players were kicked off the team in February 2020 after their arrests.

The woman told police that she was having consensual sex with Riep before Wint came into the room & both forced her into sex. After several minutes, they stopped & Riep recorded the woman agreeing that the sex was consensual.

Riep & Lloyd McFarquhar, another former Ohio State football player, both testified on Wednesday that players had been told to get evidence that their sexual partners consented to protect themselves from prosecution.

#amirriep #jahsenwint #ohiostateuniversity #ohiostatebuckeyes #ohiostatefootball #2ohiostatefootballblayersacquittedofrape #rape #kidnapping #college #football #footballplayers #19yearoldgirl #accusations #innocentuntilprovenguilty #caughtoncamera #2ohiostateplayersacquittedofkidnapping #consensual #consensualsex #amirriepfoundnotguilty #amirriepnotguilty #jahsenwintnotguiltyofrape #jahsenwintnotguiltyofkidnapping #amirriepacquittedofkidnapping #justice #justiceprevails

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Sean Combs a.k.a. Puff Daddy a.k.a. Diddy was arrested on the campus of UCLA is Los Angeles, Monday, June 22.

The Bad Boy Records CEO attacked the school's football Strength and Conditioning coach Sal Alosi with a kettlebell after his son Justin Combs was yelled at.

Diddy was arrested and charged with felony assault.

G-Unit Records mogul 50 Cent couldn't help taking a couple of jabs at Diddy's predicament in an ongoing contest between Ciroc and 50's Effen Vodka.

Follow 50 Cent on Twitter and Instagram @50Cent
https://instagram.com/50cent/
https://twitter.com/50cent

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With the NFC's Green Bay Packers out of the running for the Super Bowl this year, Birdman has switched conferences entirely and decided to try his luck with the AFC's New England Patriots.

 

Stunna successfully bet $1 million dollars on the Packers to win last season. He's upping the ante this year by putting down $5 million on the Patriots to beat the New York Giants.

 

According to Birdman, Patriots running back BenJarvus Green-Ellis is his nephew. Eliis ran for 68 yards and scored a touchdown in the Patriots win over the Baltimore Ravens in the AFC Championship game to help his team advance to the big show.


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Super Bowl 46 will be played on Sunday February 5 at 6PM EST on NBC.

 

 

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Video After The Jump A lot of football fans have an NFL team they absolutely can't stand. Whether it be a divisional rival, team colors, the owner, tradition or a specific player. For this kid named Aiden, his hate for the Oakland Raiders had more to do with his sister picking them to beat the San Diego Chargers last week. "I hate Violet cause she picked the Raiders, I hate football!" the kid screams. Cheer up kid, it could have been worse... They could have lost to the Detroit Lions. For the record, the Raiders beat the Chargers 35-27. twitter-5d.gif
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Versus will formally announce Tuesday that being outspoken or outrageous — or is it obnoxious? — can lead to getting your own national TV talk show. Even while you're still an active NFL player. Chad Ochocinco and Terrell Owens, new Cincinnati Bengals teammates whose respective VH1 reality shows recently wound down, will now move on to their own The T.Ocho Show, a taped talk show on Comcast-owned Versus that kicks off with a preview Tuesday night. Ochocinco says the show will focus on football but might also touch on "baseball and hockey. With my love of soccer, I'll throw that in. And porn. I'm doing amateur porn, so I'll throw that in. … Do you understand how dangerous this is for us to have a stage like this?" Says Owens: "There will be topics where Chad and I will get in trouble. We'll talk about issues that aren't talked about in the mainstream media. It's an opportunity for two of loudest mouths who've been in the league." Well, yes, when you put like that. The show, billed as the first-ever weekly national talk show featuring active NFL players, will be previewed Tuesday night and run for the next five weeks on Tuesday nights with Owens and Ochocinco doing segments in Versus' The Daily Line show (11 ET). On Oct. 12, The T.OchoShow debuts as a stand-alone, to follow Versus' NHL games starting at 10:30 p.m. ET. The idea for the show, says Versus programming vice president Andy Meyer, became obvious "the minute" that Owens signed with the Bengals and "their Batman and Robin relationship got going." That pairing, he suggests, will serve as a sort of booster rocket for two players who were already well off the media launch pad: "They'd already had significant accomplishments as personalities." Meyer adds that "we'd love this to be the creation of a new genre of television" where athletes can speak "without layers of editors and beat writers filtering them out." Owens sounds game. "Some guys get on TV shows and put on their media hats and turn their back on players," he says. "I'm not going to be a brown-noser for nobody. This is something probably a lot of people don't want to see. There'll be jealous people who'll criticize it, just like they criticized my reality show." That reality show was so behind-the-scenes that viewers saw Owens in sessions with his therapist. The Versus show, he suggests, will also offer up subjects that usually stay behind closed doors. "I don't want to get into a race issue, but when you look at the media talking about (player) holdouts, it's usually about African-Americans," says Owens, noting heavy coverage of New York Jet Darrelle Revis' holdout before he signed a new contract Monday. "When do you see Caucasians shown just trying to get their money? Why is that never talked about? We'll stick out our chests and advocate for guys trying to get paid for what they deserve." Owens says he's been told he's "a natural in front of cameras" but doesn't see himself going into sportscasting after retiring from the NFL. Ochocinco, who culled through 85 bachelorettes for his The Ultimate Catch VH1 reality show"it's just what I do in offseasons, but with cameras following me" — figures he'll "go for the whole 9 yards" in post-football media. "Now, I'm setting myself up so I can do whatever I want." But Ochocinco suggests for now, he and Owens have a unique angle: "What will be refreshing for everybody is we play the game. You'll live the game through us." Or at least get a taste of its woofing. Source: USA Today twitter-5d.gif
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Video After The Jump Lil B's got big time legends doing his "cooking dance" so you know it must be catching on. The man known around the world as an All-Pro football player and star baseball player gets "Based". Deion Sanders, let off some steam at one of his little league team's cookouts and showed his "master chef" technique while his song Deion Jr filmed. How cool is that? Deion must be pretty laid back father and that's wassup. twitter-5d.gif
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(CNN) -- When a football player flattens his opponent with a bone-crushing hit, the crowd leaps to its feet and roars approval. When hockey referees break up a fight, spectators often jeer. In the increasingly popular mixed martial arts competitions, bloodied and battered fighters can knee, elbow, and kick each other in the face.

In late June, a mixed martial arts fighter, Michael Kirkham, died two days after getting injured in a competition.

His death, which is under investigation by the South Carolina athletic commission, brought attention to the controversial sport once likened to human cockfighting. This was the second death in the sport; another MMA fighter, Sam Vasquez, died in 2007.

Violent sports, movies and games enjoy popularity and profitability because of the excitement and "forbidden fruit" factor, say psychology experts.

"There's a rubbernecking syndrome," said Paul Boxer, assistant professor of psychology at Rutgers University. "When you see a body splayed out, you couldn't help it. You had to see."

But supporters say there is more to high-contact sports such as boxing or MMA than an attraction to violence. There is strategy and athleticism involved, they say.

Michael Gettys watches mixed martial arts fights every week on SpikeTV and gathers his friends to watch the pay-per-view matches. As a former college wrestler, he admires how competitors combine different fighting styles such as boxing, kickboxing, muay thai and wrestling.

"You don't make it to the top of the heap by going out like Rocky and just throwing punches at each other," said the 30-year-old computer software engineer. "They are so skilled."

Ultimate Fighting Championship, which started in 1993, is the most recognized name in mixed martial arts.

"Everyone loves a fight," wrote its president, Dana White, via e-mail. "It's in our DNA. The example I like to use is that if you're in an intersection and there's a basketball game on one corner, a soccer game on another, a baseball game on the third, and a fight on the fourth, everyone will go watch the fight. And that's not only true, but it's something that cuts across all demographic and geographic barriers."

He responded to criticism about the violence saying, "This is a contact sport, just like football, hockey, boxing, and basketball are, yet we take pride in the fact that there has never been a death or serious injury, outside of a broken arm or leg, in the history of the UFC. What the sport does promote is discipline, sportsmanship and hard work, all elements necessary for a fighter to be successful here."

The two players who died after MMA fights were not in UFC matches.

Mixed martial arts fighting is popular with the 18-to-34 demographic, said Roy Englebrecht, the founder of the Professional Mixed Martial Arts League, a minor league in California.

"I've not heard from one person, 'Roy, can you stop the blood? Can you have some shows that don't have blood in it?'" Englebrecht said.

"It's the nature of the sport. You get hit. You get a knee to the head. You know, a head wound bleeds a lot faster. We've had some major blood. All MMA, professional and amateur, are regulated by a state commission."

The attraction of violence could be that it gives people "a chance to experience taboo -- events that they can't experience in their own lives -- or see things they don't see in their typical life," said Brad Bushman, professor of communications and psychology at Ohio State University.

Violence as entertainment has existed for thousands of years, from the ancient Egyptians watching re-enactments of the murder of their god Osiris to the Romans' gladiator games, said Bushman.

"If you ask people why they do it, they give you answers like, they're bored and violence is exciting," he said.

Another common response also dates back to ancient times.

"The catharsis idea -- that's a common explanation that Aristotle gave, that by viewing great tragedies, audience members could purge or cleanse their emotions," Bushman said. "There's no evidence for the catharsis theory. It sounds good, but it's false."

If the catharsis theory were true, he said, football players should be less aggressive after a game, because they've been able to purge it from their system. Instead, research has shown that they have higher aggression levels after a game, Bushman said.

When teenagers play violent video games, they get even more aggressive, said Boxer, who has conducted research on the subject.

High-contact sports can also exact a toll on players.

A study published this year assessed the injuries suffered by MMA players. Out of 116 competitions held in Hawaii between 1999 and 2006, the study reported 55 injuries including 28 abrasions and lacerations, six of them requiring on-site suturing or emergency department referrals; 11 concussions; five facial injuries; and an array of orthopedic injuries.

In other high-contact sports, several former boxers and football players have developed traumatic brain injuries believed to be caused by repeated blows to the head.

MMA could be viewed as brutal by a casual observer, Gettys said.

"It's violent," he said. "To a lot of people who do it, it's a good way to release aggression instead of going out and doing something illegal to release it. They're doing something consensual between two people and making money."

"Is it for everybody? No. Then what is?"

Source: CNN

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G-Unit General Curtis "50 Cent" Jackson has lost a shocking 60 pounds in order to accurately play a football player diagnosed with cancer in his new film.

The movie, 'Things Fall Apart' co-written by 50 Cent also stars Ray Liotta and is being directed by Mario Van Peebles


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