addiction (8)

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MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — A southern Minnesota school district is expected to vote Monday on a $1.1 million state grant meant to help curb drug use among students of color after a pair of board members delayed accepting the money by arguing it could discriminate against white students.

At least 5 members of the 7-person Faribault school board say they will vote in favor of accepting the funding when it comes to a vote Monday evening. In November, 4 of the board’s members had been deadlocked in a vote after 2 members argued that programs specifically for students of color were unfair to white students.

“Would we ever go after a grant that only targeted whites with hopes that it would trickle down to our BIPOC community? Would we do the opposite? And I don’t think we would,” Board Member LeeAnn Lechtenberg said at the meeting.

She, along with Board Member Richard Olson voted against the program. 

The district serves Faribault, a city of 24,000 people. About 73% of the city is white, but it also has significant Latino & Black populations, including a Somali American community. More than 60% of the school district’s students are people of color.

A mother from the Somali community approached the school board last summer with concerns about drug use among youth in her community & the district applied for a $1.1 million grant from the Minnesota Department of Human Services to curb drug use among Black, Indigenous & other students of color.

#drugaddiction #opioidaddiction #opioidcrisis #rehab #relapse #recovery #students #highschool #highschoolstudents #Faribaultminnesota #minnesota #somalians #blacks #whites #indigenous #africanamerican #somaliamerican #discrimination #objection #minorities

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Video After The The Jump

Bronx, New York native and BottomLyne Music CEO, BeenOfficial, drops official visuals for "Hustle Addiction" featuring FINA. The Adwerdz-produced song is off of BeenOfficial's new album titled "A.O.D. (America's on Drugs)."

"A.O.D. (America's on Drugs)" now available: https://www.bottomlynemusic.com/product-page/america-s-on-drugs

"Hustle Addiction" directed by AK 40 Devin

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#BeenOfficial #HustleAddiction #AOD

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Video After The Jump

Virginia trio Ambassador Rick, Grunge Gallardo, and King Kong Gotcha, together known as The Opioid Era, come through with an official music video for the Trak Lass-produced banger titled "GuzMan Escapes."

This is off of their project, "The Throwaways."

Available now:
https://theopioidera.bandcamp.com/album/the-throwaways

https://music.apple.com/us/album/the-throwaways/1513772689

https://open.spotify.com/album/1moH9WlbpP3JorDD8hW95o

Produced by Trak Lass

Produced By A Geezus Piece

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Video After The Jump

Virginia trio Ambassador Rick, Grunge Gallardo, and King Kong Gotcha, together known as The Opioid Era, released a project last month titled "The Rza Vs Havoc Tape." The trio put their lyrical skills on display over classic instrumentals by the legendary producers.

With that in mind, check out the official music video for the Mobb Deep-inspired "Crawlin."

Directed by TRILL

"The Rza Vs Havoc Tape" is available now:
https://theopioidera.bandcamp.com/album/the-rza-vs-havoc-tape

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Video After The Jump

Virginia trio Ambassador Rick, Grunge Gallardo, and King Kong Gotcha, together known as The Opioid Era, come through with an official music video for the Praise-produced banger titled "Pandemic."

This is off of their project, "The Throwaways."

Available now:
https://theopioidera.bandcamp.com/album/the-throwaways

https://music.apple.com/us/album/the-throwaways/1513772689

https://open.spotify.com/album/1moH9WlbpP3JorDD8hW95o

Follow The Opioid Era @theopioidera
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Twitter: https://twitter.com/theopioidera
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Follow Praise @beatsbypraise
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Video After The Jump

Straight out of Virginia comes The Opioid Era. A new rap trio consisting of Ambassador Rick, King Kong Gotcha and Grunge Gallardo. The group is quickly gaining recognition and should be added to your playlists ASAP.

Their latest visual is for the Razor Boomarang-produced banger "Triple Threat" off of their self-titled project, which is available now on all streaming platforms.

Follow the Opioid Era:
*https://www.instagram.com/theopioidera/
*https://twitter.com/theopioidera

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Video After The Jump DMX sat down with Young Dip TV recently and didn't bite his tounge when talking about who he feels is one of the worst rappers out today. Dark Man X tipped his hat to T.I. as an artist he enjoys listening to, took aim at Plies, specifically for his song "Bruh Bruh". "I'm sure I don't even know who the worst is, but he [Plies] has to be one of the worst," X said. "Bruh Bruh...are you serious? That has to be one of the worst...like how do you even fix your mouth so say that or spell that? What a lot of people don't understand is that we as artists, are teachers. And if you're teaching people to spell like that and talk like that, then you're dumber than the people you're supposed to be teaching." What do you guys think of DMX's comments? Is Plies one of the worst rappers and is "Bruh Bruh" that bad of a song? twitter-5d.gif
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MIAMI — It almost seems impossible, but it's tragically true. Scott Storch squandered $30 million. Not only that, he did it in less than six months. "[It was] unlike anything I've ever seen in my entire life," the producer's manager, Derek Jackson, told MTV News of his friend of almost two decade's monumental fall. "Historical! It was historical without question." Storch's decline started in 2006, which was arguably his most successful year creatively and definitely his most fruitful year financially. He was one of the top producers in the business, having worked on hits by Beyoncé, 50 Cent, the Game, T.I., Chris Brown, Christina Aguilera, Dr. Dre, Nas, Snoop Dogg, Pink and many others. He had a long way to fall. "Honestly, about three years ago, he got really shady," said Jackson, sitting just a few feet away from Storch at Miami's Hit Factory studios. "And that's the best term I could use. He went from what his normal vices were to suddenly becoming a person who was infatuated with the drug, and I saw it constantly." Storch's drug was cocaine. The abuse of the narcotic almost cost him his career — and his life. Earlier this year, he was arrested for grand theft auto for allegedly failing to return a Bentley he'd leased in 2006. And last year, Storch hit legal trouble after reportedly falling behind on both his child-support payments and his property taxes. "A lot of the work that we would do and how much we would do of it, that started to scale back. I have to say the magic month was August of 2006," Jackson continued. "I will never forget it. It will be something that will stay with me for the rest of my life. You know, '06 for us was the magic year; we hit Lotto. Everything worked. I mean, there was nothing that we did that did not work. I gotta honestly say, outside of my kids, it was the greatest year of my life. It was so many [hit records] I can't even tell you. That was the year he won [ASCAP's] Songwriter of the Year [award]. We broke records — lots of [chart] records we broke and he did them quick. It was just a wonderful year, but I think it was defined by that magic month of August. He ran into the Hollywood class — and when he went to Hollywood, all things changed." Most notably, Storch went on vacation. "It was the first time he took off in, I would say, the duration of his career. I've been with him since he was 17 years old. I found Scott [playing keyboards with] the Roots in 1992, so for the duration of that, he's always been a worker bee, that's just his spirit. But in August of 06', we took a month off. It was over. Never came back." Literally. Storch got addicted to drugs and just stopped caring about his career. "Scott, I have to be real because, once again, it's about a story that has to be told," Jackson said. "We made a lot of money — I mean a lot of money that year [2006]. And Scott — in all honesty — he was broke by January. It was the quickest [loss] of money that I've ever seen in my entire life." "The cost of the drug didn't effect my life," Storch weighed in. "It was the poor decisions I made, that were so poor financially, that caused me to go into this situation where I was forced to change my lifestyle ... forced to change a lot of things. "[I had] 15 to 20 cars at all times," he continued." That's not smart. I would take one of 15 half-million-dollar cars I owned and go to the mall and spend that much money. Stupid, stupid stuff. It's like it didn't make a difference. They were ego investments. I would have been great with three or four cars! I didn't need a 117-foot boat." "Cars!," Jackson explained of how Storch lost his fortune so quickly. "Private jets are expensive — please leave them alone if you can't afford them. Trips to the Riviera on a private jet is $250,000 one way. I'm talking about, it was a routine [with Scott]. Spending on others — if you can't take care of yourself, how you gonna take care of everybody else? And it got out of control." Storch weighed in, "I watched my own father, he went bankrupt and had problems with the IRS. He was living beyond his means, and I guess I was doing the same thing and not even realizing it." As much as he was making, Storch was spending double on drugs and overly luxurious living. He was out of control, and Jackson takes some of the blame for not intervening sooner. "I was an enabler, I was an enabler," Jackson admits. "And it wasn't until I got a phone call — rest in peace [former Def Jam Records President Shakir Stewart, who died of an apparent suicide last year]. My man, one of my closest and dearest friends in the music business, said, 'D, what are you doing? Scott has Janet Jackson sitting in his studio and it's going on five hours. Where is he at? What are you doing, D? What are you doing?' And I knew the routine started to become like that. We did it to a lot of people in '07. It's when it all went bad. We had people sit in the studio for upwards of 10 hours at a time. And I would never be real to [Scotty]. I guess I got to a point where I stopped caring. We made money, I watched him blow it, I didn't care anymore. But then I watched that phone call come from Shakir." Eventually Jackson would exhaust himself trying to get his friend to clean up, so he resigned as Storch's manager. Scott still didn't get point: His addiction had tapped his inspiration to make music. "It started affecting me where my own son would be like, 'Dad, what's up? When's the next hit record coming up?' " Storch recalled. "I didn't have a answer for him." It wasn't until 18 months later that Storch and Jackson would see each other again. Storch had decided he needed help. "[It was] probably in the worst state I've seen [anyone] in my life," Jackson said of Storch. "Somebody that you knew when they were young and full of zest and fire and excitable — the spirit that the kid had was incredible. But to come back to black eyes, bloodied and bowed and unlike the person you knew. To be quite frank, he was a junkie. He was a junkie. And it was unlike anything I had seen in him, ever. Ever." Jackson checked Storch into a rehab facility called Recovery First. Thomas Trevino, a mental health tech and a three-quarter-way manager at Recovery First has been working with Storch for the past few months. "I can clearly remember the first day he came in," Trevino recalled. "The guy just looked like many others clients we've got: emotionally, physically and spiritually broken. Throughout the time, he resided in our in-patient program and he eventually graduated into an out-patient program; he was then taken into our three-quarter way house. "I have seen him change," Trevino continued. "I've seen his mind is totally opposite from day one. The guy couldn't even carry on a clear conversation when he first came in. And now I have been having the honor and privilege to come with him to the studio a couple times and check him out, see what he's doing. And it seems like he's back on track, man. He's a great inspiration for many out there who are trying to do this line of work — and at the same time he's a great inspiration for many drug addicts out there who want to stay clean and live this way of life." "It's just that type of deal," Storch — who is still under treatment — said of his fall and his climb back to the top. "I've lived it, done it. I've been around a lot of greats I seen in this industry that have problems, but the comeback can be that much greater. It's a well of creativity in my mind right now; it's not being hindered and being in love with the music again — seeing the day and taking advantage of the opportunities I've been afforded." Storch is back at work, and says he's better than ever. He's in the studio with the Game for three days, and next week goes to Orlando to work with Chris Brown. There's also a track in the works involving him, Quincy Jones and Jennifer Hudson, as well as Kat DeLuna's potential first single. Outside of music, he's been shooting a reality show and has guest appearances from the Kardashians. "This is God's work," Jackson opined. "So he has to respect that. I just hope that the people out there that watch this take the time to understand that even in the lowest of moments — because it was low for me, it took a year out of my life, it destroyed my life because I was so in tune to him — to always remember you can come back, you can clean your life up. You can be the same again. It's never too late. Never too late — never! So hopefully from this, people will understand that there's always a tomorrow." Source:MTVNEWS
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