All Posts (389)

Sort by

12351727466?profile=original

Video After The Jump

VIENNA (AP) — Three people believed to be part of a human smuggling operation were arrested overnight in Hungary in connection with the deaths of 71 migrants found in a refrigerated truck abandoned on Austria's main highway, law enforcement officials said Friday.

It was the latest tragedy in a year that has seen tens of thousands of people risking everything to seek a better life or refuge in wealthy European countries.

At least 2,500 have died, mostly at sea, where another tragedy was unfolding Friday as Libyan authorities counted bodies from two ships that capsized off the coast of that country. The U.N. refugee agency said 200 were missing and feared dead.

In Austria, officials said they are still investigating but believe the migrants suffocated in the truck. Investigators found a Syrian travel document, indicating that at least some of the dead were refugees fleeing violence in Syria, though it wasn't clear if some were from elsewhere.

The 71 included eight women and four children, the youngest a girl between 1 and 2 years old, the others boys aged 8 to 10. Authorities initially estimated the death toll at 20 to 50, but raised it after towing the truck to a refrigerated warehouse and counting the partially decomposed bodies.

460x.jpg

Migrants fearful of death at sea in overcrowded and flimsy boats have increasingly turned to using a land route to Europe through the Western Balkans. They start in Greece, which they can reach via a short boat trip from Turkey, then move on through Macedonia, Serbia and into Hungary, where thousands have been crossing the border every day, crawling over or under a razor-wire fence meant to keep them out.

Most go from there to other countries in the European Union, sometimes paying smugglers to drive them, but the discovery of the bodies in the truck showed there is no truly safe path.

Police in Hungary said that as of Tuesday, 776 suspected human smugglers had been detained so far this year, compared to 593 all of 2014. In the southern part of the country, police said they had found 18 Syrians near an overturned van on the M5 highway between Szeged and Budapest early Friday. Ten were taken to the hospital for treatment while the driver, a Romanian, was treated for head injuries and then taken into custody on suspicion of human smuggling.

460x.jpg

The truck with the 71 migrants inside was found parked in the safety lane of the highway from Budapest, Hungary, to Vienna on Thursday. It was not clear how long the bodies had been in it, but police believed they may already have been dead by the time the truck crossed the border into Austria overnight Wednesday. Autopsies were being conducted, said state prosecutor Johann Fuchs, with results expected in several days.

At least two of those arrested are Bulgarian citizens, while the third has Hungarian identity papers, police said. One is the truck owner, a Bulgarian of Lebanese descent, while two others were apparently taking turns driving, said Hans Peter Doskozil, chief of police in Burgenland province, where the truck was found. He said police believe that the suspects were part of a larger Bulgarian-Hungarian human smuggling ring.

Fuchs said it was unclear when the suspects would be extradited by Hungarian authorities, who were looking to see if they had jurisdiction in the case. Romania's foreign ministry also said that 12 Romanians had been detained in Hungary on suspicion of human trafficking and Hungarian authorities are seeking to arrest them.

Interior Minister Johanna Mikl-Leitner said the tragedy "should serve as a wake-up call ... for joint European action" in dealing with the torrent of migrants flocking to Europe. Melissa Fleming, spokeswoman for the U.N. refugee agency in Geneva called the tragedy "absolutely shocking."

"We believe this underscores the ruthlessness of people smugglers who have expanded their business from the Mediterranean Sea to the highways of Europe. It shows they have absolutely no regard for human life, and that they are only after profit," she said. "It also shows the desperation of people seeking protection or a new life in Europe, and their only means is to submit themselves to these criminals."

___

Associated Press Writer Alison Mutler in Bucharest, Romania; Pablo Gorondi in Budapest, Hungary; and Jamey Keaten in Geneva contributed to this report.

Follow Me

Join Our Facebook Fan Page Check Us Out On MySpace Follow Us On Twitter Follow Me On Youtube Like MY Facebook Page Connect With Me On Linkedin Connect With Me On Google+ Join My Website Follow Us On Twitter
Read more…

12351724662?profile=original

Video After The Jump

French Montana stopped by Hot 97 to chop it up with Ebro Darden, Peter Rosenberg and Laura Stylez about a variety of topics. Check it out below and let us know what you think.

12351724853?profile=original

Follow Me

Join Our Facebook Fan Page Check Us Out On MySpace Follow Us On Twitter Follow Me On Youtube Like MY Facebook Page Connect With Me On Linkedin Connect With Me On Google+ Join My Website Follow Us On Twitter
Read more…

12351720059?profile=original

Video After The Jump

Lil Reese revisits his Supa Savage 2 mixtape and drops an official music video for "You Know How We Play" featuring Benji Glo. Grab the project now from LiveMixtapes http://www.livemixtapes.com/mixtapes/34859/lil-reese-supa-savage-2.html.

12351720076?profile=original

Follow Me

Join Our Facebook Fan Page Check Us Out On MySpace Follow Us On Twitter Follow Me On Youtube Like MY Facebook Page Connect With Me On Linkedin Connect With Me On Google+ Join My Website Follow Us On Twitter
Read more…

12351718453?profile=original

Video After The Jump

With all the media attention being given to Ronda Rousey and Floyd Mayweather Jr.'s back and forth banter, Elie Seckbach of ESNEWS went to a reliable and hilarious source to find out what the fuss is all about.

Check out what Floyd Mayweather Sr. had to say below.

12351718276?profile=original

Follow Me

Join Our Facebook Fan Page Check Us Out On MySpace Follow Us On Twitter Follow Me On Youtube Like MY Facebook Page Connect With Me On Linkedin Connect With Me On Google+ Join My Website Follow Us On Twitter
Read more…

Who Is K'Neisha??

12351726855?profile=original

Keneisha Fairley is from a small town called Lumberton Mississippi she was born on March 14, 1984. During Junior High and High School she began her career in music by joining Choir organizations where she learned how to record, produce and write. Bred in the churches of Mississippi, soulstress K'neisha first honed her skills playing the piano and singing in her church's choir. From there she started from a small corner in her garage recording her own material, but K'neisha has a big sound thats getting out there in the world. Right now people in her corner of the map are starting to know her name and she is getting booked to perform across her home state.

Take a listen to K'neisha's song "Countdown" that's garnering shows throughout Mississippi for is wildly danceable track and great lyrics. K'neisha is in the beginnings of work with more well known producers and engineers in Atlanta, Georgia that are helping mold her sound. But until then she is pushing material she crafted in her own garage that's been remastered.

Join us in bringing K'neisha to the masses, where your mind will be wherever you desire and your heart will beat harder and faster than ever before. If you can't relate just use your imagination!!! 

CHECK OUT THE VIDEO FOR HER SONG "COUNTDOWN"

CHECK OUT HER EXCLUSIVE INTERVIEW WITH DJ SMALLS

Get K'Neisha's Single "The Next Time" On Itunes (Click Here)

Get K'Neisha's Single "Please" On Itunes (Click Here)

Check Out K'Neisha's Soundcloud (Click Here)

Like K'Neisa's Fan Page (Click Here)

Follow K'Neisha On Twitter (Click Here)

Read more…

12351722884?profile=original

Darryl Dawkins, the glass shattering former NBA player has passed away at age 58, according to WFMZ.

Dawkins played 15-years in the league for the Philadelphia 76ers, New Jersey Nets, Detroit Pistons and the Utah Jazz.

Dawkins was best known for his tremendous dunks that he gave colorful names, such as "The Chocolate-Thunder-Flying, Robinzine-Crying, Teeth-Shaking, Glass-Breaking, Rump-Roasting, Bun-Toasting, Wham-Bam, Glass-Breaker-I-Am-Jam."

In 1979, Dawkins shattered two glass backboards with powerful dunks.

His nickname, "Chocolate Thunder," was given to him by Stevie Wonder near the end of his career.

12351722901?profile=original

The cause of his death is not known at this time.

Follow Me

Join Our Facebook Fan Page Check Us Out On MySpace Follow Us On Twitter Follow Me On Youtube Like MY Facebook Page Connect With Me On Linkedin Connect With Me On Google+ Join My Website Follow Us On Twitter
Read more…

Decatur Alabama's 18 Year Old Teyz Soprano Drops TARZAN! His First Solo Single From His New Mix Tape PROBLEM CHILD Releasing SEPT 8Th ! Growing Up In The Jungle Means Survival Of The Fittest And Only The Strong Survive.. OTP Gangs Soprano Is Definitely A Problem And Is Determined To Put On For The 256! Google Teyz Soprano

 Follow On Instagram: TeyzSoprano_OTP 

Twitter: TeyzSoprano 

12351714692?profile=original

Follow Me

Join Our Facebook Fan Page Check Us Out On MySpace Follow Us On Twitter Follow Me On Youtube Like MY Facebook Page Connect With Me On Linkedin Connect With Me On Google+ Join My Website Follow Us On Twitter
Read more…

12351721691?profile=original

Video After The Jump

Killa Kyleon bodies another visual off his 30 Days 30 Deaths project, this time drawing inspiration from the infamous Death Row Records Vibe Magazine cover from 1996. Check out the video for "Used To," directed by David Stunts 

www.twitter.com/killakyleon
www.instagram.com/killakyleon

12351722680?profile=original

Follow Me

Join Our Facebook Fan Page Check Us Out On MySpace Follow Us On Twitter Follow Me On Youtube Like MY Facebook Page Connect With Me On Linkedin Connect With Me On Google+ Join My Website Follow Us On Twitter
Read more…

12351719691?profile=original

Video After The Jump

(AP) Even after gunning down a TV news reporter and cameraman during a live interview, Vester Lee Flanagan II continued to rage. But after a volatile career that had seen him fired at least twice for clashing with co-workers who recall him as an off-kilter loner, this would be the former broadcaster's last, brutal sign-off.

"I've been a human powder keg for a while...just waiting to go BOOM!!!" Flanagan wrote in a rambling 23-page note faxed to ABC News soon after the shooting.

Hours after he shot his former co-workers and then posted video of the attack to his Facebook page, Flanagan crashed a vehicle and shot himself. He died at a hospital later Wednesday, authorities said.

In the note, Flanagan — who had appeared on air using the name Bryce Williams — said he'd been discriminated against both for being black and gay. He listed grievances dating to the 2007 mass shooting at Virginia Tech and the more recent massacre of worshippers at a historic black church in Charleston, South Carolina.

When Flanagan was fired from Roanoke, Virginia, station WDBJ in 2013, he had to be escorted from the building by police "because he was not going to leave willingly or under his own free will," the station's former news director, Dan Dennison, said in an interview with a Hawaii station, Hawaii News Now (KHNL/KGMB).

Flanagan, 41, had "a long series of complaints against co-workers nearly from the beginning of employment at the TV station," said Dennison, now an official with the Hawaii Department of Land and Natural Resources. "All of these allegations were deemed to be unfounded." Though the claims were along racial lines, he said, "we did a thorough investigation and could find no evidence that anyone had racially discriminated against this man."

The victims of Wednesday's shooting — reporter Alison Parker, 24, and cameraman Adam Ward, 27 — were white; Flanagan was black.

12351720856?profile=original

Alison Parker and Adam Ward

The conflict described by Dennison in many ways echoed another, in 2000, when Flanagan was fired from a Tallahassee, Florida, television station after threatening fellow employees, a former supervisor said.

Flanagan "was a good on-air performer, a pretty good reporter and then things started getting a little strange with him," Don Shafer, the former news director of Florida's WTWC-TV, said Wednesday. He spoke in an interview broadcast by Shafer's current employer, San Diego 6 The CW.

Shafer said managers at the Florida station fired Flanagan because of his "bizarre behavior."

"He threatened to punch people out and he was kind of running fairly roughshod over other people in the newsroom," said Shafer, who did not immediately return a call from The Associated Press for comment.

12351721065?profile=original

Kimberly Moore Wilmoth, who worked with Flanagan at the Florida station, recalled him as "off-kilter" and someone who "never really made himself part of the team."

Recalling one of a number of incidents, Wilmoth said co-workers meant to tease Flanagan for a story he did on a spelling bee that made it sound as if the winner would get a case of Girl Scouts, rather than cookies sold by the group.

"The next day, somebody had a Girl Scout emblem on their desk and we made some copies of it and taped them to his computer," she said. "If he had only laughed, we would have all been friends forever. But he didn't laugh ... he got mad. And that was when I realized he wasn't part of the collegiality that exists in a newsroom and he removed himself from it."

In 2000, Flanagan sued the Florida station over allegations of race discrimination, claiming that a producer called him a "monkey" in 1999 and that other black employees had been called the same by other workers. Flanagan also claimed that an unnamed white supervisor at the station said black people were lazy because they did not take advantage of scholarships to attend college. The parties later reached a settlement.

Flanagan grew up in Oakland, California, and graduated from San Francisco State University.

Virgil Barker, who grew up on the same tree-lined street in the Oakland hills, recalled his childhood friend Wednesday with fondness.

"I know you want to hear that he was a monster, but he was the complete opposite," Barker said. "He was very, very loving."

Barker said he had lost touch with Flanagan over the years but remained close to Flanagan's sister, who still lives in the family's home across the street.

No one answered the door Wednesday morning at the white stucco house, with fruit trees in the front yard overlooking San Francisco Bay.

Before and after his work in Florida, Flanagan worked at a series of stations around the country.

They included a stint in 1996 at KPIX, a San Francisco station, where a spokeswoman confirmed he worked as a freelance production assistant. From 1997 to 1999, he worked as a general assignment reporter at WTOC-TV in Savannah, Georgia. From 2002 to 2004, he worked as a reporter and anchor at WNCT-TV in Greenville, North Carolina, general manager and vice president John Lewis said.

A former co-worker at the California station, Barbara Rodgers, recalled him only vaguely as "a young, eager kid out of journalism school," who "just wanted to be on TV and to do a good job."

Working in Georgia years ago, Flanagan was "tall, good looking and seemed to be really nice, personable and funny," said a former fellow reporter, Angela Williams-Gebhardt, who now lives in Ohio. The station's former news director, Michael Sullivan, said Flanagan was relatively inexperienced, but did a decent job, without any apparent problems.

But at Roanoke's WDBJ, Flanagan "got in lots of arguments with people," said LaRell Reynolds, a former production worker at the station. "I don't think anyone liked the guy."

After managers fired Flanagan, he worked as a call center representative for UnitedHealthcare in Roanoke from late 2013 to November 2014, the company said.

But in the days before the shootings, Flanagan assembled photos of himself on Twitter and Facebook, as if preparing to introduce himself to a wider audience. The postings continued after the shooting, when he tweeted that Parker had "made racist comments" and Ward had complained to human resources about him. Then, Flanagan posted video of the shooting online, showing him repeatedly firing at a screaming Parker as she tried to flee.

As word of the killings spread, friends from Oakland who knew Flanagan as a sociable kid who mixed easily in a high school with few racial tensions, struggled to connect those memories with the shooter shown on video.

"I don't remember anything bad about him," said Sasha Dansky, a high school classmate, recalling Flanagan's frequent appearance at parties. "He was just a nice, affable guy."

___

Geller wrote from New York. Associated Press writers Gary Fineout in Tallahassee, Florida; Garance Burke in Oakland, California; Holbrook Mohr in Jackson, Mississippi; Russ Bynum in Savannah, Georgia; Kristin Bender in San Francisco and John Raby in Roanoke, Virginia, contributed to this story.

Follow Me

Join Our Facebook Fan Page Check Us Out On MySpace Follow Us On Twitter Follow Me On Youtube Like MY Facebook Page Connect With Me On Linkedin Connect With Me On Google+ Join My Website Follow Us On Twitter
Read more…

12351729066?profile=original

Video After The Jump

DOWNTOWN FEAT MELLE MEL, KOOL MOE DEE, GRANDMASTER CAZ & ERIC NALLY

http://www.downtownthesong.com
http://open.spotify.com/album/3MVL172...
https://itunes.apple.com/us/album/dow...

Directed By 
Ryan Lewis
Jason Koenig
Ben Haggerty 

Written By 
Ben Haggerty
Jason Koenig 
Ryan Lewis

Executive Producer M&RL Films 
Lead Producer - Honna Kimmerer 
Producer - Jason Koenig

Co-Produced By VISION 
Producer - Geoff McLean
Line Producer - Michele Lawrence
Production Coordinator - Kristi Heicke

Co-Produced By NxNW 
Line Producer - Randy Kron
Production Coordinator - Diane Eve

Cinematography 
Christopher Probst
Jason Koenig

Art Director 
John Lavin

Assistant Art Director 
Kaleo Quenzer

1st Assistant Director
John Nasraway

2nd Assistant Director
Isaac Mejia

Edited By 
Ryan Lewis / Jason Keonig / Ben Haggerty 

Assistant Editor 
Phil Harvey 

Movi/Drone Operator
Ryan Haug

1st Assistant Camera 
Ryan Brown

2nd Assistant Camera
Chris Duerkopp

Camera Operators 
Mitchell Overton 
John Peterson

Location Manager 
Alan Lee Baker

Casting 
Jackie Ganger
Jenny Koenig
Nike Imoru
Kenny Parks

Choreography
Massive Monkees:
Brysen Angeles
Jerome Aparis
Terrance Guillermo
Hocine Jouini

Stylists 
Therese Lefebvre 
Paul White 

Specialized Costume Designer
Logan Neitzel

Wardrobe
Lucky Vintage / Caryn Cook 
Lisa Caryl-Vukas

12351729281?profile=original

Follow Me

Join Our Facebook Fan Page Check Us Out On MySpace Follow Us On Twitter Follow Me On Youtube Like MY Facebook Page Connect With Me On Linkedin Connect With Me On Google+ Join My Website Follow Us On Twitter
Read more…

12351718466?profile=original

Video After The Jump

Minya Oh—or Miss Info, as she is know professionally—is a legend in the hip-hop journalism game, having famously written Nas' Illmatic 5-Mic review for The Source when she was just an intern before moving on to big-time gigs at MTV and Hot 97 and launching her own must-read music blog, MissInfo.tv. Recently she's added another line to her résumé: mother. In this episode of The FADER and Sonos' At Home With series, Miss Info welcomes viewers into her Brooklyn home and introduces her adorable 2-month old son, Max. "One of the jokes while I was pregnant was, whenever I would see a hip-hop artist they would talk about how I had to make sure the baby would know their entire catalogue," she says. "I'm working through that slowly."

12351718265?profile=original

Follow Me

Join Our Facebook Fan Page Check Us Out On MySpace Follow Us On Twitter Follow Me On Youtube Like MY Facebook Page Connect With Me On Linkedin Connect With Me On Google+ Join My Website Follow Us On Twitter
Read more…

12351714082?profile=original

With his new album titled Royalty on the way, Chris Brown calls on French Montana and super producer Remo The Hitmaker for his new single, "Gangsta Way."

Follow Chris Brown

https://twitter.com/chrisbrown

https://instagram.com/chrisbrownofficial/

Follow French Montana

https://twitter.com/FrencHMonTanA

https://instagram.com/frenchmontana/

Follow Remo The Hitmaker and New Wave Music Inc.
https://instagram.com/remothehitmaker/
https://twitter.com/remothehitmaker
https://twitter.com/newwavemusicinc
https://instagram.com/newwavemusicinc/

12351714293?profile=original

Follow Me

Join Our Facebook Fan Page Check Us Out On MySpace Follow Us On Twitter Follow Me On Youtube Like MY Facebook Page Connect With Me On Linkedin Connect With Me On Google+ Join My Website Follow Us On Twitter
Read more…

12351707878?profile=original

Video After The Jump

Vine sensation Naphil aka Tyrone is always on the prowl looking to snatch someone's wife so he can smash them "long dick style." He reveals to DJ Smallz how he picks his targets.

12351708876?profile=original

Follow Me

Join Our Facebook Fan Page Check Us Out On MySpace Follow Us On Twitter Follow Me On Youtube Like MY Facebook Page Connect With Me On Linkedin Connect With Me On Google+ Join My Website Follow Us On Twitter
Read more…

12351726086?profile=original

Chad Hurley made a huge mistake when he secretly filmed Kanye West and Kim Kardashian's engagement ceremony, then uploaded it to his video sharing service, MixBit.

The incident took place AT&T Park in San Francisco back in 2013. Hurley even signed a confidentiality agreement prior.

Kim and Kanye sued him and now he's agreed to pay them a $440,000 settlement, according to TMZ.

12351553655?profile=original

Hurley probably won't miss the money. He and his partner Steve Chen sold YouTube to Google for $1.65 billion in 2006.

Follow Me

Join Our Facebook Fan Page Check Us Out On MySpace Follow Us On Twitter Follow Me On Youtube Like MY Facebook Page Connect With Me On Linkedin Connect With Me On Google+ Join My Website Follow Us On Twitter
Read more…

12351706873?profile=original

Video After The Jump

The war of words between Floyd Mayweather Jr. and Ronda Rousey continues.

During a recent interview with TMZ, Rousey took shots at the boxing champ and said she makes more money per second than he does.


"I saw that Floyd thing when he said, 'When you make $300 million a night you can give me a call.' And I actually did the math. Given the numbers of my last fight I'm actually the highest paid UFC fighter and I'm a woman," Rousey said. "And I think I actually make 2-3 times more money than he does per second. So, when he learns to read and write he can text me."

12351707481?profile=original

Floyd saw the interview and issued a statement to TMZ via a member of The Money Team.

"Big bank take little bank. Let's play and see how much money you got," read the statement. "Last time I checked I was #1 on Forbes. She will never be at my status. Keep trying to get publicity."

Welp...

Follow Me

Join Our Facebook Fan Page Check Us Out On MySpace Follow Us On Twitter Follow Me On Youtube Like MY Facebook Page Connect With Me On Linkedin Connect With Me On Google+ Join My Website Follow Us On Twitter
Read more…
} Facebook Login JavaScript Example