Archive for the ‘Jig Lit Review’ Category

Gone in 60 Seconds…

Friday, May 25th, 2012

audi5000

Of the many fucked up things I can say that I have done to ruin the quality of life for New Yorkers, the most costly indiscretions were borrowing people’s cars. The only good that ultimately came from the this was that S.W. coined the term ‘whip’. He was making fun of my parking and how I turned the wheel to get into a spot. The term is now part of the hip-hop lexicon as are many of the jig words that we use on this site. The name for a borrowed vehicle was an ‘S’. We called it that because we were cornballs and it gave us the chance to say, “Look at this ‘S’ car go.”

Living in the shadow of Shea Stadium made it easy for T.C., S.W. and me to have access to all kinds of vehicles during the summer. Actually, T.C. taught S.W. and I how to drive and he was younger than we were. I don’t even remember how we learned how to steal cars. That is another one of the fucked up things about the ghetto, bullshit knowledge gets filtered down as if by osmosis. Nobody in the ghetto can spell osmosis, but everyone knows how to steal a car. First off, you needed a couple of flathead screw drivers. One thin and small(approx. 3/16″ wide) and one that was longer and a little bit wider. Next, you had to have a dent puller, or pulley, as we used to call it.

pulley

The pulley is a sliding cast iron weight on a steel rod with a gripper handle on one end and a steel screw on the other. We would buy our tools at the Korean owned car parts store. They had to know that a sixteen year old doesn’t repair cars, but what do they care since they are prah’lee illegal aliens anyhoo. We kept our tools in a backpack. Everybody had a set and we always traveled with at least two sets. In case someone broke a screw inside an ignition, we wouldn’t be shit out of luck. Your screwdrivers got bent up too because some people would have the reinforced guards around their keyholes.

I remember the tension as you approached a possible ‘S’. You had to be precise and hell’a fast. You had to have this motion of going into the door lock and then lifting upwards. Once the door popped you would open the door and jump in the passenger seat. Out comes the pulley that you slam into the ignition cylinder. Slide the weight down to get the screw to puncture the cylinder. One, two, three, four turns of the handle should have that screw into the cylinder at least an inch deep. Slide the weight back to the handle and out pops the cylinder. Stick the large screwdriver into the ignition and turn clockwise as if you had the key.

If the car didn’t have a hidden kill switch you would be in business. You had to make all of this happen in under a minute. That is usually the time it takes for a car alarm to be activated. Car alarms weren’t as ubiquitous in 1986 as they are today. When one of them went off back then people would actually come to see what was going on. Being sharp and fast was a prerequisite and my crew, the Whypticons, had some other rules that we played by. The number one rule was not to take any whip that you thought belonged to a brother. There was all kinds of senseless shit that Black folks and Mexicans liked to do to their cars, but these pantomimes helped us recognize whose car was whose. If anyone had the personalized silver strip running along the bottom of their doors it was a Black. The gates on the back window of a Maxima were also telltale signs. As an aside, Asian folks hardly ever washed their cars back then. Props to the Filipino kids that go to the car wash. They started this whole Asian dude washing their car trend. Rule number two was not to take any car with a baby seat. We seriously had respect like that for people with munchkins. Robbin’ hoods for real. The next rules came in terms of vehicle operation. Always wear your seat belts and always use your signals. We actually convinced ourselves that our conscientious driving habits are what kept us from being caught.

gucci jacket

We treated the cars like they were our own, cleaning the insides and getting them washed regularly. Our depraved joke was that we had ‘All City’ insurance. When we smashed up a whip we would just get another. How fly do you think it was to go to the club in the city with a car? Trust me that we were among the small number of teenagers that drove themselves up to Union Square a/k/a the Underground. We would drive up to the Red Parrot and just hang out in the front of the club on West 57th Street. We couldn’t get in the club because we were too young, but S.W. had smashed a couple of chicks that he picked up on the blowout one night so that brought us back from time to time. We could get into Paradise Garage and 10-18 and those spots were hot to death with freaks and crackfiends.

The joyriding was fun as shit, but the truth is that if it doesn’t make you any dollars then it doesn’t make any sense. The junkyards that adjoin Shea Stadium are part of an area called the Iron Triangle. They sell stolen cars and parts in the Triangle during the day. Drugs and prostitution rule the area at night. We brought several cars into the Triangle and as our luck would have it we didn’t go there for a few weeks and then the Feds came through and raided the Triangle. T.C. brought the newspaper to my crib with the article. His dad gave it to him. T.C.’s dad was cool as all hell and just like all of our fathers he had a sensibility that comes from knowing what exists on the streets and how to avoid it. That ended our not so lucrative ‘auto-trading’ business model, but it didn’t stop us from whipping it.

Why did some poor fuck leave the pasenger window rolled down on a brand new golden bronze Ac’ Legend?!? T.C. caught it by the pedestrian bridge that leads to the stadium. What a dumb fuck this owner was. He parked his car in Corona and decided to walk the 5 minutes to the stadium to avoid the parking fees on his brand new sedan. We didn’t have to damage the door lock or anything. Up to this point this was the best car that we had ever had. It was completely leathered out. There were all kinds of ridiculous electronic motorized features in this car. I can’t begin to tell you how pimp we were in this car. We drove this car all around the tri-state area for almost a month. S.W. had some chicks up in Mount Vernon and I had a little shorty on Long Island near Jones Beach. You want to talk about out of control swagger?!? I am still surprised that I don’t have any children from that summer.

guess jeans

Everything wasn’t all gravy forever inside those ‘S’ cars and in 1989, T.C., S.W. and I were arrested in the Bronx. If you are lucky you will get to see my mugshot hairstyle modeling photo from back then.

After that arrest I wouldn’t ride dirty any longer, but I have got a ton of adventures to kick to you from 1986 to 1989. Holler…

PURPLE REIGN…

Thursday, May 24th, 2012

megatron

WHAT’s THE FLAVOR!?! DECEP!

HAIL MEG!

Last night was the premiere of the movie ‘Deceptz’ which was loosely based on the legendary status of my brothers MEGATRON, RUMBLE and CYCLONUS. I say loosely based because the movie wasn’t written well enough to describe the passion that galvanized our collective together while we fought against the entire city. Because the story ended up being weak, ‘Deceptz’ will go straight to DVD if it even gets pressed up at the factory at all.

Last night was a gorgeous night though because I saw some brothers I have not seen in fifteen to twenty years. BOMBER, P-WOP, BLUR, BOSTON, HOOK OFF, DEVASTATOR, MENASAUR… It was a family reunion right on 59th Street, around the block from Art & Desgn H.S. Twenty years later we STILL shut that block down. The fools came out in force and you know what happens at a family reunion when one of the brothers says some sideways slick shit?

I say brothers a lot when I refer to the youth collective I joined during my teenage years, but sisters were an integral component of our collective. Let it be known that these sisters are prah’lee some of the most hardbody chicks evar. Still to this day. GOD created man first and then shit got better with woman. I had to laugh to myself that some of us are grandparents now, and still as loud and death-defying as when we were kids ourselves. Through it all I remain the Black Peter Pan. Always for the kids. No Robert Sylvester Kelly to that last sentence.

fools

The fools in front of Brooklyn Tech.

stone

STONE is a grandfather and a godfather in this shit.

fools

This looks like a picnic day at Rockaway Beach.

fools

fools

Still foolish even though some of us are a little bit fatter. Okay, in my case a LOT fatter.

fools

fools

Big CY and ROXY

fools

SPANKY and ROXY. Truth be told is that I had the biggest crush on SPANKY. Well, everyone did. You didn’t dare fuck around with SPANKY though. If she caught your ass cheating she would shank you, and that’s real talk.

fools

fools

HEADSTRONG still looks the same.

fools

Shout out to VITAL for bringing that love of family, and respect of the foundation to the younger generation, and for having everybody’s phone numbers.

Being with all of the fools last night reminded me of what the essence of DeCep was from the beginning. We are NOT a gang. We are family. You don’t become a family through violence, but through love and sharing. Yes, some people will get knocked the fuck out because they cross the family. GOD bless those foolish mortals. Let me tell you some stories about my brothers and the city we lived in. You decide if you still want to label us a gang, or if you can recognize that we were simply trying to find our place in a world without love or respect for us.

The transformation that I’ve made from two decades ago is complete and I still have love for my brothers and their struggles in life. I just think it’s time that you heard the true story of growing up poor in a city overrun with drugs, corruption and greed. Save your judgment until you have heard the truth.

By the way, PARIS HILTON was at the premiere too. Ha ha. Crazy night.

paris

Respect The Architects…

Tuesday, May 15th, 2012

Rest In Peace Iz The Wiz

The early 1970s saw the growth of graffiti in a way that only its pioneers can explain. Classic Hits, the most visual book documenting this time period of graffiti art, tells the story from the view of originators Taki 183, Blade, Iz the Wiz, Alan Fleisher, and more.

Classic Hits Trailer from Dokument Press on Vimeo.

R.I.P. Ms.FatBooty…

Monday, May 7th, 2012

Damnnnn, Ms.FatBooty went and got the ‘sugar’!

Black Women and Fat

RTW = Rolling Thunder Writers

Monday, April 23rd, 2012

RTW was one of my favorite writing crews from the 1980s. These dudes crushed the IND lines I rode every morning to Brooklyn Tech HS. I always wondered how these dudes had the stamina to cover entire trains (8 cars) with top to bottom throwies.

I’m thankful that the homey T-Bag sent me this link to a gallery exhibit featuring RTW. I think it’d be dope to meet these cats who ruled the tunnels underground and were the superheroes of my youth

PRESENTS GALLERY
64 Washington Ave. Brooklyn, NY 11205

Tales Of RTW

05.04.2012 – 06.01.2012

The first gallery show ever as a group, The Rolling Thunder Writers of NYC Subway Graffiti fame. One of the most prolific, heavy-hitting graffiti crews in the history of graffiti art. RTW covered the period from 1976 well into the end of subway graffiti in the 1990’s. Known from their very psychedelic origins… from central parks band shell to the one tunnel…. Where hippie meets Hip-Hop, the funk gets stronger! And beyonder!

Opening 6-8pm May 4, 2012