Archive for the ‘T.O.N.Y.’ Category

‘The Wire’ Wrap Party > ‘The Wire’

Friday, January 25th, 2008

the wire

Woe is me. I’m just a lowly writer living hand to mouth. Nobody even loves me. Wahh, wahh, wahh. Okay, I need to admit that as far as bloggers go, your boy has it pretty damn good. I have a link to one of the most dynamic ad agencies in the city. They haven’t cut me a check yet, but they reach out to me and make sure that I get to live the lifestyle on their coattails.

Monday through Wednesday in New York City is the entertainment industry’s virtual weekend. These folks are typically grinding while everyone else celebrates Fridays and Saturdays. Consider Tuesday night to be the film industry’s Saturday. All throughout the city people are assembled to imbibe upon the libations that will be ridiculously marked up starting on Thursday night to offset all the free shit that was doled out earlier in the week.

dp

As usual, your favorite blogger is a two-fisted beast. On this night I pounded Dewars and coke (not Doc Gooden’s white pudding) like it said something bad about my momma. the celebration was for the fifth and final season of HBO’s triumphant ghetto gospel ‘The Wire’. I don’t even watch this shit anymore since I caught feelings of fakery during season two. In this case, just like in ‘Flavor Of Love’, I am in the minority of the minorities. Still and all, GOD bless HBO and ‘The Wire’ because without these two forces coming together we might never get to witness the humanity of the street corner narcotics dealers.

FADER mag hosted the popoff. Remember when FADER mag was the Hipster-Hop darling of downtown NYC? They had that slim dude with the dreads calling the shots along with this mean-ass Mexican shorty Mariael, or some shit was her name. Those were the days. Eminem was still a slim Slim Shady. What the fuck happened to the FADER since then? That flash in the pan cool syndrome jumped up and bit them in the ass. The FADER still gets it in more thorough than most of the other rags including XXL, but they aren’t holding it down with the grey-green eyed chicks from Oakland anymore like they used to.

jen

The party was still a solid affair with no drama at the door and almost no wait at the bars. Live go-go music kept the flow nice and smooth. Shouts go out to all my Morgan State University readers. Holler at your boy when you come back up top for the summer break. I like go-go music more than I like reggae which is still a tepid endorsement. It was regional offshoot of funk music from the B-More/D.C. area that had its greatest moment with E.U. and the ‘Butt’. I ain’t mad at you Baltimore and even though I nearly got merc’ked in that town I still can’t rate it higher than Camden, Philly or even D.C. in hardbody status.

The party… Right, so… I talked about the open bar right? Whenever you are at an industry party with O.B. status always drink the most expensive shit they have available. I remember getting wild-eyed one Wednesday night at some shindig in the old Nell’s after drinking way too much Piper-Heisdeck champagne and Belvedere with tonic. My dumb ass passed out on the subway overnight and I was awoken by the 8am morning rushhour commuters when the train pulled into the terminal. I calmly sat up, put back on my sports jacket and went to work.

Don’t be me party people. Be better than me. Get drunk and then make it back to your home.

cool mans

MIGHTY HEALTHY SATURDAY NITE…

Thursday, January 24th, 2008

40

This Saturday come down to NOVO and give a toast to my favorite lightskinted brother 40 DIESEL. No cover for you, just say you are here for 40 D’s born day party.

NOVO – 290 Hudson Street (Between Dominic & Spring, two blocks north of Canal).

I will be there by 11pm so come thru anytime afterwards.

POLITRICKS 2008: Smoking Grass Roots…

Wednesday, January 23rd, 2008

obaama

*Gives credit to the OBAAMA campaign for busting out the green marker.*

HARPER’s WEEKLY REVIEW…

Wednesday, January 23rd, 2008

harpers cover 1887

Editor’s note: Harper’s Magazine might be one of the most important periodicals published in these here United States. Don’t be fooled when some outlets regard it as liberal muckraking trash. The only thing that I find liberating is the honesty that they bring to the pillars or privilege. It’s definitely not good reading material for people who can’t handle the truth. I thought that a weekly feature on this site should include the magazine that I get some of my news from. Let me know what you think…

President George W. Bush called for $145 billion in tax cuts, describing the measures as a “shot in the arm” for the U.S. economy, which caused stock values to plunge in Australia, Tokyo, Hong Kong, China, and across Europe. “There’s something approaching panic in the market,” said an analyst with Bank of America. “The short-term risks,” explained Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson, “are to the downside.” Researchers found that foreigners invested $414 billion in American companies in 2007, up 90 percent from 2006. “This is a vote of confidence in the American economy,” said Deputy Treasury Secretary Robert M. Kimmitt. “Do we want the communists to own the banks, or the terrorists?” asked financial commentator Jim Cramer. “I’ll take any of it.” John McCain won the South Carolina Republican primary, Mitt Romney and Hillary Clinton won in the Nevada caucuses, and the Supreme Court decided that Texas could exclude Dennis Kucinich’s name from the ballots in the Democratic primary because Kucinich refused to take a party loyalty oath. British researchers determined that children universally dislike clowns, finding them “unknowable,” and a German merchant ship set sail for Venezuela partially powered by a fuel-saving kite.

It emerged that the ongoing riots that followed the Kenyan presidential election, in which at least 650 people were killed, had been partially planned; leaflets calling for ethnic killings had been distributed prior to the election, and village elders had encouraged young Kalenjin men (allied with the defeated Raila Odinga) to hunt Kikuyus (allied with victor Mwai Kibaki) with bows and arrows. “We attack people, we burn their homes, and then we take their animals,” said a Kalenjin man. “The community raised the money for the gasoline.” A babysitter in Honolulu threw a toddler off an overpass into busy traffic, and parents in Australia were suing an embryo-testing clinic for allowing their child to carry a cancer gene. Researchers in San Diego announced that they had cloned human embryos from skin cells, the FDA determined that cloned animals are acceptable food, and Hungarian scientists created a computer program that, based on its analysis of 6,000 barks from 14 Hungarian sheepdogs, can exceed human capability in accurately classifying sheepdog barks. The thoughts of a monkey in North Carolina controlled the actions of a robot in Japan.

The lone power plant operating in Hamas-controlled Gaza was shut down for lack of fuel. “At least 800,000 people,” said official Derar Abu Sissi, “are now in darkness.” Chess master Bobby Fischer died in Iceland, a man in Las Vegas was arrested for killing his girlfriend by driving a six-inch stake into her head, and a Winchester, Virginia, man was arrested for burning an 11-year-old girl with a Hot Pocket sandwich. A New York City construction worker was suing a hospital for treating his head injury by knocking him out and giving him an unwanted rectal exam, and the ACLU filed a brief in support of Senator Larry Craig (R., Idaho), arguing that people who engage in sex acts in public bathrooms have an expectation of privacy. Scientists funded by mobile-phone companies found that if the phones are used before bedtime their radiation can reduce sleep and cause headaches and confusion; the Mobile Manufacturers Forum insisted that the “results were inconclusive.” It was observed that Tahina spectabilis, a giant palm tree of Madagascar, commits suicide when it flowers at the end of its century-long lifespan, and New York researchers using carbon nanotubes created the darkest material known to history. Scientists in Chicago found that lonely people are more likely to assign human qualities to their pets and to believe in God, and Louis de Cazenave of the Fifth Senegalese Rifles, one of the last two French veterans of World War I, died at age 110. “War,” he explained in 2005, “is something absurd, useless, that nothing can justify.”

— Paul Ford

There But For The Grace Of GOD…

Sunday, January 20th, 2008

homeless

If you want to hang out with me and you live in New York City, but you need some advance notice, and you don’t have any money, then you should volunteer your time for the HOPE 2008 Street Survey.

Volunteers canvas portions of the city to count the homeless folks on the street. It’s fun and informative. You learn about the nooks and crannies of the city. I invariably run into someone I haven’t seen in awhile. You do some good for once in your miserable, selfish life.

I have lived the homeless lifestyle(by choice) before and I can tell you that there is nothing more hardbody than spending a winter night in New York City asleep on the sidewalk. There are so many reasons that these folks are in their predicaments. All of them don’t exist here by choice.

The following morning you can go back to stepping over the homeless or closing your eyes to panhandlers but your conscience will be set free. No, you are not really a good person and you are still a liar, but for one night you were bigger and better than all of that.

Volunteer.

HOPE 2008 Street Survey

F.Y.I. – I will be working as a team leader so if you do volunteer let me know so I can make sure we are on the same squad.