Archive for the ‘T.O.N.Y.’ Category

ACROSS EAST 110th STREET…

Sunday, June 11th, 2006

what does it smell like ladies?

NYC is popping so hard this weekend. I found out that I missed a block party bar-b-cue in midtown. I will be hitting that joint up today after I kick my boy LM’s azz in handball (no brokeback). You amatuers can waste your time scrambling for underage poon at the Puerto Rican Day parade, because I already hit up the best part of Puerto Rican Weekend. The festival on East 110th Street is where it goes downnnnnnn.

what does it smell like ladies?

For like twenty five years civic groups in East Harlem shut down the strip on 110th Street and all of Third Avenue from 103rd Street up to 123rd Street. They give away Puerto Rican flags, sell a lot of fried pork and play a lot of salsa music. Most of all, young Puerto Rican Mexicans leave their children in the Bronx and they walk the strip.

what does it smell like ladies?

You know that these chicas have kids because they are at least 18yrs. old, but occasionally you can come across a childless shorty. So what if she’s only 15, she’ll be sixteen by the time she steals your SideKick.

what does it smell like ladies?

If your’e like me then you don’t mind a piece of meat with some more sazon on it and they are here too. Although ZILLZ is prah’lee the only cat that is down to run up in a grandma just because she has on some spandex. This is why I love the Mexxo diaspora. All the shapes and sizes that you can imagine, plus they are wicked good cooks, plus they are so down for giving you a blumpkin.

I like to live in America!

what does it smell like ladies?

what does it smell like ladies?

what does it smell like ladies?

AFRO-PUNK PROM PARTY TONITE!

Saturday, June 10th, 2006

afropunkprom

JAMES SPOONER’s 30th birthday!

TAMAR KALI performing!

FREE DRINKS FOR EVERYBODY WHO WEARS A PROM OUTFIT!

ONLY $5 COVER

LUCKY CAT
245 Grand Street
Hipster Heaven, NY (Williamsburg Brooklyn)

www.afropunk.com

fresh prince

MEXICANS GONE WILD!!!

Friday, June 9th, 2006

sidekick

I suggest you people hold on to your SideKicks if you are visiting New York City this weekend.  For two days every year in June the city is turned over to roving mobs of Puerto Rican Mexicans as they parade and celebrate their home island’s existance as the last remaining American colony.

This means that come rain or shine there will be modified Honda Civics with flags draped on their hoods and less clothing material per square inch of ass area than the Bahamas.  Since I love crowds and since I have a predilection for groping anonymous strangers I should have some decent photos to upload by the end of the weekend.

DON’T EFF WITH THE INTERNETS!!!

Thursday, June 8th, 2006

And don’t monkey around with the telephones either!

A shout goes out to internets veteran COMBAT JACK, who pointed me to this post via a stray shot from NAH’RIGHT dot com, DefJam doorman SHAWN ‘JiggerMan’ CARTER’s favorite place on the web.  This news story takes place right here in NYC and it shows you how powerfully synergistic the internets and the telecom companies can be when there is a young white women in distress.
The story goes like this…

Girl loses Sidekick phone device in yellow taxi. Calls phone to retrieve it ready to offer reward, but to no avail, she receives no response. Purchases new Sidekick device and restores network connection only to find that lost Sidekick is in use. The S.I.M. cards to the device(s) seem to hold all the info on a dedicated server which the device(s) owner can access for information. The person in possession of the ‘lost’ device has uploaded pictures and accessed the internets repeatedly. The owner of said device(s) contacts the doppleganger user and the hilarity ensues. There has even been a website created that tells the story in every detail.

Stealing a cell phone is so 1989. What monkey doesn’t understand this? Apparently the young monkey pictured at that website. For even more six degrees of separation trivia I realize that she lives across the street from the schoolyard park and baseball field that I grew up in as a child and where I coached for the Corona Little League with my dad.

So I reach out to my troops in my old ‘hood to see if anyone knows who this dumb chica might be because she has put herself in a world of white trouble. Stealing a Coloreds phone is one thing that you can do without too much of a problem, but stealing the electronics from a young blonde Manhattanite is like whistling at a white girl in Biloxi. Just ask GEORGE CLOONEY.

I am awaiting the final act of this melodrama to conclude with shorty doing a perp walk on prime time news. The MSM will tout it as an example of how the telecom companies and the internets are working together to protect us. Hopefully that will quiet all the noise about how Verizon, Cingular and the rest of those BellTel bastards sold our phone call and internet use records away to the highest bidders.

Good Night, Sweet Prince

Wednesday, June 7th, 2006

Editor’s note: One year ago on this day my dad passed away. The letter below was sent to my friends because I felt guilty about my relationship with my dad. He put in a lot of work to get me to this point in my life and I wish that I could have been there for him at the moment that he needed me the most. Although I had repaired the strain that my teenage years put on that bond we had it can never make up for lost time. If you have a family member or a friend that you truly love please take a minute today to tell them that you love them. Do that for my dad and me.

I have some sad news to relay to you all. My dad died yesterday morning. He passed away due to a massive coronary failure and this was a shock to the immediate family since he has had no history of heart problems. I am more likely to have a heart attack than he was. He had been in the hospital recently for a pancreas condition but there was no inkling that he was having any heart issues since his EKG and blood pressure tests both appeared normal. On tuesday morning as he prepared himself for work he felt chest pains. He continued with his prep until about an hour or so later when he realized that he needed some help. He phoned the ambulance service and he was rushed to the hospital. Inside the hospital as he has undergoing treatment his heart stopped and the doctors could not revive him.

I am sad for his passing, but what compounds this feeling of sadness is the fact that I have never been one to accept the responsibility that is usually reserved for an eldest child. I did not have any concerns for anyone other than myself and I lived my life without the cognizance that there was someone else that was watching me and heavily influenced by my actions. I spent time in and out of jail and other troubles and everytime that I needed someone to bail me out he was always there. He certainly didn’t have to be because he wasn’t my father, and one day I told him so to his face.

CLARENCE PENN married my mom after meeting her at NYU night school. She had divorced my father, DALLAS ELLIS, two years after I was born because of his habitual drug use and his physical abuse. Mr.PENN knew that my mom had me and he accepted the responsibility of being my father. He worked hard to put me through prep schools and provide the experiences for me that would help me excel in life. In my teenage years I began to resent him because I felt that he was too demanding of me. I left my parents house at 17 after being thrown out of Brooklyn Technical High School and quitting the work-study program at City-As-School.

I spent the next ten years in a virtual detente with my father. Not speaking more than a hello and not offering more than a good bye. Even though we used my mother as a conduit for communication, we never shared a conversation. When I needed money for college because I refused to take any loans, he would send me a check for tuition through my mother. This situation may have have continued up to his death but when I was 27 he gave me a phone call.

My dad asked me to help him out with my kid brother who was falling prey to the same demons that attack most of us middle-class Black kids. The peer pressure to affirm your Blackness through criminality. Its sometimes as if our skin color doesn’t satisfy that confirmation, so then we must go into the world and perpetuate a stereotype. That my dad turned to me at this moment was a profound revelation. He could have called on so many other people that were close to him, but that he came to me for help was so humbling to me. Ten years prior I had broken his heart to the core, but here he was before me on bended knee asking for my assistance.

All I can say to you is that from that point forward I learned more about brotherhood, fatherhood and manhood than in the 28 years prior. One thing for certain is that getting someone pregnant is the most miniscule part of fatherhood. There is a value system and a dedication to principles and community. Then there is an unconditional love for family and friends. Unconditional love requires the courage and heart of a lion. This is probably why I took it for granted that Mr.PENN’s heart could last forever. I owe my father now more than I can ever repay him and that is the saddest part of his passing.

I thank you all for allowing me this moment to cry on your shoulders and for lending my family your prayers and your support.

poops n pops