Archive for the ‘T.O.N.Y.’ Category

Editor’s BONUS MATERIAL!!
DIP SET DEEP THOUGHTS by CAM’RON GILES

Monday, October 24th, 2005

livin' by the gun

This past weekend we almost lost another crapper to lyrical foretelling. This loss would have meant that JAY-Z has one less crapper to declare war against, but we at the website feel the absence would have had much greater impact. We would have lost a great thinker. In the abstract sense and the literal. How many crappers can use the word ‘hood’ to end a rhyme couplet four consecutive times and each time the meaning for ‘hood’ is different? Hood in the sense of neighborhood. Hood as in occupation. Hood as in apparel and hood as in that layer of skin that covers a women’s clitoris.

This is the genius of CAM’RON GILES, ne, DIP SET. We almost lost a young Black genius to the violence that often accompanies Howard University’s Homecoming celebration. CAM’RON knew that people were targeting him. He even wrote a verse to express his feeleings about the situation…

You wanna kill me come and do it I don’t give a fuck,
Diplomats live it up, clak, clak, give it up.

This nigga with the ice mug stuntin? [He won’t bust nothing]
Yo, talkin bout he gon’ touch somethin [He won’t bust nothing]
Yo sayin that he too much frontin [He won’t bust nothing]
Yo, he just a fake thug bluffin [He won’t bust nothing]
And his man with the ice grill frontin [He won’t kill nothing]
Yo, he outside with the mil frontin [He won’t kill nothing]
Talkin bout he some real somethin [He won’t kill nothing]
Sayin yo I’ma kill something! [He won’t kill nothing]
Not a collecter of Picasso, but everybody in my cipher got dough
Neglect a rock row, go to Harve and not dough ho,
but Hector, Comancho, mi amigo rockin in the side bitch,
Maxin out to Marvin?, can’t know it
That’s why I keep the BLAM BLAM loaded.

Club grand open, next week we grand close it, come and kill me

No CAM’RON not this time. You still have more rhymes to write. Harlem.

HOLLA BACK!

Monday, October 3rd, 2005

what's the flavor?

If you know any of the people in this photo e-mail the_dallas@dallaspenn.com

‘Tard Comments Welcome.

Thursday, September 29th, 2005

'Tards

DALLASPENN.COM is striving to maintain the democratic principles of freedom of speech. This means that we welcome the comments of all peoples who have gained some level of internets access. No matter what your condition or affliction, we want you to feel comfortable here.

We don’t dissuade users from posting remarks that are patently offensive because we believe speech must never be regulated or restricted. But it is our secret hope that all the mental retards will go to this site to leave their useless comments.

R.I.P. THUNDERCRACKER

Saturday, September 17th, 2005

WHAT's THE FLAVOR!!??!!??

This day, fourteen years ago, I lost the best friend anyone ever had. He was like my younger brother; not young enough that I had to babysit him, but just young enough to listen to whatever I said. Well, not everything. But if it had some adventure to it, he was down for the crown.

We lived across the street from one another, in a part of the neighborhood where the kids were from two-parent homes that their parents actually owned. We were also medium lightskin and handsome. This made us and the kids from our enclave the envy of the rest of the neighborhood. We wanted to show the other kids that even though we went to schools in white neighborhoods and even though we had white friends we were still… Black!?!

T.C. and I would do simple stuff like boost juice from the bodega before we would go to the Parks Dept. public pool. When we got a little older we became writers, actually ‘taggers’, and we would ride our BMX bikes all around the city to do our graffiti in obscure places, like on the pedestrian walkway of the Tri-Boro Bridge. The funny thing was that we had to be pretty brazen when doing our ‘tagging up’ because we both had to be home before dark or risk punishment. Sure, we were afraid of the police, but our parents were way meaner than any cop we ever encountered.

As teenagers the level of our felonious misbehavings increased and we became car thiefs and part time drug dealers. Stealing cars was easy as hell, especially during the summer, because our homes were in parking range of Shea Stadium. There were some METS fans that had to suffer the double ignominy of rooting for a sucky team AND not having an automobile to drive home in after their team lost again.

When it came to selling drugs, me and T.C. knew we really weren’t from that part of the neighborhood. The older dudes that were giving us ‘work’ were doing it because they were desperate for some young bodies to stand on the corner and do ‘hand-to-hand’ for them. Once in high school, however, I was lucky enough to link up with some guys that needed more ‘work’ than a few measly redtop/yellowtop pieces and we left the block jigs to their own devices. That is why I loved T.C. like my brother. He was a straight rider, even when he knew I was getting into some crazy shit. And he always had my back.

So when I got down with a group of guys from my high school in Brooklyn who had banded together to keep the thugs from other rival high schools from always handing us our azzes, I invited T.C. to join. Nevermind that T.C. went to high school in Queens. My youth action group had grown quite large and as part of our public service mandate, we gathered after school to escort students to and from the train stations. Whenever T.C. met up with me and the fellas, we’d have the strangest luck in finding things all around the city. It was a lot of fun hanging out with the fellas, but after a while the time came for us to stop running around the subways and knocking people out for their GUCCI sweatshirts and PRINCE sneakers.

T.C. and I weren’t going to be drug dealers forever either. My parents had a video camera and I liked to make movies, and T.C. was one of those rare cats that had every rap song memorized, even the rare joints by T-LA ROCK that never were played on the radio. We were going to take the monies from all our illicit hustling and move to Los Angeles. We imagined that in our real life we were creating the script and soundtrack for the hipper, cooler, Black version of ‘Less Than Zero’.

T.C. and I never made it out to L.A. We never even got the chance to leave this damn time zone together. Sometimes I regret the fact that I have lived these past 14 years without my brother. I think about all the things that I have experienced as an adult that he would have liked to do. I still haven’t made the trip to Los Angeles, but when I get there I will be pouring out half my bottle of BELVEDERE for my brother.