Thursday, September 16, 2010
Which Alexa Look Do You Prefer: Mini or Maxi?
Alexa Chung has been playing with hemlines this New York Fashion Week, sporting some seriously short and long esnembles as she takes her front row perch. For the Mulberry party at Soho House, she chose some tailored black shorts mixed with a denim shirt and ankle boots, while at the 3.1 Phillip Lim show she settled on a pinafore-style maxi dress with white blouse, black heels and pale pink Chanel handbag. These two looks are worlds apart but both somehow sum up Alexa's cutesy style. I quite like the sailor-inspired red maxi dress but am also crushing on her frilled denim shirt. How about you?
more info:http://www.fabsugar.com.au/
Thursday, July 29, 2010
Sexy Hip Hop Charts
Hip hop music is new musical genres born at the beginning of 90′s: it is a music styles similar to rap music and based on rhythm and spoken melodies. The main music charts of all the world have many hip hop artists in the first positions. My favorite well known hip hop stars are Run DMC, Publich Enemy, Jay Z, Eminem, 50 Cent, Lil Wayne and many many others.
DAME DASH LOSES MULTI-MILLION DOLLAR MANHATTAN HOMES
Former Roc-A-Fella co-owner Damon "Dame" Dash has reportedly lost his multi-million dollar New York City duplex after it was auctioned off for over $5 million on Wednesday.Details on the purchase were revealed late Wednesday night.
The auction in state Supreme Court was ordered after Dash was sued nearly two years ago for failing to pay the $78,504 monthly tab on a $7.3 million mortgage on the two Manhattanapartments he owned. Only one of the homes, at 25 N. Moore, fetched any interest yesterday, with the winning bid going to a California-based mortgage and finance firm called Platinum Capital Partners. Edward Farrell, a lawyer representing the buyer, plunked down a check for 10 percent of the sale price in court, but refused to answer any questions about his client. (New York Post)
One of Dash's foreclosed homes did not get auctioned off.
The first condo, in the Atalanta at 25 North Moore Street in TriBeCa, saw a brief bidding war before selling to a company called Platinum Capital for $5.5 million. The minimum bid the bank would accept was $5 million. The other apartment, at the Sugar Warehouse at 79 Laight Street, also in TriBeCa, did not meet its $3 million minimum bid, so it now belongs to the bank. (New York Times)
The rap mogul reportedly maintained ownership of the property dating back six years ago.
In 2004, he bought the duplex apartment for $3.875 million and paid $1.33 million for the smaller one. In 2006, near the peak of the real estate boom, he refinanced both properties for $7.3 million. But as he was failing to make his monthly mortgage payments, Dash twice tried to sell the duplex, first in 2008 -- right after the crash -- for $7.9 million and again in 2009 for $5.75 million. A broker familiar with the market in that neighborhood said the mortgage on his units is 30 percent above the current market value. (My Fox)
Last May, Dash discussed negative press being the cause of his financial troubles being severely exaggerated.
"I started to go through a lot of bad press all of a sudden," he explains of the period following the sale of his shares in Roc-A-Fella Records and Rocawear Clothing. "Like, the recession hit everybody, but me being a businessman and motherf*ckers getting caught up in the storm, all my issues were completely public. And completely exaggerated. So the recession sh*t happens, I don't give a f*ck." (YRB Magazine)
Read More: http://www.sohh.com/
Wednesday, July 21, 2010
Youth in Action: Greening Hip Hop
Twenty-year-old aspiring rapper Tre Pound was born in San Francisco’s Hunters Point, a predominantly low-income community of color with the dubious distinction of housing the two most toxic Superfund sites in the United States, as well as power and sewage treatment plants. Asthma, cancer, and diabetes rates in that area are all disproportionately higher than in other parts of the Bay Area. “I kinda knew where I was living wasn’t environmentally safe,” says Pound, but the public school he attended provided little information about industrial pollution or climate change.
Pound says he frequently incorporates socially-aware themes into his music, but he had never made an environmentally-aware rap song until he signed up to compete in Grind for the Green’s (G4G) Eco-Rap battle. He ended up winning the competition, earning a $1000 prize and studio time, by outpacing several other contestants with his eco-friendly flow during G4G’s second annual free concert at the Yerba Buena Gardens in San Francisco.
Pound is just one voice in the growing number of youth voices engaged in community organizing for social change. Millions of young people around the world participate in social activism. According to Wiretap Magazine, there are more than 600 youth-led community organizations currently creating green jobs, removing toxic waste, combating corporate pollution, and fighting against violence in their communities.
The undeniable reality of climate change speaks to the need for greater awareness and eco-sustainability among inner-city residents and people of color. Green has become the new face of youth activism, and today’s urban eco-activists use hip-hop as their medium.
Powered entirely by solar panels, the G4G event attracted hundreds of youth, their parents, community members, hip-hop fans, and members of other environmental activism groups, like Green for All, Alliance for Climate Education, and BayLocalize.
G4G Executive Director Zakiya Harris says she is utilizing hip-hop to focus young people’s attention on environmental issues. “We have to make it culturally relevant and engaging,” she explains. According to stic.man of dead prez, who headlined the concert, the green hip-hop movement is about empowerment, information, and economics—allowing people to “stop being just consumers and victims of corporations,” while “producing and providing those alternative resources that we need.”
During the concert, Oakland rapper Mistah F.A.B. showcased his community-minded side with material like “If ‘If’ Was a Fifth”—in which he muses, “What if poverty was gone and there was no more war and hunger?” At the conclusion of his performance, he announced that he was donating his $3,500 performance fee to the upcoming Green Youth Media Center, a joint project between G4G, Art in Action, Weapons of Mass Expression, and other progressive non-profit organizations.
The first of its kind in California, the Green Youth Media Center symbolizes the hope of green hip-hop activists like G4G’s Harris and Ambessa Cantave and Art in Action’s Galen Peterson, who envision similar centers opening up all over the United States.
The center, which opened its doors in October 2009, is a green building offering vocational, arts, and new media training; music production; youth leadership and violence prevention training; and green jobs education; as well as creating green revenue streams by selling art, music, and merchandise produced by its participants.
In order to teach urban youngsters about climate change, “We literally have to change their climate… their social climate,” Cantave explains. “We’ve related [climate change] to their health. It goes back to telling the story of something they already know; where they’re from.”
The emergence of green hip-hop activism represents the latest development in the ongoing movement to mobilize young people—a line connecting Mother Jones’ 1908 march of 100,000 child laborers from rural Pennsylvanian coal mines to Washington D.C., to the Student Nonviolence Coordinating Committee’s organizing around civil rights issues in the 1960s, to the Books Not Bars’ fight against the juvenile justice system in the early 2000s. These days, young people are organizing around community-sustainable platforms combining social justice with a burgeoning environmental awareness.
“You can’t start out talking about three million parts per billion of carbon,” Cantave says. “It’s not just something about polar bears.” Inner-city kids like Pound “have an innate sense of justice,” he says, “but haven’t yet connected that to the need for environmental justice.”
Eric K. Arnold is a writer and photographer based in Oakland, California who has been documenting emerging hip-hop and youth activist movements in the Bay Area since 1994.
From: http://urbanhabitat.org/
Pound says he frequently incorporates socially-aware themes into his music, but he had never made an environmentally-aware rap song until he signed up to compete in Grind for the Green’s (G4G) Eco-Rap battle. He ended up winning the competition, earning a $1000 prize and studio time, by outpacing several other contestants with his eco-friendly flow during G4G’s second annual free concert at the Yerba Buena Gardens in San Francisco.
Pound is just one voice in the growing number of youth voices engaged in community organizing for social change. Millions of young people around the world participate in social activism. According to Wiretap Magazine, there are more than 600 youth-led community organizations currently creating green jobs, removing toxic waste, combating corporate pollution, and fighting against violence in their communities.
The undeniable reality of climate change speaks to the need for greater awareness and eco-sustainability among inner-city residents and people of color. Green has become the new face of youth activism, and today’s urban eco-activists use hip-hop as their medium.
Powered entirely by solar panels, the G4G event attracted hundreds of youth, their parents, community members, hip-hop fans, and members of other environmental activism groups, like Green for All, Alliance for Climate Education, and BayLocalize.
G4G Executive Director Zakiya Harris says she is utilizing hip-hop to focus young people’s attention on environmental issues. “We have to make it culturally relevant and engaging,” she explains. According to stic.man of dead prez, who headlined the concert, the green hip-hop movement is about empowerment, information, and economics—allowing people to “stop being just consumers and victims of corporations,” while “producing and providing those alternative resources that we need.”
During the concert, Oakland rapper Mistah F.A.B. showcased his community-minded side with material like “If ‘If’ Was a Fifth”—in which he muses, “What if poverty was gone and there was no more war and hunger?” At the conclusion of his performance, he announced that he was donating his $3,500 performance fee to the upcoming Green Youth Media Center, a joint project between G4G, Art in Action, Weapons of Mass Expression, and other progressive non-profit organizations.
The first of its kind in California, the Green Youth Media Center symbolizes the hope of green hip-hop activists like G4G’s Harris and Ambessa Cantave and Art in Action’s Galen Peterson, who envision similar centers opening up all over the United States.
The center, which opened its doors in October 2009, is a green building offering vocational, arts, and new media training; music production; youth leadership and violence prevention training; and green jobs education; as well as creating green revenue streams by selling art, music, and merchandise produced by its participants.
In order to teach urban youngsters about climate change, “We literally have to change their climate… their social climate,” Cantave explains. “We’ve related [climate change] to their health. It goes back to telling the story of something they already know; where they’re from.”
The emergence of green hip-hop activism represents the latest development in the ongoing movement to mobilize young people—a line connecting Mother Jones’ 1908 march of 100,000 child laborers from rural Pennsylvanian coal mines to Washington D.C., to the Student Nonviolence Coordinating Committee’s organizing around civil rights issues in the 1960s, to the Books Not Bars’ fight against the juvenile justice system in the early 2000s. These days, young people are organizing around community-sustainable platforms combining social justice with a burgeoning environmental awareness.“You can’t start out talking about three million parts per billion of carbon,” Cantave says. “It’s not just something about polar bears.” Inner-city kids like Pound “have an innate sense of justice,” he says, “but haven’t yet connected that to the need for environmental justice.”
Eric K. Arnold is a writer and photographer based in Oakland, California who has been documenting emerging hip-hop and youth activist movements in the Bay Area since 1994.
From: http://urbanhabitat.org/
Footwear Spotlight: JUMP
Taiwan is invading the world with its dopeness. SoJones.com is honored to bring its readers closer to the brand that has been influencing footwear trends in over 30 countries. From Europe to USA, Jump is rocked by the most important names in fashion and entertainment industry. To know more about Jump, SoJones talked to Victor Hsu, Chief Propagandist for Jump USA, Inc.
Introduce yourself and describe how your brand was started?
I’m Victor Hsu, the Chief Propagandist for Jump USA, Inc. Originally in the early 70s, we were one of the first Taiwanese trading companies for big American brands. In 1975, after having successfully developed an unprecedented measure of production for several American brands, Jump and subsequently Travel Fox were formed as one of the first Taiwanese brands to make the move from manufacturer to brand. Jump quickly became one of the most well known sneaker brands in Asia and in the 80s and 90s began it’s expansion move to the rest of Asia, Europe and Latin America. Travel Fox actually had become quite popular in the US and England for its colorful kicks. In the early 2000s, Harry Chen, the owner of Jump was hired by Steve Madden to build a men’s division. In it’s second year, it had become a 50 million dollar business. By 2007, Harry decided it was time to bring Jump to the US which was when I was hired. Utilizing my background as a merchant at Lord and Taylor and product development at Express, we completely repositioned Jump to become relevant for the American consumer, opening a store in SoHo and growing our distribution to high end retailers like Saks and Bloomingdale’s. Jump has since entered into a variety of interesting collaborations, most notably with Black Eyed Peas’ singer, Taboo.
Describe this season’s theme for your line. Include any sources of inspiration (examples: 80’s punk, muses like Amber Rose, 70’s disco bands, Run DMC, etc)
For Fall ‘10, we’ve made a return to the great outdoors. When we relaunched Jump to become Jump Deluxe, we had been one of the first brands to go aggressive with patents. We now make a return to nature, with very clean and sober materials in neutrals and gum soles with gold accents on the eyelets and lacetaps. New for the brand are our Goodyear welted boot constructions taking a bold step to diversify our product offering.
Any product placements on celebs to keep an eye out for (examples: publicity photos, magazines, movies, music videos etc)
With our store in SoHo, we are in constant contact with celebs and sometimes develop intimate relationships on collaborations as was done so with Taboo. Keep an eye out for Jay Sean, Jason Derulo and Kevin Rudolf. Tom Cruise has recently become the owner of a pair of Jump Deluxe boots.

Taboo shows off Taboo X Jump collaboration box
Greg Gunberg of "Heroes"
Jay Sean rockin' Jump Shoes
Peter Facinelli of Twilight rockin Jump shoes
What has been a surprise fashion hit for you over the last year?While the Vanquish high top, an adaptation of one of our 80s Travel Fox hits, had been traditionally our key silhouette, its low top , the Ventus have become increasingly strong for us.
What apparel trends are you really feeling this year?
I’m an accessories guy so I keep an eye out for interesting necklaces, bracelets and rings. I like wood and ethnic/spiritual things.
What fashion trend would you like to see thrown overboard?
I think I’d be a bit pretentious to answer this one – it’s all subjective and someone might want to throw me overboard for some of the things I wear!
What is/was one of your own most prized fashion pieces, past or present?
I have a navy linen shirt from Sisley with double breasted pockets and sleeves that roll up and button that I’ve worn since college and it’s become so worn that the collar curls up and the linen is so thin. I absolutely love it.
From: http://www.sojones.com/
Tuesday, July 20, 2010
Publishers scouting another dimension
That's what the publishers of Hip Hop Weekly Magazine are hoping when its first 3-D swimsuit calendar hits 30,000 retail locations nationwide Tuesday.
``Print has sort of taken a beating in the business world. We want to bring excitement back to the print genre. We want to show that with some innovation, you can succeed.'' said Dave Mays, a Hip Hop Weekly co-publisher with Ray ``Benzino'' Scott.
Hoping to capitalize on the buzz of 3-D movies and television, the three-year-old Miami-based bi-weekly hip hop pop culture news and gossip magazine is experimenting with the 3-D swimsuit calendar. It's also adding ``peek-a-boo'' cover flaps -- flashy stunts that other magazines are also starting to add.
Playboy jumped on the trend in June with its first 3-D centerfold. And Rolling Stone sold a ``peek-a-boo'' cover edition in June, where the cover peeled away to reveal a smiling rapper Jay-Z.
``We're seeing a lot of this taking place now, where we're using technology to enhance the value of print,'' said Samir Husni, a University of Mississippi professor, better known in the industry as Mr. Magazine. ``Technology made it possible for the costs to have dropped dramatically.''
Husni said magazines with extra effects tend to be heavily sponsored, making production costs affordable.
That was the case with Hip Hop Weekly's 3-D calendar as well. The 12-month ``Flawless Beauties'' calendar, sponsored by swimsuit line FB Legacy and Sobieski Vodka, comes with red and blue paper glasses, packaged with a special swimsuit edition of Hip Hop Weekly for $9.99. It will remain on stands several weeks longer than the regular issue that comes every 14 days for $3.99.
Hip Hop Weekly Design Director Wor Whosane said he taught himself to use the software that turns ordinary photos into an image that can be seen in 3-D with red and blue glasses.
PEEK-A-BOO
Tuesday's issue will also be the magazine's first peek-a-boo cover, where an extra paper flap image of a door peels away to reveal model Tahiry in a swimsuit.
The magazine will also use a peek-a-boo cover for Aug. 3 when it launches it's first issue of Skyboxx, a monthly magazine for sports lifestyle and entertainment featuring Miami Heat's newest superstar, LeBron James. Readers can peel away James' former Cavalier's jersey to reveal a Heat jersey underneath. Scott said he plans to have peek-a-boo covers for most, if not all, of future Skyboxx issues.
Though this is the Hip Hop Weekly's first swimsuit calendar, but it's not the first for publishers Mays and Scott, who helped start hip hop-culture magazine The Source.
At The Source, which Mays founded while attending Harvard in 1988 and has since grown to be called ``The Bible of Hip-Hop,'' the calendars were ``a great seller for us, and we wanted to take it a step further with 3-D,'' Scott said.
Mays said he and Scott left The Source after conflicts over the magazine's direction. ``When we met, we figured that the monthly format is really a dying breed, at least in the way it has been done over the past 10, 15, 20 years.''
So the two moved to Miami -- a city where they hosted The Source Awards and where they ran a nightclub for a year before it closed in 2004.
``We had a vision for Miami a long time ago that it was going to emerge as the next entertainment capital,'' Mays said. ``We also realized we don't need to be in New York anymore, with the way technology has evolved. Our overhead is like a fraction of a fraction of what we used to produce The Source.''
From: http://www.miamiherald.com
Reviewed: Teflon Don by Rick Ross
A former correctional-facility officer who bathes in gangster imagery and rhymes “bitch” with “shit” on his hooks has nearly written the summer’s finest album. Too badRick Ross is kind of a sleazebag. There’s requisite rap hot-dogging and then there’s “She had a miscarriage/I couldn’t cry though/You and I know she was only my side ho.”
We’ll remember this summer forDrake’s reflective enormity, Eminem’s verbosity, Big Boi’s nostalgic acclaim, and Ross’s monstrous, blockhead anthems. Teflon Don, Ross’s fourth and best major-label offering, is a dense 11 songs about the good life. And European cars.I guess Don was imminent. After surviving a reputation-damaging feud (reportedly ignited over a dirty look exchanged at the BET Awards) wherein 50 Cent dedicated legal resources to discrediting Ross’ very being, Ross spent 2009 dispensing celebratory, made bangers so good you never questioned whether he belonged alongside Usher and Lil Wayne. Rather than vilifying Ross for posturing, colleagues joined the bandwagon despite a bitter ex’s scathing accusations: Ross worked for the criminal justice system; Ross was behind on child-support payments.
Welcome to what’s left of gangsta rap: proven frauds pressing the narratives all the way to genre immortality, beyond velvet ropes. The cocaine trafficking was fabricated, so I’ll rap about the wealth accumulated from rapping about trafficking cocaine. I was mainly drawing reliable parallels between the crack game and the rap game. 50 Cent was right to fear Ross. It’s one thing to pounce on a cardboard thug; it’s entirely another to meet a card-carrying faker that makes better music.
Ross rises because he tries. Memorial Day’s Albert Anastasia EP featured a crowning Diddy intro and big leftovers from the Teflon Don sessions. As far as label-sponsored, buzz-building freebies go, Anastasia was cinematic (John Legend appears as “Lucky Luciano”) and commanding. “Money Maker” attacked district attorneys, its low budget video juxtaposed Ross’ rapper wealth and rural Barbados to maximize the mafia don facade.
Ross has a beautifully thick voice, an excellent ear for beats, and talented friends. He’s a resoundingly average rapper. With Don’s minimalist approach to presentation, only the cream rises before the routine gets banal.
Ross’ jolly build and bearded face mask his snarling, high-energy style. His best moments occur when he howls over controlled, symphonic beats; No I.D.’stwo production credits and the J.U.S.T.I.C.E. League’s three anchor the album. The blitzkrieg verses, presented through the grizzly, syrup pipes, afford Ross the luxury of rhyming “taste” with “taste,” “motherfucker” with “motherfucker,” and on one addictive passage, “JFK” with “JFK” with “JFK.”
For the inner circle of rap royalty, Rick Ross assignments are like a bachelor party: an excuse to get hammered and urinate on political correctness. T.I. lets loose, “[I'm] fillin’ bitches’s faces with babies.” Ditto for whomever wrote Diddy’s “No. 1″ parts: “I used to move white girl out in Maryland, now my girl’s blond like Marilyn.” Kanye West hits vibrant peaks about being a deity and shopping. Ross is perpetually baked and full of esoteric, degrading misnomers, like “If she died on my dick she would live through my rhymes,” “You can find me in the Guinness Book,” and “Credit card scams? That was for the faggots.”
But dismiss Teflon Don on principal and you miss the sonic wonder. “Aston Martin Music” is Chrisette Michele as a faceless diva cooing about rolling with her boss over perfect synths, while Drake mourns lost youth, while Ross spits playful auto lines like “Pull up on the block in a drop-top chicken box.” (Hit up Google for the seven-minute extended version that features Drake’s lost rap.) “Tears of Joy” finds Cee-Lo belting the blues. Lead single “Super High” stretches Enchanment’s slow-dancing “Silly Love Song” into pulsing hustler music over which the eternally fedora-clad Ne-Yo does a note-perfect Michael impression. “Maybach Music III” is almost as good as “Maybach Music II,” but more ambitious; Erykah Badu’s sweetly odd chorus is welcome, and the beat morphs to harbor Ross’s ceremonial closing verse, and then abruptly ends.
Best of all, Ross gets the best from the best on Don’s two best cuts. Kanye West produces “Live Fast, Die Young,” and it’s the sort of spacey, rumbling-drums classic we’d expect to find toward the end of Graduation, only with sharper rapping from West. “Free Mason” reads like instant disappointment:Jay-Z and John Legend are listed, Richmond’s the Inkredibles produce. Any casual fan of hip-hop expects these commonly botched super-songs to cede potential to ego, label legalities, and laziness. Instead, “Mason” basks incontrived conspiracy -theorist folklore as Jay sets the record straight: “I said I was amazing, not that I’m a Mason” and Ross’ manifesto comes to fruition: moving to white neighborhoods, building iconography, joining forces with kings.
From: http://www.washingtoncitypaper.com
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)








