.... for making you want to smash poor kitty's heads. maybe this will make up for it.
(please withstand till 1:11)
yea... no.
29 November 2008
The new ABCREOLE!!!!!
26 November 2008
This is for the billy
okay so, the other day, i was staring at my three-footed cat, and decided to google deformed cats. i saw cats with 6 legs, two sets of ears, and even the very rare cycloptic cat. apparently this next shit is quite the common occurrence...
i seriously couldn't decide which youtube video i wanted to use. at one point i thought about posting them all, but i'm not that dedicated.
i seriously couldn't decide which youtube video i wanted to use. at one point i thought about posting them all, but i'm not that dedicated.
25 November 2008
finnally free!!
John Forte
for a lil context your boy forte was on the fugee's the score. and after his solo album flopped got arrested in Jersey with 1.4 milliion in luquid cocaine. well yesterday George W muthafuccin bush commuted his sentence. Aye !! john whose coke was that!!!!!!! youu kept your mouth shut good? Or No?!?! anyway i bought poly sci so it aint my fualt either way.
for a lil context your boy forte was on the fugee's the score. and after his solo album flopped got arrested in Jersey with 1.4 milliion in luquid cocaine. well yesterday George W muthafuccin bush commuted his sentence. Aye !! john whose coke was that!!!!!!! youu kept your mouth shut good? Or No?!?! anyway i bought poly sci so it aint my fualt either way.
watership down
this movie is real. bloody voilent babaric world of wild rabbits. It's like a cute version of menace 2 soceity.
my opinion
no sir i don't like it. I FEEL it but i don't like it. I don't like singing i like rap music. i like emotional heavy rap music. and this could have been this (and sometimes is) but he sings to much. it's like lauryn hills mis-education ( i know it's like the quran to ya'll) to much singing and not enuf of the rappin that i loved her for. BUT! i support artist reaching as deep into them selves as they can to pull out whatever they got and throw that bloody on a slab for everyone to scrutinize. Bravo sir!! but no i don't like it.
wow this is deep
23 November 2008
22 November 2008
yo i like this hella
it's hella cold in seattle right now. and dark. i hate it here. this aint here enjoi.
donut run
And LO.... last night abcreole drove all over seattle and renton in our aunts car lookin for donuts. we were on a mission from GOD to eat donuts. top pot was closed. vivace was gone. we don't know where mighty O is. we were about to fall to the stygian depths of heart wrenching despair when we where saved by our good friend mahroo!! thanx!! she new about this 24 hour spot in the U district. now normally i don't do the north end but IT WAS A MISSION FROM GOD!!! so we went and me nam gabe mahroo and her cuzzin tara gorged ourselves in a gluttonous rampage of caligulan proportions!!
really!!!
R 'n' B killed gangsta rap
Sorry 50 but it wasn't us with slimmer jeans and glasses. It was you and all that singing. gangster rap used to be about unrestrained ghetto nihilism with a hardcore political underpinning. Now it's about as hardcore as teddy riley. I knew G rap couldn't stay hard after the number one dude in it was called puff. Opposite of hard son...
this is the future of gangster rap. Thanx 50. and she's your fan
this is the future of gangster rap. Thanx 50. and she's your fan
21 November 2008
neeeeeeew JOB!!!
so i get really anxious about work when i'm not working. for me not too i need to have more days off than on. Which i don't, the only time this anxiety doesn't over ride me is when i'm workin with kids. So.... NEEEEEEEEEW JOOOB!!!
20 November 2008
RIVAL IS THE GANG
house negroes!
yea so Ayman Zawahiri called obama a house negro. HAHAHAHAHAH how does he even know what that means!?!?! Anyway to put it in context 9and to answer my own question) he said It is true about you and people like you ... what Malcolm X said about the house negroes,'. The paper said he was refering to condaleez and colin powell. Well hmmm.... they are house negroes. strait up now doubt. but Obama let him proove himself. Oh and let us call out our own people please. espescially that way. Considering between the 2 of You your the only one who worked for the CIA in the 80's. I'm just sayin!
famous haitians
Feminist, journalist - Born in Port-au-Prince in 1906, Rimpel was a founder of the first Haitian feminist organisation, the Women’s League for Social Action (Ligue Feminine d’Action Sociale). It was founded in 1934 by a group of women intellectuals, professionals and activists from the middle and upper classes, and played an important role in politics for the next 25 years, focusing mainly on legal rights - suffrage, access to education, equality for married women. In 1951, she founded Escale, a bi-weekly news revue, and for six years she was its director, driving force, and main editor.
The Constitution of 1950 gave women a limited right to vote (with their husbands’ permission) but it was not until 1957 that they obtained full equal suffrage. Rimpel, a supporter of presidential candidate, Louis Déjoie, was an active participant in the electoral campaign. When François Duvalier emerged as winner, she criticised the role of General Kébreau in assuring Duvalier's victory.
On the night of 5th January 1958, François Duvalier sent a group of masked men to Rimpel's house. They dragged her off into the night, and the next morning she was found lying naked in a street in Petionville, beaten unconscious, covered in blood, and probably raped. After two months in hospital, she recovered, but she never wrote again. She maintained her silence until her death in June 1986.
st.ides!!!
sorry to say but these where part of my child hood. not the drink (just the commercial) i was like 11 when these dropped so i only fucced wit O E ya diiiig!!
who ever can get me the wu tang and the nate dogg commercial's i'd appreciate it. the nate was the best. headeed to the corner store you know what i'm lookin for!!!
who ever can get me the wu tang and the nate dogg commercial's i'd appreciate it. the nate was the best. headeed to the corner store you know what i'm lookin for!!!
16 November 2008
IN CASE YOU MISSED THIS!!
the real fun starts at a 4 min and 30 seconds at the end of the justin report.
15 November 2008
Cahn Solo
even tho he stole my name it's cool this is my main guy rite here. and the first person to photo me up real propa like. love this cat. he attends cornish school for somethin. craziest thing is with the generation gap between kids and their parents being what it is (in particular for immigrant families) his photography has become a way for him to reconnect with his father who was also somewhat the photo journalist bacc in his native Vietnam.
TIMMY !!!
some of my favorite burton movies
And all time fave!!!!!
yea a weird tangent after all that haiti stuff but i'm weird so smeg off!
And all time fave!!!!!
yea a weird tangent after all that haiti stuff but i'm weird so smeg off!
famous haitians and this one didn't die horribly
Rose Anne Auguste
Nurse, social worker, and human rights activist - Born on November 29, 1963, in Jérémie, During the 1970s, she attended the Pressoir Jerome School in Jérémie, and later studied at Port-au-Prince’s Lucien Hibert College, where she received her baccalaureate in 1984. She went on to study at the national School of Nursing, getting her diploma in 1988, and while there she set up a nurses' student union.
Auguste then worked for a variety of non-governmental organisations in central Haiti, but was in Port-au-Prince at the time of the 1991 military coup. She risked her personal safety to rescue patients at the general hospital when soldiers came to finish off those wounded while resisting the coup. In 1992, she founded the Women’s Health Clinic (Klinik Sante Fanm in creole) in Carrefour Feuilles, Port-au-Prince, in association with the Partners in Health organisation. The clinic, located in a heavily-populated hillside shantytown to the south of the capital, and originally only meant for women, treats over 200 women, men, and children each day. Auguste has also provided counselling for female victims of gang beatings and rape. In 1994, she received the Reebok Human Rights Award, which she later donated to Partners in Health in support of destitute women in Haiti.
Auguste remains outspoken about Haiti’s legacy of poverty and violence, reporting human rights abuses to international organisations and working to make the local healthcare system more responsive to victims of repression.
Nurse, social worker, and human rights activist - Born on November 29, 1963, in Jérémie, During the 1970s, she attended the Pressoir Jerome School in Jérémie, and later studied at Port-au-Prince’s Lucien Hibert College, where she received her baccalaureate in 1984. She went on to study at the national School of Nursing, getting her diploma in 1988, and while there she set up a nurses' student union.
Auguste then worked for a variety of non-governmental organisations in central Haiti, but was in Port-au-Prince at the time of the 1991 military coup. She risked her personal safety to rescue patients at the general hospital when soldiers came to finish off those wounded while resisting the coup. In 1992, she founded the Women’s Health Clinic (Klinik Sante Fanm in creole) in Carrefour Feuilles, Port-au-Prince, in association with the Partners in Health organisation. The clinic, located in a heavily-populated hillside shantytown to the south of the capital, and originally only meant for women, treats over 200 women, men, and children each day. Auguste has also provided counselling for female victims of gang beatings and rape. In 1994, she received the Reebok Human Rights Award, which she later donated to Partners in Health in support of destitute women in Haiti.
Auguste remains outspoken about Haiti’s legacy of poverty and violence, reporting human rights abuses to international organisations and working to make the local healthcare system more responsive to victims of repression.
famous haitians
Jean-Michel Basquiat
Artist - Born in New York in 1960, the son of a Haitian father and a Puerto Rican mother, Basquiat dropped out of high school and left home at the age of seventeen. Having gained some notoriety as a graffiti artist using the tag SAMO, in 1981 Basquiat's paintings were exhibited at a show alongside artists such as Keith Haring and Andy Warhol. Overnight he became one of the most successful, controversial and glamorous artists in the world. His paintings, city dream-scapes and primal sketches, were bought by the most powerful museums and celebrity collectors including Madonna.
In 1988, at the age of 27, he died of a drugs overdose. The New York Times described him as "the art world's closest equivalent to James Dean". BBC culture critic, Tony Parsons, called him "perhaps the greatest black artist of the twentieth century". A biopic, Basquiat, was released in 1996.
Artist - Born in New York in 1960, the son of a Haitian father and a Puerto Rican mother, Basquiat dropped out of high school and left home at the age of seventeen. Having gained some notoriety as a graffiti artist using the tag SAMO, in 1981 Basquiat's paintings were exhibited at a show alongside artists such as Keith Haring and Andy Warhol. Overnight he became one of the most successful, controversial and glamorous artists in the world. His paintings, city dream-scapes and primal sketches, were bought by the most powerful museums and celebrity collectors including Madonna.
In 1988, at the age of 27, he died of a drugs overdose. The New York Times described him as "the art world's closest equivalent to James Dean". BBC culture critic, Tony Parsons, called him "perhaps the greatest black artist of the twentieth century". A biopic, Basquiat, was released in 1996.
famous haitians
Anacaona
Taino queen - Born in Yaguana (today the town of Léogâne), the flourishing capital of Xaragua, the most prosperous and heavily populated of the indigenous Taino kingdoms at the time of the European invasion. Anacaona - golden flower in the Taino language - was the younger sister of Béhéchio, king of Xaragua. She was married to the Taino chief, Caonabo, king of Maguana (the Cibao region), who, in 1494, was kidnapped by Christopher Columbus' troops and deported to Spain. (According to legend, Caonabo died en route to Spain when the Taino captives on board deliberately sank the ship in a last attempt to resist Spanish oppression.) To escape death, Anacaona left Maguana and returned to the western region of Xaragua.
In Xaragua, she soon asserted her authority over her brother and ruled as a queen famed for the ballads, ballets, poetry, plays and ornaments of her court. Xaragua was the only Taino kingdom on the island that had not succumbed to Spanish conquest when a new Spanish governor, Nicholas Ovando, arrived with some 2500 troops in 1502. He requested a meeting with Anacaona, and, in 1503, the Queen and chieftains of the province prepared a lavish reception for him and his men. In the middle of the entertainment, Ovando gave a signal, and the Spanish seized the Xaraguayans, tied them to poles and killed them. Eighty Taino leaders were slaughtered. Anacaona was saved but was captured, and in September 1503 she was taken to Santo Domingo where she was hung.
Taino queen - Born in Yaguana (today the town of Léogâne), the flourishing capital of Xaragua, the most prosperous and heavily populated of the indigenous Taino kingdoms at the time of the European invasion. Anacaona - golden flower in the Taino language - was the younger sister of Béhéchio, king of Xaragua. She was married to the Taino chief, Caonabo, king of Maguana (the Cibao region), who, in 1494, was kidnapped by Christopher Columbus' troops and deported to Spain. (According to legend, Caonabo died en route to Spain when the Taino captives on board deliberately sank the ship in a last attempt to resist Spanish oppression.) To escape death, Anacaona left Maguana and returned to the western region of Xaragua.
In Xaragua, she soon asserted her authority over her brother and ruled as a queen famed for the ballads, ballets, poetry, plays and ornaments of her court. Xaragua was the only Taino kingdom on the island that had not succumbed to Spanish conquest when a new Spanish governor, Nicholas Ovando, arrived with some 2500 troops in 1502. He requested a meeting with Anacaona, and, in 1503, the Queen and chieftains of the province prepared a lavish reception for him and his men. In the middle of the entertainment, Ovando gave a signal, and the Spanish seized the Xaraguayans, tied them to poles and killed them. Eighty Taino leaders were slaughtered. Anacaona was saved but was captured, and in September 1503 she was taken to Santo Domingo where she was hung.
famous haitians
Jacques Stephen Alexis
Writer, poet, activist - A descendent of Jean-Jacques Dessalines, Alexis was born on 22 April 1922, in Gonaïves. His father was a journalist, historian and diplomat, and Alexis grew up in a family in which literary and political discussions were the norm. At the age of 18, he made what was regarded as remakable literary debut with an essay about the Haitian poet, Hamilton Garoute. He collaborated on a number of literary reviews, before founding La Ruche, a group dedicated to creating a literary and social spring in Haiti in the early 1940s.
In 1955, his novel "Compere General Soleil," was published by Gallimard in Paris. This superb novel has recently been translated into English - General Sun, My Brother, and is a must-read for all those with an interest in understanding Haiti. He followed up with "Les Arbres Musiciens" (1957), "L'Espace d'un Cillement" (1959), and "Romanceros aux Etoiles" (1960).
More than just a brilliant intellectual, Jacques Stephen Alexis was also an active participant in the social and political debates of his time. In 1959, he formed the People's Consensus Party (Parti pour l'Entente Nationale-PEP), a left-oriented political party, but he was forced into exile by the Duvalier dictatorship. In August 1960, he attended a Moscow meeting of representatives of 81 communist parties from all over the world, and signed a common accord document called "The Declaration of the 81" in the name of Haitian communists.
In April 1961, he returned to Haiti but soon after landing at Mole St Nicholas he was captured by Tontons Macoutes. He was taken to the town's main square where he was tortured and then killed.
Writer, poet, activist - A descendent of Jean-Jacques Dessalines, Alexis was born on 22 April 1922, in Gonaïves. His father was a journalist, historian and diplomat, and Alexis grew up in a family in which literary and political discussions were the norm. At the age of 18, he made what was regarded as remakable literary debut with an essay about the Haitian poet, Hamilton Garoute. He collaborated on a number of literary reviews, before founding La Ruche, a group dedicated to creating a literary and social spring in Haiti in the early 1940s.
In 1955, his novel "Compere General Soleil," was published by Gallimard in Paris. This superb novel has recently been translated into English - General Sun, My Brother, and is a must-read for all those with an interest in understanding Haiti. He followed up with "Les Arbres Musiciens" (1957), "L'Espace d'un Cillement" (1959), and "Romanceros aux Etoiles" (1960).
More than just a brilliant intellectual, Jacques Stephen Alexis was also an active participant in the social and political debates of his time. In 1959, he formed the People's Consensus Party (Parti pour l'Entente Nationale-PEP), a left-oriented political party, but he was forced into exile by the Duvalier dictatorship. In August 1960, he attended a Moscow meeting of representatives of 81 communist parties from all over the world, and signed a common accord document called "The Declaration of the 81" in the name of Haitian communists.
In April 1961, he returned to Haiti but soon after landing at Mole St Nicholas he was captured by Tontons Macoutes. He was taken to the town's main square where he was tortured and then killed.
hunger
future of the beat jacc!
why snatch up a popular beat and just rap on it. naw take one element (like the drums) and then flip the sample a lil bity and then rap on that. you know what it is still but it sounds more your own. i like parts of this song but not how pacc divs part is so short.
EVERYBODY KNOWS US feat Pac Div , Carter, Dom Kennedy
Tokyo flash
ask a filipino
yo i got a in a lil trouble for this but i thought that shit was funny. and you didnt get mad at ask a black guy shit!!!
cool shit
More than a brand IF is a think tank based outta Geneva that was a part of the dadaist movement. A polotical art based way of thought that believed (believes?) art was best when in service to humanity and service was best as an art. They first gathered in the 70's and now they're making really interesting t-shirts.
Reading this again
yea it's funny this is closer to what i feel the future will be and the kind of catalyst we'll need for change, not Obama. Yet i cannot denie the fervor and enthusiasm that that man has kindled in my countrymen. Perhaps my my revalation-esque veiw of american progress is somewhat slanted. Hmmm. Well, I will still never trust a president of these United States but i will give some consideration in trusting the momentum the people have built up and hope that they can continue the pace and make this president do what we need him to do.
This is my dooooooood!!!!
i just felt like puttin up everything i could find on my guy. i miss this cat!!! weclome bacc to the 6 hope you don't stay as long as i did.
LOVE YOU MANG!!!
LOVE YOU MANG!!!
this is some weird white people shit!!!
yea but that aint stop me from jaccin this beat and killin clubs with it!!!!!
apparently they do all their video's like this. aiiit
apparently they do all their video's like this. aiiit
Jay electronica
I'm hella feelin this cat rite now!!! I'm happy that hip hop is movin' beyond the early 2000 sound. watch out for this cat.
09 November 2008
GOODBYE RAP CITY!!!
07 November 2008
sunny daze!!!
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