Fabolous Responds To Ray J With Dj Clue
#LittleRedRidingHood
West Philly Emcee Chill Moody links with HipHop/Reggae Artist TEFF create MUSIC. Visual shot and directed by @TuchPointMusic and track was produced by @UpNComing
Follow: @TeffTV @ChillMoody @TuchPointMusic S/O to the whole EST
Bruce Lee – The “Lost” Interview (The Pierre Berton Show – 9 December 1971) An unedited 25 minute interview with Bruce Lee (1940-1973) on the Pierre Berton Show. Recorded on 9th December 1971 in Hong Kong, Bruce Lee is seen being himself, speaking candidly and informally about his life, his martial art beliefs and philosophy. Through the program Bruce’s supreme confidence, charisma and focus provide a tremendous insight into the young Bruce Lee – the man behind the legend.
011. The music video is directed by BMike (2-Cent Films). Check out more at www.stalley330.com and Follow @Stalley.

Just recently, I stop to look at my life and the people who are in it. I noticed that we’ve come a long way from children living in North Philadelphia. I see friends bonding in a marriage, I see friends settling down and starting a family with their lover and child, friends enjoying life, friends buying homes, friends watching their children grow into preteens, friends that’s welcoming a new edition to their family, and then there is me, Eric Terry-Blair. I have grown as a person with life experiences, I just experienced one major event; Erin’s first day of kindergarten. Big day for her and I was there giving her a speech about being herself and never follow anyone. I was going to tell her the story about my first day in kindergarten but she interrupted me with, “Um, daddy, I have to go put my clothes on.” Since I never got this story out and it needs to be told I am going to tell it to you guys today.

The month and year was September of nineteen eighty-nine, I was a strapping and adorable five year old. I was ecstatic to start kindergarten; I have been talking about it to my grandmother, Nookie for a whole week. So, I was dressed very crisp and clean with my little backpack on my back waiting for my mother to finish dressing. As always, she takes forever to put one item of clothing on. Time passed, back then I didn’t know the actual time but I sensed it. I had grown impatient so I unlocked the front door, walked down three flights of stairs because we lived on the third floor. I opened the front door, looked to my left, looked to my right, and then I heard someone yelling out, “Hey Eric!” I looked up and saw my neighbors, “the twins,” they were twin boys. I waved over to them because they lived across the street. I had a huge smile on my face looking very dapper as I yelled back; “I am going to school, Twins!” Thinking back, I wonder why the hell they didn’t stop me because they were like three years older than me. Hey, it was the eighties but we digress. So, I proceed to walk down the steps to the front of our apartment to the sidewalk, at the time, we lived on Fifteenth and Oxford. I walked to the corner and began walking towards Broad Street. Honestly, I did not know where I was going; I just was walking hoping to stumble onto a school. I walked along Broad Street, southbound. As I was walking I realized how big and amazing the world was outside of my block. It was beautiful through a five year old’s eyes, the big cars, big buses, and the big building. Now that I think about it, why the hell didn’t an adult ask me if I was lost because I was gazing at my surrounding in complete awe. Finally I realized I was lost, I start leaving the sidewalk of Broad Street to enter Blockbuster; I don’t know why I picked Blockbuster, maybe my love for movies and story telling began there. I entered Blockbuster and just let the tears pour like a waterfall. I cried my little heart out; the workers gave me a big tub of popcorn to calm my cries and fears. I believe I was upset because I can’t find my school. The workers called the police and moments later they picked me up and took me home. That whole time I was only around the corner on Girard Avenue, I believe. Once the police returned me home to my mother and grandmother, the two embraced me with love. My mother took me up stairs as I was waving bye to the officers, my grand mother stayed outside to speak with the officers. Once we entered our apartment, a belt appeared. My mother beat me so f’ing bad; she struck me as if she was Thor with his hammer, Mjölnir. Oh, I screamed for help, “she’s killing me,” “murder!”, “my wee-wee hurts”, anything to get my grandmother’s attention and maybe the officers. She was beating me so hard that the neighbors across the street heard me screaming. My mother struck me with the belt so hard and forceful I was naked by the time she finished; I originally had clothes on when I entered the apartment. True story! I cried for one whole hour after the beating because the beating was like a half of hour. From that day on I never left the house without my mother or informing her that I was leaving, still to this day. The last lesson I learned from that beating was how to tell time. The “crying hick-ups” were like seconds as I sat in the hallway in my underwear. Still till this day, I do know understand what happened to my clothing.

That was the story I wanted to tell Erin but she kind of blew me off, what kid blows off their father. Rudy never did that to Heathcliff. It’s okay, the kid gets one pass, just this once. Anywhoo, I had to tell my story to you all. I hope you all enjoyed a moment from my life. Okay, here is where the tale ends…
Peace.
–
Miss.Shesheena A. Bray
So the final verdict on the true story is still out but…do you really care??
Floyd Mayweather Jr.’s triumphant win this past weekend wasn’t the only fight that rocked Sin City. Rapper Fabolous and singer Ray J reportedly got into it backstage at the Palms just before Fab was set to hit the stage. According to website Bossip, Ray J set things off when he punched the Brooklyn rapper in the face following a joke Fab made about the singer over social network Twitter.
“Nah but Floyd saying we havin a concert in my living room & the camera cuts to Ray J singing “One Wish” on the piano had me in tears!!” Fabolous tweeted on Sept. 17th, allegedly the center of Ray J’s beef. “Get it..? Ray J concert in the living room!! *Lil Wayne voice*”
Eyewitnesses on the scene say the fight didn’t end so well with Fabolous getting the best of Ray J who was eventually tossed from out the luxurious Palms hotel then later detained by Las Vegas cops.
Ray J himself confirmed half of the reports, that he was kicked out of the Palms and arrested following the incident. A number of celebrities were on hand for the incident including 50 Cent, Mayweather, Diddy and comedian Kevin Hart.
Earlier this morning Ray J phoned in to New York City’s Power 105 “Breakfast Club” show with DJ Envy, Charmalagne the God and Angela Yee.
“Ni–as sayin Ray J got beat up? I’ll sock that ni–a in his face again my ni–a.” All i’m saying if you got Fabs number tell that ni–a to send a picture of his face right now.”
During the conversation with the morning hosts Ray J confirmed that his issue with Fab stemmed from a few jokes the rapper sent his way that he didn’t find quite funny. In a recent episode of HBO’s “24/7″ show documenting the road to Mayweather’s fight against Ortiz, in one scene Ray J is playing the piano in the champ’s living room singing his song “One Wish.”
“Don’t disrespect me and Floyd like that” Ray J continued raging. “I play piano on that muthaf–kin piano every day, thats my big brother, ni–a we grew up together. So if you think that I just came over there and sang a song, ni–a you got me twisted. Ni–a im over there everyday.”
Following the fight Fabolous went on to perform at the palms alongside LOX rappers Jadakiss and Styles P.
It is a fitting message for the day—the reality is viral hepatitis does, in fact, affect everyone, everywhere. Consider, for instance, that three percent of the world’s population is infected with the hepatitis C virus, a leading cause of liver disease. That’s 130 to 170 million people chronically infected globally. In the United States alone, as many as 3.9 million Americans are living with hepatitis C, and about half are unaware of their status.
Although hepatitis C is curable, most patients outside of the developed world are unable to access treatment. In countries as diverse as Thailand, Indonesia, Georgia, Ukraine, Russia, India, and many parts of Africa, where hepatitis C is a major public health problem, access to diagnostics and treatment barely exists. This is particularly true for people living with HIV/AIDS, for which hepatitis C is now becoming one of the leading causes of death.
One of the critical drugs in the standard treatment regime for hepatitis C today—pegylated interferon-alfa— is under patent protection and costs as much as $50,000 per course. Because of a duopoly held by the pharmaceutical giants Roche and Merck—the two companies which currently produce pegylated interferon-alfa—there is no competition by generic manufacturers that could deliver desperately needed cheaper alternatives to hepatitis C treatment. Two new hepatitis C treatments were recently approved by the FDA, yet they have to be used with pegylated interferon, adding another $30,000 to $50,000 to the cost of treatment. At these prices, how can a country like Ukraine, with more than 1 million people infected, really commit to treating its citizens?
Prohibitive pricing of lifesaving medicines is unethical and unacceptable. The only way to increase access to hepatitis C treatment is if pharmaceutical companies—in this case, Roche, Merck, and the firms with new hepatitis C drugs in the pipeline—commit to reducing their prices substantially to levels that become affordable to the majority of people in need of treatment. And because millions of people need access to these lifesaving treatments, national governments and international bodies, including the WHO, must provide the political push to make this happen.
More than a decade ago, HIV/AIDS patients marched the streets of South Africa, Thailand, and Brazil demanding affordable access to medicines that could save their lives. And with success—in a matter of months the 00 per person per year to less than $100 today, resulting in more than 5 million people currently on treatment in low- and middle-income countries. Today, these same people are surviving on cheap generic AIDS drugs only to die from their untreated hepatitis C.
Demanding greater access to treatment is a primary reason that strong civil society groups, including people living with hepatitis C, initiated World Hepatitis Day. Roche and Merck must support people living with hepatitis C by substantially lowering the prices of pegylated interferon-alfa.