He's one of those endlessly prolific creative forces that only rap music seems to produce. Like Lil Wayne or Gucci Mane or Young Thug, he lives in the …
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03 Greedo Became A Legend The Same Year He Went To Prison
He's one of those endlessly prolific creative forces that only rap music seems to produce. Like Lil Wayne or Gucci Mane or Young Thug, he lives in the …
Continue reading here:
03 Greedo Became A Legend The Same Year He Went To Prison
He's one of those endlessly prolific creative forces that only rap music seems to produce. Like Lil Wayne or Gucci Mane or Young Thug, he lives in the …
Read more here:
03 Greedo Became A Legend The Same Year He Went To Prison
This is the first in a Rolling Stone series exploring the new business models of music's rap – and streaming-dominated era. Record deals rarely let slip …
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'F-ck It, We'll Take the Bet': The Gold Rush To Sign the Next Rap God
So much rap is outsourced id – music we play to put us in touch with deep animal parts of our inner lives, where we fight and fuck and flaunt our …
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Drake's soft centre makes him a new type of hip-hop role model
Growing up between 21st and 22nd on Bryant Street, there was Latin music blasting out of every window, rap music blaring out of lowriders, and …
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Mission Native Mario Alberto Silva rides wave of success into film, awards and more
The criticism largely hinges on perceptions and stereotypes of rap music , particularly those that define rap music and black culture as not being …
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A black candidate made a rap album. His white opponent says it makes him unfit for Congress.
If you're not into rap/ hip-hop music because you associate it with “gangsta” performers, lots of obscenity, outright misogyny, and the gratuitous …
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Christian Rap Artists To Perform For First Time In Ocean Grove's Great Auditorium
I just want to say Preach Jacobs wrote an excellent article about the rap music scene in Columbia. (“Fight the Power: On Main Street Public House and …
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Rant and Rave: A Fifth on the Fourth
(CBS News) — The 12 members of a soccer team and their coach rescued from a flooded cave in northern Thailand finally regained their full freedom on Wednesday, walking out of a hospital a week after they emerged from 18 days trapped underground. The Wild Boars team members , who range in age from 11 to 16, and their 25-year-old assistant coach spent at least eight days at the hospital in Chiang Rai being tested and treated for relatively minor ailments, given their ordeal. They were brought to the hospital over the course of a dramatic three-day rescue operation. The team left the hospital just after 5:50 a.m. Eastern on Wednesday and was transported to a conference center in Chiang Rai, where they gave a news conference — their first opportunity to present their own first-hand account of the story which has captivated a global audience for almost a month. The conference hall was decorated as a soccer field. Government spokesman Lt. Gen. Sansern Kaewkamnerd said doctors, social workers and psychologists would participate in the news conference to filter questions and ensure the boys’ well-being. The media would not be allowed to interview the boys after the news conference. The Wild Boars teammates entered the Tham Luang cave on June 23 for a quick, relaxing excursion after soccer practice. But rain began falling while they were underground, and the water filled the caverns, cutting off their escape. Divers found the group huddling on a spot of dry ground deep inside the cave 10 days later, hungry but generally healthy. An international team of rescuers using diving equipment and pulleys extracted the 12 boys and coach through the tight, flooded passageways over three days, concluding July 10. Some of the boys were treated for minor infections during their hospital stay, but all 13 have been described as recovering well. Follow the latest updates below: Deep gratitude Asked about the former Thai Navy SEAL who died during the rescue mission, for whom the boys held a memorial while still in the hospital, coach Ekkapol “Ake” Chantawong said he and the boys “were very sad” when they learned of his death. “We felt that we were the cause of his death. The cause of his family’s loss,” he said. At that point a portrait of the ex-SEAL, who volunteered to join the rescue effort, was brought onto the stage, signed by the entire team. One of the youngest team members stood on the stage and issued a message, expressing the team’s deep gratitude for his sacrifice. “We thank him from the bottom of our hearts,” the boy said. The team clearly felt a deep debt to the Navy SEALs, who led the rescue effort. Asked who among them might want to try and join the elite unite of the Thai military when they grow up, all the boys raised their hands. How they survived “After two days we started to feel weak,” said one of the players, explaining that they had no food at all, but that they did find a trickle of fresh water to drink coming down off a rock in the cave. One of the youngest members of the team said he “tried not to think about food,” but found it hard to get fried rice off his mind. Another said he tried to keep his stomach full of water in lieu of anything solid. They dug to try and find a way out for days, one of the boys said, and had to use their one flashlight “economically.” “Didn’t think it was real” The first question for the Wild Boars was about the moment they were rescued, and how they communicated with the British diver who first found them. “We didn’t think it was real,” one of the team members said, explaining that they first heard the rescuer’s voice but couldn’t see him. When they realized that help had actually arrived, the player, who was the only English speaker among the team members, said he “didn’t know what to say to him so I just said ‘hello.’” “I was shocked. Then he asked if I was okay, so I said I was okay.” Assistant coach Ekkapol “Ake” Chantawong said in the initial confusion and excitement he had to try and calm down his player so he could concentrate on communicating for the team. “My brain was very slow, as we had been in the cave for 10 days,” said the English speaking player. “Hungry, hungry,” he told the diver. “Ready to go home” The Wild Boars were jovial as they walked into the conference center and onto a waiting stage. A man who described himself as a media representative introduced the team and said all 100 questions for the team had been screened beforehand, “for sensitivity.” He said any additional questions could be submitted for screening by the medical experts who have screened the players. The director of the hospital in Chiang Rai, where the boys have recuperated for the last week, was first to speak. “They are ready to go home,” he said, as the boys smiled. He said they were no longer showing any signs of mental trauma, and they “seem fine to go ahead with their regular lives.” “They’ve been ready to go home since they were in the cave!” said one of the Thai military officers who led the rescue effort, adding that they had spoken a lot since being trapped about what they were most looking forward to eating. A medical worker from the hospital agreed that they were “quite ready” to go home. “They are quite strong.” The boys then stood one by one, after their assistant coach Ekkapol “Ake” Chantawong, and introduced themselves, each giving a traditional Thai greeting with hands clasped in prayer fashion and a slight bow. Wild Boars to speak The entire soccer team, with rows of relieved parents sitting behind them, gathered at the conference center in Chiang Rai on Wednesday to tell the world, for the first time in their own words, about their 18 days trapped underground in a flooded cave. The boys were seen smiling and talking to each other before the carefully orchestrated news conference began. A cadre of social workers and mental health experts were on hand to deflect any questions from the media deemed too sensitive for the boys to answer this soon after their ordeal. Before the news conference began the boys and their coach all posed for a team photo in their uniforms. They were then led into the room, smiling and waving to gathered media on the way, to a separate building to give the news conference. On their way Cameras were outside the hospital in Chiang Rai to catch the first images of the boys, all of whom appeared happy and relaxed as dozens of adults shepherded them onto waiting vans. A woman who came to the hospital just to see the now-revered soccer team emerge told a television crew she was “very happy” to see the boys walk out. She was emotional after watching the team members leave smiling. All 12 team members and their assistant coach were on their way to the conference center to address a gaggle of journalists from around the world. “Whatever he wants” The family of one of the boys was preparing their home for his return Wednesday night. Banphot Konkum, an uncle who has raised 13-year-old Duangpetch Promthep, said he’ll have a renovated bedroom and gifts awaiting him. “We’ll do whatever he wants. If he wants anything we’ll buy it for him as a present as we promised that when he gets out, whatever he wants we’ll do it for him,” Banphot said.
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‘Ready To Go Home’: Thai Soccer Team Released From Hospital, Describes Dramatic Cave Rescue
The Raptors are finalizing a deal to acquire Spurs All-NBA forward Kawhi Leonard in a trade package that includes All-Star DeMar DeRozan, league sources told ESPN.
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Sources: Raptors, Spurs finalizing Kawhi trade
Ghostface Killah, a rapper who went on to have solo success with his platinum 1996 debut album “Ironman” and 2000 sophomore disc “Supreme …
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Multi-genre musician Keller Williams, Wu-Tang Clan's Ghostface Killah to play Easton's …
Ghostface Killah, a rapper who went on to have solo success with his platinum 1996 debut album “Ironman” and 2000 sophomore disc “Supreme …
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Multi-genre musician Keller Williams, Wu-Tang Clan's Ghostface Killah to play Easton's …
Chance the Rapper is no longer releasing his new album this week. … him tell me that he wants to produce my album and come to Chicago is like.
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Chance the Rapper's album not coming this week
Chance the Rapper is no longer releasing his new album this week. … him tell me that he wants to produce my album and come to Chicago is like.
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Chance the Rapper's album not coming this week
LOS ANGELES (CBSLA) — A Redlands family spoke to CBS2 Tuesday evening about their harrowing ordeal as passengers on a sight-seeing boat hit by lava bombs Monday while vacationing in Hawaii. Dr. Kaming Li and his family spoke to CBS2’s Jeff Nguyen via Face Time from Maui. “It looked about the size of two basketballs. It was still glowing in the boat,” said Dr. Li. The doctor and his family described the lava bomb that smashed through the metal roof of their Hawaiian boat. Video captured the sense of terror passengers felt Monday as lava shrapnel fell from Kilauea volcano. Nearly two-dozen people were injured including Dr. Li’s son. Young Christopher tried to dodge the lava by hitting the deck. “I got covered in really hot rocks. I stayed there for maybe two seconds and 3rd degree blistering burns on my legs,” Christopher said. He and his sister Erica were at the front of the boat while their parents were towards the back. “We really couldn’t get to them. There was total bedlam, there was chaos. There was just lava all over the boat,” said Dr. Li. Mom and dad had another problem right in front of them. A woman in her 20s had been hit by lava. “It looked like a broken femur,” says the doctor. Li is plastic surgeon who has a practice in Ontario. Earlier in his career he worked at USC as a trauma surgeon. He later ran the burn unit at an Inland Empire hospital. His wife Dawn is a nurse and the couple managed to improvise to help the injured passenger. “We used one of the cushions to act as stretcher.” he says. “We basically were calling for jackets to keep her from going into shock. And life preservers to stabilize her hip fracture,” said Dawn. The woman with the broken leg was taken to a hospital when the boat returned to shore. Dr. Li said the boat’s captain and his mate, wrapped the lava bomb in jackets and blankets and pushed it overboard fearing it would tear a hole through the vessel.
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Redlands Family Opens Up About Being Hit By Lava Bomb