Thursday, October 16, 2008

Young Jeezy Speaks about Pimp C ti VIBE magazine..

Much props to whoever
created these drawings..Especially on an EtchASketch! WOW





The trap star talks about his relationship with one of rap's fallen legends
Before he passed last year on December 4, UGK member Pimp C spoke out against any and all rappers rhyming about the drug game. At one point, Pimp C told Ozone magazine the following:
"Muthafuckers talking about they’ve got kilos for $17,500. Bitch, ain’t no kilos for $17,500 up there, and you know what I’m talking about. Come to Houston and get the work and pop it cause we’re right there by San Antonio and we’re going down there and gettin’ the work. And guess what, man. All y’all niggas talking about selling dope? If y’all niggas was some d-boys, guess what, man? I don’t believe you niggas no more cause I’m seeing you niggas in button up shirts getting cute and pretty trying to look sexy. Nigga, fuck you. Nigga, and I ain’t gotta say your name. "

Many thought Pimp was calling out Young Jeezy, who had a song on his second album, The Inspiration, entitled “Mr. 17.5.” And although Pimp C later said he wasn’t calling out Jeezy specifically, the two men were never able to clear matters up face-to-face. In this VIBE.com exclusive, Young Jeezy talks to VIBE’s Benjamin Meadows-Ingram about Pimp’s words and how they affected him. And be sure to check out the August issue of VIBE featuring Jeezy on the cover.
Man, God bless the dead. I got love for Pimp. I’m gonna always have love for Pimp. I just feel like I’d really rather not speak on it out of respect for a lot of other people. I just think after it was all said and done, he did his homework and he was like, “All right, cool.” From what I understand, before he passed he was really trying to reach out but we just couldn’t connect. I’m willing to bet that’s what the conversation was about. And he a real nigga, so you gotta look at it for what it’s worth. When real niggas don’t understand something, and you don’t get them answers, you wanna know. I’m like that. I can’t ever hate on Bun or Pimp cause I always respected what them niggas did, but I put in my work. That shit hurt me, cuz. Fuck that, man. That shit hurt me, dog. I’ll be lying to you if I said it didn’t hurt. I remember listening to “Pocket Full of Stones”, my nigga. I remember listening to that shit and living and dying by it. I came up from that. I could give this interview to my mama. Anything I ever said was the truth. I’m not fabricating nothing and that hurt me because I listened to them niggas and I did what they told me to, which I thought was right. And I made it. I made something out of nothing. For a nigga that I love and respect to tell me that I’m a liar…my nigga… Like do you know how many times I almost went to fuckin’ prison? Like, for real. I lived and died by that man. Even when he wasn’t gone, I didn’t really know Pimp. I knew Bun. I rolled for that nigga man, everything that I was on… “Call the judge, tell the bitch to free Pimp C.” I put him in the same line with my nigga Meech. That was respect. I’m not gonna front. That shit fucked me up. And that’s why it wasn’t even a situation where a nigga was on some rah-rah shit. ‘Cause everybody knows, everybody got what they got, everybody roll with who they roll with. That’s understood. But at the same time, you respect somebody and you give them that respect like, “I’ve done what you said and look what I’ve done.” Obviously I’ve done better, ‘cause look where I’m at. I was able to put Bun on “Trap or Die”, or “Over Here,” or this, that, and the other. When he got out, one of the first songs was “Get Throwed” [from Bun B’s solo album Trill] and I jumped on that shit. I got a lot of love for Bun. I got a lot of love for Pimp, but as a real nigga, when you look me in my face, my nigga, and I tell you I will put my hand on any Bible, ain’t no nigga fittin’ to tell you that. So for that to be like that, as a man that’s where I’m at. Ain’t no punk shit.
It’s like one of your older cousins or something. If he get money, he teach you to get money, he goes to prison. He comes home, you’re the man now. You’ve come up. You ain’t dead. You ain’t locked up. You’ve put in your work and niggas are respecting you. And this is your cousin and he is just looking at you and says, “Fuck that. You ain’t that.” That hurts, man. I did it for you to see. I did this for [Pimp] to see. Like, look what I’ve done for us. Look what I did. We’re still relevant. I’m talking about this shit. These niggas is livin’ it.
I remember one show. I swear on everything I love, that the reason that hurt me so bad is because he came to my show in Fort Lauderdale, when he got out. Bun called me and said, "Pimp out." Me and my whole ‘hood went crazy. I wanted to be the first nigga to get a song with this nigga. We had our Pimp C shirts on and all that.
He came out to Fort Lauderdale, I knew he had just came out, he reminds of my big homie. [Pimp] had on a red Dickies suit and a black mink coat. And I was like, ‘Pimp, it’s hot as a motherfucker out here. Why you got that on?’ Pimp said “I’m a pimp. I can wear what I want.” You can ask anybody in Fort Lauderdale, I brought him out on stage and he grabbed the mic. These were his exact words: “When I was locked up and when I was going through my shit, all these guys are out here lyin’ and fakin’. This nigga right here held me down. I respect this nigga, ‘cause he talk that shit the way it’s supposed to be talked. And I love and respect this nigga.” You can ask anybody in Fort Lauderdale that was at my show. And that was the last time I talked to him. And the next thing I got was that.
I don’t want to disrespect nobody and he’s not here to say what he’s gotta say. So I’mma leave it right there. I got love for UGK. I got love for Bun B. I got love for any nigga that got up there and did what they did and got what they got. I wouldn’t halfway be here if it wasn’t for a nigga like that. And you ask me if I’m hurt? I’m hurt of off that. And I’m grown. Don’t shit hurt me.




Drug Sweep yields more than $400K cash, 8 vehicles, weapons, and jewelry..

Escambia deputies seized more than $400,000 cash early Wednesday during a drug sweep of 10 area homes.

Deputies arrested eight people on drug-related charges as a result of "Operation Talledega Nights," which began about 3 a.m. Wednesday.
A majority of the cash — more than $321,000 — was taken from a vacant house in the 7000 block of Dale Street off Burgess Road. Investigators believe the house's only purpose was to store drug money, sheriff's spokesman Glenn Austin said.
"We found the money hidden in the home's air-conditioning ducts and vents," he said.
Amber Larson , 27, lives next door to the Dale Street stash house and was shocked to learn about the drug sweep.
"We were awake until about 1 a.m., and didn't hear anything," she said of her and her husband. "We always saw people coming and going late at night but never expected anything like this."
Deputies recovered the remaining cash from a home in the 400 block of Elcino Drive, said Lt. Eddie Barnard, head of the sheriff's narcotics division.
Deputies also seized eight vehicles, two handguns, and numerous pieces of gold and diamond jewelry, including a gold fork studded with yellow diamonds.
Sheriff Ron McNesby called the operation "one of the biggest cash cows" he has ever seen.
"We believe these folks that we have arrested are responsible for supplying an awful lot of drugs to the Escambia County area," he said. "These are not street corner dealers."
Investigators believe the suspects arrested were part of the same drug network, Barnard said.
"One way or another, at different times, they interacted together," he said of those in custody. "Several individuals ran different groups and different parts of the operation."
Barnard would not elaborate further because of the ongoing investigation.
Investigators believe the money seized was earmarked to purchase drugs from Houston and Atlanta that then would be brought to the Pensacola area.
The owner of the home on Dale Street, whose identity was not released, was not arrested, Barnard said.
When deputies raided an Arapaho Drive home, Charles Borner Jr., 24, ran from the residence and into a lake on a nearby golf course before he was arrested, Austin said.
The Drug Enforcement Agency and Pensacola police assisted Escambia County deputies during the operation. Santa Rosa deputies also were involved because a house in Gulf Breeze was searched during the operation.
At the conclusion of the case, the money seized will be redistributed among the agencies that took part in the operation, McNesby said.
Here is a video from another busted operation...

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EEJ9hUVssY8

Pensacola News JournalPublished
11 arrested in drug bustAgencies find $100,000 in drugs, cash and guns
A multiagency investigation into drug dealing at Pensacola Village apartments nabbed 11 suspected dealers in an initial wave of arrests this week that seized more than $100,000 in drugs, cash and guns.At a news conference Wednesday at the Pensacola Police Department, State Attorney Bill Eddins described it as a "significant investigation with excellent results."Pensacola police started the investigation more than 10 months ago, but narcotics Detective Brad Burrus has worked the private housing project for about two years, making arrests and gaining links to a conspiracy that for years has plagued the government-subsidized private housing project.He said that when he previously would make an arrest, the dealer would quickly be replaced. This sweep was more comprehensive, Burrus said.The majority of those arrested did not live in the complex, but they used apartments of people who resided there, or simply sold from their cars or the street, he said."It's a housing project with several good people -- a lot of single moms with kids, and there are just a few bad apartments," Burrus said. "It was getting to where they couldn't live there anymore. There's dope everywhere. And they said they can't afford to move anywhere else."'Early-warning system'Patrol cars often saw nothing when they responded to calls of complaints because the dealers used lookouts, said Sgt. Steve Bauer, supervisor of the five-man Pensacola police vice and narcotics unit. The compound of apartment buildings has an entrance on Fairfield Drive and an exit on North Davis Highway."Pensacola Village had an early-warning system," Bauer said. "There was one way in and one way out. We'd get close, and phones would start ringing and people would start knocking on people's doors."Lookouts were able to alert dealers about police bike patrols, Bauer said.Eleven suspects were arrested Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday, with warrants issued for eight others. Police identified Terrance Stallworth as a possible ringleader, but said the group did not have a rigid structure.The investigation is ongoing to determine the source of the drugs, Florida Department of Law Enforcement special agent Eli Lawson said.A virtual buffetA virtual buffet of seized drugs, cash and weapons were spread out over a large folding table at the police station:* Baggies containing chunks of cocaine larger than golf balls, totalling one kilogram, worth about $85,000. Each bag weighed about one ounce, or 28 grams. The bags sell for about $1,000, or the dealers will break the contents up and sell it for $100 a gram, Burrus said.* Two baggies contained yellowed "cookies" of crack cocaine.* An imposing Tec-9, a banned 9 mm rapid-fire gun about the size of an Uzi. It will be sent to an FDLE lab to determine if it is semi- or fully automatic, Burrus said. Charges will be enhanced if the weapon turns out to be a fully automatic machine gun.* About $16,000 in cash was spread out over the table, mostly in $100 bills and $20s. Officers also seized MDMA -- Ecstasy -- which was being sold as well.* About $1,000 worth of marijuana.* A custom-framed photograph of Colombian cocaine kingpin Pablo Escobar, with a pistol and bag of white powder inset into the frame. Escobar was gunned down by a secret police unit in 1993 on the roof of a hideout in Medellin, Colombia.$100,000 grantThe Pensacola Village investigation was funded by a $100,000 Violent Crime and Drug Control Council grant awarded by the Florida Department of Law Enforcement to the Pensacola Police Department.About 20 officers and agents were involved in the case, supplementing the five-man Pensacola narcotics unit. Escambia County Sheriff's Office; FDLE; the Drug Enforcement Administration; Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives and the State Attorney's Office were involved in the case, Eddins said.Manpower and cooperation"The goal of this was to stop drug dealing in Pensacola Village," Eddins said. "It was a lengthy investigation that required tremendous manpower and cooperation between the agencies."Officers searched one apartment at Pensacola Village and homes and apartments in the 3800 block of West Blount Street; the 100 block of Old Corry Field Road; the 6800 block of Tiki Lane; the 100 block of Cavalier Drive; and the 9400 block of Chisholm Road.Pensacola Village staff could not be reached for comment Wednesday. Bauer said the police department will attempt to "brainstorm" with management to prevent dealers from setting up shop again. Surveillance cameras or resident identification cards are possible.


DAMN HATERS!! And these fools wonder why its drier than tha sahara outchea!

Billionaire BUSTED!!

Billionaire Drug Bust
Broadcom's co-founder charged in tawdry narcotics indictment
JUNE 5--A technology billionaire was a drug fiend who trafficked in cocaine, Ecstasy, and methamphetamine, spiked the drinks of business associates and employees, hired prostitutes for himself and others, and maintained several narcotics dens, including one in an underground lair at his Los Angeles mansion, prosecutors charge. In a remarkable federal indictment unsealed today in Los Angeles, Broadcom co-founder Henry T. Nicholas III is portrayed as an out-of-control wild man who scored drug caches for Super Bowl parties and rock festivals and had his dealer invoice him for these illicit purchases. A copy of the felony drug conspiracy indictment against Nicholas, who is reportedly worth about $2 billion, can be found on thesmokinggun.com. The 48-year-old Nicholas, who was charged with securities fraud in a separate U.S. District Court case, allegedly "used threats of physical violence and death and payments of money to attempt to conceal his unlawful conduct," according to the indictment. Prosecutors allege that, in June 2002, Nicholas and Broadcom entered into a $1 million settlement agreement with an employee who was aware of the executive's "unlawful narcotics activity." The hefty payout, which Broadcom covered, contractually prevented the employee from speaking about Nicholas's drug abuse. The billionaire apparently did little to conceal his drug transactions. On one occasion, in the lobby of Broadcom's southern California headquarters, he directed an employee to provide cash to a courier "in exchange for an envelope containing controlled substances," the indictment charges. On a drug-fueled 2001 private plane flight--during which Nicholas allegedly used and distributed narcotics--the pilot was forced to don an oxygen mask due to the "marijuana smoke and fumes." According to a March 2008 Forbes story, Nicholas, with an estimated net worth of $1.8 billion, is ranked 677 on the list of the world's wealthiest individuals.

Well all I can say is DAMN! Dude was a hustler for real...

You can do ya thang its ok to floss..Its jus one rule pimpin: DONT GET CAUGHT!!

As many wonder what's up with Jay Z's new look, sources say the jiggaman might be doing it all for his first starring role in a yet to be known movie.
According to a tip we received, Jay is currently working on a project entitled "Hit Men" due out sometime next year and has adapted the new look as part of the project.
Hov has previously expressed his interest in the movie industry producing his 2004 documentary "Fade To Black," as well as having minor roles in Roc-A-Fella films, "Paper Soldiers," "State Property," and "Streets Is Watching."
This is of course all speculation and Hov can just be readying up for a cold winter.
Jay Z is currently putting the final touches on The Blueprint 3, scheduled to hit stores sometime in December.


http://www.keepittrill.com/trilltalk/showthread.php?p=2558#post2558

Check out some Fu**in hilarious pictures from keepittrill.com


More legal troubles are on the horizon for rapper Brian "Baby" Williams. Earlier this year the rapper and CEO of Cash Money Records was slammed with a copyright infringement lawsuit after allegedly releasing various albums including projects by Lil Wayne, containing copyrighted material that was used without licensing agreements.
Now, Williams, who recently handed a million dollars in cash over to Lil Wayne as a birthday present, has been hit with another lawsuit by an L.A. based promoter accusing him of taking $275,000.
The lawsuit alleges Williams has continuously failed to put on a Lil' Wayne concert in Miami by coming up with preposterous excuses.
In other news…
Cash Money Records Hit With Co...
Baby claims Lil Wayne Bigger T...
Hip Hop's Top 10 One Hit Wonde...
Hip Hop's Top 10 One Hit Wonde...
According to TMZ, the suit filed in L.A.'s Superior Court, alleges that Williams even backed out of one of the shows because "the weather in MIAMI was too cold."
No statements have been released by Williams or his camp regarding the situation.
THANKS TO defsounds.com for this info...


ALSO CHECC OUT DATPIFF.com for free mixtapes daily!!!
I'm a bit late on this, but I've been busy doing real world stuff and wanted to share my thoughts on this whole Officer Ross debacle.
So rick Ross finally admitted to being a CO back in the day and my question to you is, were you surprised?
I'd like to know why even deny it in the first place officer? Not only did Ross deny it but his crew beat up a rather well known DJ for bringing it up during an on-cam interview.
Why not say you were hustling AND locking niggas up at the same time?..I don't know about you, but that shit is gangsta...that's pimping the system folks.
Why does Ross being a CO automatically negates the past he narrates in his music..are rappers not allowed to multitask?Hell, I know back in the day as I stood on the corner hustling to feed my daughter, I also worked at the library hustling literacy to dumb dumbs...ok maybe not so much, I don't even have a daughter--as far as I know.
I'm not defending officer raws, I'm just saying he coulda been living two lives like many people do...plus, if you believe everything these rappers talk about in their music you're an idiot.
Detroit rapper Eminem is seamlessly easing his way back into the spotlight with the release of his new autobiography, "The Way I Am."

The book, illustrated with never-before-seen photographs of Eminem’s home and life along with original drawings, is filled with reflections on his greatest hits, previously unpublished lyric sheets, and other rare memorabilia.

Last night at the launch party for the book, the "8 Mile" hitmaker stopped by for a brief interview as well as debuted a new track rightfully titled "I'm Having A Relapse."
During the interview, Em put an end to rampant rumors of his forthcoming LP being titled "King Mathers."

"There are alotta fake album titles floating out there--alot of bullshit titles. The real title of my album that's coming out is called 'Relapse." Em tells Angea Yee of Shade 45.
In other news…

50 Cent: Formula 50 Gone Bad
50 Cent's "Before I Self Destr...
50 Cent: Ready To Self Destruct
50 Cent Files Defamation Suit ...

"Relapse" will complete Shady/Aftermath's trifecta which 50 Cent has dubbed "The Three-Headed Monster," dropping in between 50's "Before I Self Destruct" and Dr. Dre's "Detox."
"It's a story actually, the three-headed monster returns. Before I Self Destruct, I'll relapse, then detox." 50 retorted during the interview.

Tuesday, October 14, 2008

Thoed Mixtapes, Singlez, Beats n More..




New Singlez
If you know a new song, mixtape or beat cd that isnt posted that you want, let me know bcuz I can get it... PLUS I have alooooot of more music to come. STAY POSTED!
Trae Bun B and Lil Keke
Busta Rhymes-Light Up a Fyre (prod. by Don Cannon)
Weezy And Juelz Santana-Leanin Low
MIXTAPES
Rap A Lot Street Classics 2008
pass: 44Atze
tracklist
1. Big Mike - World Of Mine 4:26
2. Tela - Tela 3:46
3. Willie D - Bald Head Hoes 4:20
4. Raheem - Underground Jugglin' 4:42
5. Do Or Die - Po Pimp 3:54
6. 5th Ward Boyz - P' Poppin 3:48
7. Too Much Trouble - Wanted Dead Or Alive 3:19
8. Choice - Payback 4:22
9. Convicts - This Is For The Convicts 3:44
10. Big Mello - Funkwichamind 6:14
11. OG Style - Catch Em Slippen 3:28
12. Seagram - Sleepin In My Nikes 4:25
13. Ganksta Nip - Murda After Midnight 5:20
14. Devin The Dude - Your Pussy Lke Dope 3:29
15. Geto Boys - Car Freaks 5:45
16. Ghetto Twinz - Responsibility 4:52
DJ Keyz & Tapemasters Inc.-
Rap City Tha Bassment Best Of The booth http://i33.tinypic.com/2vtp8uq.jpg
DJ Keyz & Tapemasters Inc.- Rap City Tha Bassment Best Of The Booth Pt.2http://i37.tinypic.com/ddjbs5.jpg
like i said, STAY POSTED! MORE TO COME SOOOON!!!
any Qs u got hit me up @ JAYABEAR36@YAHOO.com