Thursday, October 30, 2008

Hip Hop Lessons 101: The Original 50 Cent aka Kelvin Martin




Hip Hop Lessons 101


It's not uncommon for rappers to name themselves after legendary gangsters. At one point in Nas' rap career, he called himself "Nas Escobar." Pablo Escobar was the world's richest and most brutal drug trafficker. Murder Inc's Irv Gotti, whose real name is Irving Domingo Lorenzo Jr., dropped his last name and replaced it with the same last name as an infamous Mafia boss, John Gotti. When you include rappers Scarface and Capone to the list, the consistent gangsta theme in hip hop isn't news.

50 Cent aka Curtis Jackson is known as a world famous hip hop icon. Now learn the real story and meaning behind the name.

Kelvin Darnell Martin (July 24, 1964 - October 24, 1987), known to the underworld as 50 Cent, was an African American who grew up in the Bronx, New York, but later moved to Brooklyn, New York and was known as a stick-up kid in a Public Housing Project in Fort Greene, Brooklyn. Throughout the 1980s, Martin became a well-known robber who managed to claim his success through the robbery and murder of local hustlers. Martin allegedly stole one of Rakim's chains and robbed LL Cool J's chain in a parking lot in Brooklyn.

Kelvin Martin was known as '50 Cent' because he was very short and would rob anyone, no matter how much money they had in their pocket. He was a very small guy at 5 foot 2 and 120 pounds however he made up for it with his talent at robbery, if he wanted something he would often just take it.

Friends estimate that, throughout his life, Martin had sustained at least 30 bullet wounds and murdered at least 45 people. Ultimately, gunshot wounds were his cause of death. He was shot on October 20, 1987 on the stairway of his girlfriend's project building, dying in Kings County Hospital four days later.

Wednesday, October 29, 2008

Here's is a very interesting video. Hip Hop legends tell us when they first fell in love with the culture. Now ask yourself, when did you first fall in love with Hip Hop. What was the first album, cd or artist that really made you want to be part of the culture? Hip Hop man, you have got to love it!!!


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Tuesday, October 28, 2008

Hip Hop Mayor Heads to Jail


Once called the "Hip Hop Mayor" Kwame Kilpatrick is moving to a new home Oct. 28th — a 15-by-10-foot county jail cell where he will spend the next 120 days for lying during a civil trial to conceal an extramarital affair. At 31, he was the youngest mayor in Detroit's history — alternately dubbed "King Kwame" and the nation's first "hip-hop mayor" — and seemed to embody a glamorous celebrity lifestyle. He celebrated his inauguration in 2002 with "club crawls" of Detroit's most exclusive bars and nightclubs, later claiming the events were intended to motivate the city's disaffected youth.

Was Kwame an inspiration or hinder to the hip hop community?

As more and more people who grew up in the hip hop scene come of age and enter the so called business world, will they also be tagged like Kwame as the hip hop (enter profession).

Since he ran on a platform of being a child of the hip-hop generation, appearing on Detorit hip-hop stations and what not. Will they try to blame this latest debacle on hip-hop?

Sunday, October 26, 2008

Video Throwback of the Week 10 - 26 - 08

Probably one of the best duos from back in the day. Too bad they broke up and parted ways before the world could experience their true potential. This weeks throwback video, Pete Rock & CL Smooth-T.R.O.Y. (They Reminisce Over You.

Thursday, October 23, 2008

Sneaker Alert: Air Max Foamdome


More like "boot alert"! Here's the latest Nike boot, tell me what you think. What's the verdict? Is this something you'll rock this winter as you battle the elements? Since we last saw the above sneaker which we originally called it the Air Foamposite Boot, we now learn that its actually called the “Air Max Foamdome” since its a hybrid of the Air Foamposite One and the Goadome boot. The combination is pretty amazing especially for basketball fans and boot lovers. This tank like boot is scheduled to drop in stores this coming November with a price tag of $225. Those of us on the east coast and any wintery concrete city will definitely appreciate these.

Sunday, October 19, 2008

Video Throwback of the Week 10 - 19 - 08

This week's throwback? Mad Skillz,The Nod Factor!In 1996 Skillz dropped the debut album, From Where??? and the first single off the album was "The Nod Factor". This is a personal favorite of mine because if you really look hard at the 3:50 mark of the video I make a personal appearance. I know, I know it's only a crowd scene, but hey I had fun that day hanging out with everybody!!

Friday, October 17, 2008

Barack Obama is the greatest MC of all time.


Written by Barry Michael Cooper a Barry Michael Cooper is a writer, journalist, and filmmaker living in Baltimore, Md. He is also a native of Harlem, N.Y.


Originally titled: When Politics Became The New Hip Hop

The definition of Hip Hop has always been a political one: at the heart of democracy lies the aorta of free speech. Be it George Orwell, V.I. Lenin, Karl Marx, or Donald Oliver Soper shooting the gift (of gab) in London at Speaker's Corner of Hyde Park, or KRS-One and Chuck D voicing their opposition to Reaganomics and a Dickensian New York in the late '80s, or Jay-Z, Puff, and Kanye describing theirBrave Rich World from Gulfstream-V windows 40,000 feet above Monaco in rhythmic iambic pentameter, Hip Hop is the vox of the common man speaking to power.

FDR was Hip Hop: "There is nothing to fear but fear itself."

MLK was Hip Hop: "I have a dream that my four little children will one day live in a nation where they will not be judged by the color of their skin but by the content of their character."

JFK was Hip Hop: "And so my fellow Americans: ask not what your country can do for you - ask what you can do for your country."

RWR was Hip Hop: "The past few days when I've been at that window upstairs, I've thought a bit of the "shining city upon a hill"....And how stands the city on this winter night? More prosperous, more secure, and happier than it was eight years ago."

Bill Clinton is Hip Hop, too, but George Walker Bush embodies the flatline of Gangsta Rap: "Intelligence gathered by this and other governments leaves no doubt that the Iraq regime continues to possess and conceal some of the most lethal weapons ever devised...Saddam Hussein and his sons must leave Iraq within 48 hours. Their refusal to do so will result in military conflict, commenced at a time of our choosing."

Barack Obama is the greatest MC of all time. The DNC's Master of Ceremony's skills of Moving the Crowd have never been more evident than on the night of August 28th, 2008 in Denver's Invesco Stadium. It was the night Barack Obama fulfilled Martin Luther King's dream, and accepted the Democratic National Party's nomination for President. I wonder what went through his mind before he took the stage that night. Was it Jigga, as Obama mentally scrolled through his list of detractors in the media and politics, who tried to clown him by deifying him?: "I never claimed to have wings on/I get my/by any means on/when there's a drought/get your umbrellas out/that's when I brainstorm."

Maybe it was Rakim in the earbuds of Obama's iPod: "I'm not a regular competitor/ first rhyme editor/ Melody arranger, poet, etcetera/ Extra events, the grand finale like bonus/I am the man they call the microphonist."

Or maybe it was just Barack Obama being Barack Obama on this most historic night, transforming rap into epos: "We cannot turn back. America, we cannot turn back. Not with so much work to be done. Not with so many children to educate. And so many veterans to care for. Not with an economy to fix. And cities to rebuild, and farms to save. Not with so many families to protect, and so many lives to mend. America we cannot turn back. We cannot walk alone...in America, our destiny is inextricably linked."

I don't know if John McCain is Hip Hop. I don't know if he or the Republican Party understands that it is the culture of Hip Hop that has directly -- and indirectly -- fueled the youth movement behind Barack Obama. Many have made this connection between Obama and Hip Hop, including the great New York Times columnist, Maureen Dowd, to a young Baltimore, Md. journalist by the name of Timothy Cooper.

Even Robin Williams said on Letterman a few weeks ago:

Obama running is wonderful. It's-initially it was very interesting with people being kind of afraid of going, 'You know, he's a very eloquent black man'. And some folks in Conneticut going, 'Well, he's a tan Kennedy'. But...what was their fear, though? Are they afraid that this very eloquent man will be elected President, and all of a sudden he takes the oath of office and goes, 'Yo what's up?!! (Williams grabbing his crotch in the b-boy style) Yo-yo-yo! Yo gonna keep it real! I'ma bring it home right now, no more of that Urkel stuff! I wanna introduce some members of my cabinet: this is Lil' Ray-Ray, Skinny G, Colin Powell, because he's bad! Keepin' it real!

The Gen-Y'ers have truly made the connection between Barack Obama and Hip Hop. They are his advance team on Facebook, My Space, and Friendster, an army of Millennials that has assisted the Obama campaign in raising hundreds of millions of dollars online. For this new paradigm--young white kids (and Asian, Latino, African-American, and multi-racial kids, too)--the culture of Hip Hop allowed them to embrace a black man without fear, suspicion, or loathing. These same Gen-Y'ers will go to a Jay-Z concert and know all the words to "Regrets" or "Lost Ones." Michael Phelps motored Beijing's Olympic blue cube -- stoked by the fires of Lil' Wayne lyrics playing in his head -- en route to a record eight gold medals. These same Millennials are also educating their parents around the breakfast and dinner table, letting them know that the Baby Boomer version of the American Dream, the Woodstock, flower power, peace, love, and Haight-Ashbury, has grown up in Eminem's 8 Mile of Detroit, Snoop Dogg's Long Beach, and Common's South Side of Chicago. Their world may not be a ghetto, but the Millennials have broadbanded it into their very own 3-G global 'hood. Which, incidentally, is Obama's hood, too.

So I don't know if John McCain is Hip Hop. Last week, with McCain and Sarah Palin -- the Charli Baltimore of the G.O.P. -- and their operatives flashing the political gang signs to their conservative base ("Terrorist", "Ayers", "Who is the real Barack Obama"?), The Straight Talk Express derailed into lyrics of David Bowie's "Candidate": "I'll make you a deal, like any other candidate/we'll pretend we're walking home 'cause your future's at stake...I'm having so much fun with the poisonous people/ spreading rumours and lies and stories they made up."

John McCain may be more Rock and Roll than Hip Hop, which --along with R&B-- was the Hip Hop of the '60s and '70s. The raison d'etre of John McCain seems to trapped between a pair of Bowie bookends: The Man Who Fell To Earth who joins forces with The Man Who Sold The World. No matter how much distance this heroic fighter pilot and former POW tries to put between George W. Bush -- who is on an unswerving, abominable path towards presiding over the most calamitous administration in American history -- McCain cannot escape the connection nor the facts. Wall Street continues to collapse. The ranks of the unemployed swell to hundreds of thousands every month. The war in Iraq, Afghanistan, and an increasingly unstable Pakistan seem to have no end in sight. Those are the facts, and so is this: life as we know it in this country is slowly rotting away. And that's not Hip Hop. That's the discord of an apocalypse. And -- quite possibly -- as Sen. John S. McCain may find out at the end of the last and final debate with Barack Obama on Wednesday at Hofstra University, his campaign's swan song.

Thursday, October 16, 2008

Notorious Trailer

In January 2009 the movie Notorious is set to drop and I can not wait! Based on the life of Christopher Wallace aka Biggie, this movie is set to really be one the first hits of 2009.

Born in Brooklyn, New York, Biggie grew up during the peak years of the 1980s' crack epidemic and started dealing drugs at an early age. When Biggie debuted with the 1994 record Ready to Die, he was a central figure in the East Coast hip-hop scene and increased New York's visibility at a time when hip hop was mostly dominated by West Coast artists. The following year, Biggie led his childhood friends to chart success through his protégé group, Junior M.A.F.I.A.

While recording his second album, Biggie was heavily involved in the East Coast-West Coast hip hop feud dominating the scene at the time. On March 9, 1997, he was killed by an unknown assailant in a drive-by shooting in Los Angeles.

We all loved Biggie for his lyrics and music, but it was that swagger that the hip hop world fell in love with!!



Here's my favorite Biggie video. Enjoy!!

Tuesday, October 14, 2008

Please Revoke the Passport of Devin Harris and Bring Him Back Home

After a glorious campaign in China for the 2008 Olympics and the retaking of the basketball throne, why would Devin Harris of the New Jersey Nets allow himself to get hustled in London.



Please Devin, we just got our swagger back in the eyes of the world in basketball and then you come along.

Sunday, October 12, 2008

Video Throwback of the Week 10 - 12 - 08

From time to time Urban Established will showcase a throwback video. This weeks classic, Keith Murray - The Most Beautifullest Thing In This World

Star & Buc Wild back on the radio

This may be old news to some, but recently I just found out one of my favorite radio morning shows is back on air. There once was a time when Star and Buc Wild graced the morning airwaves here in my city. Then one day they were yanked due to the wild antics and the honest truth that Star dropped every morning. Since then morning radio has been boring in my opinion. Well the other day I found out the Star and Buc Wild show has a new home and continues to push the envelope. Hopefully the new show will go into syndication and once again bless the airwaves nationwide. Here are some of my favorite Star and Buc Wild moments.