Tag Archives: chicago

Banksy Continues His Environmental Theme in Graffiti

Images from artkrush Banksy, that super-productive and ubiquitous graffiti artist, is at it again. Last week his work was popping up as a children’s ride that was an anti-BP statement. He is back from his North American tour, where he visited Toronto , San Francisco, Chicago, Detroit, and Boston, promoting his film and creating havoc wher… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Banksy Continues His Environmental Theme in Graffiti

Monica Crowley Smacks Down Eleanor Clift Over Racism in the Tea Party

Conservative radio host Monica Crowley on Friday smacked down Newsweek’s Eleanor Clift over racism in the Tea Party. In the second segment of “The McLaughlin Group,” the host addressed July’s controversial resolution by the NAACP condemning so-called racist elements within the Tea Party. Liberals Clift and Clarence Page of the Chicago Tribune predictably supported the NAACP while bashing the conservative organization. Crowley with the support of Pat Buchanan defended the Tea Party while calling the NAACP irrelevant. With McLaughlin surprisingly taking Crowley and Buchanan’s side, sparks flew in an oftentimes heated discussion (video follows with partial transcript and commentary):  MONICA CROWLEY: Look, the Tea Party has an issue with the content of Obama’s policies, not the color of his skin, and I find it amazing that the NAACP would waste its time on nonexistent racism in the Tea Party when there are so many problems that still plague the black community like black on black violence, like fatherlessness, like education and drugs and guns in the inner cities. And so it seems to me to be a straw man that the NAACP set up because they are less willing to really confront all of those vexing problems in the black community. JOHN MCLAUGHLIN, HOST: Exit question. CLARENCE PAGE: I think they are confronting them, but they don’t get the publicity until they attack the Tea Party. But believe me, they are dealing with those problems. ELEANOR CLIFT: Let’s have you do a radio show on what they’re doing on all those other issues. CROWLEY: And I have, Eleanor, I have. But you clearly don’t listen to it. After McLaughlin asked what kind of damage has the NAACP’s resolution done to race relations in this country, the sparks really flew: CLIFT: The NAACP is not hurting race relations. We have a very active faction on the right using racial issues as a wedge to try to defeat Democrats and a black president and I think that is where… CROWLEY: Oh boy. CLIFT: You’re gonna say that’s not true? CROWLEY: Well, I’m saying that you are making our point that when the left goes out there and stokes these kinds of racial issues when they don’t exist, what happens is it dilutes real racism and that’s the danger. CLIFT: Oh, so this is called stoking? CROWLEY: Yes. After some crosstalk, Page pressed the issue: PAGE: Well, I was just going to say, these are, these are kind of a smokescreen, they’re kind of totems. The NAACP is as important to the base of the Democratic Party as the Tea Party is to the base of the Republican Party and so that so never the twain shall meet. But, for you to say racism is not a problem anymore, that’s exactly the kind of thing… CROWLEY: No, that’s not what I said. I said nonexistent racism in the Tea Party. I didn’t say racism doesn’t exist in America. PAGE: Nonexistent racism in the Tea Party. That’s the same thing. From the vantage point of African-Americans and most liberals, they would say, “No way.” And that’s the real problem, Clarence. This comes from the vantage point of African-Americans and most liberals despite  lacking evidence to support that position:  CROWLEY: That’s not what I said. Let’s be clear. MCLAUGHLIN: Can we restore order here? CROWLEY: My point was that when we start slapping on the racist label, whether it’s on the right or the left, we end up diluting real racism. MCLAUGHLIN: President Obama said he was introducing a post-racial America. Do you think this action by the NAACP… PAGE: When did he say that, John? MCLAUGHLIN: …has torpedoed that? PAGE: When did he ever say that? MCLAUGHLIN: In his speech, in his speech on race. PAGE: No, no, he was introducing a post-racial America. CLIFT: The media announced that. PAGE: The media said that. MCLAUGHLIN: On the basis of his speech. That’s correct! Whether Obama specifically said that in his March 2008 speech in Philadelphia is somewhat irrelevant if that’s the way media reported it at the time:   PAGE: No, this is important, John, because Barack Obama… MCLAUGHLIN: You mean he doesn’t stand for a post-racial America? PAGE: Throughout Barack Obama’s campaign, I defy you to find me where he ever said it. No, he only talked about race when he had to, and that was after Reverend Wright.  MCLAUGHLIN: Well, he gave a 35, 45-minute speech on race, remember that? PAGE: Yes he did, he never said anything about a post-racial society. MCLAUGHLIN: I think he said it. PAGE: Go back to that speech and find me the bite. MCLAUGHLIN: Does he in the mind of Americans stand for a post-racial America? The answer is yes. PAGE: That’s different. MCLAUGHLIN: The NAACP torpedoed it, yes or no? PAGE: They did not torpedo it, not at all. MCLAUGHLIN: I think they torpedoed it. PAGE: Americans still view Barack Obama basically as the embodiment of racial progress. He didn’t have to say it. BUCHANAN: John, you’re right. Stick to your guns, you are exactly right. It damaged the whole idea of a post-racial America for no reason whatsoever. PAGE: We’ll be post-racial when we’re post-racist. MCLAUGHLIN: How much damage, on a ten scale? Is it cataclysmic damage? BUCHANAN: I think the series of things that’s not only Rev. Wright, but it’s Sgt. Crowley and this and the Black Panther thing has severely damaged what everybody hoped would be a post-racial America. (CROSSTALK) CLIFT: When a political party stops using race as a wedge, not because that party is racist… BUCHANAN: You all don’t use race as a wedge? For heaven sakes. CROWLEY: Eleanor, come on! In the end, what happened on that set was the embodiment of the condition of race relations in this nation today, as Left and Right have a diametric view of the problem as well as the causes. Yet, maybe most telling was how both Clift and Page blamed the media for the perception that Obama was going to create a post-racial America. They, of course, were quite correct in their accusation, but neither chose to accept responsibility despite their shameless. I wonder why that is?

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Monica Crowley Smacks Down Eleanor Clift Over Racism in the Tea Party

Some Chicago Dentist Is Running ‘Hillary for 2012’ Ads in New Orleans [2012]

American politics makes such little sense nowadays that any random jumble of words you put together is likely to describe a real-world situation. For example: Some Chicago dentist is currently running “Hillary 2012” TV ads in New Orleans. It’s true! More

PANIC! HACKERS? E-mail outage could cost MILLIONS?

I awoke to find my hotmail account under maintenance. I has been more than four hours. This could get expensive. How much of your life could be disrupted by a lost or late e-mail? http://www.theinternetpatrol.com/hotmail-outage-as-server-goes-down-users-unable… added by: thelastwheeler

Smart cities (un)paving the way for urban farmers and locavores

Evan Fraser, co-author of the new book Empires of Food: Feast, Famine, and the Rise and Fall of Civilizations, declared on NPR's All Things Considered recently that our entire future is imperiled by a global food system “built on some very, very rickety pillars.” Fraser warns that the U.S. is making the same agricultural missteps that brought down the Roman and Mayan Empires: degrading our topsoil; banking blindly on ever-higher yields at a time when unstable weather patterns and depleted resources will more likely bring reduced harvests; cultivating a monoculture that's economically efficient but ecologically ruinous. And talk about a vicious cycle — our fossil fuel-intensive, forest-and-ocean-destroying farming methods worsen climate change, which makes it ever harder to grow food all over the world. A relocalized food system, or “foodshed” (i.e., the path that our food travels to get from farm to plate) offers city dwellers a sustainable alternative to Agribizness-as-usual. Shorten your supply chain and you stand to reap a long list of benefits: increased food security; green space provided by urban farms and gardens; more fresh, wholesome foods and job opportunities where they're needed most; less pollution and waste; and reinvigorated local economies. A seismic shift toward greater self-sufficiency is rippling through every region. We've seen a dramatic rise in farmers markets and CSAs (community supported agriculture programs), and tremendous enthusiasm for community and school gardens and urban farms. Food policy councils are cropping up all over the country. From Sonoma to Chicago to Sheboygan, these coalitions have brought together policy makers, for-profit and non-profit enterprises, farmers, gardeners, and advocates to figure out how to go about relocalizing our food systems. The first link in this brave new food chain? Land tenure, zoning issues, and other regulatory hurdles that city folks have to contend with in order to grow food to feed themselves or sell to others. They’re also working on how to collect and compost food waste instead of shipping it to the landfill; how to increase the percentage of locally sourced ingredients in schools, hospitals, prisons, and other publicly run institutions; how to facilitate local food production and ease distribution bottlenecks; and how to support all kinds of urban agriculture, from school and community gardens to rooftop farms, aquaculture, chicken keeping, and bee keeping. Zoning in on vegging out There's no shortage of places to grow food in even the most densely built communities. What's in short supply, in some cities, is better access to these spaces, and more secure tenure. With all the sweat equity that it takes to turn a barren lot or a rooftop into an edible oasis, our community gardeners and city farmers deserve to have their cherished plots protected from being plowed under to make way for more condos. Here in New York, hundreds of community gardeners and urban ag advocates turned out at a recent hearing to voice their concerns about proposed regulations that would sow uncertainty like a pernicious perennial weed in their carefully cultivated beds. Even now, despite a development-dampening recession and the resurgence of urban farming, community gardeners can't afford to let down their guard. Detroit has become an international poster child for urban agriculture, with an estimated 40 square miles or so of open land and a mayor, Dave Bing, who's eager to convert those vacant lots into productive farms. But Detroit's current zoning laws “neither define nor set standards for community gardening or commercial agriculture,” according to the city planning commission's urban agriculture draft policy. So, Detroit's thriving farms are off the radar, officially speaking. Mayor Bing is being encouraged to move “quickly to change the city and state legal structure to accommodate them,” as the Detroit News reports; Grist's Tom Philpott has more on the history and future of Detroit's urban-ag scene. Seattle Mayor Mike McGinn has declared 2010 the “year of urban agriculture”, as Tyler Falk reported for Grist, and he means it: the city government this month approved new legislation that allows any would-be urban farmer to grow and sell food, increases the number of backyard poultry allowed from three to eight, and other urban-ag-friendly moves. In Los Angeles, Jason Kim, the young chef behind a hot new Silver Lake eatery named Forage, had the novel idea of letting home gardeners trade their surplus produce for meals at his restaurant. As the word spread, Kim's “Home Growers Circle” grew to include more than a dozen backyard farmers. But four months after he launched the program, Kim was obliged to suspend it after the health department informed him that produce from unlicensed growers would be a liability risk should a customer become ill. After doing a little homework, the folks at Forage and the backyard farmers discovered that the Home Growers Circle could receive the same certification that lets professional farmers sell their produce at farmers markets, just by paying a $63 fee and undergoing an inspection. So, as of July, the Home Growers Circle is back in action, equipped with Certified Producer's Certificates from the county agricultural commission that permit them to sell their backyard surplus to restaurants and markets. Front-yard farmers in Sacramento, meanwhile, are just grateful they're allowed to grow any food at all. It took food activists three years to overturn a ban on front yard food gardens that dated back to 1941. Now, they just have to get to work on Sacramento's mayor, who left food out of the equation when he recently announced a “Green Initiative” to make his city more sustainable. It's an all-too-common oversight. Mayor Bloomberg — famous for championing a soda tax, salt reduction, and calorie counts — mysteriously ignored food when he announced New York City's sustainability blueprint, PlaNYC. So, Manhattan Borough President Scott Stringer stepped up to the plate and collaborated with local good-food folks (disclosure: myself among them) to create FoodNYC, a comprehensive plan to relocalize New York City's foodshed through such initiatives as an Urban Agriculture Program and an Office of Food and Markets. The FoodNYC team has met with the mayor to discuss incorporating their proposals into PlaNYC, but Bloomberg has yet to sign on. San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom needs no such prodding to put food policy front and center. In July, Newsom issued an executive directive which has the potential to “dramatically accelerate urban food production,” according to New School professor Nevin Cohen, an urban food policy expert who lauds Newsom's specific mandates as a meaningful step up from the non-binding agreements and resolutions that typify so many food policy initiatives. added by: JanforGore

Bozell Column: Brian Williams, From Musketeer to Mouseketeer

The fifth anniversary of Hurricane Katrina recalls a horror show on two levels. There’s the actual disaster which killed hundreds of people – and then there’s the media smear job on the Bush administration and first responders. No one should forget pompous grandstanders like “NBC Nightly News” anchor Brian Williams signing off three months after the floods from the Lower Ninth Ward:  “This is a neighborhood that’s been left to die.” How those network anchors loved hurricane hyperbole! Williams, for one, lectured the nation that the hurricane should “necessitate a national discussion on race, on oil, politics, class, infrastructure, the environment, and more.” He underlined that a top local radio station decided not to air President Bush’s remarks from the city since “nothing he could say could ever help them deal with the dire situation unfolding live in the streets of New Orleans, where people were still dying during his visit.” It never mattered to these nattering nabobs that, as Popular Mechanics magazine documented, Katrina spurred by far the largest and fastest rescue effort in American history, with nearly 100,000 emergency personnel arriving on the scene within three days of the storm’s landfall, rescuing an estimated 50,000 residents. Not content to attack Bush on just his own program, Williams took to comedy shows to unload more spin. He lectured to Jon Stewart on how cities less black than New Orleans would have seen a lot more helicopter rescues. Williams proudly took that attack directly to Bush three months after the storm. “After the tragedy, I heard someone ask rhetorically, ‘What if this had been Nantucket, Massachusetts, or Inner Harbor Baltimore or Chicago or Houston?’ Are you convinced the response would have been the same? Was there any social or class or race aspect to the response?” On the first anniversary of Katrina, Williams repeated the mudslinging, citing radical-left black professor Michael Eric Dyson in Bush’s face: “A lot of Americans are always going to believe that that weekend, that week, you were watching something on television other than what they were seeing, and Professor Dyson from the University of Pennsylvania said on our broadcast last night it was because of your patrician upbringing, that it’s a class issue.” Bush shot back: “Dyson doesn’t know. I don’t know Dyson, and Dyson doesn’t know me.” But Williams didn’t care. His cartoon was perfect. Williams later appeared on PBS and boasted “You can’t give distance. I don’t mean that in a Jets vs. Sharks way. I’m not an adversary.” That’s laughable. He insisted Bush “appreciates the swordfight of a crackling good conversation.” Now watch Williams “swordfight” with Barack Obama. He’s gone from musketeer to Mouseketeer. On the fifth anniversary of the hurricane, Williams deferred to the statesman before him by asking about the lack of a national conversation: “Katrina was about so many things. It was about class and race and government and the environment. Whatever happened to that national conversation we were supposed to have about it?” Is that all the toughness Williams could muster? That’s how he “crackles” now? See his crackling swordfight over the BP oil spill and Obama’s lack of effort: “It’s getting baked in a little bit in the media that BP was President Obama’s Katrina. And it’s also getting baked in that the administration was slow off the mark. Is that unfair?” What about our disastrous economy? Surely Williams would challenge Obama here. “Do you have anything new on the economy?” Instead of tough questions, Williams felt Obama’s pain that too many Americans misunderstand his religious faith: “Mr. President, you’re an American-born Christian, and yet increasing and now significant numbers of Americans in polls, upwards of a fifth of respondents, are claiming you are neither. A fifth of the people, just about, believe you’re a Muslim….This has to be troubling to you. This is, of course, all new territory for an American president.” That’s not even a question! But it’s all in a day’s shoeshine for Brian Williams. He loved slinging “racist, classist” mud on Bush, but he was so distraught by Obama’s-a-Muslim rumors that he replayed the poor-Barry exchange a second time the next night. Why is this arrogant partisan the leading evening-news anchor in America? He drew 7.2 million viewers last week, as the ratings continue to decline. That’s not unexpected when an anchorman can’t be bothered to ask tougher questions to this president than his makeup artist would.

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Bozell Column: Brian Williams, From Musketeer to Mouseketeer

White Sox Wiggin’ Out Over Manny Ramirez

Filed under: Manny Ramirez , TMZ Sports The Chicago White Sox aren’t finished doing business with the Los Angeles Dodgers — TMZ has learned the MLB squad didn’t just want Manny Ramirez … they also want his wigs!!! Of course, when Manny first arrived to L.A., the dreadlock “Manny Wigs” sold… Read more

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White Sox Wiggin’ Out Over Manny Ramirez

Chris Brown, Raekwon Recruited For Twista’s Perfect Storm

‘You’re definitely gonna hear the growth and maturity in the music,’ rapper says of album, due in October. By Jayson Rodriguez, with reporting by James Lacsina Twista Photo: MTV News For Twista , it took longer than he thought to go home again. The Chicago MC revisited his debut album three years ago with the release of Adrenaline Rush 2007 , a nod to his first solo effort, Adrenaline Rush. But it wasn’t until that project’s follow-up, last year’s Category F5, that Twista and his first producer, the Legendary Traxster, reunited. Now, the pair are working together once again, joined by the Windy City’s No ID (Jay-Z, Kanye West) for the rapper’s new LP, The Perfect Storm, due in October. “This album is gonna be different, because you’re definitely gonna hear the growth and maturity in the music, that’s one thing for sure,” Twista told MTV News of the project, his eighth overall. “And also, me being able to get back with Traxster, which is the [producer] that did a lot of my original music, like ‘Adrenaline Rush’ and [records] like that, so we bringing that back. And also having jams on there that’s way different, a different style and vibe. Songs like ‘The Heat,’ which was produced by Traxster and No ID. You’ll be able to hear the whole vibe. You’ll hear me tear into it with songs like ‘Three Minute Murder,’ and you gonna hear me on that sexy thing and you gonna hear me do it with that Chi-Town swag.” Twista also recruited Raekwon (“The Heat”) and Chris Brown (“Make a Movie”) for The Perfect Storm. In addition to a new collection of music, Twista plans to include a documentary about his life with the set. According to the fast-rhyming lyricist, the film will be a diary-like take on his journey intertwined with footage of Chicago. “I’m a person that people don’t get to see a lot of, so when you get the documentary, you get to see how I do things, how I am in the studio, my perspective on the city,” Twista explained. “And the reason I turned out the way I did, as far as my lyrics and the way I see things, my outlook on things and just breaking down the city. It’s a piece of Twista. They don’t get to see me on the other side, so it’ll be cool.” Related Artists Twista Chris Brown Raekwon

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Chris Brown, Raekwon Recruited For Twista’s Perfect Storm

Paris Hilton Facing Felony Charge In Cocaine Bust

Socialite could get anywhere from probation to four years in prison. By Gil Kaufman Paris Hilton in Las Vegas police custody on Friday Photo: Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department Paris Hilton’s arrest on Friday in Las Vegas could land the socialite in jail again. According to a statement from the Clark County District Attorney’s office, the reality star will be charged with felony possession of a controlled substance after police alleged that they found .8 grams of cocaine in her purse during a search following Friday’s incident. The charges could land Hilton anything from probation to four years in prison; she could also face a $5,000 fine. Jillian Prieto, public information officer for the Clark County courts, confirmed that Hilton is due back in Vegas for an arraignment in the case on October 27. TMZ reported that unnamed friends of Hilton’s said the hotel heiress and nightlife regular is wavering a bit from her initial “it wasn’t my purse” story, explaining that Paris claims a friend recently borrowed the purse and “probably” left the illicit drug inside it. Hilton allegedly said the friend returned the bag but that she never bothered to check the contents before using it herself. The friend said Hilton explained that she was eating sushi at the Wynn resort with boyfriend Cy Waits when she got tired and Waits offered to drive her home before returning to his gig as a nightclub boss at the Wynn. “It could be a setup,” Hilton is reportedly telling friends. “Everyone knows how against cocaine I am.” Hilton was pinched after police stopped Waits’ Cadillac Escalade when they smelled “the strong odor of marijuana coming from the vehicle,” according to the police report in the incident. When one of the officers recognized the passenger as Hilton, he said she immediately tried to roll up her window. When police stopped the car and a crowd began to gather, Hilton told the officers she was “extremely embarrassed” and asked if she could use the bathroom at the Wynn and go inside to “prevent her from being molested by the growing crowd and also asked to go somewhere private and out of the public’s eye until the investigation was over.” A Radar Online story claimed Hilton could be off the hook because police allegedly failed to check her purse at the scene and instead didn’t do so until she was inside the Wynn, which her lawyers could argue was an illegal search . The police report confirms that an officer escorted Hilton into the hotel to the Wynn security holding room while they waited for a female officer to take her to the restroom. Inside the Wynn, Paris asked if she could take some lip balm out of her purse, and when the officer handed it to her, he claimed in the report, “As she began, I saw a small bindle of what I believed to be cocaine in a clear baggie begin to fall from the purse and into my hand.” Also found in the purse: a broken tablet of Albuterol — a prescription drug commonly used to treat asthma and wheezing — as well as Zig Zag rolling papers. Hilton copped to the Albuterol but said the cocaine was not hers and that the purse did not belong to her and that she’d borrowed it from a friend. When questioned by the police about the cocaine, she allegedly said “she had not seen it but now thought it was gum.” Also inside the purse were $1,300 in cash and some of Hilton’s credit cards. Reported boyfriend Waits failed a field sobriety test, according to the police report, and was also arrested in the incident and charged with driving under the influence of drugs/alcohol. The heiress had another run-in with the law over alleged drug possession earlier this summer when she was detained in South Africa at the World Cup for marijuana possession. But the case against Hilton was later dropped after officials learned that someone else in her group was smoking. Hilton has a history of getting in trouble for possessing substances and hitting the road, including a 23-day jail sentence in 2007 for violating probation stemming from a 2006 DUI bust. Related Photos Moments In Paris Hilton’s Legal Life Related Artists Paris Hilton

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Paris Hilton Facing Felony Charge In Cocaine Bust

Kanye West Drops Justin Bieber ‘Runaway Love’ Remix

Track channels old-school Wu-Tang Clan, with two new verses from Raekwon. By Jayson Rodriguez Justin Bieber and Kanye West Photo: Getty Images On Kanye West’s re-engineered vision of Justin Bieber’s “Runaway Love,” which arrived online Monday (August 30), ‘Ye and Raekwon take turns trading Wu-homage rhymes in between the teen’s vocals. West sampled the Wu-Tang Clan ‘s 1993 breakout smash “Wu-Tang Clan Ain’t Nuthing Ta F— Wit” for the number. In his verse, Kanye pays homage to Raekwon’s standout verse on Jodeci’s “Freek’N You” remix, among other nods to the Staten Island collective. The veteran Wu lyricist also gives a nod to that same verse. “Yo, ‘Ye, what up,” Rae spits, opening the track like he did on the Jodeci hit. “You got stacks like the International House of Pancakes/ All alone, ready to phone me and your hand shakes/ Palms is wetted, don’s regret/ Never to walk miles for love, I sit in the starter’s deck.” “Last name West, and my teeth diamonds,” West rapped. “She said, ‘Yo, what’s your occupation: crazy rhyming?’ ” Bieber’s vocals are the same as on the original. Raekwon anchors the song with two verses, and Kanye has one verse on the track. Raekwon spoke to MTV News earlier this month and revealed that only he and West joined forces in the studio for the track. The wordsmith made no mention of Bieber among the celebrities who were present during the session at New York’s Electric Lady Studios. “Kanye was just being Kanye,” Rae said. “He was definitely excited. The energy in the room was already speaking for itself. It was time to get up and have fun on the track together. We was drinking, laughing, being normal cats. At the same time, we had a houseful of celebrities in the house as well. [Kanye] was moving through the facility, checking out the studios he had. He had three studios in there. “You had Akon in the building. Mos Def was just chillin’. Mos is a good friend of ‘Ye’s,” Rae added. “You had Charlie Wilson, the legendary cat from the Gap Band. Chris Rock walked in. These are guys that really respect who ‘Ye is. ‘Ye’s energy is cool. He’s a normal cat. A normal Chicago/world cat. Very mature. Having a great time.” The record came together after Kanye West and Justin Bieber talked to each other via Twitter. “Listening to @JustinBieber ‘Run Away love,’ ” West wrote “I love Sunday mornings in the crib.” Bieber responded and the two traded messages about their mutual admiration. West then added Raekwon in the mix. The producer revealed that the Wu-Tang Clan star performed on one of his favorite remixes of all time, Jodeci’s “Freek’N You” redux. “Maybe me and Rae should hop on Runaway Love! FLEX would drop bombs,” West wrote on Twitter, referring to Hot 97 DJ Funkmaster Flex’s method for showing his approval of records. What do you think of Kanye West’s “Runaway Love” remix? Let us know in the comments! Related Artists Kanye West Justin Bieber Raekwon Wu-Tang Clan

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Kanye West Drops Justin Bieber ‘Runaway Love’ Remix