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Coming Up At Uptown Comedy Corner

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Coming Up At Uptown Comedy Corner

People Are Crazy: Allentown, PA Woman Hires This Man To Kill Her Ex’s New Lover Via PayPal

A young lady who was jealous and enraged about the fact that her ex-boyfriend had moved on , has been charged for trying to hire a hitman to kill his new lover with stolen credit cards from Paypal: Marissa Mark, 28, from Allentown, Pennsylvania is alleged to have hired Essam Ahmed Eid through his amateurish website www.hitmanforhire.net. She wanted him to kill Anne Royston for $37,000 in 2006. She is accused of paying a $19,000 deposit with three stolen credit cards through website PayPal. Marissa Mark, left, is accused of hiring Las Vegas poker dealer Essam Eid, left, through his website www.hitmanforhire.net to kill her ex-boyfriend’s new lover. The shoddy website said: ‘Whether you are trying to put an end to a domestic dispute or eliminate your business competitors, we have the solution for you’. The hire-a-hitman website, which has since been taken down, said: ‘Assassinations are the most practical solutions to common problems. Thanks to the Internet, ordering a hit has never been easier. We manage a network of freelance assassins, available to kill at a moment’s notice.’ Court documents show that PayPal refused to transfer the money Mark allegedly paid from three stolen credit cards, meaning Eid never received any money. According to FBI accounts and court documents, Royston – who worked as a loan broker – was first contacted by Eid in September 2006 under the pretence of wanting to refinance his house. He visited her officers in Woodland Hills, California with one of his two wives, Theresa Engle, posing as his assistant, and told her ‘Somebody wants your head. Somebody wants you killed and they hate you a lot.’ He said he decided against killing her because she reminded him of his own daughter and she could save her life and see Mark dead by settling the balance of the contract. In this current case Mark was arrested in Jersey City, New Jersey and transferred to Allentown, Pennsylvania where she appeared in court charged with conspiracy, identity theft and other counts. She was granted bail on a $150,000 bond. There are rumours that the events could be turning into a movie. www.hitmanforhire.net??? This isht is crazy and needs to be a movie….real talk!!! Source

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People Are Crazy: Allentown, PA Woman Hires This Man To Kill Her Ex’s New Lover Via PayPal

3rd Annual Battle Of The Bands [COMING SOON]

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3rd Annual Battle Of The Bands [COMING SOON]

Aviation Institute of Maintenance [OPEN HOUSE]

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Aviation Institute of Maintenance [OPEN HOUSE]

Kanye West Protege Big Sean To Appear On ‘RapFix Live’

G.O.O.D. Music MC will chat with Sway on Thursday at 4 p.m. ET on MTV.com. By Alvin Blanco Big Sean Photo: Theo Wargo/ WireImage “RapFix Live” is back Thursday at 4 p.m. ET, and our special guest is G.O.O.D. Music/ Def Jam rapper Big Sean. The Detroit MC and 2010 XXL Freshmen 10 alum will be fresh from rocking South by Southwest this past weekend with Jay-Z and his G.O.O.D Music family, including mentor Kanye West. Big Sean first made a name for himself about four years ago when his song “Getcha Some” was a standout on West’s Can’t Tell Me Nothing mixtape. After catching Yeezy at a radio station and impressing him with an impromptu audition, Sean passed on a scholarship to Michigan State University to tour with West and eventually signed with the Chicago rapper’s G.O.O.D. Music imprint in 2007. Since then, Sean has released three volumes of his Finally Famous mixtapes ( The Mixtape, U Know Big Sean and BIG ) to keep his fans satiated, and he was also a regular on West’s G.O.O.D. Friday music leaks. After a few delays, Sean’s long-in-the-making debut album, Finally Famous: The Album, has an official release date of May 3. Right now, Sean can be heard on the album’s No I.D.-produced lead single “My Last,” which features R&B crooner Chris Brown. “I’ve seen and [gone] from doing shows in Detroit and getting booed to people just looking to a couple people knowing the words to doing sold-out shows with thousands and thousands of people just knowing [my songs],” Sean told MTV News from the set of the video for “My Last.” “And it [comes from] years of grinding, man.” Sean performed the song at SXSW and the Detroit spitter also has a verse on West’s soon to be released “All of the Lights” remix with Drake and Lil Wayne . Don’t miss “RapFix Live” with Big Sean on Thursday at 4 p.m. ET on MTV.com. Related Artists Big Sean Kanye West

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Kanye West Protege Big Sean To Appear On ‘RapFix Live’

Nate Dogg Funeral, Benefit Planned For This Weekend

Crooner is tentatively set to be laid to rest Saturday, followed Sunday by a DJ Quik-hosted benefit. By Jayson Rodriguez, with additional reporting by Rahman Dukes Nate Dogg Photo: MTV News Plans for Nate Dogg’s funeral and wake are starting to shape up, according to a source close to the late singer’s family. Nate Dogg died last week of yet-undetermined causes. The “Regulate” star suffered two strokes in recent years and never fully recovered from the setbacks brought on by the second one, his manager, Rod McGrew , told the media. The crooner is tentatively set to be laid to rest this Saturday with a ceremony preceding the event at the Long Beach Airport, which will be open to fans, according to the family friend. The next day, another tentative event is in the works: a memorial benefit at the Los Angeles Convention Center hosted by DJ Quik. McGrew did not respond to MTV News’ request for comment about the events; a representative for Quik was unable to confirm the information when we contacted him. Warren G, who teamed with Nate Dogg for his hit “Regulate,” spoke to MTV News about his friend’s death following a South by Southwest tribute concert. “I was out on the Sweat Tour with Snoop, and we had got the word from his family on what was going on, and it was just a crushing blow for us,” he said. “Just from going to see him and lifting his spirits up when he was in therapy and stuff like that, it’s just crazy for that to happen. And I still don’t believe it, you know what I’m saying? “It kind of hurts me when I look at this shirt [the organizers of the SXSW tribute show sold Nate Dogg T-shirts, with proceeds going to the late singer’s family], it’s like, ‘Damn, that’s my homeboy on this shirt,’ ” he continued. “And I’m hurting, and you know, a lot of people are showing tons of support for his family, for his homeboys, and we really and truly appreciate that. It’s real love.” Share your well-wishes for Nate Dogg’s friends and family in the comments. Related Videos Remembering Nate Dogg Related Photos Nate Dogg: A Life In Photos Related Artists Nate Dogg

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Nate Dogg Funeral, Benefit Planned For This Weekend

Get Well… AJ Jewell’s Daughter Asheley Remains In Critical Condition As Family Plans Vigil

Asheley Jewell, the daughter of Kandi Burruss’s late ex-fiance , is still in critical condition in a Georgia hospital after being shot in the head last weekend . And her family is actively seeking the public’s help in figuring out why. Friends and relatives of Asheley Jewell, the 15-year-old wounded in an apparent road rage shooting, will hold a candlelight vigil Saturday near the site of the shooting. Jewell, a Stephenson High School sophomore, was shot in the head and remains in critical condition at Grady Memorial Hospital. Jewell is the daughter of the late A.J. Jewell, a “Real Housewives of Atlanta” personality who died in 2009 after a fist fight outside an Atlanta strip club. About 10:30 p.m. Saturday, Fulton County police said, two vehicles were traveling on Old National Highway near Jerome Road when one started chasing the other. Shots were fired and Jewell, a passenger in the car being chased, was struck. No one else was hurt. Jewell was rushed to Grady and underwent surgery. “Investigators are looking into every possible motive as well as attempting to gain surveillance video from surrounding businesses for a closer description of the perpetrators’ vehicle,” Fulton detective Melissa Parker said. Anyone with information on the incident is urged to call Crime Stoppers Atlanta at 404-577-8477. The vigil will be held at 7 p.m. Saturday at O’Reilly Auto Parts, 5549 Old National Highway in College Park. “The vigil is a step toward healing a family victimized by senseless violence,” said Jewell’s cousin, attorney Ebony Phillips. “It is also a call for justice in hopes that someone will come forward with invaluable information about this case. Although nothing can undo the events of March 5, 2011, the family is hopeful that justice will prevail.” Ashley “A.J.” Jewell died Oct. 2, 2009 after he and another man fought in the parking lot of the Body Tap, police said. A strip club employee was charged with voluntary manslaughter, but the charge was later dropped after it was determined Jewell died from a sickle cell crisis. We hope the person responsible for this random ridiculousness will do the right thing and turn him- or herself in. Source

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Get Well… AJ Jewell’s Daughter Asheley Remains In Critical Condition As Family Plans Vigil

Klozet Freaks presents Madingo Madness

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Klozet Freaks presents Madingo Madness

Klozet Freaks presents Madingo Madness

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Klozet Freaks presents Madingo Madness

Steve Stoute Clarifies Critical Grammy Snub Letter

After music vet’s now-infamous ‘open letter,’ MTV News examines whether the Grammys need to go back to the drawing board. By James Montgomery Steve Stoute Photo: Johnny Nunez/ WireImage On Sunday, in a full-page “open letter” in The New York Times, marketing executive and music-industry veteran Steve Stoute took the Grammys ; its parent organization, the National Association of Recording Arts and Sciences; and NARAS president Neil Portnow to task for their “fundamental disrespect of cultural shifts as being viable and artistic,” an outburst that stemmed from the events of the 53rd Grammy Awards. At last Sunday’s awards show, widely perceived favorites such as Eminem and Justin Bieber were upset by lesser-known acts like Arcade Fire and Esperanza Spalding. “Over the course of my 20-year history as an executive in the music business and as the owner of a firm that specializes in in-culture advertising, I have come to the conclusion that the Grammy Awards have clearly lost touch with contemporary popular culture,” Stoute wrote, in part. “As an institution that celebrates artistic works of musicians, singers, songwriters, producers and technical specialists, we have come to expect that the Grammys uphold all of the values that reflect the very best in music that is born from our culture. Unfortunately, the awards show has become a series of hypocrisies and contradictions, leaving me to question why any contemporary popular artist would even participate.” Stoute wondered how it was possible for the Grammys to use the images of Eminem, Bieber and Kanye West to promote the show — and invite them to perform — while, at the same time, snubbing them when it came time to hand out the hardware, and called into question the very legitimacy of the Recording Academy’s “peer” voting system, which is used to determine winners … or, shroud the show in an additional veil of secrecy. “[Do] the Grammys intentionally use artists for their celebrity, popularity and cultural appeal when they already know the winners and then program a show against this expectation?” he wrote. “Meanwhile, the National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences hides behind the ‘peer’ voting system to escape culpability for not even rethinking its approach.” On Tuesday (February 22), in an interview with The Hollywood Reporter, Stoute said that he was inspired to write the letter after hearing some artists voice their complaints about the transparency of the show, complaints that — to him, at least — seemed well-founded, especially considering the fact that, moments after besting Eminem to win Album of the Year, the Arcade Fire seamlessly stepped into a show-closing performance number. “What … triggered it was sitting with some really big, credible artists after the show, and hearing them complain that, ‘This is crazy,’ ‘We need to start our own show,’ or ‘This doesn’t make any sense,’ ” Stoute said. “For me, it wasn’t Arcade Fire winning that was the problem, it was them performing twice. After the backstage moment, the production was set for them to perform again. But if Eminem had won, would he have performed again? That’s when it was, like, ‘This is fake now.’ ” And that sentiment was echoed by MTV.com readers, who flocked to our original story about Stoute’s open letter to let their frustrations be known. To them, the Grammys “killed any respect they had left” by ignoring Eminem and Bieber in favor of less-popular acts like the Arcade Fire and Spalding. “We define the artists we love by actually buying — and not pirating — the music they offer,” one reader wrote. “The Recovery album … was able to capture the appeal of a widespread audience unlike any other artist nominated,” another wrote. “In order to receive the biggest award of the night, [an artist] should have made a true impact on the music industry.” But do Stoute — and our readers — have a point? Do the Grammys need an overhaul? Have they lost their cultural relevance? Well, it’s certainly worth wondering why it took everyone so long to have this discussion. After all, complaining about the awards (and the voting of the Recording Academy) is a tradition nearly as old as the Grammys themselves: The list of snubs is long and puzzling, though some of our favorites include the New Vaudeville Band besting the Beatles and the Beach Boys to win Best Rock & Roll Recording in 1966, Elvis Costello losing Best New Artist to A Taste of Honey in 1978, Jethro Tull trumping Metallica in the 1988 Best Metal Performance category and, of course, Steely Dan triumphing over Em’s The Marshall Mathers LP in 2000’s Album of the Year race. And building off that last one, it truly seems, particularly when it comes to the biggest categories, that Recording Academy voters have always had a difficult time discerning between “Best” and “Most Popular.” When Taylor Swift’s Fearless took home Album of the Year last year, detractors howled that voters gave the award to Swift only because she had sold more albums than anyone else (you know, the same reason most think Em should’ve won this year). In 2008 and 2009, those same voters took the opposite tact, giving Album of the Year to Herbie Hancock’s River: The Joni Letters and Robert Plant and Alison Krauss’ Raising Sand, respectively, while ignoring higher-selling albums by West, Amy Winehouse, Coldplay and Lil Wayne. In fact, if you look back at the past decade of AOTY winners, you’ll see that they’re pretty evenly split between best-sellers (the Dixie Chicks’ Taking the Long Way, U2’s How to Dismantle an Atomic Bomb, Outkast’s Speakerboxxx/ The Love Below ) and critically acclaimed releases (Steely Dan’s Two Against Nature, Ray Charles’ Come Away With Me ). Occasionally, they handed the award to an album that managed to be both commercially successful and critically lauded — the ‘O, Brother, Where Art Thou?’ soundtrack, Norah Jones’ Come Away With Me — but more often than not, voters either sided with the record-buying public, or the folks that write about the music itself. And that divide could be what’s driving fans (and Stoute) crazy. Of course, it could also have something to do with the Grammys’ failure to recognize hip-hop as both the commercial and cultural force that it is today. The show famously didn’t create Best Rap Performance categories (either solo or group) until 1991, or a Best Rap Album award until 1995 and, in the 30-plus year history of the genre, only two true hip-hop releases have ever won Album of the Year: The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill in 1999, and Speakerboxxx in 2004. And, most certainly, that is a trend that anyone who considers themselves a fan of music would find puzzling, if not slightly troubling. So will things change? Well, Stoute told the Hollywood Reporter that, as a result of his open letter, he was promised a “let’s-talk-behind-the-scenes” meeting with members of the Recording Academy, and added that he hopes “this ignites the conversation so artists can use it as a platform to move forward and not tolerate things as they are any longer.” Does that mean that the Recording Academy might be forced to change their voting process — or, at least, open it up to a wider spectrum of voters — lest they be faced with a potential mutiny? Given the silence coming from Academy president Portnow (and the tradition of the Grammys themselves) we wouldn’t bet on it. Still, it bears mentioning that for the first time in a long time, music fans are actually talking about the awards, which, given their long history of befuddling, counter-intuitive and downright frustrating decisions, is certainly a step, not to mention proof that there is definite interest in seeing things repaired. And all it took was an open letter. Who knows what’ll happen next? Do you agree with Steve Stoute? Are the Grammy Awards are out of touch? Sound off in the comments! Related Videos Backstage Interviews From The Grammys Related Photos 2011 Grammy Awards Red Carpet The 2011 Grammy Awards Show

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Steve Stoute Clarifies Critical Grammy Snub Letter