Tag Archives: streets

Victoria’s Secret Angels

The Victoria’s Secret angels in different commercial including Adriana Lima Alessandra Ambrosio Tyra Banks Heidi Klum Gisele Selita Ebanks Karolina Kurkova Miranda Kerr and Other Angels and models song Kaskade 4am Sleepless gliding Over the city lights Watch us flying Over the streets tonight And I say Theres a way, theres a way I know Theres a way, theres a way I know Theres a way, theres a way I know that someday we will surely find it Theres a way, theres a way I know Theres a way, theres a way I know Someday, theres a way Someday, theres a way I know it Sunday morning Watching the city sleep Dreams are shining Finely theyre within reach

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Victoria’s Secret Angels

Rachel Bilson’s Effortless Boobies

Here’s Rachel Bilson doing her best to discourage the boners she normally gives me by hitting the streets in an awful period outfit. Jeans and a baggy t-shirt? Really? This might explain why she’s not getting any acting gigs. Luckily the shadows cast from her boobs and the breeze on her shirt have somehow managed to save the whole thing for her. All that’s missing is a little rain and I’d know for sure that Mother Nature was into chicks. Hot

JWoWW’s Plump JBooBS Keep Me Coming

I think I’m beginning to get a little obsessed with The Jersey Shore’s Jenni Farley aka JWoWW , well at least with two beautiful parts of her, I can’t stop myself from posting pictures of her walking the streets of Miami in a tight workout outfit. Don’t take this to mean that I think she’s hot, far from it, her busted face looks like it’s been beat with a sack full of assholes, but those beautifully plump skin pillows make everything alright in the world. Enjoy.

May Day Madness: Reportedly Over a Million Take the Immigration Battle to the Streets [Worst Law Ever]

Arizona may have set a record for the most immediately unpopular law ever. The measure to force cops to ask brown-looking people for immigration papers was condemned by Obama. Now people are taking to the streets to show their displeasure. More

May Day Madness: Over a Million Take the Immigration Battle to the Streets [Worst Law Ever]

Arizona may have set a record for the most immediately unpopular law ever. The measure to force cops to ask brown-looking people for immigration papers was condemned by Obama. Now people are taking to the streets to show their displeasure. More

Hank Azaria As Gargamel from The Smurfs

Hank Azaria out on the streets of NYC in full makeup and costume. He is starring as Gargamel in the upcoming Smurfs movie. View

Brooke Hogan is Still a Useless Pig of the Day

Brooke Hogan is not just a joke, but she’s also a monster like her dad…and maybe that’s why he wants to fuck her…because he sees himself in her…and anyone that tanned and jacked up…probably loves themselves a lot…and wanting his daughter cuz she is the female version of him just makes sense…it’s masturbation….but to the rest of the world..she’s fucking scary…but not as scary as the era when she was on TV or when she was launching her music career…which was a serious fucking joke, so it’s nice to see her gutter ass back on the streets of Florida trashin’ it up like she was destined to do and if she’s lucky, she may get a segment on this season’s Jersey Shore…a serious match made in white trash heaven… I am posting these for old times and new titties. Pics via Bauer

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Brooke Hogan is Still a Useless Pig of the Day

Mr. Finley Is ‘Pushing’ For His Hometown Of Las Vegas

‘I do this music and represented for the city so long — way before I got a deal,’ he tells Mixtape Daily. By Shaheem Reid Mr. Finley Photo: Kamp Wess Fire Starter: Mr. Finley Mr. Finley is hoping that the old slogan “What happens in Vegas, stays in Vegas” doesn’t hold true for much longer. Well, at least when it comes to his career. The 26-year-old and his team, K.A.M.P. Wess, have been making music for years in Sin City, building up a local fanbase. A breakthrough came last summer when Finley and K.A.M.P. Wess signed a record deal through Ghet-O-Vision/ Def Jam. Although it’s taken some time to get the project off the ground, Finley is coming with a double-fisted assault of singles and videos for “Blowin Dat Endo,” a smoker’s anthem, and a dedication track for his hometown, “Sin City.” “My father was out in the streets from before I was born until I was 17 years old,” Finley told Mixtape Daily. Pops Finley was actually grooming his son to be a singer, the MC said. “He was running the streets. I got older cousins and little cousins, they still out there running the streets. They’re still carrying on this Finley name. If you get your name checked out [by police], you automatically in trouble out here. It don’t stand for nothing good as far as the law and all of that sh– is concerned. I’m just trying to clean my family name up and show we stand for something more.” When Finley goes to the ‘hood, though, all his homies still call him “Weas,” short for “Weas Mac.” The abbreviated “Weas,” he said, comes from the nickname he was tagged with as a teenager: “Weasel.” It turns out the young Mr. Finley had developed a reputation for taking other guys’ girlfriends. But chasing the ladies was just a pastime — Finley’s real diversion was chasing dollars. And when it came to the concrete, he was accepted on both sides of the turf. “My father, he started one of the only Blood gangs out here, but I didn’t really grow up with my father,” Finley said. Raised with his grandparents, the Vegas rapper admitted it was sometimes crowded, with upward of 15 cousins living under the same roof. “I grew up with my mother, [who] grew up in a Crip neighborhood. All my friends that I grew up with since kindergarten grew up and had older brothers that were already Crips. These was my n—as, so it was only the natural thing to do. Me and Pops, we bumped heads when he found out I was a Crip and all that, but we love each other. “But I do this music and represented for the city so long — way before I got a deal. So what I’m doing, everybody sees. All the people that grew up in the ‘hood I grew up in, the Westside, they gonna ride with me. They know I’m pushing for them.” Finley’s debut, The Talented Mr. Finley, has no release date yet. For other artists featured in Mixtape Daily, check out Mixtape Daily Headlines . Related Videos Mixtape Daily: Plies, Drake

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Mr. Finley Is ‘Pushing’ For His Hometown Of Las Vegas

Trey Songz Flirts, Cries, Covers Kings of Leon On ‘MTV Unplugged’

It was a chance ‘to be vulnerable,’ the ‘I Invented Sex’ singer tells MTV News. By Jayson Rodriguez Trey Songz performs on “MTV’s Unplugged” Photo: Scott Gries/ MTV NEW YORK — Trey Songz was fun, flirty and fearless during his “MTV Unplugged” performance, which premiered Monday (April 26) on MTV.com. The Grammy-nominated singer recorded the material earlier this month, at Manhattan’s NEP Studio 33, before an intimate audience of (surprise!) mostly women. “Shout-out to the guys with their girls,” a cheeky Trey said, before chuckling as he pointed at a man in the crowd: “He like, ‘Yeah, what up.’ ” The Virginia native showcased a number of the hits from his latest album, Ready, including a mash-up of “I Invented Sex” and Marvin Gaye’s classic “Let’s Get It On.” “You don’t believe me?” he teased a fan during a brief pause after “I Invented Sex.” “I got the blueprint at the crib. “Lemme tell you what I been trying to do, though,” he continued, transitioning into the opening line of the Gaye track. “I been really trying, baby.” Songz, clad in a white T-shirt, dark jeans and a fitted leather jacket, was charismatic throughout his set. At ease onstage, the singer frequently interacted with his eight-piece band, inviting his guitarist and bassist to join him during a performance of Ready ‘s “Black Roses.” And for a cover of Kings of Leon’s “Use Somebody,” Songz brought up an overwhelmed admirer from the audience. “A funny thing, I actually forgot a part of the song because I was making sure she was OK,” Trey told MTV News afterward, laughing about the moment. “I said, ‘Are you OK, baby?’ Those are moments that I’ll never forget.” Songz’s onstage guest was all aflutter as he pulled her close, crooning the lyrics directly to her. “I could use somebody,” he sang as he circled her, suggestively. “Someone like you.” Other covers included Jimmy Cliff’s “Many Rivers to Cross” and Sam Cooke’s “A Change Is Gonna Come.” During the latter, and after running through numbers like his own “Say Aah” and “I Need a Girl,” a somber Songz took his jacket off and opened up about his recent good fortune. Taking a seat, he talked about his visit to the White House with Jay-Z and Beyonc

Drake Talks About The Evolution Of Mixtapes

‘A mixtape can’t be the songs that don’t make your album,’ he tells Mixtape Daily. By Shaheem Reid, with reporting by Sway Calloway Drake Photo: Jason Merritt/ Getty Images State of the Streets: Drake Talks Mixtapes On Mondays, we usually bring you our main pick, but we had to start this week by saluting mixtapes. We’re proud that so many MCs are stepping their mixtape game up. The mixtape world is strong, potent and competitive right now. This year alone, we’ve seen Fabolous, Wiz Khalifa, Jim Jones and Asher Roth drop product off in the streets and the Internet. The next few weeks are going to be flooded with ferocity, with Young Jeezy, the Game, T.I. and Rick Ross, just to name a few, dropping soon. Long live the underground! We asked Drake — the guy with the biggest mixtape of the past few years, So Far Gone — what he thought about the state of mixtapes right now. He said everyone has to come with their best. “I think that when creating a mixtape, you have to approach it with a selfless mind-set,” Drake told us. “A mixtape can’t be the songs that don’t make your album, or songs that aren’t good enough to make your album make your mixtape — unless you’re that good. There aren’t that many people that are that good. I’m not that good. That mixtape [ So Far Gone ] is me working my hardest. It wasn’t ‘Oh, here are the songs I’m gonna give away to you ’cause I have better songs coming.’ A mixtape has become an album. “Before, I remember people used to be in the studio cutting songs, and they would be like, ‘Oh, that song is OK. I’ll just put it on my mixtape,’ ” he added. “Now a mixtape is an actual tool. It’s a format you need. You don’t necessarily need it, but it can be useful. Like with Fab and the other guys, I know they do a lot of rapping on other guys’ beats. It’s hard to tour like that, as incredible as it may be. Now Wayne, when the No Ceilings set comes on, it’s ridiculous. It’s hard to rap over other people’s songs and have it be timeless. With So Far Gone, when I did flip other people’s songs, half the time people didn’t know what song it was. I tried to pick stuff that was new or rare or just like an album cut. But yeah, man, if I use somebody else’s beat, I try to make a song out of it.” For other artists featured in Mixtape Daily, check out Mixtape Daily Headlines or follow the Mixtape Daily team on Twitter: @shaheemreid and @mongosladenyc . Related Artists Drake

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Drake Talks About The Evolution Of Mixtapes