Tag Archives: vehicles

‘Dark Knight Rises’: Our Top Five Batmobiles

We count down our favorite Batman rides, in The Weekly Rising. By Kevin P. Sullivan The Batmobile Photo: AFP/ Getty Images Warner Bros. recently shot a bonus feature from the eventual Blu-ray release of “The Dark Knight Rises” (early, I know!) that featured all five Batmobiles from the movies, starting with Adam West’s Lincoln to Christopher Nolan’s Tumbler. The video makes for a cool stunt, seeing all the vehicles in one place, but it also provides insight into just how different the Batmobiles have been over the years — so much so that it begs the question: Which Batmobile was best? Here is our countdown of the top five Batmobiles from the movies: 5. “Batman and Robin” Joel Schumacher ‘s run as the director of the Batman series brought around the two worst Batmobiles by far. Both cars stand as perfect symbols of everything that was wrong with the director’s take on the Caped Crusader. They are both too over-the-top to actually function as vehicles, in the same way that Schumacher’s Batman simply doesn’t work. But of the two, the painful swirling light of the final Schumacher Batmobile from “Batman and Robin” remains the worst Batmobile of all time. The one-seater looks like an oversized Happy Meal toy, and the convertible design puts the Bat out in the open air where everyone can make fun of him. 4. “Batman Forever” The first Schumacher Batmobile gets a pass simply because it’s not as bad as the one from “Batman and Robin.” The enormous fins remain, but the body doesn’t extend nearly as far out. It also gets the added benefit of a closed cabin, so Batman can hide his shame from behind the privacy of tinted windows. At the very best, the “Batman Forever” Batmobile wins the losers bracket. 3. “Batman: The Movie” The Batmobile that Adam West drove during his stint as Batman on the television series and in the 1966 film is the only one of the Dark Knight’s cars that actually looks like a car. Completed in three weeks, the original Batmobile was made from a modified 1955 Lincoln Futura concept car. West’s Batmobile scores points now for a retro style that can’t be beat and just the right amount of camp. 2. “Batman” and “Batman Returns” Admittedly, this is the ride that inspired the two worst Batmobiles ever, but Tim Burton’s take on the Bat vehicle has a certain charm to it. Burton’s films in the series had a look all their own, but they never quite went over-the-top insane like Schumacher’s, and the same applies to his Batmobile. It had the same long body but had a more refined and battle-ready look to it. As impractical as it probably was, the Burton Batmobile was badass in its own way. 1. “Batman Begins,” “The Dark Knight” and “The Dark Knight Rises” Is there really any other choice? The Tumbler not only fits the realistic take on the series, but it also could eviscerate any and all other Batmobiles. Did I mention that his has a motorcycle hidden inside the front of it? How about the newly added flight feature? It may have been meant originally for building bridges, but all the Tumbler ended up doing was being the toughest ride the streets of Gotham has ever seen. It’s only fitting that the greatest iteration of Batman gets the all-around best version of his car. Which is your favorite Batmobile? Let me know on Twitter via @KPSull! Check out everything we’ve got on “The Dark Knight Rises.” For breaking news and previews of the latest comic book movies — updated around the clock — visit SplashPage.MTV.com . Related Photos ‘Dark Knight Rises’ Trailer: 5 Key Scenes

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‘Dark Knight Rises’: Our Top Five Batmobiles

‘Tron: Legacy’: The Reviews Are In!

Critics call Disney’s reboot/sequel a ‘catchy popcorn pleasure’ that is ‘destined to split audiences.’ By Eric Ditzian “Tron Legacy” Photo: Disney It’s been a good year for studios that waited three decades to update old-school flicks. In April, Warner Bros. gave 1981’s “Clash of the Titans” a coat of CGI splendor and ended up with a film that grossed almost $500 million worldwide. Can Disney, which has resurrected 1982’s computer-world-based adventure film “Tron” for a new generation, mirror the success of “Clash”? At this point, at least, “Tron: Legacy” is receiving far kinder reviews than “Clash.” That doesn’t mean, of course, that “Tron” can top the $61 million domestic opening of the latter. Disney’s 3-D film is predicted to land somewhere in the $40-45 million range. Will it defy expectations? Will positive word of mouth spread? Is the movie worth a trip to the theater on opening weekend? Check out what the critics are saying about “Tron: Legacy” and decide for yourself. The Story “Sam Flynn (Garrett Hedlund), the son of video game developer Kevin Flynn (Jeff Bridges), is left as the uninterested heir to his father’s corporation after the elder Flynn’s disappearance 20 years earlier. Following a mysterious signal, Sam finds himself pulled into the same computer world that has trapped his father. Reunited, the Flynns team with a Quorra (Olivia Wilde), a cyber warrior, to defeat Clu, a program left in charge of the Grid whose rise to power puts both the computer world — and our world — in danger.” — Silas Lesnick, ComingSoon.net The Comparison to the Original “[T]his is one of the smartest ideas for a reboot in yonks. Where its fellow 1982 sci-fi releases, ‘E.T.’ and ‘Blade Runner,’ are still universally celebrated, ‘Tron’ ‘s visuals and ponderous tone have aged as badly as Manic Miner. The concept at the Disney film’s core, however, remains beautifully simple: What if a man got sucked into a computer? That notion, revisited with today’s turbo-boosted VFX technology, has now given Mickey Mouse a stonking tentpole. And make no mistake, ‘Tron Legacy’ — part sequel, part remake — is a proper event movie, complete with nattily digitized Cinderella’s Castle at the start, a journey to a fully realized alien world and the best 3D since ‘Avatar.’ ” — Nick de Semlyen, Empire The Effects “The FX in ‘Tron: Legacy’ have an almost Einsteinian elegance: They infuse light with gravity. If one of the discs hits a combatant, he’ll shatter into glassy fragments, and Sam, absorbing the physics of the game, must learn to treat his body almost as part of the surrounding architecture. He becomes a ruthless digital specter. As long as it’s engaged in light-hurling bouts of force, or motorcycle chases through a landscape so ominously enveloping it looks like ‘Blade Runner’ after gentrification, ‘Tron: Legacy’ is a catchy popcorn pleasure.” — Owen Gleiberman, Entertainment Weekly The Dissenters “This is one of those big-budget projects destined to split audiences (a good thing, always). Directed by Joseph Kosinski, who did the ‘Halo’ and ‘Gears of War’ commercials, ‘Tron: Legacy’ comes to life when Sam, played by a too-cool-for-school Garrett Hedlund, learns the ways of the Lightcycles and the perilous joys of racing on ‘ribbons of light.’ Here, we get the sweep and simple excitement we need. Elsewhere, we get exposition more sluggish than the stuff we had to wade through in the second and third ‘Matrix’ movies, and a strained, opaque brand of intellectual-property mythology that might mean tons to ardent fans of the first ‘Tron,’ but less to others.” — Michael Phillips, Chicago Tribune The Final Word ” ‘Tron: Legacy’ is a surprising film for many reasons, not the least of which being that it contains more substance than is easily explored — if also to some extent, articulated — in just one viewing. And perhaps it might seem like a pre-emptive defense against logical or narrative shortcomings to make one of its central themes the idea that perfection, as we can imagine it, is ultimately unknowable. But it’s a point that’s well-taken, and if I have to endure the kind of imperfection that produces a film like ‘Tron: Legacy,’ which is interesting, inspiring and for better or worse, simply incomparable, then it’s worth it.” – Todd Gilchrist, Cinematical Check out everything we’ve got on “Tron: Legacy.” For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com . Related Videos The Vehicles Of ‘Tron Legacy’ ‘Tron Legacy’ Clips Related Photos The Vehicles Of ‘Tron Legacy’ ‘Tron: Legacy’ Premiere In Los Angeles ‘Tron Legacy’ Official Images

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‘Tron: Legacy’: The Reviews Are In!

‘Tron Legacy’: Under The Hood Of Three Cool Vehicles

Designer Daniel Simon gives MTV News a behind-the-scenes look at how the film’s futuristic machines were built. By Eric Ditzian Lightcycle in “Tron Legacy” Photo: Disney The “Tron Legacy” vehicle design team had one goal: “We wanted to make the most sexy vehicles ever onscreen.” According to German-born designer Daniel Simon, who worked on transforming the original film’s iconic creations from clunky machines to sleek, futuristic works of art, the crew set the bar high for themselves. It was a four-year process that began with director Joseph Kosinski and production designer Darren Gilford, who conceived the overall concepts and then brought in folks like Simon, whose work includes designing real-world Bugattis and Lamborghinis. Not that they actually built the lightcycles and lightjets we see in the finished film, which hit theaters on Friday (December 16). While the crew constructed each vehicle’s cockpit, complete with LED lights and instrumentation, the machines only exist on the sketchpad and in the ultra-powerful computers with which Kosinski created his film. Simon called up MTV News recently to walk us through the creation of three of the vehicles in the new movie. Here’s what we learned. Lightcycles As fans of the 1982 film know, the first lightcycles — those bikes that race forward and emit beams of light — weren’t open-air vehicles but rather sported concealing shields. You couldn’t see the actors furiously riding through the movie’s CGI world. The tech team back then simply didn’t possess the computing power to capture such complexity. They had to hide the actors. The first thing Kosinski wanted was to make his “Tron Legacy” bikes open-air. “It was a pretty obvious choice. That is what most motorcycles look like,” Simon said. “They had exactly those ideas in the ’80s but didn’t have the technology to execute them. Making the lightcycles open-air was a way to show off our technological revolution. And it’s more fun for the actors, since they can be seen and they can interact with the environment.” To further update the bikes, the team drew inspiration from real-world bikes built to set speed records. “From the rider position and the wheelbase, it’s inspired by land speed-record bikes that you would see in Bonneville or El Mirage,” Simon explained. “Motorcycle fans will know Burt Munro, who set all these records in the ’60s, he used the same rider position. The only difference is that you can’t actually turn a bike like how the bikes are turned in the movie!” Lightjets Simon and his fellow designers got a few simple directives for the lightjets, a collection of elegant warships that do some crazy aerial battling late in the film. As Simon puts it, “They said they want this vehicle to look elegant yet aggressive, it has to fit three people in and it has to have a gun in the back and the wings should fold up. But out of that concept, you can make 5,000 different designs.” Nor were they constrained by real-world consideration for airplanes; these lightjets never had to land safely at LAX. Yet such freedom had its limits: The jets had to conform to what the public is generally familiar with when it comes to aircraft. With so many possibilities, they drilled down to a few concrete references. “The big jets should be more like gliders, laid-back but still sinister with guns and sh–,” Simon said. “The small ones should be like mosquitoes, aggressive and very agile.” Quorra’s Car Olivia Wilde’s Quorra drives a seriously impressive sports car in the film. And there’s simply nothing like it on Earth. “There’s not a real car we referenced,” Simon said. “It’s freaking huge — almost 9-feet wide. It would kick every Lamborghini’s ass.” The car, it turned out, was too huge, and Simon had to go back to the drawing board. “The door has this scissor-swing opening and it was difficult to design,” he said. “And then the room where they were going to shoot it was not high enough for the door to swing open. We were like, ‘Oh sh–, this has to be a foot shorter!’ ” Check out everything we’ve got on “Tron Legacy.” For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com . Related Videos ‘Tron Legacy’ Clips Related Photos The Vehicles Of ‘Tron Legacy’

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‘Tron Legacy’: Under The Hood Of Three Cool Vehicles

Ja Rule To Serve Two Years In Prison On Gun Charges

Rapper reaches plea deal for charges from arrest in July 2007. By Jayson Rodriguez Ja Rule (file) Photo: Mark Mainz/Getty Images NEW YORK — Ja Rule reached a plea deal with prosecutors in a Manhattan courtroom on Monday (December 13) that will see the rapper serve two years in prison. The charges stem from a gun bust in July 2007, when both Ja and Lil Wayne were arrested separately following a concert performance. The Murder Inc. star pleaded guilty to attempted criminal possession of a weapon, a class D felony in the second degree. “Minor setback for a major comeback,” Ja tweeted after reaching the deal. Ja Rule is expected to be sentenced in February, following a court appearance that same month to report his progress to the judge. The case originated just over three years ago, when Ja Rule joined Lil Wayne at Manhattan’s Beacon Theatre to perform with the Cash Money superstar, who was headlining his first New York City bill. After the concert, both rappers, in separate instances, were pulled over in their vehicles by the New York Police Department. Both were subsequently charged with illegal possession of a firearm; Lil Wayne was also brought up on drug charges. In Ja Rule’s case, the rapper was one of three men in his car to be charged; all three were arraigned on the same charges. Police said they found a loaded semiautomatic weapon in the rear door of his car. If the Queens native had gone to trial and been found guilty, he could have faced up to seven years behind bars. Now, having reached a plea agreement, he’ll likely serve 16 months in prison, followed by a year and a half of post-prison supervision. Last year, Lil Wayne reached a plea deal in his case, and in March of this year, he turned himself in to begin his one-year sentence. Just last month, the New Orleans MC completed his sentence and is currently on probation for an unrelated incident in Arizona. Related Artists Ja Rule

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Ja Rule To Serve Two Years In Prison On Gun Charges

GM to Hire 1,000 Engineers & Researchers to Develop Electric Vehicles

Photo: GM If There’s One Thing Michigan Needs, It’s Jobs… While the “green jobs” bonanza that some predicted hasn’t quite happened yet, there are many high quality green jobs that are being created all around the world these days. The latest announcement comes from GM, who starting today will start hiring 1,000 engineers and researchers in Michigan to “significantly expand its vehicle electrification expertise and lead in the development of electric vehicles from hybrids to electric vehicles with extended-range capability, like the Chevrolet Volt.”… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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GM to Hire 1,000 Engineers & Researchers to Develop Electric Vehicles

Could Subway Trains Generate Power with Regenerative Braking?

Photo: Flickr , CC Could Save Millions of Dollars Per Year Vehicles without regenerative braking are throwing away a lot of energy every time they brake (movement is converted into heat via friction on the brake pads). Hybrid and electric car address that problem by capturing as much of that energy as possible and converting it into electricity, and the same might be about to happen to subway trains with the added twist that it would be tied to the (smart) power grid. The Southeastern Pennsylvania Transportation Authority (SEPT… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Could Subway Trains Generate Power with Regenerative Braking?

Olbermann Mocks Bozell, NewsBusters as ‘Worst Person in the World’

MSNBC’s Keith Olbermann named MRC president Brent Bozell Wednesday’s “Worst Person in the World” for my NewsBusters post on Jon Stewart’s sneering attack on  conservatives as supposedly being opponents of religious freedom over the Ground Zero Mosque controversy. (Audio here .) Predictably, in choosing this dishonor, Olbermann was playing rip-and-read from certain Hillary Clinton-founded Fox-and-Rush watchdogs, as he routinely acts as the TV Xerox of the Bush-Hating Left-Wing Blogosphere. Olbermann also re-tweeted them yesterday . None of these analysts on the left evaluated their own tendency to see grave threats to freedom of religion and church-state separation from Christian evangelists, but nothing at all threatening to their swaggering secular coolness from Islamic advocates of “dialogue.” (See, for example, one take on the Ground Zero Imam Feisal Abdul-Rauf’s views on America’s “Shariah compliance.” Hello, Barry Lynn?) Here’s the transcript:   OLBERMANN: But our winner, Brent Bozell of the hilarious Media Research Center and NewsBusters — not happy that John Stewart criticized the anti-American frenzy by conservatives to stop the building of houses of worship for Muslims. “Stewart,” writes Tim Graham on NewsBusters, quote, “mocked conservatives for having no respect for freedom of religion. This from Comedy Central, the network that mocks Jesus and Christians relentlessly but censors whenever the radical Muslims threaten them? Yes, Stewart was arguing for the greatness of Islam that it should be accepted with great tolerance as a global religion.” Except, of course, when Comedy Central folded in front of Muslim protests over an episode of South Park , Stewart mocked Comedy Central. You know how I know that? Graham’s own Media Research Center and NewsBusters applauded Stewart for doing it. One Lachlan Markay wrote, “Jon Stewart noted the blatant censorship his employer Comedy Central exercised against its popular show South Park by banning it from showing and even uttering the word ‘Mohammed’ in this week’s episode after a threat came forward from an Islamic group. His extensive recap of all the religions the show has made fun of over the years was clearly a critique of Comedy Central’s decision.” Clearly, people at NewsBusters are not relying on their own Web site for information. Then again, with their kind of track record, who would? Brent Bozell of the somewhat self-destructive NewsBusters and Media Research Council [sic], today’s “Worst Person” – hey, beard – “in the World”! I wrote that Stewart and his network shouldn’t “cower” before Muslim critics as they trash Christians. But it’s clear that Lachlan reported that Stewart mocked radical Islam (sort of) over the Comedy Central censorship in April. He lightly made fun of the bosses, and then lightly mocked the Muslim death-threateners with Jewish-deli-and-Frisbee jokes: They “try to intimidate the creators of South Park all while enjoying our lovely theater district, our many diverse restaurants including really the best Jewish delis you’ll find and our new high line park. It’s a park made out of an elevated train line. It’s a super-thin park in the sky. Let’s play Frisbee.” Radical Muslims make death threats; Stewart makes Frisbee jokes and mocks gospel choirs with his “F-You” song. That hardly compares in tone and temper to another April bit, Stewart trashing the 21st-century Catholic Church for heinous massacres in the 13th  as well as everything from Galileo to the Spanish Inquisition: SAMANTHA BEE: The Cathars, the gnostic sect in 13th century France. STEWART: I still got nothing there. BEE: Tens of thousands of them were massacred under the direct authority of Pope Innocent III, persecuted out of existence by the Catholic Church. STEWART: Oh, I see. BEE: Well, that’s what you’re doing now. STEWART: Sam, see, if any other organization had done anything close to what the church is being accused of, they’d be done! The church is barely showing any contrition. Stewart also made fun of Christian “Islamophobes” and Fox News in early July when the bizarre story of NASA administrator Charles Bolden’s Islamic outreach broke. Clearly, the cable news stars on the Left plays the enemy-of-my-enemy-is-my-friend game. Just like they were anti-anti-Communist, now they’re anti-anti-Islamist. 

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Olbermann Mocks Bozell, NewsBusters as ‘Worst Person in the World’

The "LOL OIL" Tesla Vanity License Plate

Photo: Imgur, via Digg Better to Laugh than to Cry Getting off oil is one of the hardest things that our petroleum-addicted society will have to do. It’s a challenge of epic proportions, and it’s going to be hard especially in the transportation sector where oil utterly dominates as a source of energy. We’ll need to change our cities (make them more like Copenhagen ), and change our vehicles (allow them to be powered by clean(er) sources, like electricity from renewables). All of this will be … Read the full story on TreeHugger

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The "LOL OIL" Tesla Vanity License Plate

German Airports Use Bees As Biodetectives For Air Pollution

Photo by bwohack The Düsseldorf International Airport and seven other airports in Germany have decided that bees are the best “biodetectives” for monitoring local air quality. By regularly testing the honey of hives placed on airport premises, researchers are able to see what toxins are in the air and being captured by the flora and fauna. From planes themselves to the buses, taxis, freight trucks and other vehicles used at airports, ensuring the air pollution stays under regulated levels is important; bees seem to be the perfect for the task…. Read the full story on TreeHugger

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German Airports Use Bees As Biodetectives For Air Pollution

Biggie’s Best: Debating The Brooklyn MC’s Finest, 13 Years Later

More than a decade after the Notorious B.I.G.’s death, our Mixtape Daily team is still hashing it out. By Shaheem Reid and Rahman Dukes Notorious B.I.G. Photo: Getty Images Legacy Salute: Biggie’s Best, Part 1 Tuesday (March 9) marks the 13th anniversary of the death of the Notorious B.I.G. There aren’t enough accolades to give the Brooklyn bone-crusher. Biggie helped mold one of the greatest eras in hip-hop with a versatile style and gift for wordplay that has him perennially listed in the top three when you ask most hip-hop fans to name the greatest MCs of all time. Here, your favorite hip-hop team chooses some of Frank White’s pre-eminent musical accomplishments. Best Album Shaheem Reid : Life After Death How do you distinguish extreme excellence? How do you look at two albums by the same artist — both of which you feel are in the top 10 greatest hip-hop creations ever made — and put one over the other? Ready to Die vs. Life After Death is a subject I’ve debated going on 10 years now. No argument has a clear-cut winner. Both albums are classics. Both have stood the test of time. You can’t logically dis a song on either LP. There might be some records you prefer over others, but Big didn’t have anything wack on his albums. For me, though, I go with Life simply because I feel that it was Biggie at his best. He had evolved. He grew. Big touched all bases from the ‘hood to Hollywood in two immaculately put-together discs — a feat that no other MC has been able to duplicate since. Nothing could ever replicate the initial euphoria that Ready brought, but Life was the master with his craft fully perfected. Rahman Dukes : Ready to Die Nothing can replace that feeling hip-hop heads in New York City experienced in the days leading up to this release. I specifically recall the Friday before RTD was set to shock the world. It seemed like every car from Brooklyn to Queens was pumping “Juicy” and “Unbelievable.” Back then, albums were on cassette tapes and not bootlegged. Imagine hearing this flawless masterpiece for the first time in its entirety. The East Coast ran hip hop in the ’90s, and Ready was the icing on the cake. The movement the album set off in the Tri-State Area was the first to do it, only duplicated years later when 50 Cent dropped Get Rich or Die Tryin’. Hmm, that title Get Rich or Die Tryin’ sounds eerily similar to … you know the rest. Best Single Unanimous Choice : “Hypnotize” “Hypnotize” had the million-dollar video with the mermaids and the car chases, but it’s way more than the visual production that puts this record slightly above our other favorites Big singles like “Big Poppa” and “One More Chance.” “Hypnotize” was so hot in its heyday that it felt like the walls in the club would just melt when the DJs pulled it back (sometimes up to 10 times in a row). We were absolutely devastated that Big was gone, but this record helped us get through it. Big left us three and a half minutes of pure jubilation to celebrate his life and legacy. Best Album Cut Reid : “The What” from Ready to Die The Bad Boy/ Wu-Tang Clan pairing was too much. “N—as know soft like the Twinkie fillin’/ Playing the villain/ Prepare for this rap killin’/ Biggie Smalls is the illest/ Your style is played out like Arnold and that ‘What you talkin’ bout Willis.’ ” Big was as merciless as an NFL linebacker attacking the blindside of an unsuspecting quarterback, wonderfully cocky and as humorous as eight episodes of “Def Comedy Jam” all in just a few bars. You put that with a hungry and focused Method Man, who lyrically spat broken glass all over the track, and you wonder why Diddy — in his infinite wisdom — never pushed the button on this classic with radio adds and a video. Dukes : “Everyday Struggle” from Ready to Die B.I.G. was a true master at making some of the most hard-core tracks come off as commercial material. If you tune out exactly what he was saying on songs such as this one, you’d think it was something that you could expect to hear on regular rotation. But then there are lines like this: “I got my honeys on the Amtrak/ With the crack in the crack of her ass/ Two pounds of hash in the stash/ I wait for hon to make some quick cash/ I told her she could be lieutenant, bi— got gassed.” It’s a bit explicit, but I’m sure you get my point. Best Guest Appearance Reid : Jay-Z’s “Brooklyn’s Finest” Another tough one. Big was prolific not just with his own projects, but with doling out the love on his peers’ records as well. I had an inner conflict trying to figure out if I should go with Shaq’s “You Can’t Stop the Reign,” where the swagga was off the Richter, or Puff’s “Victory.” But in the end, I had to give it to his back-and-forth with Jigga. Both MCs were relentless, neither one wanting to let the other get the upper hand. In the end, Big and Jigga made the best tag-team duo since Slick Rick and Doug E. Fresh on “The Show.” Dukes : Shaquille O’Neal’s “You Can’t Stop the Reign” I think the beauty behind this monster is that this record came out around the time when B.I.G. was in rehab and took a break from the rap game. The wordplay on this song is historical. “A lime to a lemon/ My D.C. women bringin’ in to G-minimums/ To condos with elevators in them/ Vehicles with televisions in them/ Watch they entourage turn yours to just mirages/ Disappearin’ acts, strictly nines and macs/ Killers be surreal, Copperfield material/ My dreams is vivid, work hard to live it/ Any place I visit I got land there/ How can players stand there and say I sound like them, hello.” Ten years since the release of this song, nothing comes close to what Big had to say. The irony is that he gave such a jewel away to Shaquille O’Neal. Shaq, you owe the Christopher Wallace estate big time for this one. For other artists featured in Mixtape Daily, check out Mixtape Daily Headlines . Related Videos Mixtape Daily: Tyga

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Biggie’s Best: Debating The Brooklyn MC’s Finest, 13 Years Later