Tag Archives: work

Tupac Was ‘Fearless,’ Mike Tyson Says

‘It was obvious he was a genius, he was a prodigy,’ former heavyweight recalls on what would have been ‘Pac’s 39th birthday. By Shaheem Reid Tupac Shakur at the Paris Theater in New York City Photo: Ron Galella/ WireImage The last time Mike Tyson saw Tupac Shakur, it was September 7, 1996. ‘Pac, who had struck up a friendship with Tyson in the early 1990s, came to Las Vegas like thousands of others to watch “Iron Mike” clean the clock of fellow pugilist Bruce Seldon. That night, Tyson won the World Boxing Association’s heavyweight championship title via first-round TKO. After the bout, Mike, ‘Pac and Suge Knight headed to the locker room to celebrate. No one knew that prizefight night would also mark one of the greatest tragedies in hip-hop: Tupac was shot as he left the Tyson-Seldon matchup; he died from his injuries a few days later, on September 13. ” ‘Pac was just a ball of energy,” Tyson recalled of his friend, when MTV News called him up on Wednesday (June 16). The most prolific MC ever, ‘Pac would have celebrated his 39th birthday Wednesday. Instead, the hip-hop community honors Shakur’s life and legacy . Tyson remembered him as an individual who was unique, to say the least. The former heavyweight partied with the icon, but the two men also shared some insightful private conversations. “He was incredible. You knew he was a special person when he’s in your presence,” Tyson said on the phone from Las Vegas. “If you had any consciousness of the reality we live in, you could feel his energy. You knew he was a special individual. Mike described their talks as, “purely emotionally intimate talking; expression of feeling. He was very prolific in expressing himself. He had a lot of hostility. I think it was just misguided and misdirected. It was obvious he was a genius, he was a prodigy. Whoa! He was just amazing as far as his energy was concerned. He was explosive — like a black panther ready to pounce.” In the ring, Tyson exhibited ‘Pac-like qualities himself. He intimidated the competition, but the people loved him. He was a warrior, the fiercest gladiator the sport has ever seen. “He looked very destructive. He came across as a world beater,” Tyson said. “As far as his music was concerned, his presence and his energy … the word I’m looking for is fearless. He came across as fearless. When you come across somebody that’s fearless, you’re a little bit in awe. You’re like. ‘Whoa!’ He’s ready to blow, too, at any moment; very volatile. He’s very focused. He can go from one second to the next and get very focused.” Tyson and Tupac met during a turning point in both their careers. Iron Mike was the biggest and baddest draw in boxing, but also a year removed from having lost his heavyweight championship. ‘Pac was still affiliated with Digital Underground and about a year from landing the star-making role that would launch him: the intriguing, if insane, Bishop in 1992’s crime saga “Juice.” “Magic Johnson had a party at the Palladium in Los Angeles,” Iron Mike said, jogging his memory. “What year was this? No, I wasn’t champion, it was ’91. I just fought [Donovan “Razor”] Ruddock … I believe I came outside. I was talking to the people running the door. They were friends of mine. They wouldn’t let these guys in, Tupac and them. I said, ‘Man, let these guys in. You remember how it was with us.’ “So they let him in. ‘Pac had said, ‘Hold up for one minute,’ and he brought back 200 more people. He had a gang of people with him. They said, ‘Listen, you can’t go through the front, you have to go through the back.’ Next thing I knew, it was over. I hear somebody on the mic — he took the mic. Him and his guys got the mic somehow and started rapping. The whole crowd started going crazy. They loved him. The guys from Digital Underground introduced him to me. They said, ‘This is Tupac.’ I met him, he was very young. He was very happy, vivacious. He just had energy. He was wild, an amazing individual.” More than three years would pass before Tyson and Tupac crossed paths again. In 1995, ‘Pac visited the Champ at the Plainfield Correctional Facility, in Plainfield, Indiana, where Tyson was serving his sentence for a rape conviction (a crime for which Tyson still maintains his innocence). “The next time I saw [Tupac] I didn’t even know who he was,” Tyson said. “I knew he was ‘2Pac.’ But his mother had wrote me a letter in prison … I remembered that night. He came to prison to see me. We spoke. He was so much more confident than when I had met him the other time, probably a year or two prior to that. He had gone from being shy guy to very strong-willed and confident and independent. He was tremendously feeling himself. He had so much confidence. He was bursting off the air. “He came to the prison. He was standing on the table, started talking. All the people in the prison started going crazy. I said, ‘Sit. Sit down. Sit brother, sit,’ ” Tyson recalled. “The white prisoners, the guards, everybody went crazy in this redneck prison. They went nuts when he came in there. I didn’t know he was [famous] like that. I didn’t know he was like that! I thought he was some young brother. But when he came in, I didn’t know people was feeling him like that too. I was like, ‘Yo man, chill brother.’ He was wilding, sweating, talking, being very gregarious. He was prolific. He was talking, having a ball. … He was very territorial. He was an interesting guy. He was different than any other rapper I had ever met from a philosophical perspective.” Tyson said all of the prisoners were trying to talk to ‘Pac and snap pictures with him. But the champ was concerned that all the hoopla might get him thrown out of the facility, which had happened before when other celebs had visited the boxing legend. “I didn’t know Tupac was that big then, because I was inside,” Tyson explained. “That’s when they had that [East Coast vs. West Coast] beef stuff [with Bad Boy]. I didn’t know Tupac was who he was. I had no idea.” Share your memories of Tupac in the comments. Related Artists Tupac

The rest is here:
Tupac Was ‘Fearless,’ Mike Tyson Says

Christina Aguilera: What Should Her Next Move Be?

After soft first-week sales for Bionic, experts weigh in. By James Montgomery Photo: Ronald Martinez/ Getty Images Between the unexpectedly soft first-week sales for her comeback album, Bionic, constant criticism from Perez Hilton and a barrage of Lady Gaga comparisons , it hasn’t been an easy few weeks for Christina Aguilera. While the negative press is nothing new (remember the public outcry over her explicit “Dirrty” video? ), the less-than-stellar album sales, controversy over her sexed-up “Not Myself Tonight” video and the recent postponement of her tour are not adding up well. So what should she do next? We decided to pose the question to some experts, all of whom seem to agree that Aguilera has bucketloads of talent — but also has her work cut out for her. “She’s still under 30, she still has a fantastic voice, but I think her time has passed. I don’t know if it’s because she went away for a while, or because she tried to do something different with this project, but it feels a little crass and calculated,” Entertainment Weekly music critic Leah Greenblatt said. “From her choice of collaborators [The-Dream, Polow Da Don, Le Tigre] to her first single, it doesn’t feel fully organic. What’s missing so much with her this time out is that, while she can still sing the crap out of her songs, you don’t get a sense of vulnerability, or even really know who she is.” “She just seems a little confused, and that’s not like her, and it’s not what we want from her,” Julianne Shepherd, executive editor of The Fader magazine, added. “The image she’s been projecting, she just doesn’t seem comfortable doing it. She’s always done vamping, but now it’s like ‘I’m wearing these insane PVC outfits and singing to this music that I don’t relate to.’ No matter what she says, I don’t see her sitting around listening to old trance records.” Both agreed that Aguilera should essentially do her — focus on putting out the kind of songs that showcase her strengths — and stop chasing her competitors. “I think honestly, she’s trying to be a little too Gaga, and it’s not working for her,” Shepherd said. “She’s such a talented singer that she doesn’t need to do what everyone else is doing. It just seems too forced and too in the mold of the Gagas and the Rihannas of the world.” “She’s very much into the concept of ‘the future’ on this album, but the first single doesn’t sound like the future: It sounds like a song they’d play in a spin class, circa 1998,” Greenblatt said. “When you look at the other girls on the pop charts, it doesn’t feel fresh. It’s not compelling enough to pull herself away from the field. If you look at something like Katy Perry’s ‘California Gurls,’ it’s a retro song, but it’s fun. There’s a heaviness to the Christina album. She may say she’s having fun, but you don’t believe her.” Both Greenblatt and Shepherd singled out the M.I.A. collaboration “Elastic Love” as a potential game-changer, a song that perhaps best sums up whatever it was Aguilera was hoping to achieve on Bionic, and one that might reinvigorate a public that’s grown tired of more of the same old pop. And both added that Christina should get back to basics (the title of her last album, as it happens), or maybe line up a new collaboration or two. “She’s got to re-calibrate her image, like do a fun video that treats sexuality as a garnish, not the entire meal,” Greenblatt said. “If she reins herself in and releases the right single, things might be OK. There are plenty of artists who hit it big with the second, third single, and she’s definitely big enough for that to happen here. People want her to succeed, she just needs to give us an iteration of herself that people like.” “I think that, maybe if she steps back a bit, tries to ease our of where she’s going, and trusts herself more, she will probably be okay. I think it’s just a bump in the road,” Shepherd added. “Or maybe she should collaborate with all of Young Money. That would probably work too.” What do you think Christina Aguilera’s next move should be? Let us know in the comments below! Related Artists Christina Aguilera

More here:
Christina Aguilera: What Should Her Next Move Be?

Photographers Capture "Fragile" Louisiana

Image credit: Linda Holllinger Debbie Fleming Caffery is an award winning photographer who holds yearly photography workshops in Louisiana for small groups of artists who are keen on further developing their eye and vision in an extraordinary environment. Looking at the work of Caffery is always a delight and a surprise in that she seemingly never repeats herself. This year I asked to her to have the participating photographers take images that were “fragile.” I thought it would be interesting to see what came back. … Read the full story on TreeHugger

Read more from the original source:
Photographers Capture "Fragile" Louisiana

Fat Joe Calls Rumors Of His Rap Demise Premature At LP Listening Party

‘Did you ever have anybody try to kill you?’ the Bronx MC says of being counted out after weak album sales. By Shaheem Reid Fat Joe Photo: Shareif Ziyadat/ FilmMagic Fat Joe is like the vampire Bill Compton on HBO’s “True Blood” — crawling out of the dirt after being, in a sense, buried alive. “They tried to disrespect the God, realest rapper ever,” Joe said Monday when we joined him at Manhattan’s Skyline Studios. The Bronx MC was talking to a group of journalists and select DJs (Clark Kent, Bobby Trends, Mister Cee and others) assembled for a listening session of his new LP, The Darkside Vol. 1, due July 27. “Did you ever have anybody try to kill you?” Joe asked, addressing Kent and Trends. “They tried to erase 15 years!” After sales of his last album, 2009’s Jealous Ones Still Envy (J.O.S.E.2), turned out to be meager at best, some journalists, bloggers and fans said Joe’s career was done. But on Monday night, a confident Joe Crack responded to his critics, playing Darkside over and over for hours and proclaiming the work a classic. And one song in particular seemed destined to be his newest banger: the Rico Love-assisted “No Problems.” “July 4th weekend, this will paralyze the city!” Joe said of the track. As an engineer pressed play, a thunderous “aahhhh aahhhh” came up through the speakers. Mister Cee quickly called out the “No Problems” sample as the song shook the room. “To all y’all DJs, do not go put ‘Terminator [X] to the Edge of Panic’ and ‘Flash Gordon’ on your computers now,” the legendary DJ ordered, name-checking the Public Enemy track which borrowed from Queen’s “Flash.” “Joe, do not give out an instrumental. You don’t want a bunch of n—as Mr. Potato Head-ing your record,” he joked. While Scoop DeVille produced that record, Joe also enlisted other producers for the project, including Cool and Dre, Infamous, Raw Uncut, Street Runner, Scram Jones and Just Blaze, who helmed the “I am Crack” track, which finds Joey Crack rapping from the perspective of rock cocaine. DJ Premier is behind “I’m Gone,” and Joe explained that he got the track from him the same day Preemo’s Gang Starr partner Guru passed away in April. “I’m gangster/ F— that, I’m Gang Starr,” Joe raps on the record, on which he pays homage to the late MC. “Tell Nas hip-hop’s dead now/ My man’s gone.”

Read more from the original source:
Fat Joe Calls Rumors Of His Rap Demise Premature At LP Listening Party

Taylor Lautner in GQ: Yummy!

In a recent interview, Robert Pattinson joked that he wants a better body than Taylor Lautner. Based on a new photo of the latter in GQ , though, it’s no laughing matter when we say: dream on, Rob! We mean… seriously. But you can take comfort in this, R. Patt: few men on the planet have a better body that Taylor: In the July issue of this magazine, Lautner expresses shock over his rise to fame (on the Oscars: “You’re looking down and you’re talking to George Clooney, Leonardo DiCaprio – and they’re listening to you!”), while also saying not much is different away from the cameras: “The thing I love is that my home life hasn’t changed. I still help out with the garbage. I still help out with the lawn.” Since Twilight hit it big, Lautner has signed on for a bunch of new films, such as Abduction . But he says he tries not to get caught up in anything but the work itself. “If I start thinking, Is this movie going to open? Is this movie going to do well? I’m not focusing on the job. The job is to make a good movie.” Anyway, we know what you’re thinking: enough reading. On with the ogling! Drool over new photos of Taylor in GQ below…

Read more:
Taylor Lautner in GQ: Yummy!

Buzz Break: ‘Dishes are Done, Man’

‘New Moon,’ Miley Cyrus, Justin Bieber Lead Teen Choice Nominees

Katy Perry will host the awards show, which airs August 9. By Jocelyn Vena Justin Bieber Photo: Jeff Kravitz/ Getty Images The nominees for the 2010 Teen Choice Awards, which take place on August 9, have been announced, and there are quite a few fan favorites in the mix. Among the celebrities who might win surfboards during the Katy Perry-hosted show : Justin Bieber, Miley Cyrus, Taylor Swift and the stars of “New Moon.” Cyrus wrangled three nominations. She’s up for Choice Movie Actress: Drama for her work in “The Last Song,” Choice Movie: Dance for her footwork with co-star Liam Hemsworth in “The Last Song” and Choice Music: Female Artist. In the last category, she will battle it out with Ke$ha, Lady Gaga, Shakira and Taylor Swift. Meanwhile, Bieber is one of the contenders for Choice Music: Male Artist. He’ll be up against Jason Derulo, Drake, Usher and Adam Lambert. In the Choice Movie: Fantasy category, “New Moon” will try and suck the blood out of “Alice in Wonderland,” “Clash of the Titans,” “Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince” and “Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time.” Taylor Lautner and Robert Pattinson are both nominated for Choice Movie Actor: Fantasy, while Kristen Stewart has been nominated for Choice Movie Actress: Fantasy. “Glee,” “Gossip Girl,” and “The Vampire Diaries” will vie for surfboards, and so will their stars: “Vampire Diaries” stars Paul Wesley, Ian Somerhalder and Nina Dobrev are nominated for acting awards, as are Jane Lynch, Corey Monteith and Lea Michele from “Glee.” Five “Gossip Girl” cast members — Penn Badgley, Chace Crawford, Blake Lively, Leighton Meester and Ed Westwick — are also up for acting awards. Although she hasn’t been on the show this season, former “Hills” star Lauren Conrad will face off against current “Hills” star Kristin Cavallari for Choice TV: Female Reality/Variety Star. Their competition includes “Jersey Shore” star Nicole “Snooki” Polizzi, whose co-stars Mike “The Situation” Sorrentino and Paul “DJ Pauly D” DelVecchio are up for Choice TV: Male Reality/Variety Star against “Hills” star Brody Jenner. Presenters and performers will be announced closer to the show’s August air date. For a complete list of nominees, check out teenchoiceawards.com . Related Videos ‘New Moon’ DVD Special Features ‘The Last Song’ Exclusive Clip Related Artists Justin Bieber Katy Perry Miley Cyrus

More here:
‘New Moon,’ Miley Cyrus, Justin Bieber Lead Teen Choice Nominees

Tony Awards Go To Movie Stars Scarlett Johansson, Denzel Washington

‘Red’ takes home Best Play, while ‘Memphis’ wins Best Musical. By Jocelyn Vena Scarlett Johansson at the Tony Awards Sunday Photo: Andrew H. Walker/ Getty Images While the Tony Awards are intended to celebrate the biggest stars of the Broadway stage, several of this year’s trophies wound up in the hands of movie stars. Hosted by “Promises, Promises” star Sean Hayes and held at Radio City Music Hall in New York City, the Tonys honored the new production “Red” (starring Alfred Moline) with Best Play, and “Memphis” beat out “American Idiot” and “Fela!” for Best Musical . Bill T. Jones did win Best Choreography for “Fela!” (which counts Jay-Z and Will Smith among its producers ). “American Idiot,” meanwhile, won awards for its scenic design and lighting design. But Hollywood was a dominant presence all night. Denzel Washington won Best Performance by a Leading Actor in a Play for his work in

The Sea Turtles’ Breeding Tradition is Threatened – Delicate Turtles Dying Amid the BP Oil Spill

http://www.latimes.com/media/alternatethumbnails/blurb/2010-06/34574476-12213022… Sea turtles' breeding tradition threatened By Kim Murphy On an Alabama beach, the reptiles return to their birthplace to deposit their eggs. But this year, hundreds have been found dead or stranded. Photos (click on link) By Kim Murphy, Los Angeles Times June 12, 2010 | 8:18 p.m. Reporting from Gulf Shores, Ala — Each summer, a ritual millions of years old unfolds on this beach, next to the high-rise condos and beach chairs, the T-shirt shops and the Hooters across the road. A 300-pound loggerhead turtle drags herself out of the water for the first time since her birth, probably on the same beach, 18 years ago. Under the moonlight, she kicks a 2-foot-deep hole into the sand, drops in a gleaming heap of eggs, covers it and then lumbers back out to sea. Two months later, 100 or more tiny turtles will scratch their way up through the sand, glimpse the shine of the moon and stars on the water that serves as some kind of celestial GPS, and head for the sea. Fishermen's nets, children with sand shovels, confusing waterfront lights and pollution have plundered the sea turtles, leaving all five species that inhabit the Gulf of Mexico endangered or threatened. Now they face what may be the most serious threat of all: millions of gallons of spilled oil, much of it in the waters they must navigate to reach their Alabama nesting beaches. More than 350 turtles have been found dead or foundering along the Gulf Coast since the April 20 well blowout, a number wildlife biologists find alarming. At least 62 turtles have been found covered in oil. Rescuers in Gulfport, Miss., on Thursday were called to collect 20 turtle carcasses, the highest daily number they have ever recorded. Researchers say there is no way of knowing how many more turtles have perished at sea. “Before, we didn't deal much with dead turtles. The calls we'd get were few and far between,” said Tim Hoffland, director of animal care at the Institute for Marine Mammal Studies in Gulfport. “But since this oil spill, it's just gone berserk,” Hoffland said. “I'm getting calls from my people saying they can't even walk a quarter-mile on the beach without running into dead turtles. It's crazy.” The turtle deaths pose a complex forensics mystery for scientists, many of whom say they are not ready to blame it all on the oil spill. Many of the stranded turtles, for example — five times the number seen in recent years — have been caught by fishing hooks. Toxicology tests will try to determine whether a toxic algae bloom may have killed some of the animals. Many researchers say the spill could have unleashed a tangled web of threats that is killing the turtles even without swathing them in oil. Some suspect shrimping boats — unleashed recently for what many fishermen feared could be their last chance to harvest before oil kills off or contaminates their catch — may have harmed the turtles in their eagerness. It's possiblethey dispensed with the required openings in their nets and inadvertently trapped turtles, leaving them unable to surface for air and causing them to drown. Oil or dispersants may have poisoned the turtles or the fish and crabs they rely on for food; the turtles then may have been driven toward fishing bait along the piers, resulting in the large number of hookings. In a little more than half of the roughly 70 necropsies performed so far, there has been evidence of either acute toxicosis — of unexplained origins — or drowning, said Michael Ziccardi, director of the Oiled Wildlife Care Network at UC Davis, who has been working in the field to help diagnose the deaths. “What we're doing is a CSI for sea turtles. We're taking all of that information and pursuing the clues to try to see why these animals are dying,” he said. So important are their findings — illegal fishing, for example, could carry criminal penalties — that the turtle carcasses are being marked with evidence tags and kept under lock and key in a refrigerated trucking container at the Gulfport marine mammal facility until they can be picked up by government scientists. Though turtle strandings around the world are relatively common, the number on the Gulf Coast has averaged only 47 a year over the last five years, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. The significant increase this year raises an uncertainty: How much of the bigger reported number is due to the larger number of people on the beach looking for troubled animals? Here on the white beaches of Alabama, there are typically far fewer sea turtle nests than the tens of thousands in Florida. The loggerheads that make their way here are so threatened by the bustling resort development that volunteers with a group called Share the Beach patrol the 47 miles of sand at dawn each morning. They look for new nests and fence them off with posts, tape and warning signs — an effort that has won ready cooperation from residents and tourists. Mike Reynolds, a real estate agent and auctioneer from Gulf Shores who heads the group, said he fears there are already signs that fewer turtles have made their way toward shore through the oil and tar balls. “By this time of year, we should have 11 nests. We have six,” he said one morning last week as he motored in a dune buggy down the beach, looking for the long, sliding track known as a “crawl” that shows a female turtle has made her way onto the beach to deposit her eggs. Reynolds said the volunteers began their work eight years ago to counteract the devastating effect of development on the newly hatched sea turtles, which were increasingly turning toward the urban lights on shore rather than the safe glint of starlight on the sea. “Back in the late '90s, we lost tens of thousands of turtles,” Reynolds said. “They'd start going to the light; they'd end up getting dehydrated in the dunes, foxes would eat them, coyotes would eat them, and you'd drive down the road and you'd find squished baby sea turtles.” Since then, local officials have passed an ordinance minimizing lights on the beach during hatching season. Just before the babies emerge, volunteers dig a deep trench from the nest directly to the sea. But in what is normally a busy nesting season, sticky globs of oil have marred the beach. Sargassum seaweed, a favorite habitat for young turtles, has washed up soaked with oil. The last nest laid on the beach, on June 3, came exactly one day before the first waves of oil showed up in Gulf Shores. Are the turtles merely slow this year, Reynolds wonders? Or unable to make it through the oil? Or dead? The volunteers — a postal carrier, an office manager, a teacher, a retired transportation specialist — are motivated by a growing fear, and a lingering sense of obligation: Whatever primordial impulse drives these slow, heavy turtles toward their shores must be honored. “These turtles circumvent the globe, and no matter where they go, 18 or 20 years after they were born, they're driven to come back to this beach to nest. It doesn't matter if it's oiled, or if it's got too much light on it, or too many people or too much trash,” Reynolds said. “So we can have our houses here, have our condos, get our suntans, as long as we remember this is an important habitat for an ancient creature that doesn't have a choice.” added by: EthicalVegan

"We Don’t Need This on Camera": BP’s Crappy ‘Paper Towel’ Cleanup Job

You know Isle Grande Terre, Louisiana, from the unbelievable pictures of oiled birds taken there last week. It's also the island just to the east of Grand Isle, which I've been reporting on since oil made landfall there several weeks ago. I wanted to check up on Grande Terre, and so to get there, and avoid a BP escort, yesterday I got in a kayak with my intrepid former literature professor from the University of New Orleans and paddler extraordinaire, Dr. John Hazlett. On the way, we beached ourselves on an uninhabited spit near Grand Isle State Park. It was completely covered in oil, and there were no cleanup crews in sight. After a while, a Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries employee trailing half a dozen big & tall men behind her appeared. She flagged us down and told us nobody should be walking on that beach because it was a wildlife reserve. Which, considering the amount of oil (massive) and level of cleanup taking place (none), was pretty alarming. Plus, as a big guy next to her wearing a shirt from ES&H, the main cleanup contractor here, said, “We don't need this on camera.” Which is why BP's contractors have their workers on a gag order: because sometimes they say stupid shit like that. We paddled on and pulled up on Grande Terre, where the oil stretched as far as we could see in deep dark pools. We encountered a cleanup crew supervisor gunning around on his ATV, who said there were all of 30 workers on the whole island, which he said is five miles long. For the hour we walked around, only three of them were working anyway, while the rest sat in the shade. And the work consisted of somewhat haphazardly laying down paper towels. That was about all we could take, what with a heat index of 105 and the rowing we had to do back to Grand Isle and I was already getting a little woozy. At least I kept my wits enough about me to remember to keep my mouth closed when waves splashed water thick with oil into my face. I suppose the 60 or so dolphins swimming the pass with us don't have that option; things got a little (more) depressing in the kayak when we saw that they were blowing it out through their holes. They'd probably like to take the double scrubbing-down with dishwashing liquid we took when we got home, too. added by: Omnomynous