I swear she dropped one of the best albums I’ve heard all year, regardless if it’s just March….”The Sea” Album last all year…in the Zune, Sunday Evening Living room status record. Really good vibes/emotion evoking music.
I swear she dropped one of the best albums I’ve heard all year, regardless if it’s just March….”The Sea” Album last all year…in the Zune, Sunday Evening Living room status record. Really good vibes/emotion evoking music.
I still say she dropped a classic album !
INTERESTED ?
Missy guest spots and things like that…the best pound for pound right now Money Mayweather..seems cool, glad for Chilli . I always thought she was gorgeous…Floyd better be persistent.
Raven Symone joins Lauren Scott of Pepsi Co. at the 2010 NAACP Awards to accept an award honoring the We Inspire program. Raven represents LAUGHTER in the program which was recognized for advancing positive multicultural images in advertising and media. (Photo credit Getty Images)
“Icons” Raven Symone and Taraji P. Henson, along with Pepsi Co’s Lauren Scott, were on hand to accept an award honoring the We Inspire Campaign .
Pepsi We Inspire icons Taraji P. Henson who represents LOVE and Raven Symone, LAUGHTER joined by Gabby Sidibe beaming with pride at the 2010 NAACP Awards.
About Pepsi “We Inspire” (www.pepsiweinspire.com)
Whether they spring from the mouths of loved ones, through the media or from within our hearts, stories inspire, motivate, inform and strengthen our relationships. Pepsi We Inspire will tap into the powerful bonds between women by creating a platform built just for them. Singers, thespians, and authors, whoever uplifts and entertains, will be a part of this community as they too share their own intimate moments, like the songs, movies and recipes that make their own live
I actually watch Friday Night with Jonathan Ross on BBC. I support this program.
I read this on TheWrap.com. I wasn’t surprised.
By Dylan Stableford
MTV changed its logo for the first time in roughly 30 years on Monday.It was a minor change with major symbolism. The network — known more for its scripted reality show programming these days than the music videos and industry it revolutionized — dropped the “Music Television” tagline from the Frank Olinsky-designed original.
With the new look, MTV had those “Jersey Shore”-watching millennials in mind. Via the press release:
“It represents a new visually defined MTV, stimulating its past, present and future and embracing its diversity. Everything from Jersey Shore, to the VMAs to collaborations with the MoMA. The logo is part of MTV’s re-invention to connect with today’s millennial generation and bring them in as part of the channel.”
And with that, “Music Television” can officially rest in peace.
Heres the Teaser.,,
But Watch Episode 1….Embedding disabled by request of HBO ..
Episode 1 Can Be Viewed on You Tube
It’s pretty cool, and I like the NY scenery. It’s showing the hustle and grind behind trying to be “the man” in NYC.
I got this Via Kanye’s Old Blog
It’s been out a couple of days now..
Yeah the entire Jon Stewart Interview
The World’s Biggest Signpost from adghost on Vimeo.
Craaaaaaaazy, the key to our continuation is communication.
Whatever happen to following the North Star…..It’s natures Satellite/GPS . HA !

Los Angeles – Codeblack Entertainment CEO Jeff Clanagan announced today that “Why We Laugh: Black Comedians on Black Comedy,” the groundbreaking film examining the history and cultural influence of American black comedy, has been acquired by Showtime and will premiere on the cabler Thursday, Feb. 4 at 8 p.m. The film will air throughout Black History Month.
Directed by noted actor-producer-director Robert Townsend (“Hollywood Shuffle”), the documentary, which originally screened at Sundance in 2009 in the Premiere section, features interviews with prominent scholars, politicians, cultural critics, and a host of notable comics, including Bill Cosby, Chris Rock, Keenan Ivory Wayans, Steve Harvey, and Katt Williams.



“Why We Laugh” tracks the evolution of black comedy from the character of Stepin Fetchit and minstrels in blackface to the politically tinged humor of Dick Gregory, and from the television success of Good Times and The Jeffersons to the big-screen accomplishments of stars such as Eddie Murphy and Whoopi Goldberg. The film also turns a perceptive eye on the controversial career decision of Dave Chappelle and the implications of corporate efforts to capitalize on the massive success of Russell Simmons’s Def Comedy Jam and Spike Lee’s The Original Kings of Comedy.
“’Why We Laugh’ is a major historical contribution to American culture,” said Codeblack executive vice-president Quincy Newell. “This film is a tribute to the way one courageous person with a microphone can change history.”
Newell produced the documentary which he co-wrote with John Long. The film is based on the book “Black Comedians on Black Comedy: How African-Americans Taught Us to Laugh,” by Darryl J. Littleton. Codeblack’s Clanagan, Richard Foos, and Littleton are executive producers on the project.
Director Townsend has been at the forefront of black cinema for 30 years and received a Career Achievement Award from the American Black Film Festival in 2002.