Fresh-N-Proper Radio!!!!!!!
Saturday, March 7, 2009
New Music: Curren$y - Scared Of Monsters
Could Be A Crackhead...
Grammy Award-winning artist Coolio was arrested today at Los Angeles International Airport on suspicion of crack cocaine possession. According to Reuters, the 45 year-old rapper, who is best known for his 1995 single, "Gangster's Paradise" was detained at an LAX terminal and taken into custody after he was found in possession of illegal drugs.
Reps from the LAPD had no more details about the incident and arrest. However, TMZ recently reported that Coolio was going through a Southwest Airlines security screening, when the screener found the narcotics in his possession. It is also reported that Coolio was on his way to Tulsa, Oklahoma to perform with co-headliners Tone Loc and Shock G of the Digital Underground at the Flytrap Music Hall.
The one-time member of WC & The M.A.A.D. Circle ran into trouble in June of last year after he was arrested for an outstanding misdemeanor warrant stemming from driving with a suspended license and expired registration. While he was able to make bail after that particular incident, these latest charges could see Coolio facing serious jail time.
Coolio is now being held on $10,000 bail.
Only a nigga on crack would think he could get through an airport with crack. And wasn't he on Nickelodeon? Shame, shame, shame.
Via: HipHopDX
In The L...
What Happened Friday night??? Here's what you need to know:
- D. Wade had 42 points, 8 assists, and 6 boards. He has to get some serious recognition for MVP...He's single-handedly got the Heat in a position to get a top-4 seed in the playoffs. And, while its only been three games, he's averaging 40 this month.
- Boston won the "Beast of the East" battle - without KG. The King was just 5-15 from the field, finishing with 21. The Celtics lead the season series 2-1.
- L.A. became the first team to 50 W's.
- Utah won their 10th straight.
- Did anybody else peep that the Spurs signed Drew Gooden. It may not seem like much, but we'll definitely be hearing from him this postseason. Vets like him flourish in Pop's system.
Former Detroit Pistons coach Chuck Daly has been diagnosed with pancreatic cancer.The team says Friday that Daly "is being treated for the cancer and his family is requesting privacy."The 78-year-old Daly coached the Pistons to NBA championships in 1989 and 1990. He also was the coach of the 1992 gold medal-winning US Olympic squad dubbed the "Dream Team." He was inducted into the Hall of Fame in 1994."My thoughts and prayers go out to Chuck and his family following today's tough news," Detroit president of basketball operations Joe Dumars said. "He holds a special place in our hearts and we'll be here to support him in any way we can."Dumars played for Daly on both championship teams, winning the NBA finals MVP award in 1989.The Pistons were scheduled to play the Golden State Warriors on Friday night."I wish him the best. It's a tough cancer to get," Golden State coach Don Nelson said. "He beat my (butt) probably more than anybody."Family spokesman Matt Dobek says in the release that as a coach Daly was "known as the Prince of Pessimism, right now Chuck Daly is the King of Optimism."
Former NBA star Charles Barkley began serving a three-day jail sentence Saturday for a drunken- driving charge.Maricopa County Sheriff Joe Arpaio said Barkley already had been acting like a "model inmate," even chatting with others at Tent City, where inmates are housed in tents rather than traditional jail cells.Barkley has a private tent, but is close enough to other inmates to talk, Arpaio said.Barkley, a TNT studio analyst, will spend all of Saturday in custody, but will be given work release from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. Sunday. He will get work release at 8 a.m. Monday and will not have to return to the tents at 8 p.m.That's a total of 36 hours in jail.
Friday, March 6, 2009
Ludacris x The Roots x Jimmy Fallon...
Step Correct...
Slept-On Young Gun(s) Of The Week...2/27-3/6
Thursday Night Rundown...
Thursday, March 5, 2009
Chris Brown Hit With 2 Felonies...
Chris Brown has been charged with two felonies stemming from an argument with his girlfriend, Rihanna, court documents show.
Brown is expected to be arraigned Thursday afternoon on charges of assault likely to cause great bodily injury and making criminal threats. The 19-year-old R&B singer remains free on $50,000 bail.
The felony complaint handed down in court Thursday morning identifies Brown's alleged victim only as "Robyn F." Rihanna's real name is Robyn Rihanna Fenty.
If convicted, the possible sentence ranges anywhere from probation to four years and eight months in state prison, said district attorney's spokeswoman Sandi Gibbons.
Los Angeles police arrested Brown on Feb. 8 and booked him on suspicion of making criminal threats. Police said at the time a woman identified Brown as her attacker during an early morning dispute in an upscale Los Angeles neighborhood.
Full story here.
Via: Yahoo
NBA Basketball...
NCAA Basketball...
- Texas Tech knocked off #9 Kansas. The Jayhawks never led, and shot 33%, including 4-24 from deep. Meanwhile, the Red Raiders knocked down 15 of 27 their threes.
- Vanderbilt spoiled #11 LSU's senior night. The loss snapped a 13-game conference winning streak for the Tigers.
- Northwestern came into West Lafayette, and snapped #20 Purdue's 9 game home winning streak.
- Florida. The Gators are 21-9, and own just one win over a currently ranked team (a November win at Washington), and just 8-7 in a weak SEC. The last thing they needed was a loss 18-12 Miss. St.
- Kentucky. The 19-11 Wildcats have no major wins, and are, like Florida, are 8-7 in SEC conference play. The beast that is Jodie Meeks is the Wildcats only legit argument that they deserve a Tournament bid. Losing to the 12-18 Georgia Bulldogs certainly doesn't help their chances.
- Boston College. Not too many teams can boast W's over North Carolina and Duke. The Golden Eagles can. Losing to N.C. St. doesn't mean their chances are out the window but it could have very well locked up a bid for them. Taking care of G-Tech, and showing up in the ACC Tournament may do the trick, though.
Flava In Ya Ear...
BREAKING NEWS: COWBOYS RELEASE T.O.!!!!!!!
The Dallas Cowboys have released controversial wide receiver Terrell Owens, sources told ESPN's Michael Smith late Wednesday.Cowboys owner Jerry Jones did not deny the team is discussing the possible release of Owens in late February."There are several decisions on our roster we have to look at," Jones said at the time. "This is the time of year we do that. I'm not trying to be trite, but as you all know we're evaluating players in college, we're evaluating free agents and we're evaluating our own roster. This is an ongoing thing, not any different than this time last year."There has been talk since the end of the Cowboys' 9-7 season, in which they missed the playoffs, that they would consider cutting Owens to improve moral in the locker room.Not only did Owens have relationship issues with quarterback Tony Romo and tight end Jason Witten, but the receiver consistently criticized offensive coordinator Jason Garrett's play calling and his offensive schemes to the point that sources say Garrett does not believe they can coexist.The Cowboys paid Owens a $12 million signing bonus just last year, included as part of a new four-year, $34 million deal.Owens caught 69 passes for 1,052 yards and 10 touchdowns this season.
Wednesday, March 4, 2009
Politics & Bullsh**
League News...
The head of officials for the NBA wants to rewrite the league's traveling rule to legalize taking a "second step" and clarify what he considers a hard-to-enforce rule."I wrote a version and I put it out there," said Joe Borgia, the NBA's vice president of referee operations. Borgia said he's waiting for the league's upper management to decide if they support the change.The rule book says players get one step without dribbling, shooting or passing before they will be called for traveling. In practice, NBA players get two steps on a regular basis -- and have for years. "We really don't reference the rulebook," Borgia said in an interview with TrueHoop's Henry Abbott.Borgia claims the current rule is so confusing that it's impossible to tell if it allows one step or two. The suspicion is that the NBA ignores the rule to inspire exciting offensive players to create great moments. Borgia insists the rule is ignored simply because its intent is lost in a tangle of legalistic terminology.The NBA's official rule says that "a player who receives the ball while he is progressing or upon completion of a dribble, may use a two-count rhythm in coming to a stop, passing or shooting the ball. The first count occurs (1) As he receives the ball, if either foot is touching the floor at the time he receives it; or (2) As the foot touches the floor, or as both feet touch the floor simultaneously after he receives the ball, if both feet are off the floor when he receives it."The second occurs (1) After the count of one when either foot touches the floor, or both feet touch the floor simultaneously."That allows for interpretation -- and some confusion. "The book possibly could be interpreted differently from what actually happens. You could read it so that it's almost like you're allowed one. If you interpret it that way, right. That's where we're having an issue."League officiating instructors have been interpreting it as two steps. Officials are taught that, Borgia said."Forever, as long as I can remember, a player has been allowed two steps," said Borgia, whose father was an NBA referee for the league's first two decades, and then a referee supervisor. "I've never heard anything other than that ... Everyone in the world knows you're allowed two steps."Borgia's new version of the rule would clarify that. "We're not really making a rule change," he said. "We're just trying to write the rule that makes sense."
The outspoken owner called out his entire roster Tuesday, a day after the Mavericks fell behind by 23 and lost to Oklahoma City, which is among the worst teams in the NBA and played without its top two scorers."It's only one game, which I keep reminding myself of," Cuban said in Wednesday's editions of The Dallas Morning News and Fort Worth Star-Telegram. "But let's just say I wasn't happy with our preparation, execution or effort. Not only did it look like we had no idea what we were doing, but we did it without effort. The effort and energy, on both sides of the ball, by each player will decide their future with the Mavericks."..."If each player can't take the personal initiative to make every game important and play like it, I don't see them being here next season," Cuban said. "The ball won't always bounce the way we want it to, but every player can control their level of effort. I don't care what their contract is. I would rather turn over the roster 100 percent than subject fans to another game like last night."
Peep The P.E.'s...
Manny Being Manny....
After months of back-and-forth negotiations, a meeting Wednesday between Manny Ramirez, his agents and Los Angeles Dodgers management has culminated in a deal for the slugger.
Ramirez and the Dodgers have agreed in principle on a two-year, $45 million contract, pending a physical.
According to MLB.com, $25 million of the contract is deferred over five years and Ramirez has the right to opt out of the deal after one year. According to The Associated Press, Ramirez has full no-trade protection.
The outfielder, his agents Scott Boras and Mike Fiore, Dodgers manager Joe Torre, and owner Frank McCourt and general manager Ned Colletti met in the Los Angeles area Wednesday morning. Torre and Colletti arrived from spring training in Arizona.
Los Angeles announced last week that Ramirez declined its latest offer, a $25 million, one-year contract with a $20 million player option for 2010. That deal would have included deferred payments of $10 million each in 2011 and 2012 and $5 million in 2013.
Full story here.
I don't care what the Dodgers said, you knew they had to sign him. There is absolutely no way that anyone on the roster could replace his production.
Via: ESPN