July 27, 2010

Ever seen a rapper swim in a video?



I wanted to include this in the show, but I'm not so sure it's for my target audience. Still, I like the video. How many times have you seen a rapper swim in the ocean, with his full get-up on? Comment on the video and let them know where you saw it. Maybe we can get them on uHeard!

July 18, 2010

Ladies, I'm loosing confidence. . .

I've been doing this independent media thing for a few years now, and for the most part it has been fun - meeting new people, being the first to play hits, watching artists "blow up," all of that. I've got to admit, however, I'm loosing confidence in my ladies. Where's your grind?

Aside from Ms. Cristal and Joy Tolentino, all of my other female artists have been flops. Early on, I attributed a lot of it to wisdom on the ladies part; it's dangerous to meet strange men off of the internet. It's different now, however. I'm in the game with a track record - proof of what I do. Yet still, I'm running across a lot of flops. And the thing that makes it worse is that 100% of them contact me first! Just this week, two artists agreed to interviews, and then never showed up, called, or emailed - costing me time and money.

What's good, ladies? Where are ya'll at?

July 11, 2010

Marky McFly and Freddy King Shoot

This is a personal-experience post - a little something about what keeps me going.

If you haven't had a chance to check out the show from June with Freddy King and Marky McFly, here is a link to the Freddy King clip:



If you follow the show, then you know there are three blocks, so this is just a third of what we did that week/night. Everthing was so crazy because I was just getting back from Carolina, and we had all of this shooting scheduled. The day started off with a lot of headaches at home that put me back a couple of hours. Naturally, I wanted to bail. I was tired, it was hot, King was in Glendale Heights (a 2-hour commute for me with traffic), we were way-the-hell-behind on shooting time, and it was costing me money.

Man, am I glad I stuck with it. We ended up shooting Mark's video in like 30-minutes (and had fun doing it), we were able to get some footage in front of some Ferraris at Trump's Tower, King did a great interview, and Chicago is just the place to be on a summer night. And really, I was just holding it down with a few homies. Young Doug (my dude for a few years, now) ran the camera, Fly Boy is like a little brother, and King and I go way back - late 90's, fam. I hadn't seen him in years, and it was tight to be able to show him what I do. It just turned out to be a fantastic night.

Check me out in Chicago!

The Rapper's Job Description

Whoops! I thought I had posted this already:

I don't want to make this long or belabor the point, but uh. . . I must admit that I am becoming increasingly discouraged by today's hip hop generation. Thanks to the financial success of lyrical geniuses like Soulja Boy, Wocka Flocka, and Gucci Mane, claiming to be a professional rapper is now easier than ever. All you have to do is rhyme, and I use the term loosely, a few words over a beat - forget about story, purpose, message, all of that. Most of the time, it doesn't even have to be intelligible. Just talk over a beat. That's it. A little disappointing, but hey, what are you going to do?

Now there's a new thing with not holding a microphone. What is that? Is the job not easy enough, now you don't want a microphone? I've had this problem more than once in the past few months. I proceed to record an "artist", and he (no she yet, thank God) is like, "Fnck that, mic. I don't use mics." As far as I go, it's not making air, but somebody has encouraged these morons to maintain their no-mic policy. Maybe I should adopt a no-camera policy. . .