Archive for March, 2008
New Tees Greyone
Visit G1xSA and lace urself up in their new Spring ‘08 line…..









G1xSA
2220 E. COLORADO BLVD.
PASADENA, CA
91107
626 683 7500
Dreams + Inspiration= Destiny
Ive been watching these guys from beginning to end. Always impress me every single time, their live performances before America’s Best Dance crew began, is amazing in itself. Here’s a video clip of there first couple performances on MTV’s America’s Best dance crew. Peep it
No commentsLYRICAL ACTION

If ya’ll are gonna just sal the night away. I suggest you dont and check out the homie Wizdom You wont go blind if you attend this show and you’ll prolly have more lotion in your jergen’s bottle.
No commentsOHHHHHHH MMMMMMM LET monster
Beth’s Cafe is a resturant in Seattle, Washington. Located in the area of Seattle, on Highway 99 (also known as Aurora Avenue), the restaurant is known largely for its “greasy spoon” cuisine and is justifiably famous for its 12-egg omelette and pasta brownie. Very contagious. Ive never been this full. In a long time, but i think this is one of seattle’s best treasures. Best greasy spoon action, best 12 egg omletette action. Althought its kind of a trek during the club hrs, and by that time your probably pissed because u didnt get kisha, lafonda, or the freek a leek’s number. Its either parking lot pimp for 20-25 minutes, or beth’s cafe. I rather choose beth’s cafe you freakin loser. Anyways, heres the madness

Worlds Famous Beth’s Cafe Signage

Don ready to blast away at some 12 egg craze action. DONT HURT EM DONSKEE!!!

Donskee is angry. He wants eggs…..he wants hashbrowns……….stay away from this guy when he’s in hunger.

The punisher

Eggs baby!!!!! Ask him what his pager code was back in the day. He’ll tell u ……

Tangken throwing down, however he’s throwing it sideways with that hair style of his. Call him “baby prickleys.”

Trying to do some damage when i see……….

Lou adjusting his belt for more room………….

How do u feel kat? Exactly. Same here
No commentsNY to SHATTLE!!!!!
Back in August this what we did. We went to New York, hung out with two comedians and let the video camera ran. Btw, shout outs to rich tha barba….queens represent. Anyways, enjoy
1 commentLolo the Cat Namsayin
It has been brought to my attention that my cat is in need of some help. Apparently, he’s been keeping it real hood as far as holding the fort down around the beacon hill neighborhood so much that he got bit acouple times from who knows what. Now he’s in the vet, on some meds and fighting for his life.
For those that been to the house and see my cat, he’s buff, namsayin. Like he prolly whoop on any mid size animal. To some degree he’s prolly the most gangsterist cat out there Namsayin. But aside from being a thug cat, he can do the acrobat and he need your help. He needs your prayers and if anyone wants to help donate to medical bills. You know who to reach. In the mean time, the battle continues.
No commentsPlease do not try leave it to the UAE namsayin….
Arab Drifting (imagine you and a bunch of the homies going down the freeway hahaha)
Two Wheelin (again imagine with the homies)
This is beyond Hyphy, Super Dumb…
If it has a motor then i’m probably interested namsayin…
Nissan Patrol vs Lamborghini Murcielago
Toyota Supra vs Lamborghini Murcielago
Smart Car vs Ferrari F430
Fast Integra Type R
Fack its Friday NAMSAYIN!!!

Today is Friday, another start to another lovely weekend in Seattle. This weekends adventures contain, going to a couple favorite places to eat, a couple birthdays to attend, and thats pretty much it. I’ll see if i can take some candid pictures to let you know how we do namsayin.
No commentsSUPER SAVE THEM

Time to get a lil serious on Namsayin and support the cause. Below is a write up from sports.espn.go.com. This is what they had to say when it came to the sonics.
In six years of writing for ESPN.com, this is the longest piece I’ve ever sent to my editors — nearly 15,000 words of anguished e-mails from Sonics fans around the country. I spent the past 24 hours sifting through them and whittling them down the best I could. Don’t print this baby out. Read it, skim through it, do whatever you need to do. But definitely check it out.
Here’s why the Seattle situation should matter to everyone who cares about sports: After being part of the city for 41 years, the Sonics are being stolen away for dubious reasons while every NBA owner and executive allows it to happen, including David Stern, the guy who’s supposed to be policing this stuff. I think it’s reprehensible to watch someone hijack a franchise away from the people who cared about the team and loved it and nurtured it through the years. It belittles not just the good people of Seattle, but everyone who loves sports and believes it provides a unique and valuable connection for a city, a community, family members and friends.
Nobody has ever summed up being a sports fan better than the New Yorker’s Roger Angell in his piece “Agincourt and After,” in this passage about Carlton Fisk’s famous home run in the 1975 World Series:
It is foolish and childish, on the face of it, to affiliate ourselves with anything so insignificant and patently contrived and commercially exploitive as a professional sports team, and the amused superiority and icy scorn that the non-fan directs at the sports nut (I know this look — I know it by heart) is understandable and almost unanswerable. Almost. What is left out of this calculation, it seems to me, is the business of caring — caring deeply and passionately, really caring — which is a capacity or an emotion that has almost gone out of our lives. And so it seems possible that we have come to a time when it no longer matters so much what the caring is about, how frail or foolish is the object of that concern, as long as the feeling itself can be saved. Naivete — the infantile and ignoble joy that sends a grown man or woman to dancing and shouting with joy in the middle of the night over the haphazardous flight of a distant ball — seems a small price to pay for such a gift.
That’s what this Seattle thing is about. It’s about caring, and joy, and memories, and what a franchise can and should mean to a city and a fan base. It’s about the infantile and ignoble joy that causes people to drown out the PA announcer before Game 3 of the ‘96 Finals. It’s also about naivete, for better and worse, and it’s about greed and ego above everything else. I’m an innocent bystander with this whole thing, but still, I can’t shake one simple point: How could David Stern allow a team that won a championship while he was working for the league to move? How could he claim to care about the league and let that happen? How could he allow one of the 30 NBA fan bases to be extorted? How is this OK?
The Bennett supporters argue that this “mess” is really about Seattle refusing to pay for a new arena, which would be fine except taxpayers helped pay to rebuild KeyArena back in 1995 — and besides, why should citizens spend tax money paying for a new arena just to make a billionaire wealthier than he already is? If the precedent is set here — Pay for my new arena or I’m leaving — then really, the same thing could eventually happen to your favorite NBA team.
After All-Star Weekend, I wrote that David Stern’s conviction to New Orleans would go down as his single finest moment. Well, if he allows the 1979 NBA champs to get stolen from Seattle by a longtime friend, that would go down as his single worst moment. Hands down. As for the collateral damage for fans of the Seattle Expiring Contracts, it’s there and it continues to fester and build. More than 3,000 of them wrote in within 24 hours of me asking for their thoughts. We separated their e-mails into categories so unbiased observers can fully understand the impact that a potential Sonics move would have on the city.
This isn’t a case that you can say, “You know, I kind of understand both sides here.” There is only one side. An NBA team is getting hijacked and there’s no way of sugarcoating it, defending it or justifying it. Again, if it happens to the Sonics, it could happen to your team.
That’s why you should care.
2 comments