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Angel Amor

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Everything posted by Angel Amor

  1. Wow Jada and Wicked Wisdom at Ozzfest. I wonder how that is gonna go. I mean I love Ozzy. Been a fan of Black Sabbath. Jada got an album coming out this summer cool.
  2. I remember that. Yeah Jada was talking and Will kept jumping saying he wants more kids and Jada said no. Will said "Nah, baby I'm just playin. I take whatever you can give me." Will kissed Jada on the forehead. Besides Will and Jada's house is filled with kids. Not only their kids but he got his nephew, Jada's nephew, and I Jada's goddaughter living there. That's a lot of kids. :angel: But she did make some mention she would have one more child if Willow turn out to be a boy that she'll try 1 more time but thats it. Besides we'll c today. But hey if they r I'm happy 4 them and if not I'm still happy 4 them. :angel: :thumb:
  3. :kekeke: I think Jaden looks so cute in that get up. It's cool that Will and Jada let their children listen to all kinds of hiphop. I remember seeing Trey, Jaden and Kyle at the VMA's in 03 they were watching 50 perform. Will, Trey, and Klye seem to be just vibin' along. Jaden was sitting on Will's lap he looked a little tried but that happens wit lil kids. But he seem to be enjoying it. Will said that he talk to 50 maybe 50 sent him his new line of clothes to Will and Jada. I got know problem wit what Jaden is wearing. People just relax calm down take a deep breath. :kekeke:
  4. Hey thanx willjadafan. I love that I AM HIPHOP. :angel: His lil boy looks so cute lookin more n more like his daddy.
  5. BEST FEMALE HIP HOP 1. Miri Ben-Ari 2. Jackie-O 3. Remy Martin 4. Shawnna BEST MALE HIP HOP 1. 50 Cent 2. Jay-Z 3. Ludacris 4. Snoop Dogg 5. T.I. 6. Kayne West BEST COLLABORATION 1. Ciara f/Missy Elliott "1, 2 Step" 2. Destiny's Child f/Lil Wayne & T.I. "Soldier" 3. The Game and 50 Cent "Hate It or Love It" 4. Jadakiss f/Anthony Hamilton "Why" 5. Snoop Dogg f/Pharrell "Drop It Like It's Hot" 6. Usher and Alicia Keys "My Boo" BEST FEMALE R&B 1. Amerie 2. Mariah Carey 3. Ciara 4. Fantasia 5. Alicia Keys 6. Jill Scott BEST MALE R&B 1. Anthony Hamilton 2. John Legend 3. Mario 4. Prince 5. Usher BEST GROUP 1. 112 2. Destny's Child 3. Lil Jon and The Eastside Boys 4. The Roots 5. Terror Squad f/Fat Joe BEST NEW ARTIST 1. Ciara 2. Fantasia 3. The Game 4. John Legend 5. Omarion BEST GOSPEL ARTIST 1. Fred Hammond 2. Donnie McClurkin 3. Ruben Studdard 4. CeCe Winans 5. Kanye West VIDEO OF THE YEAR (SONG TITLE) 1. Amerie "1 Thing" 2. Jay-Z "99 Problems" 3. John Legend "Ordinary People" 4. Snoop Dogg f/Pharrel "Drop It Like It's Hot" 5. Kanye West "Jesus Walks" BEST ACTRESS 1. Halle Berry 2. Kimberly Elise 3. Regina King 4. Queen Latifah 5. Gabrielle Union BEST ACTOR 1. Don Cheadle 2. Jamie Foxx 3. Morgan Freeman 4. Mos Def 5. Will Smith FEMALE ATHLETE OF THE YEAR 1. Laila Ali "Boxing" 2. Gail Devers "Track & Field" 3. Lisa Leslie "Basketball" 4. Serena Williams "Tennis" 5. Venus Williams "Tennis" MALE ATHLETE OF THE YEAR 1. Allen Iverson "Basketball" 2. LeBron James "Basketball" 3. Donovan McNabb"Football" 4. Shaquille O'Neal "Basketball" 5. Tiger Woods "Golf" BET.com VIEWER'S CHOICE (SONG TITLE) 1. Ciara f/Missy Elliott "1, 2 Step" 2. Destiny's Child f/Lil Wayne and T.I. "Soldier" 3. Mario "Let Me Love You" 4. Omarion "O" 5. Terror Squad f/Fat Joe "Lean Back" 6. T.I. " U Don't Know Me"
  6. Dave Chappelle Says He's Not Crazy May 15, 9:17 AM EST The Associated Press NEW YORK -- Comedian Dave Chappelle wants to set things straight: "I'm not crazy, I'm not smoking crack," he tells Time magazine in an interview more than a week after his hit Comedy Central show was suspended and the rumors started to fly. "I'm definitely stressed out," said Chappelle, who took off last month to South Africa for a "spiritual retreat," leaving his fans — and even his agent and publicist — wondering where he went. "You hear so many voices jockeying for position in your mind that you want to make sure that you hear your own voice," he said. "So I figured, let me just cut myself off from everybody, take a minute and pull a Flintstone — stop a speeding car by using my bare feet as the brakes." After Comedy Central announced that the planned May 31 debut of the third season of "Chappelle's Show" had been postponed, the magazine Entertainment Weekly reported that Chappelle had checked himself into a mental health facility in South Africa. "I'm not in a mental facility," said Chappelle, who also said he did not have a drug problem but had consulted a psychiatrist for one 40-minute visit. The 31-year-old comedian said he fled to stay with friends in Durban because he wasn't happy with the direction of the show, which is behind only "South Park" as Comedy Central's most-watched program. "There's a lot of resistance to my opinions, so I decided, 'Let me remove myself from this situation,'" Chappelle said. Comedy Central president Doug Herzog told Time that the star has "complete creative freedom." He has told staff he believes there won't be a "Chappelle's Show" in 2005, but leaves the option open for the comedian's return. Chappelle, whose wife and two children live in Ohio, said he hopes to start up the show again, but did not indicate when he would return. Comedy Central had inked a reported $50 million deal to keep "Chappelle's Show" for two more seasons, and the comedian hinted to Time about struggles associated with the power and fame that come with that kind of success. "If you don't have the right people around you, and you're moving at a million miles an hour, you can lose yourself," he said. "Everyone around me says, 'You're a genius, you're great, that's your voice,' but I'm not sure that they're right."
  7. :thumb: Thanx 4 the info AJ. I'll be sure to watch that. :angel: Hey the concert in LA is today, rite . :angel:
  8. Yeah I saw that film with Martin Lawrence it was "Run Tell Dat". I loved that film cause he was honest about his drug use. Yeah it would be cool if Dave did the same thing just take a page from Richard Pyor. Be honest about what happen and use what happen to you as a bit. :angel:
  9. Well actually you never really saw Will take a puff out of the cigar in Independence Day. You have one shot where Will is holding the cigar in his mouth and it ain't even lit. But anyway I think is that why does 50 have to say gettin high and drinking in his songs but he doesn't do it himself it shows you he ain't bein' real. If you say thats the way the rapworld is now a days why do you have to rap about what everybody else is doing. It reminds me of Will's Lost and Found. But hey I like 50's earlier stuff :dancingcool: . To me it just seems his stuff got old like he's repeating himself. I think starting fights with other rappers and doin other stupid s**** is just that stupid . Hey mimi I respect your opinion. Not maybe ppl would say anything to 50's defense. :thumb:
  10. I like Jay-Z but I don't know about that comment either. RealityBasedhmm? I think he should have reality from the hood that would have made alittle bit more sense. O well at least he said sum nice things about Will :angel:
  11. Fears of a Clown Dave Chappelle got a colossal deal for the new season of his hit show. So where is it? The inside story of pressure, partying, power struggles—and a great comic's vanishing act. By Devin Gordon Newsweek May 16 issue - "I'm so sorry," says Dave Chappelle, chuckling as he shakes hands with a visiting journalist. "This is a terrible way to meet a person." It is late afternoon and Chappelle has a long night of work ahead, so the introduction is a bit rushed. But more than likely, he's referring to the fact that he's covered in blackface, with white painted lips, white gloves, a red vest, a black cane and a Pullman Porter cap. Yes, that's definitely it. It is November 2004, just a few weeks into shooting on the third season of "Chappelle's Show"—a process that will soon become far more tortured than anyone ever expected. At the moment, though, all is tranquil. Today's scenes are part of a delicately titled sketch, "The N----r Pixie," in which Chappelle plays a cackling, devil-on-the-shoulder creation who serves as the self-hating conscience of famous black men, such as Tiger Woods and Chappelle himself. Hence the racially combustible costume. In Chappelle's universe, this is high comedy—the kind of brazen stunt that has become his show's calling card. As he heads back for another take, he flashes the journalist a giant grin: "Bet you never met a real live coon before!" During NEWSWEEK's visit to the set, Chappelle, 31, appeared in complete control. As the minstrel-accented pixie, he kept busting up the crew with his profane ad-libs over footage of Woods attempting a putt. ("Show 'em how n----r you are! Stick your d--k in the hole!") Between takes, he would snap back into regular-guy mode, chatting quietly with his wife, Elaine, and horsing around with his two little boys, who were visiting from the family's home in rural Ohio. The show seemed on course for its Feb. 16 premiere. Two weeks after our visit, however, Chappelle's publicist disclosed that the star was halting production on the series, canceling magazine commitments and indefinitely delaying the start of the third season. The stated cause: "intense personal issues." The season premiere was soon rescheduled for May 31. But just last Wednesday, Chappelle and Comedy Central jointly announced that production had been halted—and the season premiere indefinitely postponed—yet again. The need for this latest delay, which was announced less than 24 hours after a network presentation to advertisers, evidently took Comedy Central by surprise. The channel had aired promotional spots for the May 31 premiere the previous night. What's going on with Dave? Published explanations for the ini-tial delay ranged from a nasty flu bug to "walking pneumonia" to writer's block. According to friends of Chappelle's interviewed by NEWSWEEK, however, the real cause of all the turmoil is more complicated. Since last summer, when Chappelle signed a staggering deal with Comedy Central worth up to $50 million to produce two more seasons of the show, friends say he's been worn down by a toxic combination of too much pressure, too much partying—and a creative rift with the network. From its very first episode, "Chappelle's Show" has been an electrifying presence on TV. The centerpiece of the pilot, which aired on Jan. 22, 2003, was a gaspingly funny, nine-minute tale about a blind white supremacist named Clayton Bigsby who's actually black and doesn't realize it. With each new classic sketch ("the Racial Draft," in which various races gather, a la the NBA draft, to "claim" ethnically ambiguous celebrities; the now legendary "I'm Rick James, b---h!" episode), buzz spread like lit gasoline. But Chappelle, who writes the entire series with longtime pal Neal Brennan, had more on his mind than jokes. He brought a rare cultural consciousness to the show, offering platforms to unsung heroes of black comedy, including Paul Mooney, a top writer for Richard Pryor. For his musical guests, he bypassed the bling-and-booty set in favor of true hip-hop artists, such as rapper Mos Def and neo-soul virtuoso Anthony Hamilton. By the end of its second season, "Chappelle's Show" was Comedy Central's highest-rated program, averaging 3.1 million viewers per week, and the DVD of the first season was swiftly becoming the top-selling TV title in the format's history. The success coincided neatly with the expiration of Chappelle's contract. He enjoyed a fierce bidding war for his services, which Comedy Central retained over NBC and the FX Network. The $50 million deal transformed Chappelle from a funny guy with a decade's worth of false starts to the hottest comedian in America. He wasn't prepared. "I saw him start trippin' when the buzz started to get real loud," says one celebrity friend. "I think he was in shock after the first season, and then [during] the second, it hit him that he was the man. That freaked him. And then came the pressure of living up to expectations for the third season. He's never been there—where something's so good and you got to come even stronger the next time. It was too much." The partying apparently made things worse. "Everyone knows Dave likes to have fun," says a music-industry pal. "I wouldn't say it's out of control ... but at some point that has to affect you if you've got a regular gig." Neither Chappelle's publicist, Matt Labov, nor Comedy Central's spokespeople are offering any explanation for the latest delay. Labov denies that his client has a drug problem. And a source close to Chappelle believes this latest stoppage is more about the show itself than the health of its star. Eager to top his previous work, Chappelle wants to push the racial envelope even further in the third season—and network executives, according to this source, are afraid he's crossing the line. "Dave is not compromising what he wants to do," he says. "He's waited a long time for this chance, and he's not trying to do anything that isn't 100 percent his vision." Last week, though, Comedy Central flatly denied any conflict, as did an employee in Chappelle's camp, who insists the current delay "is not a network issue." Despite his youth, Chappelle has been in the comedy game as long as people twice his age. After a childhood spent shuttling between Ohio, where his late father taught music at Antioch College, and his moth-er's home in Washington, D.C., Chappelle dropped out of high school to try stand-up in New York. He quickly befriended some of the older comics. "I remember working at the Comedy Cellar in the late 1980s when he came in," says Jon Stewart, a close friend and fellow Comedy Central employee. "I think he was, like, 9 at the time. And he was just effortless onstage. You knew he was gonna be huge." First he had to survive a string of demoralizing roles in junk like the short-lived 1996 sitcom "Buddies" and the MTV movie "Joe's Apartment," in which he played a cockroach. "Dave always had to play second fiddle to the guys he thought were his peers, like Martin Lawrence and Jamie Foxx," says the music-industry pal. "He was never that kind of funny. He had this weird sense of humor that not everyone got." Network television executives, in particular. "No one would let Dave do what he wanted to do," says Lauren Corrao, Comedy Central's senior vice president of programming. "They wanted him to have friends he'd never have, just for the sake of a stereotypical sitcom. But Dave's an original." Back on set in November, the pixie is tearing into footage of Rodney King as he pleads, "Can't we all get along?" "Wow, n----r, you are what they call are-tick-you-late!" Chappelle cries. "Now lemme answer your question: no. No, we can't." The director yells "Cut!" and Chappelle laughs as he watches playback of the take. "That's coldblooded, right? It's a dirty game. A dirty game." Right now, Dave Chappelle is on top of it—but it looks like he's losing his balance. With Allison Samuels © 2005 Newsweek, Inc. © 2005 MSNBC.com URL: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/7773670/site/newsweek/?GT1=6542
  12. :hilarious: Yeah that kinda freaks me out a lil bit. :kekeke:
  13. I like the movie and the soundtrack. So I say it was a hit :thumb:
  14. yEAH GREAT STUFF MAN. MAD PROPS!!! :clap3: :rock: :ditto: :bowdown:
  15. i LIKE The 2nd site better. It's better with the updates. Even tho there are sum Lorettas but not as many. N they' are better with banning ppl from the site that make sick comments. :angel:
  16. The reason why Will doesn't swear in his music 1. his grandmother told him 2. music is more accessible to kids. Kids can get their hands on music so easily than seeking in to see an "R" rated film. I know I have brought music with the parental advisiory sticker on it. And the ppl are suppose to check if the kid is 18yrs old. But most of them don't. :angel: Will understands thats. Cause look he had it edited out of Tell Me Why. Yes Will swears in real life 2. Hell we all swear. But the thing is tho we control r selves. Not like sum rappers that have a swear word in every line.
  17. 50 Cent Avoids Jail Time in Plea Deal May 13, 12:31 PM EST Listen to & download 50 Cent's music The Associated Press SPRINGFIELD, Mass. -- The rapper 50 Cent will likely avoid jail time for allegedly trampling two women and punching a third during a concert last year, under a deal reached Friday with prosecutors. If the entertainer, whose real name is Curtis Jackson, stays drug free for two years and follows other orders laid out by a judge, the charges will be dropped. Jackson, who lives in Farmington, Conn., entered a plea Friday in Springfield District Court to facts sufficient for a guilty finding. He had been charged with three counts of assault and battery. The incident occurred during a surpise concert at Springfield's Hippodrome club last May, in which Jackson allegedly jumped into a crowd after someone threw or squirted water at him. Three women were injured. After an investigation and a hearing last fall, a clerk magistrate decided there was probable cause for the charges.
  18. I agree with Fresh Princess. I mean I would tell Will I think the Lost and Found is just an work of art. I ask him about Jeff and their lil touring thing they have going on just poping up in clubs. But I'm sure when I meet I be so star struck that I will probably mumble sumthing like I.....Love....You. Or worst don't say anything just stand there like a drooling idiot. :bang: But I will try at least to get a hand shake or a hug from him. Maybe I would get 1 if I stand there like a drooling idiot. :grin: :angel:
  19. Public Enemy "Don't Believe The Hype" :angel:
  20. All I want to know is where all the people who bought Willenium went... :poke: :speechless: That's what I was wondering too. But I think Tim is sort of right. I am a girl and I brought the album Willennium cause I always liked Will's flow and his style. But sum ppl just brought it cause of WWW and Will2K. Not really paying any attention to the other tracks like Afro Angel or The Rain. :angel:
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