Monday, June 22, 2009

AIR YEEZY'S

The new Nike Air Yeezy Sneaker by Kanye West has produced a thunderous clamor throughout the hip hop world--making it the first sneaker put out by a rapper that someone gave any mind.

Check out this cool commercial directed by, an avid Air Yeezy fan, Samtubia Edwards.

Air Yeezy Spec: (Extended Version) from Samtubia Edwards on Vimeo.



The least expensive price I have witnessed a pair of these babies go for is $650--for a size thirteen. Other pairs have sold for as much as a grand.

The public response to the Air Yeezy is mad--you gotta love it though. West's 32nd birthday cake was created in the shape of the sneaker.



According to word of mouth--to date, there are only three colors that have been released at limited quantities (which justifies their exuberant prices). But--there have been some Milli Vanilliness going on. Below are three photos of Air Yeezys that are NOT authentic.





What do you think?

Below, are photos of an authentic Air Yeezy sneaker. It is the third and last color released for the limited Air Yeezy collection.









Check out this origami art by Filippo Perin



Here some pics of some more authentic Air Weezys





On Kanye's foot

Saturday, March 7, 2009

FYI

Miami or Massachusetts? Former over the latter. I'm down here, trying to enhance myself--careerwise. I have been thinking about many things like attempting to attain a Master's, getting certified to teach in FL, going to sound engineering school, or just record music. In the meanwhile, I start working at Discovery Cruise Lines on Monday and am looking forward to making some money. Spring Break is coming up, Calle Ocho sooner, and I'm really excited for the city.

Friday, February 13, 2009

Kanye West Anti-Valentines Day E-Card

Check out Kanye West's Anti-Valentine Card at http://media.islanddefjam.com/kanyecards/

Mo' Diddy... My Buddy...

Springfield [Massachusetts] man, on parole for stealing cop's car, gets 2 years on new stolen vehicle charge

By BUFFY SPENCER, for the Republican Newsroom, Wednesday January 28, 2009, 3:29 PM (Italics by I)



SPRINGFIELD - Three years ago, the man who would become the city's police commissioner thought 24-year-old Eric M. Finch deserved a break. In 2006, then-Deputy Chief William J. Fitchet said Finch, convicted of stripping the officer's personal car (Mo'...) after it was stolen from outside a clothing store, should have a "final, last chance" especially because he was the father of young children (Mo' has, about, five children...). Finch, who was sentenced by Judge Bertha D. Josephson in Hampden Superior Court in July 2006 to two years' probation, saw his chances run out two weeks ago. He's now serving a two-year jail term at the Hampden County Correctional Center in Ludlow for having repeatedly violated his probation since the city's top cop gave him a second-chance (THAT WAS PRETTY SHARP, BUFFy; bet your pen teared through the paper when you wrote this--Mo' knew that little hooptie was owned by the city's top cop. Yeah, right. How many people in the 'field have violated probation... A lot? 'ey? . The fact that Mo' is being blasted in the media for an ulterior motive is unbearable. 'cause Mo' is being used by the media--to shed light on Finchet's reverse-act of sympathy. He pulled a Gregg ). Finch, with a last known address of 185 Oakland St., violated a number of conditions of the probation he was sentenced on a charge of receiving a stolen motor vehicle. Fitchet's charcoal-gray 1991 Honda Accord (In '06--I don't care how well you maintained it--the '90-something Honda is a hooptie. What kind of cop drives a hooptie?? He said, "It's good on the gas dough!". You make 50K a year, why couldn't you lease or finance a Crown Victoria with your discount?!?!) disappeared from outside a Cooley Street clothing store on Sept. 28, 2005. Finch and a co-defendant (Now. DMX said, "I do my dirt all by my lonely". Take heed to that; those are wise words. By Mo' being charged with an accomplice, whoever this UNnamed co-defendant is--wait a minute... Why wasn't the co-defendant named??? ?) were charged with receiving a stolen motor vehicle. Josephson kept personal jurisdiction over Finch's case and warned him in 2006 that any new crime while on probation could lead to her sentencing him to up to 15 years in prison, the maximum for receiving a stolen motor vehicle. On Jan. 12, when Finch was brought back before her for violating his probation, she sentenced him to the two years in jail. Fitchet said in 2006 that his car was a total loss, and becoming a crime victim enhanced his empathy for other victims. The incident was upsetting, and it was time-consuming to deal with insurance and other issues, he said. Advised of Finch's probation violations and landing in jail, the commissioner said Wednesday, "He was given a chance to right a wrong. He had a path to choose, and he chose the... No more from BUFFy... Life is harsh. Keep ya head up Mo'.

Temple Expiatori de la Sagrada Família (Expiatory Temple of the Holy Family)



The Temple Expiatori de la Sagrada Família is a magnificent, breath-taking, and spacious Catholic Church in Barcelona, Spain. Construction of the Temple began in 1882 but it has not yet been completed. (Click on the pic for high resolution).

Thursday, February 12, 2009

The Love of Money, Downcasted

Archbishop attacks love of money
By Robert Pigott
Religious affairs correspondent

The Archbishop of York John Sentamu has led other church leaders in blaming what he called "the idolatrous love of money" for the financial crisis.

Dr Sentamu told the Church of England's synod meeting in London taxes would have to increase in order to help those worst affected by the recession.

He said Britain had "worshipped at the temple of money" as if it were a God.

Last year Dr Sentamu described bankers and financial speculators as "robber barons and asset strippers".

'Search for blame'

He told the General Synod the operation of financial markets would need reform, but the most urgent need was to help those "at the sharp end" of the crisis.

"Though I really don't want to get into the detail, surely if the plan is to redistribute money gained from inheritance tax, then taxes would have to be raised to meet the deficit in the public spending budget," he said.
“ We are in severe danger of the very rich doing for the very rich what they have failed to do for the very poor, and that is shameful ”
The Bishop of Durham, Tom Wright

Dr Sentamu said work to tackle the effects of the crisis must not end in the UK.

A child died every three seconds because of extreme poverty, and 5,000 a day because of unsafe water and lack of sanitation, he added.

He also said the Millennium Development Goals must not be abandoned because of the credit crisis.

Referring to rescue plans for banks and car companies in the industrial world, the Bishop of Durham, Tom Wright, said far too little was being done for developing countries where poverty was far more serious.

"We are in severe danger of the very rich doing for the very rich what they have failed to do for the very poor, and that is shameful," he said.

A lay member from St Albans, Simon Baynes, angrily denounced the irresponsible attitude to debt that had been encouraged by economic policy in the past.

"We have been stealing from the next generation and we should hang our heads in shame... it's become a case of have today, and someone else will pay tomorrow," he said.

There was a warning from the Bishop of Hulme, Stephen Lowe, that unemployment would increase beyond three million.

He said it would produce anger, with the potential to damage relations between ethnic and religious groups.

"There will be a search for someone to blame… we've already seen some of it," he said.

"I fear that race relations will come under pressure. The far right sees the recession as an opportunity to expand."

But the Bishop of London Richard Chartres said the financial crisis contained opportunities as well as suffering and danger. He said the recession was already making people rethink what was truly important in life.

He said: "Sometimes indeed people seem to be relieved to get off the treadmill and to be given an opportunity to reconsider what they really want out of life."

"One of the great implications of this turbulence for us is to re-boot our sense of what a truly flourishing human life consists of."
Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/uk_news/7886300.stm

Published: 2009/02/12 18:59:18 GMT

© BBC MMIX

Wednesday, February 11, 2009

Resquiat In Pace

Body dragged nearly 20 miles on NYC highways
By COLLEEN LONG, Associated Press Writer
2/11, 21:34 ET

NEW YORK – A van traveled for nearly an hour over busy New York City roads before its driver discovered the horrific cargo it had dragged almost 20 miles: the partially scraped-away body of a man who was plowed over by an SUV just before he got caught under the van.

Police said the gruesome episode was accidental and that they have no plans to charge the drivers at this time.

But that did not diminish the shock of seeing a dead man hooked under a van that had just traversed some of the busiest roads in the city. Police said the driver, Manuel Lituma Sanchez, had no idea he hit the victim until the end of his trip, when a bystander told him something was dragging under his van.

Investigators were working to identify the body, which was found largely intact but horribly battered. The man's heels were shorn off. His clothes and several layers of skin on his legs and buttocks were worn off. The back of his head was worn through to the scalp.

A business card, Western Union receipt and a broken iPhone were found in the man's pockets, NYPD spokesman Paul Browne said.

The man was first hit around 6:15 a.m. while apparently crossing against a stop light in the Corona section of Queens by the driver of a black Ford Expedition, Gustavo Acosta, who immediately called 911. When police arrived, the victim was gone and no damage was found to the SUV.

Lituma Sanchez, who was about two vehicles behind, said he had noticed cars swerving but didn't see the initial accident and assumed the drivers were simply avoiding a pothole.

He drove over the victim, who was facing up, and the man's chest was hooked by a steel plate under the van known as the skid plate, used to protect the transmission and undercarriage. It's not clear whether the victim was alive at that point.

"The van comes and rides right over the body and as it goes by there's no body there," Browne said. "The body was basically fish-hooked by the plate."

Lituma Sanchez stopped shortly after the accident to check his car but noticed nothing and went on his way. The vehicle has a low ridge around the wheels for stepping inside, making it difficult to see under the van.

Lituma Sanchez drove on the Grand Central Parkway, the Van Wyck Expressway and the Belt Parkway, winding from Queens to Brooklyn and ending up in Brighton Beach, where he works as a delivery man, Browne said. On the residential streets at a slower speed, he suspected something was wrong with his engine, and he stopped, opened the hood and checked the oil. But he did not look under the car.

He got back in and drove a few more blocks before a pedestrian flagged him to say something was dragging under his 1998 Chevrolet van. Lituma Sanchez got out of his car again, looked underneath, discovered the body and called 911 from his cell phone.

Police jacked up the vehicle and pulled the body from under the van. The battered corpse, found face up with the shirt and pants shredded, was covered with a white sheet as officers investigated and talked to the shellshocked, exhausted driver in a police car. The victim's bruised and bloody legs could be seen protruding from the sheet in front of the van.

An autopsy was planned for Thursday. Both drivers have clean records, police said.

Police retraced the van's route and recovered a blue jacket believed to have belonged to the victim, who was described as Hispanic, in his 20s or 30s and between 5 feet 2 and 5 feet 4 inches tall.

Police had initially believed it was a 17-mile journey, but did a closer examination of the route realized it was 19.8 miles instead.

Copyright © 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. The information contained in the AP News report may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without the prior written authority of The Associated Press.

Wednesday, January 28, 2009

8




She had what? Eight babies? Yesterday I was at work and a coworker informed me that a woman in California gave birth to eight babies. Now, we all know cats can do the same thing BUT is it normal for a human being to give birth to EIGHT babies (whoa!). Considering the many other mothers glorified in recent headlines, it is becoming more and more probable thus increasingly normalER. What are we becoming? Wait a minute... I'm not a woman-what are these women eating? Imagine planning to have a baby with your wife and she gives birth to seven more--all in one shot. How do you burp all of your babies? Who's a octopus? Not her. My friend asked if I would give some of the babies up for adoption if that were to happen to me and I thought it was a hard question to answer (only for a second though) before I concluded that I would rather be dead. One is enough--true talk. God bless that lady--and her husband of course--and all of her baby angels. The family is now large enough to play a full court basketball game.

The eight children, in the order of their appearance, born at Kaiser Permanente Bellflower Medical Center.

— Baby A, a boy, weighing 2 pounds, 11 ounces, born at 10:43 a.m.
— Baby B, a girl, weighing 2 pounds, 12 ounces, born at 10:44 a.m.
— Baby C, a boy, weighing 3 pounds, 4 ounces, born at 10:45 a.m.
— Baby D, a girl, weighing 2 pounds, 8 ounces, born at 10:45 a.m.
— Baby E, a boy, weighing 1 pound, 8 ounces, born at 10:46 a.m.
— Baby F, a boy, weighing 2 pounds, 12 ounces, born at 10:47 a.m.
— Baby G, a boy, weighing 1 pound, 15 ounces, born 10:47 a.m.
— Baby H, a boy, weighing 2 pounds, 11 ounces, born at 10:48 a.m.

Interesting chart:



















The photo at the top of this blog post features the Kaiser Permanente Bellflower Medical Center nursing staff that helped deliver the octuplets on Jan. 26 in Southern California.