Tagged: About this site RSS

  • L Boogie 12:03 am on May 28, 2007 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: About this site,   

    BronxRap.com Update… 

    We’ve been tryin out new stuff on the site to see how you guys & girls react to the changes. Even though there hasn’t been much news lately…Nobody’s been shot or stabbed…We still keep it goin with content from that golden era of hip-hop other sites stray away from. Also when you come to the site notice the Quick News section in the side panel…That will be used to post items that are not post worthy. We recently added a couple of heads to the staff and were still looking for writers….So walk with us…Site relaunch has been agreed upon…And will happen in the coming months….Ideas questions or concerns??? Holla at me …Bronxrap@gmail.com

     
    • JesuJuice 1:09 am on May 29, 2007 Permalink | Reply

      How about you guys hire my ass?

  • L Boogie 12:03 am on May 28, 2007 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: About this site,   

    BronxRap.com Update… 

    We’ve been tryin out new stuff on the site to see how you guys & girls react to the changes. Even though there hasn’t been much news lately…Nobody’s been shot or stabbed…We still keep it goin with content from that golden era of hip-hop other sites stray away from. Also when you come to the site notice the Quick News section in the side panel…That will be used to post items that are not post worthy. We recently added a couple of heads to the staff and were still looking for writers….So walk with us…Site relaunch has been agreed upon…And will happen in the coming months….Ideas questions or concerns??? Holla at me …Bronxrap@gmail.com

     
  • L Boogie 9:36 pm on April 4, 2007 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: About this site   

    Question For The Viewers……Please Comment 

    I need you the viewer to let BronxRap.com know. Are we too explicit…Meaning do we have too much ass all over the place to where it makes it uncomfortable to view our site??? Please comment

     
    • TAF 9:51 pm on April 4, 2007 Permalink | Reply

      It is not a problem for myself but I can see why it would be if people try to view it at their work or in a public place.

    • L Boogie 10:01 pm on April 4, 2007 Permalink | Reply

      Good lookin taf^^^^ If I get enough responses i’ll proly throw that Papoose Mixtape up for an hour or so…But we’ll see how it goes….

    • Anonymous 10:06 pm on April 4, 2007 Permalink | Reply

      yo l, i work with you boy don… i don’t think its a big problem… shit if people got a problem just tell’em the real why you put it there…and then maybe they will understand… basically. it’s okay as long you don’t click the links

    • L Boogie 10:10 pm on April 4, 2007 Permalink | Reply

      Ok^^^ my dude….Tell dat nigga Don I got him on that thing he was talkin bout earlier….Plus I’m comin out there friday…L

    • bigface 10:12 pm on April 4, 2007 Permalink | Reply

      whatz da deal it dat stafa joint!!!

    • Teflon/Teflon 11:14 pm on April 4, 2007 Permalink | Reply

      Na the ass is cool but theres a time an place to view a site that has things like this you feel me

    • nappyhedz 11:23 pm on April 4, 2007 Permalink | Reply

      Yo the ass is cool, people will find a way to access your site, your site is an expression of you. On my site I do party pictures and fashion shows, I dont go on my site at work because some of the pictures might be inappropriate but that dont stop other people from going on it. Handle your business and create your site to your vision. So far you are doing a good Job

    • Diggiti 12:20 am on April 5, 2007 Permalink | Reply

      Put the adult stuff at the BOTTOM of the page below MYPEOPLEZ & MYSPACE Headings.

      That way its not in the way for people that want to check the site at work. But its available for people that need to see that big booty everyday .

    • L Boogz 12:23 am on April 5, 2007 Permalink | Reply

      Good Idea^^^^

    • MB from ENY 3:27 am on April 5, 2007 Permalink | Reply

      I think if you had a link to it on the page that would be cool, I can’t really check it a t work and at home I got a little on thats always around. That’s not the thing I want her to be seeing. I understand that its about expression but some of your readers are professional and you know what people do at work when there is down time check their favorite BLOG. MB LIVE!

    • e-brooks 7:40 am on April 5, 2007 Permalink | Reply

      d ass is only cool to the ppl who want to see. you need to either just have alpha links or move the pic links to the bottom of the page. its uncomfortable to view your page in the dorm rooms with other people around

    • bronxbomber 8:49 am on April 5, 2007 Permalink | Reply

      lets git it straight off the rip… i love phat ass…but the prob im havin is i dont cum to ur site for that… it kind of takes away the essence of hip hop.. and, it lays claim to the defamation of women and the whole thing.. im from the BX so im glad this site is around 4real….. maybe just have a adult links page that allows peeps to go if they so choose to, nahmeen…. but wit dat said keep doin wat u do.. BX we neva nexx juss always 1st bitches….

    • Diggiti 9:25 am on April 5, 2007 Permalink | Reply

      I think the GANG sign is more inflammatory than the girls .
      What you think of that ?

    • PINEROCK 10:09 am on April 5, 2007 Permalink | Reply

      NAH,THAT SHIT DONT BOTHER ME, I LOOK AT THAT SHIT AT WORK, MAYBE SOME PEOPLE GET OFFENDED BUT I DONT GOT NO PROBLEM

    • L 10:10 am on April 5, 2007 Permalink | Reply

      Gang sign??? That isn’t a gang sign it is BX if you look closely…..that’s all it is I have never been affiliated with any gang.

    • jaga_d_schmoov1 8:17 pm on April 5, 2007 Permalink | Reply

      on 1 hand, i definitely agree w/bxbomber that seein’ all that ass has a tendency 2 mesmerize folks and distract from the real talk goin’ on…sorta reinforcing the negative stereotypes surrounding women in hip.hop, etc.

      but on the other hand, shyt, seein f-l-y m-a-m-i-s and phat asses has always been a key part of my experience when i kick it in the bx (big up TATS CRU)…so, in a way, its almost like art (your site) imit8ing reality (hunts point)…somehow it feels so appropriate;D

      bottom line:
      yo i’ve been rockin’ w/u since, like, ‘05 and ima rock w/u either way fam…keep doin’ tha damn thang.

      (all the way from minnesnowta–home of the twins [yes, its that time of year])

      ONEluv
      jg

    • L 8:58 pm on April 5, 2007 Permalink | Reply

      It does give a real street feel but then we have young people also logging on I’m torn cus I love it but maybe I should start an entire segment….fuck it Ill come up wit something

    • blitz65 10:05 pm on April 5, 2007 Permalink | Reply

      first things first, if your at work you shouldn’t be peeping anyway. second it’s not enough, more phata**es please.

    • MonsterSick 7:41 pm on April 6, 2007 Permalink | Reply

      nah its not excessive or wtv i think its cool

  • L Boogie 9:36 pm on April 4, 2007 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: About this site   

    Question For The Viewers……Please Comment 

    I need you the viewer to let BronxRap.com know. Are we too explicit…Meaning do we have too much ass all over the place to where it makes it uncomfortable to view our site??? Please comment

     
  • L Boogie 5:52 pm on March 8, 2007 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: About this site   

    Site Maintenance…. 

    If your wondering why we look like this….dont worry we’ll be back to normal in a minute

     
  • L Boogie 5:52 pm on March 8, 2007 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: About this site   

    Site Maintenance…. 

    If your wondering why we look like this….dont worry we’ll be back to normal in a minute

     
  • L Boogie 12:49 pm on February 21, 2007 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: About this site, ,   

    When Nas Speaks….You Should Listen 

    I feel the same way dude does……That is the inspiration behind BronxRap.com….L

     
    • son 12:21 pm on February 22, 2007 Permalink | Reply

      word!!

      http://www.delawareonline.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070218/NEWS/702180340

      this is what he talkin bout

      WILMINGTON — Jae Dolla$ needed some quick cash last summer to get his second rap CD ready for sale.

      But the paycheck that Jamin Coston — his given name — earned as a cell phone salesman wasn’t enough.

      So he stayed in sales but got a new job that paid more: selling drugs on a street corner.

      Coston knew a guy who knew a guy who had a lot of crack cocaine. Last summer, he sold the white rocks at 22nd and Pine streets in northeast Wilmington.

      It was easy money. So easy, in fact, that he kept selling even after he got the $3,000 he needed for his CD. Coston got arrested in August, pleaded guilty in January and was sentenced to a year’s probation.

      “I got greedy,” he said. “I stayed out too long.”

      Coston, 25, is one of a growing number of young men in Wilmington who are turning to open-air drug markets as a way to finance their musical ambitions. They think making it big in the hip-hop world is their only ticket out of the ‘hood. They are willing to risk going to jail or getting shot — the occupational hazards of selling dope on a corner — to realize their dreams.

      Not all of the city’s hip-hop artists turn to crime to launch careers. There are groups who use the music to send positive messages. Some community advocates say the hip-hop community must be part of any anti-violence strategy being devised by the HOPE Commission, organized by Wilmington Mayor James M. Baker after 2004, when nearly 100 people were shot.

      But Wilmington’s youth counselors, street preachers and beat cops say there are hundreds more like Coston, and dozens of basement studios catering to them.

      Youth counselor Shawn Allen calls what he sees on Wilmington’s streets “the new hustle.” Buying a Powerball ticket and crossing your fingers or practicing your jump shot for hours each day are definitely out of fashion, he said.

      “Some rappers sell drugs, some rob other drug dealers to get money to get their CDs out,” he said. “They’re looking to get off the street and not have to live the way they’re living by any means necessary.”

      Coston said he wants to be like 50 Cent, a former drug dealer and shooting victim who found wealth and stardom after he was discovered by rapper Eminem.

      The Rev. Derrick Johnson, pastor of Wilmington’s Joshua Harvest Church, said many young black men see artists and clothing designers such as Jay-Z and Diddy as role models.

      “To them, hip-hop is the only industry they have seen where people who look like them can become wealthy and still stay who they are,” Johnson said. “Selling crack to keep their hip-hop dream alive is nothing.”

      Coston doesn’t completely regret selling drugs. It got him the money he needed to get his CD on the street, and he’s hoping to become a star in 2007.

      “I was just your typical, average hustler, somebody that was out there trying to get what they was trying to get because it was never given to me,” he said. “Wilmington is a fishbowl, and I’m trying to get to the ocean.”

      All or nothing

      Kids on the street say the chances of making money legally are so slim that they might as well die if they aren’t hustling. They call it “trap or die.”

      Indeed, 50 Cent starred in a recent movie called “Get Rich or Die Tryin’.”

      The “cool-pose culture” is how Orlando Patterson, a sociology professor at Harvard University, prefers to characterize the mentality. It places a high value on partying, drugs, sexual conquests and sharp dressing. Patterson argues that this culture is often ignored as a major culprit for the plight of many young black men.

      They wrongly think a rap career is their only way out, he said.

      “We live in an all-or-nothing society, and all they look at is people from their neighborhoods who make it really big in athletics or entertainment,” Patterson said. “They don’t want to start in modest jobs and work their way up and into the middle class.”

      Coston is putting all his efforts into achieving stardom for now. “I hope to be signed to a record label in a couple months,” he said.

      Still, he knows he has to have a Plan B. After his arrest in the summer, Coston got a job at the Tri-State Mall. He also bought some equipment to start a house-cleaning business. And he says he’s going to begin taking real estate classes next month.

      “I’ve got my eyes wide open on this,” he said. “I know I might not make it, but I still have dreams of having what happened to 50 Cent happening to me — except for the getting-shot part.”

      Coston said he was raised by his grandmother. His mom struggled with drugs when he was young, he said, but she’s been clean 12 years now. His father, he said, was not a big part of his life.

      He last spoke with his dad in December 2003 — at his brother’s funeral. His brother, Darryl Lively, 23, was shot on Wilmington’s East Side in November 2003 and died the next month.

      “[My father] wanted to go fishing with me, but he was about 15 years too late for that,” he said. “There’s no bond there.”

      Patterson said Coston’s story is typical. He blames troubled families and thinks a huge investment of federal money is needed to make schools the place to keep kids on track.

      “Once you drop out of school, it becomes very difficult to make your place in the legal economy,” he said.

      Coston graduated from Concord High School, where he ran track, in 2001.

      He began writing lyrics at 19. His primary musical influence is Tupac Shakur, a rapper who was gunned down in Las Vegas at age 25.

      Pastor Johnson points to the irony of Coston’s path to success, saying selling crack to get to the top might ruin his chances.

      “Tupac had a tattoo on his stomach that said ‘Thug Life,’ ” Johnson said. “The problem with that mentality is thugs don’t live. They die. The method he’s choosing to get there will ensure he won’t stay there for long.”

      Coston’s criminal record stretches back to his teens, starting with disorderly conduct and traffic offenses. Later, Coston would plead guilty to more serious crimes, including weapons and drug charges and a charge of endangering the welfare of a child.

      Easier than selling CDs

      Looking for a way out, Coston put together his first CD in 2005 and sold 3,500 copies outside convenience stores, gas stations and fast-food joints on North Market Street.

      If he put in eight hours, he could sell almost 60 discs for $7 apiece and go home with $400.

      For his second CD, Coston used an underground studio on West 21st Street. He became a crack dealer to raise $3,000 to get his disc professionally remastered and packaged.

      Selling crack, Coston said, is easier than hustling CDs.

      “You can only sell a CD to the same person once,” he said. “Rock smokers keep coming back and back and back, you know what I’m sayin’?”

      Coston’s clientele was a mix of neighborhood residents, who represented the foot traffic, and suburbanites who pulled up in their vehicles.

      Some of his customers shocked him. They included a childhood role model, a relative and a former schoolmate, none of whom he thought of as drug users.

      The worst part about getting arrested was his appearance in the Wilmington Police Department’s “Drug Mugs,” a weekly posting on the city’s Web site of people arrested on drug charges.

      “My family, my pastor, all my friends — everybody found out,” he said.

      The mother of his 6-year-old daughter showed the girl his picture online and told her that her daddy sells drugs, Coston said. “That’s what hurts the most.”

      No questions asked

      Coston recorded his second CD in the basement studio run by Valentino Paula Jr., a 29-year-old producer who calls himself “The Traknologist,” or “Trak” for short.

      Paula’s underground studio is in the unfinished basement of his mom’s house. Aspiring stars rap in a makeshift booth fashioned with a sheet, blankets and curtains.

      Paula doesn’t have a business license. He doesn’t ask where all his clients get the money to record in his studio.

      “Some people save money from their jobs or borrow it from their parents, but about 50 percent definitely engage in extracurriculars to buy their studio time,” he said.

      He charges $45 an hour. High school students can record for $20 an hour. Paula estimated there are dozens of similar recording studios in the city.

      These studios thrive because young city residents want to escape their neighborhoods, said Allen, the youth counselor. “Jae has the dream to make it big in the rap game, but Trak has the equipment to make it happen.”

      Like Coston, Paula is waiting for his big break. Paula said one of his clients is 14-year-old Deja from Philadelphia, who might get signed to a big music label. Paula hopes that would make him a hot commodity.

      “I’m finally making enough money to go legit,” he said. “I’m going to get a storefront, get a business license and pay taxes on what I’m making.”

      Paula said Coston is one of his hardest-working clients, spending longer hours than most selling his new slick disc. He thinks Coston is doing what needs to be done to make a musical name for himself.

      “Major music labels these days don’t sign you because you’re talented,” Paula said. “They want you to have street sales and a local following you created on your own before you even walk into their door.”

      But rap sales tactics can be disturbing.

      Recently, Philadelphia narcotics cops were irritated by the artwork on a CD released by Lamont Love, who was arrested for cocaine trafficking last month.

      The back cover of the CD has a picture of a smiling boy, who appears to be around 8, holding wads of cash. The cover also has street signs of two roads in the city’s Manayunk section where undercover officers allege that Love sold drugs.

      One of Paula’s clients, David Mays, said selling drugs or robbing people to finance a rap career isn’t necessary.

      “To say you have to do it to make it big is not only self-defeating, it’s a crock,” he said. “It’s all about networking, which you have to do anyway.”

      Mays, 27, is a full-time DJ. He graduated from the University of Delaware with a bachelor’s degree in biology in 2002. He performs on college tours and spring break events that are affiliated with MTV. His stage name is Dj Amaze.

      Mays — who grew up in a middle-class home — doesn’t have a hard-knocks story to tell, but said it’s not a requirement for a successful career.

      Wilmington artist Grand G, who sold thousands of vinyl albums in the tri-state area in 1990, still records and is working on a new production deal. Coston has recorded in his studio.

      “It’s hard to make it, and some young artists don’t realize that. Making it isn’t just about having talent anymore. There’s a business aspect to it, so you have to be professional on your way up,” Grand G said.

      Another Wilmington artist, Gentle Jones, said Coston and Paula are typical of the city, which he characterized as long on talent but short on legitimate venues. He sees the drug-trade’s hold on the city’s rap industry as troubling.

      “I don’t mean to disrespect either of these guys, but doing anything illegal is just a bad executive decision,” he said. “The odds of any musician succeeding are against you, even if you’ve been to Juilliard. You should follow your dreams and still butter your bread in the meantime.”

      Criminals and victims

      Rappers committing crimes to jump-start their careers are a group the Wilmington HOPE Commission was created to help: young black males with criminal records.

      They are most likely to be the perpetrators — and victims — of violence. The commission will soon implement a strategy to take on the poverty-related issues that often make young men more likely to become criminals.

      Pastor Johnson, a commission member, said these young men are one reason he wants to meet with Mayor Baker to see if the city will host an annual hip-hop festival. Currently, the city sponsors two musical festivals each year, one for blues and one for jazz.

      “If we truly want the murder rates to fall, hip-hop has to be part of the equation,” he said.

      In previous interviews, University of Delaware assistant professor of education Shuaib Meacham agreed.

      Meacham has said that hip-hop has to be harnessed as a force for good, to educate young people about language and history. He serves as a mentor to Bassline Entertainment, a group of young Delaware performers who use rap to send positive messages.

      Meacham wasn’t available for interviews for this story, but Baker isn’t interested in a city-sponsored hip-hop festival anyway. Baker said an element of the genre promotes violence.

      “We wouldn’t deny anyone the right to have such a festival, as long as the lyrics and content were positive and their effort was to curb violence,” he said.

      Coston isn’t sure that a government-sanctioned festival would work anyway. He thinks he’s on the right track now, organizing a “Hope and Promise Tour” of his own. He recently spoke at Alexis I. du Pont High School in Greenville to promote that hoped-for tour.

      “I’ve tried things the wrong way, now I want to try them the right way,” he said. “I’d like to hold a show for elementary and middle school kids to show them they should never give up. If I become a big star, the kids from Delaware who saw me perform can say, ‘Hey, I want to be just like that.’ ”

      Coston said he is confident that he’ll stay out of trouble and will soon be famous. “Put on your seatbelt, man, everything I’m doing is full-throttle,” he said.

      But Allen, the youth counselor, remains worried about Coston’s future. Allen accompanied Coston to the high school last week in a show of support, but concedes that Coston’s future could go either way.

      “He’s so prone to listening to the streets,” Allen said. “And sometimes the street is stronger than anything someone like me has to offer him.”

    • Rigo 7:50 pm on March 9, 2007 Permalink | Reply

      I Just Got His And Jay’s Albums…..Classics, Keep It Comin’ Esco! Good Interview.

  • L Boogie 12:49 pm on February 21, 2007 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: About this site, ,   

    When Nas Speaks….You Should Listen 

    I feel the same way dude does……That is the inspiration behind BronxRap.com….L

     
  • L Boogie 11:21 pm on February 14, 2007 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: About this site   

    We Are Now Work-Place Safe!!! 

    In light of a couple of requests to stop tits & ass from being visible as soon as you get here….We have removed the uncomfortable banner that was plaed in our Lust section…Here’s the e-mail that made us finally make the change..

    the Assparade banner makes it a little uncomfortable to view ur page at the workplace. anything u can do about that, big dawg.

    Problem Solved

     
  • L Boogie 7:30 pm on January 28, 2007 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: About this site   

    Tak A Good Look!!! 

    6.jpg

    Waddup people…Happy Sunday and all dat. I’m tryin to get my rest on…had a long weekend so I’m gonna holla t ya’ll t’morrow….But until then click on the image above and observe….Or click below and watch…Peace & L

    Self Destruction

     
  • L Boogie 3:58 am on December 3, 2006 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: About this site, , ,   

    Cuz You Can’t Knock The Hustle…. 

    Haters drop the fuck dead…Yea I hear the talk about that nigga Jay….About he changed and he dont have the same flow that he did long ago…I hear the talk about how he sounds upper class or that he always has white dudes in his videos now. (More …)

     
    • OJ 1:51 pm on December 3, 2006 Permalink | Reply

      Ay, he’s a part of Hip Hop History and that’s a fact. Jay deserves what is rightfully due in the way of respect and I give him that. This right here is just one of many jems that made “Reasonable Doubt” another chapter in the HipHop Bible. Matterfact, the whole album is the truth! So, basically, No Hatin’ from me…Yeah, I think its silly to rap about still being tied to the streets in ways that you really aren’t especially when the publics knows and sees this due to paparazzi and sh!t. There’s nothing wrong with paying respect to where you came from and even where your heart is but make sure that’s what you are doing. I think Jay has moved more into the position as a businessman and not as much of a rapper. Nothing wrong with that…ANd the whole retiement issue, yeah, if you are going to come out of retirement, make sure the game NEEDS you! As many have said before, Hip Hop is dead…I’m not going that far, but it is fading fast, and what we need is something/someone to nurse it back to health. And when we are flooded with BullSh!t rap, we are slowly killing it. Jay has made his fair amount of contributions to the Hip Hop game and I thank him for that, and for keeping my CD player on spin back in the day (and even still). I just think we need something real solid from him in order to justify a true return. I’m talking about some Jesus Christ shit! Ionno…Just my two sense on Jay.

      As far as the site goes, sh!t, Ilove it. I think you guys do a great job of putting up quality Music and a lot of ol’ school video and cuts to remind people of where it all started. Nothing wrong with wanting to expand your empire and reaching beyond the BX.

      The Seahawks better win today, for reals!

      PEace!

  • L Boogie 3:58 am on December 3, 2006 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: About this site, , ,   

    Cuz You Can’t Knock The Hustle…. 

    Haters drop the fuck dead…Yea I hear the talk about that nigga Jay….About he changed and he dont have the same flow that he did long ago…I hear the talk about how he sounds upper class or that he always has white dudes in his videos now. (More …)

     
  • L Boogie 9:14 pm on November 27, 2006 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: About this site, , ,   

    Lesson #1….. 

    Thanks to my people over at QD3 we were able to bring this knowledge to you…Listen closely and pay attention…And understand that this is why we do what we do….**WATCH** 

    L

     
    • jaga_d_schmoov1 4:36 am on November 29, 2006 Permalink | Reply

      YO…this clip is from ‘the freshest kids’ dvd (just watched the entire joint again 2nite) and its the most comprehensive history of b.boyin that i’ve ever seen/heard…word…i almost went down in2 the basement 2 tighten up my ‘down-rock’ stylez.

      i seriously advise any/everybody who claims 2 be down w/hip.hop culture 2 peep and take notes…WHAT.

      ONEluv
      jg

  • L Boogie 9:14 pm on November 27, 2006 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: About this site, , ,   

    Lesson #1….. 

    Thanks to my people over at QD3 we were able to bring this knowledge to you…Listen closely and pay attention…And understand that this is why we do what we do….**WATCH** 

    L

     
  • L Boogie 12:30 pm on March 23, 2006 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: About this site   

    Slick Rick…That Back in the day shizzle 

     Ok Ok I’m showing my age lol.  A teenage love is a true classic.I can remember listening to the song and thinkin about writing a note to my then crush….Do you like me Yes-No or Maybe…Gettin butterflies everytime she came around.Ok Ok moving on check this joint out peoples.Peace

     
    • Tania 12:24 pm on May 25, 2006 Permalink | Reply

      Please call me and let me know that you received this email.

  • L Boogie 12:30 pm on March 23, 2006 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: About this site   

    Slick Rick…That Back in the day shizzle 

     Ok Ok I’m showing my age lol.  A teenage love is a true classic.I can remember listening to the song and thinkin about writing a note to my then crush….Do you like me Yes-No or Maybe…Gettin butterflies everytime she came around.Ok Ok moving on check this joint out peoples.Peace

     
  • L Boogie 11:29 am on March 23, 2006 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: About this site   

    Noassatall Disease 

    Were on earth is her ass?? Let me get this straight….G.Q is paying her big money to be on the cover of their mag indicating that this is what us men want.NOOOOO!!!! Somebody should bring the G.Q mag producers and photographers to the Bronx for just a day.This chick has no ass at all.I guess her as was absent today…

     
  • L Boogie 12:54 am on March 22, 2006 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: About this site,   

    N.Y Rap is a movement….Get Down Or Lay Down!!!! 

    This is gettin pretty funny cus this is the whole reason I created BronRap.com..People have lost respect 4 The creators of hiphop.Let this be a lesson to you.Peace & love..L

     
  • L Boogie 12:54 am on March 22, 2006 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: About this site,   

    N.Y Rap is a movement….Get Down Or Lay Down!!!! 

    This is gettin pretty funny cus this is the whole reason I created BronRap.com..People have lost respect 4 The creators of hiphop.Let this be a lesson to you.Peace & love..L

     
  • L Boogie 12:04 am on March 21, 2006 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: About this site   

    Sedgwick & Cedar is what I believe is only clothing line that actually has a whole generation behind it.This represents the birth of all hip-hop everywhere…And if you dont know you better ask somebody baby.Long Live the Bronx N.Y….Sedwick & Cedar

     
  • L Boogie 12:04 am on March 21, 2006 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: About this site   

    Sedgwick & Cedar 

    Sedgwick & Cedar is what I believe is only clothing line that actually has a whole generation behind it.This represents the birth of all hip-hop everywhere…And if you dont know you better ask somebody baby.Long Live the Bronx N.Y….Sedwick & Cedar

     
  • L Boogie 8:15 am on March 20, 2006 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: About this site   

    ShowBiz & A.G (Fat Pockets)–Bronx Classic 

    These are my dudes for real.This classic made headz spin.It’s ill to see and remember back in the days when timb boots and crispy army jackets from the army&navy was the shiznit.

     
  • L Boogie 8:15 am on March 20, 2006 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: About this site   

    ShowBiz & A.G (Fat Pockets)–Bronx Classic 

    These are my dudes for real.This classic made headz spin.It’s ill to see and remember back in the days when timb boots and crispy army jackets from the army&navy was the shiznit.

     
  • L Boogie 1:33 am on March 19, 2006 Permalink | Reply
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    Shellz-A Verbal Hitman—Ofcourse from the Bronx 

    The flow is ill and rare.We are proud to call dude one of our own.

     
  • L Boogie 1:33 am on March 19, 2006 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: About this site   

    Shellz-A Verbal Hitman—Ofcourse from the Bronx 

    The flow is ill and rare.We are proud to call dude one of our own.

     
  • L Boogie 3:48 pm on March 17, 2006 Permalink | Reply
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    Warning-The Image Below Is Trash 

     I cant believe that our audience has turned to this!!Peewee Herman and his brothers going platinum.My god we are in big trouble!!

     
    • Morgan 4:28 am on March 20, 2006 Permalink | Reply

      Yo…I feel you son ! I went to the WU show down in Philly back in Feb. and they were making fun of these cats….saying that too many people don’t know what hip-hop is any more ! And they don’t….!

    • va757 12:42 am on August 17, 2007 Permalink | Reply

      lol @ Peewee Herman ….niggas is just certified wack these days and dont even know it

  • L Boogie 12:41 am on March 16, 2006 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: About this site   

    BIG PUN..One Of Our Illest Rapperz Ever (R.I.P) 

    Damn we miss you nigga!!!!  Things aint the same without you dogs.

     
  • L Boogie 10:51 pm on March 15, 2006 Permalink | Reply
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    What The Fuck is a Papoose!!!!! 

    Yooooo ya boy Pap is doing big things…From the streets to the fame to the doe(i hope so) K Slay finally found a winner but how long will this winner stay with Slay is the question. Who knows we’ll see..I’m diggin the way Pap said “Bronx on my middle finger sayin fuck you” Good shit pap Hold us D.

     
  • L Boogie 8:08 am on February 8, 2006 Permalink | Reply
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    When will you leave 

    This post is password protected. To view it please enter your password below:


     
  • L Boogie 8:08 am on February 8, 2006 Permalink | Reply
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    Protected: When will you leave 

    huh when will you leave …like a theif in the night?

     
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