Thursday, July 30, 2009

TOO CRAZZZZYYYYYY! RIDE THIS WAVE YALL!


London's menswear mini boom has fired up a new wave of cobblers. Leading the charge is Marc Hare, whose label, Mr. Hare, is tantalizing footwear freaks with its Dover Street Market debut and its online presence at Oki-ni.com. Hare himself is the kind of stand-out character who could only have evolved in London's unique bouillabaisse of high and low culture. ("From red carpet to surf"—Hare's summation of his design ethos is practically his autobiography.) His natty dreads have been a fixture on every scene since a pre-modeling Kate Moss used to hang with the BMX boys at his shop Low Pressure. He did marketing for Doc Martens and Sebago, then opened—and closed—a store called Something, which reintroduced Londoners to labels like Balenciaga.

Hare's innate instinct for marketing shows up in the names he gives his styles. Take the Orwell, for instance (below). It's a patent-and-stingray Oxford with a distinctive blaze of white on the vamp. "With that one pair of shoes, you could dress like a tramp and fit in anywhere," he says. (In other words, if you're George Orwell, down and out in Paris and London.) Fitzgerald (above) is a Gatsby-worthy suede-and-patent combo. There's a Miller, a Wolfe, a Kerouac...you get the picture. The passion for footwear that drove Hare's blog (think Shoe-torialist) means he's designed the kind of shoes that he always wanted to find—and then had them handmade in Italy by Tuscan craftsmen. An entrepreneurial dreamer who addresses his own needs? It's a durable recipe for success. But Hare's seductive, surprising combinations of materials and textures are also likely to connect with every man's inner shoe fetishist.
Prices starting at $534; pre-ordering now at oki-ni.com; mrhare.co.uk

TIM BLANKS
Photo: Courtesy of Oki-Ni

DRINK OF THE WEEK: RED DEVIL


1 1/2 oz vodka
1 1/2 oz peach schnapps
1 1/2 oz Southern Comfort® peach liqueur
1 1/2 oz sloe gin
2 oz triple sec
2 oz orange juice
1 splash grenadine syrup

PRADA SPRING COLLECTION



THESE R HOT



First Lady Michelle Obama loves her Lanvin Cap Toe sneakers! She’s been spotted twice rockin’ these designer sneaks and caught some slack for being seen in such a pricey shoe. These casual yet chic sneakers have been all over the media after the First Lady was photographed in them. The green leather sneaker has a metallic green/patent cap toe, grey grosgrain ribbon laces and a rubber sole; the grey trim simply sets these shoes off. Design style is classic, while the colors make the sneaker really stand out. The Cap Toe sneakers are a fashion-savvy girl’s dream. They can be worn to the office or running errands on the weekend. The Lanvin Cap Toe sneakers retail for $585 at Barneys NY.

THE FIRST AND THE FINED!


Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority international President Barbara McKinzie is being sued by 8 of her sorors for gross misuse of funds on everything from a million dollar life insurance policy and programs funneled to her own company, to a big screen TV and a wax statue of herself. Seriously.

The plaintiffs want Barbara McKinzie fired, the board of directors removed and money returned. McKinzie argues she did nothing wrong. The he said/she said of the statue debate goes like this:

In the sorority statement, McKinzie took particular offense to the accusation that she commissioned a life-sized wax figure of herself that cost hundreds of thousands of dollars. She said the sorority's board approved the money to "help defray overall expenses for our 2010 convention." ...



She said a total of $45,000 was spent on a wax figure of her and the sorority's first international president, the late Nellie Quander. McKinzie also said the expenses were "consistent with furthering AKA's mission" and did not violate any of the group's bylaws.

The lawsuit says $900,000 was spent on the McKinzie wax statue, but Edward W. Gray Jr., an attorney representing the plaintiffs suing the Chicago-based sorority, said he has since learned the amount was for the two statues. The statues reportedly are to be displayed in the National Great Blacks in Wax Museum in Baltimore, Md., he said. Source: Alpha Kappa Alpha Sues President Over Wax Statue, Associated Press - AOL

If the allegations are true, then AKA, of which I am a member, has been infected by greed at the top. This entire saga is not only sad because it's a blow to the reputation of the oldest predominantly black sorority in America. It's mostly sad because if some were lining their pockets, while others stood by and watched, then sorely needed community service programs most likely, didn't get funded.

Within the 38-page lawsuit filed last month, the sorority, which Gray called "one of the crown jewels of our community," is portrayed as a troubled organization rife with financial improprieties.

For example, the lawsuit alleges that McKinzie and Betty James, the executive director who is also named as a defendant, oversaw the preparation of the organization's tax return's that include many "unreasonable large and inappropriate" deductions.

McKinzie also invested millions of dollars of the sorority's money in stocks and bonds - investments that have since lost huge amounts of money, according to the lawsuit. Source: Alpha Kappa Alpha Sues President Over Wax Statue, Associated Press - AOL

It's hard to find empathy when black organization leaders spend hard earned cash recklessly and on personal monuments. I just hope amid the infighting, personal jealousies and complicit oversight committee, the charges against Barbara McKinzie will turn out to be nothing more than a huge misunderstanding.

SOMETIMES I THINK ITS JUST A EUROPEAN THING BUT ITS NOT.


WHISPER JOBS: OK! MAGAZINE

OK! Magazine Entry-Level Designer
Job/Internship type:
Full-time
Company/Publication Name:
OK! Magazine
Location:
New York, NY
Description:
OK! Magazine is looking for a full-time entry-level designer. Must be proficient in InDesign and Photoshop. Any relevant design experience is a plus.
Posted 7/28/09
Contact:
Please e-mail cover letter, resumé and a few PDF samples of your work to joseph.broda@okmagazine.com.
OK to mention Ed?:
Yes

Monday, July 27, 2009

NEW YORK KAPPA WEEKEND


FRIDAY JULY 31ST, 2K9
"Anything But Clothes"
(Pajama / Lingerie Party)

RUMBA SKY
19 NORTH FRANKLIN ST.
HEMPSTEAD, NY 11550

Damage: FREE for Ladies // $10 for Guys b4 12
18 TO PAY // 21 TO PLAY
...:::DRESS CODE ENCOURAGED:::...

DJ Spynfo + DJ Scoota on the 1's and 2's!

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

SATURDAY AUGUST 1, 2K9

RED SEA BBKue 2K9
Jones Beach /// Field 6
3PM - 9PM

10 Chapters of Nupe Juice
FREE Food
FREE Water /// Sand
FREE Love!

(I know Black folks love free shit... LMAO)

***DIRECTIONS TO JONES BEACH***
Take the SSP or NSP to Meadowbrook Parkway
Meadowbrook to JONES BEACH EXIT

Get to field 6.

Park up and Pour up! We SEE YOU ON THE MOON!!!

Sunday, July 26, 2009

ON HIS DIDDY SHIT - 2005 INTERVIEW. ONLY CUZ I BELIEVE IN SPREADING INSPY!


Bad Boy Records - Aug 2005
By TRACIE ROZHON, New York Times
SEAN JOHN COMBS, the rap and clothing impresario still best known as Puff Daddy, a sobriquet he has now abandoned, stood before a conference table in his company's Midtown Manhattan headquarters recently, addressing his designers.

Dressed in a black baseball cap, a black T-shirt and black cut-off denim shorts - his only flash a large square diamond stud in each earlobe - he projected a decidedly serious mien. The designers listened intently. When he paused, as he did several times, there were no questions. They knew to wait until he solicited their advice.

"There will be only three 'Sean John' T-shirts in the coming collection," he said. A few designers let out wispy sighs at such a seemingly self-destructive edict; after all, clothes with the Sean John name, initials or crest make up a big slice of his company's sales. "I'm putting you on rations," he said, laughing. "From now on, I want people to read the name without seeing the name. You get me?"

Messing with the name is no small gamble, nor is it the only one he is taking. Sean John is already a well-known brand - at least in households with teenagers, who spend about $42 billion a year to look good.

Mr. Combs's company, Sean John, has about $400 million of that business, most of it from urban styles like baggy, crotch-at-the knee trousers, conspicuously branded T-shirts and hooded sweatshirts, or "hoodies." But Mr. Combs, who sometimes goes by the rapper name P. Diddy but is known to associates as Puffy, is looking to expand well beyond the urban niche.

A stack of other rap and rhythm-and-blues celebrities from Snoop Dogg to Beyoncé have decided they have the style to create clothes, but Mr. Combs is the one who analysts say has the best chance of making the transition to the mainstream.

That could be particularly lucrative for Mr. Combs, who, unlike most of his competitors, has maintained control of his company. (By contrast, Russell Simmons, another rap impresario, sold his Phat Fashions to Kellwood, a giant clothing producer, for $140 million last year.)

"Sean John felt he has the heft to go it alone," said Eric M. Beder, an analyst at Brean Murray & Company, a New York investment bank.

Going it alone, though, will mean having to tackle some serious problems, starting with two years of more or less flat sales and a net loss last year. That is compounded by signs that the urbanwear trend is past its peak, and by basic business problems like disorganized distribution. Then there are the distractions inherent in being part of an informal miniconglomerate that has at times included businesses as diverse as music publishing and advertising and restaurants.

Mr. Combs has started to address each of these issues. He began by parting ways with a longtime friend and the executive vice president of Sean John, Jeffrey Tweedy, and replacing him with Robert J. Wichser, the former chief executive of the Joseph Abboud Apparel Corporation. Mr. Combs is also moving to expand beyond urbanwear - first into a line of women's clothes, and next into a host of licensed products, including leather sneakers, belts and wheel rims.

The success of this strategy is far from assured, but Mr. Beder, along with other analysts, bankers and even competitors, says Mr. Combs stands a good chance, in part because he is so personally involved. He directs his own designers, and Sean John makes 70 percent of its own clothes; most celebrity-branded gear is made under license by other companies. "If he can get the women's working, he can become a true lifestyle brand," Mr. Beder said. "Sean John can become more than just Puff Daddy's company."

Before he hired Mr. Wichser in May, Mr. Combs held the title of chief executive. Mr. Wichser had said he wouldn't sign on to run Sean John without that title - and the authority to match. Mr. Combs has also hired Jon Cropper, a former executive of Quincy Jones Productions, as chief marketing officer of Bad Boy Worldwide Entertainment, his recording company. The goal, both men say, is to bring "synergy" to an empire that Mr. Combs says spans "clothing, music and lifestyle."

Mr. Combs has also vowed to pay more attention to the Sean John clothing and accessory lines, a pledge he honored at the recent meeting with his designers. "When we are doing the Jack Johnson Collection, I want people to think 'champion.' " he told them, announcing the coming season's theme, named for a great and tragic black boxer of the early 1900's. "I don't want you to bring me clothes with the name 'Jack Johnson' on them. We got to get away from that. And I don't want some kind of retro stuff, like clothes from 1906. I want contemporary. If somebody's wearing one of my track suits, I want it to say 'champion' from two blocks away."

He is also branching into footwear: three styles of leather-and-suede Sean John shoes, in brown and black, will hit stores soon. (In the Sean John store, on Fifth Avenue at 40th Street in Midtown, a salesman recently described the shoes, which resemble sneakers or lightweight hiking boots, as "something Louis Vuitton would do.")

Sean John's sales have started to grow again, Mr. Wichser said, after a two-year plateau. But the key to the company's long-term success, many agree, will be the women's clothing line, called "Sean by Sean Combs," coming this fall. It is aimed at the contemporary department-store category (read: young and midpriced), but it has some particularly expensive items - like coyote-trimmed leather jackets for $6,000. The line has already received some good reviews, and orders, from Bergdorf Goodman, Saks Fifth Avenue and other stores.

Robert Burke, the fashion director at Bergdorf Goodman, says Sean John's women's line is more impressive than its men's wear. "We at Bergdorf have not been - and are not - interested in the men's collection," he said. "The women's has more fashion, more sophistication, and a sexier edge to it."

Mr. Combs says he knows the women's line must be more than just "better" if he is to make the leap from the category called urban - a name he resents, by the way, contending that is just another way of saying "black" - to something fresh and great.

MR. COMBS, a Grammy-winning rapper, created his first major business, Bad Boy Worldwide Entertainment, in 1993. His clothing company came along six years later. It produced clothes that mimicked what many young African-American teenagers had already started wearing: an anti-establishment style influenced by prison inmates, who wore their pants baggy and held up with a piece of rope.

Mr. Simmons, a founder of Def Jam records, started marketing the style through his Phat Farm clothing label in the early 1990's. A basket of new urban brands quickly followed, including Ecko, Rocawear and Sean John.But some of these clothing companies ran into problems in the last year or so. Last summer, Mr. Simmons said in a deposition during a civil court battle over one of his record deals that he had exaggerated the amount of money his company was making at the time he sold it to Kellwood. (Kellwood executives said in a news release that Mr. Simmons was just frustrated at the time, and had always been honest with them.)

Whatever the facts of Mr. Simmons's business, several surveys have found that the urban market is starting to decline. The days of full "hook ups" - a total head-to-toe outfit of one urban brand - are past, said Richard E. Jaffe, a retail analyst at Legg Mason. Those who still like the look are seeking brand names that are perhaps hipper and definitely younger than either Phat Farm or Sean John, he said.

When Steven Brown, who runs a new Web-based urban clothing store called CityBoyz, lists his top designers, they are names like Ami Sanzuri and Krush, Caffeine Clothing and Dragonfly. "I think I have a couple of Sean John belts on the site," he said, when asked if he carried the brand.

That is not surprising to some analysts, who say Sean John may be old hat for the newest fashionistas. Being urban, after all, means being ahead of the fashion wave. But the masses, including some older, more affluent customers, may just be discovering him.

"It's a really odd thing," said John D. Morris, a retail analyst who specializes in youth-oriented fashion at Harris Nesbitt, an investment bank in New York. He canvasses the malls and holds focus groups with teenagers and customers in their 20's. "The teenagers who used to wear Sean John are wearing Ralph Lauren," he said, "and the 20-ish stockbrokers are starting to wear Sean John."

Mr. Beder, the retail analyst, said that "the whole urban style has been co-opted by preppies."

Although Sean John is not a public company, Mr. Morris says he tracks it and most of the other urban brands because they are sold in the national specialty chains, which are publicly traded. "The brand has been slipping," he said of Sean John. "Managers in places like T.J. Maxx list Rocawear, Polo, Ecko and Baby Phat as their most popular. Macy's has far more Ecko and Baby Phat than Sean John. Plus, there's been an overall shift away from branded clothes. We know the kids don't like logos anymore."

Elina Kazan, a Macy's spokeswoman, said Sean John "is, and will continue to be, a very important vendor for us."

Last year, retailers sold about $400 million of Sean John clothes, according to Mr. Wichser - a figure that translates into $125 million to $150 million of wholesale revenue in 2004. The profitability of Mr. Combs's clothing business - which last year got a $100 million infusion from the billionaire Ron Burkle - is the subject of much speculation in the fashion industry.

Mr. Wichser said Sean John "incurred a slight loss" last year, but he attributed that to expansion. First, he said, Sean John bought a 50 percent partnership with Zac Posen, one of the hottest and most social of the young designers. (The price was not disclosed, but bankers said it was about $2 million.) Second, he said, Sean John opened its Fifth Avenue store last year.

That store is not large - only 3,500 square feet - and the rent may be cheaper than in it would be in other locations, like West Broadway in SoHo, where other urban clothing retailers have set up shop. To many retailing experts, Mr. Combs's leap last fall to include dressier, more formal styles - notably suits and silk ties and French-cuffed shirts - seems prescient now.

Last week, Mr. Wichser predicted that the store would "break even or be slightly profitable in 2005," adding that he was "assessing" the store's future.

Earlier this month, the salesman who compared Mr. Combs's sneaker designs to Louis Vuitton's said that some of the suits had been in Sean John's store since last fall and had been subtly marked down to $495. ("Where's the sign?" he was asked. "I am the sign," he replied, with true Puffy bravado.)

Mr. Combs, for his part, shrugs off speculation about his empire's health. "It's all right if people have questions," he said, "but sometimes it's not important to give people answers." He does, however, answer one question: Is the urban business in trouble? "No," he replied. "The economy is in trouble."

The story of Mr. Combs's beginnings, as he tells it, sounds like a rap song, especially with the emphasis he places on certain words.

"I come from Harlem, New York," he said, "and one of the things Harlem is known for is style, making something out of nothing. Nobody has money but everybody knows how to dress. My mother was a model and a shopaholic. I was definitely a mama's boy; I was dragged into bargain shopping for the right pieces. My aunt was a seamstress. My uncle George was gay. My grandmother did the robes for the church, and she did the hems for the choir - she did them cheaper than the local cleaners. My father was an alcoholic, and he died when I was three."

It sounds like a Horatio Alger story, he was told.

"I don't know who this Horatio Alger guy is, but I certainly went through a lot of adversity," he said. "As a young black man - I don't want to pull the race card - but it certainly seems like the odds were against me. Eighty percent of my friends are dead or in jail. It's just something I have to live with."

When he was 12, the family moved to Mount Vernon, N.Y., just north of New York City, and he went to the Mount St. Michael Academy, a private school a few miles away, in the Bronx. "When I arrived, I was too young to have a paper route; I was one year away," he said. "But I made a deal with the kid who had the local route, who was going off to college. I'd split the money with him 50-50. It was a great deal for him, and I was making $600 a week by the age of 13. That's when I got the bug, when one plus one equaled two for me."

When he went to Howard University, the entrepreneurial reflex went with him. Between classes, he ran a shuttle service for other students, for example, and he later pursued an internship at Uptown Records, which published the R&B and rap music he liked most. When he met the rapper Heavy D, whose real name was Dwight E. Myers, Mr. Combs said he begged him to call the label's president, Andre Harrell, on his behalf.

One day, he was asked to meet Mr. Harrell. "I told him I'd wash cars, quit school - anything - a priceless chance to be in your presence," Mr. Combs recalled. The student sycophant was given a chance, dealing with artists "nobody could control or handle," he said. The first record he produced - "Come & Talk to Me" by Jodeci - sold two million copies, and he was named a vice president. But almost as quickly, he was fired. He was 21.

"I guess Andre didn't want two kings in the castle," Mr. Combs said. "I had obtained some success, some notoriety, and I didn't realize it wasn't my house."

A concert promotion failed spectacularly when nine people were crushed to death at a rap concert that Mr. Combs and Mr. Myers staged at the City College of New York in 1991. Family members of the people who died sued Mr. Combs and Mr. Myers, as well as the college and the city, accusing them of negligence. The suit was settled for $3.8 million, of which Mr. Combs paid $750,000. In a separate suit filed by some people who were injured at the event, Judge Louis C. Benza of the Court of Claims in Albany chastised Mr. Combs, saying he oversold the event and hired bouncers who barricaded the doors to keep out angry ticketholders, trapping others inside.

Mr. Combs landed in trouble again when he faced charges of illegal possession of a gun and attempted bribery of a witness after a 1999 shootout in a Midtown nightclub. Three people were wounded in the incident. Mr. Combs was acquitted, though one member of his party was convicted and sentenced to 10 years in prison.

After that, Mr. Combs spent more time on his fashion company, which he had started by using money from his CD sales to buy 50,000 black hats and T-shirts with his signature on them. The idea, he said, was inspired by the Agnès B boutique, which then sold clothes mostly in black. He started hiring independent designers to expand his offerings, then started designing himself. "I didn't think I'd end up being the designer," he said. "It was never my intent. My intent was to own a company, not be a face in its ads."

These days, Mr. Combs says he is partying less; he is slowing down a bit. He is consolidating his clothing maker and recording outfit from several offices around Manhattan into a single building on Broadway at 54th Street, "to make sure we take advantage of all the synergies," he said.

"And that takes time," he added. "I'm taking the time to slow down, to strategize, to figure out where I want to be in five years."

The company, he said, had been "like a train speeding down the track; if you don't manage the velocity, the train will eventually crash."

It came close to a collision last year, when deliveries became so erratic that Macy's threatened to stop carrying the line. "Did we have some problems during the last year? Yes," Mr. Wichser said. "We didn't have the infrastructure." (To address that problem, Sean John opened a distribution center in Cranbury, N.J., last fall.)

Mr. Combs's top priority is the Sean John collection of casual men's wear, which makes up about 70 percent of his business, according to Mr. Wichser. "What most needed work was the management," Mr. Combs said, adding that he addressed that problem by hiring Mr. Wichser. Now the company will work on finding better factories to make the goods.

Mr. Combs also has to figure out how to incorporate Zac Posen into his empire. Last week, he said the plan was to have Mr. Posen do "a secondary line," probably aimed at department stores, and to license his name for accessories.

"A woman would buy a Zac Posen handbag, a pair of shoes," Mr. Combs said. "He's different from Marc Jacobs, of course, but he's definitely following in his footsteps." Mr. Posen, who is only 25, has also been "a quiet consultant" to the new women's line, Mr. Combs said.

WHILE strengthening men's wear and introducing the women's line, Sean John will rely on licensed goods - suits, dress shirts and ties made by other companies but sold under the Sean John label - to drive its growth, Mr. Wichser said. Sean John collects a percentage of the sales of licensed goods, usually 7 to 10 percent. Mr. Wichser predicted that sales of the licensed clothes would grow "in the mid-teens" between this year and next.

At the same time, Mr. Combs has begun to de-emphasize his recording career. In a lengthy interview, he said he was making his last record and would only produce records in the future. "I think I've gone as far as I can as a solo artist," he said.

Recently, he sold half of his Bad Boy music catalog to the Warner Music Group for $35 million. He dismissed speculation that he owed about $12 million of that to his old distributor, Universal. He said that he paid much less than that to settle an old loan and let him get out of his contract with Universal eight months early. A spokesman for Universal had no comment.

"Puffy has told us he's going to focus on music and building his career," said Edgar Bronfman Jr., the chairman of Warner Music, "and when he focuses, there's no one more talented and better at spotting talent and overseeing its growth."

In the end, the empire is only as strong as its emperor - Sean Combs or Puff Daddy or P. Diddy.

Ronald Frasch, the fashion director at Saks Fifth Avenue and the former chief executive of Bergdorf's, said that a big part of the appeal of Mr. Combs's new women's line was Mr. Combs himself. After a 20-minute presentation by Mr. Combs, Mr. Frasch said he told him: "I don't know whether the clothes are any good - but I'll definitely vote for you!" He ordered clothes for six stores to start, and said he plans to include more.

John Dempsey, the chief executive of Estée Lauder, said his company was also delighted to be part of Mr. Combs's newest venture - a perfume, but please don't ask about the name before it is revealed next month. It doesn't matter, he said, that every other celebrity seems to be introducing a fragrance.

Mr. Combs, he said, rises above them all. "Russell Simmons comes close to Sean as a business entrepreneur," Mr. Dempsey said, "but nobody else could have created 'The Band' on MTV or gone on Broadway to star in 'Raisin in the Sun.' When I travel the world, when you go to Germany, to Europe, his clothing line may not be known, his music may not be known, but everybody knows who he is. He's got a lot of personality muscle."

Mr. Combs also has enough experience to know that personality muscle alone is not enough to build an empire. "You have to invest in executive talent in order to one day own or be part of a Fortune 500 company," he said, then paused. "I'm more mature now. I understand. It's all right to need people."

Sean "P Diddy" Combs will be hosting MTV's VMA's (Video Music Awards) hosted live from Miami, Aug 28, 2005 on MTV. Combs, was recently named in FORTUNE Magazine's, Aug 15 Edition of One of the Most Influential Monitories. P Diddy was joined on the FORTUNE list by Russell Simmons, Jay Z, Will Smith, Oprah among others. For more information on Sean "P Diddy" Combs visit Diddy Bad Boy Online

THESE ARE HOT! [FOR THE LADIES]

Friday, July 24, 2009

THIS IS CRAZY!!!

THE EMPIRE AND EGO OF DONALD TRUMP ((1983 Article, NY Post))


HE made his presence known on the island of Manhattan in the mid 70's, a brash Adonis from the outer boroughs bent on placing his imprint on the golden rock. Donald John Trump exhibited a flair for self-promotion, grandiose schemes - and, perhaps not surprisingly, for provoking fury along the way.

Senior realty titans scoffed, believing that braggadocio was the sum and substance of the blond, blue-eyed, six-footer who wore maroon suits and matching loafers, frequented Elaine's and Regine's in the company of fashion models, and was not abashed to take his armed bodyguard-chauffeur into a meeting with an investment banker.

The essence of entrepreneurial capitalism, real estate is a business with a tradition of high-rolling megalomania, of master builders striving to erect monuments to their visions. It is also typically dynastic, with businesses being transmitted from fathers to sons and grandsons, and carried on by siblings. In New York, the names of Tishman, Lefrak, Rudin, Fisher, Zeckendorf come to mind.

And now there is Trump, a name that has in the last few years become an internationally recognized symbol of New York City as mecca for the world's super rich.

''Not many sons have been able to escape their fathers,'' said Donald Trump, the president of the Trump Organization, by way of interpreting his accomplishments. Three of them, built since 1976, stand out amidst the crowded midtown landscape: the 68- story Trump Tower, with its six-story Atrium housing some of the world's most elegant stores; the 1,400- room Grand Hyatt Hotel, and Trump Plaza, a $125 million cooperative apartment. And more is on the way.

''At 37, no one has done more than I in the last seven years,'' Mr. Trump asserted.

Fifteen years ago, he joined his father's business, an empire of middle-class apartment houses in Brooklyn, Queens and Staten Island then worth roughly $40 million. Today, the Trump Organization controls assets worth about $1 billion.

The largest and most striking properties were developed by the younger Trump and are owned by him individually or with one non-family partner. While his father, Fred C. Trump, is the company chairman and oversees the original holdings, the Trump Organization is unquestionably a Donald Trump extravaganza.

HE makes that clear. At Trump headquarters on the 26th floor of the Trump Tower astride Fifth Avenue, he opened the door of a room furnished with a vast table.

''This was supposed to be a board room but what was the sense when there's only one member,'' said Donald Trump. ''We changed it to a conference room.''

By MARYLIN BENDER; MARILYN BENDER, A JOUNALIST AND AUTHOR, WRITES ON BUSINESS FROM NEW YORK.
Published: August 7, 1983

Mr. Trump assiduously cultivates a more conservative public image now, a gentleman of taste in a navy- blue suit with discreetly striped shirts and blue ties, who weekends with his family in Greenwich, Conn. Last spring he forsook the Hamptons, his former habitat, to buy an estate in the conservative community.

His pastor, the Rev. Norman Vincent Peale of New York, avowed that he is ''kindly and courteous in certain business negotiations and has a profound streak of honest humility.''

But Mr. Trump prides himself on being street smart and boasted that Brooklyn and Queens, where he was raised, are among ''the toughest, smartest places in the world.'' Mr. Trump prefers the vocabulary of war and sports to document his exploits, acknowledging ''I don't like to lose.'' Nor does he like to receive less than full credit for his victories.

''He was a pretty rough fellow when he was small,'' recalled his father, who packed off his obstreperous teen-age son to the New York Military Academy in Cornwall-on-Hudson for his high school education. According to some of his peers in the industry, Donald Trump has not really changed much from those boyhood days.

His alternating skills of charming some individuals and riding roughshod over others has earned Donald Trump a reputation in some quarters as someone not to be trusted. He reneged, for example, on a promise to donate to a museum the Art Deco bas- reliefs on the facade of Bonwit Teller's - bulldozed to make way for Trump Tower. It was a sin deemed unforgivable by landmark preservationists. But the only negative comments about Donald Trump these days are given off the record.

WU-TANG'S DEMO TAPE VIA KANYEUNIVERCITY.COM/BLOG

DRINK OF THE WEEK: GREEN GOBLIN


ITS THE SUMMER TIME SO GET HAMMERED WASTED AND PASS OUT ON SOMEBODY'S PORCH!

1 oz vodka
1 oz peach schnapps
1 oz DeKuyper® Sour Apple Pucker schnapps
1 oz coconut rum
1 oz sweet and sour mix

DRINK RESPONSIBLY < disclaimer LMAO

WHISPER JOBS: Assistant Editor opening at Bettyconfidential.com

Job/Internship type:
Freelance
Company/Publication Name:
Bettyconfidential.com
Location:
New York, NY
Description:
BettyConfidential.com is looking for an Assistant Editor Must be:
• EXTREMELY ORGANIZED
• Skilled technically – basic HTML, experience with blogs/ CMS,
Photoshop.
• An excellent writer
Responsibilities include:
- MORNINGS: Overseeing daily updates to the website (M-F) – starting at
7 am.
- Image sourcing and formatting
- Contribute story ideas, research, write articles
Most of this work will be done virtually, but you will need to attend
meetings (1-4 times/month) in NYC.
We are looking for someone with a flexible schedule, available mornings
M-F (approx 7 – 11 am) and as needed throughout the day. Some
evening/weekend work may be required.
20-30 hrs/week @ $10 – $15 /hr.
Posted 7/23/09
Contact:
Apply: jobs@bettyconfidential.com
OK to mention Ed?:
Yes

RUN THIS TOWN - Jay-Z feat Kanye / Rihanna

Wednesday, July 22, 2009

LMAO LEBRON GETTIN "DUNKED ON." IT WASN'T EVEN THAT OD BUT I GUESS FOR THE BRON HATERS, HERE'S SUUM FOR U TOO!

ENTREPRENEUR MAGAZINE: "The New Orleans Saints" In the wake of Hurricane Katrina, a new entrepreneurial culture is taking hold in New Orleans.


If New Orleans needs a symbol of its entrepreneurial uprising, this is it: A grand building in the heart of the Warehouse District, once home to one of the city’s old-line law firms, has been completely taken over by young business renegades.

By April, the lawyers had been swept out of the building at 643 Magazine Street. It was freshly rehabbed, christened the Intellectual Property, and the future started moving in: businesses like TurboSquid, an emerging player in the wild art of 3-D modeling, and iSeatz, the online engine behind major travel and entertainment sites.

Down the hall, an outfit called Launch Pad is leasing low-cost work space to freelance designers, writers and other would-be entrepreneurs. The Idea Village, a nonprofit group that fosters entrepreneurship and helped create the Intellectual Property building, moved in and started planning community events in the lobby. PlayNOLA, an organizer of sports leagues for young professionals, got its space by winning a local business plan competition. There are even a few new lawyers at Couhig Partners, which specializes in helping corporations with commercial litigation and business management.

The idea behind the I.P., as the building is called, is to provide a hub for an entrepreneurial culture that is bubbling up all over the city, in almost every kind of enterprise. Four years after Hurricane Katrina and the many stumbles toward its recovery, these young businesses represent technology, invention and youthful, entrepreneurial energy--altogether, the potential for rebirth in a region devastated by disaster.

“As someone who cut his teeth in the Bay Area during the dotcom boom, it’s my opinion that we have an opportunity in New Orleans to recreate what we saw there in the late 1990s, or what Austin or Seattle has done,” says Michael Hecht, president and CEO of Greater New Orleans Inc., a nonprofit economic developmentinitiative, and one of the minds behind the I.P. “We’re creating a mecca for entrepreneurs.”

The evidence is growing--from the thousands of new jobs to the tens of millions invested in business development and incentives. Not far from the I.P., in the Central Business District, a building at 220 Camp Street houses an upstart alternative energy provider, a new online exchange for business receivables and a startup music licensing firm. In the Faubourg St. John neighborhood, Trumpet Ventures is incubating startups in a 12,000-square-foot converted warehouse as it continues to expand its own marketing business. A new motion picture studio sprung up in Elmwood and already has a $60 million Sylvester Stallone action flick in production.

All of this is happening in a city that’s still trying to clean up the tangible and psychological damage of Katrina, even as it clears away the long-existing lore of embedded industry and somewhat dubious business practices. In the midst of one of the worst national economies in decades, New Orleans is recreating itself as a hive of entrepreneurial initiative and demonstrating to other cities how to recover from even the worst disaster.

“Everyone’s going through Katrina right now,” says New Orleans fashion designer Seema Sudan of the current economic calamity. “When I go elsewhere, I feel what’s going on in the world. When I’m here, I feel the optimism.”

Read more: http://www.entrepreneur.com/magazine/entrepreneur/2009/august/202586.html#ixzz0M3gVDMbS

Jay-Z Speaks On Chris Brown, Calls Game 'Groupie'


In an interview with English deejay Tim Westwood, Jay-Z took time to address several hot-button issues, the first of which was Chris Brown.

Jay-Z denied rumors that he had Brown's scheduled Michael Jackson tribute at the BET Awards canceled. "First, let me categorically deny that. That's not even my style. If I got a problem with Chris Brown, I got a problem with Chris Brown. I haven't said anything - I haven't said anything live, or behind the scenes. Whatever. I don't agree with what he did, and that's it."

Moving onto other controversies, Jay spoke about The Game, whom he mentioned in a freestyle live in concert [click to read], which ilicited a harsh response from the west coast rapper [click to read]. Jay-Z was careful to point out that he in the freestyle that he was not talking about Game. "Tell groupie to get over it," concluded Hov.

During the interview, Jay also confirmed that his next single will indeed feature Rihanna and Kanye West in favor of one with Drake [click to read]. As previously reported, the singer is titled "Run This Town."

A FUCKIN GOLDMINE. BUT DON'T MIND ME. I'M JUST SAYIN...

AIGHT, IM GUESSIN THE WHOLE BUDGET WENT TO THE ALBUM CUZ THIS VIDEO WAS JUST EFFORTLESS. SONG IS HOT THO.

Tuesday, July 21, 2009

Charting Your Business Timeline - Year 1: Starting Up


Most new businesses start much the same way. First there's an idea for a product or service that customers will pay for. Next is a plan--written or not--to buy or build the products, or develop the service; locate the facilities, hire the people, develop the systems and raise the money to create, market, deliver and service the products.

After the doors open, however, the similarities end--businesses tend to go in all sorts of different directions. But long-lasting growth enterprises do share a consistent set of future challenges. As they move along the course of business life, entrepreneurs must face and overcome obstacles relating to hiring, planning, refining, systemizing, evolving and, finally, exiting the business.

The key to knowing which challenges are next is to look at your business's timeline. Depending on whether you're a startup, in the growing years from two to five, refining your approach from five to 10, maturing from 10 years on or in the final exit stage, you'll face predictable barriers. The good news is, many entrepreneurs have been there before you, and most of those impediments have solutions that are proven and repeatable.

A Guide to Business Timelines
Year 1: Starting Up
Years 2 to 5: Time to Grow
Years 5 to 10: Growing to the Next Level
Years 10 to Retirement: Managing Maturity
Moving On: Exit Strategies

Read more: http://www.entrepreneur.com/growyourbusiness/businesstimeline/article81266.html#ixzz0LuEPP3SZ

Thursday, July 16, 2009

FUCKIN JERRY MAN... LOL

MY HIGHSCHOOL HOMEBOY DID THIS JOINT. HOT!!

HELLZ SPECIAL DELIVERY & SHORT FILM, "KICKS AFTER SIX" from HELLZ on Vimeo.

DOTM: Jamaica!

Jamaica
This is a great drink i found at several locations in Aleppo Syria. Great drink and can be also made as a non- alcoholic drink without the rum.
2/5 white rum
1/5 orange juice
1/5 pineapple juice
1/5 grapefruit juice
1 dash grenadine syrup

Pour the White Rum first then add the juices. First Orange Juice then Pine Apple and then Grapefruit. At the end add a dash of Grenadine.

I FUCKS WIT SOULJA BOY HEAVVVVYYYYYYY

Friday, July 10, 2009

SIPKE ON MIKE

SLAM 131

PAUL JOHNSON Jr PRESENTS: LATE KNIGHT WITH THE JOKER


DOTM: Thug Passion!


Thug Passion recipe
This drink is referenced in the song "Thug Passion" by rapper 2Pac in which the ingredients are "alize and cristal". Cristal is the brand name of a well-known Champagne produced by Louis Roederer, Since we don't expect everyone to have $350 for a bottle, we listed generic Champagne.

2 oz Alize® liqueur
2 oz Champagne

GUARANTEED TO KEEP THE D*CK HARD AND THE P*SSY WET! -Tupac Shakur

I ALWAYS LOVED DUNKS



Thursday, July 9, 2009

THE BEST EVER

QUIT HATIN' BITCH!


July 9, 2009
Jeb Bush: 'I don't know' if Obama is a socialist
Posted: 11:26 AM ET

From CNN Political Producer Rebecca Sinderbrand

(CNN) – Former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush told an interviewer that he could not say whether or not President Barack Obama is a socialist, and that the president would not have been elected if he had been honest with Americans about his agenda.

Bush would not answer the question of whether he agreed with the assessment of some congressional Republicans that the president is a socialist. "I don't know. Define socialism for me," he told Esquire magazine. "It's a word… I believe he's a collectivist. He believes that through collective action, through government, you can solve more problems." He added that he believed the word "socialism" was a pejorative, and "didn't help" the GOP make its case.

The brother of former President George W. Bush and son of former President George H.W. Bush dismissed the idea that his party's policies were unpopular with most Americans. "I don't think there's any seismic shift. The Democrats have won on tactics," he said. "Barack Obama would not have gotten elected if he'd let us in on his secret plan prior to the election," he said, pointing to the president's economic agenda and energy proposals.

"….He made it appear like McCain was going to raise taxes, which was unfair, but there was no response back. When there was an ideological component, it was generally centrist or even center-right. Had he said what he was going to do as a candidate, (Obama) would have lost."

He downplayed the president's approval ratings, which remain above average. "First of all, who cares?" he said.

I ALWAYS LOVE TO SEE DUDES ON THEIR GRIND. REMINDS ME A LITTLE OF MYSELF.

BET Awards '09 Weekend Part 1 from ricky parker on Vimeo.

Monday, July 6, 2009

F-LISTED: NEW MEGAN FOX JOINT



So you went out and saw Transformers 2: Fievel Goes West this weekend and now you have post-Transformers depression. You feel sad, yet you feel guilty for feeling sad, and this only makes you sadder because you know that it could be full months before you can view Megan Fox in a movie again and you sort of just wish they invented something like the Nintendo Virtual Boy that you could put in front of your eyes except it would just show the image of Megan Fox. (That may actually be what the future of the internet looks like. Just a picture of Megan Fox – or the future equivalent – you can wear on your face.)

Fret not, though. Jennifer’s Body will be in theaters before you know it; why, they’re already releasing trailers of it on the internet! It’s like a sexy campy cheerleader horror movie, but with a twist…

The twist is that it has a lot of Megan Fox in it. The idea is basically that Megan Fox is a mean demon who sort of does that horror-film leer at people where she makes her eyes really sinister and demonic looking. Then she murders them, but in a sexually exciting way. Actual line of dialogue: “I thought you only murder boys!” ”I go both ways.”

SPIKE DOIN' WORK

THIS IS TOO CRAZY RIGHT HERE. R.I.P. MIKE!

Sunday, July 5, 2009

STEVE MCNAIR SHOT


Police probe relationship between McNair, waitress
Updated Sun. Jul. 5 2009 10:16 AM ET


CTV.ca News Staff

Nashville police will spend Sunday piecing together the nature of the relationship between ex-NFL quarterback Steve McNair and a female friend who were found dead Saturday in his downtown Nashville condominium.

Autopsies on the two victim's bodies are also scheduled for Sunday.

McNair was found on a sofa with multiple gunshot wounds, including one to the head, by his friend Wayne Neeley, with whom he rents the condo. Twenty-year-old Sahel Kazemi, described as a friend of McNair's, was found near the former NFL MVP with a single gunshot wound.

A gun was found near Kazemi's body.

Nashville police have not said who they believe committed the slayings, but also said Saturday they are not actively looking for suspects.

McNair, 36, was with Kazemi Thursday evening when she was pulled over and arrested on DUI charges. She was driving a 2007 Cadillac Escalade registered to both her and McNair.

McNair was not charged in the incident and was allowed to leave the scene in a taxi.

The former football star, who famously led the Tennessee Titans to within a yard of forcing overtime in the 2000 Super Bowl, was married with four children.

Authorities said they do not believe McNair's wife, Mechelle, was involved in the slayings.

McNair's oldest brother, Fred, told the Associated Press that family members will likely travel to Nashville to be with Mechelle.

"It's still kind of hard to believe," Fred McNair said. "He was the greatest person in the world. He gave back to the community. He loved kids and he wanted to be a role model to kids."

Fred McNair said he did not know anything about the nature of the relationship his brother had with Kazemi.

Employees of Dave & Buster's, where Kazemi worked as a waitress, told the Associated Press that McNair and his wife frequented the restaurant.

Kazemi's ex-boyfriend, Keith Norfleet, told The Tennessean newspaper that McNair and Kazemi met at the restaurant.

An unnamed employee of the restaurant told WSMV reporter Deanna Lambert that McNair and Kazemi "met there months ago and he is under the impression that the two had been in a relationship for about six to eight months," Lambert told CTV News Channel on Sunday morning.

McNair played 13 seasons in the NFL, 11 with the Titans and two with the Baltimore Ravens. He retired after the 2007 season with 31,304 passing yards and 174 touchdowns.

Friday, July 3, 2009

"The fact that Iran is stable, calm and secure, they're upset with this," Intelligence Minister Gholam-Hosein Mohseni Ejei told Press TV. The Iranian


TEHRAN, Iran (CNN) -- A top Iranian cleric said Friday some of the arrested employees from the British Embassy in Tehran would be put on trial, Iranian Students News Agency reported.

The employees have been accused of helping to incite some of the post-election protests that swept through the country.

British Foreign Secretary David Miliband issued a statement "urgently seeking clarification from the appropriate Iranian authorities."

He said: "We are confident that our staff have not engaged in any improper or illegal behavior.

"We remain deeply concerned about the two members of our staff who remain in detention in Iran."

Iranian officials had said previously that all but one of the nine embassy staffers taken into custody on June 27 were released.

The European Union said Friday that all of its member governments will call in the Iranian ambassadors in their countries to tell them that the EU opposes the continued detention of the two British staffers.

Christina Gallach, spokeswoman for EU international policy chief Javier Solana, told CNN the move is part of a coordinated diplomatic effort to pressure Iran into releasing the staffers.

Iranian Students News Agency quoted the Ayatollah Jannati at Friday prayers saying, "The British foreign office had said last March that there may be riots during the elections in Iran and they said that they should warn their citizens to be careful.

"What do these predictions mean? And then some people in the UK embassy, who had a hand in the disturbances, were arrested and will surely be put on trial."

Iran's intelligence minister has blamed Western powers for stirring up protests over its disputed presidential election, singling out Britain and saying the British Embassy in Tehran "played a heavy role in the recent disturbances."

"The fact that Iran is stable, calm and secure, they're upset with this," Intelligence Minister Gholam-Hosein Mohseni Ejei told Press TV.

The Iranian government has long accused other countries, especially Britain, of "meddling" in its affairs but has offered no proof any outside forces have been involved in the unrest since the election.

ARTEST TO THE LAKERS


Lakers reach agreement to add Ron Artest to squad

By David Aldridge, TNT Analyst
Posted Jul 3 2009 8:33AM

The Los Angeles Lakers are not content to stand pat in defense of their latest championship.

They reached an agreement Thursday with Houston Rockets free agent forward Ron Artest on a five-year deal using the team's mid-level exception that would pay Artest a little more $32 million based on last season's mid-level amount of $5.585 million. Artest will have an out in the contract after the fourth season, according to a source, and will be allowed to make the contract into a three-year deal if he changes his mind between now and next Wednesday, the first official day that players can sign contracts for the 2009-10 season.

The 29-year-old Artest might be inclined to go for a shorter deal to give him the chance at another contract after this one expires. By signing for three years, Artest would regain his "Larry Bird" rights, which allow a team to go over the salary cap in order to re-sign its own players and pay those players an additional year's salary. That would also apply if Artest wanted to leave the Lakers after three years; he'd get an additional year if the Lakers agreed to a sign-and-trade deal for him.

FOR THE REST, LOG ON TO WWW.NBA.COM