Daily Archives: April 4, 2012

Bulletproof by Shin-B x Adriana

Bulletproof by Shin-B x Adriana
Rapper Shin-B dropped her latest single “Bulletproof”with the help of singer Adriana. The female emcee has a new vibe for 2012. She got the bullet and she’s bulletproof. Shin-B got it locked and loaded with this track. Nothings gonna stop her.

Listen to music from Shin-B: Buzzkillin, Get Up and Go, 2 The Top, and Don’t Let Anyone (Tell U No).

Bulletproof by Shin-B x Adriana

Lyrics to Bulletproof by Shin-B x Adriana

Intro:
hahaha…
take a picture

Chant:
bulletPROOF
i got the bullet and bulletPROOF
i got the bullet and i’m bulletPROOF
i got the bullet and i’m bulletPROOF
i got the bullet

Verse One:
a femme nikita
nikita, a femme fatale
i got the power
and a magic
i’mma cast a spell
i got a vest
and it is
full of bullets
i’mma pull it
wanna shoot it?
Cupid isn’t present
i’mma shoot it
ZOOM

Chant:
bulletPROOF
i got the bullet and i’m bulletPROOF
i got the bullet and i’m bulletPROOF
i got the bullet and i’m bulletPROOF
i got the bullet

Chorus:
i’m standing tall
but if i should fall
i’ll get back up again
made up my mind
i’m livin life
and doin things my way

try your best
but you can’t break me down (i got the bullet, ah. x2)
try your best
but you can’t break me down (i got the bullet, ah. x2)

Chant:
bulletPROOF
i got the bullet and i’m bulletPROOF
i got the bullet and i’m bulletPROOF
i got the bullet and i’m bulletPROOF
i got the bullet

Verse Two:
i pack
pack a round
bulletPROOF
i got the crowd
i got it locked
from overseas
to over underground
i found a guy
and i’mma use him to my advantage
and i don’t care what you may think
and i’mma pull it
EY

Chant:
bulletPROOF
i got the bullet and i’m bulletPROOF
i got the bullet and i’m bulletPROOF
i got the bullet and i’m bulletPROOF
i got the bullet

Chorus:
i’m standing tall
but if i should fall
i’ll get back up again
made up my mind
i’m livin life
and doin things my way

try your best
but you can’t break me down (i got the bullet, ah. x2)
try your best
but you can’t break me down (i got the bullet, ah. x2)

Bridge:
only i can make this right
by letting go of what’s in sight
i won’t run, i won’t run, i won’t run away
though there’s pain in my chest, i won’t run away
i look in the mirror and what do i see
a reflection of what could be
i’m starting over
now i can show you i am stronger

Chorus:
i’m standing tall
but if i should fall
i’ll get back up again
made up my mind
i’m livin life
and doin things my way

try your best
but you can’t break me down (i got the bullet, ah. x2)
try your best
but you can’t break me down (i got the bullet, ah. x2)

Posted by Rekstizzy x JKey x Hoya

Posted by Rekstizzy x JKey x Hoya

Rekstizzy‘s latest single, “Posted,” off his debut “Fake It Til You Naked” album, features two fellow rap brethren, JKey and Hoya. It’s a misogynistic anthem alluding to each emcee’s penchant for hook ups, group sex and Ichi Umi—all while chanting Biggie’s infamous “true f*cking players” line as the chorus.

The music video itself is a tribute to the early aughts rap aesthetics replete with a black-and-white camera filter, girls in imitation Aaliyah outfits, and posse moments that involve eating food. It’s a highly energetic (and entertaining) performance visual with layers of debauchery supporting the idea of uplifting skirts.

You can download the track FREE below:

Listen to more from Rektizzy: No Apologies and Drunk Dial x American Dream

Posted by Rekstizzy x JKey x Hoya (contains explicit lyrics)

Lyrics to Posted by Rekstizzy x JKey x Hoya

jkey:

rekstizzy:
hollup yall goin too fast my swollen balls can’t handle that
i walk with a limp but you runnin so i’m playin the wall and standin back
some of these hoes is fly why it jus might defy gravity
put my finger in her mouth (Owwww) i hit a cavity?
nah she says its a go but please take it slow
okay fine im wit keepin the traffic signs yellow
hair down mellow corsette and stilettos
i hear violins and cellos singin tikki tikki tembo
the tempo can use some slow motion on that jello
them boobs is the jello that ass is the jello
and after i make em spread she smokes a cigarello
sips amaretto gets up and says lets go again hello
i get so damn emotional
cry while i fuck ya blow my nose like a muffler
touch down when i score do a dance at the end zone
love at first glance like denzel i never been in the friend zone

hoya:
Eat a cup of ramen when I’m rhyming smoking yoohoo
that lethal diesel leave her stiffer than some new shoes
i grab buns like my hand inside a tutu
greedy with my pussycat i never ran a choo choo
and ya chick know how to fuck like she looked it up on youtube
now she’s in my honda coupe got her slurping on some noodles
and i might go down if it’s clean head new do
damn my moma say mah omblongata kinda coo coo
holdin up their ass cheeks lookin like deloreans
separating cheeks like northern and southern koreans
in less than 8 weeks i had it and then aborted it
i had a great week got a number and didn’t store the shit
1 skinny 1 fat, fuck it ill do both of them
coke and rum, coke and opium got them open
petroleum gassed up droppin E like sodium
so whats the 411 hun

Art Recession Trailer

Art Recession Trailer

“Art Recession,” a documentary about the importance of art education, produced, written, and directed by Ming Lai of Humanist Films (Journey of a Paper Son)

Despite its huge impact, art education is often one of the first programs to be cut, especially when the economy is hard hit. “Art Recession” explores the importance of art education, showing how it teaches us to communicate, develops our critical thinking skills, helps us to learn other subjects, expresses our individualism, enriches our culture, builds our society, and ultimately conveys our humanity. This documentary then offers powerful ways to save it.

The documentary interviews the art world about this timely subject—from visionary artists and respected art curators to inspiring teachers and knowledgable museum educators to involved parents and promising art students. These thought-provoking interviews include Gary Baseman, Gary Blackwell, Michelle Borok, Denise Gray, Jason Holley, Brooke Kent, Monica Magana, Rachel Matos, Karol Heinecken Mora, Eric Nakamura, Paige Oden, Ming Ong, Ralph Opacic, Aaron Smith, Brian Stoebe, Courtney Stoebe, Tiffany Stoebe, Edwin Ushiro, Tianyi Wang, and P. Williams.

Lai was inspired to make “Art Recession” by The Mini Show, a group art exhibition to raise money for the Mini Lai Scholarship Fund, which honors the memory of his sister, Mini Lai, and benefits Art Center College of Design illustration students. The fund is managed by the respected California Community Foundation. Mini Lai is a proud alumna of Art Center’s prestigious illustration program.

Art Recession Trailer

Help fund Mixed Match documentary

Help fund Mixed Match documentary

Mixed Match is an inspirational, emotional, and evocative feature-length documentary that explores the need to find mixed ethnicity bone marrow and cord blood donors to donate to multiethnic patients suffering from life threatening blood diseases such as leukemia. This live action and animated film is a dramatic journey focusing on the main characters’ struggles to survive against incredible odds.

Directed by Jeff Chiba Stearns, the documentary will lead the viewer through the lives of young patients and families struggling to overcome life-threatening blood diseases. While presenting medical concerns, Mixed Match will be a character-driven documentary that will highlight a number of exceptional, courageous, and inspiring participants. The film will follow recently diagnosed multiethnic patients in search of donors, some of whom must struggle to hold on to hope through countless rounds of excruciating chemotherapy as they spend months searching for a match. A patient who is in remission after a successful stem cell/marrow donation will also be documented. Another patient’s story is told through his surviving family members, as he was not able to find a suitable marrow match and, as a result, ultimately succumbed to his illness. Lastly, the documentary will feature a joyous and heartfelt reunion between a donor and patient after a successful transplant, as the two meet for the very first time.

Mixed Match is an important human story told from the perspective of youth who are forced to discover their identities through their deadly illnesses and how their mixed backgrounds threaten their chance at survival, thus highlighting why in this day and age, knowing our history and cultural heritage still matters.

The documentary addresses the fact that every year over 30,000 people in North America are diagnosed with life threatening blood diseases. For many patients, a bone marrow transplant is their only chance at survival. Currently, in the US, of the 7 million registered bone marrow donors and 100,000 cord blood donors, less than 3% are multiethnic. This statistic, although proportionate to the population of mixed people in the country, poses a substantial challenge to a mixed patient given the endless variety of possible genetic combinations in the registry. Finding a multiethnic marrow match in the public registry has been compared at times to “finding a needle in a haystack” or “winning the lottery.” Therefore, this is a very timely and important issue.

Learn more about how you can help here.

Help fund Mixed Match documentary

Cudi the Kid by Steve Aoki x Kid Cudi x Travis Barker

Cudi the Kid by Steve Aoki x Kid Cudi x Travis Barker

Steve Aoki, Kid Cudi, and former Blink-182 drummer Travis Barker band together to make a dubstep-inspired party anthem “Cudi the Kid” off Aoki’s Wonderland album. The collaborative track brings their artist back to when they were kids. Enter their bizarre world of clowns, nuns, art, and more. It’s an interesting mix of visuals and sound. You can get teh single on Cudi the Kid (feat. Kid Cudi & Travis Barker) - Wonderland (Bonus Track Version) or amazon.

Listen to more Steve Aoki: Heartbreaker, Ladi Dadi, Ladi Dadi Part II, Earthquakey People, Earthquakey People (The Sequel), Tornado, I’m in the House and No Beef.

Cudi the Kid by Steve Aoki x Kid Cudi x Travis Barker

Behind the scenes of Cudi the Kid by Steve Aoki x Kid Cudi x Travis Barker

Remixes of Cudi the Kid by Steve Aoki x Kid Cudi x Travis Barker

Lyrics to Cudi the Kid by Steve Aoki x Kid Cudi x Travis Barker

let the good time..
let the good time…
let the good time…

when i was a young man, couldn’t wait to get big
all in all, stay on my job, and you can call me cudi the kid
when i was a young man, couldn’t wait to get big
all in all, stay on my job, and you can call me cudi the kid
can’t stop, don’t stop
can’t stop, don’t stop
can’t stop, don’t stop
can’t stop, don’t stop
can’t stop, don’t stop
can’t stop, don’t stop

clap, clap, clap
drinking, drinking
smoking, smoking
That’s my daily routine after rocking shows and low-scoping
Focused on the wrong things like the ghosts out of your dreams
And it really truly seems that this is supposed to happen, man
If this were to happen then I’d probably still achieve what I dreamed of even if I’m leaned up, I’m high up
All the damn kids that are listening to Gucci mane…
… Let the good times roll

when i was a young man, couldn’t wait to get big
all in all, stay on my job, and you can call me cudi the kid
when i was a young man, couldn’t wait to get big
all in all, stay on my job, and you can call me cudi the kid
can’t stop, don’t stop
can’t stop, don’t stop
can’t stop, don’t stop
can’t stop, don’t stop
can’t stop, don’t stop
can’t stop, don’t stop

Return To Sender

Return To Sender

This is a video letter addressed to the President of the United States of America Barack Obama, the U.S. Congress, the U.S. Senate, and the U.S. Supreme Court from a group of Khmer Exiled Americans (K.E.A.s).

Their previous video “My Asian Americana” was a finalist for the White House AAPI’s “What’s Your Story” video contest. They won the highest popular votes by a landslide. But the White House decided to disregard the votes and silence our voice in this election year. They formally refused to invite their movement’s representative to the event. This video was intended to be shown at that “Champions of Change” event at the White House.

Despite this treatment, they seek to inform the public of the devastating effects of so called “criminal alien deportation” which allows no appeal in the court. Many of the deportees, whom they began to call “exiles”, were living respectable lives after their incarceration, having their own business, going to school, starting their own family. And one day, I.C.E. (Immigration and Customs Enforcement) would come pick them up, detain them in some cases up to 2-3 years without any charge or trial, and sent them back to their supposed homeland, like Cambodia, leaving wives, husbands, fathers, mothers, and their young children in utter financial and psychological devastation. Often these K.E.A.s (Khmer Exiled Americans) had never seen Cambodia until they were escorted off the airplane by the agents at the Phnom Penh International Airport.

Watch more videos about deportations: Resident Aliens, Undocumented Students and the DREAM Act, Ordered Deported, Jose Antonio Vargas.

Return To Sender