independent and unofficial
Prince fan community
Welcome! Sign up or enter username and password to remember me
Forum jump
Forums > Music: Non-Prince > NOTORIOUS MOVIE
« Previous topic  Next topic »
Page 5 of 9 <123456789>
  New topic   Printable     (Log in to 'subscribe' to this topic)
Reply #120 posted 01/17/09 9:29pm

Cinnie

My beef is I did not hear that awesome Jay-Z/Santogold song in the movie!
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #121 posted 01/17/09 10:13pm

Harlepolis

Karen71 said:

Harlepolis said:

That was his calling.

Folks could argue back and forth about the kind of childhood background he grew up in,,,,but truth of the matter is, you live by the sword,,,,you fuckin' DIE & ROT by the sword. Had his momma been Maya Angelou, he would still face the same fate,,,its called choices, you raise your kid the BEST way you could and hope that he absorb the knowledge that you passed to him/her.

All that bullshit he did was a way of life, thats true - BUT it was his choice, he had options(unlike some of the people who lived in the bottom) he could've turned the other way or live the fast life and endure whats coming to him,,,,,and he chose the latter, nobody slapped his greasy ham-hock hands to do it.

This mofo wasn't a victim,,,,in short.



Question #1: Who tried to paint him as a victim?

Question #2: Why's he gotta have "greasy ham-hock hands"? Don't know why but that made me LOL


Answer #1: The folks who rationalize the whole "selling dope" bullshit. Take your pick.

Answer #2: Because he looked like a humanized pig - god rest his soul and all - but he does. I don't wanna hear about him "selling dope because he was hungry" hammer
[Edited 1/17/09 22:15pm]
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #122 posted 01/17/09 10:17pm

Timmy84

Harlepolis said:

Karen71 said:




Question #1: Who tried to paint him as a victim?

Question #2: Why's he gotta have "greasy ham-hock hands"? Don't know why but that made me LOL


Answer #1: The folks who rationalize the whole "selling dope" bullshit. Take your pick.

Answer #2: Because he looked like a humanized pig - god rest his soul and all - but he does. I don't wanna hear about him "selling dope because he was hungry" hammer
[Edited 1/17/09 22:15pm]


I always thought his line in "One More Chance": fat, black, ugly as ever was very funny because it was so true yet he was getting girls like *that*. I'm sure he had more girls than just Kim, Faith and Charlie that were just "groupie loves". lol BIG sure got around by the time of his death at 24! eek
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #123 posted 01/17/09 10:24pm

Harlepolis

Timmy84 said:

Harlepolis said:



Answer #1: The folks who rationalize the whole "selling dope" bullshit. Take your pick.

Answer #2: Because he looked like a humanized pig - god rest his soul and all - but he does. I don't wanna hear about him "selling dope because he was hungry" hammer
[Edited 1/17/09 22:15pm]


I always thought his line in "One More Chance": fat, black, ugly as ever was very funny because it was so true yet he was getting girls like *that*. I'm sure he had more girls than just Kim, Faith and Charlie that were just "groupie loves". lol BIG sure got around by the time of his death at 24! eek



I don't mind fat, some fat brothas are fine(yes, I DO love a lil' thick meated man myself).

But Biggie looks like the character Evillene from the movie Wiz boxed I've always had issue with that.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #124 posted 01/17/09 10:25pm

Timmy84

Harlepolis said:

Timmy84 said:



I always thought his line in "One More Chance": fat, black, ugly as ever was very funny because it was so true yet he was getting girls like *that*. I'm sure he had more girls than just Kim, Faith and Charlie that were just "groupie loves". lol BIG sure got around by the time of his death at 24! eek



I don't mind fat, some fat brothas are fine(yes, I DO love a lil' thick meated man myself).

But Biggie looks like the character Evillene from the movie Wiz boxed I've always had issue with that.


OMG! He DOES look like the Wicked Witch of the West! God rest his soul but you ain't never lied! falloff
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #125 posted 01/18/09 2:44am

Ottensen

SCNDLS said:

MsMisha319 said:




What does the length of time have to do with anything? My great grandparents knew each other for 2 weeks before they were married and they were together for 35 years. They would probably still be married if one had not died. Biggie and Faith obviously loved each other. Maybe not enough for all the extra stuff to stop, but enough.

Smooches;)

When you're dealing with a clearly dysfunctional womanizer, drug dealer, drug user, and abuser, a girl MIGHT wanna take her time before jumping the broom. But, uh, okay, maybe that's just me. thumbs up!
[Edited 1/17/09 10:36am]


She had been in an abusive relationship before,so I imagine she set herself upfor a pattern of sorts.

They did by the way, date MUCH longer than 9 days...okay, not 9 months,but they were running around Bad Boy together for a minute lol .While everyone knew they were an item, the marriage did come as a shock to a lot of folks around them. He ain't even tell his momma he got married till after the fact.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #126 posted 01/18/09 6:26am

shorttrini

avatar

MsMisha319 said:

Karen71 said:



Oh lawd. I'M out of pocket??? YOU'RE the one in here calling people's statements idiotic---just because they don't fit into your limited "world" view of what happens in Michigan. Clearly, you've never left the state.

THEN, you find a way to defend drug dealing while attacking anyone who suggests legal work-even if it is menial--as an option.

And NOW...you have the audacity to say that a person's environment have nothing to do with how they turn out??? Okay, so it's clear you've never left your PORCH.

I lived in my hometown for over 20 years and never laid eyes on a (known) drug dealer, prostitute on the corner or illegal transaction ONCE--NOT.ONE.TIME. I grew up in a VERY INEXPENSIVE place where even today you can go with virtually nothing and have something before very long.

Some people make it DESPITE their environment but to say it doesn't influence a child, which it CLEARLY did in Big's case.

Had he grew up in Colorado somewhere, his story would be much different.

It's obvious you're young, so I'll take it easy on you.

You seem mentally weak.




Funny lol I've never left the state. I used to be a journalist and I travelled quite a bit, when I was younger. So I've definitely left my "porch"

And yes, I'm young. Probably much younger than you, but that has nothing to do with anything. I respect any and all opinion's and I expect the same. You clearly need to grow up.

Yes, I do believe that one can grow up in a shitty neighborhood or around shitty people, and still accomplish things in their life. I am living proof of that. You have rapper's like Jay-Z, Nas, Lil Kim who are also proof...same neighborhood...and they are still here and doing well. And mind you, he was not even killed there, but in a whole 'nother state.....

Also, I never attacked anyone for working nutso I believe I said that you never know what you may have to face and you cannot fault those who do bad things. Maybe not in those exact words. At what point did I attack anyone? Drug dealing is bad. We all know that, but if it's something you do because you can't find work.....which, I'm sure some of you can attest, it's not easy to find work.....and you're forced to depend on the state...which isn't a whole lot....you have to do what you have to do. Maybe you have never been in that position and maybe you never will be. But until you walk in those peoples shoes, you cannot fault them. Some of you think you are high and mighty in here, but you could lose it all tomorrow. Then you will know what it's like to have to do things that you never thought you'd do.

I'm not the one with the "limited" view here. You clearly are. You cannot even empathize with people.

Smooches;)


This is exactly that point that I was trying to raise. I too agree that drug dealing is a very bad thing, but sometimes you gotta do what you gotta do. I don't care how much of an education one has or how much money, today or tomorrow, that could all go up in smoke. Is it right for some to tell me how to survive?
[Edited 1/18/09 6:46am]
"Love is like peeing in your pants, everyone sees it but only you feel its warmth"
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #127 posted 01/18/09 6:51am

missfee

avatar

SCNDLS said:

LiquidGold said:


Yes. He saw some kids with sneakers and chains and went to his drug dealing friend and started dealing. Then, it cuts to him as a teenager, going to the roof and changing clothes before going to school: He pulls out fresh white sneakers and a chain. He wasn't trying to support anybody then. He had no intention on stopping and even sold crack to a pregnant woman. He continued when he found out he was going to be a father, but that wasn't why he started. He could have gotten a real job

nod Even Pussy, I mean Puffy, said that he sold drugs AFTER getting his record deal. According to him, so consider the source, he used to beg Biggie NOT to sell drugs because it might hurt his musical career. As if not dealing would have been a good idea JUST because. confused

falloff
I will forever love and miss you...my sweet Prince.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #128 posted 01/18/09 6:53am

missfee

avatar

SCNDLS said:

BlaqueKnight said:



You insult black men when you defend fools in this way. Most of us grew up on the streets. I have never sold a drug in my life. There are always answers if you're not looking for the quick and easy way out. Poisoning our people is counter-productive no matter how you look at it and either you are part of th problem or part of the solution. Biggie was part of the problem. His music was bullshit.

Not to mention he started dealing drugs at the ripe old age of TWELVE while he was still in private school and his mother was busy working TWO jobs to support him. disbelief I don't think he had a child to support at that time, but I could be wrong, not that that's an excuse anyway. confused

damn you have enlightened me on this shit because I always thought he sold drugs to survive, I didn't know he just did it for sport...he actually didn't HAVE to sell drugs at all, it was like a hobby? that's crazy.
I will forever love and miss you...my sweet Prince.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #129 posted 01/18/09 6:58am

Harlepolis

missfee said:

SCNDLS said:


Not to mention he started dealing drugs at the ripe old age of TWELVE while he was still in private school and his mother was busy working TWO jobs to support him. disbelief I don't think he had a child to support at that time, but I could be wrong, not that that's an excuse anyway. confused

damn you have enlightened me on this shit because I always thought he sold drugs to survive, I didn't know he just did it for sport...he actually didn't HAVE to sell drugs at all, it was like a hobby? that's crazy.


I know MANY middle class kids who sold dope on the side.

Some of them actually do it as a way to prove they're "down" confused whateva the hell that means.

Peer pressure is a bitch on the kids,,,,,esp when its coming from the wrong crowd.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #130 posted 01/18/09 6:59am

missfee

avatar

shorttrini said:

BlaqueKnight said:



You insult black men when you defend fools in this way. Most of us grew up on the streets. I have never sold a drug in my life. There are always answers if you're not looking for the quick and easy way out. Poisoning our people is counter-productive no matter how you look at it and either you are part of th problem or part of the solution. Biggie was part of the problem. His music was bullshit.



How am I insulting black men? You cannot speak for the entire black male population. The man had a child to support and as a father myself, I would do anything to make sure that my daughter does not go hungry and have all that she needs. Besides, who is the bigger fool, the one who sells the poison or the person who is well aware that it is NOT good for them, but takes it anyway! You've got liquor stores on every corner in my hood. They people that frequent them are well aware that it is not good for them. Are you going to sit their and tell me, that it is the liquor store owner's fault? The owner has to make a living too. Okay, so you never sold drugs, that does not make you any different from the next guy. Be it right or wrong, he felt that his back was against the wall and because of this, he had to do something to make a quick buck.
[Edited 1/17/09 14:07pm]

Wow! omg we have people on the org justifing drug dealers now? Okay, i've officially seen it all on the org now.
I will forever love and miss you...my sweet Prince.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #131 posted 01/18/09 6:59am

shorttrini

avatar

missfee said:

SCNDLS said:


Not to mention he started dealing drugs at the ripe old age of TWELVE while he was still in private school and his mother was busy working TWO jobs to support him. disbelief I don't think he had a child to support at that time, but I could be wrong, not that that's an excuse anyway. confused

damn you have enlightened me on this shit because I always thought he sold drugs to survive, I didn't know he just did it for sport...he actually didn't HAVE to sell drugs at all, it was like a hobby? that's crazy.


At one point I think he did do it to survive. When he was a kid, it was just to be "down".
"Love is like peeing in your pants, everyone sees it but only you feel its warmth"
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #132 posted 01/18/09 7:18am

missfee

avatar

Harlepolis said:

missfee said:


damn you have enlightened me on this shit because I always thought he sold drugs to survive, I didn't know he just did it for sport...he actually didn't HAVE to sell drugs at all, it was like a hobby? that's crazy.


I know MANY middle class kids who sold dope on the side.

Some of them actually do it as a way to prove they're "down" confused whateva the hell that means.

Peer pressure is a bitch on the kids,,,,,esp when its coming from the wrong crowd.

Yes you are right that is true....sort of forgot about that. boxed
I will forever love and miss you...my sweet Prince.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #133 posted 01/18/09 8:58am

GetAwayFromMe

avatar

Karen71 said:

MsMisha319 said:




It's not the notion that someone has to finance them. It's the notion that YOU think you have a right to say what she should've done with her money and her life. The neigborhood may not have been the best, but not everyone there ends up the way he did. My comment of the "safer and more affluent area" was sarcastic.


Smooches;)



I made a friggin' COMMENT on a message board, cause that's what they're for!

Unless you're Voletta Wallace, I don't understand why you give a personal damn about my observation.

You seem to be the stereotypical angry black woman who simply likes to argue every damn thing that's said--cause that's all you've done the entire thread.

Do you have an original thought of your own? Or do you simply wait to challenge what everybody else has to say?

Speaking of, what say you about the film? Cause I could've sworn that's what the thread's about.

Having trouble keeping up?


Oooh, I like you. Why is it that I have failed to notice the brilliance that is Karen71? biggrin
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #134 posted 01/18/09 9:01am

GetAwayFromMe

avatar

MsMisha319 said:

Karen71 said:



Oh lawd. I'M out of pocket??? YOU'RE the one in here calling people's statements idiotic---just because they don't fit into your limited "world" view of what happens in Michigan. Clearly, you've never left the state.

THEN, you find a way to defend drug dealing while attacking anyone who suggests legal work-even if it is menial--as an option.

And NOW...you have the audacity to say that a person's environment have nothing to do with how they turn out??? Okay, so it's clear you've never left your PORCH.

I lived in my hometown for over 20 years and never laid eyes on a (known) drug dealer, prostitute on the corner or illegal transaction ONCE--NOT.ONE.TIME. I grew up in a VERY INEXPENSIVE place where even today you can go with virtually nothing and have something before very long.

Some people make it DESPITE their environment but to say it doesn't influence a child, which it CLEARLY did in Big's case.

Had he grew up in Colorado somewhere, his story would be much different.

It's obvious you're young, so I'll take it easy on you.

You seem mentally weak.




Funny lol I've never left the state. I used to be a journalist and I travelled quite a bit, when I was younger. So I've definitely left my "porch"

And yes, I'm young. Probably much younger than you, but that has nothing to do with anything. I respect any and all opinion's and I expect the same. You clearly need to grow up.

Yes, I do believe that one can grow up in a shitty neighborhood or around shitty people, and still accomplish things in their life. I am living proof of that. You have rapper's like Jay-Z, Nas, Lil Kim who are also proof...same neighborhood...and they are still here and doing well. And mind you, he was not even killed there, but in a whole 'nother state.....

Also, I never attacked anyone for working nutso I believe I said that you never know what you may have to face and you cannot fault those who do bad things. Maybe not in those exact words. At what point did I attack anyone? Drug dealing is bad. We all know that, but if it's something you do because you can't find work.....which, I'm sure some of you can attest, it's not easy to find work.....and you're forced to depend on the state...which isn't a whole lot....you have to do what you have to do. Maybe you have never been in that position and maybe you never will be. But until you walk in those peoples shoes, you cannot fault them. Some of you think you are high and mighty in here, but you could lose it all tomorrow. Then you will know what it's like to have to do things that you never thought you'd do.

I'm not the one with the "limited" view here. You clearly are. You cannot even empathize with people.

Smooches;)



You see, I totally disagree with the bolded statement. If you have children in your home, drugs shouldn't be there. If they are, you should have your children taken away from you, because you clearly don't give a rat's ass about their best interests.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #135 posted 01/18/09 9:19am

MsMisha319

avatar

Karen71 said:

MsMisha319 said:




It's not the notion that someone has to finance them. It's the notion that YOU think you have a right to say what she should've done with her money and her life. The neigborhood may not have been the best, but not everyone there ends up the way he did. My comment of the "safer and more affluent area" was sarcastic.


Smooches;)



I made a friggin' COMMENT on a message board, cause that's what they're for!

Unless you're Voletta Wallace, I don't understand why you give a personal damn about my observation.

You seem to be the stereotypical angry black woman who simply likes to argue every damn thing that's said--cause that's all you've done the entire thread.

Do you have an original thought of your own? Or do you simply wait to challenge what everybody else has to say?

Speaking of, what say you about the film? Cause I could've sworn that's what the thread's about.

Having trouble keeping up?



WOW, what ignorance neutral You have no idea what race I am and YOU just stereotyped quite a bit. I'm not the one who's angry. I have nothing to be angry about. I give a damn that people like you and soooo many others are frowning upon what others do to support themselves. If you haven't been there, then you are only talking out of your ass about what you wouldn't do and what you think is wrong. Tell someone who's in need of diapers that they're wrong for selling a dime bag. That dime bag paid for diapers. No one is saying that it's right, but it's what they had to do. True is, biggie didn't have to. neutral

As for LiquidGold's comment, I didn't grow up around drugs and crime, so it's not all that I know...but I have definitely seen it. Again, you people are so quick to jump to conclusions about someone. Get a clue. Gain some EMPATHY. Look it up.

As for the film, if you have read my earlier comments, you would've seen that I did in fact see the film and thought it was decent. Nothing spectacular, but not bad either.


You all need a reality check. I now see what some of the old school orgers mean and why they stay away. The moment someone expresses a different view or perspective, everyone jumps down their throat and begin to personally attack them. It's ridiculous. whistling

Smooches;)
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #136 posted 01/18/09 9:48am

MsMisha319

avatar

GetAwayFromMe said:

MsMisha319 said:





Funny lol I've never left the state. I used to be a journalist and I travelled quite a bit, when I was younger. So I've definitely left my "porch"

And yes, I'm young. Probably much younger than you, but that has nothing to do with anything. I respect any and all opinion's and I expect the same. You clearly need to grow up.

Yes, I do believe that one can grow up in a shitty neighborhood or around shitty people, and still accomplish things in their life. I am living proof of that. You have rapper's like Jay-Z, Nas, Lil Kim who are also proof...same neighborhood...and they are still here and doing well. And mind you, he was not even killed there, but in a whole 'nother state.....

Also, I never attacked anyone for working nutso I believe I said that you never know what you may have to face and you cannot fault those who do bad things. Maybe not in those exact words. At what point did I attack anyone? Drug dealing is bad. We all know that, but if it's something you do because you can't find work.....which, I'm sure some of you can attest, it's not easy to find work.....and you're forced to depend on the state...which isn't a whole lot....you have to do what you have to do. Maybe you have never been in that position and maybe you never will be. But until you walk in those peoples shoes, you cannot fault them. Some of you think you are high and mighty in here, but you could lose it all tomorrow. Then you will know what it's like to have to do things that you never thought you'd do.

I'm not the one with the "limited" view here. You clearly are. You cannot even empathize with people.

Smooches;)



You see, I totally disagree with the bolded statement. If you have children in your home, drugs shouldn't be there. If they are, you should have your children taken away from you, because you clearly don't give a rat's ass about their best interests.




hmm Where in my paragraph did I say anything about drugs being in the home or children being around drugs?

Smooches;)
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #137 posted 01/18/09 11:33am

GetAwayFromMe

avatar

MsMisha319 said:

GetAwayFromMe said:




You see, I totally disagree with the bolded statement. If you have children in your home, drugs shouldn't be there. If they are, you should have your children taken away from you, because you clearly don't give a rat's ass about their best interests.




hmm Where in my paragraph did I say anything about drugs being in the home or children being around drugs?

Smooches;)


If you're presumably selling drugs to take care of your family, then the children come into the picture somewhere, don't they?
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #138 posted 01/18/09 11:47am

mcw00

Interesting article. I didn't realize he only released two albums...

"Was B.I.G. really influential enough to deserve a biopic?"
http://www.baystatebanner...2009-01-15
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #139 posted 01/18/09 11:51am

Timmy84

mcw00 said:

Interesting article. I didn't realize he only released two albums...

"Was B.I.G. really influential enough to deserve a biopic?"
http://www.baystatebanner...2009-01-15


This is why I don't get why BIG and 'Pac get the stats they do. Their careers only lasted about 4 and 5 years respectively of each other when they died and they both were in their early 20's when they passed away ('Pac was 25 and BIG was only 24) and yet because of their deaths, they've been getting all the accolades that sometimes I don't even think EITHER of them deserve especially when legends like Rakim, KRS-One, Chuck D, Kool Moe Dee and Melle Mel are still alive. Calling BIG and 'Pac the "greatest rappers ever" is serving a disrespect to the overall picture of hip-hop. confused

And this is why so many men my age believe 'Pac and BIG were the best because they have this blurred picture of what hip-hop is or was really about.
[Edited 1/18/09 11:54am]
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #140 posted 01/18/09 11:53am

Timmy84

Here's the full article:

Was B.I.G. really influential enough to deserve a biopic?

Perhaps the most highly anticipated film of the new year, “Notorious” chronicles the life, times and death of hip-hop legend The Notorious B.I.G. (played by Jamal Woolard, pictured). Writer Fanon Hutchinson looks at the hype surrounding the film and asks: Does B.I.G. merit such treatment? (Photo courtesy of Fox Searchlight Pictures)

“The most important film of our time,” reads the tagline for the biopic “Notorious,” a much-publicized film that tells the story of the life and death of slain rapper Notorious B.I.G., a.k.a. Biggie Smalls.

Really?

This is a more important film than “Malcolm X”?

It’s more important than the films about Martin Luther King Jr.? Or films like “Cry Freedom” or “The Great Debaters”?

It might not even be the most important hip-hop movie of our time. What about “Krush Groove” or “Beat Street”?

I’ve loved hip-hop ever since I first heard “Rock Box” by Run DMC back in the early ’80s. In the early days, artists like Kurtis Blow, the Sugar Hill Gang, Whodini, the Fat Boys, LL Cool J and the Beastie Boys got the ball rolling. Later in the decade, the likes of EPMD, Boogie Down Productions, Eric B. & Rakim, Public Enemy, NWA, A Tribe Called Quest, De La Soul, Queen Latifah, Compton’s Most Wanted and Dr. Dre revolutionized the art form and brought it to the masses.

These are the legitimate pioneers of rap and hip-hop.

Now, granted, I can’t stomach much of what passes as hip-hop nowadays; it seems like it’s geared more toward a segment of the population that wear “skinny jeans” and Mohawk hair styles — in other words, little kids and adolescents.

This brings me back to “Notorious.” His entire career spanned two albums. Two albums! His first, 1994’s “Ready to Die,” is labeled a classic, but I would have to disagree. Can you really compare it to Public Enemy’s legendary 1988 record “It Takes a Nation of Millions to Hold Us Back,” or to Ice Cube’s 1991 album “Death Certificate,” or Tribe’s “The Low End Theory,” also released in ’91?

These albums defined a generation and helped to revolutionize the way hip-hop was viewed. These albums made you think as well as made you move. While the three albums are as different from one another as President-elect Barack Obama is to the late Ronald Reagan, they are lyrically and musically on point.

On the other hand, “Ready to Die” is mostly filled with the usual tales of hustling, sex, standard rap braggadocio and party songs. It is no different than anything that has come before it. The only thing that set this album apart is the beats, which deviated from the mid-’90s grimy East Coast sound that permeates the albums of such contemporary New York artists as the Wu-Tang Clan, Black Moon and Onyx. But that difference should be attributed to P. Diddy and his Hitmen production team, not to Biggie.

“Ready to Die” paints Biggie as a sort of hard-luck case who was able to pull himself up out of a bad situation and become a winner. This might have been inspirational to a lot of people, but the whole “rags to riches” story was nothing new or innovative. Neither was the whole “I had to sell drugs to feed my daughter” song and dance, which was supposed to make his actions seem honorable without any remorse on his part. At least when NWA or Ice-T wrote tales about drug hustling, there were some kind of repercussions for the pushers included within the song.

The content remains largely the same on Biggie’s second album, “Life after Death,” though the tone is less bleak, because now he has “made it.” There are fewer hard luck tracks and more songs dedicated to the credo, “Let’s party, drink champagne and sleep with random chicks.” He even has the good sense to include a how-to song on the rules of selling drugs (“Ten Crack Commandments”). This is just what black youth need. There are, however, a few notable songs on “Life after Death,” such as “Notorious Thugs,” which pairs Biggie with the rapid-fire delivery of Bone Thugs & Harmony and showcases his impressive ability to go toe-to-toe and bar-for-bar with the nimble-tongued Cleveland rap quartet.

Don’t misunderstand: I don’t think that Biggie was without talent. On the contrary, I think he was a very skilled wordsmith. But to label him as “the greatest rapper of all time,” as a lot of people has done, is a slap in the face to all of the great MCs that came before and after him who have had more of an impact in the development and evolution of hip-hop.

What about KRS-One? Or Big Daddy Kane? Or a man who I think should be in everybody’s top-five, a person who revolutionized hip-hop music and in my opinion truly took rap to a new level — Rakim? When are the movies about their lives coming out? That shouldn’t be a notorious question.

Fanon Hutchinson is the editor and publisher of “The Truth,” a Los Angeles-based hip-hop and sports blog. For more, visit bighutchbaby.blogspot.com.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #141 posted 01/18/09 11:56am

Harlepolis

Timmy84 said:

mcw00 said:

Interesting article. I didn't realize he only released two albums...

"Was B.I.G. really influential enough to deserve a biopic?"
http://www.baystatebanner...2009-01-15


This is why I don't get why BIG and 'Pac get the stats they do. Their careers only lasted about 4 and 5 years respectively of each other when they died and they both were in their early 20's when they passed away ('Pac was 25 and BIG was only 24) and yet because of their deaths, they've been getting all the accolades that sometimes I don't even think EITHER of them deserve especially when legends like Rakim, KRS-One, Chuck D, Kool Moe Dee and Melle Mel are still alive. Calling BIG and 'Pac the "greatest rappers ever" is serving a disrespect to the overall picture of hip-hop. BIG does get credit for reviving hip-hop's east coast scene and 'Pac had great lyrics in SOME of his songs but "greatest"? I think not. confused



Perfect case of being there in the right place @ the right time. It got nothing to do with their talent.

90s was a golden era for hip-hop, commercially. 90s also gave birth to the "hype machine", so there u go.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #142 posted 01/18/09 12:00pm

Timmy84

Harlepolis said:

Timmy84 said:



This is why I don't get why BIG and 'Pac get the stats they do. Their careers only lasted about 4 and 5 years respectively of each other when they died and they both were in their early 20's when they passed away ('Pac was 25 and BIG was only 24) and yet because of their deaths, they've been getting all the accolades that sometimes I don't even think EITHER of them deserve especially when legends like Rakim, KRS-One, Chuck D, Kool Moe Dee and Melle Mel are still alive. Calling BIG and 'Pac the "greatest rappers ever" is serving a disrespect to the overall picture of hip-hop. BIG does get credit for reviving hip-hop's east coast scene and 'Pac had great lyrics in SOME of his songs but "greatest"? I think not. confused



Perfect case of being there in the right place @ the right time. It got nothing to do with their talent.

90s was a golden era for hip-hop, commercially. 90s also gave birth to the "hype machine", so there u go.


Exactly. I may be only 24 but I remember vividly at 5 looking at the first episodes of "Rap City" and at 4 "Yo! MTV Raps", which was a big deal at the time, I remembered seeing it fully for the first time at 5 or 6. And this was before hip-hop really became this global phenomenon it is now. I just hate that the true rap legends/pioneers don't get looked on with the same respect that was given to Tupac and Christopher.
[Edited 1/18/09 12:06pm]
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #143 posted 01/18/09 12:05pm

sassybritches

avatar

shorttrini said:

BlaqueKnight said:



You insult black men when you defend fools in this way. Most of us grew up on the streets. I have never sold a drug in my life. There are always answers if you're not looking for the quick and easy way out. Poisoning our people is counter-productive no matter how you look at it and either you are part of th problem or part of the solution. Biggie was part of the problem. His music was bullshit.



How am I insulting black men? You cannot speak for the entire black male population. The man had a child to support and as a father myself, I would do anything to make sure that my daughter does not go hungry and have all that she needs. Besides, who is the bigger fool, the one who sells the poison or the person who is well aware that it is NOT good for them, but takes it anyway! You've got liquor stores on every corner in my hood. They people that frequent them are well aware that it is not good for them. Are you going to sit their and tell me, that it is the liquor store owner's fault? The owner has to make a living too. Okay, so you never sold drugs, that does not make you any different from the next guy. Be it right or wrong, he felt that his back was against the wall and because of this, he had to do something to make a quick buck.
[Edited 1/17/09 14:07pm]

wow. really? i mean, really?

ok mr "it's excusable to engage in reprehensible behavior so long as the ends justify the means," when somebody robs (and perhaps injures or kills) your child and uses the excuse that they had to do it because their child would go hungry otherwise, i suppose you will excuse this monster and even sympathize with their reason.

i hope you never have to eat your words.
An individualist is a man who lives for his own sake and by his own mind; he neither sacrifices himself to others nor sacrifices others to himself...
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #144 posted 01/18/09 12:13pm

shorttrini

avatar

sassybritches said:

shorttrini said:




How am I insulting black men? You cannot speak for the entire black male population. The man had a child to support and as a father myself, I would do anything to make sure that my daughter does not go hungry and have all that she needs. Besides, who is the bigger fool, the one who sells the poison or the person who is well aware that it is NOT good for them, but takes it anyway! You've got liquor stores on every corner in my hood. They people that frequent them are well aware that it is not good for them. Are you going to sit their and tell me, that it is the liquor store owner's fault? The owner has to make a living too. Okay, so you never sold drugs, that does not make you any different from the next guy. Be it right or wrong, he felt that his back was against the wall and because of this, he had to do something to make a quick buck.
[Edited 1/17/09 14:07pm]

wow. really? i mean, really?

ok mr "it's excusable to engage in reprehensible behavior so long as the ends justify the means," when somebody robs (and perhaps injures or kills) your child and uses the excuse that they had to do it because their child would go hungry otherwise, i suppose you will excuse this monster and even sympathize with their reason.

i hope you never have to eat your words.


If you were to go back and read my post, you will see that I do not agree with that kind of behavior, but I can understand why someone would resort to selling drugs to get money. Let me asked you a question, Do you always make the right choices? Have you ever been in a situation where you had to make a choice that you were not proud of? It seems to me that you as well some others on this board have the attitude that "that can never happen to me". To that I say....."WOW!! REALLY??"
"Love is like peeing in your pants, everyone sees it but only you feel its warmth"
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #145 posted 01/18/09 12:19pm

Timmy84

I think the situation is different for everybody. I live in a predominantly black housing community district just west of my hometown and there were drug dealers in our neighborhood but thankfully I had parents who geared me the right direction and didn't allow me to get involved in it. Funny thing was I was (and in many ways still am) an introvert so I never left my gates because I was aware of some of my surroundings, it wasn't all bad and even when I was around people who dealt with it, I never saw it around me as much, it was often hinted about but never talked about. There was a house that you come through at the beginning of the district that was a crackhouse at one time. So I guess it all depends on how you look at it. Not everyone is gonna think the same way that people like BIG was thinking. Let's not forget BIG was only 12 when he started to get involved with drug dealing.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #146 posted 01/18/09 12:23pm

MsMisha319

avatar

GetAwayFromMe said:

MsMisha319 said:





hmm Where in my paragraph did I say anything about drugs being in the home or children being around drugs?

Smooches;)


If you're presumably selling drugs to take care of your family, then the children come into the picture somewhere, don't they?



Well, if you are selling drugs to take care of your children, then yes, they come into the picture. You're doing it to support them. However, you don't have to have your children around it. I was in a relationship for 2 years and didn't know that my ex was selling drugs. He never brought it in our home...or atleast, I NEVER saw it. No one ever came to our home to buy it and we lived in the city. I never even suspected such a thing. I was SHOCKED to say the least, when I found out. And though he was an extremely smart guy, like many black men, he did some things in his past. Therefore, no employer was eager to hire him, so he did what he had to do. He provided everything that was needed for our son and, like I said, I never knew he had this side thing going on.

And though I was working and more than able to provide my son, I appreciated every bit he did to help. Regardless. I know he never put our son in any danger. Though he may have put himself in danger, he did it for a reason.

Smooches;)
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #147 posted 01/18/09 12:29pm

Timmy84

MsMisha319 said:

GetAwayFromMe said:



If you're presumably selling drugs to take care of your family, then the children come into the picture somewhere, don't they?



Well, if you are selling drugs to take care of your children, then yes, they come into the picture. You're doing it to support them. However, you don't have to have your children around it. I was in a relationship for 2 years and didn't know that my ex was selling drugs. He never brought it in our home...or atleast, I NEVER saw it. No one ever came to our home to buy it and we lived in the city. I never even suspected such a thing. I was SHOCKED to say the least, when I found out. And though he was an extremely smart guy, like many black men, he did some things in his past. Therefore, no employer was eager to hire him, so he did what he had to do. He provided everything that was needed for our son and, like I said, I never knew he had this side thing going on.

And though I was working and more than able to provide my son, I appreciated every bit he did to help. Regardless. I know he never put our son in any danger. Though he may have put himself in danger, he did it for a reason.

Smooches;)


I don't mean to get in your business but I wonder if your boyfriend at the time couldn't get a job BECAUSE he had been arrested for offenses before... hmmm If that's the case, I guess then he had no choice... but I guess that's what happens when people put themselves in positions that they can't escape from because it still leads to death and/or prison and that sucks but then again so is life and the hands we're dealt. That's when I'm glad Jay-Z turned his life around and decided to stay away from trouble that BIG unfortunately didn't or couldn't escape from.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #148 posted 01/18/09 1:05pm

sassybritches

avatar

shorttrini said:

sassybritches said:


wow. really? i mean, really?

ok mr "it's excusable to engage in reprehensible behavior so long as the ends justify the means," when somebody robs (and perhaps injures or kills) your child and uses the excuse that they had to do it because their child would go hungry otherwise, i suppose you will excuse this monster and even sympathize with their reason.

i hope you never have to eat your words.


If you were to go back and read my post, you will see that I do not agree with that kind of behavior, but I can understand why someone would resort to selling drugs to get money. Let me asked you a question, Do you always make the right choices? Have you ever been in a situation where you had to make a choice that you were not proud of? It seems to me that you as well some others on this board have the attitude that "that can never happen to me". To that I say....."WOW!! REALLY??"

please...i can speak on the matter because i've been jobless and broke. not with kids, no, but i've still had to go hungry some nights. and i worked my ass off to get out of that situation. i've never sold drugs and lord knows the option has been there and lord knows i could have justified it. but i dont want to benefit at the expense of others and only those disgusting creatures disguised as men, like biggie, would find it within themselves to justify it.
An individualist is a man who lives for his own sake and by his own mind; he neither sacrifices himself to others nor sacrifices others to himself...
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #149 posted 01/18/09 1:41pm

GetAwayFromMe

avatar

MsMisha319 said:

GetAwayFromMe said:



If you're presumably selling drugs to take care of your family, then the children come into the picture somewhere, don't they?



Well, if you are selling drugs to take care of your children, then yes, they come into the picture. You're doing it to support them. However, you don't have to have your children around it. I was in a relationship for 2 years and didn't know that my ex was selling drugs. He never brought it in our home...or atleast, I NEVER saw it. No one ever came to our home to buy it and we lived in the city. I never even suspected such a thing. I was SHOCKED to say the least, when I found out. And though he was an extremely smart guy, like many black men, he did some things in his past. Therefore, no employer was eager to hire him, so he did what he had to do. He provided everything that was needed for our son and, like I said, I never knew he had this side thing going on.

And though I was working and more than able to provide my son, I appreciated every bit he did to help. Regardless. I know he never put our son in any danger. Though he may have put himself in danger, he did it for a reason.

Smooches;)


Errrr....whofarted

Smart and drug dealer don't go together in the same sentence, sorry. He wasn't smart, he was lucky. Had he been found out, he would've been in jail and you would've lost your kid. He DID put your son in danger, you just weren't aware of it. Although, just HOW you were that blind I have no idea. It's sad to me that can justify that situation, because if a man put me in that position, while hiding it from me, I would be ashamed of myself. And then I'd kick his ass out.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Page 5 of 9 <123456789>
  New topic   Printable     (Log in to 'subscribe' to this topic)
« Previous topic  Next topic »
Forums > Music: Non-Prince > NOTORIOUS MOVIE