The 20-year-old, whose birth name was Daniel Pellegrine, was rapping to a crowd at a public housing complex when he was attacked, according to Billboard, which cited local news sources. After the incident, he was rushed to an area hospital, where he died, the publication said.
No information has been released on arrests or potential suspects in the case.
Video of the shooting shows the musician breezing through a mid-tempo hip-hop track before the crowd when he suddenly collapses and falls to the ground.
Last week in northern Brazil, a referee stabbed and killed a soccer player after an argument over a call. It led to the ref being decapitated by the dead player’s fans
As for the killing of Daleste, there is extremely graphic video footage of the shooting (it presently has more than 4oo million views) on the next page.
Rest in peace Daniel “MC Daleste” Pellegrine.
– See more at: http://hiphopwired.com/2013/07/08/brazilian-rapper-shot-killed-on-stage-video/#sthash.CeGYbCGm.dpuf
Feeling for a little soul? Then this is the place as Keb Mo brings back the memories of Ray Charles. Fitting for this July 4th weekend, relax with the vibes as Keb Mo take you to a whole new level.
On June 19, just five days before her wedding, Washington announced that she was going on a Twitter hiatus and kept fans completely in the dark on her upcoming nuptials.
And while she surely won’t be sharing any deets on her new hubby, we’ve compiled a list of facts about the NFL star.
Below are a few things you may not have known about Kerry Washington’s hubsand Nnamdi Asomugha. –danielle canada
TMZ reports that 50 has been charged with domestic violence for allegedly kicking his baby mama, and destroying some of her property last month.
The L.A. City Attorney says that the rapper caused $7,100 to the victim’s condo on June 23rd in Toluca Lake, California.
Fif will be hit with 5 charges, which include 4 counts of misdemeanor vandalism, and one count of misdemeanor domestic violence. If he is convicted of all charges, he could serve up to 5 years in jail and fines of $46,000.
More information to come as it arrives.
[Update: Details Emerge]
According to LAPD officials, officers were called to the scene to find the victim, who explained that she had been in an altercation with 50. She explained that after she locked herself in her bedroom, Curtis allegedly became so infuriated that he kicked down the door, hitting her and resulting in injury.
Robin Thicke provides fans with an audible treat in the form of snippets from his forthcoming album, Blurred Lines. The project looks to be a concise listening experience, as it clocks in at just 10 records.
Among these is the title track, “Blurred Lines,” which has moved over 840k copies in two weeks. According to Billboard, Thicke is the first artist to sell more than 40ok downloads in consecutive weeks since Gotye’s “Somebody That I Used to Know” did so for three times in a row in 2012.
Other songs include the crooner’s ode to his wife Paula Patton, “For The Rest Of My Life,” and his Kendrick Lamar-assisted follow-up single “Give It 2 U.”
Blurred Lines releases July 15 internationally and July 30 in the states. Stream the snippets and see the LP’s artwork below.
After an opening which shows Jon Voight getting out from prison, Ray Donovan begins like a USA program; I could even imagine the narrator explaining the premise, with something like this. “Ray Donovan, LA’s fixer to the stars, is the best at what he does. The rich and famous have problems, and he, along with his super team, including the accent-challenged Avi and the spunky lesbian Lena, fix them.” We quickly see just how effective they are when they solve two problems with one stone, getting a sports star who woke up next to a women who ODed overnight out of his situation by swapping in an actor who was dealing with accusations of having picked up a transvestite hooker. See, for actors, being found next to a dead woman ain’t no thing. Hollywood!
We also see that Ray is a bit of a rebel. He doesn’t play by the rules, and that sometimes gets him in trouble with his team, and his boss, who is played by the always wonderfully sniveling Peter Jacobson. Supposed to spy on a woman for a scummy rich dude, he instead warns the woman, who he happens to know from an earlier encounter, of a stalker. He then proceeds to make out with her. He’s not afraid to get his hands dirty either, threatening the stalker, covering the stalker in green die, and then beating him with a baseball bat when his earlier threats don’t succeed.
Ray is a very serious character who comes from a very fucked up Boston Irish-Catholic family (if you can’t recognize the Boston accent from real life, you should recognize it from Ben Affleck movies over the years). His dysfunctional family includes his two brothers, one of whom was molested by a priest as a child and is now an alcoholic, and the other who developed Parkinson’s from one too many shots to the head during a boxing career. His sister jumped off a building years ago while drugged up. And his dad, whom he hates most of all, just got out of prison after 20 years and is coming to find him and his wife and kids, whom are the last people Ray wants his dad spending time with.
So those seem to be the two main threads of the series, his job and his family, all shaken up now by the reappearance of his hated dad after many years. Ray’s got to balance his job, doing terrible things for rich people, with his inner sense of right and wrong, and he has to be the rock in his otherwise fucked up family, keeping together his troubled brothers while fending off his father. I half expected the narrator to announce during a credit sequence, “This is the story of a family from Boston living in LA, and the one son who had no choice but to keep them all together.”
Ray’s got to do it all, and you can probably understand why he doesn’t crack a smile during the episode, or, really, say more than maybe 50 words. His silence and straight face imbue him with some combination of mystery, intimidation, and sex appeal, to the different characters in the show.
Ray Donovan was not a bad show, but it was a surprisingly generic show. Rather than seem inherently different and new, it seemed like it was trying to take some of the same themes that show up all the time on broadcast and the “light cable” (TNT and USA) networks and give them some serious edginess so that you know it’s premium cable. Ray gets drunk. Ray considers screwing a post-adolescent pop star who adores him. Ray beats up a man with a baseball bat. Unlike in an USA show as well, Ray’s job involves not infrequently doing what all involved admit are terrible things. These facets made the show darker and give it a wider swath of possibilities for future development; shows on Showtime are allowed to have more complicated, serial plots, that USA shows can’t or won’t. However, nothing in this first episode takes advantage of those possibilities. It seems more like a matter of degree than a fundamental difference from that classic USA or TNT format.
Ray’s got demons, and he’s going to have to face these demons. He’s great at a really cool but risky job. I can see the avenues worth exploring, The tensions between his old family and his new. The moral difficulties of committing terrible acts as part of a living because that’s his job. There’s clearly a mystery to his past, and to what he did to ensure his father stayed in prison and why.
I liked the family plot better than the work plot from the first episode, but still it hewed a little too close to cliché. These clichés can be broken with the detail and depth that hours and hours of a television series can offer, which is one major advantages over film. Still, I wish the pilot had delved deeper into one area of Ray Donovan’s life to try to really heighten the appeal and show off a little early complexity rather than throw the kitchen sink of potential plots (his family, his brothers, his work, his mentor) but attack them all on a surface level just as a preview of all the characters you’ll be seeing this season. There was no semblance of focus.
The genericism of the story lines isn’t necessarily something that can’t be transcended through further episodes. In the first few episodes, Justified looked like a simple procedural with a cop who didn’t play by the rules before it grew into something excellent. I enjoyed the first season of Hannibal, which hardly breaks new ground, greatly. Still, it’s hard to make this type of show work without a charismatic lead. What everyone in the show saw as mysterious or silently uber-competent, I saw as stiff and uninterested.
There was enough that I was on the fence. All I wanted was a five minute sequence in the episode that convinced me, damn, this is a show that is required viewing, a moving moment, a stirring speech, and a stunningly filmed confrontation, and then I could figure out exactly what’s good about it later. I didn’t get that.
Will I watch it again? Honestly, from this episode, probably not. If it picks up buzz and I start hearing that it gets good, I’m perfectly willing to give it a second chance, and I do think there’s a non-negligible chance that I’ll have given it a couple more episodes before the end of the season. My expectations are always ramped up a little bit for premium cable shows and I was kind of let down, less by the show being bad, and more by the protagonist not seeming particularly compelling, and the show not offering me at least a little something new or different or exciting me in any particular way.
Once upon a time, a perfect man and a perfect woman met. After a perfect courtship, they had a perfect wedding. Their life together was, of course, perfect.
One snowy, stormy Christmas Eve, this perfect couple was driving their perfect car (a Grand Caravan) along a winding road, when they noticed someone at the side of the road in distress. Being the perfect couple, they stopped to help.
There stood Santa Claus with a huge bundle of toys. Not wanting to disappoint any children on the eve of Christmas, the perfect couple loaded Santa and his toys into their vehicle. Soon they were driving along delivering the toys.
Unfortunately, the driving conditions deteriorated and the perfect couple and Santa Claus had an accident. Only one of them survived the accident.
Who was the survivor?
(Scroll down for the answer.)
The perfect woman survived. She’s the only one who really existed in the first place. Everyone knows there is no Santa Claus and there is no such thing as a perfect man.
Women stop reading here, that is the end of the joke.
Men keep scrolling****.
So, if there is no perfect man and no Santa Claus, the perfect woman must have been driving. This explains why there was a car accident.
By the way, if you’re a woman and you’re reading this, this illustrates another point: women never listen.
You’re cruising down the road with your dashboard camera on when all of a sudden, out of nowhere comes a cow being pursued by a bull.
It’s apparently mating season and the boundaries of paved highway and the sound of zooming two thousand pounds vehicles, could not detour these animals in heat, as they choose your car to make their presence known.
A brief introduction between your car and the cow happens. The cow jumps up off the road and continues on her merry way with the bull still in pursuit.
The unplanned introduction damages your car. Your only consolation is a great YouTube video. As for the cow, a fantastic story to tell her calf.
The honchos at CBS tell TMZ … they were certainly OFFENDED by several racist and homophobic comments made by the current “Big Brother” houseguests … but hey, that’s live programming for ya.The houseguests have been under fire from what appears to be the ENTIRE INTERNET over the following comments:– GinaMarie referred to welfare as “n**ger insurance”
— Aaryn called gay contestant Andy a “queer.”
— Spencer referred to Andy as “Kermit the F**” … and praised Hitler as a gifted speaker.
CBS has released a statement to TMZ … saying, “We certainly find the statements made by several of the Houseguests on the live Internet feed to be offensive.”
However, The Eye points out that 24/7 live programming can sometimes reveal some bad things about people … saying, “At times, the Houseguests reveal prejudices and other beliefs that we do not condone.”
There have been rumors that Big Brother will be 86ing some of the offensive cast members — but it certainly doesn’t appear that’s gonna happen.
Just over a week ago, the owner of a Canadian diner struck up a conversation with a customer, and eventually their talk turned to news about the owner’s daughter, who had just been diagnosed with cancer. A few days later, the same customer returned to the diner, again chatted with the owner, and then paid for his meal with a $10,000 check.
During their first meeting, Cliff Luther, the owner of the Saskatchewan diner, took notice of Bob Erb’s Legalize Marijuana pin. Luther asked about it and soon discovered that the appropriately-named Erb is a pot activist.
“He was telling me how he thinks legalizing marijuana is the way to go, you know, which was interesting,” Luther told the Ottawa Citizen. “One thing came to another, and he’s from B.C. and I was telling him how my 25-year-old daughter is out there right now and has just been diagnosed with cancer.”
For Erb, Luther’s story hit close to home; his own son died four years ago after a battle with cancer, at the age of 26. “He was emotional about it, just as any parent would be in that kind of situation,” Erb said, adding that Luther “was just looking to talk and learn about things from another perspective.”
Several days later, Erb, who won $25 million in the lottery last fall, returned to the diner and ordered a burger and fries. When he was finished eating, he asked Luther for a pen.
“He asked for a pen and said: ‘Here, you can just take the bill out of that,’” Luther said. “It was a check for $10,000. He just kind of said ‘If you need to get out there quickly, this will help you.’”
Paula Deen, while planning her brother’s wedding in 2007, was asked what look the wedding should have. She replied, “I want a true southern plantation-style wedding.” When asked what type of uniforms the servers should wear, Paula stated, “well what I would really like is a bunch of little n*ggers to wear long-sleeve white shirts, black shorts and black bow ties, you know in the Shirley Temple days, they used to tap dance around;
Black staff had to use the back entrance to enter and leave restaurant;
Black staff could only use one bathroom;
Black staff couldn’t work the front of the restaurants;
Brother Bubba stated his wishes: “ I wish I could put all those n*ggers in the kitchen on a boat to Africa”;
Bubba asked a black driver and security guard “don’t you wish you could rub all the black off you and be like me? You just look dirty; I bet you wish you could.” The guy told Bubba he was fine as is;
Bubba on President Obama: they should send him to the oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico, so he could n*gger-rig it;
He shook an employee (Black again) and said” F your civil rights…you work for me and my sister Paula Deen;
Paula’s son Jaime’s best friend managed the Lady & Sons restaurant. He threatened to fire all the ‘Monkeys’ in the kitchen. When Paula found out…she slapped him on the wrist and suggested that the employee visited Paula’s $13,000,000 mansion so he felt special and could be massaged.
I feel Paula Deen, her brother and anyone who treats people poorly should not be given a free pass. I wonder if Paula is truly sorry that she used the “N” word or that she was reported by someone who looks just like her. I appreciate the lady having the courage to report Paula Deen. It’s people like her and the videographer who leaked the 47% comments made by Mitt Romney who should be receiving the attention, not Paula Deen.
And his mother confirmed that Chris Kelly used cocaine the night before he died.
Investigator Betty Honey of the Fulton County Medical Examiner’s office in Atlanta said Monday that a toxicology screening showed the 34-year-old Kelly had a mixture of drugs in his system when he was pronounced dead on May 1. However, Honey said she did not know which specific drugs Kelly had used.
A police report says Kelly’s mother told investigators her son used cocaine and heroin the night before he died and had a history of drug abuse.
Kelly, known as “Mac Daddy,” performed alongside Chris Smith, known as “Daddy Mac,” in the early and mid-1990s. The duo was remembered for the song “Jump” from their 1992 debut album, “Totally Krossed Out.”
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