Thursday, September 3, 2009

Dweeb & Nakimuli Guerrilla Fashion Show


Come be a part of our guerrilla style fashion show as we take over the streets of Union Square on Saturday Sept.12th at 11pm! Show will be held on the Union Square park steps. Dweeb & Nakimuli will debut pieces from their Spring 2010 collection.

Monday, August 10, 2009

Let's get strange tonight Vol.1

The Dweeb compilation album is out now! The album features Memberz Only, Chae Hawk, Marv, Warscroll and many more. listen to/download it here: http://x.imeem.com/xBvv63kiBn


Lets get strange tonight Vol.1

Monday, June 15, 2009

Funniest lost & found Craigslist posting

father missing in son's life (New York)


Reply to: comm-tysxj-1221729877@craigslist.org [Errors when replying to ads?]
Date: 2009-06-14, 9:43PM EDT


David Lee Mumford(Father missing in son's life)

David Lee Mumford from the Bronx New York hasn't called, text, emailed, sent a letter to his 4 year old son. The last time he contacted his son was March 2008! His son ask for his father each night and includes him in his prayers. He ask his mother, auntie and grandmother why his father doesn't come to see him. He ask his family where his daddy is every single day. His father just dropped out of plain sight for no reason. There was no problem between his mother he just left and never came back to see his son again. All David's friends and family still see him in the neighborhood right around the block where his son lives but yet he refuses to come and visit. If you see this man (boy) please let him know there is an adorable little boy that misses him and longs for his father each and everyday. Let him know that there is nothing worst than a dead beat dad and he should be ashamed of himself.

  • Location: New York
  • it's NOT ok to contact this poster with services or other commercial interests
image 1221729877-0


PostingID: 1221729877


Wednesday, June 10, 2009

Banksy summer show!


So it looks as if Banksy is having another summer show, but other than the opening date of June 13th no one knows any other information about it (content,location). Stay tuned for more info.

Thursday, May 28, 2009

Dweeb is now available at Post


Dweeb is now available at Post 172 N 1st Street Brooklyn, NY 11222...Shout out to Kojo for hooking it up!!

Wednesday, April 29, 2009

Jaydiohead

Jaydiohead is a mash-up album combining the vocals of Jay-Z and the music of Radiohead. It is produced by NYC DJ and producer Minty Fresh Beats. The new album is a free download at jaydiohead.com


Jaydiohead :: Jay-Z x Radiohead

Monday, April 6, 2009

Born Like This

I know. I know. I'm late on this, but for those of you who don't know Doom's new album, Born like this, dropped March 24th and it is sick. I'm too lazy to write about it so I stole an article from Rolling Stone's writer David Downs. Oh yeah, and you can listen to the album at the end of this blog

American underground rap iconoclast Doom (formerly MF Doom) releases his new album Born Like This. on Lex Records tomorrow, March 24th. The U.K.-born, New York-raised rapper’s LP features contributions from Ghostface Killah, Raekwon and the beats of late production genius J Dilla, and represents seven years of work recorded on and off at home in Atlanta. Thom Yorke recently remixed sexy single “Gazillion Ear” and funky, Jake One-produced “Ballskin” is bouncing across the major music blogs. The centerpiece of the record is “Cellz”, which explodes with apocalyptic fury. On it, the late, great American poet Charles Bukowski reads of one of his best poems, “Dinosauria, We,” for almost two minutes while missiles fire and the Earth is laid to waste.

(Listen to the whole album, after the jump!)

“Don’t freak with old Buke. Buke is nice. He’s as good as the rest of the rappers on there,” Doom says. “He kind of sets the tone for the record, being that we’re living in what he was kind of describing. He might’ve been reaching for the worst description based on what he saw us heading to, but it happened and that made me go, ‘Wow, that’s ill. Kinda prophetic words.’ ”

With a career modeled on the Marvel comics arch-villain Doctor Doom, the metal mask-wearing fortysomething remains characteristically cryptic about future live dates. “I tell you one thing: when you come to a Doom show, come expecting to hear music, don’t come expecting to see. You never know who you might see. It has nothing to do with a visual thing. Use your mind and think. I might be there. Next time I do a show, I might tell everybody to close they eyes. Use your own mind’s eye. That’s better than a camera phone, know what I’m sayin’?’ ”

He says Michael Jackson — who just sold out 50 shows in the U.K. — might be doing the same thing. “Word. That nigga was crazy as hell. How do you even know he’s still him? He might’ve been doing the technique.”


The Doom live experience caused controversy in 2007, when the highly acclaimed lyricist behind Madvillainy and The Mouse and the Mask allegedly sent an impostor to perform several of his dates in Los Angeles and San Francisco. Furious crowds booed and took their rage to the Internet, reporting that the impostor lip-synced to MF Doom’s songs. Self-proclaimed super-villain Doom posted no response to his fan’s rage until now, when he tells Rolling Stone that he couldn’t care less.

“Everything that we do is villain style,” Doom says. “Everybody has the right to get it or not get it. Once I throw it out, it’s there for interpretation. It might’ve seemed like it didn’t go well, but how do we know that wasn’t just pre-orchestrated so that we’re talking about it now? I tell you one thing: People are asking more now for live shows and I’m charging more, so it must’ve worked somewhere.”

Such weirdness is par for the course for the erratic artist, born Daniel Dumile. In the late ’80s, Dumile signed to major label Elektra with his sibling. But his brother was killed in a car accident, Elektra dropped him, and Dumile vanished.

In the late ’90s, a metal-faced rapper spitting inimitable flow on debut underground LP Operation: Doomsday materialized named MF Doom. More than a dozen LPs and two dozen EPs later, Born Like This. is highly anticipated hip-hop eclecticism; a follow-up to 2004’s widely lauded Madvilliany with producer Madlib and 2005’s The Mouse and the Mask with platinum producer Danger Mouse. Those hits cracked the Billboard 200 — commercially and critically validating Dumile’s brutal, funny, literate, street style.

Lasering in on Armageddon on his new disc puts Doom smack in the middle of a morbid trend, with the Dow melting away, Watchmen blowing up the box office and the globe warming. But the ending of “Dinosauria, We” also posits a beautiful new beginning, begging the question: is the apocalypse actually cleansing?

“No doubt,” says the father and admitted McCain voter. “If something ends, then something’s gonna start. So it’s like, what side are you on? Do you feel like your world is ending? Or do you feel like, ‘Wow, it seems like that’s ending and it’s the start of something new.’”

Born Like This. is about the next chapter, he says and more is coming. “I got a hundred albums in me. I’m gonna rock this shit forever.


DOOM - Born Like This