Relevant

dilla

Trumpfan17 aka Coonie aka Dilla aka Tennis Dog
#21
I usually spend a ton of money on clothes. I like to buy the best of everything. Best doesn't equal most expensive. But I usually buy Prada shoes, and no others. They are my brand. I don't defend them, but I do love them.

But... I don't flaunt it. If an item of clothing is branded (Has the brand written anywhere but the label) I won't wear it.

Great cars. Good engineering. Can't knock it.

If it was a cadillac, now that's different. Poorly built cars by a country not known for it's skill in Engineering. But... I don't knock that either. Americans and their loyalty to American brands is something to be admired.
Uh oh, Pittsey. ;)

http://www.autoblog.com/2011/08/17/cadillac-lexus-toyota-tie-for-lead-in-customer-satisfaction-in/
 

dilla

Trumpfan17 aka Coonie aka Dilla aka Tennis Dog
#23
I spent four years in the South. Both in and outside of a college-town. No one there is anything but friendly and polite.

They're very Christian, but they don't run around lynching coons anymore. Damn....
 

raywaters11

Well-Known Member
#24
I lived in the south my whole life and people aren't nearly the dicks that they are in New York and Chicago. Southern hospitality is actually real. Maybe you all get treated like shit in the south because all you do is judge people and call them rednecks and put yourself on a pedestal.
Also, people in Japan are assholes. At the risk of sounding like a racist fuckhead, Japanese people are fucking cunts. Even when you try to be nice to them. I understand I'm in their country and I'm a stranger but god damn, be civil. Cab drivers are the worst.
And I hate ghetto blacks. I'm fine with black people and have a ton of black friends that I go out with regularly, but the ghetto blacks seem to have an inferiority complex and they do nothing but reinforce negative stereotypes that ignorant people believe to be true.
 

Casey

Well-Known Member
Staff member
#26
I've never spent any time in the South. There's plenty of rednecks in Oregon and Washington. And none of them ever treated me like shit, they're just scary lol.
 

dilla

Trumpfan17 aka Coonie aka Dilla aka Tennis Dog
#27
southern hospitality isn't restricted to whites.
No, it's the culture of the South that instills that "Southern Hospitality." It's the "love thy neighbor" aspect of Christianity that they practice the most and so I think that's why it's been labeled as such. It's just the Indians of the South that are stuck-up shits.

I knew one. He had an interesting story. He went there telling his dad he was getting a degree in biomedical sciences (a broad degree that's simply a ticket to med, dent., vet., PT school). But he didn't really like it so he was taking computer science classes on the side while doing the pre-med stuff. Too bad he licked the White people's assholes clean and was a mooch.
 

raywaters11

Well-Known Member
#28
I never said southern white hospitality..I went to my job school in Augusta, Georgia which is heavily black, and they were just as country as I am and friendly as could be.
Saw a black guy wearing a NASCAR jacket and fucking lost it though. Never laughed so hard in my life.
 

dilla

Trumpfan17 aka Coonie aka Dilla aka Tennis Dog
#29
Mark Deez was from Augusta. Or maybe Valdosta. Either way, I was a stone's throw away from him. I miss him on here. When I came back to SH six years ago, he was what SH was all about as people made fun of him and all those pictures came out.
 

Casey

Well-Known Member
Staff member
#30
people made fun of him and all those pictures came out.
He brought that upon himself by making a thread where he boasted about how he'd bullied some kid and humiliated him in front of his whole school, or something. Unfortunately for him, nobody else here found his story amusing at all.
 

Casey

Well-Known Member
Staff member
#32
Well, he's a big star now. Working with KGR, amongst others.

http://www.myspace.com/markdeez
Not really. You can pay anyone to be on your track, and indie artists don't charge much. Pras appeared on one of our songs on our last album for free because we have the same management and my cousin produced a track for his album in return. But I know how much he charges other artists for a guest appearance. And it's much more than what KGR and Canibus charge. They aren't major label artists.

My manager also manages Lauryn Hill. Even she has a price and she's sold over 15 million records. But, pretty much nobody can afford what she asks. Joss Stone got Lauryn on a track a few years back and spent her entire album budget on it pretty much. And Joss has sold a few million herself, so she gets big budgets from her label.

A good friend of mine had Beenie Man, Twista, Sean Paul and DMX on his album. I know how much they all charge. And it's less than you would think, and they ARE major label artists. You can only quantify success through associations with other artists to people who don't know any better and don't know how this industry works.

A better way to quantify success is through touring. I'll give you a real world example. A typical leg (ie, one part) of an international tour for me and my band tends to be about 6 shows. That's two weeks minimum, three if you only want to play weekend dates which depends on the culture and the cities you're hitting. 8 people on the tour including band, management, and tour manager. First class return air flights. 5 star hotels. Per Diems (daily money the promoters give you for your own personal use). Vehicle rental. And performance fee on top of that. Combine that with the costs the promoter has of creating the gig in the first place. Hiring the venue, hiring the equipment, etc, etc. Giving a cut to Ticketmaster. That's a SERIOUS investment. It's more than what most banks will give to people starting businesses. And it's dozens of times more than what someone like KGR would charge for a verse. Most years we do at least 3 tours like that. In a release year, it's 5 or 6. Even a lot of artists who you would think are REALLY well known aren't doing international tours because they don't have a sufficient international fanbase to make promoters wanna make that investment unless there's big corporate backing.

If you're doing tours like that, you're a success. Hell, if you're doing international tours at all, you're a success because at the very least you're worth economy flights, a decent hotel and a performance fee. I know some artists that are extremely talented, have sold tens of thousands of records, have had decent radio exposure in the UK, have a solid fanbase, and they still can't get booked for a single gig outside of their home country.

A few thousand hits on your myspace page, some local club shows and some C-List rappers on your song does not equal big star.
 

raywaters11

Well-Known Member
#36
It's a shitty video. Don't have the link on my phone but it's under raywaters11, just a compilation of Allen Iverson highlights with the song Hate Me Now by Nas and Puffy (or whatever he's called today)
 

dilla

Trumpfan17 aka Coonie aka Dilla aka Tennis Dog
#37
Was this when you were a homosexual in high school? Because that just screams "I want this coon's dick."

Have you seen the ESPN 30 for 30 with AI? Did not know he was one with such history. Nuts.
 

Latest posts

Donate

Any donations will be used to help pay for the site costs, and anything donated above will be donated to C-Dub's son on behalf of this community.

Members online

No members online now.
Top