Tuesday, March 30, 2010
The Ambidextrous Pat Venditte
The Yankeeees young prospect can pitch with either arm !!!!!!!!!!
He's the 2nd pitcher to do so in the modern era
GO YANKS
Monday, March 29, 2010
How 2 Make It In America
This is one of my favorite TV shows right now. Its "new aged" lol. New York City is like a character in the movie.
Saturday, March 27, 2010
She's So Fucking Talented
JAY Z HAS DONE IT AGAIN !!!! HE FOUND HIM A DIAMOND OUT THERE IN SOUTH CAROLINA.
HOV SIGNED ALEXIS JORDAN TO HIS LABEL ROC NATION & SHE IS CUTE AS HELLL!
Thursday, March 25, 2010
Fuck Bush !
Former Prez. Bush wiped his hand on former Prez. Clinton after he shook the hand of a Haitian.
King James
LeBron James just became the youngest to ever score 15,000 points!!!!
Which means he is the fastest to 15,000... Meaning he could break the scoring record if he stays healthy and continues to put up those all most triple double numbers.
WE ARE ALL WITNESSES !!
lol
Which means he is the fastest to 15,000... Meaning he could break the scoring record if he stays healthy and continues to put up those all most triple double numbers.
WE ARE ALL WITNESSES !!
lol
R&B and HIPHOP Stars Doing Well
USAToday: Actor Jamie Foxx and recording artist Chris "Ludacris" Bridges today join the ranks of celebrities who have lent their popularity to push HIV prevention as part of a social media effort targeting young African Americans.
The "i know" campaign is sponsored by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, which aims to draw thousands of young people into a conversation about HIV using Facebook, Twitter, text messages and a website (actagainstaids.org). It launches today with an event at Clark Atlanta University that will be webcast to students nationwide.
If it works as the CDC hopes, young African Americans will no longer be passive consumers of HIV-prevention messages. Instead, they'll become vocal advocates armed with information that will help them protect themselves and one another from HIV, says Kevin Fenton, director of the CDC's national center of HIV/AIDS prevention. "We're trying to create a movement," Fenton says.
The initiative is part of a five-year, $45 million effort called Act Against AIDS, announced last year at the White House. The broader effort was designed to "refocus attention on the HIV epidemic here at home" after years of addressing the crisis in Africa and elsewhere, says Robert Bailey II of the CDC.
Public health officials say one of their biggest challenges is to shatter the complacency bred by the misconception that, thanks to effective treatment, HIV is no longer an emergency.
The AIDS virus continues to spread widely among African Americans, who represent just 14% of Americans ages 13-29 but account for half of new infections in that group, the CDC reports. Young black gay and bisexual men account for 55% of infections among African Americans in that age group, the CDC says.
Yet the number of young blacks who say they're concerned about HIV declined from 50% to 40% from 1997 to 2009, according to the Kaiser Family Foundation.
Tina Hoff, who leads Kaiser's efforts to convey prevention messages through the entertainment industry and social media, says Internet networking can raise awareness, but only as part of a comprehensive strategy.
Last fall, the foundation set out to bolster the White House initiative with its Greater Than AIDS campaign, launched with the Black AIDS Institute, MTV, BET, Essence and other media enterprises. What's needed, Hoff says, is a "collective response" in the African-American community: "Building a social network is a useful component of that."
The "i know" campaign is sponsored by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, which aims to draw thousands of young people into a conversation about HIV using Facebook, Twitter, text messages and a website (actagainstaids.org). It launches today with an event at Clark Atlanta University that will be webcast to students nationwide.
If it works as the CDC hopes, young African Americans will no longer be passive consumers of HIV-prevention messages. Instead, they'll become vocal advocates armed with information that will help them protect themselves and one another from HIV, says Kevin Fenton, director of the CDC's national center of HIV/AIDS prevention. "We're trying to create a movement," Fenton says.
The initiative is part of a five-year, $45 million effort called Act Against AIDS, announced last year at the White House. The broader effort was designed to "refocus attention on the HIV epidemic here at home" after years of addressing the crisis in Africa and elsewhere, says Robert Bailey II of the CDC.
Public health officials say one of their biggest challenges is to shatter the complacency bred by the misconception that, thanks to effective treatment, HIV is no longer an emergency.
The AIDS virus continues to spread widely among African Americans, who represent just 14% of Americans ages 13-29 but account for half of new infections in that group, the CDC reports. Young black gay and bisexual men account for 55% of infections among African Americans in that age group, the CDC says.
Yet the number of young blacks who say they're concerned about HIV declined from 50% to 40% from 1997 to 2009, according to the Kaiser Family Foundation.
Tina Hoff, who leads Kaiser's efforts to convey prevention messages through the entertainment industry and social media, says Internet networking can raise awareness, but only as part of a comprehensive strategy.
Last fall, the foundation set out to bolster the White House initiative with its Greater Than AIDS campaign, launched with the Black AIDS Institute, MTV, BET, Essence and other media enterprises. What's needed, Hoff says, is a "collective response" in the African-American community: "Building a social network is a useful component of that."
Wednesday, March 24, 2010
Tuesday, March 23, 2010
Sunday, March 21, 2010
Next Up !
Thursday, March 18, 2010
Tuesday, March 16, 2010
Monday, March 15, 2010
Successful But Still A Void
Nas Speaks To Boys & Girls Club Members, Pledges To Get High School Diplom
ahttp://http//hiphopwired.com/2010/03/15/nas-speaks-to-boys-girls-club-members-pledges-to-get-high-school-diploma/
IM BACK !!!!
AFTER A LONG LAY OFF.. GUESS WHO'S BIZZACK, U CAN STILL SMELL THE CRACK IN MY CLOTHES, DONT MAKE ME RELAPSE ON U HO'S !!!!
haha
haha
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