swinging-couple

 

Easy going … Steven and Emma

MARTIN ROSE

By DEIDRE SANDERS

Sun Agony Aunt

WE can all feel jaded about sex sometimes and swapping partners for the odd night can sound like the best way to sharpen up your appetite without risking your relationship.

After all, if you’re both doing it openly, what can be the harm?

But it’s not as simple as that.

 

Advice … Agony Aunt Deidre Sanders

Our sex life is closely linked with our emotions.

What can be safe as a fantasy can be very risky for our relationships when real people get involved.

Judging by the readers who get in touch with me, it is usually the man in a couple pressing to try swapping and swinging.

Men are often more capable than women of having sex without getting emotionally involved.

But they may react very differently afterwards about their partner having made love with other men.

And whatever the woman’s experience, it’s bad news.

If she has a rotten time then she will feel dirtied and resentful – and perhaps be left feeling very insecure if he enjoyed himself.

If she has a good time, her partner may well be the one left feeling insecure.

Most men feel very vulnerable if there’s a chance their prowess as a lover may not compare favourably.

So this supposed safe way of enjoying sex with someone new can result in broken relationships, wrecked families and a lot of grief.

And that is quite apart from the risk of sexual infections if protection isn’t used.

Or suppose there is a contraception failure and one of the women gets pregnant? It happens.

I suggest anyone drawn to swinging asks themselves why.

Is it that your love life has become dull or unsatisfying, or there is some tension in your relationship?

You may be able to sort these out together. If you get stuck, Relate counsellors can help (0300 100 1234 or relate.org.uk).

 

OK SO THAT’S THE FUN PART!

 

 

TMZ reports: 

This one flew under the radar screen for months, but we just learned Scott Storch — formerly a wildly wealthy music producer for the likes of Dr. Dre and 50 Cent — has been charged with grand theft auto.

Storch allegedly leased a Bentley but never returned it after the expiration date. It took the leasing company 7 months to find it.

Storch pled not guilty in Broward County Court last Friday.

Fun Fact: Lil Kim had a Bentley repossessed back in ‘08 — which just happened to be a gift from none other than Storch himself. We don’t know if it’s the same Bentley.

Steve Rifkind says Asher Roth Album TOP 5 EVER


Steve Rifkind says Asher Roth Album TOP 5 EVER from Kush Robinson on Vimeo.

 

 

What if Eminem pursued a degree in elementary education, popped his collar, and liked his parents? Though comparing an on-the-rise Caucasian rapper to the real Slim Shady may seem hopelessly facile, Asher Roth — the boyish 23-year-old behind the surprise top 10 iTunes hit ”I Love College” — does initially come off like a junior-varsity Marshall Mathers, eerily echoing the 36-year-old superstar’s nasal delivery and back-of-the-classroom cockiness.

On this debut album Asleep in the Bread Aisle, Roth fully acknowledges the white elephant in the room with the song ”As I Em,” intoning, ”Because we have the same complexion and similar voice inflection/It’s easy to see the pieces and to reach for that connection…not much that I can say except I’m sick of it.” In that case, he’s going to be feeling ill for a good while. But if critics and mainstream hip-hop fans can find room in the game for more than one melanin-deficient MC, Roth might surprise them. ”College,” his loping ode to women, weed, and one-dollar pizza slices, provides an irresistible dose of lowbrow higher-education hedonism. And though he makes good use of street-accredited guests like Cee-Lo (the soul-slicked ”Be by Myself”) and Jazze Pha (syncopated goof ”Bad Day”), Roth never floats sham tales of suburban hardship here. Instead, he just wants to have a good time — and for the most part, he provides one as well. B

By Leah Greenblatt

 

AND IN SHADY NEWS…HERE’S SOME UPCOMING COVERS…

BTW here’s the vid…and no, it’s really not Jessica Simpson on the hook!

EminemNew MusicMore Music Videos


Apr
15

TAX DAY BITCHES!

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Alot of ish is going on right now…so that’s why I’m having sort of an issue figuring out what’s importante…por exemplo…

The old ass country chick singin’ her ass off on Britain’s next American Talented Model or whatever it’s called…

simon1






…Is it me or is it odd that Pirating is at an all time high? There are so many things for me to worry about on land, and now I gotta worry about a bunch of old skool ass muthafuckin’ swashbuckle ass peg legs livin’ in the past…I mean If you bums want to “sail the high seas lookin’ for booty” with a bunch of ya boys on a boat…then do what you do

 

All this damn pirate bullshit needs to stop…If you’re reading this guys…it’s cool…we get it…you’re still not “out” yet…

I don’t mean to offend anyone, but this is what it seems like an up to date pirate ship would be… 

    

 

‘The Foxxhole’ host Jamie Foxx to Miley Cyrus: I’m sorry

BY KORIN MILLER
DAILY NEWS STAFF WRITER

Wednesday, April 15th 2009, 10:12 AM

And now, the apology …

Comedian Jamie Foxx has issued a mea culpa to Miley Cyrus after suggesting she make a sex tape, become a lesbian and, uh, do heroin.

“I so apologize … and this is sincere,” he said on the “Tonight Show With Jay Leno” on Tuesday. “I am a comedian, and you guys know that whatever I say, I don’t mean any of it.”

“I have a radio show… We’re really the black Howard Stern. We go at everybody. There was a situation with Miley Cyrus, and I just want to say, I apologize for what I said. I didn’t mean it maliciously. You know I’m a comedian. You know my heart.”

Foxx came under fire from Cyrus fans after verbally attacking the “Hannah Montana” star on his Sirius radio show on Sunday. The 16-year-old should “get like Britney Spears and do some heroin. Do like Lindsay Lohan and start seeing a lesbian and get some crack in your pipe. Catch chlamydia on a bicycle seat,” Foxx opined.

And now he’s taken a different tact.

“Miley, I apologize, so I’ll call you,” Foxx said Tuesday. “I got a daughter too, so I completely understand.”

Poor ol’ Mylie’s gotta be so offended…it’s not like she’s ever done anything disparaging… 

—–

 

THIS REALLY HAPPENS MORE THAN WE THINK…STILL GROSS NONETHELESS

THIS SHIT JUST MADE LIZ A LIL BIT!

Today’s post has been brought to you by the following…

 

as always…peace to the contributors…

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Apr
13

KING & THE CAUZE MIXTAPE

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This is one of my favorite pieces of work going on right ‘chere! Show this friday in Philly…see below!

 

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Apr
13

Back on the grind..

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So I finally got my bloodclot phone to do what it’s supposed to do… Posted up in Beantown…again…comin’ off a crazy few days! Cupcakin’ & Lovemakin 2 dropped the other morning…my bday posted up with the famo and boo boo J. Holiday show…he was great, the turnout wasn’t…

The short and small of it all was: partied Friday to a good extent, airport by 5 am for Allentown…6:15 wake up to see the old chick that was sitting next to moved prob because I was snoring all over her! 7:30 est, arrive in atl…no smoking in my part of the terminal smh…barely make my flight to Allentown and arrive by 12:15…Magnetic come thru and the day begins…check the other entry for how that went down…

Gotta knock out my taxes in the AM then head to Dorchester to pose with the Boston side of la Famiglia.

Categories : Bberry Blasts
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Apr
13

Test

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So here I go again tryna blog with this bullshit ass app…let’s see if it works…

Categories : WTF?
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By Kiko Michaels

While income streams for artists in the music industry have become less and less, the amount of money made by songwriters and music publishers has not seen that drastic of a decline. This is not to say that the decision to be just an artist cannot still be a lucrative one. However, it would seem there are more pronounced cons.

“If you don’t feel like your song is hotter than the #1 song in the country, then it’s not even worth it.” says Dre McKenzie from G-Unit records during BMI’s “A Conversation With The Industry”, a panel discussion on March 18th regarding the state of music from a publishing perspective. The world of songwriters is just as competitive if not more so than that of artists. There are a multitude of songwriters on any given day who are working towards achieving the next chart topper. 

However, where an artist may have to wait a small eternity to amass riches even after chart topping hits and a platinum selling album (especially given the current state of the music industry) the pay off for a songwriter is much more immediate. With the collection of royalties and writer fees, a songwriter can see a six-figure income after penning only one song if it becomes a massive hit.

“Producers and songwriters have definitely become more popular in the past couple of years,” legendary producer Kwame explains about the increase in visibility of those “behind the scenes.” There are definitely songwriters who have achieved a certain level of visibility and even fame. However, most will never see it to the extent that an artist does. An artist has a marketing machine behind them whose sole purpose is to drill them into the consciousness of as many people as possible, whereas the machine behind a songwriter (if they have one) is to drill them into the consciousness of as many people in the Music Industry as possibly. 

Penning hit songs helps this cause, but in most cases does nothing in terms of creating fame in the most general sense for the writer. In fact, it only makes the artist more popular. The retention of their anonymity can be a blessing for many songwriters as they get all the perks of a music industry lifestyle without the intense scrutiny that fame can bring. However, there are many who crave the spotlight as there are many songwriters who are simply artists waiting for their time to shine.

“I love what I do. It’s the best profession in the world. Nothing compares to it,” gushes songwriter Frankie Storm about her job. So what is better: being an artist or a songwriter? The lucrative compromise would be to do both. Keyshia Cole, Ne-Yo, R.Kelly and many others have all made money on both sides of the fence. However, the more definitive answer probably depends on where you sit full-time.

 

It’s nice to see someone do an article about writers because….well damn…you generally only hear about those that have crossed over to the writer and singer status….ie. Neyo and Johnta Austin. As one who writes and aspires to get into those wide open spots, I firmly believe that the songwriter is the the most influential part of the business….not to down the artists, A&R,  DJ’s, or the promotions squads that bring the whole package together. 

 


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Mar
24

Atl-Boston

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I took the time on my flight from atl to boston to go over a ton of mixtapes to study style, structure, and strength. A lot of Dj’s, especially now, throw out tapes with the series name and some
fake scratches to sound live…blend muthafuckas blend!
That’s always been my thing as a DJ…you gotta blend the records and create cohesion. Bpm code ur records and try to stay within 2-4 bpms during the mix progressively. Before that was just good vital policy because there was no pitch control with vinyl…now we see reckless kids with Serato trying to crash a 83 bpm track with a 91…it’s a problem when ur drops sound more professional than ur product…gtfoh!

What I love about 90’s NY Dj’s was their ability to smash records in right at the hot spot or where the record peaked. Like Tribe Called Quest’s Scenario…the real highlight is Busta Bus…cut through the rest of the track and straight to the verse…very good move for the crowd with ADD.

A highlight that was dissapointing was Biz Markie back in 94…homie sounded straight crumbly but he made up for it with his selecttion of hot joints.

I’ll be finishing Rzrbldz & Vdka 5 this afternoon and I answered my question of whether I should have less tracks on the tape that are all solid records based on my opinion or more tracks with some joints that test well in research that I don’t care for. Option B.

We’re flying over NYC lookin at the Brooklawn bridge wishin’ we could pull over for a quick slice and
a piece of cheesecake. Or at least drop the two ass clowns sittin next to me…f’n battybwoys

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“The world his filled with pimps and hoes, we’ll just talk about those I know.”


The world is falling apart…there’s so many that deserve a good ol’ Epic Fail…but I won’t touch down on all that because… this right here is not for the use of such negativity and perception that I’m some kind of a hater!


Big shout out to Shadyville DJ’s worldwide! Just got down (pause) with the newest member over in Australia…Victor Lopez…look for some funk real soon! 

I’m about to head on the road down to Memphis then to Tunica for the Southern Entertainment Awards…so the shit should be quite on point!picture-3 So I’ll be updating throughout the day…weekend and so on…look forward to some Iphone pics….shitty ass iphone pics because they opted for the 1.3 megapixel…why he hell are cats with metro pcs or prepaid phones snapping better pics than me?

 

Here’s what’s going on all around tha erf!

I heard the big homie Kelly was preggo after she did her thing on Idol…Word on this end is that she isn’t…in 09 size 14 is the new 3…when your last album tanks and you have to beg to get folks back on your side after you decided that you needed to b “yourself” Hostess will always come to the rescue!

I may go ahead and do a vid blog to people that are celebs to let them know that no one cares about who they really are…they just want you to paint a picture for them to obsess over!  Then again, maybe the weight+since you’v been gone/because of you mashup (My life would suck…) = platinum again and revamped hope for American Idol?


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

shit…I gotta bounce!

Mar
11

Is it really dead though?

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Commerical radio is dead: Why CBS Radio’s K-Rock format switch in New York won’t make a bit of difference in fight against technological irrelevance

by Nicholas Deleon on March 9, 2009

923now

There’s something wrong with CBS Radio’s press release announcing the launch, complete with silly “countdown,” of 92.3 Now FM in New York City, a contemporary hit radio station that will replace K-Rock on Wednesday, March 11, at 5:00pm. (Contemporary hit radio, in plain English, means garbage pop songs, distinguished by their use of auto-tune and use of lowest-common-denominator song-writing.) CBS Radio Senior Vice-President of Something or Other, Don Bouloukos, is quoted in the release as saying, “Our assets in the country’s No. 1 market include among them the best known brands in the business. From the most listened to news and sports stations in the country, to the classic sounds of WCBS FM and the adult contemporary styling of Fresh 102.7, CBS RADIO offers something for everyone in the market – including young adults who are using the radio to discover today’s most popular music as featured on 92.3 NOW FM.” [Emphasis added, obviously.] And that, friends, is why the radio business, as we know it, is truly doomed. No, Mr. Bouloukos, young people are not turning on their radio to discover new music; they’re certainly not sticking around through the commercials to listen to new music on a radio station. No, sir, that’s what the Internet is for, and that’s why your business has no future.

Some background information is needed here. For only one more day, 92.3 FM in New York City will be known as K-Rock, a typical rock station that you can find in any city in the U.S. If you can think of a rock song from the past 20 years, odds are, the station will play it. Twenty times per day. The latest ratings put the station at 21st place, one spot higher than a gospel station—there’s people who listen to gospel music in New York City?—and right behind a Univision-owned Latin Rhythm station. K-Rock, as a whole, isn’t doing too well. In fact, it’s doing so poorly that CBS Radio decided it was necessary to completely flip formats. Out with the Green Day and in with the Beyoncé! Opie and Anthony, a show I’ve enjoyed for several years now, was let go, according to Opie’s Twitter. It, apparently, doesn’t fit in with the station’s new direction. Fair enough, it’s for CBS Radio to decide if the show is relevant to the demographics it’s now targeting.

So CBS Radio in particular, and commercial radio in general, besieged by scary new technologies—your ImeemsPandorasiTunes(es?)YouTubeBitTorrentsiPhones, etc.—decides that rock doesn’t cut it anymore, and that a switch to CHR was in order. (There’s already another CHR station in New York, a fact CBS Radio decided to spin by saying that New Yorkers now, for the first time, have a choice of which frequency they wish to hear that Taylor Swift song. (As if people care what station they’re listening to a song on, provided they’re tuning in at all.) The thinking here, one can only assume, is that radio companies feel that station formats like rock, classic rock and whatever else—radio formats with large back catalogues—don’t work in an iPod world. Why pay a DJ to spin Nirvana’s “Smells Like Teen Spirit” for the millionth time when a good chunk of your potential audience already has the song on their iPhone (or other music-playing cellphone) or iPod (or other portable media player)? Better to program a music station with NEW! HIT! music. That way there’s less of a chance of your audience having the song on their iPod, and there’s less of a chance of your audience saying, “Good God, again they’re playing [this song]! Time to listen to something else!”

We now turn to Mr. Bouloukos’ comment, that young people—most of you guys are young people, I would guess!—are “using the radio to discover today’s most popular music.” First off, that wording is just wrong. If a song is already popular—remember, 92.3 Now will only only play “hit music”—then the odds are that people have already heard it before; in other words, hit music is already popular! A song becomes popular when a lot of people know it, and enjoy it. If a song is popular, then people aren’t, by definition, “discovering” it! (Amateur Hour at CBS Radio, apparently.) Even giving Mr. Bouloukos the benefit of the doubt, that what he meant to say is that people are using radio to discover new music… well, good luck bro. I’d like to find the last 17-year-old in America who is using commercial radio as his primary source of new music. I mean, it’s not like these kids are using THE INTERNET to find new music, right?MySpace Music, music blogs like Hype Machine, sites like Imeem and YouTube, etc. (Then these kids turn around and buy said music either directly from the band’s Web site, or use iTunes or, yes, download it “from BitTorrent.” (BitTorrent is an Internet protocol; you don’t download things “from it.”)

You wanna know how I “discovered” Buraka Som Sistema, this ridiculous electronic group from Portugal? (Yes, I readily admit that my tastes in music are a little on the unusual side, at least by American standards.) On What.cd, a popular BitTorrent site, I was reading the profile of M.I.A., the girl who sings all those songs in Slumdog Millionaire. There’s a little related artists diagram, and one link leads to Buraka Som Sistem. I grab their latest album and say to myself, “holy smokes this is amazing.” (My favorite song of theirs happens to be “Yah! (The Count and Sinden Remix)”.) These guys are coming to New York in May, so barring some sort of catastrophe, I will be there and I will enjoy every last minute of it.

miawhat

Never mind that commercial radio in New York City will never play Buraka Som Sistem!

Let’s try another example of how people discover new music in the year 2009. Opie, from the aforementioned Opie and Anthony show, had tweeted—there’s this thing called Twitter, CBS Radio, that I’m sure you’ll try to use before the year is out—a picture of a couple of CDs he had in his car. One of them was MGMT, an indie rock band that I had never heard of till then. Before you know it, hey, I’m now a fan of MGMT. What introduced me to this band? Nope, not crusty old commercial radio, but Twitter, a largely rubbish Web 2.0 site that, for all its faults, lets people talk nonsense rather effectively. One Tweet later, I now have another band to see when they swing by New York City.

CBS Radio, that is how people are “discovering” new music in the year 2009. They’re not listening to the radio, sitting through commercials, waiting for the marble-mouthed DJ to say, “Hey, here’s [Cool New Band].” Yes, we know. We heard about [Cool New Band] two weeks ago via Twitter/Facebook/MySpace Music/whatever. Thanks for trying to remain relevant, though!

Now, I still think radio, as a medium, isn’t dead yet. Plenty of people listen to talk radio, whether it’s of the comedy variety à la Opie and Anthony, of the political variety à la Hannity or Rush, or of the sports variety. (My God does sports radio delve into minutia!) Radio is great for news, too: nothing wrong with listening to the headlines while you’re stuck in traffic on the BQE. But this idea that CBS Radio, and others, cling to, that commercial music radio has a future, that people still seek out commercial radio to listen to new music, is laughably outdated.

I’m one that will rarely EVER argue in defense for CHR because in so many cases is it ever really “Conteporary.” Let’s look at the definiition of the word thrown around and bastardized by  format directors and some weak consultants…

 

con⋅tem⋅po⋅rar⋅y

    [kuhn-tem-puh-rer-ee] 

–adjective    

1. existing, occurring, or living at the same time; belonging to the same time: Newton’s discovery of the calculus was contemporary with that of Leibniz.
2. of about the same age or date: a Georgian table with a contemporary wig stand.
3. of the present time; modern: a lecture on the contemporary novel.

 

Contemporary means up to date; and in this day and age, it sure as hell means up to the minute! So in order to have a station that it Contemporary Hit Radio…you better be on the pulse of what people want right now…no pun intended just yet. 

Often, we find the CHR format being a lame excuse to replay the safe songs that people know enough not to lean up from their seat whilst driving/riding in the car and hit the next preset button in order to increase and savor the ever so important TSL (time spent listening.)  So much of CHR is stale, out of date, dry, and quite the contrary of contemporary.  I blame the out of date format directors that are too old to know what women 18-34 want.  I then blame the shook and scared program directors (PD’s) for not doing their own research to find out what their markets calls for! The edict of  ”don’t argue with your format director so you don’t lose your job” isn’t helping anyone! There’s a way to make your point while still having respect and the number one reason for constant rollover by the PD’s is due to the lack of their own research locally for a compelling rebuttal.  This is part of what is killing “radio.”

Technology opens up arenas to help radio.  Most people aren’t as closed minded as the suit in the office crunching numbers thinks. I don’t think I have ever met one single P1 listener for any format that is a slave to one genre of music.  Look at the factors that have been there: influence from kids, husband, wife, friends, social events and so on. Now look at the factors that have come into play in the last decade: Apple (all i-products therein), the dubious Napster, blog sites, sattelite radio. For these reasons, there is no flat out way to dispute that the 25 song “tight” playlist with minor changes over a 90 day period is enough so suffice.

So, for the out of date format directors WHO CAN NO LONGER RELATE TO MORE THAN 1/3 OF MUSIC GOING FOR ADDS AND THINK THAT RATINGS WILL COME BY SHUTTING ON AIR PERSONALITIES UP, stop what you’re doing and quit ruining radio. How do you expect your jocks to grow intro morning talent if all they do is intro songs?  PD’s, grab a spine and stand up for yourselves. One surefire way to get people to love your station is by memorable moments created by the talent; and no; regurgitation of show prep used by every day part talking up the post of a song doesn’t count as memorable.

All the above being said, find a way to get listeners to choose your side and allow them to brand for you the way you brand yourself to them and magic can happen. Just don’t patronize them! This can be a great opportunity for CBS to grow considering how well CHR has been doing in PPM markets. Is it an uphill battle? Yes. because the old crusty man they are trying to paint Elvis Duran as, is the same guy that people grew up listening to and love…and it will be hard for them to let that go.  This is just my humble opinion…

Categories : Life & Radio, Opinion
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Mar
11

old skool mix 03 10 09

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some ol’ funk for ya…

 

 

 

Categories : Mixtapes, mixes
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