Thursday, June 26, 2008

Summer Movie Fest

If you are ready for free "Family" movies, say yeahh!!!

Wehrenberg is offering first come first serve movies each Wednesday and Thursday for the following titles.



Not to be outdone, Regal Cinemas has the same promotion.
Regal St. Louis Mills Stadium 18
5555 St. Louis Mills Blvd. Hazelwood, MO 63042 314-227-5500
07/01/2008-07/02/2008 Jimmy Neutron: Boy Genius (G)
The Second Junglebook (PG)
07/08/2008-07/09/2008 Wallace And Gromit (G)
Hook (PG)
07/15/2008-07/16/2008 Muppets Take Manhattan (G)
Stuart Little (PG)
07/22/2008-07/23/2008 Everyone's Hero (G)
Bratz (PG)
07/29/2008-07/30/2008 Adventures Of Pipi Longstocking (G)
Alvin And The Chipmunks (PG)
08/05/2008-08/06/2008 Doogal (G)
Are We There Yet? (PG)

P.S. - Popcorn and Soda will cost you $9 plus tip.

Tuesday, June 24, 2008

NCAA Football 09 - Three More Weeks

Kobe: Tell me how my Azz Taste

Daimler to offer electric Mercedes in 2010


 Daimler to offer electric Mercedes in 2010
Fri Jun 20 19:19:41 UTC 2008

FRANKFURT (Reuters) - Daimler <DAIGn.DE> plans to roll out a Mercedes-Benz model that runs on electricity in 2010, its chief executive said in a newspaper interview.

"We plan an electric Smart for 2010 and for the same year a Mercedes (electric) model as well," Dieter Zetsche told Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung in comments to be published in the Saturday edition.

Daimler currently has in London a fleet of 100 first-generation Smart cars that run on electricity.

Unlike General Motors Corp <GM.N>, which has promised to launch a Chevrolet Volt plug-in electric car in 2010 selling for about $30,000 (15,182 pounds), Zetsche said no decision has been made regarding the price for the electric models.

"That depends on whether we sell the batteries with the car or lease them. The willingness (on the part of consumers) to pay more is limited," he said, adding that the group is also considering whether to manufacture electric motors itself.

Daimler, which spends about half of its research and development budget on powertrains and CO2 reduction, is also in talks with ex-SAP <SAPG.DE> executive Shai Agassi regarding his plan to create a mass-market infrastructure for electric cars.

Zetsche also said he aimed to bring a small series of fuel cell cars to the market in 2010.

Earlier this week, Honda <7267.T> kicked off production of its FCX Clarity fuel cell sedan, which will be leased in the United States via a special dealership network starting in July and then in autumn in Japan.

Honda targets a volume of 200 cars in the first three years in the two countries combined.

Zetsche, who reaffirmed the Mercedes-Benz operating margin target of 10 percent, said Daimler so far had not been hurt by a drop in used car prices in North America that forced BMW <BMWG.DE> to raise its risk provisions by 236 million euros ($366.5 million) in April.

He also called the talks with BMW to cooperate on components for the next generation of compact models as "good and concrete."

(Reporting by Christiaan Hetzner; editing by John Wallace)

Monday, June 23, 2008

St. Louis ICON: Rose Man silenced by weekend violence


This The Blender Article
The Rose Man" Nixon, 64, brought smiles to the faces of many women with his wares, selling roses at countless St. Louis nightclubs for years, while decked out in his trademark red suit.

It ended violently early this morning. Nixon was selling roses at the Soft Touch Lounge in Washington Park, Il. around 3 a.m. when shots were fired into the club, hitting Nixon and another patron.

Nixon died at St. Louis University Hospital today; the injured patron is being treated.

In a 2005 interview with the Post-Dispatch, Nixon said he hadn't turned a profit in over 30 years of selling roses and teddy bears. "I just work. I do it for love, really."

Rest in peace, Rose Man

Youtube of the Day



Sidenote:
"The basketball shoe market is down from the $4.5 billion the market was at when Nike signed LeBron. Powell says this year basketball shoes will gross in the $2.5 billion range. Then consider how dominant Nike is. Adding up Nike, Converse and the Jordan business, Nike has a 93 percent share of the basketball shoe market, the largest take of any shoe business by one company. And finally, consider this. Michael Jordan is still Nike's best endorser by a mile. Powell says sales of the Jordan brand make up a larger percentage of the overall shoe business than they ever have. For every three pairs bought in this country, two of them (67 percent) are the Jordan brand. Nike has a 24 percent share, adidas has a 4 percent share and Converse has a 2.5 percent share. Given these numbers, you can imagine what it would take for Nike to fork over big bucks when they already have a basic monopoly on the business. And you can imagine how marketable a certain player would have to be in order for adidas to jump at him. Five years ago, the power was in the hands of the players and the agents."

US Olympic Basketball 2008

And the roster is....

G - Chris Paul - Guaranteed 10/assists per game with this lineup. Can he be consistent from outside?
G - Michael Redd - Sharpshooter, hope he is on, if not defensive liability.
G - Deron Williams - Physical guard, can he be consistent from outside?
G - Kobe Bryant - MVP, best (only) on ball defender on team. Does he have Finals hangover?
G - Dwyane Wade - Is he going to hurt his chances of competing in the Regular season by playing this summer?
G - Jason Kidd - Floor general. Should make Paul/Williams more effective as change of pace.
F - LeBron James - Can play 1-5 vs international big men, but will he settle for too many jumpers?
F - Carmelo Anthony - Best International Style - No defense, fierce scorer and guaranteed 20pts on 55-60% fg.
F - Tayshaun Prince - Defensive MVP. Will guard all positions and hit the key corner jumpers after Redd is benched for poor defense.
F/C - Carlos Boozer - Will see a lot of him and Williams on the court at the same time.
F/C - Chris Bosh - He already plays on a Int'l team, Toronto Raptors, should fit right in.
C - Dwight Howard - I can smell hack-a-shaq tactics already.

The team has talent...but more like Silver talent if they run into a hot shooting Argentina (without Manu).

Thursday, June 19, 2008

In South Africa, Chinese is the New Black????

Article
A high court in South Africa ruled on Wednesday that Chinese-South Africans will be reclassified as “black,” a term that includes black Africans, Indians and others who were subject to discrimination under apartheid. As a result of this ruling, ethnically Chinese citizens will be able to benefit from government affirmative action policies aimed at undoing the effects of apartheid.

In 2006, the Chinese Association of South Africa sued the government, claiming that its members were being discriminated against because they were being treated as whites and thus failed to qualify for business contracts and job promotions reserved for victims of apartheid. The association successfully argued that, since Chinese-South Africans had been treated unequally under apartheid, they should be reclassified in order to redress wrongs of the past.

This is not the first time the classification of Chinese in South Africa has changed. In fact, the racial status of Chinese-South Africans has often shifted with the nation’s political climate and its international relations.

The first significant group of Chinese came to South Africa in the early 20th century, before a formal system of apartheid existed, to work in the gold mines. They were not encouraged to settle permanently and by 1910 almost all the mine workers had been repatriated. Those who remained struggled with racism and lived in separate communities based on language, culture and socio-economic status.

As apartheid became enshrined in law with the ascendancy of the Afrikaner government in the late 1940s, the Chinese were classified as “colored,” forced to live apart from whites, and were denied educational and business opportunities along with the right to vote. But after South Africa established an economic alliance with Taiwan in the 1970s, Taiwanese immigrants were welcomed as “honorary whites,” and other Chinese in South Africa began to be treated more like whites. Although they never attained the formal “honorary white” status of Taiwanese, Koreans and Japanese in South Africa and couldn’t vote, Chinese-South Africans were no longer required to use segregated facilities, and in the early 1980s they were exempted from some of the discriminatory laws that applied to other non-whites.

After apartheid ended in the early 1990s, the legal status of Chinese has remained in a gray area, though they’ve generally been lumped together with whites and denied the post-apartheid benefits available to other non-white groups.

South Africa has seen waves of immigrants and investment from China since 1994, and today there are as many as 300,000 Chinese living in the South Africa. But the new court decision is unlikely to benefit most of them or trigger another mass migration– it applies only to those Chinese who were South African citizens before 1994 (and their descendants), a much smaller number of around 10,000 to 12,000.

Wednesday, June 18, 2008

Hakeem Tha Dream

Good article on some local talent.

Show is a dream for St. Louis rapper
By Kevin C. Johnson
POST-DISPATCH POP MUSIC CRITIC
06/19/2008

Hakeem Tha Dream performs in a style that he describes as edgy, conscious and melodic.
(Christian Gooden/P-D)

The big crowd at the Chris Brown concert in January at Scottrade Center eagerly awaited the headliner to take the stage when, during intermission, a DJ spun St. Louis rapper Hakeem Tha Dream's "Thick Wit It."

And the crowd went wild, almost as if Brown himself had appeared.

Hakeem Tha Dream wasn't at the show to see the crowd's response; he wasn't asked to be a part of the lineup. But he heard about it.

"I felt cheated," says Hakeem Tha Dream, 24, also known as Hakeem Love.

A similar scenario went down more recently at the Rick Ross and Plies concert, when a DJ played "Thick Wit It" during a break.

But when the Hot 104.1 Super Jam comes to Verizon Wireless Amphitheater on Saturday with headliners T.I. (bottom left) and Keyshia Cole, (bottom right) Hakeem Tha Dream will not only be there, he'll share the bill with nearly two dozen national and local performers. And he can't wait.

"If they acted like that when I wasn't even there, what will they act like this time when I am there, in the mix, live and in 3D? Everyone's going to see the hometown kid get it cracking," Hakeem says.

Local rap fans already know that Hakeem has been getting it cracking for a while now, thanks to his breakthrough "Thick Wit It." But he's been doing so mostly on smaller stages such as Lucky's, Society, the Loft and the Spot.

Last Saturday night, he headlined a sparsely attended show at the Spot that featured Kimora Lee Simmons' father, Vernon Whitlock Jr., judging a model-walk contest. Hakeem wasn't especially happy with the evening.

But his Super Jam gig is a good look, the best yet, for one of St. Louis' most promising young rappers.

That big stage represents a big step in more than venue size. It's a long way from Hakeem's upbringing on a gang-riddled portion of Red Bud Avenue in St. Louis.

He says he could have taken any number of wrong paths earlier in life.

"We were kids with dangers around us. That lifestyle was all around us, and most of my friends veered off into that lifestyle," says Hakeem, who avoided following suit despite some "dibbling and dabbling" in negative situations.

But he made it through, thanks to having "a family that showed a lot of love. A lot of kids didn't have that, and they would either go home to mothers on crack or seek love in the streets."

Part of the family love Hakeem received came from his grandfather, St. Louis blues musician Clayton Love, who had reservations about him getting into rap music.

"He was like, 'You gotta show me something grandson,' prove it," Hakeem says.

And that's just what he's doing. He says he's been into rap since grade school, when he watched rappers on TV. His early favorites were Kid 'N Play, Eric B. & Rakim and Bone Thugs-N-Harmony.

Hakeem, a graduate of Central Visual and Performing Arts School, at one point thought he would go into public speaking, at the urging of a mentor, before realizing "I couldn't get with that, though I will still speak to kids."

He knew rapping was his thing, and he was good at it. After listening to more lyrically based rappers such as Canibus and Jay-Z, he wrote more and more while taking part in every rap battle and amateur show he could find. He began honing a style he describes as edgy, conscious and melodic.

Hakeem hooked up with local music producer Ronnie Notch, who presented him with a bunch of tracks, including what would become "Thick Wit It."

"Thick Wit It," which pays homage to the shape of sizable women, wasn't nearly Hakeem's favorite track. But it would be the one people embraced because it was so catchy. The song not only became a staple in St. Louis, it garnered airplay in Chicago; Little Rock, Ark.; Indianapolis; and in Memphis and Nashville, Tenn.

That, coupled with digital sales, landed him a spot on Billboard's Top R&B/Hip-Hop Songs chart.

"That was a two-sided thing for me," Hakeem says. "I'm happy on the one side. But there's still so much work to be done on the other side."

The success of the song allows Hakeem Tha Dream to land gigs weekly. He says promoters love booking him and holding "Thick Wit It" contests.

While he's still milking "Thick Wit It," Hakeem is ready to drop a follow-up. He's weighing four songs as the next single, including "Crush" and "Model Type," for those who got on his case for doing a song for the thicker types.

The songs are expected on his full-length CD, which he'd like to see out by the end of the summer after his next mix CD, "Nightmare Series Vol. 3."

Hakeem says he'll probably release the new CD independently, despite rumors that he's been offered major-label deals.

"I only got offered one deal, and it didn't make sense," he says.

Hakeem prefers the indie route, which would mean releasing the CD on PiMO Entertainment, the company he shares with Rams receiver Brandon Williams.

"That way I'll get all the money," Hakeem says.

However his CD is released, he says, he will face a particular challenge in breaking out of St. Louis. Thanks to Nelly and

Chingy, he says, the industry is mostly looking at St. Louis rappers only for party raps.

"Labels didn't want to hear what else I had," Hakeem says. "I don't want to be boxed in. I have so many other kind of records I want to present that are more meaningful."