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Border Lords II

LIL MACC LOCO Posted by LIL MACC LOCO at 07:30 PM on October 13, 2009 Comments comments (0)

A Shade Pictures Film Featuring music By: LIL MACC LOCO,Billy Townes, Chazz Pratt,Steve Marquez,Marty Olivas,Demetrius Williams,Erik Unsworth,Jawn Glass,Dominic Hradek,Laforest gray,Karen Johnson, Perla Cruza,Dj Pooh Heff.

blii

SEE THE TRAILERS ONLINE AT:

youtube.com/shaderecords + facebook.com/borderlords + myspace.com/borderlordsmovie

 

The Border Lords 2 premiere is Sold Out.

But...

An Encore Presentation will be held on Tues, Nov 3rd at the Bassett Premiere Cinemas! Showtimes are 7pm & 9:30p

Producer Mark Love will have tickets on sale tomorrow (Sat, Oct 10th) at 11450 Rojas in ELP from 11am to 3pm....please go early! Tickets to the premiere sold out in 3 hours!

For more information you can email Mark at elysianent@yahoo.com

I'm A Underground Allstar

LIL MACC LOCO Posted by LIL MACC LOCO at 12:44 AM on February 15, 2009 Comments comments (0)

Interview With Gonzoe

 

WorldWideConnected.com: What do you think about the current state of the West Coast and the rap game in general?

The West Coast is building in our strong points again slowly but surely. But its still a lot of hoe shit going on that I don?t condone. But you know, you cant save the world. And the rap game has been just as fucked up as its been for the last 20 years. Same shit different toilet. But who am I to complain?

WorldWideConnected.com: But I heard you?re living on the East Coast now. What?s that like? Why did you decide to move there? 

Im not a stranger to the East Coast by far. Ive been moving around out here for years. But I just had a new baby boy and I married his mother (Jewlz Bailey, who also happens to direct my videos), so I wanted to break the cycle of not being in the household with my kids, and just having another baby mamma. So I got a spot in Toronto (where she is from and finishing her last semester at the university of Toronto). They also buy a lot of Regime product over here, so as a business man, with the means to do it, I had to spread my wings. A lot of cats from back home are stuck in the same old shoe box tryin to get rich right in their own backyard. But the kind money that im getting now, I couldn?t rock like that.

WorldWideConnected.com: You?ve been dropping a lot of projects lately. How come you are more productive now than you?ve been in the past? 

I started my own record label last year, Blocwize Ent. And that cuts a lot of bullshit out. I can do what I want, when I want, and what I always wanted to do was make good music at my discretion and not have to worry about all the politics that come with it. So that?s what im doing now. Dropping hot shit, and lots of it. So if you think last year was productive, 07 is gonna be even better.

WorldWideConnected.com: What projects are you working on right now?

I got my new DVD that just came out ?Tha Boxx Urban Muzic Video Collection Vol.1? featuring new videos from Dru Down and Lee Majors, Myself, Yukmouth & Killa Klump, Keak da Sneak and others. I got Starz & Stripez pt.1 (mixtape) droppin on Jan. 30th on rapbay.com, its got original songs from myself, Young Jeezy, Bizzy Bone, The Outlawz, Lloyd, Fiend, Big June, Smig Dirtee, Fatdog, Brovaz Grimm, Mayhem Morearty, Nasty Nate, and more, and even a few Pac tracks that?s off the fuckin meat-rack. Its mixed by DJ LAW, world famous DJ LAW that is, from Project Bounce radio in T.Dot. for all y?all hip hop headz u know that?s a big deal cause he won the Justo award for best style. Im also putting out the Brovaz Grimm hosted by DJ Envy (also world famous, of NYC?s HOT 97.5fm) ?NVUS? which drops March 20th. Also tune into my radio show every night at rapbay.com 9:30pm pacific time hosted by myself.

WorldWideConnected.com: You?ve got a underground project you?re working on. Volume 2 is coming out soon. What made you decide to do a project like that? 

Yea Undaground Allstarz volume 2. Volume 1 was a success, and I wanted to give more artists a chance an opportunity to get heard who otherwise wouldn?t have that voice goin to bat for them. Cause when I was starting out, that avenue didn?t exist. So I felt it was necessary to keep doing all that I can for up and coming artists because the industry is so fucked up nowadays, and it also puts the perspective in place the way it should be, that talent should speak for itself.

WorldWideConnected.com: What artists can we look forward to hear on Vol 2?

Volume 2 is going to be a double CD. The first disk will feature my new artist Exile, who won the contest bringing in the most votes. The second CD will feature repeats from volume 1 (like Fatdog, Tony Streetz, Flames, Flossalini, AP.9, B.R.E.P, myself, etc.) plus new additions like Brovaz Grimm, Virus (RIP), Playgurl Slim, CBC & 25
, Lil Macc Loco, Donny Goines, and some more cats that y?all aint heard before.

WorldWideConnected.com: What can you tell us about Starz & Stripez Vol. 1? 

Well I already told u about the features, it?s a mixtape but its basically all exclusive except for the Pac features and one or two mixtape beats.

WorldWideConnected.com: What other projects are you working on?

Well, other than music, I have Young World, a movie we?re about to start shooting this Spring that I wrote the screenplay for. I just started a new management company with my wife that I?m very proud of, Blocwize Management, so expect many tour dates to come (starting with the Outlawz/Gonzoe tour coming to Canada). Also, Jewlz (my wife) has been shooting a lot of videos recently, so I?m very happy about that, because its giving me a whole other angle in the game, and you can expect to see a lot of those on ?Tha Boxx Vol.2?

WorldWideConnected.com: How about a solo album? When can we expect it to be released? What guests can we expect? Who is handling production?

I'm taking a little time to develop all these other things, and make sure that my next solo album is shittin on everything moving, so I can only give u a little insight now because the hip-hop game nowadays is based upon who can steal the best. You can expect something in the Spring, production wise, I like working with cats that I?ve already built a relationship with like Jado and Kadosha, S-class, Alchemist, J?angelo, Deranged, The Natural, Battlecat, just to name a few.

WorldWideConnected.com: I noticed you had writer credits for the 2pac track ?Dump?n? on the new Pac album. How did that come about? 

Well, I did the original song with him 10 years ago, it was me, Pac, Kurupt and Nutso, and Daz on the beat. And we all came up with the concept together, actually I named the song (and I start off the original). But its always business first, so Universal thought it would be best (because the songs were dated, and everybody had heard it on the bootlegs) to redo it with new mainstream artists and new production, but still give all the original artists their due credit as far as royalties, publishing and songwriting, etc. and im all for that, cuz like I said im a business man, and just being on a Pac album, even though that was my boy and none of the cats on the new album ever met him a day in their life, I was still honoured by having my name in the credits, let alone making a couple hundred thousand off something I did ten years ago.

WorldWideConnected.com: Are you still beefing with Ice Cube?

No. a year or so ago I made a public apology to him cause he did put me in the game, and my lack of information about the game, caused me to blame him. And I was wrong for that. So any real man, could apologize if he was the one at fault. So no, but I don?t regret nothing I did, I just feel that if you make a mistake, you should be able to correct it and not feel any less of a man.

WorldWideConnected.com: You got any other beefs going on at the moment?

I wouldn?t call it beef. But I still got a couple of niggaz that I need to address when I see em, and find out whats what. Yuk and Game squashed their beef, but on the end of the song, he felt that he could still take lashes at me. And for anybody who knows me, they know it wasn?t going down like that. So when I see him, its no questions asked. He better get to explaining, or he getting whooped on.

WorldWideConnected.com: Any chance for a Kausion Re-Union?

I cant say yes and I cant say no. but im always willing to work on good music, and we have been in touch. But as far as an album is concerned, that takes a lot of vibing and preparation and its been so much time elapsed that its hard to get that chemistry back.

WorldWideConnected.com: How was it to be a member of groups like Kausion, Outlawz & Regime, got any favorite memories? 

Yea my favorite memory was when Pac was alive and the game still had honour. My favorite memories were being in the studio with Ice Cube, being taught by legends. My best memories of the Regime were before all the bullshit came into play. Now there?s a lot of politics happening that takes the feeling out of it. I don?t feel shit no more. And that?s what worries me. BUT, we?re working night and day (me and Yuk) to bring some stability back to the Dragon Gang, to be more family oriented, and not just a rap group.

WorldWideConnected.com: What's up with the Gonzoe/Dubee collabo... is it still going down? When can we expect it? 

its definitely still going down. Im touring right now and hes touring right now, so I haven?t seen him or been in the lab with him for a few months, but I got a email the other day saying that its time, so im fena be back and forth to the bay to get that done. I predict it should come out around summer time.

WorldWideConnected.com: What's up with Dirt Left? Is he still on your label? What other artist and producers do you have on your label? 

Dirt left is my big homeboy. I would love to put out his album. But he was incarcerated for a minute, and in that time, I bought my house in vegas and started going to the East Coast a lot more. So we?ve kinda been on a different page you know, outta touch. But he?s a childhood friend so whenever he?s ready, im ready. As for other artists, I have Tony Streetz, Fatdog, Exile, Brovaz Grimm, Jado and Kadosha, and Deranged.

WorldWideConnected.com: What?s your connection to Smoke-A-Lot now that you are back with Regime? I know you?re back in the group, but are you also back on the label as a solo artist? 

I was never signed to smoke-a-lot. I was supposed to drop a joint-venture through smoke-a-lot but we couldn?t agree on the terms so I started my own label. You definitely will hear a Gonzoe project in the immediate near future just to show my loyalty to the Regime and that im fully a team player. But I felt that ive been in this game for way too long not to have my own situation.

WorldWideConnected.com: What?s up with The Regime? What can we expect from ya?ll in the future?

The Regime album ?Regime Life? is being worked on as we speak. Some of the main cats in the Regime, im not saying who including myself, had some contractual issues, etc. and it was only right that we stood fast as a team until that was resolved. That?s why you haven?t heard a Regime album yet. But you will real soon.


WorldWideConnected.com: WORD ASSOCIATION:

Fatdog ? Regime Gang, DC underworld boss

Yukmouth ? The nucleus of the dragon gang, west-coast legend

Monsta Ganjah ? Regime General

Yung Skrilla ? I wish him the best of luck

Tha Realest ? Regime Gang

Young Jeezy ? Real trap boy

Kenny Kingpin ? Regime general

The Outlawz ? fuck rap. Family first.

WorldWideConnected.com:  Yourself, Gonzoe ? Regime General, Outlaw representative, Dragon Gang or shoot ya self!!!

WorldWideConnected.com: Anything else you wanna say before we wrap this up? 

RIP to Virus, King Lou, Ava Shaw, Mac Dre, Tupac, and any other fallen soldiers that I forgot, I cant mention them all, and one last thing, I don?t give a fuck what ur name is, and what you claim, or where you from, if I ain?t eatin with you, then fuck y?all. Period.

 

 

Copyright © by World Wide Connected HipHop and RnB All Rights Reserved.

Published on: 2007-01-20 (1824 reads)

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Bernie Mac Dies At Age 50

LIL MACC LOCO Posted by LIL MACC LOCO at 08:59 AM on August 09, 2008 Comments comments (0)

Bernie Mac dies at 50

Comedian Bernie Mac died this morning in a Chicago hospital

By Kelley L. Carter and Glenn Jeffers | Tribune reporters 9:10 AM CDT, August 9, 2008
Bernie Mac

Comedian and actor Bernie Mac (Bob Fila, Chicago Tribune / December 6, 2000)


Comedian and Chicago native Bernie Mac died early Saturday morning from complications due to pneumonia, his publicist confirmed.

Mac, 50, had been hospitalized for about a week at Northwestern Hospital, according to his spokeswoman. A few years ago, Mac disclosed that he suffered from sarcoidosis, a rare autoimmune disease that causes inflammation in tissue, most often in the lungs.

The comic born Bernard Jeffrey McCullough could cut an imposing figure. He stood 6-foot-3, was built like a fullback and carried himself with a bouncer's reticence. But perhaps the strongest weapon in the Chicago comedian's arsenal was that voice, that amalgam of thought and a delivery that could rise like a tidal wave, outpace a Gatling gun and remained, to his last days, loud and unapologetic.

He wasn't scared, he told us time and again, to tell anyone what he thought, to say what others were afraid to say. That fearlessness wasn't always welcome, considering Mac didn't get his big break until his 30s. But when he did, the comic skyrocketed to success in stand-up, television and the big screen.

Mac shared screen time with some of Hollywood's larger-than-life leading men, co-starring with Brad Pitt, George Clooney and Matt Damon in the "Oceans 11" remake and subsequent sequels.

Most recently, Mac garnered attention for making unsavory comments at a Barack Obama benefit that the presumptive Democratic candidate had to distance himself from.

Growing up on the South Side a hard-core White Sox fan, Mac discovered early on that he wanted to make a go at being a comedian.

Before his 10th birthday, Mac was performing comedy standup, honing his skills on CTA trains and parks before graduating to well-known haunts like the Regal Theater and the Cotton Club. He came to a realization during those first years as a struggling comic: If he could kill in front of a black crowd, he could kill in any crowd.

"Black audiences are hard," he told the New York Times in 2002. "You got to come with a little extra to satisfy them."

He also learned that comedy isn't a lucrative business when you are starting out. During those lean years in the 80s, Mac drove a Wonder Bread delivery truck to pay the bills.

Life changed dramatically for Mac when he was 32. He won the Miller Lite comedy search that year and that performance took him to the standup stage, which ultimately led to regular performances on popular shows like HBO's "Def Comedy Jam."

In a few short years, he was able to put a stamp on this tell-it-like-it-is brand of comedy that audiences had come to know him for. He was a hit on the stage, delivering sordid tales of his early life growing up on Chicago's South Side.

His work hit home to the African American audience -- his aggressive, brash comedy had a down home feel to it, tackling everything from family life to black romantic relationships -- yet Mac was able to cross it over, connecting with a majority entertainment scene.

"When I started in comedy in the clubs in 1977, blacks couldn't do certain clubs -- not because they were segregated. They just didn't want to put the [black comics] out there. In Los Angeles, the clubs would have a black night. People would say, 'Why don't you come by and do something?' I would say, 'I'm a comedian -- don't put a title on me.' Don't limit yourself. How you start is how you finish," he told the Tribune in 2007. "If you let people put tags on you, you'll never be able to remove them. You've got to make people respect you. Respect is bigger than dollars and cents."

Mac got his respect and he gained national attention after his set on HBO's popular late-night series Def Comedy Jam in 1992. Decked out in a pair of jeans with his face illustrated, graffiti-style, on the right pants leg, Mac expounded on one taboo subject after another, from the benefits of snitching to his prowess in the bedroom.

"I ain't scared of you [expletive]!" became his signature tagline.

Many took note of the blue comic's performance, which later led to a bit part in 1992's "Mo' Money," and later an HBO Special, "Midnight Mac."

In 1995, Mac earned a spot in the cult-classic "Friday," and the film helped Mac break out. His portrayal of Pastor Clever was one of the film's highlights, however small it was. He followed it up with bit roles in other films, including "Booty Call," and "Def Jam's: How to Be a Player."

But he wanted more.

Mac sowed the seeds for his success on a cloudy day in North Carolina while taping the 2000 Spike Lee concert film, "The Original Kings of Comedy." There, on a rain-soaked basketball court, buttressed by co-stars Cedric the Entertainer, D.L. Hughley and Steve Harvey, Mac issued a challenge to Hollywood:

"Do I have a television show? Nah," Mac told the cameras. "Why? 'Cause you scared of me, Scared I'm a say something. You [expletive] right. Think I won't say something?!"

A year later, Mac got his chance. "The Bernie Mac Show" debuted on Fox in November 2001, drawing critical acclaim, numerous awards, including two Emmy nominations for Mac and, most important, high ratings. Its premiere episode drew 11.4 million viewers. The second episode, which immediately followed the first, drew 12.4 million.

For the next four years, Mac spoke to the America public--via a break in the fourth wall a la Dobie Gillis--with all the befuddlement of a 40-something taskmaster father lost in a sea of talk therapy and "timeouts." "Now, America," Mac would often begin before going into a rant about undisciplined children, cuddling parents or, one of his favorite topics, the differences between black and white people.

But in 2005, the show went off the air. Several reasons contributed to cancellation: The show's ratings had dropped, Mac was getting more lucrative offers from the movie studios. Before the 2000 concert film, Mac's biggest credit was a recurring role on "Moesha."

But Mac's health was also a factor. In 2004, he halted production on the show while recovering from exhaustion. A year later, he disclosed that he suffered from sarcoidosis, a rare autoimmune disease that causes inflammation in tissue, most often in the lungs.

In spite of that, his star had risen a great deal. In addition to the highly popular "Oceans" films, he co-starred with Ashton Kutcher in a reverse remake of "Guess Who's Coming to Dinner" in 2005.

Last spring, Mac said that he was hanging up his standup career, and instead would focus more on movies. In 2007, he co-starred in "Ocean's Thirteen," "Pride" and had a role in the blockbuster "Transformers."

Scheduled for release is "Soul Men," with Samuel L. Jackson, which will be released this year, and "Old Dogs," with Robin Williams, which is due next year.

Mac is survived by his wife Rhonda McCullough, their daughter, Je'Niece, a son-in-law and a granddaughter, Jasmine.


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