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Showing posts with label AllHipHop. Show all posts
Showing posts with label AllHipHop. Show all posts

July 12, 2011

The Next 48 Hours With Prodigy of Mobb Deep



AllHipHop and Jumpoff TV's docu-series is back for Season 3. This time we are following Prodigy during the release of his book "My Infamous Life." In part 1, watch as Prodigy travels from Power 105 radio studio to Brooklyn with Fuse host Toure and see what it takes for a rapper to release a book! "We start season 3 of the Next 48 Hours Series with Prodigy. I don't know anyone that doesn't know Mobb Deep and their importance in Hip-Hop and Prodigy put a lot of that history in his book, "My Infamous Life" and we caught the exclusive behind the scenes of his grind of his book release. This one is special for me because he's a legend."
- Steve Raze AllHipHop.com

June 28, 2011

Dramatic Story of Lorenzo "Phat Kat" Nichols Heading To Theaters

In photo: Phat Kat & Pappy
The story of legendary Queens, New York drug kingpin Lorenzo “Fat Kat" Nichols is being shopped, raising funds and securing distribution via Sophie Lily Weinstein's film company, Synergy Media Productions. Weinstein, who is the CEO and founder of Synergy Media Productions, has acquired the script from screenwriter Curtis Scoon, an associate of Nichols', who also served as co-producer of an “American Gangster” episode about the infamous Queens drug dealer. “Cat's impact has had a long reaching ripple effect,” Sophie Lily Weinstein told AllHipHop.com. “There isn't a person in this country who wasn't impacted by the crack era and the laws put in place, either directly or indirectly through its influence in pop culture/Hip-Hop. The script will focus on Nichols' early childhood in Queens, his association with Hip-Hop culture and his reign as a drug dealer, which helped usher in the infamous Rockefeller Drug Laws. Nichols was eventually sentenced to a total of 40 years in prison for murders, racketeering, and drug-related charges. “It is my hope this project does for the black gangster what 'Goodfellas' did for the mob,” screenwriter Curtis Scoon told AllHipHop.com. “Strip away the glamorous veneer, to reveal the raw brutality of the urban underworld."


For the full story or to comment log on: http://www.allhiphop.com
 
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