Love Rap Songs For Him
|
|
Love Rap $4.99 We believe it is important to preserve what makes music special, and make it easy to craft listening experiences. At MOG, browse millions songs and play them instantly. Or just turn on radio where you can stop and replay songs. You can also create playlists for any occasion, and even download songs to your mobile. We are dedicated to employing the cleanest but most powerful technology so you can enjoy music as much as ever. |
|
|
Super Primal for Him $99.95 Super Primal for Him (Not to be confused with Primal Instinct) This extraordinary, unscented liquid contains highly concentrated human sex pheromones. Use it alone or add it to your own cologne. Only your imagination limits its use, but the response you get from the women in your life will be beyond imagination! |
|
|
To Know Him Is To Love Him $4.99 We believe it is important to preserve what makes music special, and make it easy to craft listening experiences. At MOG, browse millions songs and play them instantly. Or just turn on radio where you can stop and replay songs. You can also create playlists for any occasion, and even download songs to your mobile. We are dedicated to employing the cleanest but most powerful technology so you can enjoy music as much as ever. |
|
|
The Miseducation Of Lauryn Hill $6.60 Grammy-winner Lauryn Hill releases her solo debut album, a follow-up to the Fugees’s The Score.Genre: Soul/R&BMedia Format: Compact DiskRating: Release Date: 25-AUG-1998… |
|
|
20/20 $7.49 CD 20/20… |
|
|
Timeless $11.98 All products are BRAND NEW and factory sealed. Fast shipping and 100% Satisfaction Guaranteed…. |
|
|
NBA Ballers $0.01 … |
For Progressive-Minded Radio Fans Who Love Variety In The Music And Local Characters On The Dial, Downstate Illinois Can Be Frustrating.
For progressive-minded radio fans who love variety in the music and local personalities on the dial, downstate Illinois can be exasperating.
So increasingly, listeners seeking voices and tunes they can not find in west-central Illinois find them online made less complicated with smartphone technology. Folks who are bored with Limbaugh or who miss high-powered stations of years past (Little Rock's KAAY-AM 1090 and its late-nite "Beaker Street" or WHAM-AM 1180 and Harry Abraham's even-later "Best of All Possible Worlds" were classics in the '70s) can find music or opinion they enjoy.
Alas, they then give up local stories and personalities.
Commercial radio today has too few area folk and small stories. Most stations depend on syndicated shows, and even on news-talk stations, 86 % of stories and public-affairs programming isn't local, according to Steven Waldman's Fed Communications Commission (FCC) report, "The Information Requirements of Communities."
At its best, radio had been a local medium, mixing immediacy with neighborliness, local color and public seriousness. News was a staple of radio since 1930, when the NBC-Blue network first started displaying Lowell Thomas' 15-minute weekday newscasts. Radio stories grew in audience and influence thru World War II, after which local news increased, filling the void where war stories had been, and the FCC inspired it.
In 1981 , however , the FCC deregulated its duty that 8 percent of AM station programming and six % of FM programming be news and public-affairs programming (debates, documentaries and dialogues of public interest). The FCC concluded, "We are convinced that absent these guidelines, significant amounts of non-entertainment programming of a range of types will continue on radio."
It didn't.
Public-interest radio content dropped.
Instead , stations cut shows, trimmed staff and lost such ties to listeners and still made cash off the public's airwaves. Radio companies now make higher profits than the average SP 5 hundred firm, the FCC says, and even in the previous couple of years and the Great Recession, radio station profits have stayed above twenty %, according to Waldman.
In recent times, the news / talk format grew dramatically, whether right-wing blowhards, sports or all-talk. Except for radio journalism, non-commercial public radio is the industry's stories core, with 1,400 reporters, editors and producers in twenty-one domestic and 17 foreign bureaus more than any broadcast Television network, Waldman says.
Former president of CBS Radio's Station Group, Mel Karmazin now Chairman of Sirius XM claimed, "A lot of these bigger companies deserted what had made these list of radio stations terrifically successful, which was local, local, local."
Deregulation let commercial radio ignore past duties to serve the towns they were approved to, plus cut reports staffs or eliminate local stories and voices altogether.
Meanwhile, satellite radio started in 1997 when American Mobile Radio Concern (the predecessor of XM Radio) and Satellite CD Radio (the predecessor of Sirius Radio) won bids to operate a digital audio radio service on the condition they not use them for locally originated programming or to seek local ad income (reaffirmed in 2008 when Sirius and XM combined).
Arbiton says more than 35,000,000 folk now hear Sirius XM in cars.
Today, besides using PCs, listeners can use smartphones' online browsers to listen live to any station they want, too including in their autos.
17 percent of Northern Americans report listening to online radio in 2010, a serious change in listening habits. 40 % listened to AM or FM stations streaming online, and fifty five p.c listened to online-only radio (like Pandora or Slacker Radio). And the app for Pandora a sort of D-I-Y format is one of the top 5 for all smartphone platforms.
Radio critic Alan Hoffman described online radio's appeal : "Internet radio explodes the boundaries of radio broadcasting, opening up a universe of stations offering much more diversity. When you start listening to Web radio, the boundaries of AM and FM a controlled number of stations, within a limited geographic area seem like a throwback."
Local radio could protect its franchises, continue to profit, and serve its communities with local reports and local personalities. But they will lose listeners if the music is too dreary or safe, or if the voices are all poisonous, Sean Hannity types. Audiences will abandon local radio unless stations offer added price and new text : local personalities and local programming listeners cannot get somewhere else as reported tagza.com.
|
|
Fight the Power $19 Like the hard-hitting sounds of a Public Enemy jam, the words of the band's lead singer, Chuck D, excite the mind and senses. In his first book, Chuck D pours out commentary that takes on Hollywood, race, the music industry, the murders of Tupac and the Notorious B.I.G., drugs, and the three E's--education, economics and enforcement. Likening the challenge to scaling a slick mountain on roller skates, Chuck D lets no one off the hook, putting celebrities and street kids alike on notice that the future is up for grabs...and the only way to be part of it, to be players not victims, is to work together. As an insider's view on Hip-Hop culture slides into intimate revelations about his own life, as lyrics from his songs bump shoulders with top ten lists like The Greatest Rappers of All Time, Chuck D has his say with verve and electrifying energy, with anger, love and truth. A book that brings light into darkness, Fight the Power speaks for a generation. It is a powerful and prophetic message that America, both Black and White, urgently needs to hear. Nightline with Chuck as the featured guest. His rejection of celebrity and his constant community activism have made him a hero. For the past five years he's been touring colleges and universities, delivering three hour lectures on everything from the music industry's corruption of young talent, the history of black music from Blues to Rap, his own controversial lyrics, problems in the black community, self-empowerment, contemporary culture and current political leaders to Public Enemy's rise to international stardom. All while maintaining his solo and Public Enemy's recording careers. Fight the Power examines a multitudeof complex social, racial and artistic issues. In his unmistakable voice, Chuck discusses the role of heroes and role models in the black community, Hollywood's negative images of blacks, the effect of gangsta rap, its images on the country's youth and the war between east and west coas |
|
|
God Inspired Poetry $16.75 I have always dreamed of being a writer. I have written a book of poetry and some fictional romance stories. I also wrote one that is partially sci-fi. I have another that is totally sci-fi started. I enjoy writing as a hobby and started writing after my father died. My first poem was about him and his death. I have written articles for my college yearbook and also an article for our magazine, Image. I also wrote a weekly news column for the Town of Stockbridge in the Oneida Daily Dispatch. I have also written a couple of songs and love the idea of possibly having them sung by country singers. In college I took many courses I felt would help me with my writing and I majored in journalism. I graduated from SUNY Morrisville in 1994. I live in a small country town and love it. Hobbies I enjoy other than writing are horseback riding, collecting teddy bears, dolls, angels, bells and Elvis memorabilia. I am sixty-four years old, disabled and married for forty-five years. I am a mother, grandmother and great-grandmother. I like almost all music, except for opera, heavy metal, hard rock and rap. |