| Sex, Booze, Cameron Diaz, Ashton Kutcher & Vegas, Baby!!!! |
 |
http://www.NGTV.com
Boy's and girls, it's time for another
exclusive and uncensored episode of Up Close
with Carrie Keagan. This time it's Ashton
Kutcher and Rob Corddry from the cast of What
Happens In Vegas, which also stars Cameron
Diaz!!!
Set in Sin City, story revolves around two
people who discover they've gotten married
following a night of debauchery, with one of
them winning a huge jackpot after playing the
other's quarter. Unhappy pair try to
undermine each other and get their hands on
the money -- falling in love along the way.
NO GOOD TV stars Carrie Keagan and Shark
Firestone and showcases over a dozen original
shows featuring raw, real and uncensored
interviews with the biggest stars in the
world from music, movies and TV. It also has
uncensored, uncut, explicit and director's
cut versions of music videos. NO GOOD TV aka
NGTV can be found at NGTV.com. It's the most
fun you'll ever have with your pants on!! Tags : cameron diaz ashtpn kutcher las vegas sex drugs bra panties hot girls animation blooper parody pranks stand-up video blog spoof sketch short film series advertising commercials tv trailer performing arts entertainment news web |
|
Affichage : 2031516
Durée : 448 s |
| Hot for Boobs and Booze |
 |
So, some of you wanted to see what my best
weekend ever was! Here you frickin' go! hehe
Leave me a comment, what was your best
weekend ever?!
Vote for me, i'll love you long time
http://www.tinyurl.com/voteforcharles
(you can vote 5 times a day)
Stalk me too:
http://www.twitter.com/charlestrippy
Thanks to Marina for playing along!
http://www.youtube.com/hotforwords
____________________________
music used with permission:
Mondo Primo - "San Deem Us Ready"
http://www.myspace.com/mondoprimo
Onionz - "Woman of the Sun (Magik Johnson
Remix)"
Andy Caldwell - "Warrior (Claude Von Stroker
Remix)" Tags : my best weekend ever charlestrippy hotforwords sexy the special sauce drunk college movie frat party kegstand shots |
|
Affichage : 385151
Durée : 279 s |
| GUNS, BOOZE & WEED for $1 |
 |
So a quick trip to the dollar store turns up
more than I thought it would..
PLEASE GO TO THIS LINK!
http://www.tinyurl.com/vote4dallas AND VOTE
FOR "DALLAS"!! It is a short film that
ItsBrent is involved in. He is my home boy!
Go now! Ok sorry for yelling.. Tags : shaycarl dollar store booze redwine guns weed |
|
Affichage : 103549
Durée : 133 s |
| Roots of Blues -- Ma Rainey „Booze And Blues" |
 |
„Booze And Blues"
(M. Rainey)
Recorded: New York , October 15 1924
'Ma' Rainey And Her Georgia Band
Ma Rainey (vcl), Howard Scott (cn), Charlie
Green (tb), Don Redman (c), Fletcher
Henderson (p), Kaiser Marshall (d)
Gertrude Malissa Nix Pridgett Rainey, better
known as Ma Rainey (April 26, 1886 --
December 22, 1939), was one of the earliest
known American professional blues singers and
one of the first generation of such singers
to record. She was billed as The Mother of
the Blues. She did much to develop and
popularize the form and was an important
influence on younger blues women, such as
Bessie Smith, and their careers.
Rainey was born in Columbus, Georgia. She
first appeared on stage in Columbus in "A
Bunch of Blackberries" at fourteen. She then
joined a traveling vaudeville troupe, the
Rabbit Foot Minstrels. After hearing a blues
song at a theater in St. Louis, Missouri,
sung by a local girl in 1902, she started
performing in a blues style. She claimed at
that time that she was the one who coined the
name "blues" for the style that she
specialized in.
In the one known interview she did, Rainey
told the following story, In 1902 "a girl
from town... came to the tent one morning and
began to sing about the "man" who left her.
The song was so strange and poignant that it
attracted much attention,and Rainey learned
the song fron the visitor, and used it soon
afterwards in her "act"." Audiences reacted
strongly to the song.
She married fellow vaudeville singer William
"Pa" Rainey in 1904, billing herself from
that point as "Ma" Rainey. The pair toured
with the Rabbit Foot Minstrels as "Rainey &
Rainey, Assassinators of the Blues", singing
a mix of blues and popular songs. In 1912,
she took the young Bessie Smith into the
Rabbit Foot Minstrels, trained her, and
worked with her until Smith left in 1915.
Also known, though less discussed, is the
fact that she was bisexual. She was arrested
in Chicago in 1925 for hosting an 'indecent
party' with a room full of semi-naked women.
Rainey celebrated the lesbian lifestyle in
"Prove It On Me Blues", but hid behind a
cross-dressing man-hating persona that was
quite distinct from her regular public image:
In most of her songs, Ma projected herself as
a passionate and often mistreated lover of
men. In private, her preference was for young
men. The poet Sterling Brown tells of
approaching her as a fan with the
musicologist John Work. She immediately
propositioned them as she was having trouble
with her young musicians. Brown wrote a
moving poem about Ma Rainey and her huge
popularity with Southern audiences.
Ma Rainey was already a veteran performer
with decades of touring in African-American
shows in the U.S. Southern States when she
made her first recordings in 1923. Rainey
signed with Paramount Records and, between
1923 and 1928, she recorded 100 songs,
including the classics "C.C. Rider" (aka "See
See Rider") and "Jelly Bean Blues", the
humorous "Ma Rainey's Black Bottom", and the
deep blues "Bo Weavil Blues". In her career,
Rainey was backed by such noted jazz
musicians as cornet players Louis Armstrong
and Tommy Ladnier, pianists Fletcher
Henderson and Lovie Austin, saxophonist
Coleman Hawkins, and clarinetist Buster
Bailey. Rainey recorded two vocal duets with
Papa Charlie Jackson in 1928, which proved to
be her last recordings; Paramount terminated
her contract soon afterwards, claiming that
her material had gone out of fashion.
Rainey's career dried up in the 1930s--as did
the career of just about every other classic
female blues singers of the previous decade.
But her earnings were enough that she was
able to retire from performing in 1933. Tags : Blues Roots_of_Blues History_of_music |
|
Affichage : 1836
Durée : 199 s |
|
|
|
|
|