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Instead, the video features many celebrities such as Coolio, Ice-T, Issac Hayes, Warren G, Adina Howard, Salt-N-Pepa, Shock G, B-Real, Treach, Jada Pinkett Smith, Marcus Chong, and Kenya Moore. Taking place in a hotel , the video opens and closes with the concierge (Ice-T) complaining about Coolio (a bellboy ).
Ice-T; from the album Breakin' A-side "Reckless" [1] Released: 1984: Recorded: 1984: Genre: Electro hop, rap, old school hip hop: Length: 3: 30 (original B-side) 6:54 (club mix) Label: Polydor Records UMG/Taxidermi Records (re-release) Songwriter(s) Chris "The Glove" Taylor, David Storrs: Producer(s) Chris "The Glove" Taylor, David Storrs
In the version appearing on the EMI YouTube channel and on N.W.A's official VEVO channel on YouTube, numerous parts are blurred out including logos and faces. Despite this, the complete uncensored video can still be found online. [6] The music video features cameos by Sir Jinx, TK Kirkland, and a then-unknown Warren G.
Something from Nothing: The Art of Rap is a 2012 American documentary film directed and executive produced by Ice-T and co-directed by Andy Baybutt. It focuses on the craft of writing and performing rap verses, and all the interviewees are musicians of the genre and friends of Ice-T. Producer Paul Toogood states on the DVD release that the genesis of the project stemmed from a conversation he ...
Related: The 14 best Jamie Lee Curtis movie and TV roles, ranked Things take a turn for the wonderfully absurd when Fallon decides to send Curtis a video of himself dancing, causing her to pull ...
"Black Ice (Sky High)" is a song by American hip hop group Goodie Mob from their second studio album Still Standing (1998), released as its second single on June 7, 1998. [1] The song features American hip hop duo Outkast and was produced by Mr. DJ .
Stetsasonic is an American hip hop band. Formed in 1981 in Brooklyn, New York City, New York, Stetsasonic was one of the first hip hop acts to perform with a full band and use live instrumentation in their recordings, paving the way for future hip hop bands such as The Roots.
"I'm Your Pusher" is a 1988 single by American rapper Ice-T, from his second album Power. The song's lyrics recommend the use of music and dancing to feel good rather than using drugs: "The dope I'm selling you don't smoke / You feel out in the dance floor on my world tour / I'm selling dope in each and every record store". However, the anti-drug theme was i