Saturday, November 24, 2007

The Ill Destroyers




Atmos has just sold out of the Nike Dunk High Destroyers [which I’m upset about], but The Evil Collector must talk about this must buy!

This reddish-brown colorway with the felt as the main attraction, really blew some minds coming from Japan. The Dunk High Destroyer also has the Varsity jacket [Subzero Down Jacket] which refers to the Destroyers theme. Although the jacket takes on a more technical approach, it’s really the shoe that steals the show. I’ve been trying to find a way to get these for a fit, but since the shoe is sold out, The Evil Collector will keep you posted to see if anymore become available.


courtesy- theevilcollector.com

Tuesday, November 20, 2007

KANYE NAMED MAN OF THE YEAR BY GQ!


After a year of both tremendous highs and lows for the Chi Town MC/producer, Kanye West is now gracing the cover of GQ magazine for their Men Of the Year issue.

According to USA Today, the issue will hit newsstands on November 27 and will see Kanye sharing the honor with fellow men of the year Bill Clinton and Daniel Craig, who will also have their own covers. A candid Kanye spoke on several issues including the possibility of him marrying his current fiancé, Alexis Phifer.

"I'm just going to go and get married -- I'm not going to make a big deal out of it," he said. "It's not to prove anything to anyone -- it's for me, for stability in my life, and I'm so happy that I found someone that I really love, that challenges me, that keeps my life interesting, that's just as crazy as I am."

West and Phifer spent the weekend in Paris, where he performed Saturday night as he broke down after introducing his song "Hey Mama," off of his sophomore disc, Late Registration. Ye stood in front of the crowd with his head in hand and was consoled by members of his band before taken backstage. In a show of resilience, the rapper returned to finish his set with the appropriate "Stronger."

Friday, November 16, 2007

Barry Bonds Indicted!


Late on the morning of Dec. 4, 2003, Barry Bonds arrived at the Phillip Burton Federal Building in San Francisco and was ushered into the courthouse by the lead investigator in the BALCO steroids case. Bonds was flanked by his lawyer and a bodyguard while cameramen and photographers scrambled to snag a shot of the San Francisco Giants slugger on a day that had been anticipated for months.

Bonds' appearance before the BALCO grand jury represented the climactic moment of a fall that had witnessed some of the world's greatest athletes marching through the doors at 450 Golden Gate Ave., riding an elevator up to the 17th floor and then disappearing into a grand jury room, where, in many cases, they described their explicit use of an array of illegal performance-enhancing drugs.

But Bonds, just as he did every time he stepped into the batter's box, went into the grand jury room with a game plan, one that had been foreshadowed by his lawyer, Michael Rains, in the buildup to his client's appearance. Six weeks before the testimony, Rains was asked by the New York Daily News what Bonds would say when asked if he had taken steroids. Rains said his client would respond, "Well, I didn't know it at the time."

Through three hours of sometimes meandering testimony, Bonds stuck with that message, providing responses such as, "Not that I know of," or "I don't recall," or dismissing his steroid use by saying that his trainer, Greg Anderson, "rubbed some cream on my arm" but never told Bonds it was illegal. The prosecutors weren't buying, repeatedly pressing Bonds for answers, their voices tinged with sarcasm as they asked how he could have taken drugs without knowing what they were.

At the end of the three hours, prosecutors had pages worth of testimony filled with Bonds' denials. They had showed him Anderson's doping calendars coded with the initials "BB," and informed him about a drug test he had taken in November 2000 that showed he tested positive for testosterone. Bonds never wavered. He said he never used steroids. He never took human growth hormone. Anderson never provided him with performance-enhancers and Bonds was never injected with steroids. Like the other athletes who had testified before him, Bonds had signed a document that said he would give truthful testimony, no matter how damaging, and in return he would be immune from prosecution. After all, he wasn't the target in the investigation, he was only a witness against the men accused of steroid trafficking.

Had Bonds simply admitted to using "the cream" and "the clear," as others like the Yankees' Jason Giambi did, he might have suffered only embarrassment when details of his testimony appeared in the San Francisco Chronicle. But from the first of his denials, government prosecutors were convinced Bonds was lying, and a federal grand jury agreed, returning an indictment Thursday on four counts of perjury and one of obstructing justice.

Until news of the indictment spread, public speculation about the case was limited to the dribs and drabs of information that had emerged. Rains and BALCO founder Victor Conte insisted the U.S. Attorney had no case or he would have brought charges much earlier. With Anderson in prison for refusing to testify against his friend, conventional wisdom held that he must be crucial to the government's case; if the trainer could finish the length of the grand jury's term without spilling, Bonds was safe.

But while Rains, as he has since 2003, railed against the government and proclaimed Bonds' innocence Thursday, the government offered the first glimpse of a case rooted in "a mountain of evidence," as prosecutors once said in court papers.

Conventional wisdom, it turns out, was wrong.

The item that jumped from the 10-page indictment was the revelation of "positive tests for the presence of steroids and other performance-enhancing substances by Bonds and other professional athletes." The positive tests stem from work-ups performed on Bonds' blood and urine samples through BALCO, and if corroborated could be a damaging blow to Bonds' defense. The item that jumped from the 10-page indictment was the revelation of "positive tests for the presence of steroids and other performance-enhancing substances by Bonds and other professional athletes." The positive tests stem from work-ups performed on Bonds' blood and urine samples through BALCO, and if corroborated could be a damaging blow to Bonds' defense.

Already Rains has challenged whether the tests prove anything, but the previously undisclosed evidence was the first glimpse of the material the government has been secretly compiling against Bonds for almost four years.

That process began in early 2005, about a year after Bonds' testimony, as the conspiracy case against BALCO's Conte, Anderson and two other men was winding its way though the system. The government began to focus on bringing a perjury case against Bonds, and prosecutors' first witness was Kimberly Bell, Bonds' former girlfriend, who testified to the grand jury in March 2005 that Bonds had admitted he began using steroids in 1999, the San Francisco Chronicle previously reported.

From that point forward, lead agent Jeff Novitzky of the Internal Revenue Service's Criminal Investigation's division sought further evidence in building a case against Bonds. Anderson was subpoenaed to testify, but he refused and was sent to prison on a contempt charge.

Then-U.S. Attorney Kevin Ryan was overseeing the probe, and by the summer of 2006, prosecutors and other officials were convinced that, even without Anderson's testimony, there was ample evidence to seek an indictment, and that Ryan would push for one.

As it became clear, however, that Ryan might not be ready to pull the trigger, officials with the IRS and the FBI began lobbying the Justice Department in Washington for an indictment, according to the book, "Game of Shadows."

It didn't work.

Even though Rains told Bonds to expect an indictment, Ryan instead decided to empanel a new grand jury, extending the case and dooming Anderson to more than another year in prison. Anderson's attorney, celebrity lawyer Mark Geragos, said Anderson would receive no payment for his silence and would take his prison sentence "like a man." They felt the government had double-crossed the trainer.

The prosecutors initially had tried to get Anderson to cut a deal in which he named names, but he had refused. The government made the deal anyway, and after Anderson pleaded guilty to steroid distribution and spent three months in prison, he thought he was free from having to testify further.

This summer, as the second grand jury's term came to a close, Rains predicted the government would dismiss the grand jury without an indictment. Sources close to the investigation, however, said at the time that Rains was wrong.
Witnesses the public never heard about had provided testimony that prosecutors felt was damning, and the government was already confident in the case. Two attorneys close to the investigation told the New York Daily News at the time that the government had sought and received a six-month extension but planned to postpone grand jury testimony about Bonds until September at the earliest while they pursued other matters. One of those matters was Marion Jones, who tearfully pleaded guilty to obstructing justice in October after years of fervent, unqualified denials.

The sources said the government intended to seek an indictment of Bonds next and were confident the grand jury would return one.

Nearly four years to the day after Bonds entered the grand jury room, he will return to the federal courthouse to be arraigned. Six years after he obliterated the single-season home run record once held by the now-disgraced Mark McGwire, and just three months after he passed Hank Aaron to become the game's all-time home run leader, Bonds' already-teetering legacy has taken a full body shot.

MLB officials told ESPN's investigative unit that they think Bonds' career is over and they won't even bother to suspend him. Rains' predictions, Bonds' protestations and public speculation have become meaningless. If Bonds pleads guilty, he probably will go to prison. If he decides to fight, then his freedom will depend on what the government can prove, and what he and Rains can do to convince a jury and a skeptical world of his innocence.




courtesy :espn.com

Friday, November 9, 2007

JAY-Z'S EMPIRE CONTINUES TO GROW


The Jigga man's empire continues to grow with the recent acquisition of apparel brand Artful Dodger.

The high end clothing company was picked up for an estimated $15 million in cash by Scion, LLC - Hov's joint venture with Iconix Brand Group, Inc.

Formerly owned by Sovereign State, LLC the Artful Dodger brand is primarily sold in UK specialty stores and US boutiques.

As part of the new acquisition Scion will began an exclusive multi-year licensing agreement with Signature Apparel Group for both men's and women's Artful Dodger Sportswear. The agreement also calls for Artful Dodger founder Scott Langton to join Signature Apparel Group in order continue his work as creative director and head designer with the brand.

"Artful Dodger is an incredible brand with a lot of room for growth and Scott Langton is a visionary designer," Jay said via a statement. "They represent what's next and new in fashion and we are glad to have both the brand and Scott as a part of our family. Artful Dodger represents the first of many acquisitions that will begin to shape our joint venture with Iconix."

Scion is also currently considering building the brand beyond sportswear, evaluating licensees in addition to the existing sportswear license in order to include footwear and outerwear to grow Artful Dodger into a lifestyle brand.

"Artful Dodger is the perfect deal to launch Scion as we look for brands that have the potential to become lifestyle brands. The combination of Scott's design talent and the marketing strengths of Jay Z and Iconix will create exciting growth opportunities for the brand including distribution at high-end department stores and expansion into new product categories," Neil Cole, Chairman and CEO, Iconix, said also via statement.

The clothing company was named after the 19th Century character Artful Dodger who led a group of cunning young men in mischief throughout the UK.

The Artful Dodger purchase at Scion is just the latest in a series of power moves by Jay-Z. The Def Jam executive, artist and entrepreneur is currently serving a week-long stint as host of Sirius Satellite Radio's Channel 40 Hip-Hop Nation, which has been named "Jay-Z Nation" in honor of the MC's takeover which began November 5.

He's also slated to tie with Elvis Presley's chart-topping record if American Gangster hits No. 1 on Billboard, as is expected.

The album will be his 10th Billboard chart-topper, according to Nielsen SoundScan's Building Chart, released yesterday (November 7). That will tie him with Elvis for second place among artists with the most No. 1 albums. The Beatles hold the top spot with 19.

Jay-Z's concert on "106 & Park" will be airing on BET tomorrow (November 9) at 6 p.m. EST.


courtesy "sohh.com"

NEW JAY-Z VIDEO "ROC BOYS"