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New York Hip Hop Radio Wars
From 1861 to 1865 America was engaged in a Civil War between the North and the South. In the presidential election of 1860 Abraham Lincoln campaigned against the expansion of slavery beyond current slave states. In response southern slave states seceded from the United States and formed the Confederacy. The remaining 25 states supported Lincoln and formed the Union. The confederacy, led by General Robert E. Lee, and the Union, led by Ulysses S. Grant, fought for about 4 years before the Confederacy surrendered and slavery was abolished by President Lincoln in the United States.
As we hop in our Delorean and fast-forward to 2012, New York hip-hop radio is engaged in its own Civil War. On one side is Hot 97 FM and on the other is Power 105 FM. The fight started about two weeks ago when Power 105’s Morning Show commented on the controversy involving Nicki Minaj at Hot 97’s Summer Jam concert. DJ Envy, Angela Yee & Charlemagne of Power’s morning show declared Hot 97 DJ Funkmaster Flex their “Donkey of the Day” for reacting to Minaj’s absence at Summer Jam.The next day Flex did what Flex does. He hit the airwaves at 7 PM and unleashed one of his famous rants that any normal person would need a cough drop to complete. Flex’s retaliation to Power’s morning show was long, loud and lasted for about a week while Power took shots at Hot 97’s Peter Rosenberg and his morning show mates.
The war between Power 105 and Hot 97 is not a fight that will determine the fate of a young burgeoning country, but instead a fight between an old bitter neighbor that hates the loud rock and roll his next-door neighbor blasts from his bedroom. Hot 97 has run New York hip hop radio since the late 80s and did not have an ounce of competition until Power was born in 2002.
It seems as if the tension between the two stations began immediately. Hot 97 employees who pursued opportunities were instantly alienated and seen as the enemy. In any New York business or venue competition trumps everything else. The genuine feeling of pride for your peer’s success does not exist. Disdain and envy usually follow the promotion or departure of someone you once worked closely with. The ironic thing about this occurring between two New York hip-hop stations is that New York is the birthplace of a genre that has progressed rapidly since the Sugar Hill Gang first performed Rappers Delight. And while hip hop has its roots in trying to one up your opponent in the most clever way possible, these are DJs. Disk jockeys and radio talk show hosts are beefing over… I will let you know when I figure it out.
Like the Civil War, each side of this radio war is fighting for themselves and not the greater good. They each share the blame equally and should both just take a step back and do what they do best. Keep New York City dancing and rapping along to their favorite hits, instead of arguing back and forth like Basketball Wives.
25 Free Things To Do In NYC This Summer | Complex
New York is expensive. Movies are great! Music is fun! Concerts? Even better! Museums? Good from time to time. But all of these things cost money. Oftentimes, a lot of money. But summer is that special time when things that should cost money stop costing money.
Here are 25 Free Things to Do in NYC This Summer. Movies, live music, food festivals—all the dreams money can buy, but for the next three months, won’t have to…
Check them out here: 25 Free Things To Do In NYC This Summer | Complex.
Bosh Will Play In Game 3
Bosh returns home to be with expectant wife
Heat forward Chris Bosh may miss Game 3 of Miami’s Eastern Conference first-round series in New York on Thursday after being summoned home because his wife was preparing to give birth.
The Heat were told late Wednesday that Bosh had to return home. Bosh left from New York on a private plane, and his wife, Adrienne, posted a photo on a social media account saying “hurry home.”
The Heat have not ruled Bosh out for Game 3. The team will hold a morning shootaround practice at Madison Square Garden.
(Copyright 2012 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)
Short-handed Knicks brace for Heat in New York
Amare Stoudemire and Iman Shumpert are sidelined. Jeremy Lin isn’t back yet.
The New York Knicks are short-handed, and Carmelo Anthony says he doesn’t know where the offense is going to come from in Game 3 of their first-round series against the Miami Heat.
“Nobody never said it was going to be easy,” Anthony says.
And if the Knicks are hoping to get an advantage from playing at home, well, they can probably forget that. LeBron James and Dwyane Wade thrive at Madison Square Garden and will be extra fired up to try and move the Heat within one victory of the second round.
Stoudemire is out for Game 3 after cutting his left hand while punching the case around a fire extinguisher following Miami’s Game 2 victory Monday. He hopes to return in Game 4.
(Copyright 2012 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)
Pettitte testifies uncomfortably in Clemens case
Andy Pettitte (PEHT’-iht) looked like he wanted to be anywhere but on the witness stand in the perjury trial of former baseball star Roger Clemens.
During breaks in the proceedings Tuesday, Pettitte sometimes rubbed his eyes for several seconds, looking like he couldn’t wait for this to end.
But Pettitte returns to the stand Wednesday, when Clemens’ lawyers will continue to try to sow doubts about the testimony Pettitte provided for prosecutors when he said Clemens had mentioned to him that he had taken human growth hormone.
Clemens, who told Congress in 2008 that his friend and former teammate “misremembers” the conversation, is accused of lying to Congress when he said he never took HGH or steroids.
Pettitte and Clemens pitched together for the New York Yankees and Houston Astros.
(Copyright 2012 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)
Yankees OF Swisher expected to miss a week
Yankees outfielder Nick Swisher is expected to miss a week because of a strained left hamstring.
New York manager Joe Girardi gave the update on Swisher before Monday night’s game against Baltimore. Girardi said the team hoped Swisher would be ready to play a week from Tuesday at home against Tampa Bay, and did not need to put him on the disabled list.
Swisher says he felt a “little pinch” in his hamstring when he took his first swing Sunday against Detroit. He was pulled in the third inning for a pinch runner.
Swisher says an MRI exam did not show any extensive damage. He says he had a similar injury in 2007 that sidelined him for nine or 10 days. He is hitting .284 with six home runs and 23 RBIs.
(Copyright 2012 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)
Knicks will evaluate Lin further later this week
Jeremy Lin took part in another practice with the New York Knicks on Monday, and the team says it hopes to know more later this week about when the guard might be able to return to the lineup.
Lin participated in the team’s gameday shootaround before its playoff matchup with the Heat, the fourth straight day that Lin did some on-court work in Miami.
The guard who was the biggest story in the NBA after putting up big numbers in February had surgery to repair torn cartilage in his left knee four weeks ago.
Knicks coach Mike Woodson says the team will “have a better feel” about Lin’s recovery when it returns to New York for practices on Tuesday and Wednesday. Game 3 of the Knicks-Heat series is Thursday night.
(Copyright 2012 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)
Stoudemire hurt postgame, Heat beat NY, 104-94
Knicks forward Amare Stoudemire is apologizing “to the fans and my team” for an incident after New York’s 104-94 loss to Miami in Game 2 of the Eastern Conference first-round series on Monday night that left him with a cut on his left hand.
At least one of Stoudemire’s teammates says the cut is bad enough to keep him out of at least Game 3 of the series in New York on Thursday night.
Stoudemire posted a message on Twitter saying he is “so mad at myself” and that he is “not proud of my actions.”
The Knicks did not say exactly what happened, though a fire-extinguisher case near the locker room was damaged and drops of blood stained the carpet.
(Copyright 2012 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)






