Connect with us

Entertainment

Lyrics from Young Thug’s songs are being used as evidence in his gang indictment

Published

on

Lyrics from Young Thug’s songs are being used as evidence in his gang indictment

In response to the 88-page indictment obtained by CNN, lyrics from the rapper’s standard songs — together with “Slime Sh*t,” “Authentic Slime Sh*t,” and “Anyone” — have been used as examples of “overt acts,” a few of which represent racketeering. Prosecutors allege that Younger Thug, actual title Jeffery Williams, based the gang Younger Slime Life in late 2012 and was a key determine in numerous YSL actions. Rapper Gunna, actual title Sergio Giovanni Kitchens, can also be charged within the doc. Williams was arrested at his residence in Atlanta on Monday, police mentioned.

Most notably, prosecutors mentioned that in 2015, Williams rented an Infiniti Q50 sedan from Hertz, which was later used within the homicide of a rival gang member. There are additionally references that paint Williams because the chief of the YSL gang, as two associates mentioned learn how to get hold of his permission to aim to homicide rapper YFN Lucci whereas he was incarcerated.

“I am ready to take them down,” “homicide gang sh*t,” and “I by no means killed anyone however I acquired one thing to do with that physique” are only a few of the handfuls of strains referenced within the indictment.

Lyrics from different standard rappers referencing ties to Younger Slime Life are additionally quoted within the indictment, together with social media posts.

Advertisement

Williams has been booked into the Fulton County jail and charged with conspiracy to violate the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (RICO) and participation in legal avenue gang exercise.

This is not the primary time music lyrics have been utilized by legal prosecutors. In 2019, prosecutors questioned Brooklyn rapper Tekashi 6ix9ine about lyrics for his music “GUMMO,” asking if it included threats to rivals. In 2017, prosecutors tried to make use of Drakeo the Ruler’s “Flex Freestyle” as proof that he conspired to homicide one other rapper.
Not everybody helps permitting prosecutors to make use of lyrics as proof. In “Rap on Trial: Race, Lyrics and Guilt in America” by Erik Nielson and Andrea L. Dennis, rapper Killer Mike argues that rap as an artwork kind is a secure house the place uncooked feelings can and needs to be expressed.

“Left unchecked, it has the potential to silence a technology of artists who’re exercising their First Modification proper to specific themselves,” he wrote. “These are voices we needs to be encouraging, but our legal justice system has constantly seemed for methods to punish them.”

Killer Mike additionally famous that different artists from genres apart from rap are sometimes celebrated for his or her darkish lyrics, whereas rappers are vilified.

Final yr, state senators in New York launched the invoice “Rap Music on Trial,” which might stop artwork — together with music lyrics — from getting used as proof in legal circumstances. Jay-Z, Meek Mill, Large Sean and Kelly Rowland all supported the invoice, as did different musicians.

However Fulton County District Legal professional Fani Willis sees it otherwise.

“I imagine within the First Modification; it is certainly one of our most valuable rights. Nonetheless the First Modification doesn’t defend individuals from prosecutors utilizing (lyrics) as proof whether it is such,” Willis mentioned throughout a press convention Tuesday. “On this case, we put it as overt and predicate acts inside the RICO rely as a result of we imagine that is precisely what it’s.”

Advertisement
Continue Reading
Advertisement
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Movie Reviews

‘Dear Santa’ Review: A Devilishly Fun Jack Black Elevates Paramount+’s Mediocre Holiday Comedy

Published

on

‘Dear Santa’ Review: A Devilishly Fun Jack Black Elevates Paramount+’s Mediocre Holiday Comedy

Christmas-themed movies have become so ubiquitous it’s hard to avoid the feeling that filmmakers have come to think of them as annuities for their retirement accounts. So it’s no wonder that the Farrelly brothers have waded into the territory for the first time, with their new comedy directed by Bobby Farrelly making its debut on Paramount+. And while Dear Santa doesn’t exactly qualify for entry in the filmmakers’ pantheon beside the likes of There’s Something About Mary and Dumb and Dumber, it should fulfill its goal of being trotted out annually for holiday consumption alongside the turkey and the eggnog.

Considering that the words “Santa” and “Satan” contain exactly the same letters, it’s amazing that it’s taken this long for someone to come up with the idea for a movie about an 11-year-old with dyslexia who writes a letter to Santa, only to find it answered by Satan thanks to inadvertent letter placement.

Dear Santa

The Bottom Line

‘Tis the season for mediocre Christmas movies.

Advertisement

Release date: Monday, Nov. 25 (Paramount+)
Cast: Jack Black, Robert Timothy Smith, Keegan Michael-Key, Brianne Howey, Hayes MacArthur, Post Malone, P.J. Byrne, Jaden Carson Baker, Kai Cech
Director: Bobby Farrelly
Screenwriters: Ricky Blitt, Peter Farrelly

Rated PG-13,
1 hour 48 minutes

Jack Black, in his first collaboration with the Farrellys since 2001’s Shallow Hall, plays Satan, who shows up one night in the bedroom of Liam (Robert Timothy Smith, a real find) after the bespectacled tween has written what he thought was a letter to Santa. Satan, sporting horns and a burgundy leather-and-fur outfit and announcing that he’s there “in the naughty flesh,” doesn’t bother at first to inform Liam of the truth but instead offers him three wishes, in the devilish hope of stealing the little boy’s soul.

Liam’s first wish is for the romantic attentions of Emma (Kai Cech), his classmate with whom he’s besotted. Satan instantly grants it and it isn’t long before Liam is escorting Emma to a Post Malone concert, complete with VIP seats and backstage pass. This plot element provides the opportunity for an extended sequence featuring the superstar rapper-singer playing himself, which should help the film appeal to its desired teen demographic.

Advertisement

As with any deal involving Satan, things quickly grow complicated, here in the form of subplots involving Liam’s friend Gibby (Jaden Carson Baker) having to pretend to be a cancer patient and Liam’s concerned parents (Brianne Howey, Hayes MacArthur) having him see a child psychologist. (The shrink is played by the always funny but unfortunately underutilized Keegan-Michael Key.)

It should hardly come as a revelation that Black’s hardworking comedic efforts are the film’s saving grace. Adopting a deep growl that makes him sound like late-period Jack Nicholson, the actor is clearly having a ball with his colorful role, and the fun proves infectious. He makes the many bad jokes bearable and the decent ones even funnier with his typically manic, perfectly timed delivery.

And to be fair, there are a few decent ones in the screenplay co-written by Peter Farrelly and Ricky Blitt (Family Guy, Loudermilk), even if it inevitably includes bathroom humor in the form of Satan casting a gastrointestinal distress spell on Liam’s obnoxious English teacher (P.J. Byrne). “Every time a grown man sharts himself, a demon earns its horns,” a smug Satan informs Liam. There are several funny pop culture references that should please adults while befuddling the target audience, including a reference to One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest and Satan announcing that he’s staying at the “Redrum Motor Lodge.”

“You can probably guess my room number,” he adds.

Culminating in a maudlin ending that seems a bit much even for a film of this type, Dear Santa is the sort of forgettable holiday fare — much like the current theatrical misfire Red One — that will probably nonetheless live on forever on streaming services. And if no less a figure than Charles Dickens could resort to creating a Christmas story for some quick cash (look it up), why shouldn’t the movie studios?  

Advertisement

Full credits

Production: Farrelly Brothers, Kraymation Films
Distributor: Paramount+
Cast: Jack Black, Robert Timothy Smith, Keegan Michael-Key, Brianne Howey, Hayes MacArthur, Post Malone, P.J. Byrne, Jaden Carson Baker, Kai Cech
Director: Bobby Farrelly
Screenwriters: Ricky Blitt, Peter Farrelly
Producers: Peter Farrelly, Bobby Farrelly, Jeremy Kramer
Executive producer: Gretel Twombly
Director of photography: C. Kimes Miles
Production designer: Tim Galvin
Editor: Julie Garces
Composer: Rupert Gregson-Williams
Costume designer: Bao Tranchi
 

Rated PG-13,
1 hour 48 minutes

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Entertainment

Adele tearfully closes last Las Vegas show: 'I don’t know when I next want to perform'

Published

on

Adele tearfully closes last Las Vegas show: 'I don’t know when I next want to perform'

Adele is sending her love to Las Vegas as she finishes out her more than two-year residency at the Colosseum at Caesars Palace.

The “Hello” singer, 36, launched her “Weekends With Adele” residency in November 2022 after a controversial last-minute postponement — which she initially attributed to “delivery delays and COVID” but later said was due to her “artistic needs” not being met — and has since extended the run twice. Closing out her 100th and final show Saturday, she expressed her gratitude for her Vegas gig despite its “rocky” start.”

“I’m so sad this residency is over but I am so glad that it happened,” Adele said in footage posted on YouTube, adding that her initial postponement in 2022 came during “one of the worst years of my life.”

“Had I done that show that I canceled,” she said, she “wouldn’t be standing here tonight.”

Adele went on to thank her fans for traveling to Vegas to see her show, her partner Rich Paul for encouraging her when she felt depleted, and the Colosseum “for giving me that second chance.”

Advertisement

“Weekends With Adele,” the 16-time Grammy winner said, was “just what I needed for this season of my life.” Most importantly, opting for a residency rather than a world tour after the release of her 2021 album “30” has allowed her to spend weekends with her son Angelo and to “keep his life normal.”

“I will miss it terribly, I will miss you terribly. I don’t know when I next want to perform again,” Adele said. But even though the singer doesn’t have any concrete plans to return to the stage, she reassured fans, “Of course I’ll be back, the only thing I’m good at is singing.”

It’s not the first time the singer-songwriter has voiced her intent to take a break from performing. Gearing up to the launch of a 10-show gig in Munich in August, she told German broadcaster ZDF that her “tank is quite empty” and that she doesn’t have plans for new music “at all.”

“I want a big break after all this and I think I want to do other creative things just for a little while,” she said. “You know, I don’t even sing at home at all. How strange is that?”

At a show later that month, she reaffirmed that after her residency, “I will not see you for an incredibly long time.”

Advertisement

“I have spent the last seven years building a new life for myself and I want to live it now,” she said through tears.

Continue Reading

Movie Reviews

Dallas King’s ‘SWAP’ (2024) – Movie Review – PopHorror

Published

on

Dallas King’s ‘SWAP’ (2024) – Movie Review – PopHorror

Swap, written, directed, and starring Dallas King, is a new film that has turned the tables on typical vampire movies. It could easilyhave been a trashy romance novel. Swap is a modern-day 70s exploitation film.

Check out the trailer below, then read on for the review!

Synopsis

New couple, Rad (James Eastwood) and Kyla (Jessica Lelia Green), are invited by Glory (Erin Anne Gray) to celebrate her engagement to Angelo (Dallas King), her mysterious new boyfriend. At Angelo’s secluded house, Rad discovers that Glory and Angelo are swingers looking to swap partners. When Rad tries to persuade Kyla to leave, her curiosity leads to a steamy encounter where she learns that Angelo is a 500-year-old vampire with sinister intentions.

Dallas King, Jessica Lelia Greene, and Erin Anne Gray

I don’t watch many vampire movies but this one kind of stuck with me and left me confused. I couldn’t relate to the story because, in all honesty, it was a little repetitive to me. There are a great moments however. The story is different than your typical vampire fare. The acting is also pretty strong. You can tell everyone put their heart into making this. And there are moments int he film that really made me think.

Sexy vampires isn’t a bad theme, but I’m also very timid. I think the sex overpowered the film, and while the sex story sells to a lot of people, for me, it’s not so much. It’s a love-it-or-hate-it type of movie, although a slight grey area is locked deep away, and I found it. I wanted to see the bright side. I just couldn’t.

Advertisement

I enjoy a good horror movie sex scene that gets you killed by a slasher. With Swap, however, I felt like I was watching a Misty Mundea film. I felt like I needed a shower after because that’s how down and dirty it is.

To Be Fair…

I am a fair guy; I’ll give everything a watch one time. I am not big on modern horror outside of a few franchises. Maybe that was my problem with this, or maybe it was all the sex. Unfortunately, for whatever reason, it lost my attention. This is all just my opinion; as I said, everyone should give it a shot at least once. It may not be my cup of tea, but it will sell to fans who know what they like, and I can commend the hard work everyone put into this film.

James Eastwood and the ladies

In The End

I have no interest in sex horror. To me, this movie had so much potential, but just went in a weird direction. I’ll stay in the gray area for a while because, though the story was interesting enough, it made me feel awkward watching it. But in the end, this movie is going to be fantastic to a lot of people, and that’s perfectly fine.

What promised to be different was run-of-the-mill, in my opinion. It’s not that I wasn’t interested, but there was more sex than story, This is just one opinion, I always let people enjoy things; just because you have an opinion, it isn’t a rally to not watch this movie. See it for yourself.

Advertisement
Continue Reading
Advertisement

Trending