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The official GANGSTA-wanna-be thread (list your fave AC members)

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  • The official GANGSTA-wanna-be thread (list your fave AC members)

    This is where we list all the AC members who are dying to be anything BUT Armenian.

    A message to all of you:
    Read your profiles.......To be honest, you sound like idiots. You're using slang like it's out of style. Blacks don't even talk like that anymore. Stop trying to jive talk (ex: "you izz", "haterz", "ma crew", "xxxxxez", "hoes", "drinkin becardi", etc...) You don't even know how to spell Bacardi, let alone drink it. Use proper English, people. With an attitude like the ones you're displaying, you won't go far in life. If you're a girl, no one will want to hire you, unless it's for a porno. If you're a boy, you'll end up being a garbage collector, or even homeless. If your parents only knew....

    I know children go through phases, but man, this is becoming an epidemic with our Armenian youth. And it's not only the Armos...all ethnicities are plagued: greeks, italians, etc...

    Hip-hop artists & executive (record label) moguls are laughing to the bank, as our youth suck up everything they throw at them. Every adult (black & white) knows that hip hop is now considered a money-making TOOL that targets & influences young kids. It's no longer about the music! It's all about asses, tits, drinking, fu#@ing, tatoos, slang talk, gangsta-wanna-be's, bad-azz attitudes.

    To all of our armo wanna-be's worldwide: take your attitudes to the depths of South Central (Los Angeles), Queens, Bronx, the ghettos of Mobile (Alabama), Cabrini Green Projects in Chicago, any ghetto in Detroit or Newark, NJ..............and see what happens. You'll pee on yourselves like you were 3 years old.....And, go ahead, try to talk & act like you do!!! Trust me, you will not make it out.



    My present pick:

    Member: SexayChicka

    She likes to refer to herself as the GhettoQueen..

    whatever!?!?

  • #2
    Originally posted by djsinister



    I know children go through phases, but man, this is becoming an epidemic with our Armenian youth. And it's not only the Armos...all ethnicities are plagued: greeks, italians, etc...
    I hear you. Its dissapointing that as Armenians some of us leave our roots to try and become something we are not and never will be. Maybe it is a phases with these kids but its kinda annoying and pathetic.

    By the way I dont have a favorite AC member because I dont read and dont want to read their profiles. Usually I dont understand a word, but maybe thats just me.
    You can't hold a man down without staying down with him.

    Comment


    • #3
      Yo yo yo cuz. Why you all up in my grill like a playa hata son? Don u know I gotz de ill beats ? One life to live homie on the real.

      Comment


      • #4
        Originally posted by XxgoeyxX
        I hear you. Its dissapointing that as Armenians some of us leave our roots to try and become something we are not and never will be. Maybe it is a phases with these kids but its kinda annoying and pathetic.

        By the way I dont have a favorite AC member because I dont read and dont want to read their profiles. Usually I dont understand a word, but maybe thats just me.
        I come from a rap background. I listened to rap from about 13 to 22 years old (religiously), and I still do today at 31 years old, although WAY less. I still embody hip-hop culture in my veins. However, I listen to PROPER rap artists that talk about politics, religion, love (not sex)& self-actualization, amongst other mature topics!!!!

        Basically, music with a purpose...

        In any case, I am nevertheless able to decipher what some of these profiles have to say(as hard as it may seem). I happen to land on these profiles by pure chance. I don't spend my day looking for such rubbish. But when I do land on them, I do read them for sheer amusement and fascination as to how lost our youth SEEM.

        I use the term "SEEM" (instead of ARE) with caution, because I obviously don't know these people in person. In their defense, perhaps they are geniuses and are simply putting on an act for the AC website, although I highly doubt that.

        All I know is that when I used to listen to this music at such an inflential age, yes it did influence the way I talked, walked and dressed, but NEVER like what i see today. Never to this degree. Back then, we had respect! We grew up in a stage of rap music that was highly political, hence we perpetuated that. We wouldn't boast, and talk out loud and degrade women. We were silent, respectful, yet we were hard as steel (in our attitudes, and mind-sets).

        And back then (1985-1990), most ethnics still hadn't discovered rap and hip-hop culture. I had NEVER met another greek, italian or Armenian that remotely like rap. I was a lone armo, amongst a flurry of Haitians, Jamaicans, and Afro-canadians. I even used to rap for about 9 years. Once, i remember, I was performing at a rap fest (about 20 artists), and i was the only white artist to perform. Let alone, there was only one other white person in the crowd, and she was some dude's girlfriend. There was atleast 400 people in attendance. I got on stage with italian dress shoes, and nice dress pants and shirt (I have no earrings, no tatoos, no gold,...). I proceeded to blow the crowd away with my lyrics and delivery. i rapped non-stop for 5 minutes (no choruses, nothing....) Non-stop rapping for 300 seconds. Of course it helped that the main performer of that night got on stage pre-maturely to introduce me...

        anyway, i'm veering off topic here...

        Comment


        • #5
          Originally posted by patlajan
          Yo yo yo cuz. Why you all up in my grill like a playa hata son? Don u know I gotz de ill beats ? One life to live homie on the real.
          On the fo rilla my wigga!
          LOL

          Comment


          • #6
            Originally posted by djsinister
            I come from a rap background. I listened to rap from about 13 to 22 years old (religiously), and I still do today at 31 years old, although WAY less. I still embody hip-hop culture in my veins. However, I listen to PROPER rap artists that talk about politics, religion, love (not sex)& self-actualization, amongst other mature topics!!!!

            Basically, music with a purpose...

            In any case, I am nevertheless able to decipher what some of these profiles have to say(as hard as it may seem). I happen to land on these profiles by pure chance. I don't spend my day looking for such rubbish. But when I do land on them, I do read them for sheer amusement and fascination as to how lost our youth SEEM.

            I use the term "SEEM" (instead of ARE) with caution, because I obviously don't know these people in person. In their defense, perhaps they are geniuses and are simply putting on an act for the AC website, although I highly doubt that.

            All I know is that when I used to listen to this music at such an inflential age, yes it did influence the way I talked, walked and dressed, but NEVER like what i see today. Never to this degree. Back then, we had respect! We grew up in a stage of rap music that was highly political, hence we perpetuated that. We wouldn't boast, and talk out loud and degrade women. We were silent, respectful, yet we were hard as steel (in our attitudes, and mind-sets).

            And back then (1985-1990), most ethnics still hadn't discovered rap and hip-hop culture. I had NEVER met another greek, italian or Armenian that remotely like rap. I was a lone armo, amongst a flurry of Haitians, Jamaicans, and Afro-canadians. I even used to rap for about 9 years. Once, i remember, I was performing at a rap fest (about 20 artists), and i was the only white artist to perform. Let alone, there was only one other white person in the crowd, and she was some dude's girlfriend. There was atleast 400 people in attendance. I got on stage with italian dress shoes, and nice dress pants and shirt (I have no earrings, no tatoos, no gold,...). I proceeded to blow the crowd away with my lyrics and delivery. i rapped non-stop for 5 minutes (no choruses, nothing....) Non-stop rapping for 300 seconds. Of course it helped that the main performer of that night got on stage pre-maturely to introduce me...

            anyway, i'm veering off topic here...

            I understand what you mean. I have nothing against people who listen to rap music or whatever type of music at all. My brother listens to rap. Not all the time but he likes it. Sometimes I listen to it becaue he just has to have it in the car. But what I meant is why are these kids tring be something they are not? Who cares what rap artists you like doesnt mean you have to become like them. They are Armenian not Black, not hispanic nor Asian nor anything else for that matter.

            Oh and by the way thats very interesting the stuff that you have done. Now from what I have read it seems you are not one of those Armenian guys that made a horrible rap album. But I dont know much about Hip Hop/Rap so I wouldnt know what is good and what is not.
            You can't hold a man down without staying down with him.

            Comment


            • #7
              Originally posted by djsinister
              My present pick:

              Member: SexayChicka

              She likes to refer to herself as the GhettoQueen..

              whatever!?!?
              YO! Lets keep it on the downlow, aite?



              Welcome to the forum, djsinister.
              I see...

              Comment


              • #8
                Originally posted by SagGal
                YO! Lets keep it on the downlow, aite?



                Welcome to the forum, djsinister.
                Why you playa hatin? U noe he be dropin knowledge on yall.

                Comment


                • #9
                  Interesting........very interesting.

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Originally posted by patlajan
                    Why you playa hatin? U noe he be dropin knowledge on yall.
                    I ain't hatin, I'm bein' real.

                    It was a little funny for me that you said, "knowledge." haha.
                    OK, that was mean. My bad.
                    I see...

                    Comment

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