WORD ON THE STREETS

Magazine Issues for the Music Magazine:
SECTION 1
April Issue 04
May Issue 04
June Issue 04
July Issue04
August Issue 04
Sept Issue 04
The VMA's 04
October Edition04
November Issue04
December Issue 04
January Issue 05
February Issue 05
March 05 Issue
May 05 Issue
June 05 Issue
July 05 Issue
August 05 Issue
Sept 2005 Issue
October 05 Issue
November 05 Issue
December 05 Issue
January 06 Issue
March 06 Issue
April 06 Issue
May 06 issue
June 06 Issue
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May 07 Issue
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August 07 Issue
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October 07 Issue
November 07 Issue

December 07 Issue
January 08 Issue
July 06 Issue
August 06 Issue
September 06 Issue
October 06 Issue
November 06 Issue
December 06 Issue
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February 07 Issue
March 07 Issue
April 07 Issue
May 07 Issue
June 07 Issue
July 07 Issue
August 07 Issue
September 07 Issue
October 07 Issue
November 07 Issue

December 07 Issue
January 08 Issue

SECTION 2

May Deaths -Muddy Waters
May BirthdaysThe Duke Ellington, DJ Casey K
What Happened this month in music history?

SECTION 3

Viewpoint-The upcoming Rap Coalition
The Hottest Music, in May is?  The music countdown
The Word on the Streets, Is?The cops and Hot 97

SECTION 4

Current Events in Music..

The Circle- Learn about the Music business - come to meeting near you.

Fleet week announcement


 

Cops and rappers

 

NYPD camera on Hot 97 studios

BY ALISON GENDAR and TONY SCLAFANI /

DAILY NEWS POLICE BUREAU

 

The NYPD is going to start filming real-life gangsta rap videos - by putting a surveillance camera outside violence-plagued radio station Hot 97, the Daily News has learned. The decision was sparked by the wounding of a rapper last week in front of the hip-hop station's SoHo studios - the latest in a string of high-profile shooting incidents linked to Hot 97. "We'll keep it in place until Hot 97 is evicted or cleans up its act," a police source told the News, adding that the camera will go up this week. The camera, emblazoned with the NYPD logo, will be among the first in a planned wave of high-tech video recorders set to go up around the city. But while most of the cameras are earmarked for high-crime areas and potential terror targets, this one will be specifically aimed at stemming rap-related gunplay in a generally safe, well-heeled neighborhood.

 

The latest violence erupted Wednesday night when rapper Jamal (Gravy) Woolard, 30, was shot in the butt outside Hot 97's Hudson St. studios by a hanger-on miffed the performer wouldn't let him sit in on a radio interview, cops said. Woolard, who went through with the interview after being wounded, was treated at St. Vincent's Hospital Manhattan and released. He has not cooperated with detectives. Nearby surveillance cameras didn't capture the shooting, but recorded people running from the gunfire, sources said. Since then, extra cops have been stationed outside the studio, including a marked patrol car at night.

 

The camera, which will point directly at 395 Hudson St., the building that houses Hot 97, is part of a $9 million plan to install 500 video recorders throughout the city. The move was announced last month by Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly, who is also seeking federal money to install a video surveillance system around the Financial District modeled after London's "Ring of Steel."  So far, two wireless video recorders have been installed at high-crime areas in Brooklyn, sources said. The camera set for Hot 97 would be the first to go up in Manhattan, the sources said. Some of the radio station's neighbors said they were surprised the camera would be needed in a trendy area with multimillion-dollar apartments and relatively low crime. "This is easy to fix. Get Hot 97 out of here or enforce the loitering laws," said Leslie Williams, 49, a freelance television director. "It's very safe. I don't get why they would put up this camera," said contractor Stephen Estrin, 35. "But it couldn't hurt."

 

Like those in Brooklyn, the Hot 97 cameras will be on 24 hours, seven days a week, sources said. The cameras have zoom lenses and the capacity to be monitored in real time by local precincts - giving cops an edge in nabbing crooks, sources said. The New York City District Council of Carpenters, which owns the building that houses Hot 97 studios, vowed to boot the station after the recent gunfire and has gotten support from several of its tenants. A spokesman for the union's attorney Brian O'Dwyer said yesterday that "lawyers will be meeting with their clients [today] and examining all their options." A spokesman for Hot 97 was not immediately reachable for comment.

 

Timeline of trouble

History of hotheaded violence around Hot 97's Hudson St. studios:

 

·  April 26, 2006

Rapper Jamal (Gravy) Woolard is shot in the butt outside the building — allegedly by a hanger-on who was upset the performer refused to let him sit in on an interview inside the studios. Despite his wound, Woolard did the interview.

·  Feb. 28, 2005

A beef between superstar 50 Cent and turncoat protege The Game erupts in gunfire outside Hot 97, wounding a 20-year-old rapper in The Game's posse.

·  Sept. 19, 2002

Hot 97 deejay Funkmaster Flex allegedly pummeled and choked rival deejay Big Steph Lova of WWPR Power 105 FM outside Hot 97. He eventually pleaded guilty to harassment.

·  Feb. 25, 2001

A showdown outside Hot 97 between the crews of Lil' Kim and Capone-N-Noreaga ends with a 22-shot barrage that left a 21-year-old Capone-N-Noreaga crew member wounded. Lil' Kim is now serving a year in jail for lying to a grand jury about the shooting. 

 

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the smack Festival of 2005
Oh this went over well


Don Omar
at a press conference


Muddy Waters

Muddy Waters in New York City in 1980

Lil Kim

Has had her own problems and was jailed by actions near Hot 97