Young Jeezy almost shot his INTERN for leaking 'TM 101'?!
Options
CuddlyMuppet
Members Posts: 12
Jizzle went after an intern with an AK47 for leaking TM 101 according to his new movie with Sam Jackson. WTF that dude is crazy
Source: http://blogs.villagevoice.com/music/2011/11/young_jeezy_a_hustlerz_ambition_review.php
Source: http://blogs.villagevoice.com/music/2011/11/young_jeezy_a_hustlerz_ambition_review.php
Comments
-
cool story....didnt click lank
-
but tm 101 was basically a mixtape rereleased as an anlbum
-
bankrupt baller wrote: »cool story....didnt click lank
............. -
movies by rappers are usually 100% accurate
-
The user and all related content has been deleted.
-
Key word ``ALMOST`` and if you wanted to mirk and intern you didnt need an AK.Dude tried to scare the mu´? .
-
Perhaps Young Jeezy's biggest weakness as an artist is the information that's out there about him, or the lack thereof. Four albums and a plethora of mixtapes deep and even ardent fans like myself admittedly know very little about the man behind those guttural trap-rap bangers and deliciously elongated ad-libs, save for a smattering of his legal run-ins and imbroglios with fellow rappers—and, of course, his snowman emblem.
Enter A Hustlerz Ambition: The Documentary, the new biopic narrated by actor Samuel L. Jackson that chronologically recounts how the man born Jay Jenkins evolved into Young Jeezy and available as part of the deluxe edition of Jeezy's forthcoming Thug Motivation 103: Hustlerz Ambition. The roughly shot film combines interviews with Jeezy (oft-taped Swisher Sweet in hand) and his family and colleagues (Jay-Z, Diddy) with childhood photos and concert footage.
This isn't Martin Scorsese's take on the Rolling Stones, nor is it Amadeus. Nonetheless, it's an entertaining retrospective. Samuel L. Jackson's booming baritone adds weight (and, sometimes, inadvertent comedy) to every word recounting Jeezy's trip out of the small-town South, where an absentee father coupled with an addicted and violent mother turned the 11-year-old on to slinging drugs. The rapper candidly talks about the day he saw his own mother strung out in a ? house, where he watched in horror as his friend sold her several grams. This mindfuck couldn't detract the young trapper, though; he continued hustling unabated well into adulthood, finally stopping only when he and manager Kinky B found music.
The doc is peppered with these rare, sometimes wrenching moments. Jeezy is soft-spoken but complex. The same man who is at once sensitive as he talks about his beloved grandmother or his struggles with Bell's palsy is also a hardened gangster who once brandished an AK-47 at an intern who had leaked tracks from his first album. Walking the line between the street and selling out is at the crux of his inner demons, and whether Jeezy will choose to denounce them for greater career gain (not to mention his own physical safety) is ultimately left unanswered. In the end, the rapper is unsure of his future but trusting of his instincts; as long as he does it "the Jeezy way," as he calls it, he'll find success.
SMH at Sam Jackson for narrating a doc on Young Jeezy, got damn it get back to doing big ? again, how about SNAKES ON A PLANE 2? -
jeezy dont bust his guns
-
deliciously elongated ad-libs,
Ew...Who describes ad-libs that way?
-
I'd smash the ? outta Kirstie Alley.
-
birdcallaveli wrote: »jeezy dont bust his guns
He really doesnt though lol. -
Idi Amin Dada wrote: »I'd smash the ? outta Kirstie Alley.
Agreed. She is thick as hell.