POPULARITY
Original Air Date 03/29/2020 In this episode of “Let Us Be Idiots”, I massively re-edited and cut up the Audio originally from Frank Terranova's former podcast, “Terradome”. The audio from “Terradome” was original uploaded on August 1st, 2019. In this episode , Matteo Pascale, Frank Terranova and Kevin Janaway are giving our take on Quentin Tarantino's 10th film, “Once Upon a Time in Hollywood”. People featured on this episode: Frank Terranova and Kevin Janaway. All other information can be found on the website: https://www.crooklyncomedy.com/
Original Air Date 03/07/2021. This week's episode of, "Let Us Be Idiots" is joined by the original cast of Terradome, that being Frankie T. and Kevin Janaway. On the show, everyone gives their take on Eddie Murphy's new film, Coming 2 America. Besides that, everyone is just discussing films.All other content can be found on the website:https://www.crooklyncomedy.com/ The podcast currently on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/CrooklynComedy?fan_landing=true
This week's episode of, "Let Us Be Idiots" is joined by the original cast of Terradome, that being Frankie T. and Kevin Janaway. On the show, everyone gives their take on Eddie Murphy's new film, Coming 2 America. Besides that, everyone is just discussing films.
In this episode of “Let Us Be Idiots”, I massively re-edited and cut up the Audio originally from Frank Terranova’s former podcast, “Terradome”. The audio from “Terradome” was original uploaded on August 1st, 2019. In this episode , Matteo, Frank Terranova and Kevin Janaway are giving our take on Quentin Tarantino’s 10th film, “Once Upon a Time in Hollywood”.
When it comes to Brooklyn, Frank is The Last of the Mohicans. Born and raised in Canarsie, Brooklyn, he has lived in New York City for more than 50 years. Frank has seen it all and is no bullsh*t. Check out his podcast The Terradome.
MURDER STORY There are schools, and there are schools. Some are highly respected by society. They offer book learning, a competitive grading system, and a fast track to the top of the social ladder. Some of these schools have have higher prestige, status, and celebrity than others. A diploma or degree from one of these institutions can open many doors that lead to respect, social acceptance, and wealth. The street can also serve as a school. So can a prison. Your education in these hard knuckle schools will not earn you society’s blessings or certificates that open doors. But they can definitley give you a priceless education. They can teach you survival and a profound understanding of human psychology, They can unleash creativity. They can cultivate compassion; They can offer you hard won lessons of great wisdom. These schools can destroy you. If they don’t, they can forge integrity and strength of character and prepare you to enrich the world with your unique brand of authenticity and contribution. Will Latif Little forged his character and special gifts on the streets of Philadelphia and in Holmesburg Prison, a terrifying penitentiary known as the Terradome to its inmates. Will Little served ten years in the Terradome for murder. His own tagline describes him as a man who went from convicted murderer to committed life coach. Here are some of his accolades: He leaves people forever changed. No one forgets Will Little. He’s a category of one. Those words do not express unearned praise. Will played a high stakes game to win them. It was a life and death game. Will emerged from prison, a wise, loving, intuitive, and compassionate person with a gift for healing others. He heals damaged and disturbed psyches; he heals souls. He is an author, speaker, and mentor to troubled youth. Give yourself the special gift of hearing this authentic inspiring man on today’s episode of Change Your Story, Change Your Life. BOOKS IN THIS PODCAST ICY – Inner City Youth: The Life & Times of Will Little byWill Latif Little and Christopher Skog The Four Agreements by Don Miguel Ruiz The 21 Irrefutable Laws of Leadership by John C. Maxwell WILL’S FAVORITE QUOTE “Where there is a will, there is a way.” – Pauline Kael CONTACT WILL www.WillVLittle.com (https://www.willvlittle.com/) littwilli@aol.com https://www.facebook.com/littwilli
KJ-52 and Chunjay sit down for coffee in Florida and reflect on their experiences in hip-hop and the Christian hip-hop subgenre. Little Cuban cafe, on KJ discovering Cuban colada coffee. KJ does not enjoy pour over coffee. Chunjay eating a Cubano sandwich. On what KJ-52 is up to: crowdfunding new album, videos, documentary. Adding public speaking to rapping. “I’m coming from the perspective of a 42 year old man. I’m not coming from where I was when I was 25 and came into the industry….I’m an old MacBook Pro with updated software.” KJ-52’s struggle after his record deal with Essential ended. Shopping to Nashville record labels. Ended up with Tooth & Nail/Uprok. KJ on Flicker Records: “Then they turned round and signed you guys, and I was so ticked off.” “Revenge of the Nerds” by KJ-52 with Pigeon John from the KJ-52 Remixed album. On figuring out his niche, and finding a way forward. On catching criticism for things he did. On his “backpack rapper” origins with Sons of Intellect and Shadow of the Locust. “I always looked at every record as ‘starting over.’” On his platform, not just “youth group rapper.” History: Goatee led him to Todd Collins. Todd took him to Essential. On the KJ-52/Royal Ruckus tour of Maui in 2001. On Royal Ruckus: “You two were the most interesting, hilarious, weird people I’d ever hung out with in a long time. And I think because of that, I was like, ‘I’m really drawn to these guys, cause they’re so bizarre, but so like, genuinely themselves.’ And I think that resonated with me.” On getting sunburnt in Hawaii. “Cheese Rappers in Paradise” (Demo) by Royal Ruckus from Seventeen Candles. Available free at noisetrade.com/royalruckus. On crossing paths with each other in Nashville, TN and Bakersfield, CA. “I’ve played in Bakersfield so many times.” Headlining the “White Privilege Conference” in the middle of Iowa. Awkward experiences on tour. “Moment of Zen” by Royal Ruckus from The Summer of the Cicadas LP. Listen for KJ-52 and T-Bone reference in the song. “I helped Kirk Cameron get through the priority line at Delta.” “Shipwreck” by Cookbook and Uno.Mas from The Robertson Bullies EP. “Once you’re about 10 years in [the music industry], you become irrelevant.” On a near-career shipwreck. Paraphrase: I went from getting a couple grand shows to getting $250 a show locally, if I was lucky. Finding alternate ways to survive and stay in his own lane. Graffiti. School assemblies. Being a pastor. Rapping still. “It’s like I wrecked the ship, took the wood, and built a house.” “Fight Music” by KJ-52 featuring Lecrae and Propaganda, from the album, Mental. On KJ’s lack of facial hair. KJ loved street tacos in Baja, Mexico, and Korean-fusion tacos in San Francisco. KJ recommended podcasts: What She Wants (formerly Ask Women), Sexy Marriage Radio, Stuck in the 80s, and The Cypher Show. KJ on women: they don’t want men to be nice, they want ALPHA. “I realized how technically challenged some of my fanbase is. So I was like, ‘How can I make this as simple as possible?’” KJ52 Podcast. @kj52 at twitter and facebook, @kj52instagram for insta. “Let me say, and I dig your podcast, too. Because I like how you explore back stories.” On having something to say, and less to lose. On having John Reuben on his documentary and not being able to use it. “It Takes Two” by Rob Base and DJ E-Z Rock was the game changer song for KJ-52. The second would be “Welcome to the Terradome” by Public Enemy. Third: “Ain’t No Joke” by Eric B. and Rakim. De La Soul: “Me Myself and I.” Shouts to Propaganda, Pigeon John, Limp Bizkit, Kid Rock, Pillar, Pax 217, Rebecca St. James, producer Tedd T., Todd Collins, Flynn Adam, Krum (Playdough), Jesus Shack, Spirit West Coast, Kirk Cameron, Tako Cheena in Orlando, NF vs. Lecrae album sales, John Reuben, Cookbook from LA Symphony, Jars of Clay, more.