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THIS MIXTAPE IS INCREDIBLE & OUT NOW :
MIXTAPE KING DJ RON G PRESENTS - MY WAY
(FALL EDITION - LISTEN & DOWNLOAD LINKS BELOW)

http://www.audiomack.com/album/dj-ron-g/my-way

http://www.legendarydjrong.com

http://coast2coastmixtapes.com/mixtapes/mixtapedetail.aspx/my-way-fall-edition

http://www.mixtapehustle.com/2015/09/new-mixtape-legendarydjrong-mixking155_24.html

http://mixtapefactory.com/DJ-RON-G-PRESENTS-MY-WAY-FALL-EDTION-.html

http://www.getrightmusic.com/mixtape/post/mixtape-king-dj-ron-g

http://certifiedbootleg.com/mixtapes/sp-mixtape/dj-ron-g-presents-my-way-fall-edition

https://www.sendspace.com/file/bhirb6

photo MY WAY CD COVER _zpsqvc7nufj.jpg

photo my way cd back cover _zpsa4fanaho.jpeg

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Inside 50 Cent's Incredible Collection Of Vehicles [Pics]

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Written by Zack O. Greenburg @zogblog for Forbes

 

Curtis “50 Cent” Jackson’s love affair with automobiles got off to an inauspicious start. His first car nearly got him killed, and not because he was driving too fast. In the summer of 1994, at the age of 19, Jackson plunked down $53,000 in cash made from peddling drugs on the streets of New York for a charcoal gray Toyota Land Cruiser. He tricked it out with a rooftop bike rack, new wheels and a sound system with a bass that thumped so hard it rattled the license plate against the back hatch.

 

A few months later, Jackson was driving his car through a rough neighborhood when a stranger pulled up next to him, flashed a menacing look and asked, “Yo, where Black at?” “Black” was the street name of a notorious–and violent–gangster. Jackson quickly put it all together: Black had a similar-looking car. Jackson shrugged at his questioner and, luckily for him, the man drove off into the night.

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A few months later, Jackson was driving his car through a rough neighborhood when a stranger pulled up next to him, flashed a menacing look and asked, “Yo, where Black at?” “Black” was the street name of a notorious–and violent–gangster. Jackson quickly put it all together: Black had a similar-looking car. Jackson shrugged at his questioner and, luckily for him, the man drove off into the night.


The next day, Jackson returned to the dealership. “Why the f**k did you sell [Black] the same color truck as me?” he demanded. “I almost got killed last night.”

 

He traded in the Land Cruiser for a white Mercedes-Benz 400 SEL with bulletproof windows and a 6.0 liter V-12 engine. But the second car turned out to be no better than the first. The Mercedes was conspicuous, an easy target for thieves. A pair of armed robbers ambushed him outside his grandmother’s house in Queens. Jackson barely escaped through a back alley and soon sold the vehicle.

 

Then came more car trouble, but this time only his ego was bruised. In the late 1990s, Jackson decided to leave the drug-dealing days behind to commit himself fully to his music, in part to please his grandmother, who’d raised him from age 8 after his mother was killed (an attempt on Jackson’s own life and the birth of his son provided the main impetus for his career change). The more virtuous life had its own problems: He was left with significantly less money. Which meant he was stuck driving a homely 1992 burgundy Dodge Caravan. “The a/c didn’t work,” he recalls glumly.

 

But his fortunes–and car collection–soon changed for the better. After linking up with Eminem and Dr. Dre, Jackson recorded the album that would make him a star, 2003′s Get Rich or Die Tryin’. It would go on to sell more than 8 million copies in the U.S. alone, becoming one of the most successful rap albums of all time. Buying and customizing uberluxury cars soon became the means by which he celebrated his musical triumphs.

 

With money from his first album, Jackson first rewarded his grandmother, leasing a Mercedes-Benz C240 for her. Next he bought himself a Rolls-Royce Phantom. He initially wanted to customize it, covering it entirely in chrome. Then he met with the president of Rolls-Royce, who showed him what a door slathered in the shiny substance looked like. “I didn’t realize how big the car was,” says Jackson, reclining on a sofa in his Midtown Manhattan office. “It would have looked like a silver bus. You know what I’m saying? So I changed my mind.”

 

Since then Jackson has released three more solo albums, pushing his worldwide sales total past 30 million; his next is due out later this year. He’s also created a business empire that includes his own clothing and shoe lines, videogames and films, headphones and energy shots, even his own flavor of VitaminWater. Jackson now has a net worth of $125 million. “You learn a lot about yourself when you have success for a while,” he says. “Like, a lot of things that you think are really important aren’t. But you need that process.”

 

One thing that has remained important to Jackson is the cars. He owns two bulletproof Chevrolet Suburbans that feature bombproof undercarriages. The $200,000 vehicles were built for the Iraq war. He bought a Lamborghini Murcielago to celebrate the launch of his second album. The $300,000 car was painted charcoal gray, just like his ill-fated Land Cruiser. Perhaps to erase the ghosts of his youth–and satisfy the urge he had with his Rolls–Jackson decked the Lamborghini out in an all-chrome finish.

25. 50 Cent's Bulletproof Suburban

http://www.complex.com/rides/2011/08/gallery-the-25-most-iconic-hip-hop-cars/50-cents-bulletproof-suburban

Over the years, Jackson added a Ferrari convertible and a Yamaha YZF-R1 motorcycle, along with a Bentley Mulsanne with beige leather seats (to match his coat, as he explains in one song). He recently painted his West Coast fleet a metallic blue and added matching ceramic brakes to his Lamborghini, being more interested in freshening up his existing rides than trading them for newer models–which, he says, “are starting to turn a little space-agey to me.” He’s no stranger to futuristic rides: Last year he designed a few concept cars of his own.

 

These days, Jackson isn’t worried about drug dealers and gangsters. It’s the taxman who merits concern.

 

“If you’re familiar with my man Uncle Sam, you understand the only way you can actually feel better about what he’s gonna take, come the end of the year, is lifestyle,” says Jackson. “Only thing you can do is spend some of it.”

 

The West Coast Fleet
In Los Angeles, 50 Cent keeps a 2011 Range Rover, a 2012 Bentley Mulsanne, a 2005 Lamborghini Murcielago and a 2012 Yamaha YZF-R1 motorcycle (he keeps two bulletproof Chevy Suburbans in New York).

 

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Family Friends
50 Cent poses with his Lamborghini and Tiffany Lighty, daughter of his late manager Chris Lighty.

 

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On the Hood
A closer look at the Bentley.

 

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Hog Wild
50 Cent's Yamaha YZF-R1 motorcycle.

 

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Ready For Takeoff
The Lamborghini's doors open toward the sky.

 

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Nice Wheels

50 Cent insisted on ceramic brakes and a custom paint job for his Lamborghini.

 

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Holy Trinity

50 Cent with three of his cars.

 

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Quick Getaway

50 Cent on his Yamaha YZF-R1.

 

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Car Guy

The G-Unit founder up close.

 

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Speed Racer

50 Cent designed this three-wheel concept car, executed by Parker Brothers Concepts, complete with a hubless monster rear tire.

 

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Speed Racer, cont'd

Another look.

 

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Speed Racer, cont'd

...and another.

 

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Speed Racer, cont'd

...and another.

 

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White Lightning

50 cent designed this one-of-a-kind car, also executed by Parker Brothers Concepts, as part of the SyFy series "Dream Machines."

 

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White Lightning, cont'd

Another look.

 

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White Lightning, cont'd

...and another.

 

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White Lightning, cont'd

...and another.

 

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Not Your Daddy's Motorcycle

A futuristic motorbike designed by 50 Cent, and also executed by Parker Brothers Concepts.

 

 

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Not Your Daddy's Motorcycle, cont'd

Another look.

 

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Not Your Daddy's Motorcycle, cont'd

...and another.

 

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Not Your Daddy's Motorcycle, cont'd

...and another.

 

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Victory Cigar

50 Cent lights one up.

Photos by Spencer Lowell

 

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Rap superstar 50 Cent kicks off Yahoo!'s new Crash Concerts performance series with a surprise show at the Madison Square Boys & Girls Club in Brooklyn, New York

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Madison Square Boys & Girls Club students go wild when 50 Cent takes the stage at the surprise Crash Concerts event. 

[RELATED: SEE 50 CENT CRASH CONCERTS PHOTO GALLERY] ALSO LIVE VIDEO

With G-Unit partner-in-rhyme Tony Yayo and DJ Whoo Kid in tow, the "In The Club" rapper gives the group of more than 300 kids the afternoon of their lives, performing his hot new single, "New Day."

SOURCE OF STORY http://music.yahoo.com/blogs/live/50-cent-performs-crash-concerts-brooklyn-boys-girls-011829594.html

images?q=tbn:ANd9GcS1Lbfhs2QYehouwIncBx5XDpRJXRp_V95WwZbNqLeIBskF2bOcKA

Sc magazine / tv / radio/promotion/entertainment

 

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There has been a lot of speculation recently regarding an apparent conflict between longtime friends 50 Cent and Floyd Mayweather Jr. Until now none of the reasons seemed legitimate, but a series of letters written to Floyd while he was in jail may provide a clue.

 

Former Floyd  Tommy Summers, A.K.A. Tommy Smalls, reached out to the boxing champion while he was incarcerated and tried to convince him that his longtime adviser, Al Haymon, had cut deals behind his back to hold fights at the MGM  in Las Vegas costing Floyd millions of dollars in the process. Summers also accused Haymon of funneling all of his fighters to rival promotional company Golden Boy instead of Floyd's Mayweather Promotions.

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"All the fighter that Al Haymon got he signed them to Golden Boy, not with us," Summers wrote. "You let him eat with you and you can't eat with him. HBO told 50 Cent on the low that Al Haymon has 20 dates over a period of years on your name. F*ck that."

 

Summers goes on to explain further how Haymon basically stole money from Floyd by doing side deals.

 

"You fought Oscar [De La Hoya], [Ricky] Hatton, [Shane] Mosely, [Manuel] Marquez, [Victor] Ortiz, [Carlos] Baldimore and [Miguel] Cotto. All at the MGM Grand. The deal was cut under the table. That site fee and gate money ain't sh*t. G.B. and Al already took the money to bring you to Vegas and fight here at MGM. It's worth over $150 million dollars. D. King did not bring Tyson to Vegas at MGM for only gate money. You are worth more, do your own thing. You never got the things you wanted from MGM because they got it already. Over $100 million over 8-fights. Trust me I know."

 

Summers explained that when Floyd got out of jail there would be big money deals on the table from people like Jerry Jones, Steve Wynn and either Hank Steinbrenner orHal Steinbrenner to hold fights at their stadiums in front of 75,000 to 100,000 fans each time out.

 

"You can make $500 million to $1 billion before you quit and after," Summers insisted. "That old Golden Boy sh*t is over. You gonna make $100 million or more a fight. You made Golden Boy and Al Haymon a . Game over!"

 

Floyd evidently did not believe Summers. Summers and 50 Cent are now in negotiations to do business with Manny Pacquiao by forming a new boxing promotion company. Could that be the reason for the recent friction between Floyd and Fif?.

 

Read the letters below and decide for yourself.

 

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Spotted at IFWT

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50 Cent went off yesterday on French Montana after the Bad Boy rapper made some negative comments recently talking about the G-Unit boss' record sales.

 

In interviews with Complex, French said that 50 should have avoided beefing with so many different artists.

 

"I feel like beef hurt himYou know if you follow our history you’ll know it’s like, from when we started until now, we’ve been good. We’re not the hottest, we’re not number one, but guess what? Everyday that goes by, we getting bigger and bigger," French said. "So I would rather do that, then come in and have a short run. I’d rather have a Cash Money run. Not to say that in a bad way, but 50 Cent could have been a lot bigger. You think 50 could come out and sell 10 million now?"

 

50 got wind of the interview and went off on French via Twitter.

 

"French Montana you ain't Sh*t boy. You out your league talking about me you hoe.i read your little interview what the f*ck is you high," 50 wrote on the social networking site. "French your Sh*t so weak you never had a song by your self fool. Ain't nobody's waiting to hear your verse. Girl. I'm not tweeting about this little fool No more. I'm a see him and he gonna explain that's it."

 

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50 does bring up an interesting point regarding French's career. From Max B to Waka Flocka Flame, most of his  have been collaborations. Even his current single "Pop That" features three prominent rappers in Lil Wayne, Drake and Rick Ross.

 

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Has French bitten off more that he can chew by dissing a man who is known for destroying rapper's careers? Let us know what you think

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CHECK OUT LEGENDARY DJ RON G & DJ CHEDDAR NEW MIX CD GLOBAL PLAYERS (NEW YORK & GERMANY EDITION BLENDS & EXCLUSIVES) http://thatcrack.com/mixtapes/dj-ron-g-and-dj-cheddar-global-players/
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Time to stock up on your DVD collections. Curtis Jackson has just inked a $200 million 10-movie deal for his film company, Cheetah Vision. Curtis will be funded a budget of $20 million for each film, which will be distributed through Grindstone/Lionsgate. Above is a picture on the set of The Fast and Furious 5 with actor Paul Walker, who is in negotiations to star alongside 50 in his upcoming flick, Set Up. VIA RAPRADAR CENT
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