The Dallas Wings versus the New York Liberty is one of three strong options on today’s WNBA slate for you to enjoy.
The WNBA is streaming on Fubo, Paramount+ and Prime Video this season – use our links so you don’t miss any of the action! Sign up for WNBA League Pass to get access to live out-of-market games and tons of WNBA content.
How to Watch Today’s WNBA Games
Dallas Wings at New York Liberty
How to Watch
TV Channel: NBA TV, FOX5 New York, BSSWX, and Liberty Live
Live Stream: Watch this game on Fubo (Regional restrictions may apply)
Game Time: 7:00 PM ET
Venue: Barclays Center
Location: Brooklyn, New York
Get tickets for WNBA games at Vivid Seats, StubHub and Ticketmaster
Seattle Storm at Washington Mystics
How to Watch
TV Channel: FOX13, MNMT, and Amazon Prime Video
Live Stream: Watch this game on Fubo (Regional restrictions may apply)
Live Stream: Watch this game on Prime Video (Regional restrictions may apply)
Game Time: 7:00 PM ET
Venue: St. Elizabeths East Entertainment and Sports Arena
Location: Washington, District of Columbia
Los Angeles Sparks at Connecticut Sun
How to Watch
TV Channel: NBCS-BOS and SportsNet LA
Live Stream: Watch this game on Fubo (Regional restrictions may apply)
Game Time: 7:00 PM ET
Venue: Mohegan Sun Arena
Location: Uncasville, Connecticut
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Chy’s Town Goodies, LLC is more than just a business; it’s the embodiment of one woman’s determination to achieve her dreams and inspire others to do the same. The brainchild of Ms. Chy, this thriving online grocery store specializes in bringing the flavors of Chicago to customers far beyond the city’s borders. But the story doesn’t end there; Chy’s journey of entrepreneurship, her passion for self-love, and her undying faith in hard work make her an inspiration to others.
The Making of a Millionaire and a Leader
Ms. Chy, the creator and driving force behind Chy’s Town Goodies, believes that her life is an ongoing story of becoming a millionaire. As a natural-born leader, friend, and survivor, her journey is as motivational as it is unique. Raised by an entrepreneurial father and a corporate professional mother, Chy has always been destined for greatness. Her story is one of a serial entrepreneur who is a creative risk-taker and who understands that faith without work is dead.
Social Media Recognition and Career Highlights
As Chy’s Town Goodies grew, Ms. Chy found that her customers’ praise on social media became her greatest advertisement. Their messages and tags have been a cherished part of her journey. The hard work she put into promoting her company and distributing her products has drawn the attention of major companies in the Chicagoland area. These businesses have followed her lead and expanded to share the Chicago food culture with the south.
Ms. Chy’s entrepreneurial success also led to the creation of the first Chicago-style food warehouse in Dallas, Texas, a significant accomplishment for a woman from the south side of Chicago. She navigated the complex process of reselling large quantities of food without any formal guidance, an impressive feat in its own right.
Overcoming Challenges and Sharing Wisdom
One of the biggest challenges Ms. Chy faced as a small business owner was staying focused on her goals and not being intimidated by larger, more established companies. She overcame this fear by acknowledging her role as a creative trendsetter and recognizing the impact her work had on other businesses.
Ms. Chy’s advice to others is to embrace their creativity and not be afraid of judgment. She believes that some of the best ideas remain hidden in notebooks because people are afraid to take action. Her message is simple: just keep going. No matter the obstacles, whether it’s a lack of funding or support, continue pushing forward.
A Vision for the Future
In the coming years, Ms. Chy envisions Chy’s Town Goodies becoming a franchise specialty food store, as well-known as Walmart, as upscale as Target, and as accessible as Amazon. Her dreams and aspirations include providing the best quality products to her customers, faster shipping times, and consistently maintaining stock to meet demand.
Conclusion
Ms. Chy’s story is one of entrepreneurship, passion, and the relentless pursuit of success. Chy’s Town Goodies, LLC serves as a testament to her determination and serves as an inspiration for others to follow their dreams, no matter the challenges they may face.
Fact Check: Democrats Claim Kamala Harris Is from ‘Middle & Working Class’
The neighborhood in which Harris grew up is “the most upscale neighborhood.”
BREITBART
CLAIM: Democrats claimed during the Democratic National Convention (DNC) in Chicago, Illinois, on Monday that presidential nominee Vice President Kamala Harris is from the “middle class” and “working class.”
VERDICT: Completely and totally false.
Shawn Fain, the president of the United Auto Workers (UAW), referred to Harris as “a fighter for the working class.”
“On behalf of one million active and retired members of the UAW, I am honored to support Kamala Harris and Tim Walz to be our next president and vice president,” Fain told the crowd:
And, I want to say thank you to Joe Biden for making history by walking the picket line with the UAW. For the UAW and for working-class people everywhere, this election comes down to one question: Which side are you on? On one side, we have Kamala Harris and Tim Walz, who have stood shoulder-to-shoulder with the working class. On the other side, we have Trump and Vance, two lap dogs for the billionaire class who only serve themselves. So, for us in the labor movement, it’s real simple: Kamala Harris is one of us. She’s a fighter for the working class.
***
During her speech at the convention, Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY) claimed that Harris was “for the middle class” because she “is from the middle class.”
“In Kamala Harris, we have a chance to elect a president who is for the middle class because she is from the middle class,” Ocasio-Cortez told the crowd.
***
As Breitbart News Politics Editor Emma-Jo Morris previously reported, she “lived up the street from where” Harris “went to school.” Morris explained that Harris’s childhood and adolescence were “spent living in an upper-class enclave in Montreal, Canada.”
Morris wrote:
I know that because I grew up on the exact same “streets” she grew up on. I actually lived up the street from where she went to school, and she lived down the street from where I went to school, during the seldom discussed childhood and adolescence she actually spent living in an upperclass enclave in Montreal, Canada.
Morris noted that Harris grew up in a neighborhood called Westmount, which is a “majority English neighborhood in the French province of Quebec.”
“She would have definitely experienced segregation living there – but not the kind she has claimed in the last few years to have lived through.”
The neighborhood in which Harris grew up is “the most upscale neighborhood.”
Morris added that “at the time” Harris was living there, the neighborhood “was not only the nicest neighborhood in Montreal but was the richest one in all of Canada.
CONTINUE READING ORG ARTICLE
Header featured image (edited) credit: Harris/Andrew Harnik/Getty Images
Emphasis added by (TLB)
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SEATTLE (TCN) — Police arrested a 25-year-old man after his girlfriend was found dead with her throat cut and a golf ball in her mouth inside his flooded townhouse last week.
According to the Seattle Police Department, on Aug. 10 at 10:22 a.m., officers were asked to conduct a welfare check at a residence on the 3000 block of Northeast 133rd Street in the city’s Olympic Hills neighborhood. The Seattle Fire Department was also there and located a deceased female inside. Police located and arrested a 25-year-old suspect, who KOMO-TV identified as Andy Chu. The King County Prosecutor’s Office announced Aug. 15 they were charging Chu with first-degree murder and third-degree assault.
KCPQ-TV identified the victim as Zoey Yun.
KOMO reports Yun, who was in town from Hawaii, was seen going into Chu’s residence with him on Aug. 9.
Chu’s friends reportedly took him to the hospital on Aug. 10 due to a “crisis condition.” He said he took ecstasy and smoked marijuana that day. While at the hospital, he allegedly groped a nurse and hooked the back of her neck with his arm. The assault charge stems from this incident.
Court documents cited by KOMO say neighbors initially reached out to their landlord on Aug. 10 because they saw water coming out of Chu’s home. When police and fire department officials went into the home, they reportedly found Yun with “an ice pack on her throat and a small block behind her neck, supporting her head.” The bathtub was reportedly filled with water and the sink had been left running. She also had a cut on her throat.
Yun reportedly had “possible dried blood on her arms, shoulders, and chest as well as a granular substance covering these areas.”
KOMO reports Chu allegedly informed police he “has a memory of choking her, twisting her neck, holding her down underwater in the tub.”
After, Chu allegedly “tried several things to revive her including sprinkling the açaí powder all over her [and] placing a ball similar to a golf ball in her mouth to fix her jaw.”
KCPQ reports the medical examiner determined Yun died from asphyxia by homicide.
MORE:
Detectives Investigating Homicide in Olympic Hills – Seattle Police Department
Lake City Murder and Assault Charge – King County Prosecuting Attorney’s Office
Seattle man confesses to brutal murder of girlfriend before he assaults UW nurse – KOMO
Man accused of killing girlfriend in North Seattle charged with murder – KCPQ
The Biden administration is threatening—and has sued—local governments and law enforcement agencies across the country that have implemented measures to curb an epidemic of crime, drugs and gang violence in rental properties asserting that the policies “unfairly penalize communities of color.” The popular laws, enacted by thousands of cities nationwide are commonly known as “crime-free” and “nuisance” programs that restrict housing based on criminal and arrest records and punish landlords and tenants with excessive calls to police and emergency services or those engaged in criminal activity. To improve living conditions in mainly low-income rentals 2,000 cities across 48 states have adopted crime-free and nuisance policies, according to the Department of Justice (DOJ), which has legally challenged many of the measures in the last few years claiming that they are discriminatory and therefore violate federal law.
“Even when well-intentioned, these programs can disrupt lives, force families into homelessness and result in loss of jobs, schooling and opportunities for people who are disproportionately low-income people of color – all in violation of federal law,” said Assistant Attorney General Kristen Clarke, who heads the DOJ’s Civil Rights Division. “These programs can also discourage people with disabilities and their loved ones from seeking help during a mental health crisis and prevent victims of domestic violence from seeking the protection they desperately need.” The lifelong civil rights lawyer, who has dedicated her career to “combating discrimination faced by African American and other marginalized communities,” assures that the agency will continue to fight what she calls “discriminatory and unlawful housing programs across the country” while supporting the efforts of local governments and police to prevent violent crime. Clarke delivered the comments a few days ago when the DOJ sternly warned cities with crime-free and nuisance measures that they are violating federal housing protections.
In a lengthy document warning local governments and their law enforcement agencies about policies to curb crime in rental housing, the DOJ writes that it has successfully challenged many of them and forced “a number of municipalities,” to repeal their measures. The feds also remind those still enforcing their crime-free and nuisance policies that “states from California to Iowa have passed legislation prohibiting” them. The agency essentially threatens the local enforcers of crime-free and nuisance initiatives by stating that they are violating four federal laws—the Fair Housing Act, Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, the Americans with Disabilities Act, and the Violence Against Women Act. The DOJ graciously offers to work collaboratively with local police and governments to reverse, or at least relax, tough-on-crime policies widely opposed by the left.
In its widely distributed warning, addressed to “Dear Colleague,” the agency lists examples of how it has successfully challenged the laws around the country, apparently an intimidation tactic since it can be daunting—and financially impossible—for local governments to take on the federal government with its vast resources. “Remedies arising from violations of these four statutes include monetary relief (including damages, civil penalties, and attorneys’ fees), potential termination of federal funding, and injunctive relief (including potential repeal of a program and judicial oversight),” the DOJ warning to local governments states, adding that “recent settlements have required law enforcement agencies and local governments to pay millions of dollars in monetary relief and to repeal or rehaul their programs.” The agency offers numerous cases with extensive background information to illustrate how it has flexed its muscle to eliminate tough on crime housing policies nationwide.
Examples include Hesperia, California repealing its policies and paying nearly $1 million in “relief” after the feds sued the southern California desert city with a population of around 100,000. Faribault, Minnesota doled out nearly $700,000 to settle its federal case and is prohibited from enforcing the types of criminal history that may be considered by private landlords when screening tenants. Bedford, Ohio repealed its laws after dishing out a $350,000 monetary award. Hemet, California got rid of its measures and was forced to create a $200,000 remediation fund. Anoka, Minnesota made “substantial program amendments” and paid $175,000 to settle with the DOJ.
PolitiFact is live fact-checking the second night of the 2024 Democratic National Convention in Chicago, including tonight’s speech by former President Barack Obama.
We also fact-checked the first night of the DNC, including speeches by President Joe Biden, former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and others.
Several TV networks will be broadcasting tonight’s prime-time speeches, and all speeches will be streamed online.
PolitiFact fact-checks politicians across the political spectrum. We also fact-checked the Republican National Convention in July. Read more about our process.
Follow along with our live debate fact-checking here on our website and across our social media channels, including Facebook, Instagram, Threads, TikTok and X (formerly Twitter). To suggest a claim for us to fact-check, email [email protected] or text “Facts” to (727) 382-472.
How to Watch the Braves vs. Phillies Game: Streaming & TV Channel Info for August 20
Published 6:06 am Tuesday, August 20, 2024
Zack Wheeler takes the mound for the Philadelphia Phillies on Tuesday at Truist Park against Jorge Soler and the Atlanta Braves. First pitch is at 7:20 p.m. ET.
Watch MLB, other live sports and more on Fubo! Use our link to sign up for a free trial.
Braves vs. Phillies Live Stream, TV Channel and Game Info
Date: Tuesday, August 20, 2024
Time: 7:20 p.m. ET
Location: Atlanta, Georgia
Venue: Truist Park
TV Channel: BSSO
Live Stream: Watch this game on Fubo
Catch MLB action all season long on Fubo!.
Braves Batting & Pitching Performance
The Braves rank fourth in Major League Baseball with 163 home runs.
Atlanta is 12th in MLB with a slugging percentage of .414 this season.
The Braves rank 17th in MLB with a .241 team batting average.
Atlanta has scored the 16th-most runs in the majors this season with 537 (4.3 per game).
The Braves have an on-base percentage of .307 this season, which ranks 20th in the league.
The Braves rank 24th in MLB in strikeouts per game with an average of 9.1 whiffs per contest.
Atlanta pitchers have a combined ERA of 3.72 ERA this year, fourth-best in baseball.
Atlanta averages 9.6 strikeouts per nine innings as a pitching staff, most in the majors.
The Braves have a combined WHIP of just 1.235 as a pitching staff, which is the ninth-best in baseball this season.
Place your bets on any MLB matchup at BetMGM, and sign up with our link for a first-time deposit bonus!
Braves Probable Starting Pitcher
The Braves’ Reynaldo Lopez (7-4) will make his 20th start of the season.
The right-hander last pitched on Sunday, July 28 against the New York Mets, throwing three innings without allowing a run.
He has started 19 games this season, earning a quality start (6 or more IP, 3 or fewer ER) in 10 of them.
In 19 starts, Lopez has pitched through or past the fifth inning 16 times. He has a season average of 5.5 frames per outing.
He has made 19 appearances and finished seven of them without allowing an earned run.
Rep your team with officially licensed MLB gear! Head to Fanatics to find jerseys, shirts, and much more.
Braves Schedule
Date
Opponent
Score
Home/Away
Braves Starter
Opponent Starter
8/14/2024
Giants
W 13-2
Away
Grant Holmes
Robbie Ray
8/15/2024
Giants
L 6-0
Away
Max Fried
Logan Webb
8/16/2024
Angels
L 3-2
Away
Spencer Schwellenbach
José Soriano
8/17/2024
Angels
W 11-3
Away
Chris Sale
Griffin Canning
8/18/2024
Angels
W 3-1
Away
Charlie Morton
Jack Kochanowicz
8/20/2024
Phillies
–
Home
Reynaldo López
Zack Wheeler
8/21/2024
Phillies
–
Home
Max Fried
Aaron Nola
8/22/2024
Phillies
–
Home
Spencer Schwellenbach
Cristopher Sanchez
8/23/2024
Nationals
–
Home
Chris Sale
MacKenzie Gore
8/24/2024
Nationals
–
Home
Charlie Morton
Jake Irvin
8/25/2024
Nationals
–
Home
Reynaldo López
DJ Herz
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100,000 a day. That’s a low estimate of how many new songs are released to the world every 24 hours. With such a massive amount of music being released so consistently, it is harder now than ever for even the most talented artists to cut through the noise and make a name for themselves, in the music industry. Regardless, there are a few who find a way to do it. For this list, we interviewed ten artists in South Carolina that are doing just that.
Arcadia Studios
Nestled humbly in the Grand Strand of South Carolina, the Arcadia Studios team has been providing industry-quality audio, visual, and marketing services to a diverse range of artists and businesses for decades. Today, they are leading the charge toward a sustainable model for artist independence in the rapid evolution of the music industry today. Their unique approach has contributed immensely to the success of many of the artists we’ll be discussing today. “For me, it’s never been about money. I know I could move and charge a hundred times more for my skills, easily. It’s about helping artists stay sane and keeping these kids off the streets. I think making my expertise available and affordable to them and seeing them come in and be here rather than somewhere else depressed or getting in trouble is far more valuable than any amount of money.” These are the words of Arcadia’s Owner and Chief Engineer, Darryl “DeeCee” Cherry. It’s a sentiment that is reflected by the rest of his team, also. Patrick Richardson, Arcadia’s Chief Visual Producer, said, “I could drive a few hours up the road and add a zero or two to the end of my price for a basic music video, but then I wouldn’t be a part of this mission. The mission is what matters to me. It’s what matters to all of us.” We interviewed the rest of the team to hear their thoughts. From Director of Marketing, Shawn “Khan” Anderson, to Artist Development Manager, Theo Johnson, and the rest of the audio production team, Kwesi “WYD” Jackson and Jonathan “12Gage” Ashton, the intent behind their work was the same. We deduced that, perhaps, that’s what makes Arcadia’s quality and impact so significant; however, we decided to let their artists speak for themselves.
SHAWN KHAN
“We overcome.”
SHAWN KHAN is a 24 year old artist from Greene County, Pennsylvania, currently residing in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina. When asked why he makes music, he said, “Music was the only thing that kept me alive, at times, as a kid. Moreso, God speaking to me through music. Music isn’t just a concept to me. It’s something I feel like I can connect with and have an actual relationship with, no matter what form it takes. I want to use that connection to help others, now. I want to bring a sound to the earth we’ve never heard before. I don’t even know what it is yet, but I know it’s out there, waiting to be released on the earth. When I’m ready for it or when the world is ready for it, we’ll receive it, and I’ll be ready to play my part in delivering it.” Describing his own work simply as, “Powerful,” and, “Glorious,” Shawn’s uniqueness can be found in his artistic diversity and innovation. “I can do any genre. I love them all. Even the ‘weird’ ones. I always find something to appreciate. Mark my words, I’ll have an opera song playing in the club one day.” He says that he wants to “love people through music.” He wants his music to “… relate to peoples’ pain but, also, empower them to overcome it. I want them to know that love and power comes from God too.” We asked Him to take us behind the curtain on his creative process. “It varies, depending on the energy and emotion I want to capture and how that balances with the message I want to communicate. Regardless, I never want the purpose of my music to be empty. Even if I make a song that is ‘empty’ and void of depth or meaning on the surface, it’s intentional. Everything I do, I do for a reason.” His message to the world is, “I was sent from another dimension to deliver a message with two words, in one name: ‘We overcome.” Signed, ‘Jesus.’”
Cas
“Buy the ticket. Take the ride.”
Cas is a 35 year old artist from Rhode Island, He has been residing in Myrtle Beach, SC, for the last nine years. When asked why he makes music, he said, “It’s in us all. It’s everything. It’s expression. There’s something about music that, the people who make it, hold carefully in the core of their being.” Describing his own work as, “A cosmic gumbo,” Cas’s uniqueness can be found in the fact that he wants his listeners to interpret his sound and story for themselves, and everyone may get something different. He says that he wants his music to make people feel free, inspired, and radiant. He shared with us that music has, “… always been a part of my life. It’s been my late night parties, solitude, and therapy.” We asked Cas to take us behind the curtain on his creative process. “The music does it all. I try to capture the sound or how I interpret the vibe of it. It fuels how I approach the song. My cat is usually around. I’m sure that helps.” His message to the world is, “Be true to yourself and be kind to others.”
ATM Dollaz
“ATM: All The Money.”
ATM Dollaz is a 29 year old artist from Myrtle Beach, SC. When asked why he makes music, he said, “I started making music, inspired from childhood and modern day occurrences throughout my life. (It was) a way for me to express myself and feel like my true self—an outlet to tell your story and have people all around the world relate to it.” He describes his own work as influenced by the likes of, “Lil Wayne, 2Pac, Luther Vandross, Micheal Jackson, and 50 Cent.” He says, “I would describe my sound as influential, with old and new school flows, cadence, and rhythm.” ATM tells that his uniqueness can be found in, “… being authentic. The true love of music is what keeps me going and the simplicity of being myself and not caring to be judged. I’ve always been a leader. It started with sports and led to me making my own story.” He says that he wants his music to, “… affect people in a positive way, give them energy and confidence to accomplish whatever they want in life, believe in self and the man above, stay consistent, and watch the results.” He shared with us, “When I didn’t have anyone to talk to or understand me, I put it into my music. Music is universal. There’s a song out there you can relate to, when you’re sad, happy, or feeling grumpy. Music was my escape—my happy place.” We asked ATM to take us behind the curtain on his creative process. “What inspires me to write music is an instrumental with a nice bass and kick or even going through a real life experience and wanting to translate it through music.” His message to the world is that he is a, “Father before anything, and music is my passion but not who I am as a man. My brand—my name—is everything and what represents me for life.”
HiiiGHC
“It can get personal for me, to walk through life with music. While being the creator of that energy, it’s truly a surreal experience. Kind of like the zen we all search for.”
HiiiGHC is a 30 year old artist from the upper peninsula of Michigan. He is currently residing in Myrtle Beach, SC. When asked why he makes music, he said, “They say, ‘Try everything once.’ If you’re good at it, and you enjoy it, how do you stop?” Describing his own work as, “Clear and smooth with a bass and guitar rhythm,” He says his uniqueness can be found in his view that, “Most musicians are always proud to represent their city. I am too, but growing up and through my young adulthood and military career, I moved around a lot, spending equal time in most places. For these reasons, I feel I have obtained many different artist styles, ranging from Michigan, Chicago, New York, Tennessee, North Carolina, South Carolina, Louisiana, and California. I find the bass (south), implement a vibe (west), construct a rhythm with clear lyrics (east), and then I lay down some heavy hitting bars (north).” He told us, “There is just something on fire in me that would love to create a wave between street rap, hip-hop, club, and guitar-style music, with intents and hopes on generating a larger fan base from all different genre lovers which will bring more people together.” He shared with us that, for him, “The best part about music is there are many different types of it, so no matter where I have been in life, there has always been something to listen to that would help me either relate or cope with my surroundings.” We asked HiiiGHC to take us behind the curtain on his creative process. “So it starts off with the beat selection, and I only choose beats to write to that I can shred a quick freestyle on. Whether it’s a quick 16 or 32, … once I decide on a path to travel, I may not finish a song for six months—start writing one day, come back and revise, then do it again twenty more times, or I may start and finish a whole track, front to back, in under an hour. It really depends on the story or the exact feeling I’m in during the moment. I’ll write a track and never even use it!” His message to the world is, “I just like to kick it up a notch, so I make my own salsa.”
MALO (Elnesto Valle)
“FORREAL!”
MALO is a 35 year old artist from Florida. He grew up in Indiana, and is currently residing in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina. When asked why he makes music, he said, “As an outlet that provides the means for a foundation.” Describing his own work as, “… emotional, melodic—Tupac meets Eminem,” MALO’s uniqueness can be found in the fact that his music is true, as He says. “Struggle, pain, heartache, and misery created the man I am today.” He says that he wants his music to inspire people. He shared with us that, for him, music has, “… helped to define him and find his purpose in life.” We asked MALO to take us behind the curtain on his creative process. “Pain inspires me to write. I just turn a beat on and feel the instruments and wait to catch a vibe and go with whatever I’m feeling.” His message to the world is, “There is no victory without sacrifice, and it’s not about what you did. It’s about what you do.”
JiggieHendrix
“A son never forgets.”
JiggieHendrix is a 31 year old artist from North Myrtle Beach, SC. When asked why he makes music, he said, “A prophet actually told me I’d change the music industry, when I was younger.” Describing his own work as, “… a little bit of everything,” Jiggie says, “I want to go as far as dropping some country, but the late Nipsey Hussle was very influential on my delivery and message of rapping, and I love to make music for the female audience.” He says, “What makes me unique is where I come from. I don’t look at myself as a ‘gangster rapper.’ I will protect what I love, but I want to spread a different message to the ones coming after me.” He says that he wants his music to let people, “… know they can be anything they put their minds to and to know you stand out more when you not trying to fit in.” Jiggie shared, “I want my music to actually teach minorities. It’s more than just trapping and gangbanging, and even if you’re caught in that lifestyle, you can always make a positive change, especially in your community.” He shared with us that, for him, music, “… helps me keep my focus, when everything else seems to be crashing down. I love to really tap in at the studio with my boys. Biggz and DeeCee really don’t let me put out anything we can’t all feel.” We asked Him to take us behind the curtain on his creative process. “Honestly, I like the vibe to be right, have some tree, and see what the music makes us feel. A lot of my life experiences motivate me. When it comes to what I’m creating, I don’t want to be a ‘cap’ rapper.” His message to the world is, “I want everyone to know that I wouldn’t be anything or in this position, without God. I’m very blessed to be of sound mind and the age I’m at. A lot of my friends didn’t make it here or ended up locked up.”
CashFlow KweeZy
“Time is Money.”
CashFlow KweeZy is a 30-year-old artist from Myrtle Beach, SC. When asked why he makes music, he said, “… when I hear that question, it’s like asking a fish why it swims or a dog why it’s barking. Music has just always been a part of my life and probably one of the few consistent things in my life, especially Hip-Hop. Growing up, in the 90s, I had young parents who were dabbling in the streets a little bit and also in the club lifestyle, like a lot of people. That trickled down to me in a lot of ways and had a lot of influence on my love for music. I had both my father in my life, before he went to prison, and my stepfather. Both of them sold drugs and were ‘street dudes,’ but my stepfather was also a DJ. Living in the household with him and my mom, I still remember the large collection of mixtapes, albums, and vinyls sitting around the house, music blasting loud, you know, the grown-up house parties and cookouts. I can remember freestyling or, at least, trying to rap as a young kid, probably six or seven years old. It seems like music was much more a part of our lives back then, with music videos on TV and things like that. It wasn’t even a conscious decision to start making music. One day I looked up, and I was writing songs and rapping at a young age and battling at school. Really, I was just following the example of the greats who were using music as an outlet to cope with the struggles of life and paint a picture from their own personal perspective. Since then, no matter what I’ve been through in life, from the streets to prison or different relationships I’ve been in, I still make music with that outlook.”
When asked how he describes his own style, CashFlow said, “I have to shout out J. Cole as a forever ‘goated’ Carolina artist. His song ‘Middle Child’ perfectly explains where I feel like I land as a hip-hop fan and artist, being the middle child who understands the older sibling but also sympathizes with the younger one. Growing up in the 90’s, I was a fan of Pac, DMX, Eminem, and every other artist that made the 90’s and early 2000’s special. Also, I’m young enough to have grown up with Lil Wayne and Gucci Mane and grown through the late 2000’s phase with snap and trap music, and even later than that, when the melodies and flows started to change drastically. I feel like I grew up with everything and have been influenced by it. Being that I started creating music at a young age and fell in love with hip-hop early on, I was influenced, lyrically, by a lot of rappers at the time. As time went on and the south had its rise in hip hop, that helped carve my creativity and individuality away from being just a lyrical, bar-for-bar rapper which was more popular at a time. Overall, I’m just influenced by music, and it doesn’t always have to be rap.” He went on, then, to share what he believes makes him unique. “Being born and raised in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina, is a, somewhat, unique experience in itself. Being a medium-sized, coastal resort city in a rural, poor state, the city was always more of a faster pace, compared to surrounding areas in South Carolina. What came with that is the drug activity and lifestyle. I had a few run-ins with the law over the years. In December, 2022, I finished a ten year sentence in the South Carolina Department of Corrections for trafficking cocaine. I was released, after eight and a half years in prison. With South Carolina being one of the most strict states when it comes to drug laws and punishments, I ended up serving 85% of the term without the possibility of parole or good behavior. Despite being incarcerated for almost 10 years, I did my best to stay afloat and stay connected so I wouldn’t be out of the loop when I was released. I read countless books and I wrote thousands of pages of notes to refer to, during my incarceration and after my release. I used smuggled contraband cell phones and spent literal years watching YouTube videos on different subjects—everything from history and philosophy to investing in bitcoin and cryptocurrencies, in 2017, before bitcoin became a household name. I’m still a diehard crypto enthusiast and holder. I used those same smuggled cell phones to gain a large following on TikTok and millions of views on my videos showing prison content, all of which is still on my page after my release.
After just being released from prison in the last month of 2022, I’m looking at 2023 as a brand new slate and a platter of opportunity because, before this year, I was in prison, where there was very little opportunity but a surplus of violence and chaos. Despite being in prison for pretty much the entirety of my twenties, I still found ways to overcome and even thrive during the darkest period of my life. Now that I’ve been released from prison, I’m in the small percentile of men who have come home to a better situation than they left. For that, I’m thankful, but I also feel a duty to take it all the way and reach my goals for all the guys that are locked up and will never have the opportunity to reach their goals. Also, there’s a duty to make an example for the young person who has never been in prison and, hopefully, won’t go, but, instead, turn his hustle into something positive because of me.” CashFlow says that he wants his music to give listeners, “… that drive and that ambition because I know, firsthand, that, with the right mindset and the right drive, you can make any mission achievable. I’ve sat in prison cells with people you would call a kingpin or a drug lord, making hundreds of thousands of dollars a month from prison. Sometimes, not even off of drugs, just prepaid cell phones, tobacco, lighters, cigars, and rolling papers. They take those items and find a way to get them into this high-demand market, and they capitalize. Once I saw that, I looked at life differently. I didn’t look at these guys like kingpins or drug lords. They were men, just like me. Most of them came to prison with nothing at all. If anything, they had a reputation but nothing of monetary value. The only difference is that they had a plan and the opportunity to go along with it. I never want any of my listeners to take my stories or my music or any of my art as glorification but, instead, as motivation—to say to themselves, ‘If this guy overcame his situation and thrived out of it, I can do the same thing, if not more. He’s a human just like me.’”
He shared with us that, for him, “Music is my life. I mean that wholeheartedly. I’ve created music, during every stage of my life and from every aspect. I’ve been a child struggling with feelings of helplessness and poverty. I have been a fully grown adult in prison writing songs about how I’m sending thousands of dollars home to my girl and my kids through my own means of ‘finessing’ and organizing schemes from prison. Now, I get the pleasure to explore what it’s like making music as a man freely released from prison. I’ve been everywhere, from the church as a kid in the choir to a jail cell writing raps in the dark when my cellmate is sleeping. As I said earlier, one of the few consistent things in my life has always been the music. If nothing or nobody was there for me to turn to, I always had the music.” We asked CashFlow to take us behind the curtain on his creative process. “Well, my creative process usually starts with a little herbal therapy, if you know what I mean,” he joked. “Nah, in all seriousness, it’s about vibes—whatever I’m feeling or whatever is in the air. If we’re just playing instrumentals, it’s whatever the music is telling me or whatever it’s communicating to me. I try to let the vibes lead me because, sometimes, when you overthink something in music, it just doesn’t feel the same as when it just flows out.” His message to the world is, “843, South Carolina, we up next! There’s a lot of culture in our state, but especially on the coast. We are the direct descendants of slaves, living here, and a lot of our families still live on or near the lands that our ancestors were enslaved on. I feel like a lot of our younger generation either are ashamed or don’t have pride in this culture, so we’re losing a lot of our language, dialect, and history. I represent the Gullah Geechee Culture—Myrtle Beach all the way down to Charleston and beyond. Binyah! Outchea! If you know, you know!”
Ayeephil
“My music is straightforward because I want to give people me and let them know they’re not alone in going through the things that they go through.” ~Juice Wrld
Ayeephill is a 22 year old artist from Maryland and currently residing in Myrtle Beach, SC. When asked why he makes music, he said, “I make music to speak about thoughts that constantly go through my mind and use my music to help others see that they’re not the only ones going through this journey we call life. After seeing my favorite artist Juice Wrld blow up and just keeping my music to myself, over these past 2 years, I started to release music and create a name for myself. I know that life gets hard, but my goal with my music is to, hopefully, bring healing to the world, ‘cause everyone needs love.” Describing his own work as, simply, “Hip-Hop and R&B,” his uniqueness, according to him, can be found in, “… my family’s past and everything I’ve been through, following the loss of my cousin, to the loss of one of my really close friends. This might not seem to crazy to anyone, considering we lose people everyday; however, both of these individuals, who I loved very deeply, committed suicide. My friend grew up making music. He had such a bright future ahead of him—nothing in the way. He just couldn’t shake what was taking over his head, and that’s why I feel so inspired and connected to music. It allows me to get out thoughts and feelings that I just bear to face in the world. I told my mom, when we used to sleep in my aunt’s attic with stink bugs, ‘I promise you, when I get older, you will have whatever you want. I won’t stop, ‘til I get it.’ It’s everything for my friends and family.” He says that he wants his music to make people, “… vibe and really take a deep listen to the words being said.” He shared with us that, for him, “Music has saved my life. I believe, without music, I don’t know where I would be with my life.” We asked Ayeephill to take us behind the curtain on his creative process. “I write from anywhere from 12AM to 5AM or other times when I just feel I have something to get off my chest.” His message to the world is, “I’m a loving, genuine guy, and my music is set out to bring love and positive energy to the world. I know not one person can make all that great of change in the world, but I’d be damned if I don’t take this opportunity to try and bring peace to the world again. I love everybody, and thank you for supporting me.”
The Future Is Bright
Those were just a handful of the artists we were able to speak to that are making waves, with the help of the Arcadia team. We also spoke to artists like Richie Milano, Streets Love, Primo, Prince Xarolina, NatureBoyy, and CHRISTIAN. Arcadia hasn’t only been helping artists, however. We spoke with “Lo,” Owner of MSG Management, who has been managing artists for over seven years. Arcadia Studios has been his go-to source of quality services for his portfolio of artists, such as Loyal GamJuice Lee, Cookie, Mocha Mula, Big Mantha, Trapstar Kev, and Jag, to name a few, for several years. “I genuinely believe in my artists, so I want the best for them, in everything. I invest a lot of time and money into them, and I’m always confident doing that with Arcadia. We’re trying to move and shake things around here and provide new opportunities for local artists, female artists, everyone that’s been overlooked in the past. Arcadia has the same mission. It shows through their work, and that’s why I’ve worked with them for so long.” Arcadia has spent time building relationships with more than just music professionals, though. They have an established reputation among local video producers, religious organizations, businesses, and educational institutions, making them more of a community resource than just a studio. Could they be innovating a new era for business models in the music and studio industries? Time will tell, but the future is bright.
The EU Just Declared War on Free Speech in America
It is Time to Fight Back
By Jonathan Turley
Below is my column in The Hill on the move of the European Union to force Elon Musk to censor X users, including political speech leading up to the 2024 election. The column discusses this Rockwell painting, which we often use in discussing free speech controversies.
Here is the column:
Eighty years ago, the U.S. government launched a war bond campaign featuring a painting by artist Norman Rockwell in the struggle against the authoritarian threat from Europe. The picture they chose was Rockwell’s Freedom of Speech depicting a man rising to speak his mind at a local council meeting in Vermont. The image rallied the nation around what Louis Brandeis called our “indispensable right.”
Now, that very right is again under attack from another European government, which is claiming the right to censor what Americans are allowed to say about politics, science and other subjects. Indeed, the threat from the European Union may succeed in curtailing American freedom to an extent that the Axis powers could not have imagined. They may win, and our leaders have not said a thing yet about it.
In my book “The Indispensable Right: Free Speech in an Age of Rage,” I discuss the inspiration for Rockwell’s painting: a young selectman in Vermont named James “Buddy” Edgerton. The descendent of a Revolutionary War hero, Edgerton stood up as the lone dissenter to a plan to build a new schoolhouse over the lack of funding for such construction.
For Rockwell, the scene was a riveting example of how one man in this country can stand alone and be heard despite overwhelming opposition to his views. It was, for Rockwell (and for many of us), the quintessential American moment.
In the 1940s, people like Edgerton had to travel to small board meetings or public spaces to speak their mind. Today, the vast majority of political speech occurs over the Internet and specifically social media. That is why the internet is the single greatest advancement for free speech since the printing press.
It is also the reason governments have spent decades seeking to control speech over the internet, to regulate what people can say or read.
One of the greatest threats to free speech today is the European Digital Services Act. The act bars speech that is viewed as “disinformation” or “incitement.” European Commission Executive Vice President Margrethe Vestager celebrated its passage by declaring that it is “not a slogan anymore, that what is illegal offline should also be seen and dealt with as illegal online. Now it is a real thing. Democracy’s back.”
In Europe, free speech is in free fall. Germany, France, the United Kingdom and other countries have eviscerated free speech by criminalizing speech deemed inciteful or degrading to individuals or groups. The result had made little difference to the neo-Nazi movement in countries like Germany, which is reaching record numbers. It has, however, silenced the rest of society.
According to polling, only 18 percent of Germans feel free to express their opinions in public. Fifty-nine percent of Germans do not even feel free expressing themselves in private among friends. Only 17 percent feel free to express themselves on the internet.
They have silenced the wrong people, but there is now a massive censorship bureaucracy in Europe and the desire to silence opposing voices has become insatiable.
Some in this country have the same taste for speech-regulation. After Elon Musk bought Twitter and dismantled most of the company’s censorship program, many on the left went bonkers. That fury only increased when Musk released the “Twitter files,” confirming the long-denied coordination and support by the government in targeting and suppressing speech.
In response, Hillary Clinton and other Democratic figures turned to Europe and called upon them to use their Digital Services Act to force censorship against Americans.
The EU immediately responded by threatening Musk with confiscatory penalties against not just his company but himself. He would have to resume massive censorship or else face ruin.
It was a case of the irresistible force meeting the immovable object. The anti-free speech movement had finally found the one man who could not be bullied, coerced or threatened into submission.
Musk’s defiance has only magnified the unrelenting attacks against him in the media, academia and government. If Musk can be broken, these figures will once again exercise effective control over a large swath of speech globally.
This campaign recently came to a head when Musk had the audacity to interview former president Donald Trump. In anticipation of the interview, one of the most notorious anti-free speech figures in the world went ballistic.
European Commissioner for Internal Markets and Services Thierry Breton issued a threatening message to Musk, “We are monitoring the potential risks in the EU associated with the dissemination of content that may incite violence, hate and racism in conjunction with major political — or societal — events around the world, including debates and interviews in the context of elections.”
While offering a passing nod to the freedom of speech, he warned Musk that “all proportionate and effective mitigation measures are put in place regarding the amplification of harmful content in connection with relevant events.” In other words, be afraid, be very afraid.
Musk responded with “Bonjour!” and then suggested that Breton perform a physically challenging sexual act.
To recap, the EU is now moving to force censorship upon American citizens to meet its own demands of what is false, demeaning or inciting. And that includes censorship even of our leading political candidates for the presidency.
The response from the Biden administration was not a presidential statement warning any foreign government from seeking to limit our rights or even Secretary of State Antony Blinken calling the EU ambassador to his office for an expression of displeasure.
That’s because Biden and Harris are not displeased with but supportive of letting the EU do what they are barred from doing under our Constitution. This administration is arguably the most anti-free speech government since John Adams signed the Sedition Act. They have supported a massive system of censorship, blacklisting and targeting of opposing voices. Democratic members have given full-throated support for censorship, including pushing social media companies to expand in areas ranging from climate control to gender identity.
So, after only 80 years, our leaders are silent as a European government threatens to reduce our political speech to the lowest common denominator, which they will set according to their own values. Not a shot will be fired as Biden and Harris simply yield our rights to a global governing system.
But we do not have to go quietly into this night. Free speech remains a human right that is part of our DNA as Americans. We can fight back and protect millions of Edgertons who want to express their views regardless of the judgment of the majority.
I previously called for legislation to get the U.S. government out of the censorship business domestically. We also need new legislation to keep other countries from regulating the speech of our own citizens and companies. While this country has long threatened retaliation in combatting market barriers in other countries, we need to do the same thing for free speech. We need a federal law that opposes the intrusion of the Digital Services Act into the U.S.
If free speech is truly the “indispensable right” of all Americans, we need to treat this threat as an attack on our very existence. It is not only the rawest form of foreign intervention into an election, but a foreign attack on our very freedoms. This is why we must pass a Digital Freedom Act.
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Jonathan Turley is the Shapiro Professor of Public Interest Law at George Washington University. He is the author of “The Indispensable Right: Free Speech in an Age of Rage” (Simon & Schuster).
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(TLB) published this article from Jonathan Turley with our appreciation for this perspective
Jonathan Turley is the Shapiro Professor of Public Interest Law at George Washington University. Follow him on Twitter @JonathanTurley.
Header featured image (edited) credit: Mouth taped/ WP open public card file
Emphasis added by (TLB)
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Colorado Rockies (46-79) at Washington Nationals (56-69)
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When: 6:45 PM ET
Where: Nationals Park in Washington, District of Columbia
Nationals Starter: DJ Herz (2-5, 4.25 ERA)
Rockies Starter: Austin Gomber (3-8, 4.82 ERA)
Cleveland Guardians (72-52) at New York Yankees (73-52)
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Yankees Starter: Luis Gil (12-6, 3.25 ERA)
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Cincinnati Reds (61-64) at Toronto Blue Jays (58-67)
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When: 7:07 PM ET
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Baltimore Orioles (73-53) at New York Mets (65-60)
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Philadelphia Phillies (73-51) at Atlanta Braves (66-58)
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Where: Truist Park in Atlanta, Georgia
Braves Starter: Reynaldo López (7-4, 2.06 ERA)
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Milwaukee Brewers (72-52) at St. Louis Cardinals (61-63)
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When: 7:45 PM ET
Where: Busch Stadium in St. Louis, Missouri
Cardinals Starter: Erick Fedde (8-6, 3.4 ERA)
Brewers Starter: Frankie Montás (5-8, 4.86 ERA)
Pittsburgh Pirates (58-66) at Texas Rangers (58-68)
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TV Channel: SportsNet PT
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When: 8:05 PM ET
Where: Globe Life Field in Arlington, Texas
Rangers Starter: Cody Bradford (4-0, 3.5 ERA)
Pirates Starter: Mitch Keller (10-7, 3.95 ERA)
Detroit Tigers (61-64) at Chicago Cubs (61-64)
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When: 8:05 PM ET
Where: Wrigley Field in Chicago, Illinois
Cubs Starter: Javier Assad (5-3, 3.19 ERA)
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Los Angeles Angels (53-72) at Kansas City Royals (70-55)
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Boston Red Sox (65-59) at Houston Astros (68-56)
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Tampa Bay Rays (62-62) at Oakland Athletics (54-71)
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When: 9:40 PM ET
Where: Oakland-Alameda County Coliseum in Oakland, California
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Rays Starter: Shane Baz (0-2, 4.21 ERA)
Minnesota Twins (70-55) at San Diego Padres (71-55)
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When: 9:40 PM ET
Where: PETCO Park in San Diego, California
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Twins Starter: Bailey Ober (12-5, 3.49 ERA)
Chicago White Sox (30-96) at San Francisco Giants (64-63)
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When: 9:45 PM ET
Where: Oracle Park in San Francisco, California
Giants Starter: Robbie Ray (2-2, 6 ERA)
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Seattle Mariners (64-62) at Los Angeles Dodgers (74-52)
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When: 10:10 PM ET
Where: Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles, California
Dodgers Starter: Walker Buehler (1-4, 5.58 ERA)
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