PICTURES: CHECK ME OUT AT THE UNICEF EVENT AT FRAMES NYC

Ngo OKafor at Unicef event at Frames NYC by Stephen Smith

A couple of nights ago, I attended charity event called “Art in Unusual Places” for UNICEF. Check out all the pictures below.

UNICEF photographer Yanick Dery and Frames bowling lounge partnered up to present this cool event. Frames  is a really cool bowling Lounge at 550 9th avenue, NYC. Bowling is so much fun and even though I suck at it, I always have a blast with friends while doing it. Frames Lounge hosted this charity event for guests to bowl for a good cause.

Fashion photographer Yanick Dery donated some of his photography to be auctioned off with all proceeds benefiting UNICEF. My friends and I enjoyed supporting the cause and shared drinks provided by Medea vodka.

Posted by Ngo Okafor

The most downloaded black male model photo gallery and blog

www.getingo.com

 

 

Ngo Okafor at Unicef event at Frames NYC by Stephen Smith

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

I’LL BE HANGING WITH ICE-T AT THE PREMIERE OF HIS FILM, “THE ART OF RAP” ON JUNE 12th

I just got word that I will be a part the festivities at the premiere of Ice-T’s documentary “Something From Nothing: The Art of Rap on June 12th. I’ll be posting pictures and video from the red carpet and inside the party. Read more about the film…

As he prepares for the June 15 theatrical opening of his documentary “Something From Nothing: The Art of Rap,” Ice-T promises that the campaign “won’t end with this film.”
“We’ve got a DVD. We have a television show. We have a soundtrack album,” the rapper told Billboard.com before a suburban Detroit screening of the film, which was attended by fellow MCs Chuck D of Public Enemy (who Ice-T had joined on stage the previous night at the Movement Electronic Music Festival), D-12′s Denaun Porter and Trick Trick. “I’ve got 52 (MCs) in this movie, and I have at least an hour to an hour and a half of in-depth interviews. I’ve got, like, two hours with KRS-One. So the film will just be the first embodiment of ‘The Art of Rap,’ but I don’t want to promote our secondary plans and take away from the film. I want people to see it on the big screen, hear it with the big speakers and take that ride.”

 

 

Ice-T spent two years working on “Something From Nothing,” chatting with the likes of Afrika Bambaataa, Run-DMC, Dr. Dre, Ice Cube, Snoop Dogg, Eminem, Kanye West, Grandmaster Melle Mel and scores of others about the actual crafts of rapping, rhyming, composing and sound generation. “In my 25 years of rapping, no one ever asked me how I did it,” explained Ice-T, who licensed more than 400 songs for the film and commissioned Smooth Hustla to compose the original track “109 MCs.” “People would always be more concerned with the beefs, the cars, the girls, the celebrity side of it, but not how it’s done. To me that meant people thought you just s*** it out. There’s no creative process. There’s nothing to it… But some of these cats, it’s like very intricate wordplay, and they have their own ways to do it. I tried to get people who spoke on all the different styles of rap — the underground battle rappers or the conscious rappers. There’s lots of different styles.”

In addition to a list of 15 standard questions, Ice-T also asked each of his subjects to bust an original rhyme for the cameras, yielding stunning, off-the cuff performances whose lyrics often reflect on the craft and on what rap means to them. “What made this movie so special is Ice is alongside the person he’s interview, so he’s navigating the audience and he’s navigating the artists and the rappers and he’s doing a great job on both sides of the coin,” Chuck D noted. And Ice-T said his friendships with the subjects allowed him to cut deeper than the standard interviewer.

“By me knowing each one of these artists I had the ability to get, like, that Barbara Walters interview,” he explained. “I could get them into a place where I’m like, ‘That’s bulls***, man. Come on! I was there.’ ‘Ohhh…You want the REAL?’ and they start giving it up. Some of the best stuff is just wild stories — you would’ve never expected the KRS story about [how] he started rapping, or Run telling me what it’s like being on the top. It’s crazy.”

“Something From Nothing’s” official premieres will take place June 5 in Los Angeles and June 12 in New York. Ice-T predicted that “this is going to be a word-of-mouth film. We’re promoting it like a record rather than a film like…’The Avengers,’” but he’s counting on a substantial hip-hop fan base and a cross-generation appeal to bring people to the theaters.

“Almost every artist in this movie sold a million records, so in the hip-hop community we haven’t gotten one bad review,” he said. “I believe there’s a huge adult hip-hop audience that’s dormant, that wants to show their kids what they went through and wants to take them back and say, ‘This is when we wore Adidas.’ I’m hopeful those people will bring their kids. I really think this could do a Michael Moore thing. This could just swell and be bigger than a normal documentary. That could really happen.”

Meanwhile, the “Something From Nothing” official soundtrack is set to hit stores on June 12, with 23 tracks set to include live acapella performances from KRS-One, Immortal Technique, Ras Kass and Ice-T himself.

From Billboard.com

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The Most downloaded black male model

Nigerian american black male model photo gallery and blog

www.getingo.com

“NAKED BLACK JUSTICE” CAMPAIGN IS ART, NOT PORNOGRAPHY

Click the image to open in full size.I FOUND THIS ON LIPSTICK ALLEY. WHAT DO YOU THINK ABOUT THIS? CHECK OUT THE VIDEO BELOW AND READ MORE:

Here we go again. Someone is reporting us to Facebook for violating community standards, and this week’s example (last week it was a photo of an indigenous woman breastfeeding her child) had to do with a “Naked Black Justice” campaign that, quite frankly, was powerful and resonated with many (hundreds of likes and shares in about 30 minutes). Artististically, naked, nude black male and female models is an art form. We made sure the the image linked back to the campaign’s original link. We thought the message was amazing. The image is to the left:
This morning we logged into our Facebook and were told that this image violated its community standards. It was just a generic violation, we are sure it was automated, so we don’t know EXACTLY why the photo got taken down. Yet, we are thinking that it has to do with the “nudity” clause. According to Facebook, this is what they have to say about “violations,” in their own words:
Facebook reviews reports to determine whether or not the content violates our Terms of Use. We remove content that is considered obscene, violent, malicious or otherwise offensive. If you received a warning about an item that was taken down, then we have established that it violated these terms.

We would still like to know what is “obscene, violent, malicious, or otherwise obscene” about this image. The image is the start of a much-needed campaign to start destroying stereotypes about race and our perception of them. According to the campaign’s creator, this campaign is SUPPOSED to make you feel uncomfortable, to make you think, to make you act. We were not surprised that our community on Facebook (some of the smartest and most amazing people we know) resonated instantly with this image. Here is what the campaign’s creator has to say about his art:
This photography campaign was designed to bring attention to the issues of racism, prejudice and overall ignorance that has been impressed upon Black Americans. This is no longer just a statement…it has become a MOVEMENT to get others to understand that the world would be such a better place if we could just ERASE THE HATE!! Nudity was implemented to demonstrate the RAW REALITY of these issues…so if it causes you to become uncomfortable while viewing this…GOOD…maybe it will challenge you and others to take a stand against these injustices.

 

 

MESSAGE FROM THE ARTIST JAMES C. LEWIS

This photography campaign was designed to bring attention to the issues of racism, prejudice and overall ignorance that has been impressed upon Black Americans. This is no longer just a statement…it has become a MOVEMENT to get others to understand that the world would be such a better place if we could just ERASE THE HATE!! Nudity was implemented to demonstrate the RAW REALITY of these issues…so if it causes you to become uncomfortable while viewing this…GOOD…maybe it will challenge you and others to take a stand against these injustices. If you would like to become apart of this Awesome Campaign

Photographer James C. Lewis

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Ngo Okafor

The most downloaded black male model

Nigerian American black male model photo gallery and blog

www.getingo.com