Soulja Boy Crank That

RZA disses Soulja Boy and 50 Cent on stage

Posted by admin on July 20th, 2008 filed in Soulja Boy BEEF, Soulja Boy Videos
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There is a video out from RZA dissing Soulja Boy and 50 Cent.


Poppin on Myspace youtube video

Posted by admin on July 19th, 2008 filed in Soulja Boy Videos, Uncategorized
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Here is the video and song for Poppin on Myspace by Soulja Boy


New Soulja Boy Song. Poppin on Myspace

Posted by admin on July 19th, 2008 filed in Soulja Boy BEEF, Uncategorized
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There is a new song by Soulja Boy that is becoming very popular as we speak. It is called Poppin’ on Myspace. It is a remake of Sir Mix Alot’s old track called My Posses on Broadway. You heard it here first Soulja Boy Crank That.

Im Poppin On Myspace - Greg Street f/ Cutty + Soulja Boy


Nelly backs Soulja BOY

Posted by admin on July 16th, 2008 filed in Uncategorized
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“The guy’s 17 years old. You think he was worried about what a 30-year-old thinks about his fucking music when he was makin’ that song? Trip off the fact that here’s a 17-year-old that wrote and produced his own album, that found a way to make himself prevalent, got on YouTube, and made himself big. Look at that! That was brilliant to me. Again, hip-hop started for the youth, it was created by the youth, so why is all the old heads tryin’ to control it?”

–Nelly defends Soulja Boy in Rap-Up’s Summer 2008 issue


Bow wow want to Crank That Soulja Boy

Posted by admin on July 16th, 2008 filed in Soulja Boy NEWS
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Bow Wow wants to know how a joke he made on his single turned into an Internet-wide rumor that he has a beef with his friend Omarion. Well, he did make light of O’s penchant for wearing form-fitting trousers.

“It just shows you how uptight people are about certain things. The song is a joke record,” Bow told MTV News of the verse on the remix of Hot Stylz’s punch-line-driven “Lookin’ Boy.”

“Damn, them is tight, you’s a O, Omarion-lookin’ boy,” he says in the song. To make matters worst, at the end of the record, B-Dub adds, “I didn’t know me and you was gonna be going at it. I was just having fun.”

“I was talking to Yung Joc the other day; we was laughing about it,” B. Weezy said, momentarily interrupting the interview to tell his driver to hook a left. “I said, ‘I can’t believe out of all the names y’all say, nobody says nothing. I get one line, I got everybody’s attention. I’m on every Web site.’ People always hate on me, but they’re always in tune to what I’m doing. In a way, I get the last laugh. At the end of the day, the song is a joke record. It’s about your boys and you all jawning [joking] on each other. Can’t nobody tell me they ain’t never went to school and said, ‘Your momma this, your momma that,’ knowing they ain’t mean it.

“O is my homeboy, and I even joke with O about how tight he wears his jeans,” Bow added. “He knows how tight his jeans are. That’s my homeboy. Everybody knows how tight Omarion wears his pants. It’s not a secret. So why is everybody jumping on me? It’s a fact. Plus, it’s a joke. So why wouldn’t I joke on my homeboy?”

Bow said his remarks at the very end of the song weren’t aimed at O at all, but another one of his inner circle who rapped on the record. He said the friend — whose vocals were taken off the record — got on the song and joked on him real hard.

“At the end, I know everybody thinks I was dissin’, because I say, ‘I didn’t know we was going at each other.’ One of my homeboys got on the record with me. When I wrote my verse, I didn’t write about my homeboy, but my homeboy wrote about the entire crew, so I was shocked. I was telling my homeboy, ‘Dang, dog, I didn’t know you was going at me.’ Everybody assumed I was going at Omarion, [but] I was talking about one of my best friends who was on the song with me. So, nah, it’s not a dis. I know it’s a recession and everybody is uptight, but damn! I wouldn’t do that.”

Bow says he and O are so tight, he would do another Face Off record with him in a heartbeat — assuming the business and record-label promotion is right. For now, Bow is concentrating on another high-profile collaboration: with Soulja Boy Tell’em. The pair have been doing records together for official albums as well as mixtapes.

“Me and Soulja Boy have been going in,” he said. “We’re trying to put together this mixtape. We’re gonna give the people what they ask for. Next thing you know, they gonna ask me and Soulja Boy Tell’em to do an album together. Everybody is always picking on us anyway. We might just go ‘head and kill the game and sh– on all these n—as. Do a mixtape album together, put it out and go hard!”

Bow and Soulja just shot a video for “Marco Polo,” a record SB produced and rapped on.

“I’m back stronger than ever and different,” Bow said. ” ‘Marco Polo’ is gonna be a hit record. It’s an undeniable hit record. I had to get one of those silly records. Soulja Boy laced me. His beats knock! If you need one of the hard club bangers to get the crowd poppin’ … a good, snap, ghetto-ass beat, then Soulja Boy is the one. You need to come to Atlanta and get you one. His beats is ridin’. Then we did this other song called ‘Get Money.’ All the hate is doing is motivating him. He’s getting better, perfecting his craft.”

Meanwhile, Bow thinks he knows where he stands in the game. “I’m stuck in between old school and new school,” he said. “Because I’m 21 years old, I’m classified in the lightweight division of hip-hop. I look at hip-hop as having a lightweight, middleweight and a heavyweight division. It’s kinda hard for me, because I’m old but new at the same time. It makes my job harder because I gotta keep up. I gotta do the things Snoop would do every time he drops an album. You gotta give them something different. With this album, I get to bring the acting side of Bow in with the rap side of Bow Wow. It’s being displayed in the ‘Marco Polo’ video. People not even gonna know it’s me. Then I got a song called ‘Where the Big Girls’ for the big girls. The video comes in at the end of the ‘Marco Polo’ video. You’re gonna see me in the video with a big girl. She’s doing her thing, working it out, and I’m working it out with her.

Bow’s next album, Pedigree, is slated to drop toward the end of the year. (He’s a fourth-quarter staple.) DJ Khaled, T-Pain, Lil Wayne, T.I., Swizz Beatz, Soulja Boy and Nelly are all on the LP, and collaborations with R. Kelly and Chris Brown are in the can as possible other cuts. Before the album’s release, however, we’re going to get a plethora of music and a theater tour. He’s putting out two volumes of the mixtape, titled Half Man, Half Dog, with DJ Infamous, as well as three official singles. (And this is the same Bow Wow who said in June that acting, not music, was his top priority!)

“Whoever wants me out the game, it’s not gonna happen,” he said. “This video and album are gonna re-energize me and bring me to a whole new audience.”


Students use Soulja Boy Crank That and win national title

Posted by admin on July 16th, 2008 filed in Uncategorized
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Soulja Boy Tell’em’s song Crank Dat (Soulja Boy), The number one song from 2007and mainstream dance craze,  has once again given someone a title.


In the case of Fairmont High School’s Allied Health Tech Prep Program, it was three someones.

Fairmont Students Megan Lautar and Brittany Evers and Centerville High School Student Shani Yount won first place in the Skills USA National Competition in Kansas City in June.

The students used a spoof of Soulja Boy Tell’em’s song, called “Crank Dat Faucet Knob” in their presentation about the importance of washing hands.

The spoof song was performed by local rap group Marilyn Avenue. The song is the result of a collaboration between the rap group, members of Fairmont’s Allied Health Tech Prep program and Fairmont’s Digital Design Team.

Senior year students in the Allied Health Tech Program are required to complete a Senior Capstone Project, according to Kari Basson, Kettering City Schools spokeswoman. The students chose infection control as their topic.

“Ike Northern, director of microbiology at Compunet Clinical Laboratory, served as a community partner and mentored the students as they developed curriculum to teach middle school students at Van Buren Middle School about the importance of hand washing,” Basson said via a press release. “The curriculum included an introduction to microbiology, swabbing augar plates and identifying germs under a microscope.”

The students are taught by Diane Peterson.


Soulja Boy Crank That Back At Ice-T

Posted by admin on July 16th, 2008 filed in Soulja Boy BEEF, Uncategorized
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With the YouTube era, Hip Hop legends are not immune from belligerent opinions, even Ice-T. In a recent video, Soulja Boy Crank That went at Ice-T concerning his “Eat a dick” comment [click to read], which sparked a controversial opinion on the fate of Hip Hop.

After the introduction of Ice-T’s statement, Soulja Boy responded with the easiest diss he could think of; age. “This nigga Ice-T is old as fuck! This nigga old enough to be my grandfather. He’s the forefather of my nuts. I Wikipedia’d this nigga, he was born in 1958. This nigga says he’s from the west coast, nigga, you was born in New Jersey! Mr. Tracy Lauren Morrow, you was born three centuries ago, my nigga!

Continuing on his ageist rant, Soulja Boy [click to read] stated Ice-T’s mode of music is no more. “Quit nigga, why you still rappin’ for dog? Nobody wanna hear that shit no more. The reality of it is that the game has changed, there’s new nigga’s out, there’s young nigga’s eatin’, and nobody wanna hear that old shit no more. There are people who still want to hear it but they just ain’t dead yet. They old as fuck like you.

Attempting to make a more serious argument, Soulja Boy Crank That felt it was a mistake for Ice-T to speak so rudely of him. “You was wrong for that. Think about it in my shoes. This time last year I was poor as fuck. I was in the hood, I was in the ghetto. If what you living is true, you would understand where I’m coming from…I’m 17 years old, I worked hard for this shit. Even if I got all this off one song, you should be congratulating me. Real talk, you should be telling me congratulations young brother, get your money. That’s what you should be saying, instead of ‘eat a dick.‘”

This provoking series will almost inevitably continue, and Soulja Boy Crank That will be here to give you the latest.


Ice-T interview regarding the Soulja Boy Beef

Posted by admin on July 12th, 2008 filed in Soulja Boy BEEF, Uncategorized
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Ice-T Talk’s to Dj Kay Slay about what he has said.

Everyone has weighed in on the whole Ice-T vs MSoulja Boy situation. From Kanye West to Killer Mike, anyone with a voice has had something to say about Soulja Boy Crank That and Ice-T. Some agree while others do not agree with Ice-T’s approach.

Soulja Boy Crank That
has remained quiet since he responded but Ice-T wants to finish everything up. The Rapper/Actor appeared on DJ Kay Slay’s Street sweepers show to talk about what he said and why he said it.

“I just said something…I’m not really eating off of Hip Hop right now. But Hip Hop means something real to me,” Ice said. “I made a statement. Niggaz been biting their tongues but I’ve always been a nigga that say what I felt. I said it and the shit hit the fam. Niggaz is like ‘Oh my God! You’re being mean,’ I’m like ‘Ain’t that a bitch!’”

Ice-T explained that calling things out that are perceived as wack has been a part of Hip Hop since its inception and people shouldn’t be surprised at his comments about Soulja Boy.

“When I said (what I said) dude’s named just popped up as the forefront of that shit. But there’s a lot of motherfuckers doing that shit. I don’t have anything against the youngster.”

He also made it clear that once an individual steps into the booth that they are now open for criticism and this is really nothing new – for young or old artists.

“At 17 I was bustin at niggas,” Ice-T explained in reference to Mr. Crank Dat’s age. “LL got in the (Hip Hop) game at 16, Cube was in at 16, Nas was in at 16 (and) all of a sudden this is a child?”

Regardless, Ice-T wants to make something clear to all those who are upset with what he said.

“I am not hating,” Ice emphasized. “Nowadays, if you criticize something you are hating.”

And with that, Ice-T looks to be a voice of inspiration to the young artists.

“Ice is just trying to inspire these cats to be more creative. I’m looking for a 19-year-old KRS-1. I want to see a 19-year-old Public Enemy. Where they at?”


Soulja Boy Crank That on CNN the Video

Posted by admin on July 10th, 2008 filed in Soulja Boy Videos
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She say Soulja Boy Tell me. This is a video that was on CNN in the start of the year. Soulja Boy Crank That is in the news.


Soulja Boy Freestyle at Collipark Studios

Posted by admin on July 10th, 2008 filed in Soulja Boy Videos
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Real video of Soulja Boy Freestyling.