No, not like that! They’re twins just celebrated their 7th birthday. They were able to come together in their co-parenting relationship and celebrate their beautiful children.
Happy Birthday Max and Emme!
🙂 Phee
Pic from Access Hollywood.
Since I missed this Wednesdays Jam, I decided to sprinkle a little music happiness on you with one of my favs from my girl Tamar Braxton.
Whoever said that music wasn’t made from truth was a lie. Most of the songs written were from someone’s experience. I think a lot of us can relate to what Tamar’s singing about in this song. Don’t take pieces of someone Cocoa Drops, demand the whole dayum thing cause you deserve it!!!!!!!!!!
🙂 Phee
Video from YouTube.com posted by Dt Royster.
Pic from thatgrapejuice.net.
It’s one thing to have an engagement ring that makes your girlfriends sick to death but it’s an entirely different situation when you have an engagement ring that can get several small countries out of their national debt.
I just saw the article below about some pricey engagement rings. Humphries ring to Kim K was $1 million. Kanye’s ring to Kim K was valued in between $7-8 million. Beyoncé’s ring from Jay-Z is valued at $5 million but one of Elizabeth Taylor’s 33-carat rings (the chick was married like 47 times, hee hee) sold at an auction for $116 million!!!!!!! Look at some of the other big ol rings walking around with celebrities (Kim Zolciak got 2 rings but from the same man though, LOL). No shade Kim K.
1. You know who. 2. Kim Zolciak’s 2 rings. 3. Russell Westbrook 4. You know who.
How do they walk around with rings that big? You can’t run into Publix, Kroger, Piggly Wiggly, CVS, Walgreen’s, Walmart or Ingles with a ring on that dayum big. You can’t run into the corner store, the one where you can buy single cigarettes and the homeless man you know by name is always hanging out. Not gonna happen. You can’t do that anymore cause T-Dawg and his homies will be waiting for you when you come out. You can’t go to a PTA meeting with a ring on like that. When you walk in all you hear is people sucking they teeth (look at this bish). All of sudden, you get knocked over the head in the parking lot going to your car one night. You cannot wear that everywhere. You have to take it off 95% of the places you go in a day. It’s not worth it to have it if you can’t wear it safely in my opinion.
When rich people give rings out, they publicize it so EVERYONE knows about it. You are basically a new target for those high class thieves. All of sudden, there’s an Ocean’s 14 movie themed after you and how a bunch of thieves stole your ring and gave you a CZ and U.O.E.N.O.! LMAO
And what about the true victim in all this? The Diamond. Poor diamonds, people just be using the mess out of them all the time. They even made chocolate diamonds and canary diamonds and pink ones too. Don’t you think diamonds are tired of being used for us to show off? Save the diamonds everybody. Cubic Zirconia looks exactly the same and no one knows the difference. No one should be that close to you anyway to be all in your business. LOL! You know I’m lying. My birthstone is a diamond so I was born into the diamond game!
http://finance.yahoo.com/news/the-most-expensive-diamond-engagement-rings-224246251.html
🙂 Phee
Article from yahoo.com by Jeanie Ahn.
Pics from zales.com, eonline (Kim K ring), tmz (westbrook ring), hqdefault.jpg/youTube.com (leakes ring), wasabifashioncult.com(kim zolciak ring).
Miami Heat fans, I’m sure, are very sad and frankly so I am.
I do not like the Miami Heat whatsoever BUT I DO NOT like to see any players hurt or sick.
Chris Bosh has been benched for the season due to blood clots in his lungs after complaining of discomfort.
Hope you get well soon Bosh! Our prayers are with you on a swift recovery!
P.S. While you’re out, please, please, please don’t grow those dreadful baby dreds back on your head. Stanks!
🙂 Phee
Article from espn.go.com.
Featured pic from dunk360.com.
Biography courtesy of biography.yourdictionary.com
One of the fiercest competitors of any era in baseball, St. Louis Cardinals pitcher Bob Gibson (born 1935) dominated the National League in the 1960s and early 1970s. The hard-throwing Hall of Fame right-hander was at his best when the pressure was most intense, winning seven of his nine World Series starts, eight of them complete games. Gibson was the first pitcher in almost 50 years to finish his career with more than 3,000 strikeouts.
Batters feared to step up to the plate against the scowling, intimidating Bob Gibson. Like the pitchers of an earlier era, he wasn’t afraid to throw inside, sometimes knocking down hitters. Gibson’s will to win was unquenchable. He led the Cardinals to three league championships and two World Series titles. His pitching performance in 1968 is among the very best in baseball history.
Beat the Odds
Bob Gibson was born and raised in poverty during the years of the Great Depression and World War II. He was the youngest of seven children, and he never knew his father, who died of tuberculosis before he was born. His mother, Victoria, supported her large family by working in a laundry. They lived in an inner-city slum in Omaha, Nebraska.
As a child, Gibson’s own health was problematic. He suffered from asthma and hay fever. He had a heart murmur. While very young, he contracted rickets and almost died of pneumonia. Yet he overcame his maladies to become a star athlete at Omaha Technical High School, excelling in track and basketball as well as baseball, where he was primarily a catcher.
Gibson applied to the University of Indiana, but that school turned him down because in those days it had a quota on black athletes. Instead, he went to Creighton University in Omaha on a basketball scholarship. At Creighton, he also played baseball, starring as a shortstop and outfielder.
In 1957, the St. Louis Cardinals gave Gibson a small bonus and signed him to a professional baseball contract. They decided he was best suited to be a pitcher. Yet Gibson was still undecided about which sport to pursue, and he played one season of basketball with the barnstorming Harlem Globetrotters before casting his lot with baseball.
Gibson spent parts of three seasons in the minor leagues, refining his pitching skills, before earning a spot on the Cardinals roster in 1959. He was unimpressive in his first two seasons, winning six games and losing 11, and was twice sent down to the minors. Thirteen consecutive winning seasons in the major leagues would follow.
Pitched with Heart
Gibson threw the ball hard, but he had trouble throwing it over the plate with any consistency at the beginning of his career. His walk totals were unacceptably high: 69 free passes in 87 innings in 1960, and a league-high 119 in 211 innings in 1961, his first year as a regular member of the Cardinals’ starting rotation. But even while he struggled with his control, his opponents were struggling to get hits off him, and his strikeout totals kept rising. In 1962, when he won 15 games, Gibson struck out 208 batters and allowed only 174 hits in 234 innings. He would strike out more than 200 batters in eight of the next ten seasons.
When he perfected a devastating slider to go with his intimidating fastball, Gibson became a complete pitcher. In 1964, Gibson pitched 287 innings and won 19 games, despite battling arthritis in the elbow of his throwing arm most of the season. St. Louis won the National League pennant, thanks largely to Gibson’s great stretch run: he won 9 of his final 11 decisions. The Cardinals edged out two other teams as Gibson won the deciding game on the last day of the season with a gutsy performance in relief.
In the second game of the World Series, Gibson pitched eight strong innings but was pulled for a pinch-hitter with his team trailing, 4-3. Never again would he be removed from a World Series game. The series was tied at two games apiece when Gibson took the mound for Game Five. He dominated for ten innings, striking out 13 and allowing only two runs, and the Cardinals won. Three days later, a weary Gibson gutted out nine more innings in the decisive Game Seven. He allowed three home runs, but the Cardinals hung on for a 7-5 victory and a world championship.
The next season was the first of five in which Gibson would win at least 20 games. He was also establishing his reputation as an intimidator. He believed that the inside part of the plate belonged to him, and batters who would dare to lean in close could expect a fastball up and in.
“Actually, I didn’t drill many guys,” Gibson told the Sporting News long after his career ended. “You thought you might get it.” The inside pitch was a key part of Gibson’s psychological arsenal. “People don’t really understand about pitching inside,” he explained. “They think when you throw inside, you are trying to intimidate somebody, you are trying to knock them down, you are trying to hit them. It’s none of the above. You pitch inside to make them think inside.”
Gibson said that when he did hit a batter, often it was a mistake. But he wouldn’t acknowledge it was unintentional. “I wasn’t throwing at them and they didn’t know it, because they expected me to throw at somebody,” he recalled. “So I never apologized. That’s the worst thing in the world to do. You just stand out there like you did it on purpose.”
His catcher, Tim McCarver, knew how tough Gibson could be. Often, when McCarver went to the mound to settle him down, Gibson would scowl and wave him away. “The only thing you know about pitching is how hard it is to hit,” Gibson once told McCarver as he approached the mound.
Gibson’s athleticism helped him be an all-around contributor to his team. He was one of the smoothest-fielding pitchers of any era, jumping on bunts and grounders like a cat. He was awarded the league’s Gold Glove as the best fielder at his position for nine consecutive years, from 1965 through 1973. He also was a formidable hitter, batting a respectable .206 for his career and clouting 24 home runs.
Big Game Pitcher
In 1967, Gibson’s leg was fractured by Roberto Clemente’s hard line drive. He was out eight weeks, but returned in time to pitch the Cardinals to another league championship, winning the pennant-clinching game against Philadelphia. Back in the World Series, he dominated the Boston Red Sox in his three starts, allowing only three runs, 14 hits and five walks while striking out 26 in 27 innings. He won the opener, 2-1, shut out Boston in Game Four, and was again the winning pitcher in the decisive seventh game. For the second time, he was named the Most Valuable Player of the World Series.
No longer was control a problem for Gibson. In his peak years, he struck out three or four times as many batters as he walked. Recognized as the most dominant pitcher in the game, Gibson in 1968 became almost impossible to score runs against. That season was widely regarded as “the year of the pitcher,” with defensive play dominating so much that baseball officials responded after the season by lowering the height of the pitching mound. But even though batting averages were depressed throughout major league baseball, Gibson’s performance still was astounding. He completed 28 of his 34 starts, hurled 305 innings, gave up only 198 hits and 62 walks, and struck out a league-high 268 batters. He led the league with 13 shutouts and compiled a microscopic 1.12 earned run average, meaning that opponents averaged barely one run a game against him. He won 22 games and lost nine, but the losses were due mainly to poor run support from the light-hitting Cardinals.
Many baseball experts consider Gibson’s 1968 season as the greatest pitching achievement since the pre-1920 “dead ball” era. His 1.12 ERA was the fourth-best all-time and by far the lowest since the 1910s. During one stretch of the season, he gave up only two runs over 95 consecutive innings. “That season was different because of my control,” Gibson later told the Sporting News . “I really didn’t have to think about where I wanted to throw the ball … all I had to do was throw it and it got there.”
In the World Series, the Cardinals were heavily favored to beat the Detroit Tigers. The Opening Game pitted Gibson against Denny McLain, who had won 31 games for Detroit, the most by any pitcher after 1934. Gibson set a new World Series record by striking out 17 Tigers, shutting out Detroit on six hits. In Game Four, Gibson again easily beat McLain and even added a home run in the Cards’ 10-1 rout.
Gibson now had won seven consecutive World Series games, finishing all of them, and for the third time he took the mound for a decisive Game Seven. This time he faced Mickey Lolich, who also had two complete-game victories in the series. The two battled in a tense scoreless pitching duel through six innings. Then, in the seventh inning, the usually reliable Curt Flood misread a line drive by Jim Northrup and fell down while trying to reverse course. The drive went over his head for a triple and the Tigers won the game, 4-1. Gibson had struck out a record 35 batters in the series, but the Cardinals lost despite his heroic efforts.
It was the last World Series for Gibson, but he continued to be a major star and a big-game pitcher. He won a second Cy Young Award in 1970 when he won 23 games, lost only seven, and struck out 274 batters. The next season, he pitched a no-hitter against Pittsburgh. Battling arthritis and injuries into his late 30s, he continued to be a workhorse on the mound. Finally, his pain-racked body gave way, and in 1975, at age 40, he fell to a 3-10 record and was forced to retire. He finished his career with 56 shutouts. Walter Johnson was the only player of the time able to surpass his 3,117 strikeouts. Gibson was inducted into base-ball’s Hall of Fame in 1981.
A Winning Reputation
After his playing career ended, Gibson served as a coach with the New York Mets in 1981 and with the Atlanta Braves from 1982 to 1984. He also spent several seasons as a television broadcaster. For awhile he served as a special advisor to American League President Gene Budig. In 1995 he returned to the Cardinals as a bullpen coach and, starting in 1996, became a special instructor for St. Louis during spring training. He became very active in raising money for charities, and continued to be outspoken about racial barriers in baseball that he claimed kept qualified African Americans like himself from advancing in management ranks.
Gibson even complained that his reputation as a “headhunter”—a pitcher who throws bean balls—was the byproduct of racial prejudice. “I resent the fact that the only thing I get credit for is being a headhunter,” he told the Sporting News in 1998. “I suspect [it was] because I was one of the first black pitchers that was relatively successful. I pitched just like everybody else, but when I did it, it was three times worse.”
Gibson is best remembered as a competitor who used his heart and brains and guts to win. “We were taught from the time we were kids to kill, to take no prisoners—as far as winning,” he said in the same interview. “And that doesn’t change. We get a little bit older, but you go out to win at all costs.”
OMG, Remember celebrity death match? It was the funniest yet cruelest cartoon show everrrr! It was a show where clay celebrity figures were pitted against one another in a match to the death.
Check out this clip to refresh your memory or to give you a reference point for the rest of my post.
If Wiz and Amber Rose were on that show she would win no doubt. She’d probably just use her ginormous butt cheeks to suck him in and twist his neck off or twerk him to death one booty cheek at a time. Wait, Wiz might take his skinny little legs and scissor kick Amber’s head off or take a huge blunt and bash her head all the way in. LMAO.
Just jokes but my most favorite married, soon to be divorced, celebrity couple is about to embark on a real battle royale over the custody of their son Sebastian. WIZ KHALIFA IS SAYING OUT LOUD THAT AMBER ROSE IS NOT A FIT MOTHER!!!!
What you talkin ’bout Willis?
I love me some Wiz buuuuuut isn’t what he’s doing what my grandma says “the pot calling the kettle black”? TMZ caught up with him leaving somewhere fo-day in the morning and he literally face raped a random fan waiting to get a selfie with him. He was stoned beyond recognition. You can’t do that Wiz, not battling for custody and being followed by the paparazzi everyday of your life.
When you are battling for custody you have to change and act right. You have to start wearing cardigans and penny loafers, attend book signings, do community service and stuff like that. You have to keep both of your eyes completely open at all times without wearing sunglasses. The paparazzi needs to catch you with one of the Make-A-Wish children in the studio cutting an album or at church getting recommitted to GOD. You have to start hanging with Nickledeon cast members but be careful their bad ways can rub off on you. LOL. You basically can’t be the you you we know and love. It has to be your alter ego, the squeaky clean one you use when the cops pull you over and you got an unregistered pistol under the seat or the one you use when you go to the bank to get a loan. LMAO!
Wiz needs to get married again right quick like Ludacris did. Hmmmmmmm. He definitely can’t win custody partying and being caught on camera higher than Orion’s Belt. Am I right? Ok, then.
From what I hear Amber Rose isn’t home making hot chocolate and wearing a full outfit herself BUT she’s not the one making the claim of unfitness (if you will).
Just giving you life a bite size piece at a time. Don’t want you to choke. LOL!
😉 Phee
video from youTube posted by good.party.sign
pic courtesy of sohh.com
I referenced this ESPN special in my post about Amare Stoudemire. If you haven’t seen it before, it’s an eye opening experience to find out athletes go broke because they do stupid things or trust the wrong people.
I personally believed that all athletes were still rich past their time on the field, court or ice. Now, I know that some of our favorite athletes may be the one asking us if we want fries with that. One may even be at a Home Depot near you making keys or getting something down for us out of housewares, even renting us a car at Enterprise. Sho shad (so sad in baby talk).
Check it out and let me know what you think about it.
🙂 Phee
Video from youTube posted by P J Fronda.
One day on lunch with a co-worker/friend at Qdoba, I happened to look up at the tv screen to see Amare Stoudemire in what I thought was a bathtub full of blood so I almost threw up. I’m like, oh Lord, Amare done went to the dark side and joined some type of vampire cult until I read at the bottom of the screen that it was actually red wine. I still almost threw up. Not because I don’t like red wine but because of the thought of someone wasting all that red goodness to put their sweaty behind in it and not drink it nauseated me. Why would a sane person waste their money on a red wine bath?? Oh, I’m sorry, “they” call it vinotherapy. That’s not even a real world in the Webster’s Dictionary yet. LOL
Remember that ESPN 30 for 30 special Broke? Amare is going to be on the second version if he keeps spending money frivolously like this.
Here is an excerpt from the article by By Ohm Youngmisuk | ESPNNewYork.comf (link below) on vinotherapy…
“Grape polyphenols fight against free radicals, which cause 80 percent of skin aging. … In addition to their exceptional antioxidant power, polyphenols reinforce microcirculation, protect elastin and collagen fibers and prevent the destruction of the fundamental elements of the skin’s support tissues.”
My translation: Wine baths are the modern day fountain of youth and give you better skin apparently (in my J.Cole voice).
How much will a wine bath run you, might you ask? If you have to ask, you can’t afford it. No, I couldn’t find the price of the one Amare had at the Plaza Hotel in New York but I’m sure it’s not cheap because I’m almost certain they’re not going to use Arbor Mist. LMAO
Next thing you know it will be the “it” thing to take baths in gentleman’s jack if you wanna become more of a thug, Moscato if you want to be a little bit more sensitive to others, or Wild Irish Rose if you wanna learn how to turn up on people when needed. I mean, really, what next athletes??????
I’d love to hear your thoughts on this story.
🙂 Phee
Featured pic from www.sportressofblogitude.com
Article from espn.go.com
Medical people come up with a word for everything these days. And no, co-sleeping does not mean sleeping with your 2 boyfriends, 2 girlfriends, husband and your boyfriend or your wife and her sister. It is when children are allowed to sleep in the same bed with you instead of their own bed in their own cute, little room. Why medical people can’t just say that instead of co-sleeping? I have no idea.
Anywho, I have a friend that allowed her daughter to sleep with her and her husband until he was like 12-14 years old! Not 2-4 years old, 12-14 years old. Read this carefully………..THAT IS TOO DAYUM LONG TO HAVE YOUR KID IN THE BED WITH YOU AND YOUR SPOUSE/PARTNER, WHATEVA!!!!!!
Now, as parents, we start out with big, beautiful dreams. We find out we’re preggers and we go to planning every little detail and the “I wonders” set in. I wonder what they’ll look like, how they’ll talk, etc. We buy books and get all babytelligent (if you will) so we think. We buy a crib and come up with colors for the nursery once we find out the sex of the baby and all. We go through all that to have them little crumb snatchers steal our beds day in and day out. You put them in their bed, go to the bathroom, pull back the covers and BAM! there they are on your freakin pillow. It’s like they’re in the movie Jumper or something. Their nursery basically becomes a second closet, storage area, or just the place where they go to play.
H and R block says “get your billions back America”, I’m saying “Take your beds back America!!!!”. LOL
I was once a violator of the BSTOBA (Babies Sleep in Their Own Bed Act), Section 2-56, Article 37 too so I can speak on this subject with expertise. Violations of this Act for me included lack of sleep, random kicks in the stomach and face, neck cramps, scratches, anxiety from thinking the baby got lost in the cover or fell in between the bed and of course reduced relations activity! This was me in this pic. Kids just mistreat you. They don’t put that in the parenting books and stuff!
Basically nothing is yours anymore. I gave up my womb and body for 10 months in the name of science and that still wasn’t good enough. They took my bed too. I did it out of convenience and safety with my first chickadee. I was a new parent and I had fears of SIDS or that something may be wrong and I didn’t hear her so I thought her sleeping with me would be the best idea. This lasted off and on until she was 3.5 or 4 until she didn’t want to sleep with ME anymore due to HER independence. Miss “can’t get her own job” was all of a sudden independent. Imagine that. Ha!
I wish I wanted to say there’s no right or wrong answer but there is a right answer. Children should not sleep with you forever ESPECIALLY when you are married. I don’t even want to imagine all the GOD awful things that may happen while kids are in the bed with their parents and it’s Mr. and Mrs. Nasty Time. LOL. Seriously though, 12 years old is a bit old to be sleeping with parents every single night. If the child is sick or it’s a thunderstorm, I understand whole heartedly but enough can be enough. I mean, what are you going to do, when you go to the nursing home, tell them you need bunk beds??? Ijs
I found the article below for those who may be wondering about this topic and need some advice. There is no bible for parenting but there are great guides. Make your own from your experience.
http://www.webmd.com/parenting/features/getting-kids-to-sleep-in-their-own-beds
😉 Phee
Article from WebMD.com.
Featured pic from pinterest.com.
Pic in post from www.progressivepioneer.com.
OMG, KT and I looooooove us some Kevin Hart. This is his new international tour which starts in the U.S. then goes abroad.
If you haven’t gone to see Wedding Ringer, you need to and watch out for his new movie “Get Hard” coming out in March too.
Check out the website below to find out when he hits your city.
http://www.livenation.com/artists/44180/kevin-hart
🙂 Phee
Pic courtesy of www.wtsp.com.