Chuck The Triple Threat

    Loading...

    Gender: Male
    Location: Jersey City, New Jersey
    Quote: "To be a threat is to stay inspired." - Wally Run
    Orientation: Straight
    Body Type: Athletic
    Height: 6'1"
    Ethnicity: Undead
    About Me: POWER 105.1 SAT - SUN 2-6PM Three Times The Talent: Chuck Dogg, "The Triple Threat" The bonafide triple threat is taking the entertainment world by storm with his undeniable talent, relentless drive, and a charm that won\'t quit--earning him attention and respect from fans and industry insiders alike. The smooth-talking newcomer has spent years carving out his career and solidifying his spot in the game as a noted DJ, producer, and on-air personality. A Detroit native, Chuck has been influenced by a wide range of musical styles thanks to the Midwest\'s appreciation of sounds from the four corners of the country. His parents introduced him to music at an early age, offering Chuck and his siblings a solid musical education. He played cello, piano, and guitar before his interests turned more mainstream when he began working with his older brother, J.O. It wasn\'t long before the brotherly bond turned into a full-blown production company, The Fire Factory in 2001. Chuck studied communications at Hampton University and found his first on-air home in Virginia where he won the hearts of fans on the 1 hip-hop station, 103 Jamz. He had undoubtedly found his niche in radio, and Chuck has been rolling with the new opportunities ever since. Chuck has also managed to carve out an enviable career as a DJ, working the turntables for BET and spinning at high-profile events like Jay-Z\'s album release parties. He even voiced a car-stealing thug on the uber-popular videogame, Grand Theft Auto: Vice City Stories. When Chuck is done with his multi-faceted crowd-pleasing, his alter-ego, "Hooks" heads home to flex his musical muscles, making beats in the studio. Always a student of his craft, Chuck learned from some of the best, including Miami****-making duo, Cool
    Music: I listen to anything within the musical Spektrum...hahaha.
    TV: CHUCK TV 3 TIMES THE TALENT - CHUCK DOGG THE TRIPLE THREAT
    Books: HOOKZ

My Updates

    Best Friends
  • DJ Steve Smash, 27
    DJ Steve
    Smash

  • Nay, 27
    Nay

  • Malikha Mallette, 107
    Malikha
    Mallette

  • Will 2 B, 26
    Will 2 B

  • Big Uhnk, 30
    Big Uhnk

  • Power 105.1, 32
    Power
    105.1

  • New Friends
  • Shade, 21
    Shade

  • tynisha, 33
    tynisha

  • Rik, 31
    Rik

  • Cheeks, 29
    Cheeks

  • B-Righteous, 100
    B-Righte
    ous

  • Hecton, 25
    Hecton

  • andrea, 19
    andrea

    Sue Simmons, what do you think!

    Thursday, May 15, 2008, 02:10 AM CST [General]

    0 (0 Ratings)


    SAME OL' WILL FERRELL STUFF

    Saturday, March 1, 2008, 11:11 AM CST [General]

     

     Unfortunately, the direction by first-timer Kent Alterman is fairly flat and sitcom-ish, and if Scot Armstrong’s screenplay was just a little bit smarter and/or grittier, Semi-Pro could have been a sports comedy in league with the awesome Slap Shot - instead of just another funny-but-kinda redundant Will Ferrell vehicle. (Matter of fact, the story’s pretty uneventful and the flick is plagued with spotty editing; Ferrell and his cast salvage the flick from its own sketchiness at every turn.) So there’s a missed opportunity there, but why knock a flick for what it’s not? Ferrell fans will dig it. Of that I’m pretty damn confident.

    As he often does, Will Ferrell cedes some of the comedic spotlight to his supporting players: Woody Harrelson is on hand to remind us that his comedic chops are still perfectly fresh (even if his character suffers from a seriously pointless romantic subplot), Andre Benjamin proves to be a surprisingly funny performer, and (of course) the background is peppered with amusing quips from the likes of David Koechner, Rob Corddry, Andy Richter, Will Arnett, Matt Walsh and (particularly) Andrew Daly as a nerdy announcer. The “amusingly odd cameo appearance” goes to Jackie Earle Haley as a stinky hippie who’s owed ten grand from goofy ol’ Jackie Moon.

    Like most popular comedians, Ferrell has found a niche and he’s doing some consistently funny work there these days. Although it’s been injected with a fair dose of funny profanity, Semi-Pro suffers a bit from being the guy’s fourth sports comedy in as many years -- but unlike some comedians who run one joke into the ground (sorry, Sandler), Ferrell is still able to wring some real chuckles out of a very familiar blueprint. I guess the guy’s just that funny.

     

    CAN THE ROCKETS CONTINUE THIER WINNING WAYS WITHOUT YAO???

    Houston Rockets center Yao Ming will be out the rest of the season and post-season with a stress fracture in his sore left foot.With an injured Yao Ming watching from the bench, the Rockets dominated the Wizards 94-69 to extend their winning streak to 13 games.Yao was examined after Monday’s practice at Memorial Hermann Hospital and met Rockets team physician Dr. Tom Clanton to go over the test results.At an news conference this evening, Yao said that he told teammate Tracy McGrady to step it up so the Rockets could continue their success.“I told him ‘Now is your time. You need to turn it up,.’ Yao said that he would seek a second opinion and was considering his options. “I don’t know why it happened,” Yao said. “Maybe I’m just an unlucky guy.”The Rockets confirmed the news this afternoon.“It is not an injury we feel he can play with,’’ Rockets team doctor Tom Clanton said.“I’ve made the recommendation that it be treated surgically and we are working with him to get other opinions just to be certain that that is indeed what should be done.’’The Rockets (37-20) have won 13 consecutive games since losing the one game Yao has missed this season. Yao averaged 22 points and 10.8 rebounds this season.“We’ve been playing exceptional ball and Yao’s been a huge part of that,’’ Rockets GM Daryl Morey said. “We feel very confident about our playoff push. We’ve managed to step up and play well without Yao in the past and coaches and players feel confident that we’re going to continue to play well and make the playoffs this year.’’ Clanton said Yao is not expected to miss the Olympics in Bejing in August.

    WALLY'S TRAILER PARK : IRONMAN MAY 2,2008

    0 (0 Ratings)


    THE SCOOP ON THE ROOTS NEW ALBUM....SONG BY SONG

    Friday, February 22, 2008, 02:50 PM CST [General]

     

     

    On April 29, the Roots will unveil Rising Down — the latest step in the six-member Philadelphia hip-hop band's 15-year evolution on record. The darkly funky, politically charged project is now almost done after more than a year of recording, though it is currently missing contributions from planned guest artists Common, Lupe Fiasco, and Q-Tip.

     

    'RISING DOWN'' (possible alternate title: ''Humdrum'') Guest rappers Mos Def and Styles P join Trotter in unleashing a slew of dystopian imagery over heavy, atmospheric synths. ''It's not an intro, but more an introduction to the topical theme of the album,'' Trotter says. ''Mos kicks it off from one perspective. My verse is about global warming and how the world is all haywire. And Styles P is rapping about prescription-drug campaigns, the stuff they advertise on TV, all the crazy side effects. We're all dealing with different aspects of the state of the world.''

    ''GET BUSY'' It's a Philly celebration, with verses from longtime protégé Dice Raw (''kinda like W.E.B. DuBois/Meets Heavy D and the Boys'') and more recent associate Peedi Peedi as well as scratches from DJ Jazzy Jeff. The beat's driven by an aggressive, grinding bassline. ''That's the return of the boom-bap,'' says Trotter. ''We're revisiting golden-era East Coast hip-hop, but the synthesizers make it modern.'' Adds an oracular Thompson: ''What was 20 years ago is also tomorrow.''

    ''BLACK'S RECONSTRUCTION'' Trotter raps for 75 bars straight on this lyrical exercise, spitting effortless game (''Smooth like the dude Sean Connery was playing'') over a dirty drumbeat and foghorn-like tuba moans. ''It was a first take,'' notes Trotter. (Show-off!) ''That's a song in the tradition of 'Web' and 'Thought @ Work'. It's become something that die-hard fans check for, that extended freestyle, minimal chorus, hard-hitting lyrical joint.''

    ''APOLOGIZE'' Thompson calls this rhythmic, brass-laced cut (also featuring Dice Raw) a tribute to late Afrobeat legend Fela Kuti. Trotter's lyrics examine the challenges of today's music industry: ''Look into my daughter's eyes/Wonder, how can I provide?'' ''It's about not apologizing for what you are,'' Thompson elaborates. ''Dice Raw's verse does his commentary on how the new minstrel image of black people is in vogue now — how that's the image that's being sold to you. It's really hard to hold on to your dignity and not resort to shucking and jiving to sell records.''

    ''CRIMINAL'' (possible alternate title: ''Pay the Bills'') A simmering meditation on street life, still awaiting a guest verse from Saigon. ''It's about being persecuted and having no other alternative,'' Trotter says. ''You could also see it from the angle of the Rockefeller laws,'' adds Thompson, ''certain groups of people get persecuted and others get away with it.'' Chuckling sardonically, Trotter concludes: ''That [song] is a light-hearted one! It's a happy album...''

    ''I CAN'T HELP IT'' Trotter says this harrowing tale of addiction, bustling with keyboard burbles and ethereal background vocals, is about ''giving in or not giving in to your urges.'' ''I can't help it/Maybe I'm selfish,'' he raps. ''The way I'm running is becoming a health risk/I might have a heart attack, I'm taking more pills than Elvis.''

     

    ''SINGER MAN'' Two little-known guest rappers chime in on this unsettling multipart suite, which segues from a spare bass drone to a backmasked, drumless ambient section. ''That's three different first-person accounts of people that felt justifiable violence,'' says Thompson. Trotter raps in the voice of ''an African child soldier fighting for Charles Taylor in Sierra Leone''; Truck North takes on the role of a suicide bomber; and the very unfortunately named emcee Porn explores the perspective of a school shooter.

    ''UP THERE'' ''It was a cold night/Not cold like the winter, but I can feel an energy in the air that I don't like'': Another claustrophobic narrative, backed by melting synths and an eerie vocal loop. Trotter compares its steady crescendo to 1996's ''Panic''. ''It's a dream sequence. Some person is driving me through this place where I see my life, like a drive-in movie. Then the guy disappears, and I'm being carjacked. It's one of those things like the 'You Got Me' video, where [the plot is] left wide open — it's in the eye of the beholder.''

    ''LOST DESIRE'' Urgent verses from Talib Kweli (who shouts out his new project Idle Warship) and former Roots member Malik B anchor another look at contemporary social ills: ''No one cares what the truth is/It's a fortress built on lies,'' goes the hook. ''Malik and I are always the yin and yang of Philadelphia,'' says Trotter. ''He represents the street, that accurate commentary, and I'm kind of the polar opposite of that. So we balance each other out on the song, and Kweli's in the middle, talking about what goes on in Brooklyn.''

    ''THE SHOW MUST GO ON'' Cascading drums and a serrated synth texture set off the song that Common is expected to appear on. (''He promised his left arm if he doesn't get us his verse!'' kids Thompson.) ''It's about where we are at this point in our career, why we do it — a more introspective, personal type of joint,'' says Trotter. ''I'm saying some fly s--- on that song. I like those verses, boy!''

    ''RISING UP'' The title track's counterpart has a far lighter tone, courtesy of two fresh-faced guests: soulful songbird Chrisette Michele and much-buzzed-about Washington, D.C., rapper Wale. ''Where 'Rising Down' is one of the darker moments of the album, 'Rising Up' is the beacon of hope,'' says Trotter, who boasts on the song's hook that he's ''getting paper like John Travolta.'' The track's beat calls to mind the polyrhythmic pulse of Washington's go-go scene — an unexpectedly touchy subject, it turns out. ''It's more percussive than your average Roots song,'' Trotter continues with a grin. ''But Wale, who's a die-hard 23-year-old D.C. native, just refuses to accept that as go-go in any way, shape or form: 'What?! Oh, that ain't no go-go jam!' So it's our attempt at something quasi go-go-esque.''

    ''BIRTHDAY GIRL'' Summery guitar chords and an ultra-catchy hook sung by Fall Out Boy's Patrick Stump have made this the leading contender for Rising Down's first single. It's a pleasant breeze of a song — at least until you notice the vaguely creepy lyrics, in which Stump and Trotter fondly address an adoring female fan on the occasion of her 18th birthday. ''It's based on experiences that we all go through today, as musicians and as parents,'' Trotter says. ''It deals with what our daughters are exposed to, the effects of My Super Sweet 16, reality TV, all this crazy s---.'' Thompson, however, laughs off the song as a hip-hop Lolita: ''It's the most beautiful statutory rape song ever!''

    Source: EW.com

    WALLY RUN'S MOVIE PICK OF THE WEEK!!!

    BE KIND, REWIND.

    Jerry (Jack Black) is a junkyard worker who attempts to sabotage a power plant he suspects of causing his headaches. But he inadvertently causes his brain to become magnetized, leading to the unintentional destruction of all the movies in his friend's (Mos Def) store. In order to keep the store's one loyal customer, an elderly lady with a tenuous grasp on reality, the pair re-create a long line of films including The Lion King, Rush Hour, Ghostbusters, When We Were Kings, Back to the Future, Driving Miss Daisy, and Robocop , putting themselves and their townspeople into it. They become the biggest stars in their neighborhood.

    Check the Trailer Here!!!

    Source: Rottentomatoes.com

     

    WALLY RUN'S MUSIC VIDEO OF THE WEEK

     

    LIL MAMA, CHRIS BROWN FEAT T-PAIN - SHAWTY GET LOOSE


     

    0 (0 Ratings)


    More Blog Posts

Comments