Sunday, December 7, 2008

Wikipedia again (attempt at creating an article after suceeding with editing one)

In my attempts at trying to add onto an existing Wikipedia article I also tried to create a new Wikipedia article. This is my first attempt at creating a new article about a comic book guide called Slings and Arrows. I met with an attempt to delete this article because of biased language that wouldn't fit in an encyclopedia and altered it, which seems to have stopped its deletion. Check it out at

Slings And Arrows

Wikipedia and The Wire part two

I have tried a second time at contributing to a Wikipedia article after the last time I tried to edit the page on the HBO series, The Wire. This time I decided to contribute to the description of the soundtrack to the show. I had recently bought the album, loved it, and saw that the section devoted to its description was not completed. I attached the track listing and added to this page. You can find it at:

The Wire...and all the pieces matter

Theatre of the Mind

Ludacris' new album Theatre of the Mind was another solid release by everybody's favorite rapper of the South. In an album jam-packed with guest rappers Ludacris still stood out in every track. And speaking of guest artists, Luda managed to bring high quality talent to every song. Industry greats Nas and Jay-Z join together again to light up a track the way they did on "Black Republican" and "Success", on Nas' Hip Hop is Dead and Jay-Z's American Gangster, respectively. Concerned artists Spike Lee and Common join Luda for a socially aware "Do the Right Thang". These are only the tip of the creative talent that help boost Ludacris' new titanic album.

As expected, Ludacris provides many fun and funny tracks on this album, most notably "One More Drink" and "Everybody Hates Chris". This entire album isn't all light material though. As already, mentioned Luda and Common spark up a hot track that is incendiary in its material and message. Overall, Ludacris released an entertaining album full of creative rhymes, beats, and stories...as he promised in the opening track and through his consistent repoirtoir that could "fill up a CD-changer" as the Southern Gangster would put it.