


"Dealing With The Pressure 2" coming April 5th
Much like a kid who finally gets tired of being bullied in school Yung Berg has decided that enough is enough.
Unlike the school kid who looks for a fight in order to clear his lane. Berg is taker a quiter, safer route in dealing with the thugs that have relieved him of a few jewelry pieces. Berg has decided to ditch the fancy jewels and focusing on music.
If he's not wearing any jewels he won't get robbed right? We can only hope.
Berg has been robbed of a Transformers chain, a Batman chain and been pistol whipped while getting jacked.
"On some real sh*t back in the day when I was buying those big ass chains and sh*t, I felt like that was a part of me being Yung Berg. But me growing up and being Christian, being Mr. Ward, and who I really I am, I toned down. I'm not going to be with the big gaudy chains because people would look and they would say "Well, this n*gga still ain't learn his lesson." I learned my lesson. I'm going to have jewelry but it's going to be more upscale and common. It's not going to be catching just the n*gga eye," Berg recently told Vibe.
Regardless of how anyone else might look at it, Burg is happy with his career right now. He just dropped a mixtape 'Mr Ward' and is working on an album under Bryant Mckinnie's B Major Music Group
Historically speaking, Pittsburgh is to hip-hop what North Carolina is to filmmaking: somewhere between an anomaly and a footnote. Or at least that was the case before the world was introduced to Wiz Khalifa and Danny McBride. Over the past five years, both men have created an indelible image in the minds of their fans—one as a laid-back cat with quiet charisma to spare, the other as an outsize presence with outsize appetites who would outright steal any scene you were unfortunate enough to be acting alongside him in. And both of their careers seemingly hit critical mass last year. 2010 brought Wiz a monstrous mixtape in Kush & Orange Juice, a new label in Atlantic, and a new fanbase in the Pittsburgh Steelers, who made his No. 1 hit, "Black and Yellow," the team’s anthem during the NFL playoffs. For Danny, last year meant a second season as Kenny Powers on the hugely popular HBO show Eastbound & Down.
A new exhibition at Bowdoin College showcases pop-up books—for children and adults—from the Harold M. Goralnick (Class of '71) Pop-up Book Collection. LC