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There’s something startling about Los Angeles’ Beastie Boys exhibit. It feels like walking into someone’s bedroom or sneaking into a green room while the band’s on stage, except the dirty T-shirts, the scuffed posters on the walls and the worn cassette tapes are behind glass cases. And instead of a tiny, dimly-lit room, where most of this stuff was found, you’re in a 4000-square-foot...
There’s something startling about Los Angeles’ Beastie Boys exhibit. It feels like walking into someone’s bedroom or sneaking into a green room while the band’s on stage, except the dirty T-shirts, the scuffed posters on the walls and the worn cassette tapes are behind glass cases. And instead of a tiny, dimly-lit room, where most of this stuff was found, you’re in a 4000-square-foot...
- 1/14/2023
- by Charisma Madarang
- Rollingstone.com
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Beastie Boys fans who want to immerse themselves in the world and ethos of the pioneering rap band will get a chance to do so in Los Angeles next month.
Beginning Dec. 10, street art gallery Beyond the Streets will mount an exhibition of archival items and memorabilia spotlighting the raucous hip-hop group, who became the first rap act to chart a Billboard top album with 1986’s Licensed to Ill, which included the songs “Brass Monkey,” “(You Gotta) Fight for Your Right (to Party!)” and “Girls.”
The exhibit, which will be free to the public and open through Jan. 23, is set to include a trove of items from the personal collections of Adam “Ad-Rock” Horovitz and Michael “Mike D” Diamond. (After the death of third member Adam “McA” Yauch in 2012 from cancer, the group disbanded.)
Titled Exhibit and presented in partnership with Goldenvoice (the...
Beastie Boys fans who want to immerse themselves in the world and ethos of the pioneering rap band will get a chance to do so in Los Angeles next month.
Beginning Dec. 10, street art gallery Beyond the Streets will mount an exhibition of archival items and memorabilia spotlighting the raucous hip-hop group, who became the first rap act to chart a Billboard top album with 1986’s Licensed to Ill, which included the songs “Brass Monkey,” “(You Gotta) Fight for Your Right (to Party!)” and “Girls.”
The exhibit, which will be free to the public and open through Jan. 23, is set to include a trove of items from the personal collections of Adam “Ad-Rock” Horovitz and Michael “Mike D” Diamond. (After the death of third member Adam “McA” Yauch in 2012 from cancer, the group disbanded.)
Titled Exhibit and presented in partnership with Goldenvoice (the...
- 11/17/2022
- by Degen Pener
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
The father and stepmother who pull dark pranks on their children on their controversial “DaddyOFive” channel face child neglect charges and up to ten years in prison, People confirms.
On July 27, prosecutors in Frederick County, Maryland, charged Heather and Michael Martin each with two counts of neglect of a minor, court records obtained show. Prosecutors allege that the Martins neglected two of their youngest children, Emma, 12, and Cody, 9, between November 2016 and April 2017.
The Martins face up to five years in prison per count and a $5,000 fine.
The couple has reached a plea agreement with prosecutors, their attorney, Stephen Tully, told the Frederick News Post,...
On July 27, prosecutors in Frederick County, Maryland, charged Heather and Michael Martin each with two counts of neglect of a minor, court records obtained show. Prosecutors allege that the Martins neglected two of their youngest children, Emma, 12, and Cody, 9, between November 2016 and April 2017.
The Martins face up to five years in prison per count and a $5,000 fine.
The couple has reached a plea agreement with prosecutors, their attorney, Stephen Tully, told the Frederick News Post,...
- 8/14/2017
- by KC Baker
- PEOPLE.com
The father and stepmother who pull dark pranks on their children on the YouTube channel “DaddyOFive” have lost custody of two of their five children amid outrage about how the kids have been treated, People confirms.
On Friday, Rose Hall, the children’s biological mother, gained temporary custody of two of the youngest children who appear in the controversial videos, Major Tim Clarke of the Frederick County Sheriff’s Office confirms to People.
The channel shows Michael and Heather Martins playing dark pranks on their five children, often swearing and screaming at them until they cry.
In a video she...
On Friday, Rose Hall, the children’s biological mother, gained temporary custody of two of the youngest children who appear in the controversial videos, Major Tim Clarke of the Frederick County Sheriff’s Office confirms to People.
The channel shows Michael and Heather Martins playing dark pranks on their five children, often swearing and screaming at them until they cry.
In a video she...
- 5/3/2017
- by KC Baker
- PEOPLE.com
The duo behind DaddyOFive -- a family vlog channel where Maryland parents Mike and Heather Martin conducted cruel pranks on their kids -- have lost custody of two of their children.
The stunning development (first announced on YouTube, naturally), comes care of Rose Hall, the biological mother of Emma, 12, and Cody, 9 -- both of whom were frequent prank victims on DaddyOFive. Hall and her lawyer, Tim Conlon, explain in the clip (below) that she received emergency custody of Emma and Cody on Friday, and that they are in a “deprogramming mode” to shake off various abuses suffered. The Martins -- whose DaddyOFive channel counts 760,000 subscribers but has since been wiped -- have three other children, who remain in their custody.
Visit Tubefilter for more great stories.
The stunning development (first announced on YouTube, naturally), comes care of Rose Hall, the biological mother of Emma, 12, and Cody, 9 -- both of whom were frequent prank victims on DaddyOFive. Hall and her lawyer, Tim Conlon, explain in the clip (below) that she received emergency custody of Emma and Cody on Friday, and that they are in a “deprogramming mode” to shake off various abuses suffered. The Martins -- whose DaddyOFive channel counts 760,000 subscribers but has since been wiped -- have three other children, who remain in their custody.
Visit Tubefilter for more great stories.
- 5/2/2017
- by Geoff Weiss
- Tubefilter.com
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