Rappers Kixxie Siete x Artie McCraft proclaim their love for a special herb on their track “A Song About Jane”. From the ups and downs they had with Mary Jane, they still end up back together. You can’t keep them separate from one another. They each take turns telling about their experiences with her and the complexities of a relationship with her.
Rappers J.Lately x J. Good team up for the music video to their single “Live One” off J.Lately’s PB&Js mixtape. They roll up a live one and get high with the pilots. They blaze up on roadtrip with their friends.
Peter thinks she’s an actress, Theresa thinks he’s a writer, Howard and John know the truth. Set against the dark back street of downtown Los Angeles, POLLEN follows Peter and Theresa as they weave the web of lies we call relationship. This short stars Alec Mapa, Chil Kong, Felix Pire, and Becky Baeling.
Singer Leslie Deep spices it up with his music video “Sweet Sauce”. He blends sexuality and food together to create a visually sweet concoction. This revamped version of Leslie Deep is unlike his previous videos as he’s dripping with attitude. He’s got the sweet sauce. You can get the single on or amazon.
CHORUS
He likes you a lot
So you tell him what you want
If he don’t have what you like
You tell him then goodbye
He’s a rice queen
We got the sweet sauce
He’s a rice queen
We got the sweet sauce
VERSE 1
Do you really want some of this yum?
Gotta work hard cus a dollar make me holler
I’m part of the far east movement
Red and yellow stars but I’m still an American
I’m smart like they say with math
Always on time never late for class
Walking in they look at my ass, look at my ass, what you looking at ho?
And all these queens all have yellow fever
Acting like a diva with no bieber fever
I say I’m a ho no mo, get my tips from the show and go
And all these queens all have yellow fever
Acting like a diva with no bieber fever
I say I’m a ho no mo, sorry dude I gotta go
CHORUS
My Chinese Peking Duck make him really wanna f*ck
Cus the spice that I’m emitting brings all the boys to my yard
The rich potatoes all want my Shanghai beef
I don’t do take out unless your tip is really big
I’m nutritious, delicious, vivacious and superstitious
If your feng shui yin my yang then yes we be bodacious
Can you read my fortune cookie?
(If you’re sticky) then no licky
Don’t you dare give me a hicky
I’ll make you Oppa Gangnam Style
Put the dragon in my phoenix
if you cum please use a kleenex
I got two pork buns and my dim sum got some for everyone
Blasian, haitians, Australians, and big boys that come from islands
Don’t you touch unless you pay now let’s all sing Karaoke
(I’m a ho no mo x4)
CHORUS
BRIDGE
Get Down
You make my duck quack, make my duck quack….
“A Woman Named Canyon Sam” is a testament to a woman who passionately committed herself to social change from a young age, chronicling her first coming out as a young Asian American lesbian in the seventies — one of the first “out” Asian American lesbians in North America — to publishing her award-winning 2009 book, Sky Train.
At a run time of twelve minutes, “A Woman Named Canyon Sam” was inspired when Quentin first met Canyon at the reading of her book Sky Train: Tibetan Women on the Edge of History, winner of the PEN American Center Open Book Award.
Fascinated by Canyon’s multiple identities as a lesbian, an Asian American woman, a performance artist (“a master storyteller,” The Village Voice), an early gay rights activist turned human rights advocate and most recently an author, Quentin decided to collaborate with Canyon on a documentary that began in June of 2009.
Successfully funded by Kickstarter and an entirely a project of passion, “A Woman Named Canyon Sam” first premiered at the Honolulu Rainbow Film Festival. It screened at the Los Angeles Asian Pacific Film Festival, the Hong Kong Independent Film Festival, and won the 2011 Panasonic Award for Best Documentary Short at the Asian Film Festival of Dallas.
“Without the technological revolution from digital filmmaking to internet broadcasters like Youtube, I don’t think that this little film could have been possible and seen the light of day,” says Quentin. “Of course, the film could not have been possible without Canyon Sam, a pioneering spirit whom I admire and is an inspiration to me.”
“The seventies and eighties were a profoundly unique time in the history of social change movements — wildly full of change and the hope of even bigger change. We felt we were smashing social barriers every time we turned around. I’m deeply honored that Quentin has chosen to preserve a bit of those heady times through my experiences — his first documentary in many years of illustrious film making,” says Canyon Sam. “He skillfully framed the film during the promotional tour of my book, so it enjoys an immediate, contemporary feel too.”
Seouless dropped the music video for the single “Never Wife Em”. This song is a vent song where he addresses certain issues he was facing in particular moments of his life. He keeps is real in the heart of K-Town.
Never Wife Em by Seouless (contains explicit lyrics)