WOLFPAC
http://www.lukehadley.com Insane Clown Posse Violent J and Shaggy 2 Dope 2007 Gathering of the Juggalos backyard wrestling independent hardcore extreme czw jcw iwa wwe ecw icp mtv video game howard stern new jack music show cky more... jackass steve-o ... all » bam margera prank pranks czw iwa wwe wwf ecw japan dvlh • |x| backyard wrestling photo shoot 2004 hardcore extreme czw jcw iwa wwe ecw icp mtv video game howard stern new jack music sunrise adams luke hadley dvlh sick nick mondo • |x| classic • |x| comedy • |x| icp insane clown posse dvlh jcw wrestling juggalo gathering juggalos jackass cky luke hadley twiztid • |x| improv • |x| injury • |x| jackass • |x| jackass wrestling icp cky wwe extreme comedy
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WOLFPAC
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JCW Try-Out's 2005
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DVLH Game Show part 1
A game show is a type of television program in which members of the public or celebrities, sometimes as part of a team, play a game, which is likely to involve answering quiz questions for points or prizes. In some shows contestants compete against other players or another team whilst other shows involve contestants striving alone for a good outcome or high score. Game shows often reward players with prizes such as cash, or holidays and goods and services provided by the show's sponsors. Early television game shows descended from similar programs on broadcast radio. Self-injury (SI) or self-harm (SH) is deliberate injury inflicted by a person upon his or her own body without suicidal intent. Some scholars use more technical definitions related to specific aspects of this behavior. These acts may be aimed at relieving otherwise unbearable emotions, sensations of unreality and numbness. It is listed in the DSM-IV-TR as a symptom of borderline personality disorder and is sometimes associated with mental illness, a history of trauma and abuse, eating disorders, or mental traits such as low self-esteem or perfectionism. There is a positive statistical correlation between self-injury and emotional abuse. Non-fatal self-harm is common in young people worldwide and due to this prevailance the term self-harm is increasingly used to denote any non-fatal acts of deliberate self-harm, irrespective of the intention.
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Insane Clown Posse
Insane Clown Posse (commonly known as ICP) is an American hip hop duo originally from Wayne, Michigan but formed in the neighborhood of Delray. ICP consists of Violent J (Joseph Bruce) and Shaggy 2 Dope (Joseph Utsler). The duo was originally part of a larger group known as Inner City Posse, which broke up in 1992. The duo has earned one platinum album and four gold albums.[1] They also have starred in their own feature film and formed their own wrestling federation JCW, Juggalo Championship Wrestling (formerly Juggalo Championshit Wrestling). ICP has dedicated followers, known as Juggalos and/or Juggalettes. The Bizaar/Bizzar era (2000 - 2001)
In 2000, ICP was disappointed by the way Island Records had been promoting them and didn't want the label to release the final Joker's Card. Since they still had two more records left to release to fulfill their contract with Island, they released Bizaar and Bizzar, as separate albums.[citation needed] Both albums were released on the same day, selling over 250,000 each, totaling over 500,000.[citation needed] ICP claims they won the bet with Osbourne, but there is disagreement as to whether Bizaar counts as one release or half of the originally planned release.[citation needed] Violent J also said on a later appearance on Howard Stern that The Wraith: Shangri-La was the album the bet was about.[citation needed] Shangri-La sold less than both Bizzar and Bizaar.[citation needed] Also, ICP was in fact dropped from their distributor after the release of the Bizaar/Bizzar albums. Violent J claimed that they had forgotten to renew the contract.[citation needed] Regardless, ICP claims to have won the bet and has asked Osbourne to make a donation to charity to honor the bet. Osbourne has not responded.[citation needed]
ICP also clashed with MTV over the release of their videos for "Lets Go All the Way," a cover song from the band Sly Fox, and "Tilt - A - Whirl." MTV agreed to show the videos but broadcast them late at night. Eventually, ICP requested that every Juggalo/Juggalette vote for the video "Lets Go All the Way" on MTV's Daily Top Ten show, TRL.[citation needed] Despite a large number of votes in favor of the video, MTV refused to play it.[citation needed] Although never played on TRL, the "Let's Go All the Way" video continued to be played on MTV late at night or early in the morning.[citation needed]
ICP released an EP with Chaos! comics entitled The Pendulum. The EP was originally released as a dozen singles in the ICP comic series from the same company but was later re-release as a EP with the graphic novel version of the comic series.
Further chaos had occurred in the spring of 2001 in Omaha, Nebraska when their road manager William B. Dail was arrested for allegedly choking a man who waved an Eminem T-shirt in front of the band. He was charged for misdemeanor assault and battery and released on $1,000 bond and was soon after fined $100 after he plead guilty to a lesser charge. Later on that very same year, the group released their second compilation album, titled Forgotten Freshness Volume 3.
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Juggalo Wrestling
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Burning man at the 2004 Gathering of the Juggalos
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Dr. Dank Sings His Hits 002
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Robot 01
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Gathering of the Juggalos
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Drunk people skating
Drunk people and skate boards. DVLH comedy http://www.lukehadley.com Skateboarding can be a form of art, a sport, a hobby, a job or a method of transportation.[1] Skateboarding has been shaped and influenced by many skateboarders throughout the years. A 2002 report by American Sports Data found that there were 12.5 million skateboarders in the world. Eighty-five percent of skateboarders polled who had used a board in the last year were under the age of 18, and 74 percent were male.[2]
Skateboarding is a relatively modern sport—it originated as "sidewalk surfing" in the United States—particularly California—in the 1950s. A key skateboarding trick, the ollie, was only developed in the late 1970s
With the evolution of skateparks and ramp riding, the skateboard began to change. Early skate tricks had consisted mainly of two-dimensional manoeuvres (e.g. riding on only two wheels (wheelie, a.k.a. manual), spinning like an ice skater on the back wheels (a 360 pivot), high jumping over a bar (nowadays called a "Hippie ollie"), long jumping from one board to another (often over a line of small barrels or fearless teenagers lying on their backs), and slalom.
In 1976, skateboarding was transformed by the invention of the first modern skateboarding trick by Alan "Ollie" Gelfand, the Ollie (skateboarding trick). It remained largely a unique Florida trick from 1976 until the summer of 1978, when Gelfand made his first visit to California. Gelfand and his revolutionary maneuver caught the attention of the West Coast skaters and the media where it began to spread worldwide. [3]
The ollie was reinvented by Rodney Mullen in 1982, who adapted it to freestyle skating by ollieing on flat ground rather than out of a vert ramp. Mullen also invented the ollie kickflip, which, at the time of its invention, was dubbed the "magic flip." The flat ground ollie allowed skateboarders to perform tricks in mid-air without any more equipment than the skateboard itself. The development of these complex tricks by Rodney Mullen and others transformed skateboarding. Skateboarders began performing their tricks down stair sets and on other urban obstacles - they were no longer confined to empty pools and expensive wooden ramps.
The act of "ollieing" onto an obstacle and sliding along it on the trucks of the board is known as grinding, and has become a mainstay of modern skateboarding. Types of grinds include the 50-50 grind (balancing on the front and back trucks while grinding a rail), the 5-0 grind (balancing on only the back truck while grinding a rail) the nose grind (balancing on only the front truck and the nose of the board while grinding a rail), and the crooked grind (balancing on the front truck at an angle while grinding) among many others. There are various other grinds that involve touching both the trucks and the deck to the rail, ledge, or lip. The most common of these is the smith grind, in which the rider balances over the back truck while touching the outer middle of the board to the grinding surface in the direction from which he or she ollied. Popping and landing on the back truck and touching the inner edge of the board, i.e. popping "over", is known as a feeble grind. Slides such as boardslides, lipslides, noseslides, and tailslides are on the wooden deck of the skateboard, rather than on the trucks. One trick that doesn't fit these categories is the Darkslide (Invented by Rodney Mullen) which consists of sliding on the top (griptape side) of the board.
[edit] Culture
See also: Skate punk
See also: Punk fashion
Skateboarding was, at first, tied to the culture of surfing. As skateboarding spread across the United States to places unfamiliar without surfing or surfing culture, it developed an image of its own. For example, the classic film short Video Days (1991)[8] portrayed skateboarders as reckless rebels.
The image of the skateboarder as a rebellious, non-conforming youth has faded in recent years. The rift between t
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Comedy
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Review of Turistas
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Intro, Juggalo
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DVLH Game Show pilot part 2
http://www.lukehadley.com A game show is a type of television program in which members of the public or celebrities, sometimes as part of a team, play a game, which is likely to involve answering quiz questions for points or prizes. In some shows contestants compete against other players or another team whilst other shows involve contestants striving alone for a good outcome or high score. Game shows often reward players with prizes such as cash, or holidays and goods and services provided by the show's sponsors. Early television game shows descended from similar programs on broadcast radio. Self-injury (SI) or self-harm (SH) is deliberate injury inflicted by a person upon his or her own body without suicidal intent. Some scholars use more technical definitions related to specific aspects of this behavior. These acts may be aimed at relieving otherwise unbearable emotions, sensations of unreality and numbness. It is listed in the DSM-IV-TR as a symptom of borderline personality disorder and is sometimes associated with mental illness, a history of trauma and abuse, eating disorders, or mental traits such as low self-esteem or perfectionism. There is a positive statistical correlation between self-injury and emotional abuse. Non-fatal self-harm is common in young people worldwide and due to this prevailance the term self-harm is increasingly used to denote any non-fatal acts of deliberate self-harm, irrespective of the intention.
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Uncharted: Quickie
A quick sneek peek at some raw footage from Uncharted: Drake's Fourtune put up agianst the Subnoize Souljaz featuring Twiztid in Dropping Bombs. Complete and Finished video coming soon.
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Death Vs. Luke Hadley volume 1
Death Vs. Luke Hadley volume 1 Classic Luke Hadley DVLH Wrestling DVD http://www.lukehadley.com for full DVD ... Backyard wrestling is a loose term used to describe Classic Luke Hadley DVLH Wrestling DVD (see the 1st 8 minutes here for free). Backyard wrestling is a loose term used to describe the controversial practice of professional wrestling as performed by untrained fans in an unsanctioned, non-professional environment. Backyard wrestling is a title applied to home filmed and produced professional wrestling shows, videos, or events carried out by untrained athletes, mostly comprised of American males between the ages of 16 and 30. In the years since its formation, Backyard wrestling has developed into an underground scene, where federations often produce, trade and distribute their videos via Internet, and other wrestling publications. Though backyard wrestling was not unheard of prior to the 1990s, the modern backyard wrestling "craze" lasted from roughly 1996 to 2001, during a time when televised professional wrestling was enjoying a period of unparalleled popularity Hardcore phase
Backyard wrestling became infamous for its out-of-control and unregulated dangerous stunts. Many people, most commonly male teenagers, frequently risked their lives in attempted dives, jumps, falls, and bumps. Many others would use sharp and harmful weapons, performing matches with flaming tables, barbed wire, lighttubes, thumbtacks and sharp metal tools such as cheese graters. While these violent practices carry a more extensive legacy in Japanese wrestling promotions such as Frontier Martial Arts Wrestling, many attribute their stateside popularity to the rise of Extreme Championship Wrestling and wrestlers like New Jack, Tommy Dreamer, and the Sandman.
These activities, which were also closely linked to the reckless nature of other teen-centered shows such as Jackass, were part of the "hardcore" phase of American professional wrestling, ushered in by the extreme style of promotions such as ECW, Xtreme Pro Wrestling, and Combat Zone Wrestling. However, when these promotions closed and/or toned down their extreme nature, backyard wrestling followed suit, leading to less dangerous activity. Because of this, the heavy bleeding and use of dangerous weaponry in backyard wrestling has now faded from popularity.
The "backyard wrestling craze," as it was, began to slow down between 1999 and 2000 . Increased media attention[4] and reforms within the professional wrestling promotions themselves led to a generally unpopular view of wrestling and unprofessional stunts, leading to a decline in the popularity of backyard wrestling. More professional wrestling schools and small independent wrestling promotions formed at this time as well, accepting particularly skilled backyard wrestlers.
As a result, more of the younger independent wrestlers admit to having backyard wrestling experience, some claiming it is a hobby that they pursue while performing professionally. This does not reflect the majority of professional wrestlers, however, as backyard wrestling is often drastically different from that shown on television. However, Foley himself discourages the practice of backyard wrestling. While he made a career by distributing a video of himself doing dangerous stunts such as jumping off a rooftop onto a mattress, he downplays what he did and says it is too dangerous. In his book Foley Is Good, Mick Foley recalls an instance where he was interviewed for a television piece about the growing trend for backyard wrestling. He claims that comments he made having viewed footage of a legitimate professional hardcore match were deliberately misrepresented and applied by the production company to a backyard vignette.
Some professional wrestlers and most, if not all, professional wrestling promotions discourage backyard wrestling in public comments, because it involves legal risk to the promotions in the form of lawsuits by individuals. Several lawsuits
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Shaggy 2 Dope (Gathering of the Juggalos 2007)
http://www.myspace.com/DVLH Joseph William 'Joey' Utsler (born October 14, 1974), better known as Shaggy 2 Dope is one half of the Insane Clown Posse, along with fellow rapper Joseph Bruce (known as Violent J). Along with Violent J and their former manager, Alex Abbiss, the trio founded Psychopathic Records. Shaggy is the person who invented and drew the Hatchetman (the Psychopathic Records logo) as well as numerous ICP album covers Utsler is also a professional wrestler.
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Matt The Dragan Show Ep. 2(DraganASS)
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Homies
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ICP's 2005 Gathering of the Juggalos
Insane Clown Posse (commonly known as ICP) is an American rap duo originally from Wayne, Michigan but formed in the neighborhood of Delray. ICP consists of Violent J (Joseph Bruce) and Shaggy 2 Dope (Joseph Utsler). The duo was originally part of a larger group known as Inner City Posse, which broke up in 1992. The duo has earned one platinum album and four gold albums.[1] They also have starred in their own feature film and formed their own wrestling federation JCW, Juggalo Championship Wrestling (formerly Juggalo Championshit Wrestling). ICP has dedicated followers, known as Juggalos and/or Juggalettes. ICP began in the late 1980s, when a small group of rappers known as the Inner City Posse were performing locally in Detroit. In 1990 Joseph Bruce ("Violent J") released Intelligence and Violence along with D-Lyrical. Then he, along with his long time friend, Joseph Ustler ("Shaggy 2 Dope") released "Bass-ment Cuts" in 1991.
The first release that gained them local attention was Dog Beats in 1991. This album led to the beginning of a long lasting and fulfilling relationship with their manager, Alex Abbiss. After gaining a certain level of experience in music, the group decided they wanted to move in a different direction. Then one night in late 1991 Violent J had a strange dream "of a clown, a carnival spirit, with six joker cards in his hands". That marked the beginning of the Insane Clown Posse.[citation needed] ICP would release six "Jokers Cards", warning the world of impending doom. Each Joker's Card album insert featured the cryptic message "After All Six Have Risen The End Of Time Will Consume Us All". Soon, ICP began their "Journey of the Dark Carnival" by starting work on the first Joker's Card titled Carnival Of Carnage. This also began their longtime friendship with producer Mike E. Clark, who would produce their music up until 2001 and again in 2006. With the release of The Wraith albums, the Jokers Card era ended. In 2005, the band released an EP entitled The Calm, which was to be the prelude to their next album, The Tempest. The ICP produced the album, which featured a new sound.[6] However, The Calm is widely regarded as Insane Clown Posse's worst album.[citation needed]
In November 2005, ICP released their fourth compilation album, Forgotten Freshness Volume 4. Unlike their other compilation albums, Forgotten Freshness Volume 4 contained several new songs. The album's single, "The People," was made into a music video in 2006. The video features ICP rehearsing the song in their studio, with photos of juggalos and fans flashing on the screen. This marks the first time ICP has made a music video from a non-studio album.
In 2006, Shaggy 2 Dope released his first full-length solo album, Fuck The Fuck Off. It was his first solo work since 1994's Fuck Off EP. Shortly afterwards, Insane Clown Posse released their first remix album, called The Wraith: Remix Albums, which contained remixes of most of the tracks off both "Wraith" albums.
In February 2007, ICP were featured on one of the final episodes of VH1's The White Rapper Show.
On February 23, 2007 ICP released the first single for The Tempest, entitled "I Do This." They also announced that Twiztid would join them on their Tempest World Tour. This was quickly followed by a second track, "Haunted Bumps," and a photo, presumably the cover, which features ICP riding a roller coaster and a new logo composed of Insane Clown Posse written in lightning.
After a long delay, The Tempest was finally released on March 20, 2007. It was met with a mixed response from fans. Despite the mixed response, most fans agreed it was much better than The Calm.[citation needed]
An advertisement inside the album announced that the next EP, Eye of the Storm, would be released at the 2007 Gathering of the Juggalos. The Tempest debuted at number twenty on the U.S. Billboard 200, selling some 33,000 copies in its first week.[1] As of June 2007, it had sold around 70,000 copi










