![]() I hate that this house used to have a flat roof & there is absolutely NO storage. I can not begin to even tell you the depths of torture & harrassment they bestow. I hate our crazy,drunk neighbors that live right above us. I love our deck & the "game room" downstairs that I decorated hippy/60's style where the kids can hang out. I love,love,love our view of Lake Texoma. ![]() ![]() Completely windows in the back - no curtains/lots of light. Ours, too! 1960's brady bunch looking long ranch house built on a hill with two seperate downstairs rooms. Otherwsie I love it.Ĭlick to expand.Haha! I LOVE that description. Plus, back when the house was built the plumbing and wiring and all that was not down so that headroom was taken into consideration and when we renovated the plumbers and electrictions pretty much followed suit.īut that's my biggest pet peeve with my house. They're only about 7ft high - mainly for storage/laundry etc and Ian can play down there, but there's no way we could ever finish the space off and still have head room. We can't finish our basement because the ceilings are just too low. But my big wish is that we had a better basement. So everything is planned out as per my decisions, down to the screened in deck so it's about as functional and has everything on my wishlist that we could get in a tiny footprint, so I don't really have any problems there, but I wish we had bigger bedrooms, and an extra bedroom. My cape house, circa 1950's, is essentially fully new - upstairs gutted and fully renovated and added on to in 2003, downstairs fully gutted last winter. And by cosigning L.A.’s newcomers while pausing his career to devote himself to his family, he still carries the torch for the coast.I love my neighborhood - it's just the right balance of people and I have absolutely everything near me. Dre's protegé took his bow as a West Coast OG, the head of his own label (Prolific), a collaborator with Ed Sheeran, and an improbable advocate for rappers laying beefs and judgment aside. His intensity never flagged all the way up through 2019, when he released what he said would be his final album, the reflective Born 2 Rap. He was just fine on his own, thanks to his nothing-to-prove attitude and impressive songwriting, spitting bars of brash vulnerability and vivid imagery of his gritty roots over the production of both A-list and up-and-coming beatmakers. A deeply felt feud with 50 Cent led to his exit from Aftermath, and Game then launched a barrage of snarling diss tracks aimed at his former mentors before his 2006 sophomore LP, Doctor's Advocate. The Game's 2005 debut, The Documentary, proudly extolled West Coast gang culture while showcasing chameleonic flows influenced by rap greats. ![]() Dre, Jay-Z-and a mixtape they released in 2002 found its way to Dre himself, who signed The Game to Aftermath Entertainment in 2003 and slotted him with 50 Cent's G-Unit Records. He and his brother, Big Fase, studied the work of their rap forebears-Nas, Dr. Born Jayceon Terrell Taylor in Compton in 1979, he spent a chunk of his youth in foster care and made a community for himself in the city's gangs. 'hood-and proved that it is absolutely possible to become commercially successful without sacrificing an ounce of street cred. Entering the gangsta rap scene when the West Coast was losing the dominance it had enjoyed in the early '90s, The Game revived his South Central L.A.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |