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Taiwan_Vaughan's Content Summary

My Journal

  
Wednesday, February 28, 2007
 

Dear Mayor,

 

I’m one of those people that say they’ve been “saved”. There are a lot of us now, 32 million worldwide and the numbers are climbing rapidly. Although still relatively small in comparison with other clans, our institution has been the driving force behind popular fashions, cutting-edge music, film, and most modern art since the day our culture spawned 60 years ago. Whether alone, or in large groups, our place of worship is never limited to a church, temple or mosque, as we’re free to practice anywhere we like. Though seen in some ways as a cult, what binds us as a whole is not Jesus Christ, Jehovah, Allah, Buddha or even Hello Kitty. In fact our “fundamentalists” are no more than professional athletes, and our scholars produce what become our “bibles” in the form of magazines and DVD’s.

 

Never sure of whether to call itself a sport, an art, or even a new religion; skateboarding has always been in a league of its own. Together we skateboarders are a secure and unified nation. We share the same joy, the same pain, the same culture, all without needing a single leader to lead us, or boarders to fence us in. We are multinational, and within each of the countless counties we occupy we have no trouble being multicultural. All ages included, our way of life is physically and mentally healthy. A vast majority of us are staying out of trouble and away from a life of videogames while our games are often seen as a vast improvement over others. In the past decade, according to the American NSGA (National Sporting Goods Association) our relatively young sport has been replacing older sports such as Badminton, Billiards, Golf, Soccer, Baseball and Softball, Tennis and Table Tennis, Mountain Biking, and even Basketball, both on the Play Station and in the real world.

 

It was 17 years ago I started skateboarding. Since then it’s been without a doubt the most positive element in my life, and like so many guilt-ridden Catholics I feel indebt to its existence. Though great for everyone, skateboarding is a perfect outlet for “at risk” kids especially. Personally, any time my life started to go downhill, or if I got into trouble, it was always skateboarding that brought me back to life. Skateboarding’s secret societal healing power is in how it naturally fosters a need to be different and allows those who do it to progress and develop a healthy sense of independence, giving them improved confidence in all walks of life. It provides kids one more opportunity to get outside and actually do something instead of get bored and into trouble. Skateboarding continues to support life long after childhood as well. Being closely connected with the skateboard industry grants an array of highly satisfying job opportunities. I myself make a harmonious living instructing skateboarding, shooting photography and video of professionals, writing stories for skateboard magazines and even designing parks and plazas to skate in.

 

As one of many grateful skateboarders in existence, I sense a strong need to introduce skateboarding to others, protect what has made it great and keep alive the things that attracted me to it in the first place. It’s my desire to “keep it real", to keep the roots or fundamental characteristics functioning and in intact. Like a farmer I make sure it has plenty of regular waterings, enough fertile soil to root in, and as much light as it can get. Being from the west I’ve witnessed skateboarding in its mature form and feasted on its much larger fruit. Taiwan planted the seed just 10 years ago and it, like many of Taiwan’s borrowed culture or sports, is still a slow growing, vulnerable seedling, in need of special care and nurturing, and must first be grown tall and strong before any type of fruit can be had.    

 

 

 

 

 

CURRENT ISSUES

 

In a land lacking translated magazines and subtitled DVDs from the western world, and no strong local history, the skateboard scene here is like an empty shell. Without a clear idea of specific origins, skateboarding and its surrounding economy suffers from the same thing the “Hip Hop”, “Punk” or other borrowed western “youth cultures” suffer from in Taiwan. It quickly becomes a short lived fashion show if not enough new fans know what makes those western scenes shine so bright to begin with, what spawned them, or how they grew so big as to notice them halfway around the world.     

 

In what looks like proof of this theory, over the few years I’ve been in the Taiwanese skateboarding scene, the Taiwanese participation in skateboarding seems as though it has stalled at a modest midway point, odd for a sport that’s #2 next to Snowboarding in a list of the fastest growing sports on the planet. “Faddism” has indeed set in as too many have treated it as meaningless fashion, doing little or nothing to sustain a push forward or to help Taiwan’s skateboarding evolve and grow into the kind of scene one would and should have seen by now.

 

Not helping the situation also, is the fact that in Taiwan, and in much of the surrounding countries in Asia, skateboarding and its appeal to young people have been used by official “outside” organizations and their corporate associates mainly as a way to help promote the next cell phone, or products that have very little, if anything, to do with actual skateboarding. At the same time, skateboarding and its high potential for boosting tourism and its many profound social health benefits are being ignored and thus not cared for or utilized to the full extent they could be. Official decisions and planning that are said to aid in the promotion of the sport of skateboarding in Taiwan are currently being made by those who would not dare step on a skateboard themselves, and since they don’t skate they naturally know very little about skateboarding. Unfortunately for the Taiwanese tax payers, these “outsider associations” and there confused ideas on skateboarding have been approved by the Taiwan government to promote skateboarding since it first appeared in Taiwan barley 10 years ago. The Chinese Extreme Sports Association (CXA), to name a major example, is officially approved by the federal government to build “skateparks” and put on promotional events in name of something called the “X-Games”. It is quite apparent to whom the facilitation is supposedly for, that these planners and organizers lack the essential skills, experience, and cultural knowledge needed to help produce a strong, long-lasting skateboard scene in Taiwan. In fact, most of the local skaters I’ve talked to believe very strongly that in the C.X.A.’s “misdeeds”, they and their fantasies about us, our scene and industry, may actually be doing more harm than good. It is becoming ever more obvious that what they lack is the involvement of proper expert talent, and in this case they need not search any further than the skaters themselves.

 

Taiwanese skaters have had next to zero say and with the experts shut out, the parks they steam ahead to build for us, using strange partnerships and at costs that are strangely much too high, lack the necessary user-input and are inappropriately designed. To this day there are over 20 caged-in “X-Games” parks in Taiwan (about one in every major town), all cookie-cutter in nature, and not a single one made with expert skateboarder input. Instead they merely copy what they’ve seen on ESPN (another “outsider institution” wanting in). Up until recently, Taiwanese skateboarders (most of them merely high school aged) were not able, and in some cases too lazy or even unwilling to organize to attain official status and proper government support. But now with worse and worse parks going up, and more and more corporations taking us for granted in these contests, and with less and less respect to our culture, we’ve had no choice but to take matters into our own hands. Even skaters as young as 13 are slowly starting to realize a few things, things that have led to something called the Taichung Skateboarders Association. To become a recognizable and respected group in our community, autonomous in our direction, less vulnerable to exploitation and in charge of what we need to sustain natural growth; we needed to form the TSA. With careful long-term planning, we believe Taiwan’s skateboard scene and its surrounding industry can attain the kind of greatness and exposure it normally attains in every other country it exists in once skaters themselves are in the driver’s seat.

 

 

 

WHY THE OUTSIDERS WANT IN…

The Big Money in Skateboarding

l          There are an estimated 32 million skateboarders in the world, 12 million of whom are in the U.S.

 

l           Skateboards and skateboard-related products, from about 300 manufacturers of professional-level equipment, generate approximately $5.2 billion in annual retail sales around the world.

 

l          “Tony Hawk Pro Skater” video game captured the #1 ranking in both sales and revenue for video game sales in 2000, and has continued to achieve top spot each year since.

 

l           The 2001 Nickelodeon TV Kid’s Choice Awards placed Tony Hawk as “Favorite Male Athlete” in front of Tiger Woods, KobeBryant, and Shaqille O’Neal.

 

l           Tony Hawk is the 9th most searched for Athlete on yahoo.

 

l           Skateboarding is growing faster than mountain biking, golfing and 50 other sports tracked by the National Sporting Goods Association.

 

l          “More Americans rode skateboards last year than played Baseball, according to the Sporting Goods Association.” –USA Today, Aug. 17, 2001

 

l           Since 1987 the growth rate for skateboarding has been 7.2 percent per year, while baseball declined 27.9 percent and basketball grew only 5.1 percent in that same period. (From the Sporting Goods Manufacturers Association’s January 2001 "Sports Participation Topline Report")





PROOF IS IN THE PUDDING

Visions for the future:

        Taiwan’s first real skater-designed skate parks and multi-use plazas

 

Skateparks should be much more than just a place to skate; they should be powerful generators. They should generate more skateboarders and keep them skateboarding forever after they start.

 

Involving the youth and those with greater experience has been proven to work in Canada, the United States, Australia, and all over Europe. In Canada I was one of the founding members of the Vancouver Skate Park Coalition (VSPC), a coalition of skateboarders and BMX riders fighting for a place of our own, something our government had refused to grant us for well over 20 years.

 

We first sought a single indoor facility for the long Canadian winters 9 years ago., When we finally got approval to build a, “for skateboarders - by skateboarders” park, it was a huge success. Since then we’ve managed to help construct over 50 (cost-effective) other ones, each better than the last. They’ve been labeled the best in the world by professionals and skateboard magazines for being the most “modern”, “creative” and “technically advanced” concrete skate parks in North America for years and years. They have been hailed by parents, teachers, the police and the government for providing a sustained positive outlet to practice challenging skills and spend one’s time in a safe, social environment.

 

Because of an organized and highly passionate, self-motivated group like the VSPC, Vancouver is now discovering the benefits of some of the first “multi-use parks and plazas” in the world. The parks are a place where the skaters and the public co-exist comfortably in the same area, livening up parts of the city in the process.




 

 

“X”tremely Misunderstood

 

Last but not least, we as a skateboarding society want to inform the rest of society (especially the one that watches far too much TV), that skateboarding is not all about rings of fire or daredevil freak shows. What we do is about personal growth and our own individual successes. To 99% of us, skateboarding is not “X-treme”. In fact most of us are offended by mere use of it. Some even detest the word extreme or any cute use of the letter “X” in relation to us, since it has literally come to symbolize the corporate exploits of our talent, image and positive energy. At the very least, the word “X”-treme“ reminds us of the overly used marketing propaganda that all too often bears a dorky picture of a phony skateboarder, serving only to further confuse the public.

 

Style or technique, it doesn’t matter, skateboarding is completely free and self-paced. To the average skater a televised corporate contest seems a lot like a cheap corny circus act, devoid of meaning or soul. The corporate sponsored contests in Taiwan are rarely judged by skaters and the courses that we are enticed to perform on are made even worse than the “X” parks. Attendance by skaters in the televised “X-Games” have gone down over the years as they begin to see the events are mere jokes. Skaters in Taiwan’s young emerging skateboard scene are now finally old enough, or awake enough to suspect a certain form of meddling and many are becoming increasingly disappointed or annoyed with them generally.

 

A park of our very own making (events included)… can change all that and do a much better job of promoting skateboarding and the positive roll it naturally plays in any modern society.

 

Our plan is to eventually build (and take care of) a skater-designed, multi-use plaza and park, as well as an indoor facility for skateboarding, art and music. I like to think of the idea as a “Stock 20” for skateboarders.

 

Your campaigns have always caught my attention as they often emphasize support for the youth and nurturing the diverse cultures that come to Taichung, as well as the quintessential importance of tourism. It seems you have a clear vision of what it will take to make Taichung a truly modern and international city, especially as it relates to your young people, the ones bringing new life and culture to the city.

 

The TSA would like to pull you away from your busy schedule and invite you to one of our monthly meetings to show you what we’re currently working on and discuss these issues in more detail.

 

As everyone knows, your young people truly are the future of Taiwan! ….Let’s help make it both a healthy and thriving one.

 

In sincere respect to you, your island, and all your people,

 

Vaughan Neville

 

TSA Interim Coordinator /

VSPC Foreign Affairs

 

 

 


View Comments Add/View Comments (3) Tags:skatetaiwan.com, Tours, Taiwan, Asia, TSA, world, countrys, japan
Published by Taiwan_Vaughan: 2:42 AM
Updated On: 2/28/2007 at 3:12 AM

Wednesday, June 28, 2006

 

“In politics, an organized minority is a political majority." 
                                                                     - JESSE JACKSON


GSD group 1.jpg 


GO SKATEBOARDING DAY 2006

PHOTOS BY SHON CHEN



Skateboarding in most places in the world has been booming like crazy for perhaps the longest stretch in skateboarding’s 60 year-old experience. Those of you who started skating post 1990 may think this is going to last forever and that we are invincible. But for those of us older dogs, we wonder when the next “death” will occur, since, if there is one, it’s long over due. Skateboarding has died four times and each time at the end of what people would call a “golden age".

GSD group 2.jpg
    

 

    

The International Association of Skateboard Companies (the IASC) doesn’t want to see us struggle through yet another great skate-industry famine, and so in an attempt to ward off the effects of “faddism” and stop skateboarding from ever weaving in and out of popularity again, the IASC chose June 21st, (a day kids usually get out of school for the summer holidays) to simply be that of “Go Skateboarding Day”.

GSD team 1.jpg

 

 

GSD was designed to bring us all together for the sake of skateboarding itself and nothing but, and since the first one 3 three years ago, things have gone as planned. Each year, and increased number of skaters catch wind of this day and each time they are either consciously or unconsciously reminded that skateboarding is not a fad and that skaters will be hitting the streets for as long as there are years on this earth. For the full 24 hour period dubbed in their honor, skaters use this day to let it all hang out and concern them selves only with skateboarding.


GSD team 2.jpg


Upon closer inspection you might even go as far as to say we’re witnessing the steady raise of skateboarding’s Independence Day. After all, together we are a nation, a leaderless, borderless, underdog kind of nation. We are an international nation whose citizens are found in almost any country that isn’t completely dirt or ice-covered.
 
 
GSD pond3.jpg

 

I’m not sure any of the Taiwanese skaters knew on June 21st, 2004 that it was in fact “Go Skateboarding Day”. I myself was clueless to it then and must have completely missed it. Then GSD 2005 came but it was still more of a rumor around here than it was a holiday. Ahhh… but not this year… this year we were ready and waiting.

 

Here in Taiwan, Go Skateboarding Day was a timely gift and has come in very handy indeed. With no solid history to tell them otherwise, skates here have had trouble deciphering just what skateboarding in the western world is all about, and since I arrived in Taiwan 5 or 6 years ago, the Taiwanese participation in skateboarding seemed as though it was ultimately headed steadily downward - not steadily upward like I had expected. Due to an absence of translated magazines and subtitled DVDs, Taiwan has for years been plagued with fashion junkies and overly competitive attitudes both inside and outside their ranks. This has of course helped give rise to a rash of clique-ish attitudes and… the Asian X-Games in full force.

 

GSD pond A-Shang.jpg
 

 

”No person is your friend who demands your silence, or denies your right to grow.” - ALICE WALKER

Last year’s Go Skateboarding Day was a day when myself and a couple of local skaters decided it was finally time to start the much needed Taiwanese Skateboarders Association. Since then we’ve gone through the motions, had countless meetings with countless skaters focusing on whatever we see holding us down and voting on what should be done to send us in a more natural direction, and in the direction of fun.

 

GSD pond2.jpg

 

Myself and a handful of friends are now up to our necks in various projects related to the survival of grass roots skateboarding in Taiwan. I won’t go into detail as to exactly the state or status of Taiwan’s skate scene (for that you’ll have to read my article in an upcoming issue of THAT magazine this summer about “the Scene” and the TSA) but I will tell you that skateboarding sprung up merely 12 years ago and since then has been in dire need for a skater-run organization like the TSA and “Go Skateboarding Day” was a big help in having it finally take off.


This year, Taiwanese skaters knew full-well what day it was, and it showed. Skaters from all over the city zeroed-in on one of our many common meeting spots and fun quickly ensued. A classic game of S.K.A.T.E., an improvised skate-relay race and scooter-pull session to name but a few activities, both planned and unplanned. One of these kids even made a banner, most likely in a mad hurry and under the heavy influence of something awful, was quite possibly the ugliest banner known to man. It was supposed to read Go Skateboarding Day 2006 but to anyone brave enough to stare at it, looked like the abstract art you often see some artists throw together to shock the world. You know, the art that uses rat’s blood as paint, that kind of art. Apparently next year’s banner is going to be much better. They’re thinking about cat’s blood next time…

 …I can’t bloody well wait.

 

 

GSD ugly sign.jpg

 

    

GSD hang2.jpg
 

GSD SKATE2.jpg


GSD hang3.jpg
 

After a while the spot got old and the entire mob (a mob so big it warranted police escort) thundered across our poor unsuspecting town to the next spot, then the next…and the next, all the while holding our hideous banner high, and with great pride.

 

 

I don’t think any of us stopped smiling the entire day.

    

GSD A duh fs kick.jpg
 

 

    

GSD Jackie kf on bricks.jpg

 

 

GSD shon bricks.jpg


GSD bricks1.jpg


GSD A duh bs smith.jpg


At the close of the evening, lay a nation destroyed. Yet at the same time, another nation, our nation, had just finished remodeling.

 


Shons 50 50.jpg
 

The best part about this whole thing is that this happens each and every year and every year were are a year older, a year wiser, and always comparing these GSDs to the previous year’ GSDs and naturally trying to outdo them.

 

Till next time boys and girls… the fate of skateboarding (and of the entire world it seems these days) rests with you!

 

GSD ashang ollie.jpg

 


“The heights by great men reached and kept

Were not attained by sudden flight,

But they, while their companions slept,

Were toiling upward in the night.”
- HENRY WADSWORTH LONGFELLOW




View Comments Add/View Comments (3) Tags:Taiwan_Vaughan, TSA, Taiwan, Go Skateboarding Day 2006
Published by Taiwan_Vaughan: 2:08 PM
Updated On: 6/30/2006 at 5:14 PM

Monday, October 03, 2005
The Taiwanese Skateboarders Association

Who runs the TSA?
The TSA is member-run. Its members are made up of skateboarders who have devoted their life to skateboarding. They are also devoted to the healthy, grass roots promotion of skateboarding and demand that skateboarding in Taiwan be given the power to direct itself.

What is the T.S.A.?
The TSA is an independent governing body of skateboarders living in Taiwan whose chairman (after the first election) is elected by its *Core Members.


The TSA is a response to the growing need for including skateboarders in decision making that directly affects skateboarders, namely in the area of skate park design, the organizing contests, promotional events and public affairs.


The TSA is a group of highly dedicated skateboarders of all ages and backgrounds, who want nothing more than to protect the interests of skateboarders and promote its use as much as possible.

What does the T.S.A. do?
The TSA holds monthly meetings, in which everyone’s invited and encouraged to join. TSA meetings focus on the problems facing skateboarding in Taiwan and how to solve them.

The TSA independently organizes its own contests to promote skateboarding and to help make skateboarding in Taiwan more fun.

The TSA supports any effort in the community to facilitate the needs of skateboarders.

The TSA makes efforts to raise money to help finance its many ongoing projects

What can the T.S.A. do?
The TSA, and others like it, can empower its members, by giving them more independence and authority to govern themselves.

The TSA can provide an opportunity for skateboarders to get together and progressively alter the course of skateboarding in Taiwan by voicing each of their concerns.


The TSA can help manage and improve skateboarding’s overall public image.

The TSA can represent the skateboarders of Taiwan much more accurately than the CXSA (the governing body currently making decisions that directly affect skateboarders).

The TSA, by heavily promoting skateboarding, can increase the number of young people using skateboards and thus directly stimulate the economic growth of the Taiwanese skateboarding industry.

First Meeting…

Introduction

Constitution! (Lay Down the Rules!)

Until elections get started, any skateboarder may join at any time.

To join the TSA you must share basic contact information such as your phone number and email address.

The first election will be held exactly one year from today (June 21st International Go Skateboarding Day).

Elected leaders can serve a maximum term of 1 year.


Candidates can start campaigning as early as 2 months before the annual election date.

Everyone can join and become a TSA member, but not everyone can be a Core Member.

*Only Core Members are allowed to vote in annual elections for chairman.

To become a Core Member you must attended a minimum of 2 meetings a year. To stay a Core Member you must attend a minimum of 2 meetings a year.

For a TSA Q & A...

...click to see my other journal entries.

-My Journal will be updated MONTHLY-



View Comments Add/View Comments (0)
Published by Taiwan_Vaughan: 2:00 AM
Updated On: 3/31/2006 at 9:18 PM

Sunday, October 02, 2005
[Aras_de_Bomb writes:
"i have a question regarding the TSA organization. Is it just for the skaters of Taiwan? Im a little confused about your message. It seems like your purpose is to advance skateing in just Taiwan, but I am not sure." ]


TSA replies:

One of the TSA's goals is to protect the interests of grass-roots skateboarding (real skateboarding) in Taiwan. This means keeping its power and in the hands of the skaters and not the "Asian X-games" commission. (You think it's bad in the states with these X games f*TSA's.) IN the US the X games have only been allowed to take one arm of the Skateboarding body, and it's all they will ever get. Here they cut it off at the ankles. They take advantage of the fact that it is only 10 years old here, not well developed on it's own yet. These issues are being resolved through the TSA. Taking the Power Back so wee can do a better and more appropriate job of promoting skateboarding.



I have many plans. They all have something to do with increasing the popularity of skateboarding. The TSA is for the Taiwanese skaters and their friends at the moment, but that's mostly because I live here most of each year. I go home to my beloved East Vancouver to hang with my friends once year and am still part of efforts there as well, just not as much as before.

The TSA is another "template" if you will, for organizing any group of pissed of peoples. I believe it can be modified to fit most any cause you feel strongly enough about. In fact, this is nothing new, people have been starting organizations for centuries. It's just not often applied in skateboarding enough, especially in Taiwan.

The TSA also supports any other similar efforts all over the world. If you and your city's skaters are running a local skate-support-network in your area, we need to know each other. The TSA needs to know what other "TSA"s are out there, and they in turn need to know the TSA. We've already started a "Sister Cities" program with my hometown of Vancouver. We're quickly building more unions and sharing info and resources so we can direct things better.

Tell your friends about us...

V.

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Published by Taiwan_Vaughan: 2:00 AM

Thursday, August 04, 2005
Killer Reggae!

This list is hands down the best Reggae ever made. What's even greater is I haven't found ALL the best yet. I'll keep adding to the list as it comes my way.

Army ****
Augustus Pablo ******

Burning Spear *******
Barry Brown ****
Bambu Station ****
Bim Sherman ******

The Congo ****
Congo Ashanti Roy
Congragation *******
Culture ****
Clinton Fearon

Dezarie *******
Dub Farm ****
Don Carlos *******
Dry and Heavy ******
Danny I
Dennis Brown

Eka Mouse *******
Errol Davis ******
Errol Walker *******

Freddie McGregor****

Gregory Isaacs ******
10ft Ganja Plant *****
Gladstone Anderson and the Roots Radics*****
Gladiators *********

Hugh Mundell ******
Horace Andy and the Sticks ********

Inner Visions ******

Jah Creation ******
Jolly Brothers
Junior Ross and the Spear *****
John Brown's Body *******

Knowledge *******
Kactchafire *******

Lacksley Castell****
Leroy Sibbles *******
Linval Thompson *******
Love Joys ********

Mighty Diamonds *********
Mighty Three's ****
Midnite ********
Majek Fashek ****
Misty in Roots ******
Mykal Rose ****
Max Romeo and the Upsetters ****
Mutabaruka******
The Meditations *****

Native Element ******
Niyo Rah *******

Ossie Dellimore **********

Prince Far I *****
Pablo Moses ********

Rast and Ashebar Posse *****
Roots Natty ****
Reggae Regular ****
Reggae Cowboys ****
Rub a Dubs ****
Ras Michael and The Son of Negus *****
Ras Pidow

Sahra Indio *****
Sheriff Ghale ******
Steal Pulse **********

Tristan Palma****

Untouchables *******

Viceroys ******
Vivian Jones ****
Vegitation ****

Wailing Souls ****
Wayne Jarret ****
Winston Mac Anuff ****
Willy Nelson (yes, that's right.)*********!!

Zion Judah****

And YES...
...Bob Marley. (********************)

ALL seriously good Reggae tunes, ALL guaranteed to keep you high as a kite all day. Plus, it has more political content per mile than most any music out there today.



And Now the Good Hip Hop I've heard.

9th Wonder

A Tribe Called Quest

Blend Crafters
Blackalicious
Boom Bap Project
Bunny Wailer

Common
The Coup

Dialated Peoples
De La Soul
DJ Premier
Danger Mouse

Freddie Fox
Freestyle Fellowship
Felt
The Fugees

Gang Star
Group Home
Gorillaz

Heiroglyphics (Del)

Immortal Technique

Jean Grae
Jeru the Damaja
Jaylib
Jay-Z
J-Live

Kayne West

7L and Esoteric
Latyrics
Large Professor
Mr. Lif
Little Brother
Lexicon

Mob Deep
Move.meant
Mos Def

Nas

OutKast

Pete Rock
Pharoah Monch
People Under The Stairs
Perceptionists

Rascalz
RJD2
Reflection Eternal
The Roots
Royce Da 5'9

The Streets
Smiley The Ghetto Child
Smif n' Wessun

Talib Kweli
The Thyrday

Visionaries

Zion 1
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Published by Taiwan_Vaughan: 2:00 AM


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