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mungo

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About mungo

  • Birthday 01/06/1968

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  • Location
    NYC/Miami
  • Gender
    Femme

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  1. seems like the majority of the people here loved it and the rest hated it. i really wasnt feeling the early part of the set. from 4-12 morillo was on fire though. glad i stayed. great night. yes he brought the hard beats, but yes he also brought the funk. ive never seen crobar with that much energy except the night of the grammy party. many posts mention how crowded it was. what did u expect?!?!?! Morillo is one of the top djs in the world playing at the most popular club in this city. it was uncomfortable for several hours, but the later it got, that wasnt as much of a problem. terra deva was good. p diddy sucked. i give morillo an 8 out of 10. if it wasnt for that disjointed first half of the set, id give him a 9.
  2. no real way to prove it? computer evidence is used all the time in court. you obviously don't watch the news, google it for yourself. the more you continue to speak out of your ass the more and more foolish you look. sucking dick is not a job? lol, how unoriginal. what, are you gonna call me a pee pee head or poo poo face next? grow up. you dress in drag, have the grammar, spelling and maturity of a 10 year old, the reasoning ability of someone with down syndrome and are one of the biggest shit-talkers on clubbing messageboards, the one who once claimed to be opening up his own club, among a litany (look it up, i know it's a big word for you) of other bullshit lies. no i didnt have to do research, you make an ass of yourself with your postings on a daily basis on rhythmism, you know, the board you said you were leaving because people called you on your bullshit. who's the real weirdo?
  3. educate yourself. and to respond to what u said on the other thread, i have a job thank you, and a good one at that. don't speak about things you know nothing about, freak. good thing farid banned you too. http://www.stimmel-law.com/newsletters/special_newsltr2.pdf
  4. I don't see much changing. The undercovers and the crackies will still be polluting that place, and you will still have JP on Saturdays. It's embarassing that Twilo used to be in the same space.
  5. Armin was awful and Spirit is just a terrible club.
  6. She did say A LOT not EVERYONE, which I agree with. I used to be a big JP fan until I started hearing what else was out there too. Once you start hearing DJs like DJ Vibe, Danny Howells, John Digweed, you realize that JP doesn't compare to the big names out there. My Factory days were fun, but looking back the music wasnt all that great. I had good times because of the people. I can do without JP.
  7. that's the thing. there wont be enough time for it to get better at this rate.
  8. i wasnt there but my sister went. she said there were tons of undercover cops there. lots of people arrested. the cops want to shut this place down for good.
  9. try again: The latest incarnation of the RAVE Act punishes drug users and bystanders alike -- and tramples civil liberties. April 16, 2003 | Last Thursday, the House and Senate almost unanimously passed the National AMBER Alert Network Act of 2003, a popular bill that will soon create a nationwide kidnapping alert system. Coming in the wake of a year of high-profile child abductions -- from Elizabeth Smart (whose parents supported the bill) to Samantha Runnion -- the bill was a no-brainer, destined to pass quickly and smoothly through Congress. Surely Sen. Joe Biden (D-Del.) knew this, which explains why he cannily sneaked his own, completely unrelated legislation into the AMBER Act just two days before the vote. Piggybacked onto the act was the Anti-Drug Proliferation Act, a thinly veiled rewrite of legislation that had proved so controversial in 2002 that it failed to pass a single congressional committee. Now, club owners and partyers alike are being subjected to a loosely worded and heavy-handed law that authorities will be able to indiscriminately use to shut down music events at any time they please, assuming they find evidence of drug use. Thanks to Biden's surreptitious efforts, a few glow sticks and a customer or two on Ecstasy could be all it takes to throw a party promoter in jail for 20 years. The passing of the Anti-Drug Proliferation Act was sudden but not entirely out of the blue. Last year, the Anti-Drug Proliferation Act was known as the RAVE Act (the leadenly acronymed "Reducing Americans' Vulnerability to Ecstasy Act"), a piece of legislation designed by Biden in early 2002 to put rave promoters out of business. An expansion of the crack-house statute of 1986 -- which made crack-den proprietors liable for what took place in their homes, even if they didn't deal drugs themselves -- the RAVE Act threatened those who "knowingly and intentionally rent, lease, profit from, or make available for use, with or without compensation, [a] place for the purpose of unlawfully manufacturing, storing, distributing, or using a controlled substance" with 20 years in jail and $250,000 in fines. In English, this meant that anyone who intentionally let people do drugs at their events could be held liable. It also expanded the crack-house statute in two significant ways: Now the law could be applied to one-night events -- concerts, raves, parties, festivals -- as well as permanent locales like nightclubs, and it added civil penalties for violations, lowering the burden of proof from "beyond reasonable doubt" to a "preponderance of evidence.
  10. rave act already passed!
  11. jp is finished. any party he ever does will be a huge and easy target. his skills are not what they used to be. i was there on opening night and he played the same records he's been playing for the past two years and his mixing was nonexistent. he should work on his mixing rather than play around with the EFX box. anyone who thought the music was good that night has terrible taste, or you must of been on some good drugs. ive been a big jp fan for years, but have come to realize he's awful now, and his crowd is is even worse than his music. and for someone who cares about his fans supposedly, how can he justify jacking the price up at the door, blatantly lying to people who came from all over to see him. since he's part of management, he has no one to blame anymore, jp doesnt give a shit about his fans. jp will be another draper, fades away never to be heard from again except once in a rare while. he had his run a few years ago, but his parties have taken a turn for the worse. i wont be a part of it anymore, and many old school factoryheads that i know wont be a part of it either.
  12. the party was HORRIBLE. u would never know they searched people with all the drugs people were snorting, swallowing and drinking. im done with jp's scene for good. this g and tina crap is not only destroying the club scene, it's destroying lives
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