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3/02/2015

Art From JuiceboxThoughts.com

Yep it's true. We have juiceboxthoughts.com now. So why is this site still up? because I love Google? i'm not really sure but check out juiceboxthoughts.com  If you click on the title of any new post here it will take you there. But for now, I guess two is better than one?



3/01/2015

Yeah I Knew The Two Girls

Oh man. I had forgotten all about Deme. We used to party party party. I remember things better left unsaid. Just glad Lisl is out and Deme looks ok too.

2/05/2015

Voicemail- A Poem By Lightbulb Martin

Lightbulb Martin
Lightbulb Martin
1 day ago
Ahead.
Hey it's _
Give me a call I'm
At the firefly I
Dont know Where
Ocean people are so
Have a good issue I
Was going to be
Beautiful.

Alright make sure you
Press the pictures
From the later...
#cruz   #santa  

1/03/2015

50 Universal Truths That Will Make You More Successful


  • Have a passion for your work. If your work is meaningful to you, your work life will be a joy.
  • If you can't be passionate about the work itself, be passionate about the reason you do it. Maybe you don't love your job or company or career, but the money and benefits are good for your family. Be passionate in your choice to do right by your family.
  • If something needs changing, be the one to lead the change. If you dislike your job but are stuck, work on getting the skills that will get you unstuck. If there's a problem at your office, work on being the one solve it.
  • Start small and build from there.
  • Do the obvious stuff first, then progress to the harder stuff. (Otherwise known as going for the low-hanging fruit.)
  • If it's not broke, don't fix it. Do improve it.
  • The hardest lesson to learn is when to keep going and when to quit. No one can teach you that. At some point, you have to choose.
  • The definition of crazy is to do the same thing the same way and expect a different result. If the result isn't good, change something.
  • No one succeeds alone. 
  • Ask for help. Be specific when asking. Be graceful and grateful when help comes.
  • Surround yourself with positive people and you'll have a positive outcome.
  • Embrace diversity. The best way to compensate for your own weaknesses is to pick teammates who have different strengths.
  • People experience the world differently. Two people can attend the same meeting and walk away with different impressions. Don't fight that. Use it.
  • You don't have to like someone to treat that person with respect and courtesy.
  • Don't "should" all over someone, and don't let someone else "should" all over you.
  • No matter what you do or how much you achieve, there are always people who have more. 
  • There will always people who have less, too.
  • No matter how much you excel at things, you are not a more worthwhile human being than anyone else. No one else is more worthwhile than you, either.
  • If you spend most of your time using your talents and doing things you are good at, you're more likely to be happy.
  • If you spend most of your time struggling to improve your weaknesses, you're likely to be frustrated.
  • Practice is the only true way to master a new skill. Be patient with yourself while you learn something new.
  • The only way to stay fresh is to keep learning new things.
  • To learn new things means being a beginner, and that means making mistakes.
  • The more comfortable you grow with making beginner mistakes, the easier it is to learn new things.
  • You will never have all the resources (time, money, people, etc.) that you want for your project or company. No one ever has all the resources they want. 
  • A lack of resources isn't an excuse. It's a blessing in disguise. You'll have to get creative.
  • Creativity and innovation are skills that can be learned and practiced by doing your usual things in a new way.
  • Take calculated risks. 
  • In the early stages of a company, career, or project, you'll have to say "yes" to a lot of things. In the later stages, you'll have to say "no."
  • Negative feedback is necessary. Don't automatically reject it. Examine it for the nuggets of truth, and then disregard the rest.
  • When delivering criticism, talk about the work, not the person. 
  • Think big. Dream big. (The alternative is to think small, dream small.)
  • Treat your dream as an ultimate roadmap. You don't have to achieve your dream right away, but the only way to get there is to take many steps toward it.
  • If you think big, you will hear "no" more than you hear "yes." They don't get to decide. You do.
  • How long it takes you to create something is less important than how valuable and worthwhile it will be once it's created.
  • If there is one secret to success, it's this: communicate your plans with other people and keep communicating those plans. 
  • Grow your network. Make an effort to meet new people and to keep in contact with those you know.
  • No matter what technology or service you are creating or inventing at your company, it's not about the product; it's always about the people and the lives you will improve.
  • No matter how successful you get, you can still fail and fail big.
  • Failure isn't a bad thing. It's part of the process. 
  • Things always go wrong. The only way to keep that from hurting you is to plan for that.
  • Learn how to respectfully, but firmly, say "no."
  • Say "yes" as much as you can. 
  • In order to say "yes" often, attach boundaries or a scope of work around your "yes."
  • No matter how rich, famous, or successful another person is, inside that person is just a human being with hopes, dreams, and fears, the same as you. 
  • Getting what you want doesn't mean you'll be happy. Happiness is the art of being satisfied with what you already have.
  • Working with difficult personalities will be a part of every job. Be respectful, do your job well, and nine times out of 10 that person will move on.
  • For that one-out-of-10 time, remember you aren't a victim. Do what you need to get a new job.
  • As soon as you have something to demonstrate, get an executive champion to back or support your project.
  • Focus on what you want, not what you don't want.


  • Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/50-universal-truths-for-success-2013-10#ixzz3NpHzUihh


    1/01/2015

    Give a man a fish, and he'll eat for a day. Teach him how to fish and he'll eat forever.

    This is the most inspirational story I’ve ever heard, the story of Veronica, a girl from Detroit, who thanks to a college class got an idea that would end up changing lives of hundreds of homeless people. She is only 24.

    Veronica wanted to design a coat that transforms into a sleeping bag for a school project, but ended up doing much more than that. She gave people using homeless shelters one thing they needed most. This girl is the real life example of a proverb “Give man a fish and you feed him for a day; teach a man to fish and you feed him for a lifetime”

    Got The Scoop On The New Dr. Dre Album!

    Excitement level isn't as high due to previous letdowns.
    Darn perfectionists

    http://allhiphop.com/2014/12/30/got-the-scoop-on-the-new-dr-dre-album/

    Have A Nappy Happy New Year Everybody!!!

    12/31/2014

    Ratings Rise for Radio Stations that have turned to a Classic Hip-Hop format/playlist




    While radio stations have seen their audience decrease as tech-savvy consumers flock to satellite radio and streaming audio, broadcasters might have finally found a format that can lure listeners back to FM: Classic hip-hop. Playlists that shine the spotlight back on artists like the Notorious B.I.G., Naughty By Nature and Missy Elliott are currently sweeping the nation, with major broadcasters like Radio One, iHeartMedia and Cumulus Media frantically changing the format of under performing stations to the sounds of classic hip-hop, the New York Times reports.


    The Times focuses on Houston's KROI, a struggling Radio One-owned all-news channel that briefly – as a stunt – adopted an all-Beyonce format. KROI was one of the first radio stations to pick up the classic hip-hop format, and over the course of two months, KROI – now dubbed Boom 92 – jumped from a 1.0 share to a 3.2 share, and their audience jumped from 245,000 to 802,000. As a result, Radio One is hatching Boom-branded stations everywhere from Houston and Dallas to Philadelphia.

    Nowhere is the resurgence of classic hip-hop more evident than Atlanta, where the number of radio stations broadcasting that format ballooned from one to three over the course of a week in late-November. Old School 99.3 was the first to arrive; a week later Cumulus Media's OG 97.9 – first song played: Snoop Dogg's "Gin & Juice" – and, hours later, Radio One's Boom 102.9 were all spinning classic hip-hop in Atlanta.

    "I went to work with one, I came back with three. Who's going to outlast who? I have the least overhead. I have the least amount of debt. It's crazy," Old School 99.3's Steve Hegwood told the Atlanta Journal-Constitution earlier this month. "This format hits the sweet spot of 35- to 49-year-olds, which advertisers love."

    However, there is evidence that the market is becoming too saturated with classic hip-hop. While all three Atlanta stations are still standing, one of the two classic hip-hop stations in Dallas changed formats to straight urban after two weeks, the Atlanta Journal Constitution writes. The New York Times adds that while the listener-ship of radio stations that switched to classic hip-hop nearly tripled in some markets, those numbers have steadily declined as the uniqueness of the format wore off or, in some case, the format was copied by another station.

    Still, even with the slight decline, classic hip-hop stations are still outperforming their predecessors' format, so expect even more old school rap to flood the FM dial in 2015.

     


     

    This is for the Golden Era heads such as myself: