Saturday, November 16, 2024
Charleston

by -
0 2041

A total solar eclipse is scheduled to grace the atmosphere in August and millions of people around the world are planning to take part in this heavenly phenomenon. When the moon passes between the Earth and the Sun, there will be almost three total minutes of total darkness in some sections of the United States. Scientists and astronomers have predicted that the best places in the U.S. to experience this rare occurrence is along a diagonal section from Oregon to South Carolina; more specifically, cities like St. Joseph, Missouri and Charleston, S.C. are being held as prime locations to visit during the eclipse.

As a Charleston resident, the thought of any additional traffic coming into the city is damn near frightening, but here are some things that can help you make it through this spectacular, once (or twice) in-a-lifetime event:

WHY IS THIS ECLIPSE SO SPECIAL

IMG_3445

They call this event “Path of Totality” and it is said that we are in for an unforgettable experience! This phenomenon is special because this is a continent-wide solar eclipse, the first to be visible since 1776. It is also the first to cross the entire continent of North American in 99 years. As the moon’s shadow is cast across the earth, we have been told that this is a “hauntingly beautiful” site and is symbolic of “great change” – some of us can use some great change in our lives, right! Once the moon totally envelops the sun, it will last only a few minutes, we must be prepared or we will miss it! The good news is another total solar eclipse will darken the skies above Mexico and Texas, up through the Midwest and northeastern U.S in the year 2024!

TRAFFIC

IMG_3443

According to NASA:

“Aug. 21, 2017, may beone of the worst traffic days in national history, some NASA representatives predict. Although about 12 million people live within the narrow band of totality, approximately 25 million reside within a day’s drive of it, and the agency has estimated that the population inside the path of totality may double on the day of the eclipse.”

So How to Plan: (1) Hotels along the eclipse’s path have been booked for months (or years) so if you are traveling, there may be some issues with last minute planning (2) if you plan to go out to view the eclipse be aware of your proximity to food, water, parking, and facilities. (3) even traveling short distances around town will be hectic on this day

SCHOOLS ARE CLOSED

IMG_3442

City officials have decided on August 21st schools will be closed for safety reasons. The city will experience total darkness for approximately 2.5 minutes, and for the safety of every child, parents are being asked to keep their children home on this day. The good news is this will alleviate some of the already horrible traffic issues in Charleston, SC and surrounding areas.

IF YOU HAVE A BUSINESS, TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THIS NEW CUSTOMER BASE

IMG_3452

People from around the world are traveling to different cities to experience this eclipse. Restaurants, gas stations, in many cities are prepping for this event like its the Superbowl. If you have a business, create ways to generate revenue, eclipse tshirts, eclipse cupcakes, etc! Be creative!

DON’T FORGET YOUR ECLIPSE SUNGLASSES

glasses

Looking directly at the sun,even when it is partially covered by the moon, can causeserious eye damage or blindness.DO NOTlook at a partial solar eclipse without proper eye protection! Sunglasses CANNOT be used in place of Solar Viewing Glasses. The glasses above can be found on Amazon in a 6 pack for about $21, they are theSolar Eclipse Glasses – CE and ISO Certified Safe Shades for Direct Sun Viewing – Viewer & Filter – Made in USA (6 Pack) – Astronaut American Flag.Here’s a Guide to buying the best eye protection for the eclipseBEWARE OF SELLERS WHO ARE HUSTLING FAKE GLASSES.

HOW AND WHERE DO YOU VIEW THE ECLIPSE IMG_3449

We will be doing another blog to list the cool events happening for the Eclipse celebrations around town. In the meantime, check out the Charleston Museum, Outdoor Adventure Tour Boats, Patriots Point, Citadel Mall and a plethora of other businesses who are having SAFE-VIEWING events around town!

Syllabus Magazine, the Carolina’s source for Music, Culture and Fashion

by -
0 1637

The disconnect in the Charleston hip-hop scene if finally coming together… This is dope! Read more below…

(Press Release – Tawana Tee PR & Marketing)

Charleston, S.CLive from the Undergroundreturns to Purple Buffalo on July 22. In partnership with Dope & Rare and Blu Gorilla Tattoo, Tee N Mac will create a music-fest vibe with two stages, performances, and a vendor market. And what started off as a concert, will now be the ultimate summer experience with a cookout sponsored by Sun of a Brunch Catering, LLC.

Live from the Underground: The Cookout,hosted by Black Dave, will feature the sounds of OG the DJ, DJ Rubin, and local acts to include: SALIS, Benjamin Starr, VT the Fresh Prince, and Walter Brown.

“We all bring something different to the hip-hop scene,” said SALIS. “There will be old and new school hip-hop, a little bit of trap, and Country Rap Tunes playing on two stages. This is a really good line up… I’m ready.”

Back in April, SALIS and his publicist Tawana Tee, announcedLive from the Undergroundas one of three hip-hop concerts.The Cookoutwill be the second part and is expected to be their biggest summer event. The PR-rapper duo are also looking forward to performances from D Money and Ray Deez of Retro Flow Ent., CashFirst Jazz, and a surprised guest.

Live from the Underground: The Cookoutwill be held from 3 p.m.-8 p.m. Admission is $10. Guest must be 21 + with a valid id to enter. Food maybe purchased from Sun of a Brunch Catering, LLC; cash or credit/debit accepted. The Purple Buffalo is located at 2702 Azalea Drive in North Charleston. For more information, emailtawana.tolbert@gmail.comor visitLive from the Underground: The Cookouton Facebook.

###

What:Live from the Underground: The CookOut

Where:The Purple Buffalo || 2702 Azalea Drive North Charleston 29405

When:Saturday, July 22| 3 p.m-8 p.m.

Cost:$10 afterward | No advanced tickets required;Must be 21 or older.

IMG_2945

Syllabus Magazine, the Carolina’s source for Music, Culture and Fashion

by -
0 5213

The power of Twitter is real, but the power of Black Twitter is simply something from another realm of realness. Many have learned that you DON’T come for black women on social media; no exceptions. Charleston, S.C.’s very own, Woody McClain is still learning this the hard way. Woody McClain became popular from a series of “Wood The Great” videos on social media. The success of these videos put McClain on a national platform that launched him all the way to BET.

We all watched the BET biopic and we all agree; it was awesome! McClain played Bobby Brown, and killed the performance and the dance moves. Face it, Woody McClain channeled Bobby Brown while Brown is still living and mastered this performance. However, in the tradition of the internet, with fame comes curiosity; and with curiosity comes exposure.

Some sleuth on the internet decided to go back into time and look through Woody McClain’s tweets – all the back to 2011 (who has time, right?). What they found however, sent Black Twitter into a tizzy. Some of the tweets said things like, “when i’m famous, i’m dating white women only” and “if it ain’t white, it ain’t right”. Check out some of the tweets below:

woodytweets

Now that these tweets have come to back to bite McClain, he has been on a mission to explain that they were merely jokes. He has even gone as far as to tweet pictures of his black girlfriend, who he says he has been dating for the past ten years. In a recent interview with Essence Magazine, here is more of what McClain had to say regarding those tweets.


“Listen, before New Edition came out. I do comedy. Woody does comedy. So it was a tweet that was taken out content what I said—the tweet that I wrote was ‘If it ain’t white it ain’t right.’ Me growing up through comedy, that’s a comedy reference. ‘Once you go Black, you never go back.’ That’s a comedy reference. So I feel like somebody took that tweet, added more Tweets, photoshopped it, undefeated. You will not beat Photoshop. And they’re adding more to my tweets, I love Black women. I always push for Black women. When I shoot my videos—go to follow me @woody_thegreat, you will see all my content. I promote Black love. If I was going to switch up, I would have did it three years ago when I started social media. You feel me? So there is no switching up for it. My mother is Black. My sister is Black. I love my Black queens. I push for positivity every time I do my comedy videos. I’m doing it to put us in a positive light. So I’m not even mad that this happened. I’m actually happy. So I want my little African-American brothers, listen Y’all gotta understand this is not a joke. It’s not sensitive, it’s not funny no more.”

Again the power of Black Twitter and social media as a whole is split on the sincerity of McClain’s explanations. Many say having a black girl friend doesn’t automatically mean you have respect for black women; it’s no different from racists who claim to have black friends. Others say the tweets were drafted almost five years ago and it doesn’t matter.

One thing that can be said from McClain’s comments is that although he claims the tweets were jokes, the tweets were Photoshopped, he was hurt by the backlash, and the tweets were taken out of context; he never actually apologizes for tweeting these things. He said in his statement to Essence that he is happy all of this has happened. These are confusing statements coming from someone who also says that all of this ‘isn’t funny anymore‘.

Of course, being the sweet, nice, southern people we are down here in Charleston, S.C. where McClain was born, we are all bout forgiveness and redemption – right? However, our research team has scoured the internet for an actual apology from Woody McClain for the disparaging tweets…and we couldn’t find an actual apology.

Syllabus Magazine, the Carolina’s source for Music, Culture and Fashion

“What we fear most is usually what we most need to do. As I have heard said, a person’s success in life can usually be measured by the number of uncomfortable conversations he or she is willing to have. Resolve to do one thing every day that you fear.” – Tim Ferriss

sdiscomfort1

To be honest, walking into the Southern Discomfort forum held at Redux in Charleston, S. C. , my cynicism was at an all-time high. “Here we go again” I thought, trying to explain to white people our angle, our thought processes, our frustrations and our feelings of living in a society, where after 400 years, still hasn’t fully accepted or embraced US as equal individuals. Though the “slave baby” image sparked the need for this forum, it was actually not as shocking to see as some may suggest. I mean the drawing of the big nosed, big head, chained at the ankle, slave baby pales in comparison to some of the memes, costume party attire, mock lynchings, frat boy party themed events, we have seen – especially since Barack Obama has become President of the U.S. Racism and its ugly head, has really turned the fuck up since POTUS and his black family hit the White House. What was more shocking seemed to be the disbelief white people were having at the fact that someone had actually drew this picture.

I couldn’t understand at first why so many people were surprised at the drawing. Given the obvious separatism that exists within the music communities in Charleston, the outright imaginary line between the white and black music scenes – why would anyone be shocked that someone was comfortable enough to do something deemed racist? If every event in downtown Charleston caters to people who all look the same, if every event in the historic district plays the same music that attracts the same types of people each and every week – at what point didn’t anyone realize that something weird was already going on. In a town that makes billions in revenue on slave culture, the descendants of that culture are put through a type of inspection when they hit the doors of clubs and bars downtown – assuring that their t-shirts aren’t too big, their clothes are too hip-hop, and confirming that the “look” like they won’t be a problem once they enter into an establishment. This is nothing new, so why now are people expressing their shock and awe at the depiction of a slave baby?

sdiscomfort2
There could be a number of answers to these questions. Could it be that now there are more residents in Charleston who are not traditionally of southern descent? Are there more northerners moving south who may be use to more diverse cultures and less use to outright racism? Is the influx of people into Charleston who have more diverse backgrounds the push we need in order to get white people who aren’t afraid to call out the fuckery of ‘slave baby’ and anything else that may be considered offensive? Do any of these questions really matter?

With sweat beads peaking from foreheads around the room, people gathered inside a quaint gallery, shoulder to shoulder, standing room only, room temp of at least 85 degrees or more – I saw people of all colors, ages and backgrounds gather together for almost four hours in order to commit to hearing, voicing, understanding, empathizing, agreeing, and disagreeing in a constructive manner. Today, what broke my initial feelings of cynism, was the idea of being a part of something very unique; something that we don’t typically see here in Charleston. It was not only a chance for people to express their frustrations at the outright lack of equal opportunities available within the Charleston music scene, but it was the realization that others were actually LISTENING.

sdiscomfort5

The outrage from all sides, expressed about the lack of judgment stemming from the drawing of ‘slave baby’ was heard and great points were made. I believe the band member that drew the caricature was clear about the impact he had made with his ‘artwork’. Tyler, who took some heat during the forum received no sympathy, however to say that there wasn’t any empathy felt on his behalf would be a lie. Let’s just keep it real, we all have said and done some jacked up things in our lives, some things we have never had to be held accountable for, and never had to apologize. Many of us have never had to be held publicly accountable for our wrong-doings, and the average person probably couldn’t handle that type of judgement during a public forum. I imagined myself in his shoes, after saying something completely fucked up to someone (which i’ve done by the way) and having to be judged publicly for my actions. How would i deal? So yes, there was a SLIGHT feeling of empathy toward that guy. #shugs

The forum turned from the subject of the drawing to something most were not expecting. Participants discussed the difficulty for hip-hop artists to book venues in many of the clubs/bars in downtown Charleston. As Matt Monday voiced his frustration of attempting to contact and book a local venue for over two months, calling on his white counterpart (who is also a hip-hop artist) was able to get an answer from the same venue within two hours. More questions were raised: Should blacks work on owning their own venues? Should hip hop artists have to ‘water down’ their music by adding a live band in order to appeal to venues in downtown? Should we even spend money with a venue known to give hip-hop acts a hard time?

sdiscomfort4

The Royal American and The Commodore, two very popular venues in downtown Charleston were in attendance, and really attempted to answer some hard questions posed by the crowd. What some may have deemed as an attack on venue owners, may have been misconstrued as frustration misdirected toward other venues who did not participate in the forum. In all, based on the conversation, both venues said they are willing to accept any act that has a following and could pull a crowd, as long as they complete the proper booking procedures.

The almost four hour long forum simply cannot be summed up in this post. Were any goals achieved? If you attended the forum or viewed it online on you can answer that question. For me the answer is yes, there was one important goal achieved. After the forum, the conversation, the questions, and the heated debates made me, as an INDIVIDUAL take some time to reflect on how I could work on making things better within the music community here in Charleston. As a member of media and a publisher of a magazine, what more can I do to push the culture forward. For me, THIS should have been in the hearts and minds of those who attended the conference. Forget that dumbass caricature – there are more important issues at hand. There were artists in attendance that I didn’t even know existed, why is that? There are people having a hard time booking venues, what alternative ideas can be developed that can avoid artists having to go to venues who don’t really want them there? How can we utilize the abandoned buildings and commercial real-estate in this city to create a new, refreshing underground hip-hop culture? Why are some of these so-called hip-hop artists hesitant to use venues that are owned by blacks in North Charleston? If the forum didn’t leave YOU with an internal need to assist in helping fix the problem, then you wasted four hours of your life on a Sunday evening.

So, is it safe to say that anything was “resolved” at the Southern Discomfort discussion, well…

via GIPHY

Let’s just say the look on some faces after the forum was over, still told a story that the level frustration is just as real as it was prior to the start of the event. But, now that we know better, let’s do better. Let’s support these artists and take some of the suggestions made at the forum and implement them. Let’s just do some things different from the way we have always been doing them, and let us ALL push this amazing music culture forward.

SHOUT OUT TO DIASPOURA, VERY HYPNOTIC SOUL BAND, CHARLES COMODY, KJ & ELLIOT AND I’M SURE A HOST OF OTHERS WHO ALLOWED EVERYONE TO TAKE PART IN THIS EVENT.

Syllabus Magazine, the Carolina’s source for Music, Culture and Fashion

Of course, we see hundreds of cover videos everyday here at Syllabus Magazine, many of them we should be sharing. However, today while browsing through ratchet Facebook, we came across a GEM, a rare finding, a freaking treasure! A Rapper by the name of T Wade Montana aka #IonPlay out of Rome, Georgia, freestyled on Jadakiss’ “Why” beat, and listen, this is FIRE. He covered personal issues, Black Lives Matter, self respect, politics, and about ten other subjects in less than five minutes. Basically, this freestyle is just dope; I’ll stop rambling, just click below!

I got a lot of questions.. They all start with WHY?? #Pt12 #IonPlay

Posted by T Wade 'Montana on Wednesday, October 21, 2015

Syllabus Magazine, the Carolina’s source for Music, Culture and Fashion

SOCIAL

MUSIC

0 9823
Dear Ranky Tanky, Ya'll Did THAT! When was the last time you watched a music video that made you smile from start to finish? Now,...

Culture

0 12133
The Godfather of Tennessee Whiskey - Uncle Nearest The next time you order your Jack & Coke, Manhattan, Whiskey Sour, or Irish Coffee, if they...