tv Watching the Hawks RT September 15, 2020 6:30am-7:01am EDT
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what explains this farce media coverage of this trial why haven't more journalists spoken out and is the sun's being used as a car you need to sail with those challenge the powers that be. if you want to know who still would know d.c.d. a real story that the banks and what type of rails are the truth is what you need to analyze it to gauge where the bottom sit if you speak to my left shoulder that they like it or not i got tagged with this foley but at least. the the house free to handle this little story on this world but no you know it opened up a job to be opened up to start to push. greetings and salutations music my friends can change the world and most importantly it can give voice to the voiceless which is why it's our pleasure to present to you the mc out of new mexico d 5 is watching the hawks strikes
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a chord. 2 2 sense you're pretending that it's meant to be desperate to get in those last minute sassed attacks the fleet street my specialty my special seems to manifest my sleep stress those swings sprouting up last month. and the mechanism of memories a chance to preach against the trees this lead to catch my sleep it's past that sank in my sleep the legend that may still be out and the tantrums hey they don't last that will be gone the great. yeah i know my sound the sound of my spot on the profound time of the sun. i just
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felt like the next night i just michael cheika was trying to make sal the struggle but phelps lamps had. to get it up my side of myself kind of become i got the trap myself descended to. its help with. the bus headed to the town that's going to get hot i'm certain that it comes in st paul that my head up there close to my feet all the guys say that would help with. that most of all it's upgrade the public get up at the least with the breeze comes with. a couple of come to defeat the shelf of the sweet. song that i was in those things become a bit dull but leave we cut the punches really. helped me. sort out some watching the hostile.
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side of my circle of light and terrible size and try my hardest and lighting offense is fighting back to back titles the sergeant tired tired of my years has its hard games anyone last could be about to create a home from a car seat right in the cars to recite in the car some hard times to pick up the idea how to play hard ball seems far so charming groups trying to outrun a turbo darby's these are both. farm house this is the every free on the house with the bass out a pass in the back i'm happy i was down and out of it you back now with the damp it up a cascade of seconds if we decide to get past the typical top of that it's now going to cash out of my face. putting up on the top of the house in the strait of my panties now but it's a snowplow by the shrub and away from the case i joined in the race but how about for a. place with a space. to take a concept. so
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i want to sort this out 1st of all. you've got an incredible amount of passion and energy in your music and in your art and that really comes through and someone watches you perform like we just did i mean truly an inspirational so i really want to start with asking you who is the 5 defy is and see music producer artist educator from albuquerque new mexico representing the dinette nation defies also keep if you broke it break it down into acronym could be definitely eternal or
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deaf eternal forever inferno are definitely eternal forever internal short for definition rare. if you look at a sonic leaking hi fi lo fi and somewhere in there is doubt 5 or more to defy the 5 began probably in my middle school time and i've stuck with the name ever since what like what was your inspiration and experience that. led you to bring you know hip hop spoken word hip hop and traditional native american culture together in your are like what brought those 2 forces together. i think it would be a combination of livin in a urban and rural area and environments as a youth wasn't raised primarily on from a traditional side nor. you know the other side of things so basically. as a use my grandparents on my maternal side they really instilled a lot of wisdom when i was at a lesson my mother also taught me how to read and write before i could walk so they
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gave me a good leading start to begin with in middle school i'd say about that time i got introduced to hip hop culture as far as like to be able to be gross i 1st started i seen a direct similarities and connection between hip hop culture and my traditional culture as a dinette person and that both of those connections led me to kind of combine both together world reloaders of value. for instance as a dinette person we have 4 clans we're very matrilineal culture in our reservation it's around about 4 sacred mountains 4 sacred directions a lot of these numbers stood out to me and for the hip hop 4 main elements to it. one of the main connections that really led me to become connected we have is. the philosophies too as well like our people were not very judgment on this much for the most part in hip hop kind of is and is a universal culture to me so without having to look at someone's skin tones
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practitioner can practice the ceremonies and i feel like that was inviting for me a lot of times it was hard to find acceptance growing up there in new mexico where i'm from so hip hop was there so i always carry my cultural heritage with me. it's interesting you you raised over a 1000000 dollars a big number you raised the room 1000000 dollars to help the water protectors of standing rock when that went down what was your inspiration for stepping forward and saying you know what i'm going to use my arm to use who i am and what i do to raise money for those people out there putting you know putting their lives on the line and standing. you know i was a part of the fund raising i didn't do it entirely myself i've got to give credit to the collective crew family which you say of. hip hop practitioners people who are just there to help and you know we we all together fund raise over a 1000000 dollars in one night via hip hop concert by texting water at this certain number you able to leave a monetary donation just a little backstory with that but i started out as a battle rapper
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a 1st and i steam the entertainment value side of that but after a while i realized that i could apply myself in much more useful ways or much more impactful ways rather than battling someone's head to head why not try to go towards a system instead and try to wake up and defy the system sort of speak and. that's kind of how defy started i did a song when i 1st was inspired as these hydraulic fracturing zones were getting closer and closer to my homelands where my grandparents are from this and new mexico it's very rural at that point in time i realized that i needed to apply myself as an mc a music producer towards the much larger issues that and then just battle rap so i stepped outside of the box and wrote this song called the land of in fragments and that's kind of a flip on the on the slogan of our state and just to expose and also raise awareness of all these atrocities that are happening throughout
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a trial that fracturing zones in our areas and from that point on i've just been helping hand as part of the many different movements for the indigenous peoples movement and many others as well but that's probably the most that was a that was a beginning you know after hearing your music and like i mentioned earlier that passion that you have that like just bleeds out of every every verse every bar every word i really want those like how do you sit down when you sit down the writers to write a song you know like what is that process for you when you sit down and say ok you know i'm going to write about this issue of fracking or i'm just going to you know write some fire to get people jumping up about like what how do you tackle that how do you approach each song each song is kind of approach very differently but for the most part i'm writing on. my lyrics behind the driver's seat i know it's a little risky but when i'm mad it's very rural areas i could drive out and enjoy the scenery. and be out of the city put on a instrumental usually the beep guides 1st take out my beats through different
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producers go from there and so you're literally like right behind the wheel the car in the beautiful new mexico. going into your painted sky and landscape it is submitted like listen to examine and write about yeah exactly a lot of times off freestyle to think of the ideas and then just put it down on paper. who are some of your inspirations and your pop. many inspirations i guess from my youth the 1st hip hop song i probably would have heard was probably a run d.m.c. or chill raji track and as far as emceeing goes there's so many different amazing talented mcs that have inspired me to name a few. big pun big. care as one percy p. . micah 9 a free stuff fellowship evidence the dilated peoples those are very influential artists and that's a good variety in my study and you can see that not reflected in your work and said
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so glad you don't feel bad but you can definitely feel that the style you know and i think you know one of the things that's interesting true is your work you work a lot with young people you know and. you know how has your work with those young people how was that inspired the music and the art that you create the youth have always inspired me since the beginning and especially when times when i guess an artist may get tired of war now from trying to continue working with the youth has been very inspirational because they provide so much support 1st of all they keep things brand new and fresh for me i don't get worn out or i don't complain a lot a lot of people say like how do you keep going and not complaining about being on the road all the time. well just going back home and doing youth outreach it just makes me i get happy true happiness by working with the youth i was always raised in a classroom setting i come from a family of educators and healers so i've always been in the classroom since i was
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a kid my mom has been a teacher and a big inspiration for that so when people ask me why are you so connected to that it was it's just kind of just who i am and was brought up that way and raised that way. working with the youth also gives me a sense of purpose that's much deeper than. working for just myself for what would you say monetary gain or certain things like that or some are just going for the fame like that's never really been a focus of my. hip hop practitioners and feel like i have a responsibility to give back and that's what i really focus on that it's a big focus of part of my mission couldn't afford the jaw on magazine 44 and a 4th that joan ordered school woman a boarding school forced the move got chores and more sports in a dorm but only one course of fire chief kept the wood burning before morning outside the house early at 440 past the she broke on the floor by the door when the dormitory escaped out of corporate doors and explored by my board pony here to take
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it back home because ya not a present to scrub the present not your face and scrape but wait the residue resumes like beams of people resonate with resolute. able to cope with all the pain that we soak in the next generations of welcome but before the preservation was a home you know the nation was stolen but i'm in a sweat lodge see in a vision it's like i'm back out the womb dreaming that grandmother moon in the fetal position.
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end the show. but you could still. if you had it would this prejudice apply that to describe. a lot of people i think especially who are part of the you know the indigenous population here in the united states who are part of the native american community of the tribes and things like that you know i think there's a lot of misconceptions out there you know. what do you feel are some of the biggest misconceptions of people have about your culture and where you're coming from. yeah when i'm out and about far away from home i can sometimes sense. that people look at us as we're almost not even human beings in certain instances
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not everywhere i go but there are some places what i can look at somebody and just take a quick glance and they almost look at me with some type of sense of resentment if there's people out there who believe that. we're only one kind of people i mean there's so many different tribes that exist here in the country and we're all very different a lot of times people to like you know we're sitting here at a bar a lot of times people think that we're just alcoholics myself. i've been over like 6 years alcohol free and i there's many of us who never even drank or did drugs before so that's another misconception people believe that were poor but we really were very rich in culture tradition cultural heritage a lot of people also believe that every tribe gets per capita or like we we're helped out where we get a helping hand no matter what it's really not the case sometimes when you come to the deep parts of the reservations or the most rural areas i think a lot of people in music they only see the big names in the big lights right like
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they're only used to see in the cat on them t.v. or the cat on the cover of a magazine things like that but that it's a bigger world than that. i've heard it described sort of like you know if you become in if i don't artist at a certain time you can you know either be in it for monetary gain and be like this was to be considered as a rapper but i consider myself more as and see and i think that allows myself to be more community based and not a self-serving entrepreneur more like you know i'm here of service as well for. representing myself my family my friends but also the culture of hip hop and that sense of pride in me being proud of who i am as an as and in that manner and also as and see it gives me strength but also gives me direction to what i'm actually doing here with the music hip hop is. save my life so.
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me being me being part of the culture is like just i mean i want to contribute just as much as i can chip pop is helping me so when they sort of save your life or how did hip hop save your life. hip hop saved my life. through the friendships and bonds and through the practice of itself i felt like as i was working on these skills the skills were also working on me to become a better person and started out as a homeless artist and if it wasn't for the hip hop community or the hip hop scene at that time i wouldn't have had a place to stay i wouldn't have had. food and just basic survival needs so hip hop community has been there for me since day one and what advice would you give you know a younger person in similar shoes to you who finds that spirit finds that voice you know through music. for myself i mean what are our tribe deals with a lot of energy enter a tional
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i think you want to present the st paul head up but don't get caught up in a trend that's a somewhat that's a record that we're still taking place in it's at the book club to deal with about a genocidal caucus be surprised if it is the deal is still spinning in his pockets a box he could give up in a bid to distract if they don't despair because stereotypes about every time they have put a lightsaber seem tepid you might say never your flight back to the docks the same rapid pull back from the signal by this signal him you do have. you know political nature to what you're talking about because i think a lot of what you rub about a lot of what you want your songs about you know they like to mention with fracking and things like that you know you put those those flavors in there how important is music to changing. politics or changing in issue or attacking an issue or
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maybe people aware of an issue like how important is music to a fellow like music can inspire and empower many people and i feel like if the messages there that. or you look at it like the last song that you did for like the last song that you did for us that's such an enlightening song and it's such a powerful song using the mix of you know your heritage and your people as well as the drum beat and then the hip hop flavor in the archipelago you know you know that song has about that song teaches as a tribal person you kind of grow up loving the environment and that's it and that's inside you already instilled so. doesn't make you a politician sort of speak but the issues that politics that you know surround and they directly relate to our lives and way of life so. it's a responsibility for me to create music that. inspires and helps empower others
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because i was just inspired and empowered from hearing music from a lot of the greats and legends of the hip-hop pioneers is that. so continuations you're right you know it's a beautiful continuation. i want to finish up and ask you you know when you look at your career and you look at where you're going you know you're only 33 years old you've got a long career in front of you got a lot more music to write a lot more beauty to produce on this world what do you what do you imagine or what do you hope your legacy years with your music and who you are. and i got it's fired from reading something i think from kara's warner somewhere where he's making music for the future generations creating a catalog that can outlast and also transcend generations i would like for my music to help inspire future generations and also help anybody in need who. who feels alone or phil's. depressed i mean.
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i make music just to help a lot and i do make music just the likes i do have tracked i just did fire not really. just focus on a specific concept but it's hard to see the ripple effects of us sometimes because we're just moving and moving and moving and moving i hope to look back one day and be able to. thrive with my music career but also really it's a money give back tenfold as much as i received i mean i got to say my hip hop has been there since the beginning so it's hard for me to say what i really want out of it it's hard to describe man i just sometimes that the music speaks for itself. and that ladies and gentlemen is our show for you to day thank you all very much for watching and remember in this world we are not told that we are loved enough so i tell you all i love you tyrrel but keep on watching those hawks and have a great day and night everybody.
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even if. i don't know maybe they don't make or. break right. now war. seems wrong why don't we all just don't hold. me to be just to shape out just to become educated and in gains from an equal betrayal. when so many find themselves worlds apart we choose to look for common ground. join me every thursday on the alex i'm unsure and i'll be speaking to us from the
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world of politics. i'm sure i'll see you then. condemns germany's unwillingness to share evidence relating to the alleged poisoning of. a 2nd official request for data. clear asking the german side to confirm everything it claims with facts because as we have repeatedly seen unfortunately many of the supposed facts that are sensational and i'm sorry different from any factual verification. the new york times meanwhile saw as an enormous source claims that wants to return to russia. british formula one star lewis hamilton could face punishment for a t. shirt highlighting the campaign against police brutality. a formula one rules look at what the sports and politics. the only serious of injustice.
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