Showing posts with label crowd. Show all posts
Showing posts with label crowd. Show all posts

Sunday, February 8, 2015

Gully Bop expects big Caymanas crowd

Gully Bop on Wednesday said he was expecting “likkle more” than the 7,500-strong crowd that turned out for Sting 2014, as he prepares to headline tomorrow’s McKay Security Caymanas Live Entertainment Series at Caymanas Park.

“From mi born, mi neva guh ova deh. Mi don’t know weh in deh look like. Mi neva guh Caymanas Park yet, but mi duh Sting ah Portmore, an mi expect likkle more people than Sting,” the overnight dancehall sensation told THE WEEKEND STAR.

A Sting-like crowd at the Portmore racetrack would swell Caymanas Park’s Saturday attendance by more than 50 per cent. The racetrack attracts an average crowd of 5,000 for Saturday racemeets.

“Caymanas thing nuh so expensive like Sting. Dat almost free, and Gully Bop a deh deh. From Gully Bop deh deh, dat a guh sell off, straight up,” the new dancehall star added.

Gully Bop joins a select group of artistes to grace the McKay Security Caymanas Live Series, which started with Busy Signal. Other top acts to have appeared on the series included I-Octane, Spice, Tifa, Kalado and Alkaline.

Though he shot to stardom last November, a month before headlining Sting 2014, Gully Bop is a 50-year-old veteran formerly known as Countryman.

Father

Father of three children, now adults – 27 and 25-year-old girls, and a 22-year-old son – Gully Bop said he has done his homework on Caymanas Park, which regards itself as offering “family entertainment”.

“Let me explain this thing. I am a very intelligent deejay; those songs you hear playing, don’t expect to hear that out of my mouth at Caymanas Park. I don’t deejay those things at VIP events. It’s a different crowd. You have to know how you are going to talk. A nuh Sting thing. All the prime minister could be in the crowd. You have to be very careful,” he said.


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Gully Bop expects big Caymanas crowd

Gully Bop expects big Caymanas crowd

Gully Bop on Wednesday said he was expecting “likkle more” than the 7,500-strong crowd that turned out for Sting 2014, as he prepares to headline tomorrow’s McKay Security Caymanas Live Entertainment Series at Caymanas Park.

“From mi born, mi neva guh ova deh. Mi don’t know weh in deh look like. Mi neva guh Caymanas Park yet, but mi duh Sting ah Portmore, an mi expect likkle more people than Sting,” the overnight dancehall sensation told THE WEEKEND STAR.

A Sting-like crowd at the Portmore racetrack would swell Caymanas Park’s Saturday attendance by more than 50 per cent. The racetrack attracts an average crowd of 5,000 for Saturday racemeets.

“Caymanas thing nuh so expensive like Sting. Dat almost free, and Gully Bop a deh deh. From Gully Bop deh deh, dat a guh sell off, straight up,” the new dancehall star added.

Gully Bop joins a select group of artistes to grace the McKay Security Caymanas Live Series, which started with Busy Signal. Other top acts to have appeared on the series included I-Octane, Spice, Tifa, Kalado and Alkaline.

Though he shot to stardom last November, a month before headlining Sting 2014, Gully Bop is a 50-year-old veteran formerly known as Countryman.

Father

Father of three children, now adults – 27 and 25-year-old girls, and a 22-year-old son – Gully Bop said he has done his homework on Caymanas Park, which regards itself as offering “family entertainment”.

“Let me explain this thing. I am a very intelligent deejay; those songs you hear playing, don’t expect to hear that out of my mouth at Caymanas Park. I don’t deejay those things at VIP events. It’s a different crowd. You have to know how you are going to talk. A nuh Sting thing. All the prime minister could be in the crowd. You have to be very careful,” he said.


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Gully Bop expects big Caymanas crowd

Monday, January 26, 2015

Big crowd for Sultry"s milestone

By Kevin Jackson Observer Writer

Saturday, January 24, 2015    

WEEKLY club series, Sultry Lounge marked its first anniversary at the Quad nightclub in New Kingston, last Friday night.

The large crowd — comprising trendy, young adults and professionals, partied until the wee hours of Saturday morning.

Jermaine Davis, a member of Team No Shirt (TNS) — event coordinators for Sultry Lounge, said the large turnout was due to target marketing.

“We have a specific demographic that we target and our weekly themes are fresh and innovative. We have some of the best disc jocks in the business,” Davis told the Jamaica Observer.

A cadre of disc jocks from Chromatic and X Factor sound systems provided the evening’s music.

Davis said the event’s staging is not without its challenges, especially from other hot spots.

“That challenged us… but we’ve pulled through, all the way to the first year. For 2015, patrons can look forward to a bigger and better Sultry Lounge,” he said.


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Big crowd for Sultry"s milestone

Monday, January 19, 2015

Pope leaves Manila after drawing record crowd of 6M

pope660.jpg Jan. 18, 2015: Pope Francis waves to the crowd as he arrives at Quirino Grandstand to celebrate his final Papal Mass in Manila, Philippines (AP Photo/Ron Soliman)

MANILA, Philippines –  Pope Francis flew out of this Catholic bastion in Asia on Monday after a weeklong trip that included a visit to Sri Lanka and drew what Filipino officials says was a record crowd of 6 million faithful in a Manila park where he celebrated Mass.

President Benigno Aquino III, church leaders and 400 street children yelling “Pope Francis we love you,” saw him off at a Manila air base, where the pontiff, carrying a black travel bag, boarded a Philippine Airlines plane for a flight to Rome. Standing at the top of the stairs, the pope waved to the crowd, slightly bowed his head, then walked into the plane.

Hundreds of thousands of Filipinos lined Manila’s streets, with police keeping a close watch, to have their final glimpse of Francis, who smiled and waved aboard an open-sided, white popemobile.

“He’s my No. 1 world leader,” said Rita Fernandez, a 63-year-old mother of four, who stood on a street near the Apostolic Nunciature in Manila where Francis stayed during his four-day visit.

“He rides on a bus. He flew to Tacloban to visit the typhoon survivors despite the storm and he stops to talk to the poor. He’s a living saint,” said Fernandez, who held a cellphone with a camera and wore a yellow shirt showing a smiling Francis.

A crowd estimated at a record 6 million people by officials poured into Manila’s rain-soaked streets and its biggest park Sunday as Pope Francis ended his Asian pilgrimage with an appeal for Filipinos to protect their young from sin and vice so they can become missionaries of the faith.

The crowd estimate, which could not be independently verified, included people who attended the pope’s final Mass in Rizal Park and surrounding areas, and lined his motorcade route, said the chairman of the Metropolitan Manila Development Authority, Francis Tolentino.

The Vatican spokesman, the Rev. Federico Lombardi, said the Vatican had received the figure officially from local authorities and that it was a record, surpassing the 5 million who turned out for St. John Paul II’s final Mass in the same park in 1995.

Francis dedicated the final homily of his Asia trip to children, given that the Mass fell on an important feast day honoring the infant Jesus. His focus was a reflection of the importance that the Vatican places on Asia as the future of the church since it’s one of the few places where Catholic numbers are growing — and on the Philippines as the largest Catholic nation in the region.

“We need to see each child as a gift to be welcomed, cherished and protected,” Francis said. “And we need to care for our young people, not allowing them to be robbed of hope and condemned to a life on the streets.”

Francis made a triumphant entry into Rizal Park, riding on a popemobile based on the design of a jeepney, the modified U.S. Army World War II jeep that is a common means of public transport here. He wore the same cheap, plastic yellow rain poncho handed out to the masses during his visit to the typhoon-hit eastern city of Tacloban a day earlier.

The crowd — a sea of humanity in colorful rain ponchos spread out across the 60 hectares (148 acres) of parkland and boulevards surrounding it — erupted in shrieks of joy when he drove by, a reflection of the incredible resonance Francis’ message about caring for society’s most marginal has had in a country where about a quarter of its 100 million people lives in poverty.

Francis dedicated his four-day trip to the Philippines to the poor and marginal. He denounced the corruption that has robbed them of a dignified life, visited with street children and traveled to Tacloban to offer prayers for survivors of Typhoon Haiyan, the deadly 2013 storm that devastated one of the Philippines’ poorest regions.

Earlier Sunday, Francis drew a huge crowd to Manila’s Catholic university, where he came close to tears himself hearing two rescued street children speak of their lives growing up poor and abandoned.

The pope ditched his prepared remarks and spoke off the cuff in his native Spanish to respond to 12-year-old Glyzelle Palomar, who wept as she asked Francis why children suffer so much. Palomar, a former street child rescued by a church-run foundation, told him of children who are abandoned or neglected by their parents and end up on the streets using drugs or in prostitution.

“Why is God allowing something like this to happen, even to innocent children?” Palomar asked through tears. “And why are there so few who are helping us?”

A visibly moved Francis said he had no answer. “Only when we are able to cry are we able to come close to responding to your question,” he said.

“Those on the margins cry. Those who have fallen by the wayside cry. Those who are discarded cry,” the pope said. “But those who are living a life that is more or less without need, we don’t know how to cry.”

And he added: “There are some realities that you can only see through eyes that have been cleansed by tears.”


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Pope leaves Manila after drawing record crowd of 6M

Thursday, June 26, 2014

Madman paid $100 to have sex - Crowd watches him and homeless woman in downtown Kingston

A mentally ill man and a homeless woman were the ‘stars’ of a short pornographic film, which was done by the pair for only $100.

The movie was reportedly filmed in the downtown Kingston area sometime ago, in front of a large crowd.

Throughout the more than two-minute clip, it was the man’s sexual prowess or lack thereof, which was the main source of entertainment for the onlookers.

The man who could be seen attempting to penetrate the woman, but failed miserably, much to the disappointment of the spectators.

“Shub it inna it …” one of the onlookers instructed the fumbling man, to which he responded, “ah rise it ah rise, seet rise! It rising!” the man declared while flashing his instrument as evidence to the onlookers.

But after multiple attempts, the man failed to penetrate the woman.

Getting his money’s worth

In apparent frustration and bent on getting his money’s worth, another spectator instructed, “Use yuh mouth man! Use yuh mouth!” to which the man without hesitation, proceeded to perform fellatio on the woman, much to the delight of the spectators.

Another spectator quipped, “yuh nyam too much… that’s why yuh … lazy” as he continued to struggle to engage in intercourse with the woman.

But despite being at the centre of the spectacle, the woman appeared oblivious to what was happening to her, even as her ‘co-star’ attempted to rouse a response from her by attempting to remove the top of her dress, she was still unmoved.

The woman simply laid there quietly with her dress hiked to her knees, legs splayed with her hands resting on her stomach as the man did his bidding.

No reports

After his failed performance, an irate spectator began to demand a refund after his expectations of a grand show were unfulfilled.

“Gi we back we $100, cause yuh … nah stand up! Gi we back we … money!” the man demanded.

Unwilling to relinquish his payment, the man made another feeble attempt to penetrate the woman, “yuh see mi … a stand up?” to which an onlooker jeered, “yuh waa some Viagra! Dat nuh in deh!”

The STAR contacted Head of the Kingston Central Division, Superintendent Michael Scott, and he stated that he has received no reports about persons engaging in sexual activities with homeless or mentally ill people in the area.

Meanwhile, Head of the Centre for the Investigation of Sexual Offences and Child Abuse, (CISOCA), Veronica Gilzean, told The STAR, “I have heard of it anecdotally, but we have received no such reports.”


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Madman paid $100 to have sex - Crowd watches him and homeless woman in downtown Kingston

Wednesday, June 25, 2014

Aidonia thrills Chug it Crowd


Scenes from Rumbar Chug It at Sugarman’s Beach in Hellshire last Sunday. – anthony Minott photos

Girls screaming and ‘getting on bad’ were some of the scenes that characterised another high-tempo performance by dancehall artiste, Aidonia, during the popular Rumbar Chug It party held at the Sugarman’s Beach in Hellshire, Portmore, last Sunday.

He came on stage with the hit single Run Road with his prot?g? Deablo joining him in pelting lyrics from the tune.

When the JOP boss drew the tune, Don Deh Yah, he received a huge forward and a female patron barged on stage to ‘dash it out’ in front of the artiste.

The artiste also sang the praise of the weed with “High Up Deh’(Lala Land) and showed his lyrical ability in his tribute to the various artistes that set the foundation in the dancehall with ’80s dancehall style.

Apart from the live performances, the crowd was also entertained by the Turbo girls, with their acrobatic moves, and the Rumbar Vodka Flex Week girls with their sexy gyrations.

The musical presentation included ZJ Ice from Zip FM, Ikel Marvlus and Flabba Dabba.






Scenes from Rumbar Chug It at Sugarman’s Beach in Hellshire last Sunday. – anthony Minott photos


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Aidonia thrills Chug it Crowd

Tuesday, August 13, 2013

No big crowd in HWT to celebrate Shelly"s win

News

BY KIMMO MATTHEWS Observer staff reporter matthewsk@jamaicaobserver.com Tuesday, August 13, 2013

HALF-WAY-TREE square was missing the usual crowd yesterday as two big screens projected the women’s 100-metre final from the World Athletics Championships in Moscow, Russia, which had among the line-up Jamaica’s own Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce and Kerron Stewart.For the most part, the St Andrew capital only had its usual sights and sounds: Impatient motorists tooting their horns, people moving about the busy streets, and peddlers outside the transport centre trying to grab a sale from unwilling passers-by.However, at the sound of the starter’s gun in Moscow, commuters stopped in their tracks and motorists ignored the changing traffic lights to watch the race on the big screens that have been a feature in the square since Jamaica dominated the tracks in the 2008 Beijing Olympics.The handful of people relished every moment as Fraser-Pryce demolished a quality field to win in a blistering, world-leading 10.71 seconds ahead of the Ivory Coast’s Muriella Ahoure (10.93) and Carmelita Jeter (10.94) of the United States. Stewart, with a run of 10.97 seconds, placed fifth.Those watching could not contain their delight.“From mi see how she (Fraser-Pryce) lif’ up inna di race, mi confident; mi know she could not lose,” Ian Campbell told the Jamaica Observer.Even the menacing rain clouds above could not dampen the excitement of the few.“Mi really happy to see that wi secured a win in the race,” said Ian McNeil, another cheering fan.There were other fans who, despite being proud of Fraser-Pryce, said they were disappointed that Stewart had not made it to the medal podium by finishing in the top three.“I am happy for Shelly, but really wanted Stewart to secure a medal too,” said Pamela Smart, who had travelled from Portland to do business in Half-Way-Tree.

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No big crowd in HWT to celebrate Shelly"s win