Hooked on Sonics

Music, The Beat Junkies

L.A. WEEKLY
Oliver Wang
August 22, 2002

Beat Junkies

The Beat Junkies

It’s dark, concrete surrounds, and there‘s a line of riot police wearing smiley faces. London’s Banksy has painted one of his signature ”weapons of mass distraction“ murals on the walls of this downtown industrial warehouse, into which a stream of young urban bohos slowly pours. Keyboardist Money Mark is scheduled to vamp it up later, but right now the Funky President is holding court — J Rocc of the Beat Junkies. With fellow Junkie Rhettmatic waiting in the wings, J Rocc makes it look ridiculously easy, mixing one-handed so he can smoke a cigarette. Like Banksy‘s blend of pop iconography splayed on the walls, J Rocc is a one-man soundclash, bringing together everything from obscure ’70s funk to exclusive hip-hop remixes, his body in perpetual motion as he fluidly adjusts pitch, volume and fidelity.

A 15-minute trip up the I-5 later, and J Rocc‘s still in the mix, only now he’s exchanged the murky warehouse for the brightly lit DJ booth at KPWR, a.k.a. Power 106. Jurassic 5, fresh off their triumphant Smokin‘ Grooves show at the Universal Amphitheater, are tossing freestyles back and forth as J Rocc coolly bounces beats off the station’s new digital CD turntables. It‘s Friday Night Flavas, and J is hosting as part of the Fantastik 4our, alongside DJs Truly Odd, C-Minus and host Mr. Choc, the latter yet another Beat Junkie. At the same moment, across town, Junkies Icey Ice and Curse are presenting Seditious Beats on KPFK, while back downtown, Rhettmatic has taken over the mix for Banksy’s after-party. The Junkies are anywhere, everywhere in Los Angeles tonight. They don‘t belong to the city. The city belongs to them.

There has never been a DJ crew in any American city as dominant as the Beat Junkies, who celebrate their 10th anniversary on August 17. Since forming in 1992, the Junkies have helped anchor L.A.’s hip-hop scene in the clubs, on the radio and in retail, not to mention broken ground as innovative scratch DJs. True, the Bay Area‘s defunct Invisbl Skratch Piklz had more international prestige, and New York’s X-ecutioners have achieved more commercial success. But to conceive of what the Junkies have done in the ‘90s, you’d have to imagine New York‘s DJ kings of the ’80s — Red Alert, Marley Marl, Frankie Knuckles, Grandmaster Flash, etc. — all coming from the same neighborhood, forming a crew and staying intact for the next 10 years. And even then the comparison might not be adequate, since, at the end of their first decade, the Junkies are only getting better.

The Junkies inherited the mantle formerly worn by pioneering L.A. hip-hop DJs like Uncle Jam‘s Army, Dr. Dre, Greg Mack, Alladin and Joe Cooley, otherwise known as the KDAY Mixmasters. Indeed, all of the Junkies cite AM 1580 — the nation’s first 24-hour rap station — as a common inspiration. ”They actually gave the DJs a break, and gave them some time,“ says J Rocc. The problem for the Junkies was that they weren‘t from L.A. proper, but grew up behind the Orange Curtain in Cerritos. ”Coming from O.C., you had to work 10 times as hard just to prove yourself,“ says Rhettmatic. J Rocc notes that while Orange County hip-hop strongholds like Santa Ana boasted luminaries such as Alladin, ”They didn’t have the same light as L.A.,“ even though ”they were on the same shit.“

It's Understood That Hollywood Sells Californication

Hollywood, Ireland, Los Angeles, Red Hot Chili Peppers, Rock and Roll

KNBC Anchor Paul Moyer Leaves Door Open

Hollywood, KNBC, Los Angeles, Media, paul Moyer, Venice Beach

moyerLOS ANGELES TIMES

His departure from the station doesn’t necessarily mean the end of his news career, he says.

By Greg Braxton

April 27, 2009

Veteran news anchor Paul Moyer may be done with KNBC-TV Channel 4, but he may not be finished with local news.

“I’m officially retired from Channel 4, but that doesn’t mean I’m officially retired from the news business forever,” Moyer told The Times on Friday. “I can’t predict what will happen in the future. I’m not closing the door, but there’s nothing out there at the moment.”

While on vacation early this month, Moyer unexpectedly announced he was retiring from KNBC after 22 years but would return for a short time before selecting a final broadcast date. However, station News Director Robert Long told staffers Friday that Moyer had “decided to make the transition from vacation to retirement a seamless one, and he will not be returning to our air to say goodbye.”

“I just didn’t feel there was anything to gain by going back and working for another few weeks,” said Moyer. “I hope that people understand why I’m not going back. I get very uncomfortable with big formal goodbyes.”

Moyer is considered one of the last of a breed of well-paid and highly promoted local news anchors. His departure follows speculation that his salary, estimated at more than $3 million a year, had been too costly for the station in a time of declining revenue and viewership industrywide.

The newscaster said he has been moved by viewers who have expressed their sense of loss about his departure. “What really touches me is they thank me for being there,” he said. “I really feel like I have a relationship with the people of Southern California. I feel connected to them. I will really miss that.”

For now, Moyer said his focus will be on his family and his children: “I’ve got two kids, 16 and 19, and they need their dad. Now they’ve got him, full time.”

Wise Up

Cruise, Frogs, Los Angeles, Macy, Magnolia, Mann, Moore, Obama, P.T. Anderson, Robards, Seymour Hoffman, Tullycast

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Bill Maher | February 1 2008

9/11, Bin Laden, Blogs, Broadcatching, Film and Video, Hillary Clinton, Hollywood, Iraq, Los Angeles, McCain, Obama, Oil, Producers, Religion, Tullycast, Video, Writers

This week Bill welcomes columnist Clarence Page, Congressman Darrell Issa, N.O.W. President Kim Gandy and Real Time reporter Matt Taibbi

TULLYCAST

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Bill Maher | January 11 2008

9/11, Afghanistan, Bin Laden, Broadcatching, Consensus Journalism, D.C., Giuliani, Hillary, Imus, Obama, Oil, Politics, Rove

Bill Maher | January 11 2008

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Bill Maher's Real Time | October 12 2007 | Paul Krugman, Naomi Klein, Tucker Carlson, Joy Behar And Vicente Fox

9/11, Bin Laden, Giuliani

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PART TWO

 

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PART THREE

 

 

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PART FOUR

 

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PART FIVE

 

 

 

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PART SIX

 

 

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NEW RULES

 

 

 

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GRATEFUL DEAD GO WEB 2.0 WITH SOCIAL NETWORKING SITE ON DEAD DOT NET

Stories

gdb.jpgGRATEFUL DEAD GO WEB 2.0

Grateful Dead Fan Site Reborn

At their peak, rock legends “The Grateful Dead” attracted an estimated community of 40,000 self-proclaimed “Deadheads
trailing them as they toured the country. The movement had originally
spawned from fans meeting at concerts and networking on mailing lists.
Mailing lists turned digital with the launch of Dead.net, which will relaunch in the next 24 hours as a full blown social network.

The new version of Dead.net was created on the Drupal content
management platform and features extensive archives cataloging Grateful
Dead history, songs, photos, memorabilia, and shows, indexed and
searchable by tags. Dead users will be able to participate in forums,
upload their own photos, and bookmark concerts and shows they have
attended. Fans will also be treated to exclusive free mp3 show
downloads.


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BILL MAHER ASKS RICHARD ENGEL IF IT CAN GET WORSE IN IRAQ

Stories

BILL MAHER MAY 11TH 2007 PART 1

Bill’s opening monologue touches on the L.A.P.D. beatings in MacArthur Park, the fires in Griffith Park, Dick Cheney’s involvement with the D.C. prostitution scandal (Hint:Dusty Foggo/Duke Cunningham), and Tony “The Peoples Poodle” Blair.

Richard Engel live via satellite from Beirut Lebanon tells Bill that Iraqis are not on the American political time line vis-a-vis “SEPTEMBER”