To all my Diggers, do TSS (and the homie Rizoh actually) a stout by Digg’ing this joint.
Digg This! – Method_Man_Becomes_Peerless_in_New_Comic_Book
Updated — Looking good thus far but any additional help you can do to push this, please do por favor. If you’ve already dugg it, pass it to a friend and tell them to digg. Consider it as us calling in a small favor for the countless hours of entertainment we’ve tried to provide you with.
We’ll be following up with an interview with Mr. Meth, discussing the new comic book. Watch for the hook.
FYI – You can follow TSS via Digg as well using digg.com/users/tsscrew.
Previously Posted — “Man’s Only Hope…” – Method Man’s New Comic Book


Digger please.
Digg…. i like that site.
anybody holding Lupe’s “Cool”?
daamn, i’ve been usin digg since it came out in like ’05 (yea, i’m a geek), nice to see my favorite sites startin to recognize and utilize it.
dugg.
http://therapup.uproxx.com/2008/07/freebie-friday-sha-stimuli-hotter-than-july-mixtape.html#more-3954
Shit we’ve been on digg for a long minute. Just rarely do we plug for it. For my personal use, digg has gotten sorta cluttered but I still prefer it. I guess it’s like an old hat – beat to death but so comfortable that I stick w/it. Creature of habit I am lol. Feel free to digg all our crap
this is major:
Washington, D.C. – The Federal Communications Commission has finally approved the $3.3 billion merger of satellite radio providers XM Satellite Radio Holdings and Sirius Satellite Radio, establishing what many critics believe will be a monopoly on satellite radio in the United States.
The commission gave its final nod to the merger late Friday in a 3-2 vote, following an agreement by the companies to voluntarily pay a combined $19.7 million in fines for prior FCC violations.
The U.S. Justice Department approved the deal in March, and it was widely expected that the FCC would do the same. However, the merger stalled on negotiations with the FCC concerning the violations, which included signal interference complaints and concerns that some receivers and signal towers didn’t comply with federal guidelines.
Voting in favor of the merger were commission chairman Kevin Martin and commissioners Deborah Taylor Tate and Robert McDowell, all Republicans. Democratic commissioners Michael Copps and Jonathan Adelstein voted against the merger.
Tate cast the deciding vote after the companies agreed to settle the commission’s charges against them. Under the agreement, Washington, D.C.-based XM (nasdaq: XMSR – news – people ) will pay $17.5 million; New York-based Sirius (nasdaq: SIRI – news – people ) will pay $2.2 million.
Under the terms of the deal, the companies agreed not to raise prices for the next three years and will set aside 8% of their content for educational and minority-focused programming. They’ll also offer an à la carte option, allowing subscribers to pick and choose only the channels they prefer to receive.
Sirius currently offers more than 130 channels, XM more than 170. However, it’s not clear precisely how the companies will combine their operations. Together, they have more than 18 million subscribers.
Since the companies applied for permission to merge in March 2007, broadcasters, consumer rights groups and others have assailed the deal as a monopoly-maker. And indeed, it will produce a single satellite radio company in America.
However, U.S. regulators are convinced satellite radio competes with the Internet, cellphones and traditional AM/FM radio, all of which can deliver music and other radio programming. FCC officials were not immediately available for comment.
The deal is tough for many to swallow. “We continue to believe that consumers are best served by competition rather than monopolies,” said National Association of Broadcasters Vice President Dennis Wharton, following Friday night’s vote.
im gonna check that shit out
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uxaicXarCf8
JD and you !! amateur beatmakers ! it’s perhaps ya chance…