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1-44 of 44
- A mockumentary chronicling the rise and fall of NWH, a not particularly talented--or particularly bright but always controversial--hip-hop group.
- This outrageously hysterical urban comedy follows the lives and crimes of two wannabe white boys as they try to break into the world of hardcore "gangsta" rap.
- Rodney Dangerfield performs in the music video "Rappin' Rodney" from the album "Rappin' Rodney" recorded for RCA Victor. Rodney Dangerfield raps about not getting respect at a trail. Later, he is on death row talking to a priest. He is put to death in the electric chair before ending up at the gates of heaven. Later, he awakens in bed from a nightmare.
- Nick Cannon, Mac Miller, Kevin Hart, MGK and more countdown the all-time favorite Wild 'N Out moments, and introduce the new cast members.
- Official music video for "I Think I Can Beat Mike Tyson" by DJ Jazzy Jeff and the Fresh Prince.
- A 1980's Hip Hop Era film based around popular suburban African American teenagers who found themselves surrounded by the pull of drugs, sex and peer pressure. There are positive messages and comedic relief throughout the film.
- A nerdy insurance salesman thinks that a Mafia boss has been wacked, takes his identity to collect a 5 Million Dollar insurance policy. He finds himself caught up in an under world heap of trouble.
- One record deal and five rap groups who'll do (almost) anything to win!
- Official music video for "A Nightmare on My Street" by DJ Jazzy Jeff and the Fresh Prince. In this spoof of the horror movie "Nightmare On Elm Street" Will is haunted by a killer dream demon named "Fred" who wants to team up with him.
- Trexx and Flipside are wannabe hip hop stars but their music label - Wu Hah Records - is run by Mr Brilliance, who is more in tune with crooning than rap. Fortunately, his so-called assistant, Ollie, knows what she is doing and loves the boys' work. But even she worries that their enthusiasm is doing more harm than good - when they crashed the British Rap Awards (Bras) in a borrowed strip limo shared with a hen party, for instance. And, when it comes to using a little muscle, the hip hop world is inhabited by the uninhibited, and gangsta rapper B-ICE has sworn to keep the boys exactly where he put them - in the gutter. Pitted against their rap rivals and backed by a no-hoper of a manager, will Trexx and Flipside ever make it?
- Joe explores fish-out-of-water activities, events and culture - from pick-up artists to freestyle rap contests to professional wrestling school.
- An insider's guide to the Pokémon Trading Card Game.
- Jon explains his struggles to get to who he is today.
- A concerned father hires a foreign production company to follow his son and his best friend in the pursuit of mainstream success in the hip hop music scene.
- 40 viral video reenactments in 4 minutes, in a parody of "Ghetto Superstar."
- A musical comedy short depicting the final episode of a failing children's show.
- The music video for 'Weird Al' Yankovic's "Handy", which is a parody of "Fancy" by Iggy Azalea.
- The second digital comedy short film from writer/director Michael Ratner follows LiL DPC as he moves into Fat Joe's Miami mansion and into the fast life of the hip-hop industry. Always a savvy businessman, Fat Joe attempts to transform DPC into a credible hip-hop artist. Within days, tensions run high between DPC and Fat Joe's manager, Macho, who believes that DPC is talentless and is hurting their street cred. Nevertheless, Fat Joe works with DPC on the "Hung Like A Hero (Remix)" which he expects to bring in millions. The film follows DPC, Joe, and Macho in the days leading to the world premiere of the "Hung Like A Hero (Remix)" music video. Meanwhile, Richard Sr. is back in New York distraught over his missing son.
- A freak mishap gives wheelchair-bound scientist and inventor, Dr. Stefan Falconer, a vision that something terrible is going to happen to local TV personality, Walter Preston. What terrorist evil-doer will perpetrate this atrocity? Will it be Dr. Falconer himself, whose vision is mocked on the air by Preston? Will it be the white rapper who has returned to town to repair his reputation after a wardrobe malfunction? Could it be the local convenience store owner whom Preston busts for selling pornography to children? Or, will it be the painfully shy station ombudsman unknowingly caught in a love quadrangle?
- Music video for the song, "Dr Soul", by the R&B/Hip Hop group Foster and McElroy from their 1989 album FM2, With heavy rotation during the fall of 1989