Pennywise have released their new album ‘Reason To Believe‘ for free via MySpace
All you need do is click on the banner above, and add those guys (”textango” I believe) as a friend, then you’ll be able to download the album via a link they give you.
I haven’t listen to the album yet, but Pennywise are normally cool to listen too. There is an odd thing though; the 15th track isn’t there. Now this is where the obvious marketing comes in.
Textango is a service that allows you to buy/download music buy paying for it through your phone. So, you find a code on their site and text it; you are charge how ever much for the album plus your text rate. Good service really as it does allow people who want to earn through their music to offer it out to people in an easy way (well, I haven’t tired it as it is an American based service only at the moment). So Pennywise are still earning something out of this, but it is also giving something to the bands who will listen to market their music; we all know studio time isn’t cheap, so to be able to find a quick way of selling the music to the masses is great.
Young people who visit social networking sites to download music and pictures glorifying criminal street gangs can unwittingly set themselves up to be recruited by those gangs, according to law enforcement officials and youth counselors.
San Mateo Police Chief Susan Manheimer, who speaks for the San Mateo County gang task force, said gang leaders are aware that kids like to socialize on sites such as MySpace and YouTube.
“We’re seeing our gangs and the resurgence of some of the gang members coming back from prison looking more and more to those middle schoolers and the younger kids to recruit them,” said Manheimer.
Manheimer said kids get into discussions in the comments sections of web sites, and engage in everything from vicious threats to what seems to be innocuous chit-chat.
“The type of profiling they’re doing of themselves makes them prey to predators and also at odds with and challenging other gangs,” said Manheimer. “So, we’ll see something start on the Internet, and actually turn into an assault or a gang fight that actually results out of Internet profiling.”
CBS 5 visited a movie theater in downtown Redwood City on a Friday night and found kids as young as 12 years old with gang insignia downloaded onto their phones. Some had downloaded rap songs glorifying the Norteños.
“‘Til my death I’ll hold my rag up high. I’ll be a Norteño ’til the day I die,” went the lyrics to one such song.
One 13-year old boy told CBS 5 the people who put up the pages with gang images sometimes strike up conversations with him.
“They just talk normal, like – ‘What you doing? What you been up to?’” he said. “They don’t pressure me, though.”
Youth counselor Alejandro Vilchez says keeping kids out of gangs in real life now means teaching them to avoid becoming targets of propaganda in the virtual world.
“It’s really no different than the way Hitler recruited Hitler youth with the pageantry and the uniforms and the messages of unity and sacrifice and honor,” said Vilchez. “It’s the same messages that you seen on these gang websites.”
Vilchez advises parents to keep computers in common rooms and closely monitor websites and cell phones. And, he says parents should educate themselves about the colors and signs of the local gangs.
A YouTube spokesperson who asked to remain anonymous e-mailed CBS 5 the following statement: “YouTube does not allow videos showing dangerous or illegal acts which is clearly stated in the community guidelines on the site.”
“Also, real violence on you tube is not allowed,” the statement continued. “If a video shows someone getting hurt, attacked or humiliated it will be removed.”
The spokesperson said YouTube does not control content, and that they rely on users to police the site and flag inappropriate material.
Youtube staff later reviews the material and removes content found to violate the community guidelines.
“Our community polices the site and this has proven very effective,” the YouTube spokesperson wrote.
I’m very anti-gangs, I even have a serious thing about music that influence gang violence on suburban kids. Mind you, UK gangs are pretty cack with Chav assoiciating them selves to that of NWA but forgetting that NWA is something completely different to have G-Unit is about.
I think the worse case is white kids with no real socio-problems trying to create a problem through their own means. Listen up kids; this is why nobody listens to you!
Really, taken a look at one of their recuritement videos on YouTube!