Bodegas on almost every street corner cast shadows on little old men who hold cigars in one hand, while setting scratched dominoes on wobbly wooden tables with the other. The beating of las congas under the wailing of the trumpets, which create the chemistry that is Salsa,
blast from next door neighbors' windows, but get drowned out by the prevalent thumping and rattling of Hip-Hop beats from passing cars that invades the ears and souls of Latino youth on the streets of New York City. The ability to capture these sights, sounds and genuine passion for inner-city culture, and package it as an experience for others to live, is what makes Brooklyn natives Ariel Gonzalez and Charlie Nuñez not only bona fide entrepreneurs as the founders of the pioneering Hip-Hop magazine Bridgez, but the gatekeepers of a thriving cultural movement that is Latino owned and operated.
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FOR ALL YOU GAME-HEADS WHO WANT A GOOD-OLD FASHION WHOP ASS ON XBOX LIVE, HIT US UP. HERE'S OUR GAMER TAG.
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FOR ALL YOU GAME-HEADS WHO WANT A GOOD-OLD FASHION WHOP ASS ON XBOX LIVE, HIT US UP. HERE'S OUR GAMER TAG.--------------------------------------------------------
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----SUBSCRIBE TO BRIDGEZ @
http://bridgezmag.com/subscribe.phpCHECK OUT BRIDGEZ ON SI TV - BRIDGEZ ON THE UP
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CHARLIE AND OMAR CRUZ ON LA & MR CARTOON
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ARIEL AND JOELL ORTIZ TALK BROOKLYN