Monday, March 9, 2009

Who is Brian Keith Bosworth?,

Who is Brian Keith Bosworth? The football world knows him as Brian Bosworth or The Boz, is a former American football player. He was a linebacker for the University of Oklahoma (1984–1986) and the Seattle Seahawks of the National Football League (1987–1989).

Bosworth was born March 9, 1965 in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, he attended MacArthur High School in Irving, Texas.

Bosworth was a college standout at the University of Oklahoma, where he was one of many blue-chip recruits from Texas lured across the border by longtime coach Barry Switzer.

Known for his then radical hairstyles and criticism of the NCAA as much as his play on the field, Bosworth was never one to shy from publicity or controversy. On more than one occasion "The Boz" referred to the NCAA as the "National Communists Against Athletes." He wore a shirt bearing that slogan during the 1987 Orange Bowl following the 1986 season. Banned from the game because of steroid use, Bosworth unveiled the shirt while standing on the sidelines to the shock and outrage of many, including his own coach, Switzer. While Switzer was known for running a loose ship, this incident was too much even for him, and he threw Bosworth off the team.[1]
A strong side linebacker throughout his college career,[2] Bosworth was known for raising his level of play in big games. He was regarded as a great tackler, though sometimes criticized for tackling too high. The winner of the first two Butkus Awards
as the nation's top college linebacker, he remains the only player ever to have won the accolade more than once. College Football News named him #30 on its list of the "100 Greatest College Players of All-Time."
In addition to his athletic accomplishments, Bosworth was a very good student who graduated a year ahead of his freshman class, thus making him eligible for the NFL's supplemental draft.
In September 1988, Bosworth wrote an autobiography, The Boz, with Sports Illustrated's Rick Reilly. In it, Bosworth said the Sooner program was laden with drug use, gunplay in the athletic dorm and other wild behavior. Although many Sooner boosters dismissed it as the rantings of a resentful ex-player, an NCAA report issued three months later revealed many of the same things Bosworth had written about, and ultimately led to Switzer being forced to resign.[1]

Prior to his entry into the NFL supplemental draft, Bosworth had sent letters to various NFL teams stating that, if they drafted him, he wouldn't report to their training camp and he wouldn't play for them. As a joke, the Tacoma Stars of the Major Indoor Soccer League selected him in the 12th round in their 1987 draft, as their general manager jokingly stated, "Because we didn't receive a letter from him that he wouldn't play for us."


Bosworth was drafted by the Seahawks in the 1987 NFL supplemental draft and signed what was both the biggest contract in team history and the biggest rookie contract in NFL history: 10 years for US$11 million. After being drafted by the Seahawks, Bosworth sued the NFL for the right to wear #44 (the number he wore in college). Bosworth lost the case and was forced to wear #55 in the pros. Despite playing his entire college career on the strong side, he was moved to the Seahawks' weak side.
Remembered for his less than stellar professional career, Bosworth was named the 6th worst flop on the Biggest Flops of the Last 25 Years list by ESPN in July 2004 and number three on NFL Network's NFL Top 10 Draft Busts). Most recently, Bosworth made an appearance in the booth during the Monday Night Football broadcast that saw the Seattle Seahawks host the Oakland Raiders on November 6, 2006. During the discussion, he stated he had no regrets about his football career, but wished that he and Bo Jackson
had had longer careers. He also stated that he thought he and Jackson would have developed a good rivalry, had they both been able to play longer.
Bosworth was also a color commentator for the short-lived XFL during their only season of existence in 2001.



Bosworth starred in the 1991 action film Stone Cold and has had an on-again, off-again film career starring in several low budget titles such as One Man's Justice that went straight to DVD. In 2005, he had a role as one of the prison-guard football players in the Adam Sandler movie remake The Longest Yard.



Bosworth married his high school girlfriend, Katherine Nicastro, in September 1993. The couple have three children, but have currently filed for divorce. Brian also has two nephews, Kyle and Korey Bosworth, who play for the UCLA Bruins. Bosworth became a real estate agent for The Sotheby's International Realty Malibu Brokerage office.[3] In August 2007 he was listed as the selling agent for the sale of his own Malibu home at 6375 Meadows Court.[4] On July 5th, 2008, Bosworth assisted with the rescue of a woman who rolled her SUV east of Winnipeg, Manitoba.[5]

On March 6, 2009; Bosworth was arrested for a DUI charge by Los Angeles police.[6]

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Who is Linda Cohn?

Who is Linda Cohn? The sports world knows her as a female American sportscaster. She periodically anchors ESPN's SportsCenter.

Cohn was born born November 10, 1959, as a teenager, Cohn, a New Yorker, demonstrated talent at ice hockey, joining her high school's boys team for eight games. She is also an avid New York Giants, New York Mets, New York Knicks and New York Rangers fan.[1]
After graduating from Newfield High School, based in Selden on Long Island, Cohn attended SUNY at Oswego. She is remembered by students at Newfield to this day as one of the few notable alumni.Cohn graduated with a bachelors degree in arts and communications from SUNY at Oswego. She was also the goalie for the women's ice hockey team at Oswego and was inducted to the Oswego State athletics hall-of-fame on November 11, 2006.




In 1981, Cohn debuted as a sports anchor for the Patchogue, New York-based radio station WALK-AM (also WALK-FM). After leaving that station in 1984, she worked as a sports anchor for four other New York area radio stations until 1987. The most notable stop was a brief stint as an update person at WFAN, New York.


In 1987, Cohn made sportscasting history by becoming the first full-time U.S. female sports anchor on a national radio network when she was hired by ABC.[2] She anchored WABC TalkRadio from 1987-89. In 1988, Cohn got her first television break, after being hired by what was at the time one of ESPN's top competitors, SportsChannel America. In 1989, she hosted a call-in radio sports show back home in New York.
Cohn moved to Seattle, Washington, after her stint at the SportsChannel America Network, being hired by KIRO-TV to work as a sports anchor there.


Cohn returned to the East Coast in 1992, when she was hired by ESPN to work at SportsCenter. She has become a familiar face among SportsCenter viewers ever since, and she is one of a group of women that have worked at the show. She has also been featured in many of the show's comical This is SportsCenter commercials.
In 2005, Cohn signed a contract extension with ESPN, which adds doing play-by-play for WNBA telecasts to her duties.
On June 20, 2008, ESPN announced that Cohn would be a regular anchor for the new morning block of SportsCenter, which launched on August 11. She would have been the co-anchor, alongside Steve Berthiaume,
of the first three hours of the block, from 6 a.m. to 9 a.m. ET on weekdays.[3] Several weeks later, though, ESPN announced that the new SportsCenter morning block would be scaled back from nine to six hours, effectively canceling Cohn's section.
Cohn's memoir about her career as a sportscaster and at ESPN, Cohn-Head: A No-holds-barred Account of Breaking into the Boys’ Club, was published in September 2008.[1]


Cohn was married to Stew Kaufman, whom she met while attending Oswego. They had two children. Among the things Cohn writes about in her book is the recent breakup of her marriage.[4] In an interview on WFAN with Mike Francesa, Cohn admitted she occasionally sings backup at REO Speedwagon concerts.

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Who is Angelena Dara Grace Torres?

Who is Angelena Dara Grace Torres? The world knows her as Dara Torres. Torres is an American swimmer who is the first swimmer from the United States to compete in five Olympics: 1984, 1988, 1992, 2000, and 2008. She competed in the 2008 Olympic Games in the 50 meter freestyle, 4×100 medley relay, and 4×100 freestyle relay and won[2] the silver medal in all three of these events.

Torres has won twelve Olympic medals (four gold, four silver, four bronze), five of which she won in the Sydney Olympics in 2000, a feat made all the more impressive by the fact that, at age 33, she was the oldest member of the US Olympic Swim Team. She has also won at least one medal in each of the five Olympics in which she has competed, making her one of only a handful of Olympians to earn medals in five different Games.[3]
On August 1, 2007, at the age of 40 (just 15 months after giving birth to her first child), she won gold in the 100 meter freestyle at the U.S. Nationals in Indianapolis, her 14th win at these events. She then followed that up on August 4 by twice breaking her own American record in the 50 m freestyle, 26 years after she first set the American record at just 15 years old.

Torres grew up in Los Angeles and attended the Westlake School for Girls (now Harvard-Westlake School), and swam under coach Darlene Bible, where she set California Interscholastic Federation records that remain to this day.[4] As a teenager in the 1980s, she swam for the Mission Viejo Nadadores, in Mission Viejo, California, under Mark Shubert, the 2008 Olympic swimming coach.
Torres was one of the 2000 Olympics swimmers featured in the book Gold in the Water, by P. H. Mullen. It describes Torres's comeback for the 2000 Olympics under coaches Richard Quick and Dick Jochums. She broke the World Record in the Women's 50 Meter Freestyle race three times during the early 1980s.
She subsequently attended the University of Florida, where she received 28 All-American honors.
Torres uses resistance stretching with trainers Anne Tierney and Steve Sierra from Innovative Body Solutions and refers to this training as her "secret weapon" for continued success.[5]

Torres has worked in television as a reporter and announcer for American networks such as NBC, ESPN, TNT, OLN and Fox News Channel. She now hosts the golf show The Clubhouse, on the Resort Sports Network. She is also an occasional model, having appeared in the Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Issue in 1994. In 2005, she was elected to the International Jewish Sports Hall of Fame. [6]


At age 41, Dara Torres returned to the pool to obtain a spot in her fifth Olympic games, unprecedented for an American female swimmer, especially given the fact that she sat out the 1996 and 2004 Olympic games. In fact, she is the first woman in history to swim in the Olympics past the age of 40.Her Olympic career spans 24 years. On July 5, she qualified for the finals in the 50 m freestyle that were held on July 6. In that semi-final, she broke the American record with a time of 24.38 seconds. On July 6 in the finals she broke that record for the 9th time, setting it at 24.25 seconds and winning the top American women's spot in the 50 m freestyle.[7] Torres' time of 24.25 is .28 seconds off the current world's best in the 50 m, set by Australian Libby Trickett at the Australian Olympic Trials in March.
On July 7, 2008, Torres confirmed that she would be pulling out of 100 m freestyle swim for her time at the Beijing Olympics to focus her efforts on the 50 m freestyle. Lacey Nymeyer took over the position from Torres.[8]
On July 30, 2008, at the U.S. swim team's final training in Singapore, Torres, together with Amanda Beard
and Natalie Coughlin were elected captains of the U.S. Olympic women’s swimming team.[9]
In order to pre-empt any speculation that she might be taking performance-enhancing drugs, Torres volunteered for an enhanced drug-testing program. She has not been accused of steroids-use.[10]
Torres won silver on August 10, 2008, at the 2008 Olympic Games in Beijing as the anchor position of the US 4×100 meters women's freestyle relay (the fifth time in five tries she has earned an Olympic medal in that event).
On August 17, 2008 at the age of 41 years and 125 days, she won silver in the women's 50 meter freestyle race finishing in American record time of 24.07, 0.01 seconds behind the winner, Britta Steffen.
About 35 minutes later, she won another silver medal as part of the American 4×100 m medley relay team. Her 12 Olympic medals tie the all-time medal record for a female Olympic swimmer with fellow American swimmer, Jenny Thompson. Eight of Thompson's medals were gold, compared with Torres' 4. However, Dara has twice as many individual medals (4) as Thompson (2). Torres' split on the 4×100 medley relay (52.27) is the fastest 100 freestyle split in relay history. The American record in that as a single event is 53.39 seconds as of August 2008.






2008 Summer Olympics Events
Medal count: 3 (0 gold, 3 silver, 0 bronze)
Date
Event
Final Time
Place
August 9
4×100 m Freestyle Relay
3:34.33
2nd
August 16
50 m Freestyle
24.07
2nd
August 16
4×100 m Medley Relay
3:53.30
2nd

Torres was born April 15, 1967 in Jupiter, Florida, the daughter of Edward Torres and Marylu Kauder.[11] She grew up in Los Angeles, California the fifth of six children and the older of two girls. At age 7, Torres started following her brothers to swim practice at the local Y.M.C.A. and later joined the Culver City swim team. During her junior year in high school, Torres moved to Mission Viejo, Calif., to train for the 1984 Olympics. Torres started attending the University of Florida in 1985. At Florida, Torres earned 28 N.C.A.A. all-American swimming awards, the maximum number possible during a college career.[12]
In the mid-1990s, she married and subsequently divorced sports producer Jeff Gowen. Her second husband was Israeli-born surgeon Itzhak Shasha, whom she later divorced.[13] Prior to marrying Shasha, Torres officially converted to Judaism[11] (her late father was Jewish).
Torres and her partner, David Hoffman, the father of her 2-year-old and also the fertility doctor who treated Shasha and Torres, have a daughter named Tessa Grace, born in April, 2006. [14].

Dara Torress keeps adding to her awards as she also won an ESPY for her performance in the 2008 Olympics.

Saturday, March 7, 2009

Who is Rodney Jerkins?

Who is Rodney Jerkins? The world knows him by his musical name "Darkchild". Jerkins is a Grammy Award-winning songwriter, record producer, and musician. Working largely with his brother Fred Jerkins III & writer LaShawn Daniels. He has been requested by such artists as Michael Jackson, Whitney Houston and Lionel Richie. The words "Darkchild" appear in some form in many of his tracks. He is currently working on forthcoming albums from Mary J. Blige, Cassie, Anastacia, Melanie Brown,[1] Se7en, and Natasha.

Jerkins was born July 29, 1977 in Pleasantville, New Jersey into a religious family as the youngest son of a minister and choir director mother. He grew up in Pleasantville, New Jersey.[2] He began taking classical music lessons on the piano as a small child. As a teenager he had already decided to become a record producer. At 15, he and his brother Fred Jerkins III wrote and produced their own gospel rap album - On the Move. He began making more demos, one of which caught the attention of idol Teddy Riley, who gave him advice on the music industry. Finally, his first professional writing and producing job came in 1994 when he contributed two tracks to the debut album of R&B artist Casserine. Riley also subsequently let Jerkins share writing and production duties on tracks by Pure Soul, Men Of Vizion & Wreckx-N-Effect in 1995 & 1996.[3]

In his current personal life, a formerly overweight Jerkins has stated that a change in lifestyle is responsible for a new slender physique - previously it had been rumored this was achieved via GBP. He has also been married to pop/gospel/R&B singer Joy Enriquez since April 4, 2004. Additionally, in 2006 Jerkins was appointed VP of A&R for The Island Def Jam Group. Their first child, named Rodney David, Jr. was born May 28, 2008. They currently reside in Brooklyn, New York.


Jerkins has made two attempts to bring his label to prominence. The first was in 1999 when he joined with Sony/Epic Records to promote such signees as Whitney Houston-style power vocalist Rhona, Pop/R&B girl group So Plush and rapper Fats. Male vocalists K-Young, Lil' Zal and J. Mathis also made frequent collaborations with Rodney Jerkins around this time, although it is not known if they were actually signed to the label. Buzz was created about artists with Fats appearing on two tracks Jerkins produced for Michael Jackson's Invincible album and So Plush releasing the single "Things I've Heard Before" with a Hype Williams-directed video. Singles such as So Plush's "Damn (Should Have Treated You Right)" and Rhona's "Satisfied" were also released and made fair impact on charts. Subsequently, So Plush albums and "Things I've Heard Before" singles were pressed (and made available as promos) and Rhona's album was even released in Japan, output from the label stopped from this point however. It seemed that eventually artists were released from the label as Rhona reappeared in 2003 joining infamous R&B group En Vogue[4] and Fats released an album as part of the duo F.A.T.S. & Bathgate in 2006.[5]

In 2005 Darkchild Records reappeared when Jerkins signed brand new acts including Shamari Fears
formerly of R&B group Blaque, female MC Asia Lee, Dancehall artist Atiba, and Gospel singer Anesha Birchett. Joy Enriquez also briefly appeared as an artist on the site before her album release on new sister gospel label JoyFul Child Records. The website was redesigned and relaunched with artist bios and track samples and a new Darkchild Members "Platinum" Club was set up which gave access to Jerkins' Versatility instrumental album and other exclusives. Shamari, Asia Lee, and Atiba are no longer with the label. Anesha Birchett is currently in artist development; she has co-written several, recent Darkchild Productions, including those for Beyoncé, Vanessa Bell Armstrong, Shareefa, Joy Enriquez, Natasha and Tamia. Anesha's sister Antea Birchett
and Delisha Thomas are also part of a frequently active in-house roster of writers for Darkchild Records.

In 2009, Darkchild is currently working with Texas sisters Britt and Lala Main, known as "Main Street".


Jerkins released his wife Joy Enriquez' second album Atmosphere Of Heaven,
which features a religious direction, on his independent gospel imprint JoyFul Child Records. The album is available to purchase through Joy's Official Website although she was formerly featured on the Darkchild Records Site with its other artists. The Darkchild name has also been lent to a record company run by Jerkins brother Fred Jerkins III,
Darkchild Gospel.[6] which released the latest album from Virtue - Testimony.


After Jerkins being appointed VP of A&R for The Island Def Jam Group in 2006, Darkchild Records will apparently now be distributed as an imprint under the label. It was rumoured that new female R&B artist Megan Rochell will now have her music distributed through this imprint. A second upcoming female R&B artist, Natasha, will have her music distributed through a collaboration between the label and Jive Records. Jerkins composed the opening theme music to I Married a Baller. Appearing in a segment where he recorded the theme song with 90s R&B girl-group SWV,
he suggested he could help them acquire an indie distribution deal if they were to reunite. (although this does not necessarily entail Darkchild Records)

In late 2008, Jerkins joined Nicholas Longano,
Ray Brown and Jonathan E. Eubanks in creating Music Mogul, Inc. [7] MusicMogul.com, the world’s first online music world with real rewards, represents an entirely browser-based online destination where celebrity artists can unite with their fans and aspiring artists have a chance for discovery to become the next superstars. Every quarter members vote for the best video performances. [8] The top performers are then flown to Los Angeles to compete in front of a panel of celebrity judges. The winner gets a demo deal with Darkchild Productions.[9]



See links for extensive discography.

Year Song Artist Chart Position
R&B Hot 100 UK
1995 "The Way That You Love" (Remix) Vanessa Williams 23 67 52
1996 "The Things You Do" Gina Thompson 12 41 -
1997 "Yeah Yeah Yeah" Simone Hines 38 - -
"Don't Wanna Be A Player" Joe 5 25 16

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"I Can Love You" Mary J. Blige (feat. Lil' Kim) 2 28

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"Don't Stop" No Authority - - 54
1998 "Let Me Return The Favor" Andrea Martin 32 82
"Daydreamin'" Tatyana Ali 5 6 6
"The Boy Is Mine" Brandy and Monica 1 1 2

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"Top Of The World" Brandy (feat. Mase) 19 - 2
"Angel of Mine" Monica 2 1 55

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"It's Not Right, But It's Okay" Whitney Houston 7 4 3
"Angel In Disguise" Brandy 17 72
1999 "If You Had My Love" Jennifer Lopez 6 1 4
"Sunshine" Coko 19 70 -
"Say My Name" Destiny's Child 1 1 3
"U Don't Know Me (Like U Used To)" Brandy (feat. Shaunta & Da Brat) 25 79 -
"Damn" So Plush 41

2000 "He Wasn't Man Enough" Toni Braxton 1 2 5
"Holler" Spice Girls - 107 1
"If I Told You That" Whitney Houston & George Michael - - 9
"Time Limit" Hikaru Utada - - -
2001 "You Rock My World" Michael Jackson 13 10 2
"Satisfied" Rhona - - -
"Everything" Canela - - -
"I Remember" (Remix) Debelah Morgan - - -
2002 "Overprotected (Darkchild Remix)" Britney Spears - 86 4
"I Love Rock 'n' Roll" Britney Spears - - 13
"What About Us?" Brandy 3 7 4
"All Eyez on Me" Monica 32 69 -
"Get With Me" 3rd Storee 85 - -
"If Only You Knew" Prymary Colorz 78 - -
"Turntable" TLC - - -
2003 "I'm Good" Blaque 95 - -
"All I Do" B5 - - -
2004 "You Don't Know" Kierra "Kiki" Sheard 84 - -
"Lose My Breath" Destiny's Child 10 3 2
"One Wish" Ray J 3 11 13

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2005 "Cater 2 U" Destiny's Child 3 14 -
"What I Need" Ray-J 58 - -
2006 "Enough Cryin'" Mary J. Blige 2 32 46

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"Hold Me Down" Danity Kane - - -
"Cry No More" (Remix) Shareefa (feat. Streetz & Young Deuces) 43 40 -
"Need a Boss" Shareefa 10 67 -
"Déjà Vu" Beyoncé (feat. Jay-Z) 1 4 1

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"So Lonely" Twista (feat. Mariah Carey) 10 67 -
"The One You Need" Megan Rochell (feat. Fabulous) 41 - -
"Can't Get Enough" Tamia 26 - -
"Turn the Page" Bobby Valentino 63 - -
2007 "Be with Me" J. Holiday 83 - -
"Can't Leave 'Em Alone" Ciara (feat. 50 Cent) 10 40 109
"Shoulda Let You Go" Keyshia Cole 6 41 -

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2008 "Feedback" Janet Jackson 39 19 -
"I'm Grown" Tiffany Evans (feat. Bow Wow) 98 - -
"Luv" Janet Jackson 34 101 -
"When I Grow Up" Pussycat Dolls - 9 3
"Angel" Natasha Bedingfield - 63 -
"Right Here (Departed)" Brandy 22 34 -
"Long Distance" Brandy 42 101 -
"The Definition" Brandy 116 - -
2009 "Girls" Se7en (feat. Lil' Kim) - - -
"Them Girls" One Call - - -
"Symphony" One Call - - -
"The One" Mary J. Blige 49 63 -
  • Tracks due for release in 2009

Album Productions (5 or more tracks)

Guest raps

  • 1995: Hodge - "Head Nod" (Darkchild Remix)
  • 1997: Tasha Holiday - "Just The Way You Like It (Darkchild Remix)" w/ Lil' Cease, Peter Gunz and Mike Nitty
  • 1997: MQ3 - "Everyday"
  • 1997: Immature - "I Can't Wait" with Mike Nitty
  • 1997: Mary J. Blige - "Everything (Darkchild Remix)"
  • 1997: K-Ball - "On The Weekend", "Love Matters"
  • 1998: Kirk Franklin & The Nu Nation Project - "Revolution"
  • 1998: Keith Washington - "Bring It On (Darkchild Remix)"
  • 1999: Brandy - "Top of the World" (Darkchild Remix) with Fat Joe and Big Pun
  • 2000: Natalie Wilson & The S.O.P. Chorale - "Act Like You Know" with LaShawn Daniels
  • 2001: So Plush - "What You Do To Me" with 50 Cent and Fats, "Ain't My Fault"
  • 2001: Rhona - "Satisfied (Another Darkchild Remix)" with Fats
  • 2002: Jay Mathis - "Kiss" with Pain and Fats
  • 2002: Mary Mary - "He Said" with Fats
  • 2002: K-Young - "Ballinest Player" with Lil' Zal
  • 2002: K-Young - "Ooh Wee"
  • 2002: Shawn Desman - "Sexy"
  • 2003: Natalie Wilson & The S.O.P. Chorale - "Good Life"
  • 2004: Kierra "Kiki" Sheard - "You Don't Know"
  • 2005: Joy Enriquez - "Don't You Let Go"
  • 2005: Anesha Birchett - "Get Ready" with Mase
  • 2006: The Darkchild Allstars - "We Are Family"
  • 2008: The Pussycat Dolls With Diddy, Lil Wayne, & Fatman Scoop - When I Grow Up (Darkchild Remix)

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Video cameos

  • 1996: Gina Thompson - "The Things That U Do (Bad Boy Remix)"

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Watch more Dailymotion videos on AOL Video


  • 2001: So Plush - "Things I've Heard Before"

Watch more YouTube videos on AOL Video


  • 2001: Rhona - "Satisfied"

  • 2002: Monica - "All Eyez on Me"

Watch more Yahoo! Music videos on AOL Video


  • 2006: Natasha - "Hey, Hey, Hey" and "So Sick"

Watch more Point of No Return videos on AOL Video


  • 2006: J. Holiday - "Be with Me"

Watch more AOL Music videos on AOL Video


  • 2008: Brandy - "Right Here (Departed)"

Watch more BET videos on AOL Video


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Who is Luigi "Geno" Auriemma?

W ho is  Luigi   " Geno "   Auriemma? The college basketball world recognizes him as the most successfull division 1  college bas...