FOOD: Kora Lee’s Gourmet Desserts in Baltimore #BusyDoingNothing Interview & Review (Watch Episode 27 of BDN Podcast)

On September 6, 2017, not even a full 3 months away, was the birth of another successful small black business in Baltimore, MD. Hellooooo Kora Lee’s Gourmet Desserts and Brunch! It’s about time I got around to sharing some new black excellence on Doc’s Castle Media.

Kora Lee’s Gourmet Dessert and Brunch is located in downtown Baltimore, directly off light rail stop of N Howard Street and W Monument Street. The neighborhood looked sketchy but what can anyone expect dinning on Howard Street, where more than half of the strip is out of business and filled with vacant buildings. But I digress because that’s a topic for another blog.

I visited this Gourmet shop while accompanying my fellow co-hosts of the Busy Doing Nothing Podcast to interview the owner of the newly open spot on Howard Street. Our faces were greeted with friendly faces as soon as we walked in. It felt like walking into your aunt’s or granny’s house on a Sunday afternoon.

The atmosphere was great. As soon as I walked in the door, I felt like I was visiting a close aunt as I caught onto the music vibes. Classic MJ played on the radio as we waited to order some southern style brunch. I had to remind myself where I was when Thriller came through the speakers because I was ready to get in-formation to perform the infamous Thriller dance. I was ready to dance for my food.

Chris, Jill and I placed our orders. I ordered The Lanrane, a southern styled cheddar biscuit smothered in creamy gravy, itsy-bitsy bites of sausages, and a side of sliced tomatoes sprinkled with parsley leaves. I’m drooling as I’m writing about it while recalling the exact taste my taste buds experienced that afternoon. Such creamy goodness surpassed all cheddary biscuits I’ve ever tasted including Red Lobster’s famous cheddar biscuits.

Jill and Chris enjoyed their dishes too. So much so they didn’t dare to demolish them on camera. They savored them for once the interview with Kora Lee was done. But as for me, it became RIP to my plate. I was “hangry” and couldn’t wait.

During our interview with Ms. Kora Lee, we discussed many topics. Just to touch on a few, we discussed her motivation to open her restaurant in Baltimore, whether she gains a lot of support from other Black people and businesses, and what’s new to expect from this young but thriving small business.

View the full interview with owner Kora Lee of Kora Lee’s Gourmet Dessert and Brunch via the Busy Doing Nothing Podcast, below.

What’s your favorite small business to support in Baltimore? Share with our readers in the comments. Let’s start a movement to build non-traditional business customs.

Be sure to like Kora Lee’s Gourmet Desserts and Brunch on Facebook, and other social media, to keep up with events happening at the restaurant.

Have you heard of the Busy Doing Nothing Podcast? Read Doc Finally Joins A Podcast Series as a Regular on Doc’s Castle Media and learn all about it!

#HipHop4ThePeople: There’s A Mini Hip-Hop Museum Coming to Baltimore

Who’s a die-hard hip-hop fan? Everyone enjoys claiming the title. In reality, it’s rare to find the truth behind who can truly be labeled a fan because many so called fans lack the knowledge of hip-hop’s true origin or how it fits into society.

Hip-hop holds history. Enough that there are hundreds, maybe thousands, of books written about this art that emerged and continues to thrive since the early 1970s. Even in its birthplace there’s a grand opening scheduled possibly in 2018 for the country’s first ever hip-hop museum in the Bronx, NY. Now, Hip-hop is more than music that we dance to in our aunt’s basement celebrating birthdays. It’s a way of life.

Hip-hop does not stop at New York. All over the world, it has created a culture that people now eat, breathe, sleep and live by. Over the weekend, Baltimore artists exhibited a piece of what hip-hop consists of to them at the #HipHop4thePeople Cypher: A Mini Hip-Hop Museum fundraiser held at the SAND gallery, formerly known as the Incredible Little Art Gallery.

I attended the cypher expecting it to be like any other I’ve gone to in the art scene. But what made it different this time was majority it’s location, and that the event served a bigger purpose for the creative community.  

There has never been any platform in Baltimore created to solely pay homage to hip-hop. In fact, artists in Baltimore often nag about lack of support in the city from their peers. So when there’s a notion that a Mini Hip-Hop Museum is coming to town, local culture fanatics become excited because there is finally a place that will represent their way of living. Not only will we finally have somewhere that will represent the history of hip-hop, but also there will be a place to symbolize hip-hop from a Baltimorean’s perspective.

#HipHip4thePeople was exactly what it stated to be; for the people emerged in the culture of hip-hop. The atmosphere mimicked what hip-hoppers find familiar in a cypher’s circle. MCs took turns hopping in spitting their most vicious lyrics. Many were caught freestyling and others brought recycled hot 16 bars.  

President Karl Keels opens the evening.

Mini Hip-Hop Museum President and Creative Director Karl Keel, also known as Karlito Freeze, opened the night up as the host and DJ of the event. Event goers were queued in on where donations towards the cypher were being made. Partial proceeds were gifted to hurricane relief for Hurricane Harvey, Irma, and Maria to aid victims in Texas, Florida, and Puerto Rico. Other funding went towards the opening of the Mini Hip-Hop Museum expected to open in early 2018.

The cypher went for an hour and was followed up with another event sponsored by the SAND Gallery, Adult Game Night. To drop a few names of MCs who participated in the evening’s cypher were:

Kontrah Diction , Da’Rious, Donnie Breeze, Ollie Voso, Mobish Rico, and Tony Ray

All rappers are from Baltimore making a name for themselves in the “game.” Hopefully, we will find them on the walls of the Mini Hip-Hop Museum in the future. Thanks, guys, for your contribution to the culture over this weekend. I know I definitely enjoyed it.

See more photos of participants in the gallery below.

When the Mini Hip-Hop Museum opens in Baltimore, what local artist do you expect to be exhibited in its halls? Leave your comments below.

Have you seen photos from the 3rd Annual Madonnari Arts Festival? View awesome chalk work done on the Baltimore street here on Doc’s Castle Media. 

Lite Work Chalk Work at Madonnari Art Festival 2017 (Gallery)

I just love art!! It is truly is my first love. Since I was 10 years, I’ve had an appreciation for it. But more and more as I indulge in the Baltimore Art Scene, I’m inspired and reminded consistently why art is forever the first love of my life.

It provokes thought and emotion from something so inanimate; without speaking a single word.

To start off September 2017, artsy Baltimore memorized a plethora of eyes throughout a number of Art festivals over the weekend. To name two Festivals with outstanding attendance, art buyers pondered creations at the 1st Annual Sticky Buns Festival hosted by Appreciate Arts located on the Ynot Lot on North Avenue, and the 44th Annual Catonsville Arts and Crafts Festival in the midst of Frederick Road. But there was little attention given by my artsy peers to the art festival I attended.

Madonnari Art Festival 2017 is where I chose to feast my eyes on beauty. It was THE festival that truly made my eyes twinkle watching numerous artists work on their creations live in action, and inspired me to get into visual arts, again.

Madonnari Art Festival is annually in Little Italy, East Baltimore. This year is its third year. But the art form isn’t new to art culture. “Madonnari” has been going on since olden times. The festival is known for the immaculate pieces of chalk artwork created directly on the Baltimore City street’s asphalt.

While festival-goers stare in awe at each artist’s masterpiece, they also partake in visiting the stores and restaurants in Little Italy. But the apple of everyone’s eye for the weekend was focused primarily on the chalky artwork below their feet.

There were over 40 artists from around the country who came to Baltimore to participate in Madonnari. Some competed for prize money, and many like me came to experience the essence of the festival.

There was a variety of pieces that ranged from modern, contemporary, abstract, and even African art. So there could be a piece of every type of art to enjoy on on street.

While walking throughout the festival, you can catch some artists in the middle of their work concentrating on ways to appeal judges of the chalk artwork. Three of the judges were Master Street Artist Michael Kirby, WJZ-TV anchor and reporter Denise Koch, and Christine Sciacca, Associate Curator of the Walters Museum.

Winners of the art festival were chosen based on art categories of contemporary and classical. The winners of the 2017 Madonnari Art Festival according to Madonnari Art Festival website are as follows:

Contemporary Category
Ketty Grossi  for “Black Mamba”- 1st
Ever Galvez  for “Wild Horses”- 2nd
CarlosAlberto GH  for “Freedom to live without fear”- 3rd
Erik Greenawalt for “Cap. Harvey West, Our Guardian of Freedom”- 3rd
KC Linn for her rendition of the Shepard Fairey posters from the 2017 Women’s March on Washington – Honorable Mention and People’s Choice

Classical Category
Katie Better for “Harriet Tubman” – 1st
Tomoteru “ToMo” Saito for “Butterfly Fairy” – 2nd
Dave and Shelley Brenner for “The Birth of the Flag”- 3rd
Francesca Arsi for the “Renaissance Woman”- Honorable Mention

High School Awards
Concordia Prep for “Modern Madonnari” – Classical
Baltimore School for the Arts for “We must fight for our freedoms”- Contemporary

What do you think about the Madonnari Artwork? Would you go to the 4th Annual Madonnari Art Festival in 2018? Leave your comments below.

Have you heard of Walk-A-Mile In Her Shoes event, where men put on a pair of red pumps to spread awareness of Domestic violence in Baltimore? Read GBMC Working to End Domestic Violence Through Gender Role Reversal on Doc’s Castle Media.

Throwback: Doc Releases Song Pushing Domestic Violence Awareness

Today, we share some unreleased content from out of the Doc’s Castle Media Vault. Are you a fan of conscious music?

In 2014, I recorded a track that speaks on the life of a girl who’s a victim of domestic violence. It’s not your average Eve’s “Love is Blind” type of track. It’s my version of a story of a girl who was my best friend. Our relationship changed when I saw her transform before my eyes into a woman who believed in lies from a man full of broken promises to never hurt her.

I thought I’d share this song after I posted about Walk A Mile In Her Shoes, a GBMC’s SAFE Domestic Violence program 5K walk geared to help raise money and spread awareness about abuse because domestic violence is a subject that shouldn’t be glossed over. A victim of domestic violence doesn’t deserve to feel like they’re being looked over. It’s a serious matter that sometimes ends in unfortunate death for many men and women around the world.

Passion Peace is a narrative of what I saw my friend becoming after dating a guy who isolated her from everything she already knew and loved. It was my stern affection of love for her and my eagerness to tell her that she was and still is beautiful while her boyfriend profusely abused her.

It was recorded at the Dugout Dojo in Fall 2014 by engineer and Baltimore recording artist Flu_x. The Dugout Dojo is where I also recorded my hip-hop mixtape Songs From Da Dugout.

I made Passion Peace while we were no longer friends but used it as a message to tell her I still loved her more than the person who placed her in dangerous situations. I sent it to her in hopes that she would one day realize what she is worth.

If I knew any better, I would have contacted the many different domestic violence programs that could help her escape an unsafe situation. Programs like the SAFE program or My Sister’s Place Women’s Center both located in Baltimore City, could have helped stir my friend away from what was keeping her bound in her relationship.

Today, her and my relationship are far from what it used to be. What she went through torn between our bond. I don’t know how someone can change everything a person stands for and still claim to love them. But I saw it happen. I watched her change. She’s no longer with the guy who was abusing her and she’s no longer the same.

Do you have a domestic violence story to tell? Leave us a snippet in the comments below.

Have you read about GBMC’s Walk A Mile In Her Shoes 5K Event? Read GBMC Working to End Domestic Violence Through Gender Role Reversal on Doc’s Castle Media.

GBMC Working to End Domestic Violence Through Gender Role Reversal? (Gallery)

We’ve already seen the backlash of the RompHim on social media but how do you feel about men switching roles for a good cause?

Like every year, Spring 2017 is a season full of weekends for 5K Walks and Celebrations. This spring I went to a total of three 5K Walks, one of those walks being the GBMC Walk A Mile In Her Shoes 5K event, one of many programs geared to the education and ceasing of Domestic Violence amongst both Women and Men.

The GBMC Walk A Mile In Her Shoes event was organized by the Greater Baltimore Medical Center’s SAFE Domestic Violence Program, a program that provides crisis counseling, safety planning, advocacy and resource linkage for GBMC patients. It’s the only hospital in Maryland with such a program with as many services that it provides for its patients. The program helped aid over 300 individuals in 2016. Hearing a number as high as that lets someone in on the seriousness of domestic violence and the dire need for people to come out to support a cause to spread awareness.

The 2nd Annual Walk A Mile In Her Shoes 5K Walk was a huge success. Sponsors and participants raised over $41,000 to donate to an important cause. Three of the biggest sponsors of the event were Towson University, Auxiliary and Sheppard Pratt Hospital. Many others contributed in other ways such as entertainment and providing brochures and pamphlets of information about abuse. Giants Food Supermarket donated bagels, coffee, and CBS Friends and Neighbors Campaign provided music and free prizes to participants in the walk.

The GBMC Walk A Mile In Her Shoes event was full of a welcoming amount of over 250 walkers, a number that the chairman of the SAFE program Laura Clary hopes to increase in the coming years while they continue to organize events similar to Walk A Mile In Her Shoes.

Though a number of men only wore heels during the opening ceremony of Walk A Mile In Her Shoes, it served a great purpose of expressing empathy for the many women of domestic violence. Even if it only was for a few minutes, these men showed their concerns for the many women and men subjected to mental, physical, and emotional abuse.

View more photos of Walk A Mile In Her Shoes in the gallery below.

Domestic violence is an issue I’m very passionate about because I have love one’s who suffer the consequences of scars and burns from being emotionally involved in a relationship with someone who physically and mentally abuses them. It’s a serious matter that I often ponder how certain people are suddenly put into.

In many instances, I’ve asked victims of their reasoning for why they stay in a dangerous environment when they know that their situation is detrimentally unsafe. Each time, I was given the rationalize answer referring to what love is for the couple; like each situation is deeper than the surface. But I can never understand the justification of being abused.

There are programs available for both men and women to get involved in to help spread awareness of domestic violence and other forms of abuse in Baltimore, MD. The people who work with these programs are specially trained on how to deal with victims of mental, physical, and verbal abuse. So when it comes to counteracting justifications like claims that I and many others cannot rationalize, there are trained professionals that still can assist individuals into a safe place.

If a victim of domestic violence needed a place to find help, the Baltimore County Government website is a good place to start. It’s where victims can find the contact information for programs, like the 24 Hour Crisis Line, Turnaround, Inc., Department of Social Services, and more. All of this programs that help hundreds of cases of abuse from people as young as newborns to the elderly.

Do you know of any programs in Baltimore that aid victims of domestic violence? Leave your comments below to possibly help a person in need.

Artist Update: Writer of Hide and I’ll Seek Series Stars In “Kendyl’s Poetry Corner” an IUP’s Sketch-o-Phrenia Comedy Skit

Today, I want to celebrate the talents of one of Doc’s Castle Media contributors. Too bad I had to stumble across this video literally years later. Otherwise, I’d post it a long time ago. But it’s better late than never most people will say.

Writer and creative consultant of Doc’s Castle, LLC Kendyl Walker wrote a mini skit while away at Indiana University of Pennsylvania for college. Kendyl’s Poetry Corner aired on the college’s cable network on comedy show Sketch-o-phrenia.

This isn’t the only time a skit written by Kendyl has been featured on the cable show. Another skit, “Trouble on Valentine’s Day,” was previously featured on Doc’s Castle Media. The show followed a boy who struggles to find a gift for his girlfriend for valentine’s day.

In Kendyl’s Poetry Corner, the segment makes a parody of the way poets recite poetry. As mainstream media modes a stereotype most people can pick up of a poet, we can find humor in Kendyl making fun of those same stereotypical constructs. This isn’t your typical Poetic Justice. Better yet, her character can come close to comparing to Dashiki from Don’t Be A Menace To South Central While Drinking Your Juice in the Hood.

Watch Kendyl’s Poetry Corner at the link below.

Kendyl Walker is also the author of Doc’s Castle Media horror short story series Hide and I’ll Seek, a story of a young boy and girls quest to finding out who’s haunting and torturing the kids at their high school during lockdown.

Do you personally know a poet who’s similar to Kendyl? Leave your comments below.

Whiskey’s Birthday Hip-hop Showcase at DC’s Art Gallery The Fridge (DCM Gallery and Recap)

People pour into a one room warehouse full of astounding art on a beautiful Saturday evening. The Fridge, a place where artists from DC gather to spread their inner creative abilities, whether it be through painting, poetry, singing, dancing, and any other art form a person can think of. It’s on this particular day, we all gathered to listen to spoken-word and a group of talented local hip-hop artists performs in celebration of DC blogger Whiskey Girl, owner of the Whiskey and Poetry Brand and also the host of the Embrace The Crazy Podcast, birthday celebration.

I don’t know what to make of the start of the event on whether it was good luck or bad luck. Outside of the venue, there was a fire that occurred at Capital Hill Tandoor & Grill, directly across the street from The Fridge. People crowded the streets to sneak a peak of the damage inside the restaurant. It’s uncertain whether there were any injuries during the time.

I have tunnel vision for the arts, I guess. Haha.

Otherwise, the evening was nothing but love once I entered the showcase. The host Rich Rocket opened the night telling peers to “give an energy that can be reflected by the audience.” So whenever an artist performed, they needed to give an energy that the audience could mirror. If the performance was worth a standing ovation, it’s what the artist got. That was what made the evening lit. Everyone was respectful to everyone’s art. Artist worked with what they deserved.

A few artists to name that were in attendance were Donnie Breeze, Rello, Starve Marv, Mike Evann, Young Mally, and DC Kash. Each artist came with their own individual swag representing where they come from. Some of these artists even came long distances to share their unique flair; Starve Marv from Florida, and Donnie Breeze and Rello from Baltimore city.

I was so proud to see Baltimore recording artists Donnie Breeze and Rello perform at the Fridge. I put on my proud parent smile as I watched them perform. Whenever I see people from Baltimore out of their element, I get super hyped to support them. It’s the idea that they don’t get that type of love in Baltimore. The love was abundantly overwhelming from DC event goers because, like the Rich Rocket told them to do, they came with an energy that demanded an equal response.

Again I found myself asking why can’t it always be like this?! Every time I leave Baltimore City hip-hop scene to experience another city’s hip-hop atmosphere I ponder what could it be that my city is doing wrong which is preventing artists from getting the recognition they deserve? First, it happened as I went to Rockview Entertainment’s hip-hop showcase in Queens, NY while I was in attendance for support of DMV artist Jae Ducketts. Now I’m in DC, and the love that their peers showed was phenomenal.

I want to bring the attention back to the promoter of the event, always. The power of support is always in the event thrower. In this case, it was Whiskey who’s birthday may have been the cause of such a great turn out. But such a turnout was worthy of being mentioned when comparing to the turnouts of open mic and showcases in my hometown.

What I notice about attending both the events in Washington, DC and Queens, NY is the hosts for each event reminded their audience the importance of showing others respect when they have the floor. It’s appalling that the majority of the audience were old enough to understand modest mannerisms. But maybe that’s what it is needed in Baltimore. Promoters in Baltimore should often push more participation from the audience at the start of their events? It’s something worth pondering.

Here are some moments captured during the show by Doc’s Castle Media.

What are some ways to show support for independent artists? Leave your feedback in the comments below.

Ever heard the difference between the #NewBaltimore and #OldBaltimore music beaf back in 2014? Read “#NewBaltimore vs. #OldBaltimore. We’re All Crabs” on Doc’s Castle Media.

Doc Finally Joins A Podcast Series as a Regular (Watch Episode 4 of Busy Doing Nothing Podcast)

It was a long time coming for Doc to join a team of podcasters. Being interviewed and making guest appearances have become a regular thing. It should be expected for Doc to be added to a line-up of great host for the Busy Doing Nothing Podcast, a web series/podcast series hosted on YouTube.

BusyDoingNothing

Busy Doing Nothing was started by Free Minds Clothing Co. creator and main Chris “Mills” Morton and also features three regular co-hosts Christian “Pastor” Dewitt, Jill AKA J Heavy and Doc’s Castle Media’s own Taylor “Doc” Walker. The podcasts focus on various topics starting from celebrity gossip, music video reviews, “adulting,’ current events, and previously mentioned on Doc’s Castle Media Loafer’s Sports Bar and Grill closures and controversy.

In episode 4 of the Busy Doing Nothing Podcast, the four host interview their first local Baltimore guests; music producer Jonny B and hip-hop artist 7ucus (pronounced Loo-cus). Music guests join in on the conversation sharing their views on polygamous relationships, Beyonce’s beyhive, and generational differences. Watch the full episode below.

At the start and end of each episode, hosts make a toast opening and closing the show. Accompanied with each episode’s salute is an alcoholic drink that hosts rate the taste weekly on the podcast’s Instagram page. In this episode, the drink highlighted was Afrohead Rum. There wasn’t a group rating for this rum but it was the preferred drink during this episode.  

Other drinks featured on Busy Doing Nothing are Ciroc Summer Colada Vodka, Christian Brothers Brandy, Barefoot Moscato, and Doc’s favorite drink to sing about, Jose Cuervo.

AfroheadRum

What drink do you think the Busy Doing Nothing crew should try for the next podcast? Leave your comments below.

2nd Annual Light City Baltimore Event Ends In Success (Doc’s Castle Picture Gallery)

Baltimore’s annual week-long art festival that incorporates a mixture of lights and sculptures ended this past Saturday with a success bringing out more participation from businesses and festival-goers throughout the city.

The event was held starting at the peak of evening hours and ending just in time for bedtime; between the hours of 7p to 10p. For nine nights, visitors enjoyed parades, tasty cuisines, entertainment, and beautiful sightseeing in the heart of Baltimore’s Inner Harbor.

According to an article found on Baltimore’s news station website WJZ, “Estimates show that roughly 470,000 people attended the 2017 Baltimore Light City festival during its nine-night run. That’s a 17 percent increase from the previous year.”

The festival brought lots of revenue for the hotels and businesses in the downtown area. Businesses, like Hotel Monaco, even partnered up with Light City organizers with intentions to attract Light City attendees. Shahram Khan, general manager of Hotel Monaco says they provided hotel deals, and in return, it was a win for the hotel.

Each glowy night was a spectacular experience for art lovers and foodies. Simply through walking the Inner Harbor’s square, visitors were able to experience the exhibits lined up just a few steps from each other.

For those who were unable to visit the light exhibits in the downtown Inner Harbor, Doc’s Castle Media captures the moment for you. View the opening night of Light City Baltimore below.

Dates for next year’s Light City Baltimore will be discussed later this week. To keep up with Light City Baltimore updates, subscribe to www.lightcity.org or follow them on Instagram at @LightCityBmore.

Did you attend Light City Baltimore? Tell us your favorite attraction in the comments below.

Listen to #LoveandHipHop Baltimore Featuring #StrongWayRadio and #DocsCastleMedia on Embrace the Crazy Podcast by Whiskey Girl (Gallery)

Doc did something out of her element over the weekend. Dun, Dun, Dun. Doc’s Castle Media was a special guest alongside the owner of the Strong Way Radio brand on DC’s favorite Whiskey Girl podcast, Embrace the Crazy, to discuss the topic “Love and Hip-hop.” It was an interesting show, indeed, and I’m sure many of my readers will know why.

Most people who know me, know that I’m not very open with my love life. I’m far from the mushy type. Many may recall me being more of a goofball than a love bug. Until more recently, I’ve even gone as far as YEARS since posting a single photograph online of myself with a fling. But apparently, times have changed for Doc because exclusively for the DC Whiskey Queen, I’ve opened up my love life as an open romance novel for her podcast and it wasn’t bad at all.

As stated on WG’s Whiskey and Poetry Blog,

WG is a blogger, self-published author, spoken word artist and single mother with a full-time professional career in the nonprofit mental health arena. She lends her unique voice and perspective to her own WG’s Embrace the Crazy blog as well as MyTrendingStories.com. In addition to writing, her true passions include public work and serving as a mouthpiece to address mental health issues within the black community.

Embrace the Crazy podcast is a series of audio shows hosted by Whiskey Girl on her website WhiskeyandPoetry.com and Soundcloud. The series focuses on a plethora of topics ranging from hip-hop and poetry to mental health and “staying woke.” The sky’s the limit on her show.

While Karlito and I interviewed on the Embrace the Crazy podcast with Whiskey Girl, we covered topics on hip-hop and love, such as the Karlito and Doc love affair, couples collaborating with their brands, Nicki Minaj and Remy Ma beef, how local artists should prepare for hip-hop showcases, and much more. Listen to the full podcast below by visiting Whiskey Girl Souncloud.

After the podcast, the three of us did a raw photoshoot. Because I had so much fun, I thought it would only be right to share the photos on Doc’s Castle Media with the hashtags #BlackLove and #RelationshipGoals to fit the mood. View the gallery for Love and Hip Hop Episode of Embrace the Crazy Podcast below.

http://soundcloud.com/user-167368140/love-and-hip-hop-baltimore

How do you feel about couples collaborating on projects for their brands? Do you think it can be done? Leave your thoughts in the comments below.

Have you heard Doc’s interview with MDMA Cobain on CutThaCheck Podcast? Listen to Episode Four on Doc’s Castle Media.