hotroast.com – America’s Sexiest Hand Supermodel, Fingerella, gives us the lowdown on hand jobs, celebritydom and recovery from her drug addiction. Watch out for this diva or she might introduce yo’ @ss to da fist! STALK US on TWITTER www.twitter.com www.myspace.com www.myspace.com High Res Version: www.vlogolution.com
Forget about Vincent Vega and the Basketball Diaries. This ought to be a more effective anti-drug PSA for the kids. Starring Anita Hitt and Ivana Score (who just got out of Tanguay on a mandatory minimum sentence for possession, btw.) NOTE from Anita: This is not intended to PROMOTE drugs, fuckers. PS: as you watch this video, ask yourself how much mandatory minimum sentences for drug offenses really accomplish.
REPENTANCE & RECOVERY Lance Appleton the author of “One God Apostolic” recounts his deliverance from drug and alcohol addiction, and shows how God’s power has changed his life. Visit his website www.freelancemusic.net
A spin on the 1980′s drug PSA that everyone has saw. This has real elements to it, well it really more… happened to me, just not in the PSA kind of way.
Battling drug addiction and a revolving door to prison, this woman’s love of the streets may be her undoing. Locked Down: Women on the Edge : SUN OCTOBER 26 9P et/pt : channel.nationalgeographic.com
American Drug War: The Last White Hope is a 2007 documentary by writer/director Kevin Booth about the War on Drugs in the United States. The film claims the War on Drugs has become one of the longest and most costly wars in American history. Inspired by the death of four family members and close friend Bill Hicks from “legal drugs,” Texas filmmaker Kevin Booth sets out to prove his claim that the Drug War has failed. Three and a half years in the making, the film follows gang members, former DEA agents, CIA officers, narcotics officers, judges, politicians, prisoners and celebrities. There is also extensive treatment of CIA and Contras cocaine trafficking in the US. The film analyzes imprisoned drug trafficker Ricky Ross, described by a Los Angeles Times reporter as the “Wal-Mart of crack dealing.” After being arrested, Ross discovered through the work of journalist Gary Webb that his cocaine source had been working for the CIA.