Poise and Purpose from Tairey by Alex Young

Tairey photographed by Alex Young

Tairey photographed by Alex Young

Since 10th grade, Tairey devotes every day to music.

"Music taught me how to speak up for myself," said the dedicated and confident 20-year-old hip-hop artist, pronounced Ty•Ray.

His sound documents personal maturation, and is inspired by sentimental moments alone, '90s R&B, and empowering people to best themselves.

At secure I.D. Labs, a recording studio and production team placed in a former bank building in Pittsburgh, Pa., Tairey and I are buzzed in. Shiny gold and silver certified records like "Loud," "Donald Trump," and "No Sleep," by Mac Miller and Wiz Khalifa, respectively, proudly adorn the walls of a lounge area.

"After those guys [Mac and Wiz] made it everyone was trying to be next, so it was competitive. There are more lanes here now. You got dudes like Hardo doing what they are doing, and then you got soft shit like me. There's a growing scene here now of young cats doing their own thing," Tairey pointed out about Pittsburgh's music scene.

Thanks to the city's small market, however, the music community thrives because of the artists' supportive nature. Inside I.D. Labs "everyone's doors are open," Tairey explained, and a lot of the 'Burgh's young musicians make music there.

Primarily, Tairey labels time as the most valuable thing anyone can have while we conversed in a room with articles posted to the wall about the city's musical legends. So, the meeting with the Boston-born, Pittsburgh resident with Puerto Rican roots was appreciated from the beginning.

Tairey at I.D. Labs

Tairey at I.D. Labs

While recuperating from a February through April, 24-show, national tour with Kirko Bangz, a Houston, Texas rapper, Tairey re-evaluates his music. To capitalize on the exposure he gained, Tairey makes certain his sincere characteristics are still apparent while upgrading his musicality.

In cities such as Colorado Springs, Colo., Houston, Los Angeles, Calif., New York, N.Y., and Valparaiso, Ind., after every show Tairey would go into the crowd and hand out 10 CDs. He called it "grinding and paying your dues," and "showing people that I'm a good dude. If you're music is good, and you're a dick head, then people will only like your music." First impressions are very important, and Tairey kept this in mind all tour long. "The nation is seeing me for the first time, so being able to talk to people and literally deliver my message personally was a beauty in itself," he said.

However, Tairey may not have had the opportunity to go on tour if he did not drop out of college last school year. School took too much of his valuable time. "I'm not meant to be in school, and I'm not good at College. I was an engineering major. Engineering is not easy, and it takes up most of your time. The school was taking up too much time being in a dorm and classes all day, and not having time to do what I wanted to do made me depressed," he said.

With pressure from his mother to go back to school, and seeing his friends get engineering internships, Tairey felt insecure about being labeled as a dropout. He recognized the value of getting professional resources from college for a future career. But, Tairey also understood he could learn real life lessons outside of school, "I'm learning shit about life that school can't teach me. That's something that music did for me tremendously. It taught me how to speak up for myself, it taught me how to have integrity, and it taught me how to be a poised person, and I am now after having those insecurities of being a dropout. Music gave me purpose and fulfillment."

The effort Tairey puts into his music generates personal and professional growth for the artist. His work ethic keeps him from idling and opens up opportunities for him to do things like go on tour, which was an adjustment compared to his home life.

"I was in tour mode. That means I'm traveling, and my mind focused on other things, like being healthy. I did not want to gain weight on the road. I was eating fruit, yogurt, and water, as well as sleeping a lot," Tairey said. Riding in a van for, at times, 18 hours, it was paramount that he took care of his body.

Tour life also shifted Tairey's musical focus. It was difficult to make music on the road, so he concentrated on performing better to make the crowd more engaged with his music and his stage presence.

"When I'm on tour I think of my music differently," he said. "I think how I can enhance what I already made to make motherfuckers put their arms up more and make them dance more." On the Playa Made Live Tour with Kirko, Tairey took his previously recorded songs and performed them over other beats. Audiences felt the music more because the beats he rapped over were "crazy, unorthodox" instrumentals from SoundCloud that were good to perform live.

Additionally, a southern environment, brought forth by Kirko's hometown, Houston, had a positive affect on Tairey. During the tour's 11-day break in early April, spent in Hustle Town, Tairey and Kirko kicked it in the studio. Tairey caught a vibe with Kirko's whole team, and he even worked with a keyboard player. The show after the break, at the Warehouse Live venue in Houston, some people with access populated backstage, and ultimately invited Tairey to Mathew Knowles' (Beyoncé's Dad) studio following the rapper's set.

From recording multiple songs in the Texas city, and the tour experience in general, Tairey's music is changing a bit. "There's definitely more energy. Tour made me want to put more energy into my music because I know how motherfuckers are going to react to it," he said. The musician cites soulful, gospel chords the studios in Houston were using.

"Tour made my beat selection way more on point. And, I have more character now. I am able to talk to crowds better with the confidence to do it too," Tairey said.

Back to I.D. Labs in Pittsburgh, I felt the energized spirit in Tairey's new music booming through the speakers. Bass drops and catchy hooks like, "I just finessed you right," and "this is one for the bad bitches," a reflection of the type of girls he is attracting, keep listeners engaged.

Tairey and I.D. Labs play basketball

Tairey and I.D. Labs play basketball

Spending long hours in the studio into new light, Tairey is currently making a whole bunch of music "real reflective" of his life. Although he has not released anything in a while, he is ready to variously deliver a long reflective part of his life. He said he wanted to be sure the art was packaged right so that his "music gets the love it deserves."

At a nearby park a few blocks away from the Labs, Tairey and his friends at I.D., like Big Jerm, break from their studio sessions to play basketball. When they resume work, Tairey prepares to release a new song, "No More Drugs" featuring Linwood, on June 10.

Since restoring confidence in himself, and building his character on tour, Tairey hopes his musical efforts will cater to and empower people in an authentic, mature way. 

Coin Flip II: 2016 NBA Finals by Maxwell Young

Are y'all awake yet? We got action!

If you thought Mamba Day and the Warriors' achievement of eclipsing the 1997 Chicago Bull's regular season record were going to be the last exciting moments of the NBA season until the hallowed Finals, you missed some epic basketball.

Before Stephen Curry proclaimed "I'm here. I'm back," as if to really say, 'This is my Jordan moment,' in front of a stunned Trailblazers crowd in the Western Conference Semi-final; and before the Cavaliers went on a ten-game tear, going undefeated until they crossed international borders to play in the '6', we all assumed the playoffs would go as scripted.  Eight teams from each conference get to extend their season into the spring, but did we really entertain the thought that anyone other than King James and the Cavaliers would emerge from the Eastern Conference as champions? And how could two-time reigning MVP and the Golden State Warriors at 73 wins and 9 losses be stopped?  Since last summer, all signs have been pointing to a necessary rematch: King James' shot at redemption and Stephen Curry's validation, but we almost spoke too soon.

After a month and a half of playoff basketball, storylines have shaped shifted and shifted some more.  Making it all the way to the Conference finals last year, the Houston Rockets were relegated to vacation status after the first round.  The Clippers, yet again, were snubbed by the injury bug, unable to see what kind of fruit their floor general and high-flying slammers could bear.  We also saw flashes of Dwayne Wade's youth, as he willed-in every contorted lay-up and clutch three-ball he took throughout the Hornets and Raptors series.  If only leading shot blocker Hassan Whiteside stayed healthy, we could have not only seen Lebron's return to a post-season Miami environment, but also two best friends compete for a trip to the NBA Finals.

More glaringly, it might be the end to the efficient, well-oiled, crisp passing machine of the San Antonio Spurs after the six game destruction by the Oklahoma City Thunder.  The trio of Tim Duncan, Tony Parker, and Manu Ginobli, despite the emergence of Kawhi Leonard, and Lamarcus Aldridge, appeared to run out of the proverbial gasoline.  Remember when a dejected 40-year old Duncan walked to the bench, head down, after Serge Ibaka of the Thunder swatted what would have been a routine slam? if only he had young legs.  For all the championships and milestones Duncan has achieved, that split second was a microcosm of what fans had been watching all year; a depleted GOAT having to more carefully pick his moments of attack, realizing his body could no longer follow what his mind enacted.

As fast as that block had happened was how quickly Russell Westbrook and Kevin Durant coasted in transition to take momentum in the West as a legitimate championship contender. KD and Russ had been proving their greatness as a duo for the entire season.  Westbrook dominated, angrily, tallying 18 triple-doubles this tour, and Kevin has matured so beautifully--an assassin with endless ammunition.

You can't help but feel like the Warriors and the Cavaliers were destined for a rematch.  The Dubs, and more specifically Klay Thompson and Andre Igoudala, ripped Game 6 away from the Thunder.  Thompson, who hit 11 three-pointers to break an NBA playoff record, scored 17 tough points in the fourth quarter to will his team back in the game.  Igoudala's stifling defense on back-to-back possessions, swiping the ball away from both Durant and Westbrook sealed the deal on a stunning road win.  Game 7 happened, but it was over before it started.  OKC had the lead at Oracle, but Steph's high floater off the glass to end the half was a signifier that the Dubs were just heating up.  

Lebron and the Cavs controlled their destiny throughout the East.  Even when they lost Games 3 & 4 in Toronto it seemed like they rather conceded the victories when you consider some were "oot and aboot" late on the town. Say what you will about the lack of parity in the Eastern Conference, but James has figured out the winning formula for the last six straight years.  No other players have been able to achieve such a feat since the Boston Celtics were the mainstay in the Finals, every year, from 1956-1969.  Although Lebron has had a strong supporting cast to help, there's no denying the value on the court and psychologically that King James adds to a roster.

The biggest difference from last year's appearance in the Finals is health.  Kevin Love suffered a playoff ending shoulder injury in the first-round and Kyrie Irving was sidelined for the rest of the Championship after his knee gave out in Game 1.  At 100% and having played the most offensively efficient basketball in the league, the Cavaliers don't have to rely on James' heroics, like they did last year, for their first taste of glory.  Their losing effort wasn't all for nothing, though.  The Warriors exposed holes in the Cavaliers' lineup that GM David Griffin has been filling in anticipation of this rematch.  As seldom as it was to see Lebron off the floor in 2015's Finals, the Cavaliers offense became stagnant against Golden State's active defense when he was on the bench, struggling to keep pace with their motion offense and flurry of Splash Brother three's.  Adding Richard Jefferson, who is making his return to the Finals after a thirteen-year hiatus, and Channing Frye, who is shooting over 50% from three-point range has helped the Cavs' secondary lineup in Matthew Dellavedova and Iman Shumpert continue their scoring edge.  At 35 and 33 years of age respectively, you wonder if these veterans can consistently make an impact against a fast-paced, younger Warriors squad.

The Warriors quest for back-to-back championships began at the very first tip-off of the 2015-2016 season.  They made twenty-four straight victories to begin their campaign look easy, especially with Assistant Coach Luke Walton at the helm, while Head Coach Steve Kerr, rested an ailing back.  Opposing teams certainly made it interesting, whether Golden State would reach the elusive 72-wins mark, but all that team chemistry and improvement by Curry and Thompson paid dividends throughout the season.  Honestly, we didn’t start to see the kind of championship resolve this team had until they were faced with elimination by the Thunder.  Many were clamoring that the Warriors had been “figured out” once Durant, Westbrook, and New Zealander Steven Adams began running the same high-octane, fast-transition offense better than the Dubs.  If there’s one thing we learned this season, though, is that the Warriors are never ever out of a basketball game.  Draymond’s strip steals and outlet passes to a flashing Curry or Thompson for a quick three is enough to ignite a lethal group of weapons that once warmed up, are hard to stop.

This bout deserves to go seven rounds, and I would not be surprised if it did.  Home-court has been well protected by higher seeds in this year’s playoffs.  The Cavaliers have yet to lose in Quicken Loans Arena and Steph reiterated that his team would be better prepared to defend Oracle Arena, unlike when OKC stole Game 1.  The 2016 Warriors and Cavaliers are not the same teams that met last June.  Golden State, most importantly, has experience; they know what that atmosphere of the NBA Finals feels like and they know how to complete the task.  The Cavaliers have re-tooled, creating a different complexion of who they were a year ago.

I think about what this series means in the broader conversation about basketball, and I get excited.  We’ve watched memorable Finals matchups a-la the Celtics and Lakers in the 2008 and 2010 Finals, but when was the last time we witnessed the two best players in the world at the peak of their powers compete to be crowned champion? The game has been starving for a heavyweight title fight; we never got to see Kobe vs. Lebron in a winner-take-all.  We’d have to go all the way back to Michael Jordan’s first NBA Finals appearance and Magic Johnson’s last when the Bulls and Lakers met in 1991, something I wasn’t alive to see.  Stephen Curry has earned every bit of his successive Most Valuable Player awards, and all the way on the opposite coast, a King still reigns. 

Father Time lurks behind the scene, who knows when he pays a visit to Lebron James, but until then, what’s keeping him from reaching another one or two more NBA Finals?  And are mere Finals appearances enough to proclaim oneself the best basketball player on the planet? Three rings in seven total appearances to the Finals, each corresponding with a Bill Russell trophy, is very hard to argue against.  Lebron would have no contemporary equal.  Make it 2-5 with a loss again to the Dubs; however, and that’s just as many Finals accolades as the spritely Curry.  After the next two weeks unfold, there might not have to be a conversation over which star is brightest.  You can’t argue with two championships and two MVPs back-to-back.  Jersey sales indicate that Stephen has already become the face of the Association, but dominion comes with consistent victory.

The winner of this series will be the team that can defend home-court and steal one on the road.  You could feel the emotion ooze out of Lebron and the Cavs when they escaped Oracle with a Game 2 win last year, but they also had the stench of champagne baths from Game 6 permeate through the away locker room of the “Q” for the entire summer.  Match-up wise, I’m wary that Golden State exposes the lack of defensive prowess of Kevin Love and Kyrie Irving.  But it’s also possible that the combination of James, Irving, Love, Smith and Frye is too much weaponry for a smaller Warriors lineup.  I don’t know who wins and my gut hasn’t identified a clear favorite yet either, so this time around I’ll actually leave it to a coin flip.  The Cavaliers are heads and the Warriors are tails.

Heads it is.  Cleveland Cavaliers in seven.

Series Schedule

Game 1: Tonight @ 9pm

Game 2: June 5th @ 8pm

Game 3: June 8th @ 9pm

Game 4: June 10th @ 9pm

Game 5: June 13th | If Needed

Game 6: June 16th | If Needed

Game 7: June 19th | If Needed

* All games to air on ABC

 

Spilling The Beans at Gaucho by Alex Young

Gaucho Parrilla Argentina by InTheRough

Gaucho Parrilla Argentina by InTheRough

Inside Gaucho Parrilla Argentina, a restaurant in Pittsburgh's Strip Distrcit that is craved by many, a Boston food blog prepared to review the food and the experience. Known as Spilling The Beans, the blog's founder, Tara, ordered Carne Con Pan, meat with bread, and specifically a steak sandwich on a thick piece of ciabatta.

Motivated by Gaucho's popularity, pursuits in online journalism, and high school friendship, I accompanied Tara for lunch.

The restaurant gets attention not only for its food, but also for the line wrapped around Gaucho's building that people see walking or driving by. Tara, tasting her wood-fired, grilled steak sandwich, and I, eating a chicken salad with field greens and mixed vegetables, determine Gaucho is good. The tasty food brings people back for more and the buzz around the establishment attracts people for a meal.

From the pink hair and dreadlocks worn by two of the servers, to the bull horns mounted on the wall, a hip, western (Gaucho translates to cowboy in Spanish) ambience greeted Spilling The Beans and InTheRough's conversation.

Photo by Spilling The Beans

Photo by Spilling The Beans

Back in February, Tara learned the adage, "there's no such thing as bad publicity." She wrote an honest article about Loyal Nine, a Cambridge, Mass. American style café, saying, "their actual food recipes could have used some help." Tara made the comments to alert future customers that the $20 meal ticket did not match the food's quality.

A student at M.I.T., where Tara attends, caught wind of Spilling The Beans and Tara's review. Taking to 'M.I.T. Confessions,' a thread of tell alls about university life, the student whined because Tara spent a substantial amount of money on food only to criticize the restaurant. The disgruntled student provided a link to the post, and STB's views skyrocketed. Tara's friends reached out in support, praising her hobby as informative and helpful.

"Unbiased journalism is incredibly important to earn readers' trust. Calling a place out for having subpar food isn't terribly enjoyable, but neither is lying to your readers," Tara said.

Originally from Pittsburgh, Tara waited until she arrived on campus in Cambridge to begin blogging about all kinds of food Boston offers. Her website, SpillingTheBeans.me, houses a database of restaurant critiques and enticing food visuals.

Photo by Spilling The Beans

Photo by Spilling The Beans

Asian food is Tara's favorite, although categories on her site extensively list African, Indian, Mediterranean, and other food types in locations extending beyond Boston, like D.C., Los Angeles, and Taiwan.

Interestingly, Tara's personal life creeps into her blog posts. "I think that blogging is able to connect me to both the people I'm close to and to people I don't know at all," she said. "It's a nice way to update friends and family I don't see as often. For those who don't know me at all, they get to learn a little about my life, and also learn about a restaurant that I'm reviewing."

The personal attention Tara feeds Spilling The Beans turns the blog into a food diary. Her travels allow her to experience new cultures, tastes, and thoughts.

Now, she debates expanding Spilling The Beans to invite more writers to cover more restaurants. Although, her main priority is maintaining authenticity and thorough qualities that boost the site. Tara is achieving that goal herself at the moment and has done well proving her legitimacy to the restaurants she reviews. Some gift her free meals and thank you notes.

In Boston or "not Boston," Tara is always eating and uses food as a guide to gain different perspectives on life.

Gaucho

1601 Penn Avenue

Pittsburgh, PA 15222

Pack of Wolves Wearing Shop412 by Alex Young

Via Shop412

Via Shop412

With a precise and valuable mission statement, agreeable visuals, and detailed archive of projects, Shop412 launches a new web experience. The Pittsburgh lifestyle brand and clothier's 'About' page reads, "412 was birthed in 2007 with the aim to create a brand that celebrated Pittsburgh's emerging generation of cultural creators and professional athletes."

The 'Burgh's proud heritage shapes Shop412's logo and is the company's source of inspiration. While the city's area code remains the prime image for 412, a wolf is used as symbolism to represent the quality and ideals of Pittsburgh's cultural community built "TOGETHER."

After recently remodeling its storefront, moving the sneaker wall to a window cavity with open shelves and lush greenery peering through, a ferocious, salivating neon wolf adorns the shop and faces customers who enter. "Hometown•Is•Hero 412 Built," encourages the sign.

Shop412

Shop412

SFOT's supportive manifesto "started out as just an idea. A feeling. Our desire to represent our city. Our family. Us. All of us. Together."

Naturally, actors in the steel city's cultural scene seek 412 wear to boast their hometown's creative and diligent spirit. Keep Pittsburgh Dope, the don of capturing popular life and style, photographed local rapper Mars Jackson during his concert at Carnegie Museum of Art in a black long-sleeve shirt printed with the brand's wolf emblem. Menswear purveyor PixburghCam shops 412, and 24/7 Pittsburgh advocate Cody Baker loves the 412 x Heinz shirt, a collaboration bringing awareness to hunger in the region and nationally. See packs of Pittsburghers cooperatively and dominantly thrive together in 412.

The new web-store welcomes supporters with a classic logo offering in black, grey, gold, and red. Officially called the '412 Hometown' collection, the wolf appears on black and white long-sleeve tees, as well as a black hoodie.

Creating "a logo for a proud town," Shop412 is a staunch reminder of the valuable content that is produced from a supportive and engaged community.

 

Kings of the Underground by Alex Young

We know basketball runs New York.  If you're from NYC, chances are you've played ball outdoors on the double-rim hoops.  Football, though, remains underground; a niche group of players looking to assert their dominance on the gridiron rather than the court has generated a new age of pick-up competition.  Eight teams representing the best street football clubs in New York came to compete in the Street Bowl Championship, but only two made it to the final day, vying for the $16,000 come-up.

We were introduced to Carver Mobb's leader, O.G. Pamz, in episode one of Kings of the Underground, Vice Sports' chronicling of the two-day tournament, as he talked about the ferocity of street football in the streets of the Concrete Jungle.  For all the smack he and his team from the Spanish Barrio talked, they also walked the walk beating arch-nemesis Undarated twice to advance to the championship. 

AFC was one of the more enigmatic teams in the tournament.  Originally from Queens, the squad comprised of doctors, lawyers, and college educated guys was written off as soft, unable to adapt to the grimy ways of up-town street football.  Despite their lack of bravado, AFC had a seasoned athletic pedigree that was unmatched by any other team.  Myron and Travis both AFC wide receiver/corner backs played collegiate football at American International College--a Division-II school--while Travis went on to add three more years of arena football to his resume.  Their skillful play along with some clutch playmaking led the underdog team to the finals.

Vice has unveiled the curtain to one of the most unique sports leagues in the United States.  We've all got our teams we root for on Sunday, but there's something special about watching neighborhoods within New York battle for supremacy.  It's not just for the money.  It's personal. 

Peep episodes two, three, four, and five to see how the tournament unfolded here.