Author Topic: Marine Rap  (Read 1281 times)

Dos Equis

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Marine Rap
« on: August 13, 2007, 08:02:26 PM »
Someone just shared this with me.  Loved it! 

Dos Equis

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Re: Marine Rap
« Reply #1 on: August 14, 2007, 02:40:00 PM »
He's a star.   :)

Patriotic Rapping Marine: Who Is This Mystery Man?
Tuesday, August 14, 2007

By Catherine Donaldson-Evans

He has inspired hundreds of thousands of people with his poetic, patriotic rhetoric about the United States, war and defending freedom. More than 300,000 people have seen him do his rap-style monologue on YouTube. He’s been given a nickname — “BadA** Marine” — and spawned a Web site and copycats, among them a student who performed the speech in a high-school talent contest and won.

The thing is, this isn’t “Cheers” … because nobody knows his name.

Who is the mystery Marine in the video, which was first posted a year ago and only Monday suddenly exploded, snagging 40,000 views in a matter of hours and now boasting at least 288,036? Is he an actor playing a Marine, or is he an actual member of the U.S. Marine Corps? What’s his name and his story? And what compelled him to recite the rap that has now touched so many?

Though no one seems to know the identity of the young, handsome African American man in the Marine uniform, many have certainly come to know his words.

“She called,” he says, standing before a U.S. Marine Corps crest hanging on the wall. “From the bowels of Ground Zero/she sent this 911 distress signal/because she was in desperate need of a hero/and didn’t have time to decipher what to call ‘em/so she called ‘em all her children/and said, ‘I am America, and I’m calling on the land of the free.’/So they answered.”

He raps about the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks; their impact on people of every race, ethnicity and creed; the call to defend the country and freedom from terror; and the painful process of soldiers leaving for war.

“Brothers and Sisters/We’re just Americans,” he concludes. “So with that I say ‘thank you’/to the Army, Navy, Air Force and Marines/for preserving my rights/to live and die for this life/and paying the ultimate price/for me to be free.”

Not even the Marines can confirm who he is or whether he is, in fact, one of their own. The reason is simple: YouTube is a restricted-access Web site on Marine Corps computers.

"We don't have access at work, so I can't substantiate, corroborate or verify anything I can't see," explained Marine Corps spokeswoman Christina Delai. "There's nothing we can do about it here."

Even one of the people who uploaded the motivational Marine's video onto YouTube doesn't know who he is.

That person, Matthew Denton, of Birmingham, Ala., says he first saw the clip a year ago, when his brother sent it to him after having done a search for “inspiration” on YouTube.

“I was impressed with it and wanted to share it, so I downloaded it and showed it at my local church service,” Denton, a broker at a fiber-optic sourcing company, said Monday in an e-mail to FOXNews.com.

He said he tried several times to contact the person who initially posted the video — screen name studman20673 — but to no avail. (FOXNews.com has also contacted studman20673, but an e-mail was not immediately returned.)

“With no response, and no real views increase other than me, I posted it to my site, fearing it might go inactive and be lost forever. … That was last year,” Denton wrote Monday. “It has been on my YouTube site since then — getting a few hundred views a week. UNTIL TODAY!”

Denton and his brother Andy named the video star the “BadA** Marine” and created a Web site using that moniker, in his honor. They also tracked down another fan named Zac Savage, who found the clip on Denton’s YouTube profile, performed it at his high school talent show and took home the top prize in the contest.

“I think it is incredible how this Bad-A** Marine explained in three minutes why we’re fighting this war ... when some politicians have failed to convey it in three years,” Denton said.

More than anything else, Denton wants to track down this unknown serviceman and tell him how his monologue has affected so many.

“Please help me find this guy,” he wrote to FOXNews.com. “He has no idea the difference he has made, and is making, with his words.”

So if you’re out there, mystery Marine, please come forward. Everybody wants to know your name.

http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,293244,00.html

Dos Equis

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Re: Marine Rap
« Reply #2 on: August 18, 2007, 07:19:47 PM »
They found him. 

Mystery Marine Poet Revealed
Friday, August 17, 2007

By Catherine Donaldson-Evans

He is 30-year-old Marine Staff Sgt. Lawrence E. Dean II, stationed at the Cherry Point base in North Carolina. The Conway, S.C., native writes and performs rap-style poetry using the stage name "Life." And he is known all over North Carolina, where he is an inspiration to countless friends and strangers alike.

Click here to see the video.

When the YouTube video of Dean reciting the poem he wrote about defending America's freedom garnered close to 400,000 views in just two days earlier this week, he decided to reveal his identity and speak to FOXNews.com.

"It almost leaves you speechless," he said on Wednesday of the reaction to his poetry. "Just to see it affected that many people — if it made that many people think, it was worth every bit of that three minutes. It wasn't about me solely. It pretty much said what we live. It's touching people the way I intended it to."

RelatedStories
Patriotic Rapping Marine: Who Is This Mystery Man? Help Us Find the Rapping Marine Dean, who works on aviation electronics for the Marines, has never served in Afghanistan or Iraq, though he said he'd go "this second" if asked. But the poem he wrote — which begins, "And she called …" — isn’t about the experience of fighting a war. It's about what the armed forces do.

"It's about the military service and the reason we do things," he explained. "We just defend the country, no questions asked. As a family, we do it. The poem was just utmost admiration and respect for the individuals that are there. ... They've answered the country's call."

Click here to read the full text of the Marine's rap.

He was compelled to write the poem about two-and-a-half years ago, he said, when his grandmother asked him one day what would make him go to war.

"The answer I can give is just, 'Because she called,'" said Dean, referring to America. "That was the best answer I could give that day."

But he was also deeply affected by a visit to Ground Zero, where the Twin Towers once stood in lower Manhattan and where all that's left is a vast, gaping pit. In his poem, he refers to "911 distress signal" the United States sent from the World Trade Center site on Sept. 11, 2001.

"TV doesn't do it any justice," he said. "It came about from being there and seeing the magnitude. It wasn't your front yard or your school or where your parents came from. When you see Ground Zero, you realize these are actual people. This could have been your neighborhood."

The Marine Corps, where Dean has built his career for the past 12 years, has been amazed at the response to the poetry reading of one of their own.

"All the Marines I know who have seen the video have been very impressed by it," said Mike Barton, the deputy director of Cherry Point's joint public affairs office. "We're waiting to see what happens next."

The video that ultimately wound up on YouTube was shot spontaneously about a year ago, when a young Marine whose room Dean was inspecting asked him to recite his poem on camera so that he could send it to his family to explain why he was going off to war.

Dean never intended for it to be posted on the Internet — and isn't sure who first put the clip up last year (the user's screen name is studman20673), though he guesses it was the young Marine who filmed him. He didn't even know the video had been on YouTube until he read about it on FOXNews.com.

The clip was picked up by Birmingham, Ala., resident Matthew Denton, who put it on his own YouTube page. Denton was so inspired by Dean's poem that he did what he could to track him down — with no luck, until Tuesday, when the two finally had the chance to speak on the phone.

Poetry and music have been Dean's passions for years.

"That's what I do when I'm not at work," he said.

And many have been moved to tears by the words Dean wrote that day his grandmother challenged him to explain why he serves his country.

"She called," Dean says in the videotaped poem as he stands before a U.S. Marine Corps crest hanging on the barracks wall. "From the bowels of Ground Zero/she sent this 911 distress signal/because she was in desperate need of a hero/and didn’t have time to decipher what to call 'em/so she called 'em all her children/and said, 'I am America, and I’m calling on the land of the free.'/So they answered ... /You see, someone attempted to choke the voice/of the one who gave us the right for choice/and now she was callin'./And somebody had to answer./Who was going to answer?/So they did."

But it's not only through his writing that Dean — who has an 8-year-old daughter — manages to make an impact on people. It's in his everyday life, according to those who know him.

"Everybody loves him," said one of his close friends in the Marines, who asked not to be identified. "He has got to be the most motivated and inspirational person I have ever met in my life. He speaks from the heart."

As for the response to his poem, well, Dean is uncharacteristically at a loss for words to describe it.

"How do you explain the unexplainable?" he said. "It's a blessing. A lot of people that have to answer that call appreciate it. That's bigger than me."

http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,293615,00.html

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Re: Marine Rap
« Reply #3 on: August 19, 2007, 02:31:59 AM »
w

Colossus_500

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Re: Marine Rap
« Reply #4 on: August 20, 2007, 09:51:41 AM »
Someone just shared this with me.  Loved it! 

F A N T A S T I C ! ! ! !   ;D

That was intense, got me jacked up.