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alphaiota 05-14-2006 08:11 PM

stereotypical of african americans.

shelley j
sigma k

RedefinedDiva 05-14-2006 11:26 PM

Quote:

Originally posted by alphaiota
stereotypical of african americans.

shelley j
sigma k

No, not really. If you look at the table, hardly anything is tropical. The only tropical fruits on the table are the pineapples and kiwi. Grapes, oranges, and berries are hardly tropical. So, I don't see a problem with the watermelon.

Munchkin03 05-15-2006 01:30 PM

There's nothing tropical about Louis Vuitton. :(

dzdst796 05-15-2006 02:30 PM

The Whole Wedding was just WRONG on so many levels. Her and her friends should have gotten smacked.

firecracker08 05-15-2006 02:37 PM

Who are the people who say that this is a good idea? Who are you? Stop doing that! Don't encourage this mess....what's next gucci themed funerals? Didn't Proof have a gold casket?

alphaiota 05-15-2006 10:13 PM

that's what i'm saying though, the fruit doesn't exactly go with the tropical idea. and yeah, lv isn't really tropical, but i guess that's why it ranked as a ghetto wedding.

shelley j
sigma k

soft&beautiful 06-16-2006 06:52 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by alphaiota
stereotypical of african americans.

shelley j
sigma k

am I the only one who has a problem with this statement?

wht do you mean that's so stereotypical of AAs? That statement is just plain ignorant!

f8nacn 06-16-2006 09:06 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by soft&beautiful
am I the only one who has a problem with this statement?

wht do you mean that's so stereotypical of AAs? That statement is just plain ignorant!

Yes this statement is ignorant and I would love for the person who made this statement to please explain! You can not categorize this one person's idiotic wedding and her style as stereotypical for ALL African-Americans! This was HER choice not MY CHOICE! The majority of African-Americans have traditional and/or ELEGANT weddings...this one just didn't reach the mold in our eyes but in hers (even though it was a hot mess) she thought it was elegant in her standards (which could be very low)

MeezDiscreet 06-16-2006 09:57 AM

I think she was trying to say that it plays into the negative stereotype of African-Americans. Historically, in an attempt of racism and mockery, we've been portrayed as chicken & watermelon eating coons. Regardless, watermelon is a fruit that lots of people eat (not me) so I don't see a problem with it being at a wedding, just like strawberries or grapes.

PerfectVerse06 06-19-2006 01:55 PM

Bump!!

AlphaFrog 06-29-2006 10:15 AM

Maid of Honor: So, where'd you end up getting your wedding dress?
Bride: Oh, it just happened to fall out of the back of a LV truck.:p

SummerChild 06-30-2006 01:26 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by AKA2D '91
Ghetto Weddings, II
This is the column on Juvenile's recent wedding:

Mr. & Mrs. Juvenile
Rapper weds nurse in a ceremony worth the wait
Saturday, September 25, 2004
Chris Rose

A local music millionaire recently got married; maybe you heard about it.



The bride was more than two hours late and her dress was valued in the range of a sporty SUV and the wedding guests were cut from the recording industry elite.

No, it wasn't Britney's Studio City backyard ceremony, where the guests dined on ribs and chicken fingers and listened to a boom box before donning jogging sweats and hitting an Irish pub to celebrate the Big Day.

No, this was the wedding of Juvenile -- aka Terius Gray -- an equally flamboyant and controversial Louisiana music success story, whose wedding earlier this month ranks up there with our most colorful hitching tales.

Since most of what this paper has recorded of Juvie's life over the past few years has been more about rap sheets than rap music, it's nice to report a love story for your enjoyment.

Assuming that he's not going to place a wedding announcement in the Living section, I offer one here as a token of our appreciation for this well-publicized prodigy of the Magnolia housing project, whose infectious 1999 hit, "Back That Azz Up," provided a poignant counter-balance to the cheesy Boy Band music of that period and helped make the recording label Cash Money Records a household name and industry playa.

First of all, the bride, Shadonna Jones -- a nurse from St. Louis -- was more than 2½ hours late for the scheduled 6 p.m. ceremony at the Victory Fellowship church on Airline Drive.

She hadn't even showered by 6:30 and then came the Hollywood-style makeup, hair and dress routine. This took a very long time. Said local bridal designer Linda Lee: "We practically had to sew her into the dress. She said she wanted it tight, so we made it tight. When we were finished, she looked like she was painted into it."

Lee added: "And she's got booty," which one should hope, given Juvie's signature hit.

At the church, the groom, decked out in a gold suit, and his posse -- he calls them his "regulators" -- did that tap the shoes, check the wrist thing for a while and then got a little nervous.

"For the first hour, we were, you know: Women -- they can be slow," said Juvie's manager, Aubrey Francis. "Then we kept getting reports: They're on their way, they're on their way, they're on their way." All this sounds like the weather forecasters on TV talking about a hurricane, and a rumor went up that the bride actually arrived at the church but then turned back for some finishing touches, lending new meaning to the term "contraflow."

In fact, she was still getting ready.

Hard to say how the several hundred guests in the church managed to keep their patience about them, but Juvenile and backstage pals took care of business: They ordered in from Popeyes to hold them over until the reception.

Said Francis: "I guess if we'd known it was going to take so long, we would have ordered for everyone."

Once the wedding was under way, with both bride and groom standing at the altar, the presiding minister, Bishop Darryl Brister from the Beacon Light International Baptist Cathedral, lent a contemporary edge to the proceedings.

"He said there was so much bling on the altar that he could hardly see," one spectator told me and yes, he used the term "bling."

Juvie and Shadonna's necks and fingers shone like a vast sea of icicles on a glistening Wisconsin winter morning -- to say nothing of Juvie's diamond-encrusted walking stick, by NYC's reigning hip-hop accessorizer, Jacob the Jeweler, and the 10,000 stones, beads and crystals that Lee attached to Shadonna's Demetrios-designed silk gown.

It was a fitting look to receive an altar visit by R&B superstar Brian McKnight, who appeared from the wings to serenade the bride.

Nice touch.

At the reception at the Pontchartrain Center in Kenner, guests were required to be patient once again. The wedding party and closest associates went to a separate dining room to eat, not to return to the general festivities for another hour or two.

And anyone expecting a ghetto-fabulous reception would have been disappointed: Guests were treated instead to a tableau of tables drenched in flowers and ice sculptures and fine silver for a sit-down dinner of filet mignon followed by a chocolate fondue fountain.

Very tony indeed. The crowd content was sparse on the rappers and gangsta types from Juvie's notorious past. Said manager Francis: "There were more executives than artists. Lots of lawyer types."

How far we have traveled.

The party rocked until the wee hours, as weddings do. So begins the next stage in the life of Juvenile. And it begins with the present that he offered his bride as a gift and a token to their future: 25 acres of land near LaPlace, upon which they will build their home.

. . . . . . .


Columnist Chris Rose can be reached at chris.rose@timespicayune

To view the GW, I...
http://www.greekchat.com/gcforums/sh...5&pagenumber=1


Alright! I never considered that the groom and bride might exchange gifts. That's great - like the dowry of old I guess.

SummerChild 06-30-2006 01:27 PM

Aw! They look good together.
SC

SummerChild 06-30-2006 01:43 PM

It is an interesting choice of accent (the LV logo) and putting it on the cake was kinda crazy looking however I guess I don't really think that the dress was all that bad b/c brides are wearing all sorts of colors nowadays, including dresses that are not even white. They are wearing ivy, champagne, a blue strip here, a red strip there so whatever. I was in David's Bridal the other day to try on a bridesmaids dress and there were even gold bride's dresses. If you're not going to do the all white dress, I think you're kind of straying from tradition anyway so (shrug).

My gfriend who got married last year always says that she hopes that people put 12 times as much energy, focus and time into their relationship and they do planning the wedding b/c the marriage is only the relationship, only now you're stuck basically. Not the most romantic but I think she has a point.

Quote:

Originally Posted by CrimsonTide4


CrimsonTide4 09-08-2006 10:01 AM

I got these yesterday
 
The Bride
http://pic11.picturetrail.com/VOL368.../185279370.jpg


The Groom
http://pic11.picturetrail.com/VOL368.../185279369.jpg

The Guests

http://pic11.picturetrail.com/VOL368.../185279367.jpg

http://pic11.picturetrail.com/VOL368.../185279307.jpg

The Bride and the Wedding Planner, perhaps?
http://pic11.picturetrail.com/VOL368.../185279358.jpg

http://pic11.picturetrail.com/VOL368.../185279297.jpg

The Vows
http://pic11.picturetrail.com/VOL368.../185279315.jpg


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