
Wasn't there some of that in the Gibson: A quick little something I wasn't on the soundtrack because at the time I was dealing with some politics from my label. I've got a double album coming out called Alter Ego I'm introducing my alter ego Black Tie. What do you get out of doing film that you don't get from making music, and which do you like Gibson: They both definitely do something for me, but of course music is my first love, music is definitely it. That was the only thing that killed me, and I was in Timberland's, remember? So that was something.
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It was a lot of fun and you know it was crazy the only thing that killed me, that really caused some damage was how many times that Vondie (Curtis-Hall) had me running at a full sprint up the street chasing that car that wasn't there. Was it hard to do the action Gibson: I was a grown man out there I was trying to get my grown man on.
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He also told us about his singing career, and his upcoming album.Īnd if you don't know by now, Tyrese is also in the new Transformers movie he gave us some inside info into what's going on with that film and working with director, Michael Bay. We caught up with Tyrese who talked about getting on set with The Game and being that '#1' on the call sheet. He and Meagan become a somewhat modern and urban Bonnie and Clyde as they do what they have to for his son. With the help of Meagan Good, and his brother, Lucky (Larenz Tate), Tyrese is on a mission to get his son back - by whatever means necessary. I can't do emails or anything.Tyrese does just that in his latest action film, Waist Deep he's carjacked on a busy South Los Angeles street, with his son in the car, by gangsters working for Big Meat, played by The Game. Water gushed into a residential building in Gramercy Park in the stairwell and in the apartment where Amelia Page was working from home. Some New Yorkers couldn't even escape Thursday's rain inside their own homes. Click here to view New York City Stormwater Flood Maps."They actually outlined different strategies that New York City residents could do to protect their property."
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"In the plan, the city has generated a series of maps that can show residents different areas that are vulnerable," Cherrier said. RELATED STORY: Elsa's Impact: Storm Passes Jersey Shore, But Swimming Still Off Limits At Sea Bright Beach Their research is crucial to the city's new Stormwater Resiliency Plan. "I would say that New York City is one of the most advanced cities in the country in planning for what's to come with climate change," said Jennifer Cherrier, chair of Earth & Environmental Sciences at Brooklyn College.Ĭherrier is among the academic experts tasked in 2017 to analyze the impact of extreme rain events. Particularly hard hit were portions of upper Manhattan and the West Bronx where more than five inches of rain fell - that volume of water in a short time period will overwhelm drainage systems."Īhead of the storm, crews were inspecting catch basins in critical areas which often get clogged with litter, the department said on Twitter. "Yesterday's intense storms caused flooding in rural, suburban and urban areas of the metropolitan region - New Jersey, Connecticut and New York City. The Department of Environmental Protection released the following statement: RELATED STORY: Elsa's Impact: Storm Packs Punch, Strands Drivers, Causes Floods And Mudslide In Connecticut Despite the large amount of rain, our drains, pumping equipment, and the system as a whole performed well, and thanks to pre-positioned crews followed by rapid response of skilled maintenance teams who worked through the night, disruption to service was minimal through the back-to-back storms that pounded the city Thursday afternoon and Friday morning. In a few stations, water exceeded the capacity of drains, generally only for a period of minutes. New York City sustained record breaking amounts of rainfall in a short amount of time, resulting in flash flooding of roads and sidewalks, which in turn resulted in water pouring into some subway stations. The MTA said it's conducting an after action report and, Friday evening, sent the following statement to CBS2: "Really tough time for customers who were in those stations or trying to go to those stations at the height of the storm," she added.



The water comes through the vents, down the stairs in those waterfalls, and then if the drains at the street level can't handle the water, it goes over the curb and then makes things even worse," said Interim NYC Transit President Sarah Feinberg. "The concrete above ground does not absorb the water.
