![]() | Vince Carter vs. Lebron James vs. Michael Jordan This is somthing i found in my file...on my computer....i remember making it along time ago....well anyways...please comment...and rate this clip....thanks for watching |
![]() | Lebron James VS Michael jordan VS Vince Carter WHO IS BETTER? YOU DECIDE.SUBSCRIBE TO ME IF YOU WANT MORE VIDEOS ON YOUR FAVORTE NBA STARS. |
![]() | Rush Hour 2 James Carter Singin and other scene See credits if you know me and the other scene is where James says Im gonna slap you something like that idc |
![]() | Michael Jordan 1993 Finals: Gm 4 Vs. Suns, 55pts. This game still gives me chills watching it. MJ had that look that was beyond serious. After losing Game 3 in 3OTS, Kevin Johnson bragged about holding MJ to 44pts. Thus, MJ came out in Game 4 with a look of stoic madness. Becoming just the 5th player to score 50+ in the finals, he tied Rick Barry for 2nd highest all time in the Finals with 55 pts. But, the manner in which MJ played was just jaw-dropping - capped with a vicious last shot, MJ-style. Suns' coach Westphal said, "I don't think MJ could guard MJ. I'm as much in awe as everyone else. He's the best offensive and defensive PG ever, the best offensive and defensive SG ever, the best offensive and defensive SF, and he's probably top five at PF and C." |
![]() | Lebron James, the next Michael Jordan Lebron James, the next Michael Jordan |
![]() | Allen Iverson Funny MVP interview (Michael Jackson) 2001 NBA Iverson Talked about his relationship with Larry Brown He wanted to have the relation like Michael Jordan & Phil Jackson but... Allen Iverson Kobe Bryant Tracy Mcgrady Vince Carter Dwyane Wade Shaq O'Neal Gilbert Arenas Tim Duncan Kevin Garnett Yao Ming Chris Bosh Steve Nash Lebron James Carmelo Anthony Michael Jordan Scottie Pippen Charles Barkley Larry Bird Magic Johnson Karl Malone John Stockton Boston Celtics New Jersey Nets New York Knicks Philadelphia 76ers Toronto Raptors Chicago Bulls Cleveland Cavaliers Detroit Pistons Indiana Pacers Milwaukee Bucks Atlanta Hawks Charlotte Bobcats Miami Heat Orlando Magic Washington Wizards Dallas Mavericks Houston Rockets Memphis Grizzlies NO/Okla. City Hornets San Antonio Spurs Denver Nuggets Minnesota Timberwolves Portland Trail Blazers Seattle SuperSonics Utah Jazz Golden State Warriors Los Angeles Clippers Los Angeles Lakers Phoenix Suns Sacramento Kings |
![]() | cleveland cavaliers mix (lebron james) lebron james lebron james lebron james lebron james lebron james cleveland cavaliers mix video king the best nba legeneds top ten moves shots and dunks blocks steals street and1 nike players music commercial all number one player lebrons family swish airball ten hundred ludacris move bitch remix kobe bryant vince carter tracy mcgrady shaq shaquille o neal rap basketball diss funny comedy air jordan michael garnett paul pierce carmelo anthony allen iverson mtv cribs stats yao ming chauncey billups dwight howard dwayne wade hotsauce ludacris |
![]() | William Cooper - Remastered Speech! - Ufo-Alien-JFK 6 of 9 http://www.hourofthetime.com For what seems to be a complete text of this speech, see http://www.totse.com/en/fringe/mj_12_the_alien_government_conspiracy/162416.html Further description of MJ-12, Jason society, the trilateral commission and who joined them. How the treaty with the grey's got out of hand. Text of section: "It is significant that President Eisenhower as well as the first 6 MJ-12 members from the Government were also members of the Council on Foreign Relations. Thorough researchers will soon discover that not all of the "Wise Men" attended Harvard or Yale and not all of them were chosen for "Skull and Bones" or "Scrolland Key" membership during their college years. You will be able to quickly clear up this mystery by obtaining the book, The Wise Men by Walter Issacson and Evan Thomas, Simon and Schuster, New York. Under illustration #9 in the center of the book you will find the caption; "Lovett with the Yale Unit, above far right, and on the beach: His Initiation into Skull and Bones came at an air base near Dunkirk". I have found that members were chosen on an ongoing basis by invitation based upon merit post college and was not confined to only Havard or Yale attendees. A chosen few were later initiated into the Jason Society. They are all members of Council on Foreign Relations and at that time were known as the "Eastern Establishment". This should give you a clue to the far reaching and serious nature of these most secret college societies. The Jason Society is alive and well today but now includes members of the Trilaterial Commission as well. The Trila-terialsists existed secretly several years BEFORE1973. The name of the Trilateral Commission was taken from the alien flag known as the Trilateral Insignia. Majority Twelve was to survive right up to the present day. Under Eisenhower and Kennedy it was erroneously called the "5412 Committee" or more correctly, the "Special Group". In the Johnson administration it became the "303 Committee" because the name 5412 had been compromised in the book, The Secret Government. Actually NSC 5412/1 was leaked to the author to hide the existence of NSC 5410. Under Nixon, Ford, and Carter it was called the "40 Committee", and under Reagan, it became the "PI-40 Committee". Over all these years only the name has changed. By 1955 it had became obvious that the aliens had deceived Eisenhower and had broken the treaty. Mutilated humans were being found along with mutilated animals all across the United States. It was suspected that the aliens were not submitting a complete list of human contacts and abductees to MJ-12 and it was suspected that not all abductees had been returned. The Soviet Union was suspected of interacting with them and this proved to be true. It was learned that the aliens had been and were then manipulating masses of people through secret societies, witchcraft, magic, the occult, and religion. After several Air Force combat air engagements with alien craft it also became apparent that our weapons were no match against them. In November of 1955 NSC-5412/2 was issued establishing a study committee to explore "all factors which are involved in the making and implementing of foreign policy in the nuclear age". This was only a blanket of snow that covered the real subject of study, the alien question. By secret Executive Memorandum, NSC 5411 in 1954, President Eisenhower had commissioned the study group to "examine all the facts, lies, and deception and discover the truth of the alien question". NSCÿ5412/2 was only a cover that had become necessary when the press began inquiring as to the purpose of regular meetings of such important men. The first meetings began at Quantico Marine Base. The study group was made up of 35 members of the Council on Foreign Relations, secret scholars known as "The Jason Society" or the "Jason Scholars". Dr. Edward Teller was invited to participate. Dr. Zbigniew Brzezinski was the study director for the first 18 months. Dr. Henry Kissinger was chosen as the group's study director for the second 18 months. Nelson Rockefeller was a frequent visitor during the study. THE STUDY GROUP MEMBERS Gordon Dean, Chairman Paul H. Nitze N.E. Halaby Dr. Zbigniew Brzezinski, Study Director - 1st Phase William A.M. Burden Lt. Gen. James M. Gavin Dr. Henry Kissinger, Study Director - 2nd Phase Charles P. Noyes Gen. Walter Bedell Smith Dr. Edward Teller John C. Campbell Caryl P. Haskins Frank Altschul Frank Pace, Jr. Henry DeWolf Smyth Maj. Gen. Richard C. Lindsay Thomas K. Finletter James T. Hill, Jr. Hamilton Fish Armstrong James A. Perkins Shields Warren Hanson W. Baldwin George S. Franklin, Jr. Joseph E. Johnson Maj. Gen. James McCormack, Jr. Don K. Price Carroll L. Wilson Lloyd V. Berkner I.I. Rabi Mervin J. Kelly Robert R. Bowie David Rockefeller Arnold Wolfers Frank C. Nash Roswell L. Gilpatric McGeorge Bundy Oscar M. Ruebhausen" |
![]() | Allen Iverson & Michael Jordan 2003 NBA All Star Highlight Michael Jordan got the start and provided one more lasting moment. But it was all Kevin Garnett at the finish. The 52nd NBA All-Star Game was Jordan's last and filled with firsts as the Western Conference exhausted the Eastern Conference 155-145 in a double-overtime thriller. Given a surprise start as Toronto's Vince Carter stepped aside, Jordan appeared to make yet another of his seemingly endless series of game-winning shots. The superstar swingman of the Washington Wizards threw in a high-arcing jumper from the right baseline over Phoenix's Shawn Marion that gave the East a 138-136 lead with 4.8 seconds left in the first overtime, bringing a roar from the Philips Arena crowd. "I didn't think it was going to go in, but it went in," said Marion, who was victimized for a game-winning shot by Jordan in Phoenix last season. "I thought it was the game-winner, but anything can happen in an NBA game," Jordan said. Anything did. A foul call on a three-point attempt put Los Angeles Lakers guard Kobe Bryant at the line for three free throws with one second to go. Bryant made just two free throws to tie the game. "The first thing when Kobe got up, he said, 'I can't believe he called that,'" said Indiana forward Jermaine O'Neal, who committed the foul. Bryant's free throws forced an unprecedented second extra session, which belonged entirely to Garnett. The 7-footer of the Minnesota Timberwolves -- who played shooting guard earlier in the game -- took the smaller Carter into the low post for three straight jumpers. He added a foul shot for a 145-138 lead with 3:38 remaining, and the West never trailed again. "It looked like old 23 crept back in the building and was trying to take the game, but for the most part, we hung together and won," Garnett said. Garnett collected his first All-Star Game MVP award as he scored 37 points on 17-of-24 shooting and added nine rebounds and five steals. His points were the most in an All-Star Game since Jordan scored 40 in 1988. "The All-Star Game is not about individual," said Garnett, an unselfish superstar. "It's totally a group effort. It's a time for you to share stories, good times, emotional times with your teammates." Jordan, who turns 40 in eight days, gave Garnett some stories to share. He started very slowly and even missed a dunk in the first quarter. But he became the all-time leading scorer in the All-Star Game late in the third quarter and finished with 20 points on 9-of-27 shooting. "I think I got a chance to enjoy some good young company tonight," Jordan said. Some of that company joined Jordan on the Eastern Conference. Guards Allen Iverson of Philadelphia and Tracy McGrady of Orlando -- both of whom offered their starting spot to Jordan -- scored 35 and 29 points, respectively. But it wasn't enough to prevent the East from dropping to 32-20 in the all-time series. "I was going to try to forget my jersey in the locker room," McGrady said. "That way (Jordan) had to start and go out there." Bryant scored 22 points and Steve Francis of Houston added 20 for the West, which erased an eight-point deficit in the last two minutes of regulation and blew a seven-point lead in the last two-plus minutes of the first overtime. San Antonio's Tim Duncan had 19 points and 15 rebounds and the Lakers' Shaquille O'Neal had 19 and 13. It was the sixth overtime All-Star Game and the first since 1993 in Utah. Although the first quarter was the lowest-scoring opening period in 50 years and the first half the lowest since 1976, the game fell three points shy of the highest-scoring contest, another overtime affair in 1987. The pace seemed to quicken a bit after a halftime ceremony in which Jordan was serenaded by Mariah Carey, who wore No. 23 jerseys of Chicago and Washington while performing three songs, including "Hero." "I thank you for your support," a visibly humbled Jordan said to the crowd. "I leave the game in good hands." "The halftime ceremony was something I'll remember for a long time," said Francis, who was playing in his second All-Star Game. "I felt like he was talking to me when he said the NBA was going to be in good hands." McGrady took the third quarter into his hands, scoring 17 points to give the East a 93-86 lead. With 2:04 to go in the period, Jordan sank two free throws to move past Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (251 points) as the all-time leading scorer. The West overtook the East at 102-100 on a dunk by Shaquille O'Neal with 8:14 to go, but McGrady responded with a three-pointer. Three jumpers by Jordan and a drive by Iverson pushed the lead to 116-106 left and tightened the MVP race. It appeared to be Jordan's when he flipped in a left-handed shot on 7-footer Dirk Nowitzki of Dallas for a 120-112 lead with 1:58 to play. But he missed shots on three consecutive possessions, allowing the West back in it. "I wanted it to be a competitive game," Jordan said. "It was a fun ending anyway you look at it." Bryant had a chance to win it when he was fouled with 17 seconds left but split the pair, and Marion partially blocked Jordan's jumper at the other end. Despite eight overtime points from Iverson, the East looked dead when Francis hammered home a lob for a 135-128 bulge with 2:09 remaining. But McGrady and New Jersey's Jason Kidd scored four points each as the East surged to a 136-135 edge with 33 seconds left. A free throw by Shaquille O'Neal tied it. "It's easy to come in with the attitude that you are just going to run down the court and jump around and not play hard, but that's not what it is about," Iverson said. "I think the fans deserve more than that." The fans got a huge treat when Carter -- who had been criticized for keeping his starting spot -- stepped aside for Jordan in a classy move. "This is a storybook ending for Michael," Carter said. "I'm sure I'll have another opportunity to be in the All-Star Game, and this is how it's supposed to be." "I felt like he had taken a beating and he shouldn't have," Jordan said. "I think he was being very respectful." But Jordan missed eight of his first 10 shots, and the poor shooting was contagious. The East held a pedestrian 23-18 lead after one period and the West held a 55-52 halftime edge. |
![]() | LeBron James 41pts vs Bucks 08/09 NBA *Dunk from the free throw line!!! LeBron James supplied the Cleveland Cavaliers with a double dose of 40. James matched a season-high with 41 points in a season-best 43 minutes and Mo Williams scored 16 against his former team, leading the Cavaliers to their fifth straight win, 99-93 over the Milwaukee Bucks on Tuesday night. It was the third time in four games that James has scored exactly 41. "I'm not doing it on purpose," he said. The All-Star forward, who twice topped out at 41 points in wins over Chicago last week, scored 12 in the fourth quarter and didn't come out in the second half for the Cavaliers, who committed just one turnover -- a 24-second violation -- after halftime. "LeBron is LeBron," said Cavs coach Mike Brown, who would prefer to keep his superstar under 40 minutes. "We needed all 42 minutes, 46 seconds of him on the floor." With Cleveland leading by five in the fourth, James poked away a pass intended for Richard Jefferson, streaked to the other end and lifted off one step inside the foul line before smashing the ball through the hoop. Moments later, he dropped a 20-foot jumper and then drove through the lane for a finger roll to give the Cavs an 11-point lead. Zydrunas Ilgauskas added 15 points and Anderson Varejao had 13 -- 8 on 4-of-4 shooting in the fourth quarter -- with 10 rebounds for Cleveland, which didn't put Milwaukee away until the final four minutes. "We'll take the win," said a tired James, who got a massage in the locker room afterward. "But we have to continue to get better for the long term." Jefferson scored 19 and Luke Ridnour 17 -- 14 in the third -- to pace the Bucks, who were again without leading scorer Michael Redd. He missed his fourth straight game with a sprained right ankle. Redd tried to practice on Tuesday, but "was noticeably limping," coach Scott Skiles said. "It was clear he wasn't ready." Without Redd, Skiles and the Bucks had no answer at either end for James. "He had 41 and he made it look easy," Skiles said. "We tried switching a little bit. My only real complaint would be that we're still not aggressive enough on someone like that. The better players right now are putting up big numbers on us. LeBron is going to get his numbers -- 16 for 24 -- that's a pretty easy night for him. "A couple of times we did a good job on him, but he was finding other people because we had a couple of other guys asleep." Williams, acquired by Cleveland in a trade this summer from Milwaukee, downplayed his first matchup against his old team saying beforehand that it was "just another day." His new teammates played as if it was just another game for much of the night before closing out the Bucks, who were within 88-83 when James made his game-sealing steal and dunk. "I had fun," said Williams, who was bothered by an upset stomach all game, "and 'Bron was 'Bron." Williams said he take any extra satisfaction in beating the Bucks, his team for four seasons. "I wasn't overly hyped or overly motivated as I was when I got traded," he said. "Did it feel good to beat them? Yeah." The Cavs led by six points at half and quickly pushed their lead to 11 as Williams hit a 3-pointer and made two free throws to open the third quarter. But Ridnour got hot. He hit two 3-pointers and went 5-for-5 from the field in the period as Milwaukee opened a 69-66 lead with 2:20 left. James, though, responded by making three straight outside jumpers, the last one at the horn to give Cleveland a 74-71 lead entering the fourth. James was in China at the Beijing Olympics when the Cavaliers acquired Williams, trading forward Joe Smith and guard Damon Jones in a three-team deal with Milwaukee and Oklahoma City. Jones isn't even with the Bucks, who are allowing him to pursue other opportunities in the league. James couldn't remember his first thought at learning of the deal, but he knew he liked it. "I knew the type of player that he was," James said. "He has explosiveness. He took over games." He did against the Cavs. Williams helped Milwaukee go 3-1 against Cleveland last season, averaging 26 points and nine assists in the four games. This season, Williams has stabilized Cleveland's backcourt, given the club another scoring option and become the point guard the Cavs have coveted since James turned pro. Williams has been everything the Cavs could have hoped for. "Even a little bit more," James said. And James has been even more than Williams imagined. "I could go on and on about how great a player he is," Williams said. "He cares about his players and his teammates. Just like we don't go anywhere without him, he doesn't go anywhere without us." |