Word: portioned
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...most elaborate part of the set was a cylindrical platform which hung from supports above the stage and lifted Puff Daddy into the air carrying him over various portions of the audience. However, Puff Daddy used this contraption only briefly during the show when he had a contest to see which section of the Centrum was the loudest. For nearly 15 minutes Puffy hovered above the crowd asking fans stage left, center and right to scream as loud as they could. Having declared that the audience was the loudest he had ever seen, Puff Daddy had all of his fans...
...classics from his previous album The Coming. The charismatic Rhymes, along with rapper The Last Boy Scout, gave a solid performance. His unique, free-flowing lyrical style and tremendous energy were well received by the concertgoers, who were out of their seats and dancing during his entire portion of the concert. During his signature song, "Woo Hah!! Got You All In Check," the capacity crowd repeatedly bounced up and down while singing along. The highlight of his act was the "Take off your clothes" dance during which he and the Last Boy Scout stripped down to boxer shorts and sang...
Puff Daddy's portion of the concert paled in comparison to Busta Rhymes' honest lyricism. Accompanied by his long-time sidekick, Mase, Puff spent more time changing costumes and addressing the audience than actually performing. He did a number of tributes to slain rapper Tupac Shakur during which he played Tupac songs and asked the audience to sing along with the records. There were also a number of tributes to Puffy's former rap partner, the Notorious BIG, who was shot to death last year...
Associated with each user account on fas is a home directory. Most users can store a maximum of 6.5 megabytes of data, and the largest portion of this is usually taken up by mail folders. A number of other files exist in your space that you might never notice, and one such file is "dead.letter...
Spalding reconfirmed for TIME that the marriage, which he calls "a childish scamp," actually took place. He disputes a significant detail in another part of the book, the now much reduced portion dealing with Marilyn Monroe. Hersh writes that in 1960, on an occasion when Monroe was binging on alcohol and pills, Spalding went to Los Angeles at J.F.K.'s request "to make sure she was O.K.--that is, to make sure that Monroe did not speak out of turn." Spalding confirms the trip but emphatically denies that it was in any way intended to keep her quiet...