Video: Joe Ayoob achieves paper airplane throwing immortality

Joe Ayoob is finally known as something other than being the bust that replaced Aaron Rodgers at Cal - he's now a world record holder.

(Paul Sakuma/AP)On Monday, Ayoob threw a paper airplane 226 feet, 10 inches to break the world record by 19 and a half feet. Watch the video, it's impressive and a grade school teacher's worst nightmare.

The measurement still needs to be verified by the Guinness Book of World Records before Ayoob can start making T-Shirts and signing book deals.

The only thing better than the throw itself is the commentary on the video and the pure elation after the thing lands. You'd think Ayoob had just led Cal to an 8-4 season. Oh wait

This had to be a pretty proud moment for Ayoob (though he didn't really dress for a momentous occasion, did he?), who didn't exactly pan out as the highly touted San Francisco Community College transfer everyone expected him to be. Ayoob started nine games after Nate Longshore suffered an injury. Ayoob was 5-4 in 2005 and threw for 1,707 yards and 15 touchdowns. However, 2006 was less than spectacular. As a backup, he completed 9-of-22 passes for 187 yards and a score. He went undrafted and ended up in the arena league until 2010.

[Related: New coaches, wild offenses in Pac-12 spotlight this spring ]

That must have been when he honed his skills as an expert paper airplane hurler. It's not just about randomly tossing the thing into the air, folks. Ayoob threw the plane at the perfect angle to reach maximum height and maximum speed on its decent. I sound like I know what I'm talking about, right? All those aeronautical engineering classes really paid off.

So, congrats to Ayoob, who is now a hero to fourth graders everywhere.

- - - High-five to Kegs 'N Eggs. "Like" Dr. Saturday on Facebook for football conversations and stuff you won't see on the blog. And follow Dr. Saturday at its new home on Twitter: @YahooDrSaturday

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Video: Joe Ayoob achieves paper airplane throwing immortality

Worming our way to immortality

A flatworm parasite found on the gills of a fiddler ray caught off Mandurah, WA. Picture: Ian Whittington, SA Museum Source: Supplied

THE key to immortality could be in flatworms, scientists say. The worms hold the remarkable ability to regenerate time and time again - effectively living forever.

If one is cut in half, the head portion grows a tail and the tail portion grows a head.

Cut it into 20 pieces and 20 new worms, each an exact copy of the first, are created.

This has been exploited by Nottingham University scientists who have created a colony of more than 20,000 worms - which, in the wild, live in lakes and ponds - all from one original, whose bodies and organs do not appear to age.

They are confident a single worm which did not divide would live forever unless it catches an infection or another illness.

Researcher Dr Aziz Aboobaker said: "In my opinion, they are immortal."

It is hoped that the research will help develop treatments that allow humans to stay fit and healthy long into old age.

The experiments focused on Schmidtea mediterranea, a relative of an African parasite.

The flatworm has a simple brain, which can be regenerated by stem cells found elsewhere in the body. In contrast, an earthworm would die if cut in two.

Key to the flatworm's immortality are telomeres - tiny biological clocks that cap the ends of chromosomes. In the flatworm, the telomeres stay intact, allowing cells to divide many times and stopping ageing in its tracks. 

Dr Aboobaker and colleague Dr Thomas Tan said: "The next goals for us are to understand the mechanisms in more detail and understand more about how you evolve an immortal animal."

Knowing more about how the worms safely do this could help stem cell scientists achieve their Holy Grail - the growth of new hearts, livers or brain cells in a dish. It could also speed the development of drugs that stave off diseases of old age.

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Worming our way to immortality

Flatworms could hold key to immortality

Flatworms, known as planarian worms, have long fascinated scientists because they have an extraordinary ability to regenerate.

A planarian worm split lengthways or crossways will regenerate into two separate living worms.

The researchers found that flatworms can continuously maintain the length of a crucial part of their DNA, known as telomeres, during regeneration.

Dr Aboobaker's team studied two types of planarian – those that reproduce sexually, like humans, and those that reproduce asexually by simply dividing in two.

Both types appear to regenerate indefinitely by growing new muscles, skin, guts and even entire brains again and again, but the asexual ones also renew their stocks of a key enzyme which may mean they can be immortal, the study said.

Scientists know that one of the key factors associated with ageing cells is telomere length.

Telomeres are sections of DNA that cap the ends of chromosomes, protecting them from damage and the loss of cell functions linked to ageing.

Shorter telomeres are thought to be an indicator of faster ageing.

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Flatworms could hold key to immortality

Minecraft Maps – Fountain of Immortality w/ ChimneySwift11 – Pt. 3 – Video

11-02-2012 16:01 Ratings are Appreciated! ChimneySwift's Channel: youtube.com Map Download: bit.ly My Texture Pack: bit.ly Secondary Channel: youtube.com Twitter: twitter.com Facebook: tinyurl.com Twitch.TV: twitch.tv The music comes from the in-game Minecraft soundtrack. If you would like to listen without having Minecraft playing, you can download it here: c418.bandcamp.com

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Girls Swimming: Kinnelon Girls Swimming fall in state regional semifinal

'This is the best team I've ever coached. I told them its like a cooking recipe that makes good teams, talent you need that, come together as a team, [and] have all the stars align and it did, eight teams are swimming today and we're one of them and we are happy that we are one of them, I was proud of them.'

Kinnelon Head Girls Swimming Coach

Brian Boardman

After a herculean run at a state title, including a sectional championship, the Kinnelon girls swim team's run at swimming immortality came to a dramatic end following an 87-83 loss to Haddonfield on Tuesday.

"Our girls swam the best meet they've ever swam before and that team is obviously the better team," said Kinnelon Head Coach Brian Boardman.

Haddonfield started strong taking first and second place in the initial 200-yard medley relay staking them to an early 10-4 lead.

"We took it in the chin, they came out and they were flying [and] then we fought back like a good fighter we got right back up and we started taking it to them," said Boardman.

Kinnelon turned to junior Captain Abby Fisher who helped turn the momentum in the Lady Colts favor. Fisher's first place in the 200 freestyle with a time of 1:58.75 turned the tide in the Kinnelon's favor as they began to dominate in individual races.

"The team more than ever before is a family, everybody knows that you're here for yourself but more importantly you're here for the team," said Fischer. "I think that when your team is losing you can tell just by how much faster [your teammates] swim seeing that it is a team sport and we are here for each other."

The Lady Colts were able to continue to dominate after the 200 yard individual Medley gave Kinnelon their first lead of the afternoon. Mackenzie Heffernan and Christina Cirillo's first and second place finish netted the Lady Colts a much-needed ten points which when coupled with Rene Bogda's finish gave the Lady Colts a 24-22 lead.

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Girls Swimming: Kinnelon Girls Swimming fall in state regional semifinal

Scientists find key to immortality for asexual worms

LONDON (Reuters) - Who wants to live forever? Some flatworms do, even if it means no sex.

British scientists have found that a species of flatworm can overcome the process of ageing to become potentially immortal and say their work sheds light on possibilities of alleviating ageing and age-related characteristics in human cells.

In a study published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences journal on Monday the researchers found that the flatworms, known as planarian worms, can continuously maintain the length of a crucial part of their DNA, known as telomeres, during regeneration.

"Our data satisfy one of the predictions about what it would take for an animal to be potentially immortal," said Aziz Aboobaker, who led the research at Britain's University of Nottingham. "The next goals for us are to understand the mechanisms in more detail and to understand more about how you evolve an immortal animal."

Planarian worms have long fascinated scientists because they have an extraordinary ability to regenerate. A planarian worm split lengthwise or crosswise will regenerate into two separate living worms.

Aboobaker's team studied two types of planarian - those that reproduce sexually, like humans, and those that reproduce asexually by simply dividing in two.

Both types appear to regenerate indefinitely by growing new muscles, skin, guts and even entire brains again and again, Aboobaker explained in a statement about the work, but the asexual ones also renew their stocks of a key enzyme which may mean they can be immortal.

Scientists know that one of the key factors associated with ageing cells is telomere length. Telomeres are sections of DNA that cap the ends of chromosomes, protecting them from damage and the loss of cell functions linked to ageing. Shorter telomeres are thought to be an indicator of faster ageing.

Previous research -- which won the Nobel Prize for Medicine in 2009 -- has shown that telomeres can be maintained by the activity of an enzyme called telomerase.

In most sexually reproducing organisms the enzyme is most active during early development, but Aboobaker's team found that in the asexual worms, the planarian version of the enzyme is dramatically increased during regeneration - a factor that allows stem cells to maintain their telomeres as they divide to replace missing tissues.

Douglas Kell, chief executive of the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council which part-funded the study, described the finding as "exciting" and said it "contributes significantly to our fundamental understanding of some of the processes involved in ageing."

The work also "builds strong foundations for improving health and potentially longevity in other organisms, including humans," he said in a statement.

(Editing by Paul Casciato)

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Scientists find key to immortality for asexual worms

Minecraft Maps – Fountain of Immortality w/ ChimneySwift11 – Pt. 2 – Video

10-02-2012 03:23 Ratings are Appreciated! ChimneySwift's Channel: youtube.com Map Download: bit.ly My Texture Pack: bit.ly Secondary Channel: youtube.com Twitter: twitter.com Facebook: tinyurl.com Twitch.TV: twitch.tv The music comes from the in-game Minecraft soundtrack. If you would like to listen without having Minecraft playing, you can download it here: c418.bandcamp.com

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Minecraft Maps - Fountain of Immortality w/ ChimneySwift11 - Pt. 2 - Video

Dmitry Itskov on "Project ‘Immortality 2045’ — Russian Experience" at Singularity Summit 2011 – Video

25-10-2011 16:37 The Singularity Summit 2011 was a TED-style two-day event at the historic 92nd Street Y in New York City. The next event will take place in San Francisco, on October 13 and 14, 2012. For more information, visit: http://www.singularitysummit.com

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Dmitry Itskov on "Project 'Immortality 2045' -- Russian Experience" at Singularity Summit 2011 - Video

Fountain of Immortality w/ AntVenom #1 (HD) – Video

08-02-2012 15:12 Swifters be sure to leave a LIKE if you enjoyed the video! AntVenom's Channel: http://www.youtube.com Map Download: bit.ly My Twitter: http://www.twitter.com My Facebook: http://www.facebook.com 2nd Channel: http://www.youtube.com Special thanks to the map creator for putting me on his list of people he wanted to play this map!

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Fountain of Immortality w/ AntVenom #1 (HD) - Video

Minecraft Maps – Fountain of Immortality w/ ChimneySwift11 – Pt. 1 – Video

08-02-2012 12:12 Ratings are Appreciated! ChimneySwift's Channel: youtube.com Map Download: bit.ly My Texture Pack: bit.ly Secondary Channel: youtube.com Twitter: twitter.com Facebook: tinyurl.com Twitch.TV: twitch.tv The music comes from the in-game Minecraft soundtrack. If you would like to listen without having Minecraft playing, you can download it here: c418.bandcamp.com

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Fast Foodie: Big Bob's Burgers

Veronica Luna

A seriously stacked bacon cheeseburger with fries and onion rings from Big Bob's Burgers.

Can a chef with CIA creds achieve immortality with an onion ring batter? (More on that later.) Robert Riddle, the Bob of the Big Bob moniker, has relocated his burger shack from a dump near Fort Sam to a relative palace on Hildebrand just west of the railroad tracks. It's at the very least light and airy, and there's an emergently pleasant sliver of backyard patio that must really reverberate on live-music nights. All told, it's a definite step up for a chef who has flirted with fine food and Cajun cuisine over a checkered past.

At least the bacon cheeseburger doesn't bite it. The sesame bun is good and toasty (mm, mm, mm, mm, mm), the bacon is crisp (just the way I like it), the patty is tasty enough (yes, it's more done than we would do at home), and the rest of "the works" is all in very good balance (a fancy term for a burger, but we are talking CIA here). In short, it's a very good burger, and chances are that Bob may even have cooked it himself. Just as good are the skin-on fries, well-done and glossed with just a sheen of grease. No floppy, wilty here. But even better are the onion rings in a tempura-like beer batter lightly sweetened with honey and scented with caraway. Loved 'em, great crunch, even though I admit to missing the caraway. If you ask correctly, Bob will do a mixed basket of fries and rings.

Other options include the usual litany of burgers (including the Big Filthy with too much on it for any first-timer, according to Bob), plus chicken fingers, a Buffalo chicken sandwich, and a dog duo. On occasion there are smoked items such as pulled pork from Bob's patio smoker. And there is chili. It's a decent chili with a reasonably coarse grind and lots of tomato — but better characterized by what's not in it (beans, for example, and a serious chili base) than what is. We suggest Bob put his chef's hat back on, if only briefly, to come up with a more cookoff-worthy product — without beans, of course.

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Fast Foodie: Big Bob's Burgers

Fox & Weeks: Family business's success crosses generations

Few Savannah companies qualify for immortality.

One just happens to deal with the business of death.

Fox & Weeks Funeral Directors is celebrating their 130th year of operation in 2012.  Leaders of the family owned business shared the secrets to longevity Wednesday at the Savannah Morning News auditorium during a BiS Forum sponsored by Hancock Askew, the HunterMaclean law firm, Abshire Public Relations and Marketing and Business in Savannah. Click here to view phots from the forum.

The “cornerstones” of Fox & Weeks’ business model include service, attention to detail, integrity, generosity, flexibility, adaptability, compassion and a sense of responsibility to the community, according to fourth-generation co-owner Jim Weeks.

“Each generation has played an integral part in the company’s success and have shown those same qualities that have helped us thrive,” Weeks said.

Responsibility is foremost, Weeks said. The Weeks family sold ownership of the business for a 16-year period, and the parent company’s approach nearly made the fourth generation of the family the last to work in the industry.

Jim and his brother, Steve, continued to manage the business following the sale in 1987. Then the new owners, based in Connecticut, sold the Fox & Weeks operation in 1991 to Service Corporation International (SCI), a giant in the funeral industry. Twelve years into that relationship, Jim and Steve became fed up with SCI's lack of interest in the family's "cornerstones"  and decided to either buy the company back or retire.

SCI agreed to sell the business to the Weeks in 2003. The family has spent the years since building on the reputation established by the first three generations.

Jim and Steve Weeks and their sons, Matt and Scott, have adapted the business to changing times. Fox & Weeks began offering live streaming video of funerals and burials. started utilizing social media tools for obituaries and restructured their service charges because of the impact of recession on clients.

Matt and Scott – the fifth-generation – recently launched a new service for the company: Pet memorial and cremation services.

Known as Pets at Peace, the service is committed  to serving pets with the same standards of dignity, respect and care Fox & Weeks shows to human family members, Scott Weeks said.

“People really do see pets as part of the family, and sometimes pets are their families,” Scott Weeks said. “It seemed like a natural for us to extend services to pets.”

The Weeks family entered the undertaking business in 1882. John Fox, who was married to a Weeks, started the company along with his brother-in-law James S. Weeks in a house on Liberty Street.

Weeks’ son took over when his father and uncle retired – Fox had no children – and the business remained downtown for a century, including a stint in the large estate on Drayton Street that today is home to the Mansion on Forsyth Park.

Jim and Steve Weeks expanded the business in 1986, opening a southside chapel on Hodgson Memorial Drive. The company grew again in 1998 with the addition of a Whitemarsh Island chapel.

“Fox & Weeks is a tribute to business longevity due to good leadership and the ability to adapt,” Savannah Morning News Publisher Michael Traynor said in introducing Jim Weeks to the audience.

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Fox & Weeks: Family business's success crosses generations

Fountain of Immortality w/ AntVenom #2 (HD) – Video

09-02-2012 06:26 Swifters be sure to leave a LIKE if you enjoyed the video! AntVenom's Channel: http://www.youtube.com Map Download: bit.ly My Twitter: http://www.twitter.com My Facebook: http://www.facebook.com 2nd Channel: http://www.youtube.com Special thanks to the map creator for putting me on his list of people he wanted to play this map!

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Fountain of Immortality w/ AntVenom #2 (HD) - Video

LoL Moments – League of Legends – Immortal Caitlyn ! – S2 #4 – Video

04-02-2012 19:34 I will now be doing $20 RP Monthly giveaway for my LoL Moments series! Refer to this video for more info: http://www.youtube.com DONT FORGET TO WATCH IN HD AND SUBSCRIBE! Don't forget to comment, thumbs up, and subscribe!! Also do not forget to like me on FACEBOOK. Welcome to my LoL Moment series, this is where I will be showcasing funny, awesome, fail moments done by me, my friends, or the subs! I will be trying to upload these daily, so be sure to send in your clips to get featured! Help bump this thread for me : na.leagueoflegends.com **************************************************************************************** HOW TO SUBMIT CLIPS: Submit all LoLReplay files to: redmercy1991@gmail.com Be sure to include the start/end time of the moment, your summoner name, the champion you played, and a short description of what happens! Keep in mind I put properly submitted e-mails first, also a catchy title will UP your chances! **************************************************************************************** LoL Sign-up Link: signup.leagueoflegends.com Facebook: http://www.facebook.com Twitter: twitter.com Skype: redmercy1337 Check out the previous LoL Moments: http://www.youtube.com My Stream: http://www.own3d.tv Music in intro: http://www.youtube.com Hope you enjoy and please sub rate and comment!!! 🙂

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LoL Moments - League of Legends - Immortal Caitlyn ! - S2 #4 - Video

Kittanning sophomore faces difficult path to immortality

For almost all freshmen wrestlers in the WPIAL, hopes of a perfect career record disappear in a matter of days.

History shows that a flawless four-year stretch is nearly impossible. But every once in a while there's an exception.

With the WPIAL individual postseason set to begin Saturday, Kittanning sophomore 120-pounder and defending Class AA state champion Jason Nolf remains unbeaten with a 75-0 career record. His success serves as a reminder of those who never lost and those who came close.

"I haven't really thought about (the streak)," said Nolf, who will wrestle in the Section 3-AA tournament next weekend. "I don't really talk to anybody about it. I just go with it."

Nolf is ranked No. 3 in the nation in his weight class by InterMat. Not surprisingly, he has a few gems on his resume.

During a 44-0 freshman season, Nolf, wrestling at 103 pounds, defeated Bethlehem Catholic sophomore Darian Cruz, 2-1, in the ultimate rideout period of their PIAA semifinal match. Cruz was ranked the top 103-pounder in the country by USA Wrestling and InterMat earlier that season.

In December, in the finals of Central Mountain High School's King of the Mountain tournament and the Southmoreland Holiday Classic, respectively, Nolf beat defending PIAA champions: Council Rock South senior Billy Rappo (103-pound title winner in Class AAA) and North Star senior Nick Roberts (112-pound winner in Class AA). Nolf defeated Rappo, 3-2, and prevailed, 11-6, in overtime against Roberts, a two-time state champion who, based on InterMat rankings, entered the match as the country's top-ranked 120-pounder.

"I really wasn't thinking about anything (long-term) because my dad was always telling me how tough it'd be," Nolf said, "so I didn't know what it was going to be like."

Between 1940 and 1961, three wrestlers went undefeated en route to four state titles -- the first was 1943 Waynesburg graduate Jim Conklin. None of the three wrestled more than 84 matches in their career, though.

The standard for high school perfection in Pennsylvania went to another level in the early 1990s, when Jefferson-Morgan graduate Cary Kolat finished his career 137-0. He had 80 pins and 36 technical falls. According to a Sports Illustrated story on the four-time Class AA state champion, Kolat allowed just five reversals and never surrendered back points.

"The fans always went crazy if somebody was within three points," he said. "You'd have thought I'd lost out there."

Kolat, who wrestled in the 119-, 125-, 130- and 135-pound weight classes, won PIAA titles in 1989 through 1992 and was named Outstanding Wrestler each time.

"I didn't just want to be a great wrestler; I wanted to be the best," said Kolat, who remains the state's most recent undefeated four-time champion. "And to be the best, you had to knock off some records along the way. If somebody won four titles, you had to win four titles in a more dominating fashion. ... I probably didn't focus on (the streak) as much as people would think. It didn't consume me."

Before Kolat, the undefeated streak buzz belonged to North Allegheny's Ty Moore.

Moore, who started as a 98-pound freshman in 1987, became the first wrestler in state history to win his first 100 matches.

The streak lasted through his sophomore season, when he claimed a PIAA title at 105 pounds. But in the 112-pound finals of the 1989 WPIAL Class AAA tournament, Moore, a junior, finally lost, as his 105th bout went to Connellsville's Jeff Stepanic, who won, 4-3, after trailing by two with 30 seconds left.

"At that moment, I wasn't thinking it would be a positive," said Moore, who considered Stepanic a friend. "It kind of got the monkey off my back, though."

Moore finished with record of 146-1 and won four state titles.

"For me, at least, (the loss) happened at the right time," he said. "I don't know if I would've won the state title if I hadn't lost in the WPIAL finals. It was a good smack in the head that made me realize that if you take care of the small details, everything else will work out."

McGuffey's Jeff Breese joined the ranks of the elite when he went 41-0 on the way to a PIAA title as a 103-pound freshman in 1999. But, during the fall of his sophomore year, he tore his right ACL while playing soccer, and the dream of a perfect record began to derail.

Breese decided to rehabilitate his knee rather than undergo surgery. He headed into the season opener against Keystone Oaks with a brace.

"I just needed to know," Breese said. "I'd gone through all of practice up to the first dual of the year fine. The doctor basically told me it was a 50-50 shot."

Breese had a comfortable lead over Keystone Oaks' Jim Regan when his knee gave out. The pain was too much to bear. Breese lost by injury default and sat out the rest of the season. He finished his career with two PIAA championships and a 103-9 record.

"There's a lot of luck that goes with being good," Breese said. "No matter how hard you work at something, there's no guarantee that just because you did everything right, you're going to get what you want. The other guy is trying, too, and probably has done everything right, too."

There's no way to predict Nolf's fate. As Moore, Breese and others know, the path toward perfection twists and turns. But Kolat isn't sure why his accomplishment remains so rare.

"I kind of thought someone would've come along and duplicated it by now," Kolat said. "It's probably only a matter of time before it's broken."

More Leader Times Sports headlines

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Kittanning sophomore faces difficult path to immortality

In death, Detroit musician Jay Dee achieves immortality

In his brief 32 years on earth, the Detroit musician born Jay Yancey accomplished quite a lot: thousands of studio recordings, collaborations with game-changing rappers and mainstream stars, a dazzling reputation in the hip-hop underground.

But in death, it seems increasingly clear, the prolific producer known as J Dilla has achieved something even greater:

Immortality.

Amid an ever-growing mythology and stature around the world, Dilla?s music, life and legacy will be celebrated with a hometown Dilla Day, including a Friday night concert at the Fillmore Detroit featuring artists such as Busta Rhymes and Jay Electronica.

It was six years ago this week that Dilla succumbed to a lengthy and brutal battle with a rare blood disease and lupus, which in his final two years left him wheelchair bound when he wasn?t hospitalized.

Dilla was certainly exalted by the hip-hop cognoscenti during his career, thanks to the pioneering music he created for artists such as A Tribe Called Quest, D?Angelo, Slum Village and others, along with his own four-star solo albums. In-the-know fans regarded him as a musical savant, capable of bending samples into dizzying new shapes while meshing live instrumentation and deceptively complex rhythms. His instrumental tracks were hailed as sonic masterpieces, stitched with a craftsman?s skill and finessed with musical soul.

But it?s only since his 2006 death that the Dilla legend has truly snowballed, a kind of folk phenomenon in a globalized, electronically linked world. Annual ?Dilla Days? have mushroomed across the globe ? New York, Los Angeles, Moscow, London. Record traders consider him one of the most bootlegged artists in hip-hop history, and leaks of his unreleased tracks send the Internet into periodic frenzies. Even his name and image have become hot items, emblazoned on everything from skateboards to cigarette lighters, mostly from manufacturers unaffiliated with the Dilla estate.

?Today you can wear his face on a shirt around the world, and everybody knows who he is,? says Detroit rapper-producer Chuck Inglish, one half of the duo Cool Kids. Some Dilla friends and colleagues draw comparisons to figures such as Bob Marley, Kurt Cobain, even Dale Earnhardt ? personalities whose deaths only served to make them larger than life.

?He?s known as the greatest hip-hop producer in history ? that?s how he?s becoming revered,? says Jonathon Taylor, head of the new Yancey Media Group (YMG), official caretaker of the Dilla legacy. ?He?s now being viewed in the way that Hendrix is viewed in the world of rock ?n? roll guitar.?

Celebrating Dilla day

If you hopped online this morning and glanced at Twitter, you?d have seen it in action: Feb 7 is Dilla?s birthday, and the tributes and remembrances poured in from hip-hop fans across the globe ? thousands of tweets, often dozens by the minute ? as the term ?Dilla? became one of Twitter?s hottest trending topics.

At least two key factors lie behind the growing Dilla phenomenon. There?s the familiar romanticization that comes to artists who die young, the enduring mystique of a genius cut down in his prime. And there?s the simple matter of exposure: As his music has spread virally ? touted by the likes of Kanye West and often circulated via breathless online leaks ? legions of new fans have become acquainted with the Dilla canon.

Aspiring producers, including those at a Berklee College of Music class dedicated to his work, scrutinize his tracks, seeking to unlock the artistry behind it all.

?People who discover Dilla get really into him,? says Inglish. ?There are very few artists where you hear one song and want to go back and hear everything they ever made. Dilla is one of those.?

?He was a magician. People continue to pick up on that, and so it?s getting mythologized,? says Gamall Awad, a New York publicist who represented Dilla for several album releases in the early 2000s. ?And I don?t see that slowing down. I see it expanding.?

Still, Awad calls it bittersweet.

?Everybody is happy to see that he?s being recognized posthumously. It?s great that his influence is spreading,? he says. ?But you can?t help wishing that it had happened more so when he was alive.?

Protecting Dilla's identity, legacy

YMG was formed last year by Dilla?s mother, Detroiter Maureen (Ma Dukes) Yancey, in an effort to wrangle and streamline a Dilla legacy that seemed to be spiraling out of the family?s control.

?We needed a structure that could protect and gatekeep his identity and legacy,? says Taylor, a longtime family friend. He says the group will ?groom the Dilla legacy in the manner of Miles Davis,? overseeing album releases and merchandise, enforcing the artist?s copyrights and likeness, and curating 1,000-plus unreleased Dilla tracks stored on tapes and digital drives.

Taylor says there?s a duty to maintain the integrity associated with the Dilla name. ?This is sacred ground,? he says. ?I have a major responsibility with this man?s catalog. There are a lot of people who will be holding me accountable here.?

This week kicks off a new, formal chapter in the Dilla story: Friday brings the Fillmore show and a website launch ? OfficialJDilla.com ? with a new record in the wings. ?Rebirth of Detroit? features hometown rappers such as Danny Brown and Guilty Simpson performing to previously unreleased Dilla tracks, and will be released in late May at Detroit?s Movement festival.

It may be that Dilla is finally achieving the mainstream stature that had largely eluded him during life.

?Now you?ve got people in the Philippines who are worshiping Dilla,? says Detroit rapper Beej. ?I believe he was close to becoming that next big producer with a household name, on that very top mainstream level. There?s no telling what would have happened if he was still here.?

Contact BRIAN McCOLLUM: 313-223-4450 or mccollum@freepress.com

Dilla Day Detroit

With Busta Rhymes, Jay Electronica, Asher Roth, Phife Dawg, Phat Kat, Danny Brown, Guilt Simpson, DJ J-Rocc, DJ Dez, Fat Ray, Chuck Inglish, Nick Speed and others.

8 p.m. Friday

The Fillmore Detroit, 2115 Woodward, Detroit

313-961-5450

$38

Dilla Day Detroit Youth Day

Art exhibit, documentary screening, interactive activities

Noon to 5 p.m. Saturday

Virgil H. Carr Cultural Center

311 E. Grand River Ave., Detroit

313-965-8430

Free

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In death, Detroit musician Jay Dee achieves immortality

Local skateboarder sets his second world record

Posted: Monday, January 30, 2012 5:30 pm | Updated: 6:46 pm, Mon Jan 30, 2012.

MOUNT LAUREL — A Guinness World Record holder chased skateboarding immortality for a second time Monday afternoon.

And it appears he succeeded.

On a quiet, residential street, Eric Carlin, 19, performed 44 ollies in a minute. He bested the record of 42 set by professional skateboarder and MTV personality Rob Dyrdek.

The accomplishment was the Burlington County College student's second dalliance with Guinness. In July, he performed 247 straight ollies without his feet touching the ground. The feat broke the record of 215 set in 2007 by Dyrdek.

"I like to set a lot of goals. I think that's the best way to accomplish stuff," Carlin said.

Although he is not targeting the skating pro's records, Carlin acknowledged being inspired by Internet videos showing Dyrdek in action.

"He's a good skater," the new record holder said.

An ollie is a trick in which the rider and board take to the air without the use of the skater's hands. Although it seems simplistic, it is a test of strength and endurance.

The Lenape High School graduate said he once did 54 ollies in a minute, but only has a friend's word to back his claim.

Guinness spokeswoman Sara Wilcox confirmed Carlin's title for the most consecutive ollies. She said the corporation also has received a claim from Carlin for the most ollies in a minute.

"We're waiting for him to send in the documentation to review it," Wilcox said.

As they did Monday, friends videotaped Carlin's performance in July for submission to Guinness. He later received confirmation from the company as well as a certificate recognizing his title.

Carlin said he plans to immediately send his latest video to Guinness, along with other required paperwork.

Monday's record-breaking feat also was witnessed by Carlin's Mount Laurel friends.

Dylan Barlow, 16, videotaped the performance, while Joe Barone, 13, snapped photographs. David Clayton, 20, acted as timekeeper and offered words of encouragement during several failed attempts that immediately preceded Carlin's record-breaking run.

Barlow and Clayton also assisted with documenting Carlin's first world record.

Initially using a nearby cul-de-sac, Carlin realized that water in the road and the grade were obstacles to success. Changing course, he started skating downhill on Hunter Lane. Two attempts later, the computer science major seemingly earned his second Guinness World Record title.

Kristen Coppock: 609-871-8073; email: kcoppock@phillyBurbs.com; Twitter: @kcoppockbct

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Local skateboarder sets his second world record

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