King rudy acosta
Author: s | 2025-04-24
Rudy Acosta, the former gangsta rap impresario, or King Rudy, as he likes to be known. King Rudy, 34, lives in Chicago. Acosta explained, There was a guy who climbed
Rudy Acosta - Rudy Acosta/Broker/GRI - Acosta Realty - LinkedIn
She loved. Those good feelings lasted just nine months-or until Sears learned that the lot next door had actually been rezoned two years before so the owner, the developer and hip-hop record producer Rudy Acosta, could build a huge house. He planned to put up a 44-foot-high, approximately 7,000-square-foot structure festooned with turrets and battlements-in other words, a house that resembled a medieval castle, only without the moat.The castle would dwarf Sears’s house-2,100 feet square and 26 feet high-and would be dramatically out of scale with the other houses in the neighborhood. Sears was aghast. She set out to discover how this had happened, with the hope that she might prevent the castle from being built.So far, she and her neighbors have failed-construction got under way last November-but their efforts have opened a window on Chicago’s zoning procedures and the questionable circumstances and interlocking relationships that led to this case. “I wouldn’t want that house built next to my house,” says Margaret Laurino, the alderman for the 39th Ward, which now includes the Independence Park neighborhood after redistricting. Laurino says that if she had been in office when the lot came up for rezoning, she would have opposed the change. But in the Kafkaesque world of Chicago zoning, even Rudy Acosta is angry over the events so far. In a recent obscenity-salted interview, Acosta vented his frustrations with the neighborhood residents and with Laurino, claiming that he had followed all the rules and shouldn’t have had to face so many obstacles, including the denial of a variance that would have allowed him to build closer to Sears’s house. “Alderman [Michael] Wojcik signed off on the rezoning,” says Acosta. “Laurino was in full support of the variance until the neighbors got upset.” (Acosta claims Laurino even sent him a letter of
‘King Rudy’ Acosta pleads guilty in deal with
Click image to enlarge| Download archival scanRodolfo Acosta (left, in blue) co-stars in "Apache Warrior" (20th Century-Fox, 1957), which was partially filmed at Vasquez Rocks in Agua Dulce.Lobby card No. 8 (of 8), 11x14 inches. The scene appears to have been set up on a sound stage, but considering the open flame (if it truly is), then perhaps the photo was shot at the Rocks.It would have been a BW publicity photograph that was subsequently colorized for the lobby card. The numbers "57-409" in the lower right-hand corner mean this was the 409th film handled in 1957by National Screen Service Corp., which licenced advertising materials to distributors who provided them to local theaters."Apache Warrior" is subtitled "The true story of the Apache Kid," played here by Keith Larsen (1924-2006). The real Apache Kid, Haskay-bay-nay-ntayl, was a White Mountain Apache scout for the U.S. Cavalry who participated in the 1886 capture of Geronimo. The following year, a series of altercations involving the Kid and other scouts in his chargeresulted in their court-martial and imprisonment in Alcatraz. The convictions were overturned in 1888, but their Apache enemies, who obviously were many, successfully campaignedfor their re-arrest. En route to the territorial prison in Yuma, the Kid and eight others overpowered the guards and escaped into the desert.A massive manhunt led to the recapture of all of them except the Kid. He rode into legend, never to be seen again. The Apache Kid Wildnerness in New Mexico is named for him.The movie version also featuresJim Davis,John Miljan,Damian O'Flynn,George Keymas,Lane Bradford,Dehl Berti,Eugenia Paul,Nick Thompson,Eddie Little Sky,Michael Carr,Ray Kellogg,Karl "Killer" Davis,David Carlile andAllan Nixon.Stunt players areVance Howard,Walter Kray,Cliff Lyons,Mark Sheeler andBoyd Stockman.About Rodolfo Acosta.Mexican-American screen actor Rodolfo "Rudy" Acosta (1920-1974) was inducted posthumously into the Newhall Walk of Western Stars in 2013. He is the father of Santa Clarita Assemblyman Dante Acosta (who also has his SAG card).According to his Texas birth certificate, Rodolfo entered the world as a U.S. citizen on July 29, 1920. He was born in the family home at 609 E. 3rd Avenue in El Paso's El Segundo Barrio, the city's second-oldest neighborhood and an arrival point since the 1880s for Mexican immigrants crossing the Rio Grande through Ciudad Juarez. Both parents hailed from Mexico: José Acosta (aka Joseph R.), a machinist, and his wife, Alexandria Perez (aka Alejandrina).According to anthology authors Luis Reyes and Peter Rubie,[1] "When [Rodolfo] was three years old, his family moved to California, where he attended Los Angeles City College and UCLA." The 1940 U.S. Census shows Rodolfo, the eldest of four children, as a college student living at home with his parents and siblings at 3736 Mercury Avenue in the Montecito Heights section of Los Angeles.There is much erroneous information on and off the Internet about Rodolfo's early years. Some sources incorrectly state he was born in Chihuahua, Mexico; others incorrectly state he was born in the Chamizac section of El Paso, which is actually one barrio to the east. Some falsely claim he attended a‘King Rudy’ Acosta pleads guilty - PressReader
Lincoln High School in northern California; in fact, Abraham Lincoln High School was then and is now in Lincoln Heights, right down the road from Montecito Heights. Some say he was born Rodolfo Acosta Perez, and although it's true he used this traditional Mexican naming convention in 1952 when he traveled to Brazil — where his visa states, for whatever reason, that he was born in Ciudad Juarez — his full legal birth name was "Rodolfo Acosta" (NMI).Returning to our timeline, Reyes and Rubie continue: "He was fascinated by acting, studying it at school as well as at the Pasadena Playhouse. His success in dramatic studies reached a peak at age 19 [probably 20] when he accepted a prize scholarship from the Palacio de Bellas Artes in Mexico City, where he stayed for three years."Back in the States in 1943, he used the Mercury Avenue address when he signed his draft card (as Rudolph Perez Acosta) on March 23. He stood 5-feet-11 and weighed 180 pounds. According to Reyes and Rubie, he was assigned to naval intelligence. He reportedly married a woman he met in Casablanca. The union did not last much more than a few years.After the war, he landed a role as one of the minions of the crime boss in the 1946 Spanish-language film, "Soy un Prófugo" ("I Am a Fugitive"), directed by Miguel M. Delgado. How it turned into the John Ford picture of essentially the same name ("The Fugitive") one year later, we don't know, but Ford cast Acosta in it, this time as a policeman, supposedly after seeing him in a stage production. It, too, was filmed in Mexico. Despite a cast headed by Henry Fonda and the top Mexican actors Dolores del Rio and Pedro Armendariz, "The Fugutive" lost $700,000 for RKO.[2]Acosta spent the late 1940s and 1950s going back and forth across the border to play major roles in Mexico and usually smaller roles in the U.S., often as a villain or a heavy. "In 1948, the famous Mexican actor-director Emilio Fernandez wrote for him the role of Paco, a gigolo, in the Mexican film classic Salón México. The part won Acosta Mexico's highest acting award, the Ariel," Reyes and Rubie write. "He was immediately signed by Hugo Fregonese to co-star with James Mason in the 1950 production, 'One Way Street,' which led to a Universal contract."Acosta also went back and forth from the big screen to the small, appearing in "The Big Valley," "Maverick," "Tales of Wells Fargo," "Bonanza" and other TV Westerns in the 1950s and 1960s.One of his most enduring roles was that of Silva, an Apache warrior who tries to kill John Wayne's character in the 1953 John Farrow screen adaptation of Louis L'Amour's "Hondo." Diehard fans of Duke Wayne still resent him for it.A few of the motion pictures and television episodes that featured Acosta were made in the Santa Clarita Valley, such as 1957's "Apache Warrior" from 20th Century-Fox, which used Vasquez Rocks, and the TV. Rudy Acosta, the former gangsta rap impresario, or King Rudy, as he likes to be known. King Rudy, 34, lives in Chicago. Acosta explained, There was a guy who climbedRudy Acosta - King City, California - (831)
Directed by Mel Gibson Writing Credits Mel Gibson ... (written by) & Farhad Safinia ... (written by) Cast (in credits order) complete, awaiting verification Rudy Youngblood ... Jaguar Paw Dalia Hernández ... Seven Jonathan Brewer ... Blunted Morris Birdyellowhead ... Flint Sky Carlos Emilio Báez ... Turtles Run Amilcar Ramírez ... Curl Nose Israel Contreras ... Smoke Frog Israel Ríos ... Cocoa Leaf Isabel Díaz ... Mother in Law (as Isabel Diaz) Espiridion Acosta Cache ... Old Story Teller Mayra Serbulo ... Young Woman Iazua Larios ... Sky Flower Lorena Heranandez ... Village Girl Itandehui Gutierrez ... Wife Sayuri Gutierrez ... Eldest Daughter Hiram Soto ... Fish Hunter Pepe Suárez ... First Temple Sacrifice (as José Suárez) Raoul Max Trujillo ... Zero Wolf (as Raoul Trujillo) Gerardo Taracena ... Middle Eye Rodolfo Palacios ... Snake Ink Ariel Galvan ... Hanging Moss Bernardo Ruiz ... Drunkards Four Ricardo Diaz Mendoza ... Cut Rock Richard Can ... Ten Peccary Carlos Ramos ... Monkey Jaw Ammel Rodrigo Mendoza ... Buzzard Hook Marco Antonio Argueta ... Speaking Wind Javier Escobar ... Vicious Holcane Fernando Hernandez ... High Priest Maria Isidra Hoil ... Oracle Girl Aquetzali García ... Oracle Girl Abel Woolrich ... Laughing Man Antonio Monroi ... Chilam (as Antonio Monroy) Nicolás Jasso ... Man on Temple Top Ronaldo Eknal ... Slave Auctioneer Miriam Tun ... Woman Auctioneer Rafael Velez ... King Diana Botello ... Queen Joaquin Rendon ... Head Chac Rest of cast listed alphabetically: Mauricio Amuy ... First Teaser Trailer Mann Running Cameo (uncredited) Nelly Castillo ... Jade Woman (uncredited) Fernando Lara ... Aztec Warrior (uncredited) Produced by Judi Bell ... line producer Vicki Christianson ... executive producer Bruce Davey ... producer Ned Dowd ... executive producer Mel Gibson ... producer Sergio Miranda ... producer: Costa Rica Farhad Safinia ... co-producer Music by James Horner Cinematography by Dean Semler ... director of photography Editing by John Wright Casting By Carla Hool Production Design by Thomas E. Sanders ... (as Tom Sanders) Art Direction by Roberto Bonelli Naaman Marshall Stefano Susco Theresa Wachter ... supervising art director Set Decoration by Jay Aroesty Costume Design by Mayes C. Rubeo Makeup Department Wade Ackley ... makeup effects artist: Captive Audience Cecilia Aguilar ... special makeup effects artist Nury Alamo ... prosthetic makeup artist: crowd Gerardo Aragon ... hair stylist (as Gerardo Aragon Pavon) Sandra Arai ... prosthetic makeup artist: crowd Eduardo Arcos ... assistant makeup artist Martin Astles ... makeup effects artist: Captive Audience Hector Avila ... assistant wigmaker Jesus Amed Azar Meza ... hair stylist Jonay Bacallado ... makeup artist: drawing Dian Bachar ... makeup effects artist: Captive Audience Victoria Banda ... assistant wigmaker David P. Barton ... makeup effects artist: Captive Audience (as‘King Rudy’ Acosta pleads guilty in deal with - inkl
By Matt Wood in News on Nov 15, 2005 4:48PMSo a man makes a fortune in real estate, starts his own hip-hop record label, and wants to enjoy his riches by building a castle, literally. What's wrong with that? Rudy Acosta's would-be neighbors have a big problem with his plans to build a 6,700 square foot, castle-like mansion on a vacant lot in Independence Park near Lawndale and Parkview Terrace overlooking the Kennedy Expressway. The home would feature 42-foot high turrets, including one overlooking the highway emblazoned with the coat of arms for Acosta's label, The Legion Records (danger, spinning graphics!)Neighbors are pissed because Acosta's castle would dwarf their homes, sitting five feet closer to the street with towers up to 16 feet taller than other homes on the block. They also claim he used political clout to score a zoning change for the lot that would allow him to build his manor. One of Acosta's lawyers, State Rep. John Fritchey, filed an affidavit attesting that he notified residents of the zoning change. The residents say they never heard about it, and expressed concerns over family ties in the deal. Acosta's other attorney is James Banks, nephew of Alderman William Banks, chairman of the City Council Zoning Committee that approved the zoning change. James Banks is also Fritchey's brother-in-law. We thinkest thou hast some explaining to do mi' Lord.Everyone involved denies any wrongdoing of course, and the city's Inspector General declined comment about an investigation into the matter. Fritchey couldn't produce any records of having notified residents of the zoning change, but thinks that the neighbors have a problem with Acosta and his hip-hop ties personally. The Legion Records is relatively new, but they signed local underground natives Do or Die earlier this year. Chicagoist thinks that the neighbors' complaintsRudy ‘King Rudy’ Acosta free on $2 million bond in drug case
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‘King Rudy’ Acosta pleads guilty in deal with prosecutorsa day
CNN has told anchor Jim Acosta that they want to move him from his morning ET slot to midnight ET, a less high profile time period where cable news networks have traditionally run reruns of programming from earlier in the day. Acosta has anchored a 10 am. ET show for almost a year, having moved from a weekend time slot. Acosta was told earlier this week that the network wanted to make the move as part of an anchor shuffle, according to a source. Status newsletter first reported on the potential move. During Donald Trump‘s first administration, Acosta was one of the most recognizable journalists on the beat as CNN’s chief White House correspondent. The president, irate over Acosta’s and the network’s coverage, often got into testy exchanges with him or berated him at press conferences and other events. At one point, the White House sought to revoke Acosta’s hard pass, and the network challenged the move in court. A federal judge sided with CNN and ordered the administration to return the pass. Acosta has continued to feature critical coverage of Trump in his morning hour. On Thursday, he ended his show with a defense of a free press that paraphrased one of Trump’s frequent attacks on the media. “We are not the enemy of the people; we are the defenders of the people,” Acosta said. Word of the proposal to move Acosta sparked some pushback on social media, particularly on Bluesky, the platform where many disaffected Twitter users have[Local] - ‘King Rudy’ Acosta pleads guilty in deal with - Reddit
Radio Sonido Pegasso playlist Abracadabra - En Realidad En directo Los Plebeyos - Donde Andaras 13:55 Tropical Panama - El Amor De Los Peseros 13:52 Los Acosta - Si Supieras 13:49 Los Hermanos Barron - La Negra Tomasa 13:46 Super Brujo - Adios Amor 13:43 Vaquero - Quiero Tenerte A Mi Lado 13:40 Los Angeles Mexicanos - Me Voy De Ti 13:37 Los Hermanos Barron - Tu Recuerdo Y Yo 13:34 Corus - Nuestro Amor 13:31 TOP 10 canciones en Radio Sonido Pegasso 1 El Pega Pega De Emilio Reyna-Cuando Cierro los Ojos 2 Los Acosta-Un Hombre Enamorado 3 Los Mier-Si Se Hubiera Casado Conmigo 4 Los Mier-Hablemos 5 Tropical Florida-La Carcacha 6 Los Acosta-Pacto de Amor 7 Los Acosta-Sólo Me Queda Olvidar 8 Los Rehenes-Llorando Esta 9 Abracadabra-En Realidad 10 Tropicalisimo Apache-Ojitos Mentirosos Recomendado Información acerca de la radio Géneromexican, pop CiudadCiudad de México IdiomaEspañol Contactos Comentarios ¿Cómo se calcula una calificación? Cuanto más gente escuche la estación de radio en los últimos 7 días, mayor será su posición en el ranking. Radios de México App Instala Radios de México gratis en tu smartphone y escucha tus estaciones de radio favoritas en línea.. Rudy Acosta, the former gangsta rap impresario, or King Rudy, as he likes to be known. King Rudy, 34, lives in Chicago. Acosta explained, There was a guy who climbedRudy Acosta in Illinois - Spokeo
In temporarily. She is enrolled in the Calverton school and Timmy begins acclimating her to the area by taking her on a picnic. He notices she always eats as if she is starving; at first he does not notice that she is also hoarding food. Anna is continually coming in late, and then Miss Hazlit begins having complaints from Rudy that things are disappearing from the childrens' lunch boxes. When Rudy accuses Anna in front of the other kids, Timmy fights with him until Miss Hazlit breaks it up and makes Rudy apologize. Timmy comes home, however, and overhears Miss Hazlit telling Ruth that she also suspects that Anna is the thief. Timmy is disturbed, but agrees to let Miss Hazlit take care of the matter. In the meantime, S06E09 Water Boy November 1, 1959 Syndication Paul needs a new well, and Cully Wilson swears he can find water with a divining rod rather than Paul hiring an expensive geologist. S06E10 The Whopper November 8, 1959 Syndication Ruth is disturbed by the tall tales Timmy is telling to impress Willy Brewster--a problem compounded when he tells Willy and Flip that Mrs. Larson, a new neighbor living in a run-down house, is a witch. S06E11 The Bounty Hunter November 15, 1959 Syndication Due to stock killings by a puma nicknamed "Satan," the local farmers hire a bounty hunter, a curt, unlikable man whose tracking dog King and Lassie immediately strike sparks off one another. S06E12 The Land Grabber November 22, 1959 Syndication After Paul refuses to consider selling his land to a real estate broker, someone ruins his tomato crop and sets fire to his hay. S06E13 The Man from Mars November 29, 1959 Syndication When Timmy sees a meteorite come down, he's sure it was really a spaceship from another planet--and that a man from Mars is wandering around the farm. Funny thing is: food keeps disappearing from the Martin house! S06E14 In Case of Emergency December 6, 1959 Syndication After a local farmer dies on the way to the Capitol City hospital, fifty miles away, the Martins spearhead a plan to start a community hospital, but a prominent farmer known as a skinflint refuses his approval. S06E15 Star Reporter December 20, 1959 Syndication Timmy persuades editor Ira Caldwell to let him try and earn money by selling newspaper subscriptions to the Calverton Sentinel,and then accidently overhears a plan toComments
She loved. Those good feelings lasted just nine months-or until Sears learned that the lot next door had actually been rezoned two years before so the owner, the developer and hip-hop record producer Rudy Acosta, could build a huge house. He planned to put up a 44-foot-high, approximately 7,000-square-foot structure festooned with turrets and battlements-in other words, a house that resembled a medieval castle, only without the moat.The castle would dwarf Sears’s house-2,100 feet square and 26 feet high-and would be dramatically out of scale with the other houses in the neighborhood. Sears was aghast. She set out to discover how this had happened, with the hope that she might prevent the castle from being built.So far, she and her neighbors have failed-construction got under way last November-but their efforts have opened a window on Chicago’s zoning procedures and the questionable circumstances and interlocking relationships that led to this case. “I wouldn’t want that house built next to my house,” says Margaret Laurino, the alderman for the 39th Ward, which now includes the Independence Park neighborhood after redistricting. Laurino says that if she had been in office when the lot came up for rezoning, she would have opposed the change. But in the Kafkaesque world of Chicago zoning, even Rudy Acosta is angry over the events so far. In a recent obscenity-salted interview, Acosta vented his frustrations with the neighborhood residents and with Laurino, claiming that he had followed all the rules and shouldn’t have had to face so many obstacles, including the denial of a variance that would have allowed him to build closer to Sears’s house. “Alderman [Michael] Wojcik signed off on the rezoning,” says Acosta. “Laurino was in full support of the variance until the neighbors got upset.” (Acosta claims Laurino even sent him a letter of
2025-04-10Click image to enlarge| Download archival scanRodolfo Acosta (left, in blue) co-stars in "Apache Warrior" (20th Century-Fox, 1957), which was partially filmed at Vasquez Rocks in Agua Dulce.Lobby card No. 8 (of 8), 11x14 inches. The scene appears to have been set up on a sound stage, but considering the open flame (if it truly is), then perhaps the photo was shot at the Rocks.It would have been a BW publicity photograph that was subsequently colorized for the lobby card. The numbers "57-409" in the lower right-hand corner mean this was the 409th film handled in 1957by National Screen Service Corp., which licenced advertising materials to distributors who provided them to local theaters."Apache Warrior" is subtitled "The true story of the Apache Kid," played here by Keith Larsen (1924-2006). The real Apache Kid, Haskay-bay-nay-ntayl, was a White Mountain Apache scout for the U.S. Cavalry who participated in the 1886 capture of Geronimo. The following year, a series of altercations involving the Kid and other scouts in his chargeresulted in their court-martial and imprisonment in Alcatraz. The convictions were overturned in 1888, but their Apache enemies, who obviously were many, successfully campaignedfor their re-arrest. En route to the territorial prison in Yuma, the Kid and eight others overpowered the guards and escaped into the desert.A massive manhunt led to the recapture of all of them except the Kid. He rode into legend, never to be seen again. The Apache Kid Wildnerness in New Mexico is named for him.The movie version also featuresJim Davis,John Miljan,Damian O'Flynn,George Keymas,Lane Bradford,Dehl Berti,Eugenia Paul,Nick Thompson,Eddie Little Sky,Michael Carr,Ray Kellogg,Karl "Killer" Davis,David Carlile andAllan Nixon.Stunt players areVance Howard,Walter Kray,Cliff Lyons,Mark Sheeler andBoyd Stockman.About Rodolfo Acosta.Mexican-American screen actor Rodolfo "Rudy" Acosta (1920-1974) was inducted posthumously into the Newhall Walk of Western Stars in 2013. He is the father of Santa Clarita Assemblyman Dante Acosta (who also has his SAG card).According to his Texas birth certificate, Rodolfo entered the world as a U.S. citizen on July 29, 1920. He was born in the family home at 609 E. 3rd Avenue in El Paso's El Segundo Barrio, the city's second-oldest neighborhood and an arrival point since the 1880s for Mexican immigrants crossing the Rio Grande through Ciudad Juarez. Both parents hailed from Mexico: José Acosta (aka Joseph R.), a machinist, and his wife, Alexandria Perez (aka Alejandrina).According to anthology authors Luis Reyes and Peter Rubie,[1] "When [Rodolfo] was three years old, his family moved to California, where he attended Los Angeles City College and UCLA." The 1940 U.S. Census shows Rodolfo, the eldest of four children, as a college student living at home with his parents and siblings at 3736 Mercury Avenue in the Montecito Heights section of Los Angeles.There is much erroneous information on and off the Internet about Rodolfo's early years. Some sources incorrectly state he was born in Chihuahua, Mexico; others incorrectly state he was born in the Chamizac section of El Paso, which is actually one barrio to the east. Some falsely claim he attended a
2025-03-28Directed by Mel Gibson Writing Credits Mel Gibson ... (written by) & Farhad Safinia ... (written by) Cast (in credits order) complete, awaiting verification Rudy Youngblood ... Jaguar Paw Dalia Hernández ... Seven Jonathan Brewer ... Blunted Morris Birdyellowhead ... Flint Sky Carlos Emilio Báez ... Turtles Run Amilcar Ramírez ... Curl Nose Israel Contreras ... Smoke Frog Israel Ríos ... Cocoa Leaf Isabel Díaz ... Mother in Law (as Isabel Diaz) Espiridion Acosta Cache ... Old Story Teller Mayra Serbulo ... Young Woman Iazua Larios ... Sky Flower Lorena Heranandez ... Village Girl Itandehui Gutierrez ... Wife Sayuri Gutierrez ... Eldest Daughter Hiram Soto ... Fish Hunter Pepe Suárez ... First Temple Sacrifice (as José Suárez) Raoul Max Trujillo ... Zero Wolf (as Raoul Trujillo) Gerardo Taracena ... Middle Eye Rodolfo Palacios ... Snake Ink Ariel Galvan ... Hanging Moss Bernardo Ruiz ... Drunkards Four Ricardo Diaz Mendoza ... Cut Rock Richard Can ... Ten Peccary Carlos Ramos ... Monkey Jaw Ammel Rodrigo Mendoza ... Buzzard Hook Marco Antonio Argueta ... Speaking Wind Javier Escobar ... Vicious Holcane Fernando Hernandez ... High Priest Maria Isidra Hoil ... Oracle Girl Aquetzali García ... Oracle Girl Abel Woolrich ... Laughing Man Antonio Monroi ... Chilam (as Antonio Monroy) Nicolás Jasso ... Man on Temple Top Ronaldo Eknal ... Slave Auctioneer Miriam Tun ... Woman Auctioneer Rafael Velez ... King Diana Botello ... Queen Joaquin Rendon ... Head Chac Rest of cast listed alphabetically: Mauricio Amuy ... First Teaser Trailer Mann Running Cameo (uncredited) Nelly Castillo ... Jade Woman (uncredited) Fernando Lara ... Aztec Warrior (uncredited) Produced by Judi Bell ... line producer Vicki Christianson ... executive producer Bruce Davey ... producer Ned Dowd ... executive producer Mel Gibson ... producer Sergio Miranda ... producer: Costa Rica Farhad Safinia ... co-producer Music by James Horner Cinematography by Dean Semler ... director of photography Editing by John Wright Casting By Carla Hool Production Design by Thomas E. Sanders ... (as Tom Sanders) Art Direction by Roberto Bonelli Naaman Marshall Stefano Susco Theresa Wachter ... supervising art director Set Decoration by Jay Aroesty Costume Design by Mayes C. Rubeo Makeup Department Wade Ackley ... makeup effects artist: Captive Audience Cecilia Aguilar ... special makeup effects artist Nury Alamo ... prosthetic makeup artist: crowd Gerardo Aragon ... hair stylist (as Gerardo Aragon Pavon) Sandra Arai ... prosthetic makeup artist: crowd Eduardo Arcos ... assistant makeup artist Martin Astles ... makeup effects artist: Captive Audience Hector Avila ... assistant wigmaker Jesus Amed Azar Meza ... hair stylist Jonay Bacallado ... makeup artist: drawing Dian Bachar ... makeup effects artist: Captive Audience Victoria Banda ... assistant wigmaker David P. Barton ... makeup effects artist: Captive Audience (as
2025-04-04By Matt Wood in News on Nov 15, 2005 4:48PMSo a man makes a fortune in real estate, starts his own hip-hop record label, and wants to enjoy his riches by building a castle, literally. What's wrong with that? Rudy Acosta's would-be neighbors have a big problem with his plans to build a 6,700 square foot, castle-like mansion on a vacant lot in Independence Park near Lawndale and Parkview Terrace overlooking the Kennedy Expressway. The home would feature 42-foot high turrets, including one overlooking the highway emblazoned with the coat of arms for Acosta's label, The Legion Records (danger, spinning graphics!)Neighbors are pissed because Acosta's castle would dwarf their homes, sitting five feet closer to the street with towers up to 16 feet taller than other homes on the block. They also claim he used political clout to score a zoning change for the lot that would allow him to build his manor. One of Acosta's lawyers, State Rep. John Fritchey, filed an affidavit attesting that he notified residents of the zoning change. The residents say they never heard about it, and expressed concerns over family ties in the deal. Acosta's other attorney is James Banks, nephew of Alderman William Banks, chairman of the City Council Zoning Committee that approved the zoning change. James Banks is also Fritchey's brother-in-law. We thinkest thou hast some explaining to do mi' Lord.Everyone involved denies any wrongdoing of course, and the city's Inspector General declined comment about an investigation into the matter. Fritchey couldn't produce any records of having notified residents of the zoning change, but thinks that the neighbors have a problem with Acosta and his hip-hop ties personally. The Legion Records is relatively new, but they signed local underground natives Do or Die earlier this year. Chicagoist thinks that the neighbors' complaints
2025-04-22