» News Home
» View All
10 Most Recent
- HHN Live Is Here To Stay
- Wayne Welcomes The Birth of His First Son
- Altercation Breaks Out At Ace Hood Video Shoot
- T-Pain Fills In As Host For An Absent Katt Williams
- HHNLIVE Experiencing Technical Difficulties
- Former 106 n Park Host Joins The Ed Lover Show
- It's A Wrap For Rap City!
- DMX Back In Court & Facing Drug Charges
- Scarface Is Quitting, Not Retiring!
- Birthplace Of Hip-Hop To Be Sold
Most Popular
- Jay-Z To Release "The Blueprint 3"
- T.I. Talks About His New Album "Paper Trail"
- Lil Wayne's "Tha Carter III" Gets Official Release Date
- Scarface Is Quitting, Not Retiring!
- 808's & Heatbreak Coming a Month Early
- "Tha Carter 3" Tracklisting Leaks
- Diddy's Topless Lawsuit Dismissed!
- Lil' Wyte Prepares To Drop "The One and Only"
- DMX Rushed to the Hospital
- It's A Wrap For Rap City!
Marc Ecko Buys Barry Bonds 756th Home Run Ball

Hip-Hop mogul Marc Ecko (ECKO Clothing, Complex Magazine) bought Barry Bonds 756th home run ball last Saturday (Sept. 15) for $752,467 at Sotheby's/SCP auctions.
Starting today, fans can go www.vote756.com and choose to give the ball to the Hall of Fame in Cooperstown, permanently brand the ball with an asterisk before sending it to Cooperstown or put the ball on a rocket ship and launch it into space.
"We all have opinions about this ball," Ecko said. "Some feel it is a piece of history that belongs in the Hall of Fame. Others believe it is the embodiment of a cheating culture - not just in baseball, but in professional sports generally."
Bonds broke Hank Aaron's home record of 755 on August 7 in San Francisco.
"I bought this baseball to democratize the debate over what to do with it and allow the public to decide," Ecko explained.
Starting today, fans can go www.vote756.com and choose to give the ball to the Hall of Fame in Cooperstown, permanently brand the ball with an asterisk before sending it to Cooperstown or put the ball on a rocket ship and launch it into space.
"We all have opinions about this ball," Ecko said. "Some feel it is a piece of history that belongs in the Hall of Fame. Others believe it is the embodiment of a cheating culture - not just in baseball, but in professional sports generally."
Bonds broke Hank Aaron's home record of 755 on August 7 in San Francisco.
"I bought this baseball to democratize the debate over what to do with it and allow the public to decide," Ecko explained.








User Comments
g-babyy
King Deezy
Signup with HHNLive.com and have full access to all the sites features and community elements.