Macklemore mac miller chiều cao

          LOS ANGELES – An Arizona man has agreed to plead guilty to a federal criminal charge for supplying counterfeit pharmaceutical pills containing fentanyl to the drug dealer accused of selling them to rapper Mac Miller, who soon afterward suffered a fatal overdose, the Justice Department announced today.

          Ryan Michael Reavis, 38, formerly of West Los Angeles and who moved to Lake Havasu, Arizona in 2019, has agreed to plead guilty to a single-count superseding information charging him with distribution of fentanyl.

          According to a plea agreement filed today, on September 4, 2018, at the direction of co-defendant Stephen Andrew Walter, 48, of Westwood, Reavis knowingly distributed counterfeit oxycodone pills to co-defendant Cameron James Pettit, 30, of West Hollywood.

          Reavis admitted in his plea agreement to knowing that the pills contained fentanyl or some other controlled substance. In fact, the pills contained fentanyl. Shortly after Reavis distributed the fentanyl-laced pills to Pettit, Pettit distributed the pills to 26-year-old rapper Malcolm James McCormick – who recorded and performed under the name Mac Miller – approximately two days before McCormick suffered a fatal drug overdose in Studio City on September 7, 2018.

          Last month, Walter signed a plea agreement in which he agreed to plead guilty to one count of distribution of fentanyl. Both Walter and Reavis are expected to plead guilty in the coming weeks before United States District Judge Otis D. Wright II in Los Angeles.

          The case against Pettit is pending.

          The investigation into this matter was conducted by the High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area’s (HIDTA) Opioid Response Team, which operates under the direction of the DEA. The Los Angeles Police Department provided substantial assistance in this matter.

          Assistant United States Attorneys Solomon Kim of the Terrorism and Export Crimes Section and Elia Herrera of the General Crimes Section are prosecuting this case.

This week’s episode of the Complex talk show Open Late with Peter Rosenberg is a tribute to Mac Miller, who died last week at the age of 26.  The web series episode is comprised of “friends, colleagues, and people who loved” Miller, including Kendrick Lamar, who sent in a video reminiscing over the late rapper and his sense of humor.

Lamar began the segment recounting inside jokes he had with Miller, who he described as “funny, funny, funny individual” before discussing how he found him be a constant beacon of positive energy. Here’s a portion of Lamar’s remembrance, via Pitchfork:

He just always had a smile on his face, and that’s just something I commend. No matter what he was going through, he didn’t make you feel sorry for him, you know? He was strong about it—always kept a smile on his face because he wanted you to smile, too. And that’s just something I always loved, you know, no matter whatever personal issues, he gave you that energy. He gave you that energy. It wasn’t no misery loves company with him, you know? He showed a smile and then you gave that smile right back. It made you feel good. So forever we’re gonna remember the life and we’re gonna remember that smile. Celebrate. Mac Miller. Love.

Lamar’s tribute was followed by Macklemore discussing a time he walked into Miller’s house while his MTV reality show Mac Miller and the Most Dope Family.

“There are like seven homies, eight homies in there. Some of them are like sleeping. Some of them are waking up from naps. Some of them are kicking it,” Macklemore said. “And he’s there at his desk, chain-smoking cigarettes, just working in this environment that was insane. There’s just hella fools. And Mac would just sit down, make a beat, turn around, and just get in the conversation for a second, then go record himself in the booth, hop in the convo, make a beat. And he just did this for hours.”

Watch Lamar and Macklemore’s full segments below.

Other artists paying their respects to Miller include Machine Gun Kelly, Lil Xan, Smoke DZA, and Ty Dolla $ign. You can check out the full episode here.

Rosenberg is an annoying, talentless hack who's lucky to have a job where his basement-dwelling, self-important consumption is appreciated.

It's hard to think of someone who's gotten as big a head over so little than him. I honestly feel bad for anybody who has to waste their time talking to him. Exhibit A, Rosenberg tries to turn an interview with Mac Miller into a conversation about himself. His Odd Future interviews are even worse. He's so clearly an outsider to them, but he keeps on name-dropping people who are associated with OF, and trying to get them to talk about those rare moments when they let Rosenberg hang out with them. He's a grown ass man who's trying to get validation from a bunch of teenagers and just-turned-20 somethings.