It’s been an endless journey for your boy Flav and three seasons full of ups and downs. But finally, in the City
of Lights, it’s time for Flavor Flav to put it all on the line. On the
series’ finale of “Flavor of Love 3″ premiering on Monday, May 19 at 9:00
PM (EST)* Flav finds himself caught between an undeniable chemistry with one girl
and a love connection with the other. With his promise that he’ll “find
love or die trying,” this final episode proves to be the most dramatical
elimination in “Flavor of Love” history.
Leading up to the series’ grand finale, VH1 will marathon episodes from
season 3 on Monday, May 19 beginning 11:00 AM.* Fans can also relive
moments and contestants from seasons past throughout the weekend. On
Saturday, May 17, the entire “Flavor of Love” season one will air back to
back beginning at 1:00 PM*. Then on Sunday, May 18 beginning at 10:30 AM*
VH1 will air “Flavor of Love 2.”
Additionally, Flavor Flav’s new single “317,” which he recorded and co-
produced with Sam Knight, the winner of “VH1’s The Track with Flavor Flav”
is now available for free download on FlavorOfLoveWorld.com. In addition to
providing vocals, Flav plays bass and the keyboard on the new upbeat and
funky single “317.” The track also features Raphael Saadiq on bass.
The winning track created by Sam Knight was chosen by user votes from
the nearly 5,000 submissions the online contest generated. Additional
behind-the- scenes video shot during Flav and Sam’s recording session is
also available online at FlavorOfLoveWorld.com.
This was posted by Bossip’s Staff on today.
Khia was interviewed by Detroit’s HOT 102.7 and they had this fool going off and explaining her take on Deelishis’ ass. She pretty much plays herself.
Listen Here!! Or, check it out on today’s Bossip.com.
Previously on Flavor of Love, Seezinz was called down first, but surprisingly, got eliminated. Flavor Flav decided to bring back Thing 2, leaving the competition with still three girls in the running. On the other hand, Flavor Flav revealed that the rest of the activities are only for two girls so another lady will have to be eliminated.
  After her most recent elimination on the 13th episode of Flavor of Love’s third season, Seezinz weighs in on her reality TV experience and the drama that may have led to her dismissal.
Although Seezinz felt that she had a strong bond with Flavor Flav, seeing that she made it to the top 3, she also felt that all the drama surrounding her fights with Sinceer played a role in the reason why she was still around.
“I actually wanted to stop fighting so much with Sinceer, because that’s not me. I felt like for the most part, our fights kept me around for ratings purposes. When I got to Paris, I backed off Flav a little bit. Black turned up the heat and Sinceer tried, so I was in the background. I’m not that aggressive of a person, so I thought that’s why I was getting sent home. I didn’t think my comment about drama would even be a factor,” she explained. 
After everything that happened between her and Sinceer, Seezinz says she doesn’t have feelings of resentment. The fact is, she just doesn’t like her.
“There’s no beef,” she added. ”I don’t like her. She’ll never be a friend of mine. I don’t hold grudges, so after the reunion, it’s, ‘Get out of here little girl. You’re nothing to me.’”
Beyond all the catfights, Seezinz had a “very positive” reality TV dating experience.
“I was a little nervous at first because I didn’t know how I was going to be portrayed. But they portrayed me well, and I carried myself well,” added Seezinz, who vocally designated herself as being classier than the rest of the girls.
path="http://www.flavaflav.net" title="Freaky Deaky">
Obama’s Register to Vote in 2008
Let’s review, shall we, the distinction between stupid and stoopid. Stoopid is dumb with intent, with a purpose. It uses idiocy to make larger points in a way that belies its intelligence. Stupid, on the other hand, is just plain dumb.
With that in mind, allow me to say that the seemingly abysmal MyNetworkTV sitcom “Under One Roof,” the star vehicle for Public Enemy rapper Flavor Flav, does indeed succeed in transcending its own idiocy to attain the stoopid. In fact, I’d go further than that to say “Under One Roof” is the best show to address race and class in America since “The Wire” ran its last episode earlier this year.
It’s just that “Under One Roof” addresses race and class the way “The Beverly Hillbillies” addressed class and regionalism and “Green Acres” addressed the Vietnam War, that is, behind a façade of idiotic humor.
On the surface, “Under One Roof,” airing at 7 p.m. Wednesday on WPWR Channel 50, is a very stupid sitcom. For one thing, it’s an unabashed attempt to garner publicity by MyNetworkTV, the Fox subsidiary meant to fill the programming vacuum when many local Fox-owned stations were left high and dry after the United Paramount Network merged with Warner Bros. Since then, MyNetworkTV has specialized in lousy reality series and tawdry specials focusing on Britney Spears and Anna Nicole Smith, but “Under One Roof” is one of its first forays into scripted series. If a borderline media celebrity like Flavor Flav is desperate enough to star in it, so much the better. Yet that doesn’t make it any good.
Flavor Flav is best known to TV viewers as the star of the awful VH1 reality series “Flavor of Love,” in which the once-proud Public Enemy rapper debases himself in a dating competition that is sort of “The Bachelor” for skanks. He ain’t no sitcom star.
In “Under One Roof,” Flav’s Cali Cal is an ex-con who took the rap for his brother in a car crash and went to jail, allowing the brother to live a privileged life with his (white) wife and kids. Cali Cal is a playful idiot imp who frequently speaks the truth others can’t now that he has moved in with the clan in Beverly Hills.
Get past the jokes about prison sex and masturbation and look at the way the show, stupid as it is, has been designed to set him apart. As the brother, Kelly Perine’s Winston is a status-obsessed, ascot-sporting phony. Carrie Genzel is his rail-thin trophy wife, Ashley. Marie Michel’s Heather and Jesse Reid’s Winston Jr. (or J.R.) are their mixed-race kids, obsessed with wealth but also with their notion of blackness.