Check out http://smartrapsnyc.com/ and follow Mordy on Twitter - @ http://twitter.com//SmartRapsNYC.
NYC rapper/poet/performer/rhyme master/comedian Mordy Mandell teaches you everything you need to know about bedbugs in just 36 lines.
A lawyer by day, one-of-a-kind comedic rapper by night, Mordy puts the hip in hip hop - in 360 syllables or less!
He raps like no one else about science, history, popular culture and everything in between, spitting hilarious rhymes about such things as popcorn, defibrillators, heart ventricles, ketchup and tax returns.
A great resource for teachers.
To book Mordy for your school, organization, place of business. or event or to commission Mordy to write an original educational rhyme, please feel free to email him @ taxmordy@gmail.com.
This rap made me itch - but it also made me laugh a lot.. Thanks, Mordy!
mgeff200 3 months ago
I think the background music is too loud to be able to audibly understand the message beign relayed. In addition, I agree with someone else's comment that perhaps varrying the intonation and variation of the rhyming may make it less monotone..
moleic60 5 months ago
Maybe you should rap about how to get rid of and prevent bedbugs? ...seems a little more important to me.
revjaymz 5 months ago
It needs more energy and a bit more "flow" try more variation in the structure of the rhymes. They have the same pattern through the whole song which makes it less interesting.
TijdTekort 5 months ago
Agreed, less sound more voice, go morty.
rsechler79 5 months ago
Cute! music is too loud hard to understand all the words.
suzique99 5 months ago
i wish the music was turned down a little so i could hear the guy better.
nice work though
uzmaabbas 6 months ago
For a person not habitually committed to listening to this venue of "music" (actually do not view rap as music at all but... noise it is) , I found yours to be tolerably entertaining. However, I had trouble hearing every word - the words being clear enough were the emphasis placed on the words (the most important part of education, don't you know?) Perhaps a better acoustical setting would improve the quality of the entire production.
melangham1 6 months ago