Tens of billions of dollars have been made selling the death and destruction of gangster rap music. 2. When we think of gangster rap, we often think of the West Coast, but it was also born in New York City, especially in South East Queens. 3. South East Queens is home to more hip-hop icons than any other place in America. 4. Run DMC, LL Cool J, Russell Simmons (founder of Def Jam Records), Ja Rule, 50 Cent, the founders of FUBU clothing, and iconic video director Haight Williams all hail from this little corner of Queens. 5. At the center of Queens hip hop history is a man called Supreme, whose street name comes from his involvement with the fight for center move and the Nation of guys on earth, also known as the five percenters. 6. The five percenters, a breakaway group from the Nation of Islam, dominated the New York state prison system among black inmates. 7. In the early 80s, Supreme rounded up other young five percenters in Jamaica Queens to take advantage of the exploding cocaine business. 8. They formed a lucrative street-level business selling crack, becoming known as the Supreme Team. 9. Kenneth McGriff, also known as Supreme, became the leader of the Supreme Team. 10. The Supreme Team became known for their involvement in the crack cocaine epidemic in South Jamaica. 11. South Jamaica was considered the bad part of South East Queens, where the projects were located and where poor people lived. 12. Despite this, according to the 2000 census, Queens was the only major County in the entire United States where black household income was higher than white household income. 13. South Jamaica became a gold mine for drug dealers like the Supreme Team, attracting black and white middle-class buyers from surrounding areas. 14. Lorenzo "Fat Cat" Nichols, a working-class kid with connections...