Ernie Paniccioli, the famed photographer, has revealed publicly that he has cancer and is in dire need of support from the Hip-Hop community.
Paniccioli, through the The Life Goes On Foundation, announced that he's got cancer and is in need of financial support to pay for medical bills.
Thus far, the photographer has accumulated medical bill exceeding $40,000, but does not have health care coverage to pay the rigorous cancer treatment. He will have to endure roughly five weeks of radiation treatment to increase his chances of survival.
Friends, family and fans can donate by clicking this link.
At press time, the Hip-Hop Nation member has raised close to $1,000.
Paniccioli has faithfully documented Hip-Hop culture, in its many facets, since the 1970's. He's photographed the likes of Chuck D, MC Lyte, Lauryn Hill, Nas, Latifah, Tupac, Jay-Z, Notorious B.I.G., Afrika Bambaataa and scores of other Hip-Hop royalty.
In 2002, he released "Who Shot Ya?: Three Decades of Hip Hop Photography," a critically acclaimed compilation of his finest photos. He also released a documentary on Hip-Hop in 2009.
“Hip-Hop is an art form. We should use it as an art form," he told AllHipHop.com in 2009. "We should use it as fun.We should use it as a way to globally unite people past language, past religion and past race and culture. That’s the positive side of Hip-Hop. And it has the potential."
Source: allhiphop.com
Paniccioli, through the The Life Goes On Foundation, announced that he's got cancer and is in need of financial support to pay for medical bills.
Thus far, the photographer has accumulated medical bill exceeding $40,000, but does not have health care coverage to pay the rigorous cancer treatment. He will have to endure roughly five weeks of radiation treatment to increase his chances of survival.
Friends, family and fans can donate by clicking this link.
At press time, the Hip-Hop Nation member has raised close to $1,000.
Paniccioli has faithfully documented Hip-Hop culture, in its many facets, since the 1970's. He's photographed the likes of Chuck D, MC Lyte, Lauryn Hill, Nas, Latifah, Tupac, Jay-Z, Notorious B.I.G., Afrika Bambaataa and scores of other Hip-Hop royalty.
In 2002, he released "Who Shot Ya?: Three Decades of Hip Hop Photography," a critically acclaimed compilation of his finest photos. He also released a documentary on Hip-Hop in 2009.
“Hip-Hop is an art form. We should use it as an art form," he told AllHipHop.com in 2009. "We should use it as fun.We should use it as a way to globally unite people past language, past religion and past race and culture. That’s the positive side of Hip-Hop. And it has the potential."
Source: allhiphop.com