Club Freestyle REBORN

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Kenny Guido
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JOEY AND AMY GET MUSHY

TALK OF MARRIAGE & GIGGLE: 'WE'RE FUN!'


By CATHY BURKE


RELOADED FOR LOVE: Joey Buttafuoco and his now legal Lolita, Amy Fisher, give each other a juicy smack at dinner last week.




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May 20, 2007 -- Hottie Long Island Lolita Amy Fisher and her aging auto-body hunk, Joey Buttafuoco, didn't just have dinner last week - they kissed, canoodled and carried on like it was 1992.
The infamous mismatch that neither a bullet to a spouse's head, prison time, divorce court, 3,000 miles nor 15 years could break up is more than heating up.
There's even a hint that the two might eventually wind up at the altar, the TV show "The Insider" reports in an interview with the reunited couple airing tomorrow through Wednesday.
"We're dating," proclaimed Fisher, who was all of 17 when she shot Buttafuoco's first wife, Mary Jo, in the head while having her illicit affair with the then-38-year-old Joey.
"He doesn't kiss all his friends like that," Fisher told "The Insider."
At their not-so-secret date last week at the swanky Pace's steakhouse in Hauppauge, L.I., Joey tenderly reached out for his finally legal-age love and planted a big wet one while confiding, "I'm happy."
Fisher told the TV show, "We know we're unconventional and a lot of people think it's sick and strange. We're very hesitant about what people think. We care about what people think. We're nice people. We're a lot of fun."
She added: "We're going to start off slower than we did last time - although not too slow."
It has been a long, strange trip for Fisher, now 32, and Buttafuoco, 53.
She served seven years in prison for shooting Mary Jo - yesterday was the 15th anniversary of the bloody assault. Buttafuoco did four months for statutory rape. Since then, Fisher got married and is now in the middle of a divorce, while Buttafuoco divorced Mary Jo and married a second time, but that union is also on the rocks.


He has also gone to jail three more times for various run-ins with the law, including soliciting a prostitute.
Yet this new/old love of theirs is for real, they insist.
"Stunt for what?" Buttafuoco fumed during the TV interview. "I could walk out of my home in California and everybody follows. I could be in Hollywood, I could be in Vegas, and it's going to happen."
He said it was not about the money - well, not all about the money.
"I don't need the money," he declared. "I'm really OK emotionally, physically and financially. But if the money comes along with the reality show that they're talking about, fine. I think we'll have an incredible show. It will be a wild show."
America needs a good love story, Fisher claims - and so what if they're sharing their relationship with the world?
"I love it, so I would do it," she said of the idea of a reality-TV show. "We have so much fun. He's so funny. People don't know that."
"We have dynamite dynamics," Joey quipped.
Though at first the couple demurred that they were both "going through things in our own lives and we're friends," Fisher and Buttafuoco finally realized something after their night out on the town, they said.
"We have a bond," she said.
"We're working on it and taking things one day at a time," he reiterated.
After all, why would Buttafuoco fly all the way from L.A. to New York?
"I didn't come . . . to have a good dinner," he said. "I flew in to have dinner with you and to continue . . . We're friends now."
The dinner, his comely date added, was "very nice . . . with a lot of wine."
And, yes, the kiss. "There might have been one or two," Fisher allowed.
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Kenny Guido
"I was really just glad to be there," Buttafuoco said. "She's absolutely beautiful, and I was really glad to be there."
She said their bond was unmistakable, even after 15 years and a near-fatal shooting.
"I think once you date people, you [may] not see them for a long time but you always feel something when you look at them and you like that person," she said. "He flew here for sparks. He's getting a divorce, I'm getting a divorce, people talk - and, all right, we're dating!"
He echoed: "All right, we're dating!"
No matter what the world thinks, it's clear the attraction is still strong between this couple that some people love to hate.
"I enjoy talking to Amy; I really do," Buttafuoco said. "I like being friends with Amy."
Fisher said the date had been a long time coming.
"We started talking a few years ago," she said. "He called to apologize, and he kept calling and calling."
Buttafuoco said, "She kept hanging up and hanging up. The last time we tried to make something happen, the last time we spoke, I was a really big ass and off the hook with it, so I wanted to apologize to her.
"A year ago I was really angry. I had a medical situation, and I was on heavy meds. I needed to release that part of my past and have some closure on it."
He was referring to his meltdown aimed at Fisher during a reunion "The Insider" staged last year among the participants in the doomed love triangle. "That's very painful for me," he said. "I feel really terrible about it. I reached out to her from jail because I needed to put it behind me . . . I was looking for closure.
Kenny Guido
"Mary Jo claims to have closure, and Amy obviously has done well with it, and I can't move on until I release it and see where the future goes."
Buttafuoco said his kids - now 27 and 24 - are old enough to handle the romantic shift. Fisher has two small kids of her own.
Buttafuoco said he believes his former teen honey is definitely different.
"I don't believe for one second that Amy is the same person she was 15 years ago, even five years ago," he said. "I just don't believe it, or I wouldn't be here. It's as easy as that."
"Insider" interviewer Lara Spencer posed the question: Would they ever consider getting married?
"It might be a bit overdue," Fisher said.
Buttafuoco added, somewhat hopefully: "We'll take it one day at a time, but yes."
"He might not be dependable, but people change," Fisher said.
And besides, she added, "I'm going to help him now."
Quizzed by a peanut gallery of housewives from New York City, Fisher and Buttafuoco also revealed that she doesn't want more kids after having two with her estranged hubby - but that he does.
"I think I would enjoy children at this age, kind of raise them differently," Buttafuoco said.
As for Mary Jo, who was disfigured in the shooting, she's moved on. She now goes by her maiden name, Connery, lives in California and runs a small business with fiancé Stu Tendler, called OriginalPartyPosters.com, which designs posters.
"Why do we like train wrecks? Why do we like to watch? Why do we slow down when we go past an accident scene? It's the nature of the beast, I guess," Mary Jo Connery told ABC's "Good Morning America" last week.
Her ex-husband's motivation? "One word: money. Money!" she said. "Joe has lost everything. He doesn't have a business. He's been in jail more times than I can count. He has nothing. There's nothing in his life, and he's hit rock bottom - and so this is what he does."
frankiecutlass
LMAO
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Kenny Guido
Whats messed up is that I actually knew both these people. Joey swore on his wife's life that he never had sex with Amy. Amy was a whore since she was 13.
Hello, does anyone have Jeannie's CD? She was a freestyle artist from San Antonio, TX in the late '90s. She's best known for the classic "Runaway" but had other nice songs too. Thanks.
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If you grew up in the late 80s and early 90s, you already know the vibe. You can practically hear the Roland TR 808 drum machine firing up the second I mention the word freestyle. We're talking about a genre that didn't just climb the Billboard charts - it defined an entire era of youth culture. From the streets of New York City and Miami to roller rinks across the country, freestyle dance music was the ultimate soundtrack for a generation. It wasn't just music. It was the clothes, the big hair, the attitude, and the unbridled emotion of teenage heartbreak packed into a heavy bass line.

Today, we're taking a deep dive into the undisputed royalty of freestyle. They're the artists who built the foundation, impacted millions of people, and paved the way for modern dance pop. And the craziest part? They're still selling out arenas today. Let's get into it.

Shannon: The Architect
You can't talk about freestyle without bowing down to Shannon. When "Let the Music Play" dropped, it completely shattered the mold. It gave us that heavily syncopated, hard hitting drum beat that became the blueprint for everything that followed. Shannon showed the world that dance music didn't have to be mindless - it could have soul, and it could make you feel something. Fans connected with her instantly. Today, Shannon's still gracing the stage, proving that her legendary voice hasn't lost a single step. If you catch a freestyle festival this year, there's a good chance you'll see her bringing the house down.

Lisa Lisa & Cult Jam: The Crossover Legends
Lisa Lisa took the underground freestyle sound and forced the mainstream pop world to pay attention. "I Wonder If I Take You Home" and "Can You Feel the Beat" were absolute monsters on the radio. She had this incredibly unique, fierce delivery that made every young girl want to be her. Lisa Lisa and Cult Jam broke down barriers for Latino artists on mainstream radio. Their impact's immeasurable. Where's she now? Lisa Lisa's practically the reigning queen of the current Freestyle Explosion tours, packing massive venues in 2026 and showing a whole new generation exactly how it's done.

Stevie B: The Undisputed King
If there's a King of Freestyle, it's Stevie B. The man just couldn't miss. From party anthems like "Spring Love" and "Party Your Body" to the ultimate number one ballad "Because I Love You", Stevie B knew exactly what his fans wanted. His music was the backdrop to countless first dates, high school dances, and summer nights. He gave the genre a commercial viability that nobody expected. And guess what? He's still headlining enormous tours. If you look at the 2026 tour posters, Stevie B's name's right there at the top, delivering those classic hits to tens of thousands of screaming fans.

TKA: The High Energy Powerhouse
When TKA stepped onto a stage, you knew you were in for a masterclass in performance. K7 and the guys brought a raw, street level hip hop energy to freestyle. "One Way Love", "Maria", and "Tears May Fall" remain absolute anthems. They didn't just sing - they danced their hearts out and gave fans a visually stunning show. TKA became the best selling Latin freestyle group in history, and they heavily influenced boy bands and dance groups that came later. They're still performing as TKA, and their live shows today still pack the exact same electric punch as they did back in the day.

The Cover Girls: Glamour Meets the Beat
With tracks like "Show Me" and "Wishing on a Star", The Cover Girls brought a touch of glamour and pop polish to the freestyle world. They were fashion icons. Every girl wanted to dress like them, and every guy fell in love with them. They harmonized beautifully over those classic pounding beats, proving that freestyle could be both edgy and incredibly beautiful. The original lineup's seen some changes over the years, but The Cover Girls name still carries immense weight, and they're still out there touring the country.

Judy Torres: The Queen of Hearts
If you ever needed a shoulder to cry on after a bad breakup, Judy Torres was there for you. Songs like "No Reason to Cry" and "Come Into My Arms" still hit incredibly hard. Judy didn't just sing the lyrics - she bled them. Her fans feel an incredibly deep personal connection to her because her music's so relentlessly honest. Beyond music, Judy became an iconic radio personality in New York City, connecting with her fans on a daily basis. She's still a massively requested performer and a beloved figure in the freestyle community.

Sa-Fire: The Vocal Dynamo
Sa-Fire brought serious vocal chops to the table. "Boy I've Been Told" and "Love Is On Her Mind" showed an incredible range and a fierce independence. She wasn't just a singer - she was a writer and a creator who demanded respect in a very competitive music industry. Sa-Fire inspired countless young women to stand up for themselves. While she doesn't tour as relentlessly as some of the others today, her impact remains a foundational pillar of the genre.

George Lamond: The Voice
When "Bad of the Heart" hit the airwaves, it was game over. George Lamond possessed a voice that could rival the biggest pop stars on the planet. His vocal runs, his undeniable swagger, and his ability to convey deep emotion made him an instant superstar. He brought a sophisticated, incredibly polished sound to freestyle. Today, George's still out there crushing it on stage alongside his peers, and his voice sounds just as pristine as it did the day he recorded those classic tracks.

Cynthia & Johnny O: The Ultimate Duo
I've got to group Cynthia and Johnny O together, even though they had massive solo careers. Cynthia gave us huge hits like "Change on Me", and Johnny O gave us "Fantasy Girl". But when they teamed up for "Dreamboy/Dreamgirl", they created what's arguably the greatest freestyle duet of all time. It's the ultimate tale of star crossed lovers set to a frantic, irresistible beat. They gave a voice to every teenager who felt hopelessly in love. Both Cynthia and Johnny O still draw huge crowds on the live circuit, frequently performing together to the absolute delight of their lifelong fans.

Debbie Deb: The Weekend Warrior
If you ever stepped foot in a roller rink on a Friday night, you know Debbie Deb. "When I Hear Music" and "Lookout Weekend" remain the ultimate party starters. Her music was heavily electro influenced, with those bouncy, infectious beats that made it impossible to sit still. Hip hop and EDM artists today still heavily sample Debbie Deb's tracks, proving just how forward thinking her sound really was. She remains a beloved figure, occasionally popping up at retro shows to remind everyone who started the party.

How They Changed the Game
Freestyle dance music wasn't just a passing fad - it was a cultural revolution. Before freestyle, mainstream radio was incredibly segregated. These artists, many of them incredibly talented kids from Puerto Rican and Italian neighborhoods, forced the door open. They created a hybrid sound that blended the energy of hip hop, the melodies of pop, and the relentless pulse of electronic dance music. They laid the groundwork for the massive EDM festivals we see today.

But their real impact was on the people. For the fans, this music's a time machine. It takes them right back to their first car, their first kiss, their first heartbreak. The freestyle community's like a massive family. When you go to a Freestyle Explosion concert today, you aren't just watching a retro act - you're experiencing a beautiful, chaotic reunion. The fans know every single lyric, the artists still give it everything they've got, and the energy in the room's purely electric.

These artists proved that you don't need a massive corporate machine to make a lasting impact. You just need a heavy beat, a synthesizer, and a whole lot of heart. And that's why, all these years later, the music still plays on.

Who are your favorite freestyle artists - and what are your favorite freestyle songs?
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