Black & White Gala // June 25th // Radisson Hotel Warwick – Grand Ballroom

Well the brothers of C&G Marketing Group are bringing you an upscale gala for all the mature,upscale patrons who yearn for a quality event.

This event will take place on the 25th of June inside the beautiful grand ballroom of the radisson hotel in rittenhouse philadelphia.

Dress Code: 
The attire is strictly limited to black and white.

Ladies: Cocktail dresses. 

Gentlemen: Wear dress pants and a nice button-down shirt

These items will “NOT” be permitted:
• Jeans
• White T-Shirts and/or Graphic Tees
• Athletic Apparel
• Flip Flops
• Uggs
• Hoodies
• Boots
• Sneakers (Unless they are business casual styled)

Music By Dream Team’s Own DJ Marty Geez 

Featured Drinks:
Chocolate martinis, white and black Russians, or mudslides.

Theme Desserts:
Chocolate and vanilla brownies, cupcakes and even cake for dessert

Advance Tickets are $20

If interested in advance tickets,please free feel to contact:

Garry Mills (267) 357-9090

Chris Woods (215) 435-0782


MEXICAN DOING STANKY LEG

CHECK OUT THE MEXICAN “SNOOP DOGG”…LMAOOO

WALK IT OUT…..LMFAOOOOOO

Salty Senoritas Best Drinks for Cinco de Mayo

Derek Chavez from the real world cancun makes us some incredible drinks for cinco de mayo

How to make a Mexican mole sauce and traditional lime margaritas

Chef Bobby Flay showed Maggie Rodriguez how to make a Mexican mole sauce and traditional lime margaritas.

What is Cinco de Mayo about?

Cinco de Mayo marks an outnumbered Mexican army’s victory over an invading French army on May 5, 1862, in Puebla, east of Mexico City.

Although Mexico’s triumph lifted morale during a time of political and economic upheaval, it was short-lived. Mexico later succumbed to French rule in a period known as the French Intervention that lasted until 1867.

Keeping the French from creating an empire in North America was a mutual interest that sparked cooperation between US President Abraham Lincoln and Benito Juárez, his counterpart in Mexico. Today, statues of the American president stand tall in Mexico, and statues of the Mexican president, one of the country’s most beloved leaders, grace US soil.

Food!

 

Cinco de Mayo merits the consumption of lots of Mexican food – and avocados rise to the top because you need them for guacamole, a popular food staple. Americans on this holiday alone are expected to consume more than 70 million pounds of avocados, according to the California Avocado Commission.

So get your avocados, mash them to a pulp and mix in onion, tomato, hot peppers and whatever else you like. Break out the corn chips and you’re set for Cinco.

How did it start? Cinco De Mayo…..

Although Mexican immigrants observed Cinco de Mayo here as far back as the 1860s, some researchers have traced the first recognized festival to a group of California college students searching for a meaningful way to celebrate their  in the 1960s.

Thanks to commercialism, some say Cinco de Mayo since has gone the way of St. Patrick’s Day and become nothing more than an excuse to party. Community organizations in several cities are working to reclaim the holiday from commercialism.

The bigger Mexican holiday

Cinco de Mayo is often confused with another Mexican holiday with more cachet south of the border: Dieciséis de Septiembre, which celebrates Independence Day. Mexico’s 10-year struggle to break free from Spain began Sept. 16, 1810 – half a century before the Battle of Puebla.

Conventional wisdom has it that US marketers had a clever hand in catapulting to popularity Cinco de Mayo, partly because it just rolls off the tongue even if you speak no Spanish