For over a decade, has been a staple in the New York City TV scene with his hip hop half-hour extravaganza, "Freak It Wit Da Fellaz." From Nelly to Alicia Keys, P. Diddy to Master P, 100s of guests have joined to kick it and promote their projects. After qualifying for the finals in an unsigned MC contest sponsored by Scion, one that was judged by three respected individuals in the industry including super-producer Just Blaze, is on a mission to make the transformation from TV host to a hit-making hip hop superstar. began writing during his high school days in 1994. Shortly after, his MC name was born. "When I used to spit for people, theyd be like youre nice, whats your MC name? I didnt have one at the time so I used to say Good question. After saying that enough, I took the first two letters of Good question, switched up the spelling a little bit for some originality, thus , my alias, was born." continued to perfect his craft, rhyming with some hip hop heavyweights in the process, including Keith Murray & Guru and spitting for Swizz Beatz and DJ Absolute. He also made an appearance on the popular radio program "The Wake-Up Show" hosted by Sway and Tech, impressing everyone in attendence. Most recently, exchanged verses with NYC MC Jae Millz, who was shocked by how nice Que was. "You been writing, huh?!?" said a pleased Millz. s buzz single has gotten the attention of many, including Hot 97 On-air personality / Video Music Box executive producer Ralph McDaniels, who felt the song has the potential to be a nationwide smash. will drop his debut mixtape, WELCOME TO QUE YOR CITY. The first single, DUMB IT DOWN, is a blazing club song that cleverly mocks the current state of mainstream hip hop. "It seems nowadays, to make a hit single, you need to cover the same boring topics," states Que. "You gotta take about how many guns you pop, how many whips you drive, it's just real monotous. Why not make a hot club song about how you need to talk about the same cliches to make a hot club song?" Along with his original material, also puts his own original twist on known industry songs, including Remy Ma's CONCEITED and Paul Wall's SITTIN SIDEWAYZ. While he touches on many topics throughout the project, there is one common theme throughout. "My songs are the voice of the underdog," says . "I dont have 24-inch rims or a ten-bedroom crib. Neither does the average hip hop fan. Being that Im rhyming about everyday struggles that many people encounter, the average dude can relate to me."