A prank, that is primarily partaken in the south, where in the middle of the night a person or group of people sneak into another person's yard to throw toilet paper all over their house, lawn furniture, trees, bushes etc.
A successful run is done undetected. If you're busted it doesn't count as them getting "rolled".
McKenzie: You guys bailed pretty early during the Homecoming dance, where'd you guys all go?
Hailey: Well, we got bored so we went and were rolling a house of one of the teachers who was supervising the dance.
Alex: Hey man! Passed down Parker Blvd. this morning.. dude.. Jordan's house got rolled hard.
David: It was us. Don't tell anyone though. He swore up and down no one would roll him cause' no one knew where he lived.
Alex: Ha! That poor bastard.
My friend and I walked into school with rolling backpacks close behind. I heard the bitches start to whisper and moan just at the sight of it. I knew it was going to be a good day for the two of us.
rolling hills middle school is where you can find all the rich and white kids at there will be a new couple every week that is the biggest topic. if there is nothing going on someone will make up shit so eveyone has something to gossip and talk about.
dude one: i need a man that will buy me what ever i want.
dude two: just go find someone at rolling hills middle school.
This was a phrase frequently heard on the "ride home" at radio station WPGC in Washington, DC. DJ Celo, the Super Funk Regulator would say this to callers that report their current location, their response would be "thanks for letting a brother/sister roll."
** Morning DJ, Elliot Segal (Elliot in the Morning show) simply used the phrase as sattire - he didn't coin the the phrase at all. He also often joked on air in a tongue-in-cheek manner that many of his listeners were not the most cultured people (i.e. failure to realize that the phrase in question came from a black radio station!)