I don't know if everything about his directing exactly WORKED, but he put in some real effort, especially in the editing department.
I don't know if everything about his directing exactly WORKED, but he put in some real effort, especially in the editing department.
What? ANOTHER person that shares my avatar?
I've gotten Steve Buscemi twice, and Vincent Kartheiser twice.
" As a general rule of thumb, we avoid videos involving puppies here at Great Job, Internet so as not to get lost in the glut of the gajillions of other cute-animal-related videos that circulate the Internet on an hourly basis. "
Scum.
This is accurate. (And the dividing line is 1963, the year when music really changed.)
Neil Sedaka? That song anti-rocks.
I'm a DJ for a freeform college radio station— no playlist restrictions here. There's a cultural stigma from playing anything sounds like the dial above 92.0 FM, but we mostly trust our DJs.
When I was in fourth grade (1994), I stopped listening to Top 40, and started listening to oldies. It just really struck a chord with me.
Ah. I don't have a Netflix account— I just clicked on the link above. If the ratings are flexible, and adjust for people who don't suck… that's actually pretty neat.
I was looking at that list… "Poltergeist 2" has a significantly higher rating than Hitchcock's "Frenzy"?
They're saying "Sing Sing Sing" is the sort of music you'd see accompanying art-house faux-silents?
The 5,000 Fingers of Dr. T is a masterpiece— I really don't know what Dr. Seuss's response to it was. Did he consider it a failure?
Even the Kinks' "Arthur: Or the Rise and Fall of the British Empire" is a proper concept album— with a little fill-in-the-blanks from the liner notes, you see that every song fits into a coherent narrative, with a series of consistent characters.
They also cut out the song at the end of the Cosby sketch (thereby omitting Amy Poehler)
Sunlandic Twins is a great record, but it derailed their run of weird hooky twee folk pop (of which Gay Parade was the high-water mark).
I haven't seen it, but it's by Robert Popper. Y'know, the "Look Around You" Robert Popper!
Fate has some really solid songs, but the mixing is thin.
5th record? It's their 6th if you count "Toothbrush" (ridiculously lo-fi), which one definitely should.
This is possibly the greatest moment in the history of the AV Club Blog.