1962.
1962.
The Catalog Itself is Online
http://www.pawneeindiana.co…
I think that his "Good God, I don't remember this" when confronted with the doctored pornographic photo was one of the funniest things I've seen all season. On any show.
@treefingers, you didn't dream it. PARTY DOWN is supposed to come back on April 23.
Me too. It came at the perfect time: I'd watched TOS all the way through in syndication at least a couple of times, and was totally ready for more Trek. I watched it again a couple of years ago, and it seemed sparse, but I could fill in the blanks.
I've been rewatching DS9, and even during its most consistent season, it dealt up some stinkers.
The Alan Dean Foster Adaptations
I know I've probably mentioned this before, but right now it actually makes sense: the best way to "watch" ST:TAS is by reading the Alan Dean Foster book adaptations.
Heard One of them Interviewed
I heard Nikole interviewed on KROQ the other morning, and MAN, and was she annoying. She came across one someone who confuses being loud with being witty, like she'd decided that the Jessica Simpson of "Newlyweds" was going to be her role model.
@Flatulance,
I actually love "The Death of Mary, Queen of Scots"
I can't wish canceraids on this first, since that's also when I first saw them. PBS in the 1970s. Mind = blown.
Monty Python at the Hollywood Bowl
I was there. It was awesome.
I think that the whole ending was a little bit too much of a Deus ex Caseyna, even for this show.
I also heard "Bread Test." And kept thinking "because it puts bread on their table? because killing people is their bread and butter?"
Try "If There Was a Way"
1990's "If There Was A Way" has just one killer tune after another, including a Roger Miller collaboration. The tempos are up, the guitars alternately roar and cry, so when he slows down to wail about "Sad Sad Music," it completely feels earned.
Let me second that. I really don't remember reading anything nice about the Runaways, even in CREEM.
Seen the Others, Need to See This
While nothing will ever match the epic rush I got from seeing Rust Never Sleeps all of those years ago — it single-handedly turned me into a Neil fan for life — I've enjoyed nearly all of his films. Well, not Greendale. And certainly not Journey Through The Past. But his concert…
That's EXACTLY the place to start. The first four songs on #1 Record are a pop music primer, and it stays utterly amazing all the way through.
I'm with those who think that making "In The Street" the theme song of That 70s Show was a good good thing. If it drove even one kid to discover Big Star, how could that possibly be bad? And Cheap Trick? Fine by me. Bun E. Carlos is one of the great unsung drummers in rock history.
Rock and roll is here to stay.