The Wall of Pia Zadora Lips
After I moved out of the apartments I lived in during college, they decided to line one of the walls of the living room entirely with posters for a Pia Zadora concert.
The Wall of Pia Zadora Lips
After I moved out of the apartments I lived in during college, they decided to line one of the walls of the living room entirely with posters for a Pia Zadora concert.
Well at least
A strike would make my commute easier.
Yes, but the maniacal laughter at the end of Am I Going Insane fades nicely into the quiet part of "The Writ," which scared the shit out of thousands of stoners by lasting just long enough for them to turn the sound up just milliseconds before it kicked into gear at doubleplusfullvolume!
There Will Still Be A Dark Ritual
But instead of solving any legal difficulties, it will involve raising Ronnie James Dio from the dead just in case Ozzy punks out from any dates on the inevitable reunion tour.
Amen!! By the end of the song, it sounds like Iommi is playing nine million guitars.
The Living Bubba
Patterson Hood's fucking amazing song about his musician friend who kept touring while dying of aids is the single most uplifting death song ever.
Robyn Hitchcock?
No "Lady Waters & The Hooded One" or "My Wife and My Dead Wife" or "Sometimes I Wish I Was a Pretty Girl" or "When I Was Dead" ??
@scotteb
@jorge, it was located on the Paramount lot. For example, when ENTERPRISE was still in production, they had full access to the cast & producers and did a lot of website-only interviews.
Fuck These People
A couple of years ago, they fired the entire staff of the original Startrek.com website without warning. Just before Christmas.
Season of Mists
I'm not much of a comics guy, or a horror guy, but somebody introduced me to the Sandman comics in the late 1980s, and I was totally hooked.
Because of their early singles, The Who were one of the bands that punks worshiped. The Sex Pistols tried a cover of "Substitute," and The Jam, of course, got their initial sound and style from The Who.
Going back to The Clash on the radio: before LONDON CALLING, "I Fought the Law" was at least a minor tiny radio hit in central California.
I saw Journey open for Emerson, Lake & Palmer when I was 15. It was one of Steve Perry's first shows, and I instantly took a dislike to his voice and his stage presence. A very short time later, they were all over the radio, and except for a couple moments here and there, I didn't like any of the songs. And never…
@DPA
Comic-con be dammed! (Easy to say for someone who isn't going.) I'm with @penguin & @tristiac.
I Write Like All of the Above
I plugged in a half-dozen different pieces of text — non-fiction, fiction, serious, funny — and got Stephen King, Vladimir Nabokov, Ian Fleming, Raymond Chandler and Chuck Palahniuk.
How about the first episode of the second season, where instead of paying off the first season's cliffhanger, they did a whole episode of Terrance & Phillip making fart jokes?
"More Moo Goo Gai Pan!"
I'll go along with EXILE and WHITECHOCOLATESPACEGG, but I found WHIPSMART to be not quite as good.