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avclub-46936add066bd6422b3ac74a0ccb7174--disqus

Sorry, guys. The chorus is just too throwaway for me.

He can't dance worth a damn, but fuck the guy can sing.

A neighbor I smoked with made me watch a Journey tour documentary one time. It was so unintentionally hilarious. Especially the section favorably comparing Steve Perry to Frank Sinatra. My friend thought I was laughing so much because of the pot, so fortunately, he wasn't offended.

Doris Day in THE MAN WHO KNEW TOO MUCH
Terrific acting, and, along with Agnes Moorehead in MAGNIFICENT AMBERSONS, she manages one of the most convincing nervous breakdowns onscreen.

Jack White in COLD MOUNTAIN
He doesn't have much to do, but he definitely shows up.

Garth is sort of mental, odd, and deliberate. If I remember right, his interview has a lot of cuts as he slowly works his way round to the fucking point.

That moment is pretty awesome, but Levon is just cool as hell throughout.

Don't forget: Helm was in THE RIGHT STUFF, too.

*Rupert poses for stamp, gets interrupted*

Suggested stamp
Rupert Pupkin.

WIZARD OF OZ, CARRIE
The things that made an impression on me make a certain amount of sense: as a little runt, the flying monkeys gave me nightmares each time I saw THE WIZARD OF OZ. In 1977, I was eleven and our city at last got HBO, and a late late night viewing of CARRIE — well, that last moment in the graveyard

"Changes" is the only song that's occasionally skippable, to me. I think it's the closest thing to filler that album had.

This one sneaked up on me, too. I kind of enjoy suddenly learning that Raconteurs or Bob Mould or whoever is going to drop one in a week or two. that's cool.

Yep.

"Brasilia"
Just a note to say that "Brasilia Crossed with Trenton" is one of my favorite songs. I loved the first COPPER BLUE album and most of BEASTER; I have no idea why COPPER BLUE didn't more or less rule the world at the time. It's an almost perfect collection of that rare sound: huge, heavy music that's still

What I'm saying is not that he doesn't have the retrograde condition, but that this doesn't mean he cannot absolutely never ever ever make new memories.

Van Gogh
Geez — even I've sold more paintings in my life than he did in his.

Yup.

That's the whole point about the conditioning stuff. He CAN teach himself things through repetition. Remember how he talked about how you learn to pretend to recognize people? Among other things.

"…having the best sex of her life…. IN MY HEAD."