yeah, but could an eagle land on it? that's the true measure of masculinity.
yeah, but could an eagle land on it? that's the true measure of masculinity.
the real question is who is he addressing at any given time? some of things he says are supposed to be towards the girl, but really sound like they're being said to the guy (and vice-versa).
your mom let me destroy it for $25
not to mention bay/the production company has to have a whole fucking legal team
cheese, does he have a you knife in there?
be careful, lovecraft, you don't want to start people thinking all illegal immigrants are murderous crimina- oh, wait…
i've not heard one second of ms handler speaking, but i worked an event of hers and the fans were completely awful people. if the taliban wants to rid the world of a bunch of shitty americans, they should fly a plane into her next performance.
BNB- true, the books do change tack and don't revel in the violence in the way that the br movie does (i've not read it), but, like hoodwink points out, i can't believe that *somewhere* along the line the comparison didn't pop up. i could maybe believe it 15 or 20 years ago, but not now.
yankee deer, i was thinking of that album when he was describing kotche's style.
agreed. i don't have anything clever to add, but the radiohead guys always come across as nice, thoughtful guys (outside of thom's post-ok computer breakdown), which is a real nice contrast to people like kanye and mia.
yes, the idea is basically the same. if i remember correctly, collins said in an interview that she was unaware of battle royale until after publishing the first book, but i don't know if i believe that.
i thought pbr was cheap, though
wear a collar, spikes ok.
too bad it wasn't half man/half amazing.
not today, man.
fuck you.
can i get a version without richard dreyfuss?
sigh. nevermind…
hey, puke drunk, is yee yee gonna hafta choke a bitch?
what about white guys who actually have insight into urban life and realize that pretty much everything about 36 chambers is fucking awesome?
the familiarity of Selway's debut
don't you mean "familialarity?"