Marry me, Binky.
Marry me, Binky.
Thing is, these are clever because BM's and BJ's are things one can genuinely enjoy. What manner of fucktard wishes for venereal disease?
Too bad Oasis wasn't the Len Bias of rock.
I was in an AOL chatroom, pretending to give a fuck about Oasis.
Bad dog.
You jizzed all over yourself, metaphorically speaking.
Nelson's ha-ha is off in this episode.
I remember loving this story in high school.
Okay, that made me laugh out loud.
I haven't heard Scott Weiland's solo albums, but that's mostly because I couldn't stand him in Stone Temple Pilots, and don't fancy the idea of him going solo, as he was maybe the sole reason for my dislike of STP.
Yeah, I fucking love X and saw them a month ago; they screened The Unheard Music beforehand, which I'd only seen in pieces on youtube (fucking awesome). While under-rated, they're definitely not a one-man-cult band.
Good going, Futurechimp. Your variety of links in videocracy have been much appreciated, the majority of which are probably relevant to the topic of obscure cults.
Hey, speaking of Sterling Hayden: The Killing. Outside of my film-nerd friends, no one ever gives this Kubric gem a chance, it seems to me. Maybe I just need more film-nerd friends (though I myself don't qualify as one, as my movie knowledge is random and sporadic at best).
I kind of agree that some of the examples are far from one-man cult obscurities. For instance, yeah, I know a shit-ton of people who love Big Lebowski. For a cult hit, it sure seems to be popular as hell.
Do you feel that way now that Top is 'roided out?
I can see this growing on me over time, maybe.
Thanks Juanito and Miller, for I've just listened to Sometime Around Midnight and All My Friends, and enjoyed both quite a bit.
Teadoust is much more tolerable when he talks about the stuff he likes rather than tearing into or dismissing everyone/everything else. But that pretty much applies to anyone.
^^^That was beautifully insane.