That seems about right.
That seems about right.
It works when a subject is truly passionate and/or knowledgeable about the song. A lot of times, it's simply "This song sucks and I have nothing else to add."
God, whatever summer that was that this came out was the worst because of this song. It played all the time on a fuse I believe (I love music video channels, what can I say?)
I liked them both when I was a teenager, but looking back, "Everything You Want" and "You're A God" sound like some MRA theme songs for guys that can't get dates BUT ITS CLEARLY NOT THEIR FAULT.
You love "Best Day of My Life?" You are truly history's greatest monster.
The tweets are kind of filler because posting a bunch of his vines (which really show how good the medium could be for comedy, if done right) would take away from the interview. He's a very funny guy.
It's Lt. Winslow punching Urkel in the face with the Chicago skyline silhouetted over his uniform.
It is, but I appreciated the editing in this. It hit the "Family Matters" montage beats really well that most others whiff at real hard.
I don't even think they filmed those abuse scenes for SOC. Too busy showing Dre patting himself on the back by starting Aftermath.
"Straight Outta Compton" was last fall.
"This Temporary Life" is such a good song. That whole "Future Soundtrack to America" was pretty solid.
Having seen it - it's not nearly good enough to transcend its creator's awfulness as a human being.
I think the problem has been Cudi being his own worst enemy. His early mixtapes and albums were good, but they've been weighed down by a tremendous amount of shit he's released over the years. He kind of went the Lupe Fiasco route of burying his legacy with release after underwhelming release.
He should go to hospital and checked in to the psych ward after trying to commit suicide like all us regular folk! That's the only TRUE way to deal with depression.
His early stuff from before he was famous talked about his struggles with loneliness and depression. So, no.
It wouldn't surprise me if Trump already suffers from it.
I remember getting the cassette and asking my mom if any of the bands on it were popular in the '60s. I'm not sure how she broke it to me that they were all fake.
I…..don't recall this at all.
It debuted at #3, right behind the Steven Seagal/Keenan Ivory Wayans movie "The Glimmer Man." Good God, I'm glad it found an audience on home video.
I wish that movie had any funny material in general.