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MyNameIsNoneOfYourGoddamnBusin
avclub-734ffb84cfa214922893511fae356b45--disqus

See also: Seven Mary Three.

That's the minimum for any album that buys a full-page ad.

I'm not sure, but I don't think there's an actual attempt to make a joke in here.

They apparently did one and only one episode with a studio audience after realizing it had far fewer set changes than other episodes.

You're noticing the only region on the couch where there isn't a woman?

Went to one of those "Has-Beens of the Nineties" shows with some friends. Performances from Sugar Ray, Smash Mouth (whose forty minute set featured five cover songs including two by the Kinks), Blues Traveler, and Uncle Kracker. What I noticed mostly was how fucked up and out of it John Popper looked as I wondered

I've woken up on multiple occasions to find that I've called people while asleep at two or three in the morning (I don't even drink). To date none of these calls has been answered, but I'm kinda worried about what I'd say if they had been.

It's supposed to be about isolating yourself from the world or some shit like that. A transparent window would defeat the point I guess.

Do you count the ability to inherit all of Lou Reed's money as a superpower?

What I noticed was that the dead fiancee's headstone revealed a lifespan of 1905-1933. If it's assumed Elva is approximately the same age (more likely slightly younger), that means the character in the episode is supposed to be younger than sixty (the actress was born in 1888). I know she's supposed to handicapped,

Ed Stasium is kind of underrated in what he brought to the Ramones production-wise. Then again, he also the guy who tried to add tambourines to a Motorhead album he worked on, so no one's perfect.

I love the fact that that song follows "I Wanna Be Your Boyfriend" on the album. It continues the story with an implied "She said no."

I know it's a joke, but Richie put out an album this year that's actually pretty good, even if half of it is just Ramones-less versions of stuff he recorded with them.

He turned down the gig to join Metallica in 2002, so he possibly could have had a career by now.

The demos and alternative versions suggest it could have been pretty good without Spector (which also would have spared us the album's—and to that point career—lowlight cover of his "Baby I Love Us" (their highest charting single somehow, peaking at number eight in the UK)).

"The KKK Took My Baby Away"—the perfect example of turning dark lyrical themes into catchy pop.

Four-Five-Six-Seven All Good Cretins Go To Heaven.

On Reality Bites: Yeah, I didn't really like it either, although at the time I blamed that feeling almost entirely on the Troy character and the fact that there was no acknowledgment that he wasn't a good character. Still, it did have a few good jokes and cameo appearances, but that's not enough to make up for the

I love the word "ethereal" too, but I don't know of it in context of "delicate." I just think of it as a vaguely peaceful otherworldly concept.

Did they mean to call Daniel Baldwin for this one and get the wrong number?