"No, that's ska."
"No, that's ska."
"Days Go By" is an excellent pick. For ages after hearing it in that car commercial as a kid I tried to find it to no avail (the words "without you" aren't much help in Googling song lyrics, as it turns out) before finding it on a whim when someone said in an iTunes review of "Poor Leno" by Röyksopp that they were…
For one-hit wonders where I would stand up for the actual extended discography of the act, it's a toss-up between Deee-Lite ("Groove Is In The Heart") and Was (Not Was) ("Walk The Dinosaur"). Deee-Lite undoubtedly have the better hit, but Was (Not Was) are way more interesting across their career arc, plus their basic…
Honestly I think there's a level on which that enhances it. There's just something about Vince that seems like it makes him the most primed to respond well to a panicky white mom berating his lyrics.
Glad this happened, but not the best turnout. One guy just asked him how he felt about Todd VanDerWerff "embarrassing himself" over at Vox.
Honestly that combination of personnel is so bizarre that I'm still confident we'll be getting something as weird and thrilling as the book. Full speed ahead.
I have two primary, somewhat contradictory memories of Carnage: one of correctly guessing the password to jump to the final boss of the Spider-Man GameBoy Color game, and being terrified of this viscous red thing that had fused with Doctor Octopus; and one of watching a rented DVD from Blockbuster of the cartoon that…
Am I wrong to think this is weird timing?
To be fair, if you spent any time around the tumblr Sherlock fandom, you certainly wouldn't get the sense that they felt they were being pandered to. Probably the opposite.
It's kind of an early one and I don't know how well-regarded it is, but "The Pendragon" was one of the first ones I heard, and it's a story that still fascinates me above and beyond any other Dollop. Especially interesting because it almost certainly wouldn't have been in the podcast's purview unless it literally…
Have you gotten to that really bad 90's Doctor Who movie where he plays the villain yet?
Blue Bloods has episode after episode of Donnie Wahlberg committing heroic police brutality because something or other "pushed him over the edge this time", plus the occasional storyline where they have to contend with a scary black community leader who riles up the public over total misunderstandings where it looks…
That movie would have gone pretty differently if John Wick had an A.V. Club account to vent on the comments sections of Game of Thrones reviews.
What I don't get is how any of this circles back around into a feature film starring the character who has a murderous grudge against a high schooler.
Unless, of course, this ends up being some sort of superpowered version of Rushmore, but something tells me that's not where Sony's taking it.
The implication seems to be that, rather than see it in theaters, 50 expects to stream the film via his Amazon Fire USB stick once it arrives on the relevant services, and recommends that his audience do the same.
I have a probably-unfortunate level of fondness for these movies. Apart from some gross-out humor and a general inescapable air of 2004-ness they're both pretty enjoyable.
I believe the comparison being made is to shopping for condoms.
Don't dredge up my dreams of one day getting an anthology-style Assassins tv series, it's too hurtful.
~incisive~