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    Not sure if it's on the american DVD, but there is a small special feature (like, 20 seconds long) that unambiguously answers the question.

    And Xander from Buffy and Erinn Hayes from Children's Hospital.

    :(
    This is awful. Broadcast was one of my all-time favorite bands. I've seen them like 4 or 5 times at least. I can't recall having ever been so shocked at a musician's death. My heartfelt sympathies go out to her friends and family.

    I happen to love Sick, Sick, Sick. Era is definitely better than Lullabies, but whoever said that Songs for the Deaf is one of the greatest of the decade is right on.

    Honestly, that book basically validated a lot of things I had strong feelings about that conflicted with evolutionary theory about sex. I also now have restructured the way I teach sex when I teach a psychology course.

    Ditto, but indeed it came out last year.

    I don't read a lot of fiction
    but I did happen to like Jasper Fforde's "Shades of Grey" this year. It was a whimsical take on A Brave New World.

    Yes, Radiolab on WNYC. And you might be right; it could be because it was a radio show first, but I would imagine far more people listen to it as a podcast (I certainly do).

    Is this only podcasts that have started in 2010?
    Because otherwise I am shocked…SHOCKED, that not a single commenter even mentioned Radiolabs, which is still holding strong as my favorite podcast, even though they seem to be making fewer and fewer episodes.

    It's Primitive Radio Gods, who, other than that song, were oddly an industrial band.

    Nine inch nails and Tori Amos
    I said it above, but I'll make it its own comment: I'm a bit surprised that neither the 94 or 95 columns mentioned The Downward Spiral or Under the Pink, the highest selling albums for those two artists, and arguably the two most influential albums for those genres for that decade. I

    There was a ton of great stuff released 94-95 that is not being covered here, which is kind of sad. Certainly Mellon Collie in 95, but 94 had:

    You know, I think that electronic and rock musics have combined, at least in the last few years, and not really the way that people were expecting. Rolling Stone and Spin in those articles were predicting more of a hard rock/big beat kind of melange, which you could argue that Prodigy did pretty well (though I agree

    I still listen to that freaking album….COME BACK FAT AS A RAT…ALL UP AND DOWN THE EAST COAST.

    The Only Time
    is one of his most cringeworthy songs, but goddamn if it isn't worth it now that they mix that synth hook into the breakdown of Closer live.

    This was a great year for good music in general. Right now, I've only listened to half of 'Ye's album, and it's up there. ArchAndroid was amazing, the FlyLo album was amazing, Sleigh Bells, LCD Soundsystem, even the Gorillaz and Massive Attack made decent efforts. The only big release from an artist I like that

    Well
    He does have a small private practice in des moines that he wanted to turn more of his attention to.

    At this point, I cringe every time I see Wiig onscreen. They have totally overexposed her, which is sad, because she started out as one of the better castmembers.

    It was a pretty boring performance. I'm glad that a band like florence and the machine is getting a lot of mainstream love, I just wish that a better girl singer-songwriter had gotten the same opportunity. As someone said above, Regina Spektor, perhaps, or even better, Janelle Monae, who not only had one of the

    I'm fairly sure that, after midnight, you can say a lot of things on network that you can't normally say. A lot of the censorship is just convention. Did jenny slate get an FCC fine for saying "fuck" last year?