Sir Mix-a-Lot seems like he'd be a fun guy to hang out with.
Sir Mix-a-Lot seems like he'd be a fun guy to hang out with.
Bush sold millions of shitty records. Mudhoney has sold a few hundred thousand good ones.
I kinda love the way they present him with 5 issues, and he basically sorta-solves one of them. "OK, let's go!"
"1950s Middle Level Management and the Sensitive Pony-tail Men"
I feel asleep once listening to Peter Gabriel, only to be woken up by the whispering of "they're watching!" in "This is the Picture."
I'm pretty sure I've seen pics MJK wearing a bow tie.
All bald people look alike to me.
After watching Invictus and The Damned United (featuring sports I am respectfully ambivalent about, and fucking loathe (respectively)), and loving both, I've come to the conclusion that generally speaking the best sports movie aren't about the sport, so whether or not I understand what the hell is going on in the…
Minus points to BD for launching Robert Wuhl's career. Such as it was.
Eh, Major League to me seems to basically jamming the Slap Shot template on a baseball movie. It's fun, it's quotable, it's fine (Ueck being Ueck can make just about any movie better) but I can't call it "great" in any way.
No one should ever feel the need to make up an excuse to mention The Naked Gun.
Yeah, I agree. Raimi NAILS the baseball scenes. The melodrama, not so much.
To me it always kinda seemed like what Ralphie Parker and the gang got up to in the summer.
Halfway to serial-killer-ville, Squints became neighborhood bully Alan on Freaks and Geeks.
All of the 5th Element is kinda unnecessary and confusing.
Costner is one of those guys who, when playing to his strengths, can be really good.
I agree with all this….and what's mind-boggling is that I think The Outer Limits might be their best album.
That's more an Iron Maiden/Judas Priest/early Crue kinda thing.
Eh, I think the humor was still there, there were just fewer (for lack of a better word) "novelty" tracks.
Wait, what?