avclub-8d80bff6fec8f6d310dc01fab5aab6d0--disqus
Erwin Tuwonwon
avclub-8d80bff6fec8f6d310dc01fab5aab6d0--disqus

Yeah, any passion play is at least a little compelling to me. I love King of Kings and I have seen/heard Superstar more times than I can figure.

The Layton credits are always good, whether gentle and lovely or poppy and fun like Mysterious Flower from Miracle Mask: http://youtu.be/6w4hMKOpCXs

Singing that fantastic failure is a great way to get people to start disliking you openly. Yes, from experience.

I couldn't even remember SMB3's ending theme. I think SMB2 and SM64 are far more memorable and appealing, being both great as ending songs and incredibly satisfying to hum along to.

The Good The Bad & The Queen might be the Albarn project I've listened to the most. It's got this weird, comfortable doo-wop carnival feel that isn't as awful as that sounds now that I say it. If I'm ever driving at night, especially home from my girlfriend's, it's often in my car and never not in the mood for it.

Jesus Christ…

Regardless, I'm pretty sure the Alamagordo articles have been easily found online for at least a few years, so the sense of urban legend attached to this dump (an event that wasn't even unique or uncommon back then) just becomes more baffling.

RETRO magazine had a pretty great article on this featuring an interview with Jim Heller who actually organised the burial, and besides going way more in-depth about Atari at the time, it pretty much ends leaving everyone in the documentary looking even more lame. When it got too expensive to ship merchandise to San

Is it an urban legend if it appeared in newspapers at the time and was never in doubt?

Learn how to spell/pronounce lieutenant, hiccup, and fetus properly and we won't argue about how to pronounce Greek.