This could easily be a posed photo rather than a scene from an episode. Every version of Star Trek has produced posed photos for publicity purposes.
This could easily be a posed photo rather than a scene from an episode. Every version of Star Trek has produced posed photos for publicity purposes.
Um… the Rolling Stones actually were given a song by the Beatles, eventually recorded by both groups ("I Wanna Be Your Man," with Ringo on lead vocal in the Beatles' version).
Maybe they did and Trump himself is the time traveler…
Well, there was the HBO adaptation of Game Change that focused on the shitshow aspects of the Republican side of the race, with Ed Harris as McCain and Julianne Moore as Palin. It was worthy as a one-shot but I can't imagine it as a series.
I would say that in any presidential election with no incumbent running, there's a general tendency for the voters to reject any party nominee whose main justification for running is "It's my turn!" It comes across as hubris. It may even be hubris.
Young son
Don't let me down, young son
Now I'm even happier that I bailed on Enterprise after episode 1. (I did return for "In a Mirror Darkly" but even there, the only truly memorable part was the alternate-evil-empire opening credits.)
Never heard it before, and clicked off the YouTube version after 20 seconds. Repellent. Not sure it's a song as such, though.
In any case, I'm glad there are two of us who recall it. The late 1960s and early '70s were a fabulously eclectic time for top-40 radio, nicht wahr?
All I got are 42 boxes of Lean Cuisine swedish meatballs.
Well, I don't.
Yes, but it wasn't about a car crash, unless it was a flying car…
Calm down, Warren. I made the same point already (I was writing when you posted this). Now sit back down in your 1970 GTO and hit the open road.
"Ticking" is great in part because it's one of his prettiest compositions and nicest examples of piano playing, set against lyrics like those.
My candidate must be very obscure, as no one else has mentioned it yet it's perfect for the list: "D.O.A." by Bloodrock.
You mean the "Get Back"/"Don't Let Me Down" single, unless you're talking about some later reissue.
Is it known that none of the jury members had ever heard both recordings before drawing their conclusions? Even if the jury selection process had included sworn statements from juror candidates that they'd never previously heard either track, how could the judge have successfully prevented all the jurors from doing…
With both the original Gaye track and "Blurred Lines," there's a lot going on - specifically, the party-like atmosphere, people talking in the far background, etc. - that CAN'T be notated. Gaye himself, as far as I know, was the originator of this "feel" as the producer and songwriter of the What's Goin' On album of…
I'm pretty sure that LPs - or at least some LPs - as far back as the late 1960s had the P-in-a-circle that indicates performance copyright, in addition to the usual C-in-a-circle.
"Furthermore, because the U.S. Copyright Office only took the written sheet music for “Got To Give It Up” when it was originally released…"