And that sweet sweet Laurel Canyon sound.
And that sweet sweet Laurel Canyon sound.
"The crew coming together, if only a little; Spike sort of looking out for Faye, Ein saving Jet from catatonia."
This episode is probably the high point of the Bebop crew effectively working together. It's kinda sad that, with only three episodes left, Spike, Jet, Faye, and Ed are all finally comfortable enough with…
I don't know if G4's obscure enough for TV Outland, but it definitely should be the next network covered. Everyone who knows about it seems to hate it for what happened to Tech TV eight years ago.
I've officially become an old person: I know Toure from appearing on MSNBC as a contributor than I do from him being a VJ.
It's very strange to see Fuse jump from being the Hot Topic* of cable to TRL-era MTV. Granted, I had probably aged out of Fuse's target audience by the time my cable company got the channel, but I certainly enjoyed some of it. There was the one "rock" guy who would always give little history lessons about older…
I think she was contractually required to wear nothing but a leather bustier between 2006 and 2008.
No mention of Fuse's biggest sin of unleashing Tila Tequila on an unsuspecting public? Before Fuse got a hold of her, she was just some anonymous skank on MySpace.
The best Cleveland can seem to muster is an exhibit at Cleveland-Hopkins Airport about Seigel, Shuster, and Superman.
I've always heard that Andy becoming a samurai is a reference to The Magnificent Seven, which was the Americanized version of The Seven Samurai.
Anyone else remember when adult swim "lost" this episode in the fall of 2001? Online conspiracies claimed that it was about the first scene, where the destruction of a two-towered skyscraper was the punchline to Andy and Spike's bickering over Teddy Bomber.
The "Stewart's psychiatrist committed suicide because of Stewart" runner was exceptionally dark for this show. Needless to say, it was my favorite joke of the episode.
DIdn't Jesse Camp get found out later that he wasn't the "homeless stoned glam-rock kid" that he made himself out to be? That's why he was fired, right?
That's because the New Radicals' album is an underrated power-pop album. Listen to it again, without the stupid music video.
CHI? I hope it stars Chi McBride.
I've heard that story too. I think even George Foreman alluded to it in an interview, so there's more credibility to this than "Hogan was to star in the Wrestler."
Oh, 107.9 The End: the longest running of Cleveland's many short-lived alternative rock stations.
Don't ask me! I'm product of American education system. I also build poor-quality cars and inferior-style electronics.
…Dawes?
Probably something to do with metamorphic rocks, I'd wager.
So, apparently when he gave the name "Mos Def" to Stephen Colbert a few months ago, that wasn't a legitimate hand-off of power.