AVC (listens): "No 'Boys & Girls?' Okaaay….No 'Feel Good, Inc.'?! MEHHHH: C."
AVC (listens): "No 'Boys & Girls?' Okaaay….No 'Feel Good, Inc.'?! MEHHHH: C."
Funny you bring up Scott Walker, since some of the stuff on "Robots", like "You & Me", recalls some of Walker's more avant-garde output.
Would be fair to say that you love a bit of him?
All you have to do is throw shoes at him and he'll be forced to cobble, if memory serves me.
He's more Iago from Aladdin…a former supplicant who, from here on in, is looking out for himself.
I sooooo wanted that WW King guy to go "goochie, goochie, gooooo!" to the baby, in his demonic, WW voice.
But when she tells him that she'll be his FOREVER…whoa…prepubescent boner material right there!
Also, I know the Walkers aren't like, zombies, technically, but the horse was definitely a skeleton-zombie horse. I don't know if the show has done a decent enough job giving us White-Walker background info.
aka The Paw of the King.
Totally. Wet dream central right there.
I started watching some "Arrow" on Netflix. Decently dull Batman knockoff. And WHAT a knock-off! Seriously, I cannot fathom a more unoriginal character.
Whoa, the anti-"Master" vitriol is seething here! I didn't realize the backlash was so strong.
I think it's interesting that on a show that displays constant rape or near-rape of innocent characters (Sansa during the city riot), (this week's "fuck 'em till their dead"), that people would be so upset about a "rape-y" scene between two characters who have committed various atrocities, and whose relationship is…
I think you're all forgetting that the show acknowledges that there are still murderous ritualistic elites who are still at large. Cole tells Marty that "they didn't get all the bad guys" (para.) but that they just need to accept that they did what they could. I appreciated the fact that a show is willing to end it's…
Perfect example: in the episode "Fire Dogs", when Ren "saves" the giant fat woman from the burning building, you get a close up still frame of her grotesque visage, complete with fog horn.
The whole idea of Conglom-O was brilliant, and cynical, in the vein of the other themes regarding the disappointments of "modern life". It also struck me as a parody of Acme, the ubiquitous company that supplied so many anvils and giant sling-shots to various Looney Toons characters. The episode where Rocko goes to…
Some of them may turn out to be ordinary men…buuuuut better safe than sorry, then.
New single "17 Crimes" continues this trend; catchy single. I guess if My Chemical Romance has to break up, we have to settle for AFI.
"Dey LUVVAH bituv 'im!"
If anybody wants to hear the great, unreleased Weezer album, (aside from Return of the Rentals), it's Ozma's "Rock and Roll Part 3".