avclub-ddb1b62e0c8c0b8b020fb2a35cee6494--disqus
MookieFL
avclub-ddb1b62e0c8c0b8b020fb2a35cee6494--disqus

You know, right now is before he's 35. He could be an overachiever and knock that shit out right now.

Am I the only one who doesn't get the Danny McBride phenomenon?
I don't dislike the guy, I just don't find him particularly funny. In anything. Just me?

Math and stuff
Shouldn't that be 100% smudgier?

I think my favorite album with Eno as a performer is his 1990 collaboration with John Cale, "Wrong Way Up." It's just a great, slightly askew, pop album.

Gigantic
There's a shitty Kim Deal joke just begging to be made here, but I'm too unskilled to make it.

I think her teeth are great, because you just can't work the word "snaggletooth" into enough sentences, as far as I'm concerned (so of course I'm also glad to see Ms. Dunst on the list).

"Breezy"
The first such MPDG that came to my mind was Kay Lenz in "Breezy," which I only watched because it starred William Holden…I just looked it up on IMDB and discovered that Clint Eastwood was the director. Interesting, although the movie really wasn't.

Also "Born the Run," "Katy Lied," "Another Green World," "Wish You Were Here," and "Physical Graffiti."

The whole s' or s's thing is sort of unsettled, and while s's is probably more the standard, my last name ends with an s, and I hate how it looks…sorry about your head.

And of course, that should be "Waters' solo stuff."

Ouch. Actually, I removed "The Final Cut" in favor of New Order because it hasn't held up as well for me. Just because something isn't my favorite album of a single year, doesn't mean it's not one of my favorite albums.

Yes, I'm Old (Part 4)
2000: Grandaddy, "The Sophtware Slump"
2001: Spiritualized, "Let it Come Down"
2002: Interpol, "Turn on the Bright Lights"
2003: Explosions in the Sky, "The Earth Is Not A Cold Dead Place"
2004: The Arcade Fire, "Funeral"
2005: Okkervil River, "Black Sheep Boy"
2006: Mogwai, "Mr. Beast"
2007: The

Yes, I'm Old (Part 3)
1990: Brian Eno & John Cale, "Wrong Way Up"
1991: A Tribe Called Quest, "The Low End Theory"
1992: Tom Waits, "Bone Machine"
1993: Nirvana, "In Utero"
1994: Suede, "Dog Man Star"
1995: Pulp, "Different Class"
1996: Soul Coughing, "Irresistible Bliss"
1997: Radiohead, "OK Computer"
1998: Neutral Milk

Yes, I'm Old (Part 2)
1980: Talking Heads, "Remain in Light"
1981: Elvis Costello, "Trust"
1982: Bruce Springsteen, "Nebraska"
1983: New Order, "Power, Corruption, & Lies"
1984: Roger Waters, "The Pros and Cons of Hitchhiking"
1985: Tom Waits, "Rain Dogs"
1986: The Smiths, "The Queen is Dead"
1987: Lyle Lovett, "Pontiac"
1988:

Yes, I'm Old (Part 1)
I decided to go with my favorite albums now, as opposed to then, so you're not going to see Hall & Oates' "Big Bam Boom" or Styx's "Kilroy Was Here."

Ironically, I own only 2 PS3 games, Uncharted and MLB: The Show (both are excellent), and I'm about to buy MGS4…by the way, I really liked Ratchet & Clank when I GameFlew…GameFlied(?) it.

Actually, I think rock and all of its various sub-genres (note: no apostrophe) is better and more varied than ever. If you're a fan of the classic rock acts like the Beatles, Stones, Zeppelin, Bowie, or any others, there are a ton of new bands (some great, some lousy) producing music in those styles. If you're a fan

Rap stopped being good when everyone started calling it "hip hop"
Jay-Z's a talented lyricist, but the only thing he's ever done that I can listen to is The Grey Album—the music that otherwise accompanies his lyrics is awful and annoying. For some reason in the mid-90's it became popular to stop rapping WITH the beat