I prefer to interpret that line as "like Frankenstein, I did it my way" and then imagining the whole song as about Victor Frankenstein and his struggle against the scientific establishment.
I prefer to interpret that line as "like Frankenstein, I did it my way" and then imagining the whole song as about Victor Frankenstein and his struggle against the scientific establishment.
FFIV also has Edge fighting his mutated parents, who regain sanity just long enough to kill themselves.
I picture Locke as the Han Solo type, especially given his relationship with Celes. Is Banon Admiral Ackbar?
Dude, you shouldn't joke about that. Eric Clapton's son was a great writer; I heard he did, like, 50 stories before he died.
Tweety also tried to kill Eddie Valiant that one time in Toontown. What a dick.
Led Zeppelin didn't write tunes everyone liked. They left that to the Bee Gees.
AND "No Quarter." Houses of the Holy is up there with III for my favorite Zeppelin album; first album of theirs I bought as well, at the time mostly because of "Over the Hills and Far Away." And "The Rain Song" is fantastic.
"In general I'd expect an x-foot long Twinkie to weigh about 2.34 x³ pounds."
On the one hand, the proton pack is not a toy. On the other hand, I love this plan! I'm excited to be a part of it!
ToeJam & Earl in Panic on Funkotron. Tells you everything you need to know about the game right up front.
"Fred Bear" is the one that enables me to tune out how batshit insane he is.
least favorite guitar solo: It's a tie between anything by Steve Clark of Def Leppard and C.C. DeVille of Poison.
Favorite? Ted Nugent on "High Enough" when he deflects bullets with nothing but the power of his rockin'… seriously, though, it's probably Stairway.
I'm glad somebody brought up "Rime of the Ancient Mariner." And I would submit "Powerslave" for consideration as well; if there's an album with a stronger final two tracks I don't know about it.
I especially like the acoustic version Metallica did with John Popper.
Yeah, don't people realize that their vitriol toward Ghostbusters 2 only feeds the psychomagnetheric slime and fuels the return of Vigo? Maybe it doesn't hold up quite as well as the original, but there's still a lot I love about it. Especially this line:
Very good Louis. Short, but pointless.
"its forefathers’ notable exploits"
I for one am shocked to not see Rod Torfulson's Armada featuring Herman Menderchuk discussed in this article.
If money's all that he loves, then that's what he'll receive. I wonder if he really cares about anything… or anybody.
The Frisco Senior Citizen