No, an otherkin is still out of place in an 80s setting, whether or not they use the terminology.
No, an otherkin is still out of place in an 80s setting, whether or not they use the terminology.
Putting an otherkin in a show set in the 80s is moronically anachronistic. Figures, though, since the creators hadn't heard of G.L.O.W. outside of the documentary.
THE Nine Inch Nails is the version where he attempts to convince us his wife is a good singer.
More like frog locust. Think Revelation allusion. Doesn't matter who she specifically is; just an innocent who is socially disgraced in the 50s because of getting pregnant out of wedlock (she thinks, via a kiss), ends up raising the Rosemary's baby, which was spurred on by the Lovecraftian ritual mantra of the evil…
"Comparing Grunge to Goth is more relevant" Somewhat, though Goth had two distinct phases and three or four offshoots; and most of the bands that appealed to the Goth audience listened to were far away from the Batcave-style accretion disc like say, The Legendary Pink Dots or The Cocteau Twins, who were vocally…
And Skin Yard?
Post-punk negates your argument.
Breaking Bad says quite a lot of things; the inhuman cost of health care, for one, the repercussions of the "War on Drugs." Contemporary pride, greed, sense of self-worth. Relationships between fathers and sons, father figures and surrogate sons. I could go on.
Always wondered if this song were a reference to that sculpture in front of the Seattle Asian Art Museum in Volunteer Park (search "Black Sun sculpture" on Wikipedia). A view of the Space Needle is framed by the hole in the center.
My prediction: The ricin is for Gretchen and Elliot. Lydia getting the ricin seems too obvious. Walt needs her. The M60 is for Todd's uncle and his crew. Walt recovers the methylamine and Jesse, his prodigal son/henchman. The end is "let's cook."