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Matt Steele
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The fact that "Gimme Some Money" was used on like an H&R Block commercial or something like that and it's not being played as a joke makes it even funnier to me.

I loved their playful friendship that developed with Ronnie James Dio, too. Showed the guy actually had a good sense of humor about himself. RIP

Oh absolutely. "Ride the Lightning" is just one great example where it really makes the solo stand out even more.

In Flames started doing this a lot around the Whoracle album. They went from being a melodic Swedish death metal band to being a REALLY melodic metal band, hold the death. "Episode 666" has this type of key change (which Iron Maiden also did quite a bit, see "The Clairvoyant"'s 2nd and 3rd choruses), and In Flames

Gaga eating cereal while there's still action going on in the bed. "Oh, you guys are still here?"

That's some The Informant-level shit.

I was still kind of expecting Ron Funches to turn to her after she was done talking and ask, "Now who are you?" but I'm glad he didn't.

Gene Creemers' response to this rendition of "Pleep Ploop" was incredible. Jon Daly is the best.

Receptionist: "You can't feed seeing-eye dogs treats like that. Don't roll your eyes at me!"
E.L.: "I didn't!" (Waves hands in front of blind receptionist's face)
(Blind receptionist flips him off)

Newsted seemingly got a lot of enjoyment out of breaking stuff in that video.

April wasn't a bad person, she was just an insecure dumb kid, who reluctantly matured and would occasionally express human feelings. I think Jim became more of an asshole as The Office went on, whereas April became nicer.

Exactly. Axelmania is RUNNING WILD, for real, yet they insist on making us feel stupid for liking him. "He's the guy you want? Well, you're wrong. He sucks. Watch him get tossed in this battle royal in 5 seconds."

I loved how once Rusev insulted "the parents," Cena got real mad and took his shirt off. Then once Rusev insulted "the children," Cena LOST HIS SHIT. Rusev is the best.

After the Benoit tragedy, I kind of stopped following WWE regularly for about 4 years. I was super-into the new ECW brand, and he was seemingly going to be a big part of that (as was my love of CM Punk), but after that tragedy, I just grew tired and jaded of watching wrestling. I would try and watch the Rumble every

I'm loving the cocky, "told you so" attitude of Jamie Noble, and the deadly silent and emotional Joey Mercury as the Stooges 2.0. J&J Security are really fantastic.

They were chanting "Yes!" during Rock's promo, and I'm willing to bet he barely knew who Daniel Bryan was, or what the "Yes!" chant was even about at that point. At least Cena called out Bryan directly, even though he said, "Daniel Bryan, you owe me one." Why is that, John? Because you properly identified the man who

I hate WWE's re-telling because they make it seem like Bischoff challenging Vince McMahon to a fight was some big desperation move. Well, then, what exactly was the DX invading Nitro thing then? Sure, WWE was on a hot streak at the time, but the war wasn't exactly won at that point.

You should listen to the We Watch Wrestling podcast, because you are basically on the same timeline as a fan as co-host/"Pro Wrestling Padawan" Tom Sibley. He got into wrestling at Mania 2013 due to the Punk vs. Undertaker match, and each week the other guys (co-hosts and comedians Matt McCarthy and Vince Averill)

How about The Old Stags?

Deadspin, Rolling Stone, AVClub, and everyone at Uproxx has been on point lately with wrestling. I like Shoemaker, I can tolerate Cheap Heat, but sometimes the "hook" of his pieces just doesn't work, and he'll shoehorn a phrase or point into his pieces repeatedly to make it a "thing," and it can be really annoying