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Matt Steele
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Huskey absolutely losing his shit on the audience during the Popcorn Gallery segment was incredible.

I'm assuming that's when Seinfeld started? When Jerry was 38?

I had a Marilyn Manson bootleg on cassette back in the 90s and they did "Down in the Park", and it was not very good. Foo Fighters version was much better.

Rollins was not ready to work the WWE main event style match the day he walked in the door. And Rollins couldn't really cut a promo to save his life until very late 2013, early 2014 if we're being honest.

Sheamus is 37?! Jesus Christ. I thought he was like 25 when he started in WWE.

The problem is he was NXT exclusive when hardly anyone was watching NXT. The other problem is he's now successful in TNA. If he came back to WWE, it'd be a step down for him no matter what.

And the final season of Mad Men had a pivotal episode end with "Is That All There Is?" by Peggy Lee! Just had to share that here.

My friend and I started a joke metal band in college named Scrotum Pole.

Yeah, I've kind of thought Balor ran over Itami all along. He already had his shot at Owens and lost. Itami was on a roll, and Balor needed that extra advantage to ensure he'd get a shot at Owens.

I liked "Welcome to the Fold" but I was a much bigger fan of Short Bus than Title of Record.

Boggy Depot starts off with like 3-4 GREAT songs, then gets a little spotty. Degradation Trip is pretty dark and takes a while to get into, but I love it. The single CD version is worth checking out first, and if you like it, then check out the full double-CD version to hear it how Jerry originally intended.

Aside from a handful of songs on With Teeth, I've loved almost all of NIN's post-Fragile output.

"Junkhead" is all about being proud of doing heroin and not giving a fuck what other people think about it. "Junkhead" is to heroin what Black Sabbath's "Snowblind" was to cocaine. Oddly enough, both songs come from classic albums (Dirt and Vol 4, respectively) that came out right before drug issues derailed those

Even at his drug-addled, depressed worst, I always thought Reznor was really funny in interviews.

There's a part of Facelift where certain songs hit and you can tell, "Oh yeah, these guys were definitely a glam rock band before this." It's still an amazing debut album, but they hadn't quite nailed down that signature sound completely on every song.

"Over Now" to me, always came across as Jerry Cantrell realizing, "Well, this is definitely the end of this chapter of my life." I don't think he necessarily thought, "Well, heroin's got Layne, this is the end," but it sounded like a guy who knew he was about to move onto different things. There's definite optimism

Agreed. The studio versions of "Frogs" and "Sludge Factory" are just utterly depressing. Layne's voice was so frail on that album, but they had him layer so many harmonies on every song that it just added to the really creepy, eerie vibe on the songs he handled most of the vocals for.

Bald-headed Richard Patrick always scared me in this video. Hard to believe this is the same guy that gave us garbage like "Take A Picture" and Army Of Anyone.

Cue Pete Holmes' impression of Kumail. "Oh gott… EMILEEEEY!"

For Crue I would bet that's the exception, but you'd be shocked going to an Iron Maiden or Motorhead concert and seeing how young most of the people there are. I first saw Iron Maiden when I was 16 back in 2000, and now when I go to an Iron Maiden concert, I'm one of the "old guys". It's crazy and impressive how young