I especially like seeing Jay Baruchel "makin' it rain" during that scene.
I especially like seeing Jay Baruchel "makin' it rain" during that scene.
Thanks, and good to know they've slowed down. I'm not an uber-environmentalist, but when I think about the landfills worth of CDs out there, I get seriously bummed.
Serious question - are they still pressing hundreds of thousands of compact discs to prepare for the possibility that shitty album #2453254A might be a runaway hit? Or do they do super limited runs these days and assume most interested parties will buy it on iTunes?
You probably should not continue to waste stuff like this on the comment section of the AV Club. I say this without sarcasm. Maybe you should be writing a book? Really interesting read…
I feel the same way, although I did laugh a couple of times. It wasn't awful, but I think it was aimed at teenagers, and I was 29 at the time.
@avclub-85b0faa88b92483cbe957df7eb9602cd:disqus TSIB is great, but their 1992 release, Souls at Zero, was their departure from their hardcore background into psych/drone weirdness and that made them one of the most important bands of the 90s.
I'm really excited to see that Neurosis will be included in the 1992 installment of the column.
I totally know her name because of the Voluptuous Horror - used to see their posters and flyers all over the Lower East Side in the 90s.
I can't wait till they review the episode where Coach Biff is more centrally-featured. I won't say anything specific to avoid spoilers, but that might be my favorite of the series…
Yeah, I saw the last Sabbath reunion 15 years ago and Bill Ward was not the weak link in the band.
Podcasts don't take up as much time as video games. Even back when I was last gaming regularly (my freshman year of college, c. 1993/1994,) to get good at any video game required endless hours of dedication, time that I quickly realized, is not readily available in the adult world.
No, you misunderstand - I'm not saying that, if they say to no longer listen to a podcast, I will immediately stop; far from it. Most of the podcasts I listen to regularly I have been listening to since long before this column started. I was asking if they are implying that those podcasts that they stop covering are…
So when Podmass drops a podcast from its lineup, (e.g. Uhh Yeah Dude,) are we to understand that they are, in effect, saying that said podcast is no longer worth listening to?
True. Seriously though - do all people fetishize the decade that they were born in / just missed? I was born in '75 and most of the music I listen to these days was from the 70s. I feel like I missed out on everything cool!
Nah, I keep it close to my heart - I had it bronzed and put on a chain. There's nothing my love can't fix!
You know what was great about the 90s? Yeah, me neither.
Yeah, this is spot-on. I watched Katy Perry: Part of Me and got the same impression.
Haha - there's one scene where Nick and Lindsay are hugging and he starts trying to unhook her bra because he's a spazz. And when she gets pissed at him, he stammers "John Bohnam died" as his excuse for his gross misreading of social cues. Classic.
Yes, well-said. It took me years to realize that while girls might like the kind of sensitivity and vulnerability that Nick wears on his his sleeve, they want to find it underneath a confident shell, not be bludgeoned with it from day 1.
Jeez, even reading about Nick make's me squirm, let alone re-watrching the show. Jason Segal's performance hit home way too hard for me; the awkwardness around girls especially. And while he comes off as a good guy, there's nothing 'charming' about his behavior that ultimately, with persistence, 'pays off,' because…