I guess I just don’t spend time with people who yell homophobic slurs at each other.
I guess I just don’t spend time with people who yell homophobic slurs at each other.
Amazing.
Before you go, can you tell me your favorite lyric from All in the Family?
No worries.
In 1998, Blink 182 was still playing small clubs in support of Dude Ranch. Dammit had gotten some airplay on 120 minutes. 1999 is when they got big with Enema of the State.
Thanks chief.
You’re going with the old “how come the black guys can say it?” spiel?
I did confront the substance.
Glad to see you have grown from an angry teenager who likes Korn to an angry adult who likes Korn.
Half of the people yelling at me about my mocking of Korn keep saying, “well rap and hip hop have a lot of homophobic lyrics and you are not complaining about them!"
Sorry to mock your music with the homophobic lyrics and 7-string bass.
If you ignore the blatant homophobia and misogyny, poor musicianship and horrible lyrics, it is not all bad. I mean, they had a 7-string bass. Where would we be without it? And some of the drummers were competent.
I didn’t realized “I don’t listen to homophobic music” was such a controversial opinion.
I usually just don’t buy albums that have two mean calling each other homophobic slurs. But that is just me.
So did you like “All in the Family"?
I know a lot of people who stand by early Korn. But Follow the Leader contains a 5-minute track of Fred Durst and Johnathan Davis calling each other homophobic slurs.
You needed the baggies jncos to make sure nobody messed with you in the food court.
Ohh. They were economically frustrated and disenfranchised, so they were willing to overlook the message of intolerance.
“They spoke to kids from low-income backgrounds and gave them the chance to both find commonality with others through their pain and revel in a gaudy, escapist fantasy.”