So, the students unwittingly answered the question they were attempting to not dignify with a response.
So, the students unwittingly answered the question they were attempting to not dignify with a response.
The question asks whether verbal or physical attacks cause more pain. It’s an interesting question applied to any situation—how would you answer it? I agree that you can talk about usage without being provocative, but the question itself isn’t dumb.
Professors don’t get paid racks.
No.
Well said. I even learned something in regards to the consignment and outside vending at big-box stores. It reminds me of razor cartridges. Razors: most every adult uses them; they’re always behind security plastic.
It’s neither. It’s an objective description of how products are attained and placed based on evidence and experience that immediately and effectively undercuts the bald sensationalism of the original article.
What does it mean when you describe a pair of headphones as “easiest to drive” and “fast”?
What does it mean when you describe a pair of headphones as “easiest to drive” and “fast”?
Oh, shit! The Verve Pipe’s “Photograph” is so much better than “The Freshmen”
Local H has absolute dozens of songs better than “Bound for the Floor.” Here are two: “What Can I Tell You?” and “What Would You Have Me Do?”
Great article. Good Time was by far the best movie of 2017. It’s nice to see it get some (more) recognition.
Well, the Cops line is the best of ’em and has the most likes, so at least there’s some discernment in this world.
That first paragraph is a masterwork.
Nah, I have to disagree. One of the things I like about Eminem is how immune to fads he is. He didn’t succumb to the Timbaland aping of the mid-aughts, he didn’t succumb to the bassy minimalism of Noah Shebib aping of the early 2010s, and he doesn’t succumb to the awful skitterbeat trapshit of today. He is beholden to…
Well...what about Alaska? That’s the real issue here.
Good artists borrow, great artists steal...from great artists who steal.
No plagiarizing “Creep”! We already did!
Ladies and gentlemen, we got a Hollies fan on our hands!
What does “get back to the I” mean?
I don’t know of any other songs with this underlying chord structure, but I agree that The Hollies had a point, and Radiohead doesn’t. It’s odd that they’d want to bring this up, because it immediately brings up the memory of the time they much more obviously ripped off someone in relation to “Creep.”
Boy, it sure does. Pull up an audio program and overlay those first verses. Nearly identical. The choruses are very different—this is true—but the verses couldn’t be more similar.