theodorexxfrostxxmca
Theodore_Frost
theodorexxfrostxxmca

Have you heard the latest? That guy who tried to assassinate a federal judge turned out to be a middle aged white Trump supporter who quotes Limbaugh. A small reminder, during the 2016 campaign Trump had called on his followers to assassinate federal judges (there’s only one definition of his infamous line ‘2nd

It’s complicated because Neil can say he doesn’t want the songs played but he, like many artists, don’t directly control how the songs are licensed. There is a tangled web of venue licensing deals, special events licensing deals and organization licensing deals that can be used to pretty much license any song you

From what I understand of it, Trump paid to license those Neil Young songs at the 4th event, so there wasn’t any violation of IP rights. Neil Young, like many artists, doesn’t actually own the rights to all his music and Trump paid the company that does. I assume that in the case of Linkin Park they had not paid for

See also “Fortunate Son”

he did???  Neil Young has made it VERY clear on numerous occasions that Dipshit can’t play his music.  But remember Trump is the “law and order” president.  Guess IP rights are something only libtards care about.  I’m so fucking tired of this guy and his cheap wannabe mafioso bullshit.

They only know the chorus, not the line about a thousand points of light for the homeless man.

That’s the same people that think Born in the USA is a patriotic song. Listening to lyrics isn’t their strong side.

Trump did try very hard to be a successful businessman and got very far (with his dad’s money) before he fell and lost his casino/real estate empire and then came back as a professional last-name licenser and con artist. And Trump seems pretty nihilistic. But yes, the lyrics have a tone of pensive self-reflection that

similar feelings, although I’ll happily still stand up, in 2020, for Linkin Park being Actually Good. we can (and should) laugh at nu-metal all we want, but LP pulled away from that sound pretty successfully, and were always good at synthesising a bunch of styles into their own while being, like, actually good at

That’s always been a song with a lot of meaning to me, especially since Chester Bennington’s suicide. Trump abusing it is absolutely appalling to me.

Given the way The Lincoln Project has been absolutely crushing him in their videos this week, I’d think he’d want to keep that name out of his mouth as much as possible.

Less surprising then artists asking the Trump campaign to stop using their songs than the actual song choices themselves. “In the End” is about as baffling as their choice of leaning on The Rolling Stone’s “You Can’t Always Get What You Wanted” during rallies, though neither of them approach the head scratcher of

As a suburban teenager white kid of the right age to be totally into linkin park, who is now a suburban dad who still has them on his 'mowing the lawn' mix, I'm happy to see I won't have to delete them from my playlist

“Most people don’t know that Linkin [Park] was a Republican.” ~ President Trump, probably

The real hero of this video is the guy who keeps shouting about the lady’s “two hundred and forty thousand on TikTok”

Did Callaghan say whether the Body Shots Killer came through?

I believe the children are our future.

Credit to Sufjan Stevens for first rhyming “Fourth of July” with “We’re all gonna die.”

I really hope this guy’s TV show deal goes through, his YouTube channel is one of the funniest/scariest things out there right now.

If the end of the world ever occurs, the final video I will watch in the final seconds of the end of the world will be Porky Pig saying "B-b-b-b-b-b-b- That's all folks!"