Friday, April 18, 2014
Thursday, April 17, 2014
THE MOST INTERESTING RELIEVER IN THE WORLD: Either that, or Chris Resop has what they used to call a "social disease."
Wednesday, April 16, 2014
TELL ME WHAT YOU THINK ABOUT YOUR FRIENDS AT THE TOP: Unauthorized Muppets Impressionists x Early Andrew Lloyd Webber = Muppet Christ Superstar.
MY BODY. MY CHOICE. MY WAWA: The beloved regional convenience store chain turns 50 years old today, and Dan McQuade has 50 facts to celebrate.
Tuesday, April 15, 2014
AND THEN I REALIZED THAT A WOMAN'S LIFE IS WORTH NOTHING, UNLESS SHE'S MAKING A GREAT MAN GREATER: (Amy Schumer + Josh Charles) ^ Aaron Sorkin = The Food Room.
Monday, April 14, 2014
AT NOTABLE WEDDING, AN UNEXPECTED INCIDENT: How major media publications would have reported on that thing that happened on Game of Thrones last night.
(Please, no spoilers in the comments for those who haven't read the books.)
(Please, no spoilers in the comments for those who haven't read the books.)
WHEN I WENT TO SCHOOL [ ] [ ] IN OLYMPIA: This week's also the 20th anniversary of the release of Hole's Live Through This, an album which absolutely withstands the test of time as a fierce, feminist masterpiece. Spin Magazine (remember them?) has a nice history of its creation, which involved a lot of drugs, and not any of the "Kurt really wrote it" of urban legend. Drummer Patty Schemel:
During basic tracks, me and Courtney ended up leaving and going to New York to see Nirvana on Saturday Night Live. I was so drunk that I could not see straight. It was so fucked up. RuPaul was there. And I remember coming back and then having to do more recording and being completely wasted for that. When I got back, I was like, "I gotta pull it together." So that's when I did a bunch of crystal meth. We pretty much finished up our basic tracks and then we were kind of imbibing.
THE WORLD IS FULL OF GUYS. BE A MAN. DON'T BE A GUY: Say Anything was released twenty-five years ago today. Besides being the first movie at which I made out with a girl (and in one of the big rooms at the Orleans 8), there's this, from Ebert's contemporaneous review:
"Say Anything" is one of those rare movies that has something to teach us about life. It doesn't have a "lesson" or a "message," but it observes its moral choices so carefully that it helps us see our own. That such intelligence could be contained in a movie that is simultaneously so funny and so entertaining is some kind of a miracle.