One of the reasons!
Yeah, it’s back up now, I just noticed! I guess it was just a problem they found and needed to correct?
Okay… holy shit… part 4 gets fucking UNHINGED!
One of the reasons!
Yeah, it’s back up now, I just noticed! I guess it was just a problem they found and needed to correct?
Okay… holy shit… part 4 gets fucking UNHINGED!
That’s unethical.
As good a time as any to mention one of my favorite shows, for which I actually ended up breaking down and buying an on-sale subscription to Peacock — Peacock! — in order to watch the second season because there didn’t seem to be any other way to watch it, even through buying it outright:
Guess I know where I’ll be next weekend:
I liked both series of We Are Lady Parts funny stuff.
(switching topics for this)
As a huge Puppy fan, I am ashamed to admit that I had never seen this video before, but it sure was delightful.
As a long time fan of both industrial and hip-hop, there seems to be a lot of intersectionality there. The “industrial hip-hop” genre goes back to the early 1980s. Even that side, there was a lot of exchange happening between the two. You had industrial groups incorporating hip-hop elements like scratching, danceable beats, sampling, and rapping. At the same time you had hip-hop groups incorporating signature industrial elements like distortion, noise, guitars, and aggression.
I can still recall the first time I saw this video on Yo! MTV Raps as a kid:
It unlocked so many things in me. Confusion, discomfort, bewilderment, curiosity. None of the core elements were new to me, but seeing them combined in this way really left a lasting impression.