USING TUMBLR AGAIN
Yeaaaa

izzy's playlists!
Game of Thrones Daily
Xuebing Du

pixel skylines

No title available

★
$LAYYYTER
taylor price
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open
noise dept.
Today's Document

tannertan36
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me

Janaina Medeiros

Discoholic 🪩

blake kathryn

Andulka

No title available
No title available
todays bird

seen from Germany

seen from Italy

seen from United Kingdom
seen from Bulgaria
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Germany
seen from Poland
seen from Uganda
seen from Brazil
seen from Venezuela
@drummahdox-blog
USING TUMBLR AGAIN
Yeaaaa
The Hunger Games (BroadComm)
If one can compare the "Hunger Games" to the present situation of Broadcast Media Industries today, it wouldn't be so difficult.
We can liken a "tribune" to a media practitioner trying to break through in the wild, busy and unforgiving landscape of the media industry. They strive to become very successful by eliminating their enemies in any way possible. The media industry promotes a huge amount of competition within, In my opinion.
But with the success of one, an entire district is filled with hope and pride.
Success for a media practitioner could probably be in the form of a society-shaking production, a historic news headline or a life-changing movie for the audience. It not only gives pride, confidence and encouragement to the victor alone, but to the audience as well. It could become a contagious idea and further improve the creativity and way of thinking of society.
The Hunger Games (BroadComm)
PAWN STARS
Long before banks, ATMS and check-cashing services, there were pawn shops. Pawning was the leading form of consumer credit in the United States until the 1950s, and pawn shops are still helping everyday people make ends meet. Pawn Stars takes you inside the colorful world of the pawn business. At the Gold & Silver Pawn Shop on the outskirts of Las Vegas, three generations of the Harrison family--grandfather Richard, son Rick and grandson Corey--jointly run the family business, and there's clashing and camaraderie every step of the way. The three men use their sharp eyes and skills to assess the value of items from the commonplace to the truly historic, including a 16th-century samurai sword, a Super Bowl ring, a Picasso painting and a 17th-century stay of execution. It's up to them to determine what's real and what's fake, as they reveal the often surprising answer to the questions on everyone's mind, "What's the story behind it"? and "What's it worth?"
FORMAT
Discussion
- The show is generally a discussion show. Its story revolves around the everyday battles of the pawn shop owners in negotiating with their customers.
Actuality
- The show features REAL business transactions as they happen. The audience serve as spectators to all the haggling, demanding and lying in the show
Interview
- Interviews are shown before/after/during each episode to give the audience an edge on what the customers want for their item before Rick, the shop owner, does.
APPEAL
Conflict
- It strikes a conflict appeal on the price the item is bought or sold to. The buyer and the seller most of time (actually always...) never agree on the same price, this separates the audience in two factions, Pro-sellers and Pro-buyers. Two conflicting opinions...need I say more?
Curiosity
- Nowadays, most people have become materialistic. We learned to love material things more than anything these past few decades. The show triggers that love by featuring rare items which most people only pass by to in the Internet. As Rick said in the intro, "You never know what comes through that door". It could be the holy grail or just another fake Beatles vinyl. The audience would always feel excited and curious thanks to all this unpredictability.
Red Encounter by Nicebleed
When you have the same class as your best friend.
You guys will show up on the first day of school like
Oh yeaaaah
truthhoneyandashes:
Nobody’s quite normal.
Everything Subnormality says is....Truth yoooowwww
True or False? 8 Myths About Nirvana's 'Nevermind'
True or False? 8 Myths About Nirvana's 'Nevermind'
In September 1991, DGC Records released Nirvana's Nevermind, one of the most influential and revered albums of the past two decades. But much of what the general public thinks they know about the record is wrong — or at least slightly skewed. Here's the real scoop, from Kurt Cobain biographer Charles R. Cross.
MYTH NO. 1: NEVERMIND WAS KURT COBAIN'S FIRST CHOICE FOR AN ALBUM TITLE. Kurt Cobain was a notorious planner, and his journals are filled with track listings for albums he never made. His first idea for a title for Nevermind was Sheep. He went so far as drawing an ad in his journal with typically cryptic, Cobain-esque copy: "Sheep: Because you want to not, because everyone else is," it read, with the tagline of "Abort Christ." Krist Novoselic offered up his explanation for the title: "We were thinking about calling it Sheep because we were so cynical." But that plan was abandoned by late 1990.
Click to enlarge
MYTH No. 2: NEVERMIND WAS RECORDED IN 1991. Nirvana essentially made Nevermind twice. The session that began in April 1991 with producer Butch Vig at Sound City studios in Van Nuys, CA, was remarkably similar to a session the band had in April 1990 with Vig at Smart Studios in Madison, WI. They recorded eight songs with the producer in 1990 in Madison, and five of those ended up onNevermind, though most were new recordings and takes. The major difference between the Madison sessions and the recordings made in Van Nuys was Dave Grohl. So while most of the album was recorded in '91, the genesis of Nevermind began a year earlier. (Bonus trivia: On several songs, Grohl played Vig's Yamaha snare — the same one used on the Smashing Pumpkin's Gish.)
MYTH No. 3: DAVE GROHL IS THE ONLY DRUMMER ON THE ALBUM. Vig was a drummer himself, and the crisp drum sound he captured from Grohl for the album — think the start of "Smells Like Teen Spirit" or the chorus in "Drain You" — was a key ingredient to the record's sound. Vig used a "tunnel" to record all of Grohl's work at Sound City, except for "Something in the Way," where he struggled to make him play quietly. But Grohl isn't the only drummer on the album: Nirvana'sBleach-era drummer Chad Channing is featured on "Polly." This was the one track that emerged from the original Smart sessions unscathed. Channing isn't credited on the original release of Nevermind — and he didn't earn royalties from it, either.
MYTH No. 4: "SMELLS LIKE TEEN SPIRIT" WAS WRITTEN ABOUT A DEODORANT. Everyone knows that Cobain wrote "Smells Like Teen Spirit" about a deodorant. Well, sort of. Kurt's friend, Bikini Kill frontwoman Kathleen Hanna, did indeed write, "Kurt smells like Teen Spirit" on Kurt's bedroom wall as a kind of taunt, and that was where the song title came from. But it wasn't until after the album was released that Kurt discovered there was such a thing as a Teen Spirit deodorant. Kurt wrote the song about a line of graffiti, not an antiperspirant. (Bonus trivia: Sales of Teen Spirit deodorant skyrocketed after the record came out.)
MYTH No. 5: NIRVANA ORIGINALLY MADE A CASSETTE DEMO OF "SMELLS LIKE TEEN SPIRIT" TO PROVE THEY HAD A HIT. Nirvana first recorded "Teen Spirit" onto a boombox at a rehearsal, which is included on the forthcomingNevermind box set. But even though the band liked the riff, no one in the group knew it would be an immediate hit. Butch Vig said he knew it was one the moment he heard it in early '91, when Cobain sent him a copy of their new material. But the real reason Nirvana started recording their demos on a boombox, according to Grohl, was because they kept forgetting how to play several songs they'd written. "So many songs got thrown away, until we finally said, 'Maybe we should start recording them on a cassette,'" he said. (Bonus trivia: The tape began with Kurt saying, "Hey Butch. We've got a new drummer, his name is Dave Grohl, and he's the best drummer in the world.").
MYTH No. 6: COBAIN WROTE NEVERMIND ABOUT DRUGS. Drug references do spring up in several songs, but Kurt's muse was complicated, and his full-scale drug addiction didn't start until after the album was recorded. Before Nevermind, he had experimented with heroin, but he wasn't a full-blown addict. Most of the record was written about his friends, neighbors, or girlfriends. His initial plan was to break the album up into a "boy" side and a "girl" side. The "girl" side would consist of songs like "Teen Spirit," "Drain You," and "Lounge Act," most inspired by Cobain's unrequited crushes of that time. The "boy" side would contain a variety of songs, including "In Bloom," which was written for his best friend Dylan Carlson. (Bonus trivia: "Breed" is a rewrite of a song off the Smart sessions titled "Immodium," which was inspired by the intestinal problems of Tad Doyle of Tad.)
Kurt Cobain recording in Hilversum Studios, Netherlands in November 1991 (Photo: Michel Linssen/Redferns)
MYTH No. 7: THE COVER OF THE ALBUM WAS COBAIN'S IDEA. Kurt did come up with the cover idea for Nevermind, but his initial idea bore little resemblance to the final image of a baby floating naked in a pool. He had seen a late night television show on underwater birthing, and wanted a photograph of a baby's head right as it began to exit the vagina — he went as far as to sketch out the image in his journal. Yet when Kurt tried to license the gory and bloody photograph, he was rebuffed. The naked baby photo was the back-up plan. Spencer Elden, the baby pictured on the cover, has since joked that he's the world's "biggest porn star" because so many people have seen his penis.
MYTH No 8: NEVERMIND IMMEDIATELY MADE COBAIN A RICH MAN. There is a common misconception that Cobain became an overnight millionaire with the album's success. But the album didn't score Gold Record status until a month after its release, and the bulk of the sales arrived in 1992 or later. Most record companies only pay royalties twice a year, and payments lag sales by several months. As a result, Cobain earned almost no money from Nevermind in '91. His income that year totaled $29,541, and almost all of that was from a fall tour. When Cobain returned home to Olympia, WA, after recording the record in the spring, he found his belongings sitting in boxes by the curb: He had been evicted. He spent that first night sleeping in his car, while his record label completed the finishing touches on an album that would sell over twenty-five million copies.
thedailywhat:
Savage Chickens.
micro pigs.
the-absolute-funniest-posts:
Visit smokeporch.com for more posts like this
Follow this blog, you will love it on your dashboard
Follow this blog, you will love it on your dashboard
foreverfrengers:
Another one.
OKAY SO HERE ARE SOME CUTE GIFS FROM DOA:
peasandlove07:
daw dave ^
HAHA this utter confusion is hilar: AND nate’s and chris’s special moves are special
and headbanging dave is headbanging
and OMG TAYLOR WUT DAVE USUALLY DOES THIS:
and then i just realized does is a weird word…
is it a real word?
i mean…does? like is it even real?
OMG and taylor sitting there with his super swag and hotness and super locks that are super luscious.
“i’m luscious, yes i am”
…well you are too dave!
yeah he knows what it is.
YUP!
Foo Fighters - Rock En Seine 2011
Beautiful.