dedicated BODY COUNT thread (and poll)

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skits eliminated. you don't like it, IT WASNT ME IT WAS THAT MOTHERFUCKER EVIL DICK

Poll Results

OptionVotes
"There Goes the Neighborhood" 14
"Body Count's in the House" 3
"Body Count" 3
"Cop Killer" 2
"KKK Bitch" 1
"C Note" 1
"Evil Dick" 1
"Momma's Gotta Die Tonight" 0
"Body Count Anthem" 0
"The Winner Loses" 0
"Voodoo" 0
"Bowels of the Devil" 0
"Freedom of Speech" [on alternate press] 0


Fareed Zaireeka (Whiney G. Weingarten), Wednesday, 22 August 2012 02:36 (9 months ago) Permalink

"There Goes the Neighborhood" is maybe the second best riff of the '90s after Pantera's "Walk," so

Fareed Zaireeka (Whiney G. Weingarten), Wednesday, 22 August 2012 02:38 (9 months ago) Permalink

This album is stone cold classic and everyone who doesnt agree is a lame x 1000

Fareed Zaireeka (Whiney G. Weingarten), Wednesday, 22 August 2012 02:38 (9 months ago) Permalink

you should have a late night talk show where you constantly insult rap metal haters and call it JUDGMENT NIGHT

some dude, Wednesday, 22 August 2012 02:42 (9 months ago) Permalink

"There Goes the Neighborhood" for the exact reason you cite, though I think you maybe overstate the case just a little maybe

steven fucking tyler (underrated aerosmith bootlegs I have owned), Wednesday, 22 August 2012 02:42 (9 months ago) Permalink

you should have a late night talk show where you constantly insult rap metal haters and call it JUDGMENT NIGHT

best show ever

steven fucking tyler (underrated aerosmith bootlegs I have owned), Wednesday, 22 August 2012 02:42 (9 months ago) Permalink

the tension mounts!

these albatrosses have no fear of man (La Lechera), Wednesday, 22 August 2012 02:43 (9 months ago) Permalink

This album is amazing. They were also amazing live the few times I got to see them.

"There Goes The Neighborhood" should win this in a rout.

EZ Snappin, Wednesday, 22 August 2012 02:43 (9 months ago) Permalink

FUCK YEAH THERE GOES THE NEIGHBORHOOD WOOO

:D

set the controls for the heart of the sun (VegemiteGrrl), Wednesday, 22 August 2012 03:09 (9 months ago) Permalink

you should have a late night talk show where you constantly insult rap metal haters and call it JUDGMENT NIGHT

― some dude, Tuesday, August 21, 2012 10:42 PM (Yesterday) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

there's no rapping on this album!

Fareed Zaireeka (Whiney G. Weingarten), Wednesday, 22 August 2012 04:39 (9 months ago) Permalink

how fucking ignorant was charlton heston to not understand what cop killer was about?

Fareed Zaireeka (Whiney G. Weingarten), Wednesday, 22 August 2012 04:46 (9 months ago) Permalink

the tension mounts!

on with the body count

ʘ (sic), Wednesday, 22 August 2012 04:53 (9 months ago) Permalink

This album is basically Megadeth's Peace Sells without the bloat and bullshit

Fareed Zaireeka (Whiney G. Weingarten), Wednesday, 22 August 2012 04:56 (9 months ago) Permalink

I hadnt thought about it but I think I agree with that

set the controls for the heart of the sun (VegemiteGrrl), Wednesday, 22 August 2012 05:00 (9 months ago) Permalink

i do not.

album is still pretty good tho

O_o-O_O-o_O (jjjusten), Wednesday, 22 August 2012 16:45 (9 months ago) Permalink

Record is dumb, goes on way too long and should've been played about 20% faster. Still enjoyed most of it when we listened to it at work recently.

reckless driving, abuse of small dogs, thirst for fame (GOTT PUNCH II HAWKWINDZ), Thursday, 23 August 2012 03:23 (9 months ago) Permalink

should've been played about 20% faster

this is what keeps me at a distance. feels lethargic.

contenderizer, Thursday, 23 August 2012 03:48 (9 months ago) Permalink

sometimes i think this is my favorite "metal" album

da croupier, Thursday, 23 August 2012 03:52 (9 months ago) Permalink

like metal that hasn't become "hard rock" with time

da croupier, Thursday, 23 August 2012 03:52 (9 months ago) Permalink

are there any other albums that one should chase down if they have this challop?

da croupier, Thursday, 23 August 2012 03:53 (9 months ago) Permalink

Any early 90s thrash album by a band that got signed to a major label probably.

reckless driving, abuse of small dogs, thirst for fame (GOTT PUNCH II HAWKWINDZ), Thursday, 23 August 2012 04:18 (9 months ago) Permalink

suicidal tendencies, how will I laugh tomorrow - not as chaotic tho

steven fucking tyler (underrated aerosmith bootlegs I have owned), Thursday, 23 August 2012 04:35 (9 months ago) Permalink

the idea that this is a better record than peace sells is sort of definition challop tho. the better metal album...is the one by the guy who mainly raps! DID I JUST BLOW YOUR MIND

steven fucking tyler (underrated aerosmith bootlegs I have owned), Thursday, 23 August 2012 04:36 (9 months ago) Permalink

i barely like megadeth as it is; personally it's not much of a stretch for Body Count to feel better on comparison.

set the controls for the heart of the sun (VegemiteGrrl), Thursday, 23 August 2012 04:42 (9 months ago) Permalink

yeah I was guessing Suicidal Tendencies, basically I'm looking for metal with a vocalist who isn't vomiting and has somethin' to get off his chest in a wry manner

da croupier, Thursday, 23 August 2012 05:37 (9 months ago) Permalink

shit did i just tell myself to check out a rollins band album tomorrow? i probably did.

da croupier, Thursday, 23 August 2012 05:40 (9 months ago) Permalink

and what a chest it is

contenderizer, Thursday, 23 August 2012 06:14 (9 months ago) Permalink

the idea that this is a better record than peace sells is sort of definition challop tho. the better metal album...is the one by the guy who mainly raps! DID I JUST BLOW YOUR MIND
--steven fucking tyler (underrated aerosmith bootlegs I have owned)

I didn't say it was a better "metal album" I said it was a better album.

Fareed Zaireeka (Whiney G. Weingarten), Thursday, 23 August 2012 12:39 (9 months ago) Permalink

Album is enhanced by its limitations. The fact that Ice can't hit all his notes (esp in the power ballad) give it a real circa 1982 hardcore vibe.

Fareed Zaireeka (Whiney G. Weingarten), Thursday, 23 August 2012 12:42 (9 months ago) Permalink

Also, I mean, unlike Peace Sells, the whole "This IS the news" aspect of the Body Count album WAS ACTUALLY NEWS to middle america and the vice president and the NRA and Chuck Heston.

Fareed Zaireeka (Whiney G. Weingarten), Thursday, 23 August 2012 12:48 (9 months ago) Permalink

warning this is a parental advisory
the words on this disc are in no way offensive
they're just gonna say what you already know...

(body count was the second song after the one above)

these albatrosses have no fear of man (La Lechera), Thursday, 23 August 2012 14:07 (9 months ago) Permalink

the body count song set a tone that the rest of the songs on the comp didn't really try to reach iirc
that was kind of weird
i remember thinking that "don't drop the baby" was kind of out of place, along with most of the other songs on there, but it did have a fun cover of "another girl, another planet" on it
anyway no one ever shouted FUCK YOU again after the body count song was done

these albatrosses have no fear of man (La Lechera), Thursday, 23 August 2012 14:10 (9 months ago) Permalink

voted "There Goes the Neighborhood"

it was fab when Ice T brought out Body Count at the first Lollapalooza shows (I saw it in ATL, expect he did it everywhere) because it felt like a gigantic 90s-hippie moment, like rap & metal can coexist & we can all get along, in being pissed off but also having a party doing it, so fucking open minded, & it still feels like we lost something crucial when all that kind of, I dunno, I want to say "multicultural", idealism kinda fell away with grunge & gangster in 92. at least that shit matters a lot to me still. i.e. Fishbone forever

Euler, Thursday, 23 August 2012 14:22 (9 months ago) Permalink

Euler, can we be best friends?

Fareed Zaireeka (Whiney G. Weingarten), Thursday, 23 August 2012 15:02 (9 months ago) Permalink

yeah I really mourn the loss of that moment too - there was heavy crosspollination going on in genres & lots of campus-based & MTV-fed thinking about misty-eyed we're-all-in-the-same-gang thinking. Which is problematic politically imo but makes for some really interesting music especially aboveground. (Underground I tend to like super-segemented scenes because the various -cores were totally entertaining.) I think it was less grunge & gangster than the rise of the internet that killed that off though - fronting like you're cool is so easy online that copping an idealistic pose becomes less attractive to would-be hardmen

steven fucking tyler (underrated aerosmith bootlegs I have owned), Thursday, 23 August 2012 16:47 (9 months ago) Permalink

was the era of conflict magazine and steve albini really that much more idealistic?

da croupier, Thursday, 23 August 2012 16:51 (9 months ago) Permalink

i wasn't there but i've certainly read about my share of zine hardmen in the '80s

da croupier, Thursday, 23 August 2012 16:52 (9 months ago) Permalink

years later the Spawn soundtrack would finally unite the worlds of lukewarm electronica and nu-metal, thus finally bringing a thousand years of peace that we all nestled in like a soft downy quilt.

O_o-O_O-o_O (jjjusten), Thursday, 23 August 2012 16:53 (9 months ago) Permalink

was the era of conflict magazine and steve albini really that much more idealistic?

that's underground though, not really what I'm talking about. I think going into the late eighties aboveground scenes were defacto segregated - dance floor dress codes, in LA clubs were so focused on their own niches that you could go to a club and only hear NY Dolls clones & compatriots on a Thursday - rap changed that up, that era of rap sort of demanding validation and full participation was musically pretty idealistic. philosophically too to a certain extent tho I think that was also largely a style matter as much as an ideological one

steven fucking tyler (underrated aerosmith bootlegs I have owned), Thursday, 23 August 2012 17:02 (9 months ago) Permalink

most police-protected show i ever attended, btw

Pangborn to be Wilde (Dr Morbius), Thursday, 23 August 2012 17:04 (9 months ago) Permalink

(it was in the Bway theatre district the week after the Heston element blew up)

Pangborn to be Wilde (Dr Morbius), Thursday, 23 August 2012 17:06 (9 months ago) Permalink

i remember being pretty blown away by body count at the first lollapalooza, i remember he did a regular rap set then there was this thing with helicopter noise and a fake police dude saying over the PA that the Minneapolis police were gonna shut Body Count down.....bUT THEY COULDN'T STOP IT!!!!

the big, inconvenient, un-hip fact of the first Lollapalooza:

Living Colour pretty much bodied all the other bands.

Jandek at the Disco (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Thursday, 23 August 2012 17:08 (9 months ago) Permalink

people forget what a force of nature living color was live

steven fucking tyler (underrated aerosmith bootlegs I have owned), Thursday, 23 August 2012 17:10 (9 months ago) Permalink

they managed to do justice to "sailin' on" by bad brains, no easy feat

Jandek at the Disco (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Thursday, 23 August 2012 17:19 (9 months ago) Permalink

I saw that same Lollapalooza and remember not liking Living Colour's set much. My fondest memory of it (Stanhope, NJ btw) was the very beginning of the show, 'cause it was outdoors in a big field and all these hippies had showed up thinking "awesome, outdoor concert" and set up blankets and shit right in front of the stage. Out comes the Rollins Band, Rollins bows to the crowd like he's at a kung fu tournament and the band launches into I forget what song, and all of a sudden there's a literal stampede of punks and skins into the pit and hippies and their fucking blankets are left to scramble frantically out of a huge cloud of dust. Hilarious. Also, Gibby Haynes coming out with a shotgun loaded with blanks, firing it into the crowd to kick off the Butthole Surfers' set. I hung out on the grass for Living Colour and was in line for pizza during NIN's set, so all I saw was wave upon wave of dry ice smoke billowing off the stage into the sunlit afternoon, and we didn't get a Siouxsie set 'cause she was sick.

Saw Ice-T at the Ritz in NYC the next year, and it was more or less the same set he did at Lollapalooza - 1/2 rap, 1/2 Body Count - just longer. Awesome show. And yeah, there was definitely an everybody-into-the-blender feeling from '90-'92 or so; I remember seeing Fishbone with the Dead Milkmen, the Dirty Dozen Brass Band and 2 Live Crew, then seeing Fishbone again with Primus, then again with the rap group BWP; I saw that Public Enemy/Anthrax/Primus/Young Black Teenagers tour; I saw Primus and Tad on the same bill...shows were fucking awesome back then. I am old.

誤訳侮辱, Thursday, 23 August 2012 17:23 (9 months ago) Permalink

Also, Gibby Haynes coming out with a shotgun loaded with blanks, firing it into the crowd to kick off the Butthole Surfers' set

yeah he did that too, and called us college faggots and told us to go to an REM show if we didn't like it

Jandek at the Disco (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Thursday, 23 August 2012 17:25 (9 months ago) Permalink

i wasn't even in college yet!

Jandek at the Disco (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Thursday, 23 August 2012 17:25 (9 months ago) Permalink

Living Colour weren't great at the Lollapalooza show I saw either (Mansfield, MA), but when I saw them a few months earlier with Urban Dance Squad opening they were amazing.

But Body Count were great. Ice-T gave the crowd shit for not going nuts for Rollins and the Surfers, except for the small group I was hanging with. He said something like, "You motherfuckers know where it's at."

EZ Snappin, Thursday, 23 August 2012 17:30 (9 months ago) Permalink

I think it was less grunge & gangster than the rise of the internet that killed that off though - fronting like you're cool is so easy online that copping an idealistic pose becomes less attractive to would-be hardmen

hey aero if you were just spitballing it's all good, but do you want to unpack the idea of "above ground" would-be hardmen losing their idealism thanks to the internet? do you mean nu-metal guys getting shamed in the early '00s and turning into TRUE RAP ONLY and TRUE METAL ONLY folks?

da croupier, Thursday, 23 August 2012 18:02 (9 months ago) Permalink

...it felt like a gigantic 90s-hippie moment, like rap & metal can coexist & we can all get along, in being pissed off but also having a party doing it, so fucking open minded, & it still feels like we lost something crucial when all that kind of, I dunno, I want to say "multicultural", idealism kinda fell away with grunge & gangster in 92. at least that shit matters a lot to me still. i.e. Fishbone forever

― Euler, Thursday, August 23, 2012 7:22 AM (2 hours ago)

yeah I really mourn the loss of that moment too - there was heavy crosspollination going on in genres & lots of campus-based & MTV-fed thinking about misty-eyed we're-all-in-the-same-gang thinking. Which is problematic politically imo but makes for some really interesting music especially aboveground. ...I think it was less grunge & gangster than the rise of the internet that killed that off though - fronting like you're cool is so easy online that copping an idealistic pose becomes less attractive to would-be hardmen

― steven fucking tyler (underrated aerosmith bootlegs I have owned), Thursday, August 23, 2012 9:47 AM (33 minutes ago)

euler OTM, though at the time, i wasn't a fan of much rap/punk/funk/metal hybrid stuff or the cultural space it existed in. thinking of fishbone, living color, 24-7 spyz, rhcp, the judgement night sdtrk, body count, follow for now, infectious grooves, rollins band, mid-period beasties, cypress hill, rage, etc. i mean, i did like some of that stuff, but as a scene and as music, it was often too jockish and testosterone-addled for me. reminded me of what i hated about high school.

it does make sense to think of the success of grunge and west coast gangster stuff as drawing the threads apart, but i think it's also that acts like ICP and limp bizkit came up and almost overnight made rock-rap fusion look regrettable to a lot of people.

contenderizer, Thursday, 23 August 2012 18:05 (9 months ago) Permalink

"There Goes The Neighborhood" for T's cackling.

Poppy Bush and Dan Quayle's comments at the time were my intro to the Culture Wars.

a regina spektor is haunting europe (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 23 August 2012 18:11 (9 months ago) Permalink

yeah it's very easy to be blase about the world of Kid Rock types who've made connecting threads between different genres seem hacky and smh...

― some dude, Thursday, August 23, 2012 9:24 AM (1 hour ago)

yeah, blame him too

contenderizer, Thursday, 23 August 2012 18:11 (9 months ago) Permalink

euler OTM, though at the time, i wasn't a fan of much rap/punk/funk/metal hybrid stuff or the cultural space it existed in. thinking of fishbone, living color, 24-7 spyz, rhcp, the judgement night sdtrk, body count, follow for now, infectious grooves, rollins band, mid-period beasties, cypress hill, rage, etc. i mean, i did like some of that stuff, but as a scene and as music, it was often too jockish and testosterone-addled for me. reminded me of what i hated about high school.

This was all the shit that was exploding when I graduated high school (class of '90) and I fucking loved a bunch of it. I don't currently have the Judgment Night soundtrack in my iPod, but is it in my MP3 hard drive? Hell yes. (Originally owned it on cassette.) Agree about the jockism, though. Saw RHCP twice back then - once at one of Frusciante's earliest gigs with the band (free outdoor show at Rutgers U.), once at the Ritz supporting Mother's Milk. At the first show, in '89, the crowd was all freaks partying. At the second show, there were dudes in Duke U. hats crowding into the pit to punch people. I had one of those "THE SCENE HAS CHANGED MAN" moments and retreated to the balcony, depressed.

誤訳侮辱, Thursday, 23 August 2012 18:15 (9 months ago) Permalink

"KKK Bitch" may be the only of these I can hum the chorus to. Bought the album the day it came out, though.

Josh in Chicago, Thursday, 23 August 2012 18:17 (9 months ago) Permalink

hey aero if you were just spitballing it's all good, but do you want to unpack the idea of "above ground" would-be hardmen losing their idealism thanks to the internet? do you mean nu-metal guys getting shamed in the early '00s and turning into TRUE RAP ONLY and TRUE METAL ONLY folks?

just thinking out loud as usual but I was thinking more of the audience than the artists - I usually think of the latter as usually responding to the needs/buying habits of the former, and I think the ~discourse~ turned hardman once the conversation started happening more on screens than in magazines or in dorms. which leads to bands/artists thinking of their audience (rightly? idk) as wanting hardness etc

there's a lot more to it than that obv but I think the internet's effect on how artists perceive their audiences is pretty profound & has an effect of the art they make

steven fucking tyler (underrated aerosmith bootlegs I have owned), Thursday, 23 August 2012 18:22 (9 months ago) Permalink

i was talking about the audience not artists, myself.

da croupier, Thursday, 23 August 2012 18:24 (9 months ago) Permalink

i meant "nu-metal guys" as the folks who still purchased rap-rock into the internet age

da croupier, Thursday, 23 August 2012 18:24 (9 months ago) Permalink

if you're from Mars and you got a p--- we will fuck you

a regina spektor is haunting europe (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 23 August 2012 18:25 (9 months ago) Permalink

speaking of purchasing rap-rock into the internet age can anyone explain how Kevin Rudolf's "let it rock" sold 4 million digital downloads? I mean I love it but I'm still an alternative idealist.

da croupier, Thursday, 23 August 2012 18:26 (9 months ago) Permalink

kinda lost here. what I think is that once (some) people have a space in which to flex that's virtual and safe, the appeal of good-vibe music fades (for these dudes) & the appeal of playing hard rises

steven fucking tyler (underrated aerosmith bootlegs I have owned), Thursday, 23 August 2012 18:28 (9 months ago) Permalink

yeah no i get that, though i feel like the meathead contingent of rap-rock rose a bit before the internet did

da croupier, Thursday, 23 August 2012 18:29 (9 months ago) Permalink

I must say, this was one of the most galvanic albums of my young life. Never mind the rap-metal hybrid – two genres I tiptoed around in the early nineties – but also the Randy Newman songs/sensibilities filtered through the rap-metal.

a regina spektor is haunting europe (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 23 August 2012 18:30 (9 months ago) Permalink

when I discovered Newman much later I learned to listen to him through Body Count.

a regina spektor is haunting europe (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 23 August 2012 18:31 (9 months ago) Permalink

proto-Body Count?

da croupier, Thursday, 23 August 2012 18:35 (9 months ago) Permalink

AND YOUR MAMA CAN'T STOP ME
AND YOUR PAPA CAN'T STOP ME
AND THE POLICE CAN'T STOP ME
NOBODY CAN STOP ME

da croupier, Thursday, 23 August 2012 18:37 (9 months ago) Permalink

man I miss Follow For Now, sad how that went down

btw there's another ATL band kicking around that's doing this thing that you might check out, Grand Prize Winners From Last Year, saw them rock the fuck out of a NYE party a few years back, playing in someone's kitchen; these guys could handle a much bigger stage than that, was kinda sad about it

Euler, Thursday, 23 August 2012 19:42 (9 months ago) Permalink

Wait,.is there a juicy story about follow for now?

is there a dedicated black rock coalition thread?

Follow For Now, the Veldt, 24-7 Spyz, eye & i (I think? With Melvin Gibbs)

Josh in Chicago, Thursday, 23 August 2012 20:57 (9 months ago) Permalink

nah nothing juicy that I remember, just that they got squashed on their major

Euler, Thursday, 23 August 2012 21:30 (9 months ago) Permalink

Wikipedia says the guitarist lost his thumb and can't play!

Josh in Chicago, Thursday, 23 August 2012 21:44 (9 months ago) Permalink

didn't Dan Quayle bite it off?

a regina spektor is haunting europe (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 23 August 2012 21:44 (9 months ago) Permalink

speaking of weird/awesome cross-cultural hybrid shows did anyone else see the Buttholes/fIREHOSE/Basehead tour cuz that was o_0

The Radioheads are massive in the Man community (Shakey Mo Collier), Thursday, 23 August 2012 22:06 (9 months ago) Permalink

oh man i don't even care about firehose but that's the first early '90s recollection here i'm actually jealous of

da croupier, Thursday, 23 August 2012 22:19 (9 months ago) Permalink

I dunno if it was even a tour, might have been a one-off show

The Radioheads are massive in the Man community (Shakey Mo Collier), Thursday, 23 August 2012 22:36 (9 months ago) Permalink

Buttholes/fIREHOSE/Basehead

Don't recall that at all, but in Philly we got Beastie Boys/fIREHOSE/Basehead. Right after "Check Your Head" came out. Beasties rapped on fIREHOSE's version of "Sophisticated Bitch," iirc.

Josh in Chicago, Thursday, 23 August 2012 22:41 (9 months ago) Permalink

The Radioheads are massive in the Man community (Shakey Mo Collier), Thursday, 23 August 2012 22:49 (9 months ago) Permalink

weird show. how was basehead?

contenderizer, Thursday, 23 August 2012 23:24 (9 months ago) Permalink

funny! this was after their second album.

god I hate Frank Kozik.

The Radioheads are massive in the Man community (Shakey Mo Collier), Thursday, 23 August 2012 23:27 (9 months ago) Permalink

thats a coop tho

Fareed Zaireeka (Whiney G. Weingarten), Thursday, 23 August 2012 23:29 (9 months ago) Permalink

ah yes lol thx

I guess I hate him too!

The Radioheads are massive in the Man community (Shakey Mo Collier), Thursday, 23 August 2012 23:30 (9 months ago) Permalink

that whole fluorescent innuendo-n-irony style blech

The Radioheads are massive in the Man community (Shakey Mo Collier), Thursday, 23 August 2012 23:31 (9 months ago) Permalink

I recall Basehead c. "Play With Toys" and "Not In Kansas" to be more aggressive live than the records but also surprisingly adept at pulling off the druggy, laid-back haze of the records.

Josh in Chicago, Thursday, 23 August 2012 23:35 (9 months ago) Permalink

man basehead drives me up a wall

Jandek at the Disco (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Thursday, 23 August 2012 23:41 (9 months ago) Permalink

love rob't williams but kind of hate the pop surrealist school that came up worshipping him. and kozik just can't draw. coop can draw, obviously, but his sensibility gets old real fast. am eternally in kozik's debt for man's ruin though.

contenderizer, Thursday, 23 August 2012 23:42 (9 months ago) Permalink

yeah Man's Ruin put out some good stuff.

The Radioheads are massive in the Man community (Shakey Mo Collier), Thursday, 23 August 2012 23:44 (9 months ago) Permalink

man 90s aesthetically were p horrible even though i still love a lot of that music

Jandek at the Disco (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Thursday, 23 August 2012 23:48 (9 months ago) Permalink

I love Coop and Kozik, am I off the team

set the controls for the heart of the sun (VegemiteGrrl), Friday, 24 August 2012 01:42 (9 months ago) Permalink

i keep reading this thread as desiccated BODY COUNT thread

these albatrosses have no fear of man (La Lechera), Friday, 24 August 2012 02:01 (9 months ago) Permalink

restraining myself from posting various imagined DJP variations on that

itt: i forgot that he yells at a butt (sic), Friday, 24 August 2012 02:24 (9 months ago) Permalink

1 month passes...

Automatic thread bump. This poll is closing tomorrow.

System, Monday, 24 September 2012 00:01 (8 months ago) Permalink

month old classic thread

did drake invent yolo (Drugs A. Money), Monday, 24 September 2012 01:56 (8 months ago) Permalink

some dude's first post itt lol

Trip Maker, Monday, 24 September 2012 04:34 (8 months ago) Permalink

Automatic thread bump. This poll's results are now in.

System, Tuesday, 25 September 2012 00:01 (8 months ago) Permalink

i cant hate on these poll results

wood grain, chestnut / cody, CHESNUTT (Whiney G. Weingarten), Tuesday, 25 September 2012 03:16 (8 months ago) Permalink

BAWWW BAW BAW BAW BAWW
THERE GOES THA NEIGHBAHOOD

set the controls for the heart of the sun (VegemiteGrrl), Tuesday, 25 September 2012 03:20 (8 months ago) Permalink

i never could make a verdict on whether the drum solo is terrible or fantastic in that

wood grain, chestnut / cody, CHESNUTT (Whiney G. Weingarten), Tuesday, 25 September 2012 03:24 (8 months ago) Permalink

"passionate"?

set the controls for the heart of the sun (VegemiteGrrl), Tuesday, 25 September 2012 03:28 (8 months ago) Permalink


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