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It Happened One Night (1934)
It Happened One Night (1934)
1934 | Classics, Comedy, Romance

"Another movie that I really love — and I’m sure you know it — is It Happened One Night, which is, I think, one of the best romantic comedies out there. I remember seeing that movie and falling in love with Clark Gable and just thinking how fantastic that backdrop was, on the train. It seemed like a very real relationship, like they really were in love with one another. [Laughs] I didn’t seem so pat, you know?"

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1-2-3-4-: Punk & New Wave 1976-1979 by Various
1-2-3-4-: Punk & New Wave 1976-1979 by Various
(0 Ratings)
Album Favorite

"This compilation is like plugging into a direct line to your 15-year-old self. And somewhere in there is me right now. It sounds strange because I'm now 50, but it never really leaves you. It's just weird how that can energise you. Even for music that's not like it. I can put this on and it's like it gives me power, almost like turning on the batteries. Of course, we don't sound like a punk rock band from '77, but it has that energy that's universal and you form it into where you're going musically. I put this album on the list because it's a power source that got me through a lot of these recordings, and strangely enough I sound nothing like it. Punk rock is the hydrochloric acid where you get that frothy explosion in the beaker."

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The Girl on the Train
The Girl on the Train
Paula Hawkins | 2016 | Mystery, Thriller
4
7.6 (173 Ratings)
Book Rating
suspense (0 more)
pretty much everything else (0 more)
Didn't like it, but couldn't put it down
As much as I didn't like this book, I do give the author props on writing good suspense. Other than that, I can't offer much love. The characters were annoying and the plot was annoying. I like untrustworthy narrators as much as the next gal, but this just didn't do it for me.
  
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Dean (6927 KP) rated Rogue (2008) in Movies

Mar 22, 2018  
Rogue (2008)
Rogue (2008)
2008 | Horror, Mystery
6
6.3 (4 Ratings)
Movie Rating
Probably the best film of its type. I have seen a few films that were based around avoiding a huge Croc in perilous circumstances. Some had really bad effects like Crocodile, or just plain cheesey like Lake Placid 2, Blood Surf. This was more like another film called Black water. I found this more interesting though and the Crocodile looks more believable. Worth checking out.
  
    One Minute How-To

    One Minute How-To

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    The One Minute How-To is your podcast. Each episode features someone just like you who explains how...

40 Greatest Hits by Hank Williams
40 Greatest Hits by Hank Williams
1978 | Rock
6
6.0 (1 Ratings)
Album Rating
Rolling Stone's 94th greatest album of all time
I don't like country and find Hank Williams to epitomise the genre for me. Lots of that awful yodelling they sometimes do, that just reminds me of that viral video of the child of the corn in a walmart yodelling in his wellies for all the gramdmas. *shivers*
  
Ballad Of The Insolent Pup by Thee Headcoatees
Ballad Of The Insolent Pup by Thee Headcoatees
(0 Ratings)
Album Favorite

"Bikini Kill was on tour and we went to this club in Brighton under the pier and the fucking coolest looking girls in the whole universe walked in. They were the band, and they just started singing and they were the Headcoatees. They were just the coolest thing and it was one of the best shows I've ever seen. Then I got the record and really liked their version of the song 'When You Stop Loving Me' that's on that album. I always liked garage rock and I felt like they did it so well – it was the kind of music I could listen to all day and be happy. That record is more about personal stuff and I was getting really burnt out. I don't want to just listen to stuff that's about politics all the time. I want to have my guilty pleasures and I'm not feeling guilty about finding them pleasurable. They made me think I want my music to be enjoyable, not just hard all the time. I want there to be moments where it's like: "This is really fun." I always say Bratmobile was a better band than Bikini Kill, partially because I had that anger to propel me forward and also protect me, whereas they have this sort of, "Hey we're at this summer party and we don't care that you don't even know what a summer party is, fuck you." It was like they were having a summer party on stage and I'm invited. They would literally get up, just Molly [Neuman] and Allison [Wolfe] before Erin [Smith] joined the band, and just sing stuff like, "Girl germs, no return", like childhood rhymes. They're doing it in a room full of predominantly men who are, like, Melvins fans and I was just like, "Man, that takes fucking guts." I heard people in the audience say, "I want to do this and this to the singer, we should fucking murder them" and meanwhile I was having my life changed: "This is the most incredible thing I've ever seen." I use that in my performance partially based on them and I definitely saw their vulnerability as a strength instead of a weakness. I wanted to be able to flash between characters that were very traditionally female and have a macho persona as well, so I try to have both and not just be like the Henry Rollins of riot grrrl."

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Permission To Land by The Darkness
Permission To Land by The Darkness
2002 | Alternative, Indie, Metal, Rock
6.7 (3 Ratings)
Album Favorite

"I’m familiar with this band’s work. They just came offstage. This song has been in the set for hundreds of years and is always a highlight. Any version of it will do me, but I’ve chosen the live one because we’ve got a live album coming out and everyone should buy it. When we’re on fire, there’s no better thrill than playing a song like this that everybody knows and loves. You long for songs like that in a set like ours."

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Ed Helms recommended Groundhog Day (1993) in Movies (curated)

 
Groundhog Day (1993)
Groundhog Day (1993)
1993 | Comedy, Fantasy, Romance

"Groundhog Day. I can watch that movie just a million times and never get sick of it. There was a whole spate of movies around that time in the ’80s and ’90s where something magical would happen, and sort of screw over a protagonist in some way, and some of those devices were very corny and kitschy and didn’t work as well. Some of them just worked magnificently, and this one is one of those. It’s just these sort of inexplicable moments where the universe is teaching this one guy a lesson, and they never explain how or why, but you don’t care, because it just kind of makes sense. And the way it unfolds, it’s sort of like it’s one of those things that, I think, if you tasked somebody with writing a story with that premise, where a guy wakes up every day in the same day and he has to relive it over and over again until he learns to be a good person, you’d be sort of overwhelmed, like how can I do that? Then you see this version of it, and you’re like, that’s the perfect way to do it. It’s like, “Oh, it’s so simple.” That’s a brilliant script, when it looks like there was no other way to do it, if that makes any sense. And the performances, everyone from Chris Elliott to Andie MacDowell to Punxsutawney Phil. I mean, they all nail it."

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Cee-Lo Green recommended Let's Stay Together by Al Green in Music (curated)

 
Let's Stay Together by Al Green
Let's Stay Together by Al Green
1972 | Dance
8.0 (1 Ratings)
Album Favorite

"I'm the step-son of Al Green, so that's my father in many ways. Let's Stay Together has that tom-snare that just gave it this whole deadpan quality, and then there's the organ work. It sounds like church. What's so special about the organ is that it's got that dichotomy about it. It can sound absolutely angelic or downright evil all at the same time. It's the only instrument can sound like that to me. And they made good use of it. He used the same sounds, the same producer, the whole way through; it's not like records today where people use this producer or that producer. That's what I was able to acquire with Danger Mouse. Al Green is everything. He's everything that I am."

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