Here are ten songs we heard in consecutive order from the 7:00-8:00 p.m. hour on Steve-FM (106.1-Roanoke,Va.); most of the songs were from the 1980s, including "Tom Sawyer" from Rush, which was NOT a top 40 hit and became popular mainly through MTV (back in the day), "If You Leave..." a hip new wave ballad from OMD for the Molly Ringwald film "Pretty in Pink," and "Need You Tonight" from INXS.
Also from the '80s, we heard Talking Heads' "And She Was," which was a cool pleasant surprise.
The image of the yesteryear boxing bout is in reference to Christina Aguilera's "Fighter," a 2003 hit that we were completely oblivious to when it came out!
Here is the list:
1. "Tom Sawyer," Rush. 1981.
2. "If You Leave....," OMD, 1989
3. "Long Run," The Eagles, 1979
4. "Need You Tonight," INXS, 1987
5. "Fighter," Christina Aguilera, 2003.
6. "And She Was," Talking Heads, 1985.
7. "The Joker," Steve Miller Band, 1973.
8. "Honey, I'm Good," Andy Grammer, 2014.
9. "Funky Cold Medina," Tone Loc, 1989.
10. "When I Come Around," Green Day. 1995.
http://www.1061stevefm.com
http://www.rush.com
http://www.inxsonline.com
http://www.greenday.com
Thursday, July 16, 2015
Wednesday, July 15, 2015
Top 10 Sunday Comics from the Washington Post: Prickly City Gets 1st Place for the 1st Time
Greetings to our blog readers in Chile, Spain, and South Africa......
The images above are of: 1) Adam West and Burt Ward from the '60s tv version of "Batman," 2) R.Crumb's "Fritz the Cat" and 3) the late Bob Denver as Gilligan on another '60s tv series "Gilligan's Island." These are in reference to our top three finishers: 1) "Prickly City," 2) "Lio" and 3) "Non Sequitur." This is the very first time Scott Stantis' "Prickly City" has been our top choice, though it is frequently in the top ten.
In "Prickly City," the two title characters, a cat and a little girl, are blind-folded and they say: "Now, we finally see eye to eye" or something to that effect. In Mark Tatulli's "Lio," the title character, a ten-year-old boy named Lio who never ages (but he is otherwise quite different from Charlie Brown and Dennis the Menace) gets pulled by an angry cat to a liquor store. And, in "Non-Sequitur" by a cartoonist named Wiley, a man's hops to get off the desert island are dashed.
Here is the list http://www.washingtonpost.com/comics/:
1. Prickly City http://www.gocomics.com/pricklycity
2. Lio http://www.gocomics.com/lio
3. Non Sequitur http://www.google.com/nonsequitur
4. Brewster Rockit: Space Guy
5. WuMo
6. Candorville http://www.candorville.com
7. Pearls Before Swine
8. Speed Bump
9. Sherman's Lagoon
10. Foxtrot
The images above are of: 1) Adam West and Burt Ward from the '60s tv version of "Batman," 2) R.Crumb's "Fritz the Cat" and 3) the late Bob Denver as Gilligan on another '60s tv series "Gilligan's Island." These are in reference to our top three finishers: 1) "Prickly City," 2) "Lio" and 3) "Non Sequitur." This is the very first time Scott Stantis' "Prickly City" has been our top choice, though it is frequently in the top ten.
In "Prickly City," the two title characters, a cat and a little girl, are blind-folded and they say: "Now, we finally see eye to eye" or something to that effect. In Mark Tatulli's "Lio," the title character, a ten-year-old boy named Lio who never ages (but he is otherwise quite different from Charlie Brown and Dennis the Menace) gets pulled by an angry cat to a liquor store. And, in "Non-Sequitur" by a cartoonist named Wiley, a man's hops to get off the desert island are dashed.
Here is the list http://www.washingtonpost.com/comics/:
1. Prickly City http://www.gocomics.com/pricklycity
2. Lio http://www.gocomics.com/lio
3. Non Sequitur http://www.google.com/nonsequitur
4. Brewster Rockit: Space Guy
5. WuMo
6. Candorville http://www.candorville.com
7. Pearls Before Swine
8. Speed Bump
9. Sherman's Lagoon
10. Foxtrot
Sunday, July 12, 2015
The Last Ten Movies We've Seen (as of Wednesday)........Are We the Doom Generation?
Greetings to our blog readers in South Korea, Romania, and Egypt......
Happy Ramadan to our Muslims friends.....
Today, we look at the last ten films we've seen; this is an idea we originally got from "Film Comment" magazine, where Gavin Smith is the editor-in-chief.
The last ten films we've seen, include two that are in theatres ("Me, Earl, and the Dying Girl;" "The Overnight"). The earliest Hollywood film on the list is "The Brothers Karamazov" (bottom image) which is a 1958 film which marked the film debut of William Shatner (Captain Kirk on "Star Trek") and the earliest film overall is "Torment" from 1944, a Swedish film with a screeenplay from a young Ingmar Bergman.
The other two foreign-language films on the list are "Inside" (Yeralti) by Turkish director Zeki Demirkbuz and "Stray Dogs" (center image) from Taiwanese filmmaker Ming-ling Tsai.
It is not very often that we have a film from the 1990s, or the "Seinfeld" decade as we like to call it, on the list, but the very last film we saw on this survey is a strange spree killers road movie called "The Doom Generation" (top image: Courtney Love, we are using her symbolically as she is not in the film) which features a supporting character played by Parker Posey, who is one of the film's few highlights! (We agree with the late Roger Ebert who called it an awful film!).....
Here is the last ten:
1. "The Doom Generation." director: Gregg Araki. 1995.
2. Stray Dogs. Taiwan. dir: Ming-ling Tsai. 2013
3. The Dark Crystal. Jim Henson and Frank Oz. 1982.
4. Next Stop, Grenwich Village. Paul Mazursky. 1976.
5. Death Hunt. Peter R. Hunt. 1981 w/ Charles Bronson and Lee Marvin
6. The Brothers Karamazov. Richard Brooks. 1958.
7. The Overnight. Patrick Brice. 2015 w/Jason Schwatzman
8. Torment. Sweden. Alf Sjoberg. 1944
9. Me, Earl and the Dying Girl. Alfonso Gomez-Rejan. 2015
10. Inside. Turkey. Zeki Demirkubuz. 2012
http://www.filmcomment.com
http://www.tcm.com
Happy Ramadan to our Muslims friends.....
Today, we look at the last ten films we've seen; this is an idea we originally got from "Film Comment" magazine, where Gavin Smith is the editor-in-chief.
The last ten films we've seen, include two that are in theatres ("Me, Earl, and the Dying Girl;" "The Overnight"). The earliest Hollywood film on the list is "The Brothers Karamazov" (bottom image) which is a 1958 film which marked the film debut of William Shatner (Captain Kirk on "Star Trek") and the earliest film overall is "Torment" from 1944, a Swedish film with a screeenplay from a young Ingmar Bergman.
The other two foreign-language films on the list are "Inside" (Yeralti) by Turkish director Zeki Demirkbuz and "Stray Dogs" (center image) from Taiwanese filmmaker Ming-ling Tsai.
It is not very often that we have a film from the 1990s, or the "Seinfeld" decade as we like to call it, on the list, but the very last film we saw on this survey is a strange spree killers road movie called "The Doom Generation" (top image: Courtney Love, we are using her symbolically as she is not in the film) which features a supporting character played by Parker Posey, who is one of the film's few highlights! (We agree with the late Roger Ebert who called it an awful film!).....
Here is the last ten:
1. "The Doom Generation." director: Gregg Araki. 1995.
2. Stray Dogs. Taiwan. dir: Ming-ling Tsai. 2013
3. The Dark Crystal. Jim Henson and Frank Oz. 1982.
4. Next Stop, Grenwich Village. Paul Mazursky. 1976.
5. Death Hunt. Peter R. Hunt. 1981 w/ Charles Bronson and Lee Marvin
6. The Brothers Karamazov. Richard Brooks. 1958.
7. The Overnight. Patrick Brice. 2015 w/Jason Schwatzman
8. Torment. Sweden. Alf Sjoberg. 1944
9. Me, Earl and the Dying Girl. Alfonso Gomez-Rejan. 2015
10. Inside. Turkey. Zeki Demirkubuz. 2012
http://www.filmcomment.com
http://www.tcm.com
Monday, July 6, 2015
Top Ten Comics from the Sunday Roanoke Times: Jump Start Gets the Bronze
Greetings to our blog readers in France, Russia, and Bulgaria......
Today, we bring you the last installment in our favorite Sunday comic strips of the week series.
This was a week when Bill Griffith used his comic strip "Zippy the Pinhead" (not in "The Roanoke Times") to make fun of another comic strip "Funky Winkerbean" (which is in "The Roanoke Times"). Both strips share the same distributor Kings Features.
Our favorite comic strip from "The Roanoke Times" was "Speed Bump" http://www.gocomics/speedbump which featured several ducklings taking selfies of each other. Second place goes to "Get Fuzzy" in which a cat and a dog fight over a baby rattler, which one can presumably find at a Toys R Us http://www.gocomics.com/getfuzzy ............. Lastly, we went with "Jump Start" for third place which revolved around an African-American and a white mother with children almost colliding in the produce aisle of a grocery store http://www.gocomics.com/jumpstart
Here is the top ten:
1. Speed Bump
2. Get Fuzzy
3. Jump Start
4. Non Sequitur
5. Garfield
6. Agnes
7. Pearls Before Swine
8. Dilbert
9. Doonesbury
10. Zits
http://www.roanoke.com
http://www.washingtonpost.com/comics
For a look at our favorite comic strips in the "Martinsville Bulletin" go to our sister blog at http://www.politicscultureandotherwastesoft.blogspot.com
Today, we bring you the last installment in our favorite Sunday comic strips of the week series.
This was a week when Bill Griffith used his comic strip "Zippy the Pinhead" (not in "The Roanoke Times") to make fun of another comic strip "Funky Winkerbean" (which is in "The Roanoke Times"). Both strips share the same distributor Kings Features.
Our favorite comic strip from "The Roanoke Times" was "Speed Bump" http://www.gocomics/speedbump which featured several ducklings taking selfies of each other. Second place goes to "Get Fuzzy" in which a cat and a dog fight over a baby rattler, which one can presumably find at a Toys R Us http://www.gocomics.com/getfuzzy ............. Lastly, we went with "Jump Start" for third place which revolved around an African-American and a white mother with children almost colliding in the produce aisle of a grocery store http://www.gocomics.com/jumpstart
Here is the top ten:
1. Speed Bump
2. Get Fuzzy
3. Jump Start
4. Non Sequitur
5. Garfield
6. Agnes
7. Pearls Before Swine
8. Dilbert
9. Doonesbury
10. Zits
http://www.roanoke.com
http://www.washingtonpost.com/comics
For a look at our favorite comic strips in the "Martinsville Bulletin" go to our sister blog at http://www.politicscultureandotherwastesoft.blogspot.com
Friday, July 3, 2015
Last Ten Songs We Heard on Simon (98.7-FM,Greensboro,NC): Slow Ride
Greetings to our blog readers in Argentina, Belgium and Italy.....
Last night, we experienced major technical difficulties while trying to listen to Simon-FM, 98.7-FM, Greensboro, NC, but we were able to catch an hour of songs between the 9:00 p.m.-10:00 p.m. (21:00-22:00) hour last night.
The oldest tune that was played on the variety mix 'we play everything' rotation was "Drive My Car" by The Beatles, which is celebrating its' 50th anniversary as it was released in 1965 (middle image, year it's a Delorean, which came out some 20 years later).
The second newest song in the lineup was the last one in this mix: "Slide" by The Goo Goo Dolls (pict. bottom) which hit radio stations in 1998. The Goo Goo Dolls have a post-game concert following a Milwaukee Brewers game on Aug. 15th.
The most current release was actually a cover of a bluegrass standard "Wagon Wheel" by Old Crow Medicine Show; the band plays at Clinton Presidential Park in Little Rock, Ark., on July 16th.
The top image of an Andrew Jackson twenty dollar bill is an homage to Eddie Money, but of course, you already knew that! Mr. Money plays at the Santa Barbara County Fair in Santa Maria, Calif., on July 15th.
For those of you in Spain, Twisted Sister, one of the bands listed here, is playing the Barcelona Rock Fest on July 24th.
Here is the list:
1) Take Me Home Tonight, Eddie Money, 1986.
2) Drive My Car, The Beatles, 1965
3) Pump Up the Jam, Technotronic, 1989
4) Don't Stand So Close to Me, The Police, 1981
5) Wagon Wheel, Old Crow Medicine Show, 2004
6) We Will Rock You/We Are the Champions, Queen, 1977
7) Slow Ride, Foghat, 1975
8) Dancing Queen, ABBA, 1976
9) We're Not Gonna Take It, Twisted Sister, 1984
10) Slide, The Goo Goo Dolls, 1998
http://www.987simon.com/
http://www.googoodolls.com/
http://www.eddiemoney.com/
http://www.crowmedicine.com/
http://www.twistedsister.com/
Last night, we experienced major technical difficulties while trying to listen to Simon-FM, 98.7-FM, Greensboro, NC, but we were able to catch an hour of songs between the 9:00 p.m.-10:00 p.m. (21:00-22:00) hour last night.
The oldest tune that was played on the variety mix 'we play everything' rotation was "Drive My Car" by The Beatles, which is celebrating its' 50th anniversary as it was released in 1965 (middle image, year it's a Delorean, which came out some 20 years later).
The second newest song in the lineup was the last one in this mix: "Slide" by The Goo Goo Dolls (pict. bottom) which hit radio stations in 1998. The Goo Goo Dolls have a post-game concert following a Milwaukee Brewers game on Aug. 15th.
The most current release was actually a cover of a bluegrass standard "Wagon Wheel" by Old Crow Medicine Show; the band plays at Clinton Presidential Park in Little Rock, Ark., on July 16th.
The top image of an Andrew Jackson twenty dollar bill is an homage to Eddie Money, but of course, you already knew that! Mr. Money plays at the Santa Barbara County Fair in Santa Maria, Calif., on July 15th.
For those of you in Spain, Twisted Sister, one of the bands listed here, is playing the Barcelona Rock Fest on July 24th.
Here is the list:
1) Take Me Home Tonight, Eddie Money, 1986.
2) Drive My Car, The Beatles, 1965
3) Pump Up the Jam, Technotronic, 1989
4) Don't Stand So Close to Me, The Police, 1981
5) Wagon Wheel, Old Crow Medicine Show, 2004
6) We Will Rock You/We Are the Champions, Queen, 1977
7) Slow Ride, Foghat, 1975
8) Dancing Queen, ABBA, 1976
9) We're Not Gonna Take It, Twisted Sister, 1984
10) Slide, The Goo Goo Dolls, 1998
http://www.987simon.com/
http://www.googoodolls.com/
http://www.eddiemoney.com/
http://www.crowmedicine.com/
http://www.twistedsister.com/
Thursday, July 2, 2015
Last Ten Films We've Seen: Looking for Prozac Nation
Greetings to our blog readers in Cuba, Slovakia, and Finland......we are delighted that full diplomat relations have been established between our country the United States and Cuba!
Here are the last ten films we had seen as of last week. "Looking for Mr. Goodbar" and "Prozac Nation" have been notoriously hard to find, so we glad to have them off of our cinematic bucket list. "Love and Mercy" is the new film about Brian Wilson of The Beach Boys. He was played by two actors: Paul Dano (the young Wilson) and John Cusack (the older Wilson).
The pedestrian stop and go lights at the bottom are a holdover from East Germany in Berlin; "A Coffee in Berlin" is the only foreign-language film on this particular list, though "Prozac Nation" has a Norwegian director.
Fun thing we learned while putting this list together is that over $1 million of $7 million budget for "Dazed and Confused" went to film's soundtrack; we assume this means Foghat's 1975 rock hit single "Slow Ride" is expensive!
We originally got this idea from "Film Comment" magazine http://www.filmcomment.com
Here is the list:
1. Looking for Mr. Goodbar. director: Richard Brooks. 1977 w/Diane Keaton
2. Prozac Nation. dir: Erik Skjoldbjaerg. 2003.
3. The Lineup. Don Siegel. 1957
4. Bone. Larry Cohen. 1972.
5. A Coffee in Berlin. Germany. Jan Ole Gerster. 2012.
6. The Immigrant. James Gray. 2013.
7. Trishna. Michael Winterbottom. 2011.
8. Dazed and Confused. Richard Linklater. 1993
9. Entourage. Doug Ellin. 2015.
10. Love and Mercy. Bill Pohlad. 2014.
Here are the last ten films we had seen as of last week. "Looking for Mr. Goodbar" and "Prozac Nation" have been notoriously hard to find, so we glad to have them off of our cinematic bucket list. "Love and Mercy" is the new film about Brian Wilson of The Beach Boys. He was played by two actors: Paul Dano (the young Wilson) and John Cusack (the older Wilson).
The pedestrian stop and go lights at the bottom are a holdover from East Germany in Berlin; "A Coffee in Berlin" is the only foreign-language film on this particular list, though "Prozac Nation" has a Norwegian director.
Fun thing we learned while putting this list together is that over $1 million of $7 million budget for "Dazed and Confused" went to film's soundtrack; we assume this means Foghat's 1975 rock hit single "Slow Ride" is expensive!
We originally got this idea from "Film Comment" magazine http://www.filmcomment.com
Here is the list:
1. Looking for Mr. Goodbar. director: Richard Brooks. 1977 w/Diane Keaton
2. Prozac Nation. dir: Erik Skjoldbjaerg. 2003.
3. The Lineup. Don Siegel. 1957
4. Bone. Larry Cohen. 1972.
5. A Coffee in Berlin. Germany. Jan Ole Gerster. 2012.
6. The Immigrant. James Gray. 2013.
7. Trishna. Michael Winterbottom. 2011.
8. Dazed and Confused. Richard Linklater. 1993
9. Entourage. Doug Ellin. 2015.
10. Love and Mercy. Bill Pohlad. 2014.
Wednesday, July 1, 2015
Our Top 10 Favorite NPR Series: Catch The Moth
Greetings to our blog readers in Germany, Greece and Ukraine........hopefully, those of you in Greece are recouping from the economic fiasco as well as one can.
Here are our ten favorite National Public Radio (NPR) shows, some of which we tune in on out of town public radio stations since they don't air here in Virginia.
The images are in reference 1) a moth is for The Moth Radio Hour, Rachel Dratch of "Saturday Night" fame is on this week's show; 2) the '80s Journey record is for "Sound Opinions," a show in which Greg Kot and Jim DeRogatis decide which new records are worth listening to (they both happen to loath Journey; we don't); 3) Serbian food, which we are not using for "The Splendid Table," but rather "The Dinner Party Download," which ranks fourth in our top ten.
Here is the list:
1. The Moth Radio Hour
2. Sound Opinions
3. This American Life
4. The Dinner Party Download
5. Radiolab
6. Snap Judgment
7. Studio 360
8. The TED Radio Hour
9. On the Media
10. Only A Game
http://onlyagame.wbur.org/
http://themoth.org/radio
http://www.thisamericanlife.org/
http://www.soundopinions.org/
East Coast NPR stations:
http://www.wnyc.org (New York)
http://www.whyy.org (Philadeplphia)
http://www.wamu.org (Washington, DC)
http://www.ideastations.org (Richmond, Va.)
http://www.wfae.org (Charlotte, NC)
http://www.wfpl.org (Louisville, Ky.)
Here are our ten favorite National Public Radio (NPR) shows, some of which we tune in on out of town public radio stations since they don't air here in Virginia.
The images are in reference 1) a moth is for The Moth Radio Hour, Rachel Dratch of "Saturday Night" fame is on this week's show; 2) the '80s Journey record is for "Sound Opinions," a show in which Greg Kot and Jim DeRogatis decide which new records are worth listening to (they both happen to loath Journey; we don't); 3) Serbian food, which we are not using for "The Splendid Table," but rather "The Dinner Party Download," which ranks fourth in our top ten.
Here is the list:
1. The Moth Radio Hour
2. Sound Opinions
3. This American Life
4. The Dinner Party Download
5. Radiolab
6. Snap Judgment
7. Studio 360
8. The TED Radio Hour
9. On the Media
10. Only A Game
http://onlyagame.wbur.org/
http://themoth.org/radio
http://www.thisamericanlife.org/
http://www.soundopinions.org/
East Coast NPR stations:
http://www.wnyc.org (New York)
http://www.whyy.org (Philadeplphia)
http://www.wamu.org (Washington, DC)
http://www.ideastations.org (Richmond, Va.)
http://www.wfae.org (Charlotte, NC)
http://www.wfpl.org (Louisville, Ky.)
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