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ASUmusicMAN

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Everything posted by ASUmusicMAN

  1. Did you stuble upon it?
  2. I like Evanescence, but the first I heard of them was that song on the Daredevil soundtrack and then I got their album...I like!!!
  3. Wow...never even thought about it...but strangly makes sense. Good point!!!!
  4. There's a thread?? Why didn't anyone tell me?
  5. Yeah...i tried to make the snowboarder bail...but nothing...always on his feet. Pretty funny about the snowman though *chuckle*
  6. ...was already 'taking care' of three drunk women himself. "Wow!" mused Mr.Jip, "we have our own posse here it seems. Do you know what this means? This means we..."
  7. um..yeah...didn't make it out of the parking lot
  8. after scoring a miraclous -25 i died
  9. I have achieved winnatude.
  10. 2:40:51 fun...but aaaaaarrgh...I'm a lot better at real snowboarding...
  11. a fluffer. Now this is putting a BIG responsibility in his hands. Afraid of flying debris he purchased a set of goggles, to help shield his eyes from...
  12. Supreme Court: Rosa Parks Suit Against OutKast Can Go Ahead Monday, December 08, 2003 WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court refused Monday to intervene in a lawsuit over the hit song "Rosa Parks (search)" by the Grammy-winning rap group OutKast (search). The action, taken without comment from the justices, means the 90-year-old civil rights figure can go ahead with her lawsuit against the band. The 1998 song is about the entertainment industry and its lyrics do not refer to Parks by name. The chorus of the song goes, "Ah-ha, hush that fuss. Everybody move to the back of the bus." Parks claimed that OutKast violated her publicity and trademark rights and defamed her. She lost her first round in federal court, but a three-judge panel of the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Cincinnati reinstated part of the lawsuit earlier this year. The case will now return to a lower federal court judge. Parks wants all references to her removed from future versions of the record. OutKast has argued that the song is neither false advertising nor a violation of Parks' publicity rights and is protected by the First Amendment. Parks made history in December 1955 when she was arrested for refusing to give up her seat to a white man on a Montgomery, Ala., city bus. Her arrest triggered a 381-day boycott of the bus system by blacks and led to court rulings desegregating public transportation nationwide. The case is LaFace Records v. Parks, 03-504.
  13. Sounds pretty damn good, but I don't know if it can top the halftime show U2 did.
  14. By MICHAEL McDONOUGH LONDON (AP) - Ozzy Osbourne fractured several bones including a neck vertebra in an all-terrain vehicle accident but the injuries are "not a major problem," a doctor said Tuesday. Osbourne, 55, was "stable and comfortable" after emergency surgery that restored the flow to a blood vessel damaged in Monday's accident, said Dr. Dick Jack, the medical director at Wexham Park Hospital in Slough, west of London. "When he was admitted, he had a fractured left collarbone, he had some damage to the blood vessel that is underneath it, he had eight fractured ribs on the left side and, in addition to that, an entirely stable fracture to one of the vertebrae in his neck," Jack said. "This is not a major problem." He said doctors planned to reassess Osbourne's condition later Tuesday morning. Osbourne sustained the injuries while riding a quad bike, or all-terrain vehicle, on his Buckinghamshire property in southern England. His U.S.-based publicist Cindy Guagenti said the singer was taking a day off from promoting the British release of "Changes," a duet with his daughter, Kelly, when the accident occurred. The song is a likely contender for the Christmas No. 1 spot in Britain's singles charts - a hotly disputed distinction that fuels huge speculation in the British media. Osbourne's publicists in Britain could not immediately be reached for comment about how the accident occurred and whether it might affect the record's chances of success. Ozzy Osbourne, who grew up in Birmingham, central England, rose to stardom with heavy metal group Black Sabbath in the 1970s before launching a solo career. His fame grew hugely after he became the subject of hit reality-TV series "The Osbournes." The MTV show featuring the rocker, wife Sharon and their children Kelly and Jack, started production about a month ago on its third season, scheduled to begin Jan. 13. It was not immediately known how Monday's accident would affect production or how or whether it might be included in the series, an MTV spokeswoman said. Osbourne last month postponed a planned European tour until next year because of the effects of medication he's taking to treat tremors. On Saturday, a story on the Los Angeles Times Web site reported Osbourne's claim that he was overprescribed a variety of powerful anti-psychotic and tranquilizing drugs by a Beverly Hills physician. Osbourne said he developed a 42-pill per day habit that accounted for his odd behavior on the hit MTV show, including scenes in which Osbourne was seen mumbling, falling and appearing disoriented. The rocker blamed a Beverly Hills physician, David Kipper, for overprescribing the drugs. Kipper has been investigated for overprescribing drugs to other celebrity patients. On Monday, actor-director Danny DeVito issued a statement in support of Kipper. DeVito said he and his wife, actress Rhea Perlman, and other family members have relied on Kipper for medical care for more than 20 years. "He has always been, to us, the most honest, caring, selfless, responsible doctor we have ever had," DeVito said in the statement. Calls to Kipper's office Monday were not returned. Earlier this month, Osbourne told a British newspaper he'd been sexually molested as a child and suffered emotional effects from the abuse long into adulthood.
  15. BABS' CD YANKED FROM GRAMMY RUN December 9, 2003 -- BARBRA Streisand's Best Pop Vocal entry - Sony's "The Movie Album" - got bounced from the Grammys. The brains who run NARAS (National Association of Recording, etc., etc.) pulled the nomination. Sept. 30 is its cut-off for entries. They say her CD was released two weeks after. A world at war mightn't consider this a capital crime, but Grammy-wise it's a felony. Like the Oscars. Produce "Gone With the Wind 2" with Julia, Nicole, Renée, Halle, Russell, Sean, Leonardo, T. Cruise and T. Hanks, but get it in after the cutoff date and you are, as they might say in polite company, screwed. Streisand's people say it's not so. They say, but even if it is so, so what? The Grammy people are saying she has to give proof . . . PROOF . . . that it was out before the cut-off date. So what's proof? Maybe a sales-slip of someone who actually bought the thing. Failing that she is officially de-nominated.
  16. I'll start...I looove Christmas music...yes its hookey and overperformed but it really gets me in the mood. Plus it's how us performers make over fifty percent of our income (the other fifty is easter and weddings).
  17. aww yeah...and sucking needles out of the carpet until august...leaving that robust pine/spruce smell
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