Where are those Craigslist Erotic Services classifieds when you need them? Life after The Bachelor has been anything but bliss for On the Wings of Love champ Vienna Girardi. Like millions of Americans this holiday season, Vienna’s out of work and facing an uncertain future. Bet that Playboy gig doesn’t look so bad now, eh [...]
Posts Tagged ‘VI’
Vienna Girardi, “The Bachelor†Winner, Unemployed & Job-Hunting On Craigslist
The Heavy Pets: Winter Tour & NYE in FL
TOUR STARTS NOVEMBER 19 IN MIAMI, FL
![]() The Heavy Pets |
The Heavy Pets will close
out a highly successful 2010 with a tour along the northeast corridor including dates in New York, Connecticut,
Maine, Vermont, Pennsylvania, Virginia and Maryland before heading back to FL for a final leg of New Year’s shows in
their home stomping grounds. The Heavy Pets have grown exponentially in a very short time and the tour marks a
fitting end to an extraordinary year for the band.
The entire tour will be mixed, recorded and cataloged by Charlie Miller of the Grateful Dead/Kimock fame and available for purchase
on the Heavy Pets website through LiveDownloads.com
and DigitalSoundboard.com.
For a complete tour schedule and more information about the band, check out their new website at www.theheavypets.com.
2010 TOUR DATES:
11/19 Tobacco Road – Miami, FL
11/26 Highline Ballroom – New York, NY
11/27 The Vibe Lounge – Rockville Center, NY
11/30 Cafe Nine – New Haven, CT
12/1 Empire Dine & Dance – Portland, ME
12/2 Matterhorn – Stowe, VT
12/3 Matterhorn – Stowe, VT
12/4 Nectars – Burlington, VT
12/8 Westcott Theater – Syracuse, NY
12/9 Putnam Den – Saratoga Springs, NY
12/14 Jewish Mother’s – Norfolk, VI
12/17 The 8 x 10 – Baltimore, MD
12/18 River Street Jazz Cafe – Plains, PA
12/31 Culture Room – Fort Lauderdale, FL
The Heavy Pets
Tour Dates
::
The Heavy Pets News
::
The Heavy Pets
Concert
Reviews
Treasure Island Music Fest 2010 | S.F. | Review | Pics
Words by: Eric Podolsky | Images by: Josh Miller
Treasure Island Music Festival :: 10.16.10-10.17.10 :: Treasure Island :: San Francisco, CA
Check out Josh Miller’s fab photo gallery here.
Treasure Island Fest ’10 by Josh Miller |
As far as urban music festivals go, the Bay Area has got it made when it comes to gorgeous, out-of-the-way-yet-accessible locations to stage big parties. Now in its fourth year, Treasure Island Music Festival takes the cake for most unique location, situated right on the shoreline of the man-made island, a few miles offshore from SF. As there was no parking on the tiny island, a brigade of upscale buses provided free shuttle service to and from the island from downtown SF, which proved to be convenient, comfortable and efficient. Once inside the fairly small festival grounds, we were greeted to gorgeous views of the SF cityscape across the bay. Unfortunately, our luck ran out with the weather, as the Bay Area was bombarded with cold, clouds, wind and its first rains in months, right in time for festival weekend (after highs in the 80s earlier in the week). This took Saturday’s under-dressed crowd by surprise, and many were seen huddled against the Bay’s whipping winds, which swept across the exposed festival grounds.
With two closely situated stages sharing one field and no overlapping sets, this festival was a marvel of convenience that made it easy to expend as little effort as possible to catch your favorite bands. There were no half-mile walks from stage to stage, only leisurely strolls within the field’s confines. The icing on the cake was the inclusion of the Silent Disco this year, which offered the crowd a headphone-dance-party alternative to the main acts throughout the day. DJ Motion Potion‘s set really got my Saturday evening going right, as he induced a big headphone-funk dance party under a canopy of lit-up trees.
This year’s lineup was as indie as ever, and with the two days distinctly separated into “electro-dance-DJ day” and “sentimental-indie-rock-collective day” you may as well been at two different festivals over the course of the weekend. Saturday’s sold-out raver crowd swelled throughout the day, reaching a saturation point for Deadmau5‘s Daft-Punk-scale house music extravaganza. The electro beats of band after band carried the neon island party into the night before we were forced to board the buses, which deposited us back into the real word of downtown San Francisco.
Sunday was a different animal altogether, as cold and rain hit early in the day, putting a damper on affairs early on. Fortunately, the rain disappeared around 2 pm, and the rest of the day went along smoothly, and we were serenaded with the finest indie music around. Lovely harmonies, huge bands and well-crafted songs dominated the day, and the noticeably subdued and smaller crowd was all smiles, with many a couple seen making out all over the place.
The separation of each day into a general musical genre proved to be a smart decision that paid off for everyone, as people were able to choose which day to attend based on their musical tastes. Overall, even with lousy weather, the bands delivered in a big way, and the setting was naturally breathtaking and surreal. What more could you want from a festival?
Continue reading for Saturday highlights…
Treasure Island Saturday Highlights
LCD’s James Murphy by Josh Miller |
1. LCD Soundsystem :: 9:35-10:50 :: Bridge Stage
After the straight house music barrage of Deadmau5 whipped the crowd into a manic frenzy with larger-than-life beats, headliner James Murphy and Co. took the stage and built their set organically with a mighty patience, letting the music breathe, swell and build to epic heights. Decked out in a brilliant white suit, Murphy was a straight crooner on this night, singing to us with a confidence and clarity I haven’t heard from him before. He had the crowd in the palm of his hand at every moment, and he knew it. Opening quietly with the slow-burner “Dance Yrself Clean,” Murphy forced us to lean into the music right off the bat, even before the song exploded into the dance party we were all waiting for. From there, Murphy led us through his infectious catalog of ass-shaking analog dance-rock, putting special emphasis on dynamics. His well-oiled band cranked out song after song of finely crafted, polyrhythmic grooves, and it was awe-inspiring. Many things blew me away about this set, most of all the sonic perfection of the mix. Every instrument came through bright and clear, and the band’s big, spacious sound filled the festival space perfectly. With drummer Patrick Mahoney driving the groove with his incessant pocket, the masterful maturity of this band shone through in the ever-urgent, slow builds of “Daft Punk Is Playing At My House” and “Tribulations,” which peaked in epic fashion before the band closed with the happy sing-along groove “Home.” My favorite set of the weekend.
2. Die Antwoord :: 3:00-3:45 :: Bridge Stage
It’s safe to say that this set left the entire crowd with their jaws on the ground. Storming out the gate on their first U.S. tour, South African MCs Ninja and pint-sized lady Yo-Landi Vi$$er blew our fucking minds with their over-the-top stage presence and lewd gestures, and backed it all up with some of the best MC skills I’ve ever witnessed. Presenting themselves as unabashedly white trash gangsta, it was easy to laugh at their weird haircuts and ridiculous braggadocio, but as soon as Ninja started rapping, his incredible skills more than justified any antics. Simply put, the set was pure, blazing hip-hop. Ninja speed-rapped with amazing clarity over minimal slice-and-dice beats, and it was off the charts awesome. Running around the stage in his boxers, shaking his dick around and sneering, he spat dirty sex rhymes and amazing freestyles, and blew us all away with pure MC skillz. Throughout the set, Yo-Landi Vi$$er acted as a sort of Joe C to Ninja’s Kid Rock, for lack of a better analogy. Her otherworldly, little-girl delivery complimented the songs, but mostly she was all attitude and sexuality, grabbing her chest with a snarl and mooning the crowd a couple of times. An truly tremendous concert experience.
3. !!! :: 4:35-5:25 :: Bridge Stage
I’ve known about these guys for a while, and was excited to see them for the first time. This band was one of the first to patent the now-widespread dance-rock movement a number of years back, and they still deliver live. Theirs is a dirty-punk groove approach, with Tyler Pope‘s funky, deep-fuzz basslines driving the songs forward. The band themselves was fantastic, but I couldn’t say the same for vocalist Nic Offer, whose breathy, low delivery didn’t compliment the band very well. At times it seemed like he wasn’t trying very hard, and it was often hard to hear his mediocre voice above the consistently engaging grooves. When the band decided to get instrumentally serious and jam a bit, it was fabulous, bass-bombing psychedelic dance-rock, complete with electro-glitch bloops and bleeps. The band’s horn section seemed under-utilized to me, as they were used more for sonic color than anything else. I danced my butt off anyway.
4. Holy Fuck :: 1:30-2:15 :: Bridge Stage
These guys pack a sonic wallop. This instrumental band is just a rhythm section and a couple of dudes tweaking and fiddling with knobs, but they sure make a lot of sound. They crafted an eerie ambiance with their weird toys, which complimented the driving rhythm. But this wasn’t really dance music, more a soundscape of ethereal groove-noise. Vocal loops and modulators evoked Lee Scratch Perry level experimentation in a rock setting (there was even a melodica), and the audience responded warmly to the out-there results, especially considering the set was so early in the day. Hunched over their toys, these mad professors won me over with their exploratory, order-in-chaos approach to music.
Deadmau5 by Josh Miller |
5. Little Dragon :: 7:05-7:50 :: Tunnel Stage
I had never heard of this Swedish band before I caught this set, and their synth-soul-pop sound really caught my ear. Sometimes evoking the icy early-80s sounds of Grace Jones or even Bowie, Little Dragon has catchy songs and an airy-cool ambiance created by well-placed synths, which serve the melodies well. Their lead singer Yukimi Nagano is soulful yet detached in the languid, catchy way that synth-pop works best. This was one set that succeeded in inspiring me to actively seek out the band’s material. Great nighttime music.
6. Deadmau5 :: 7:55-8:45 :: Bridge Stage
Having no ear for or experience in the world of house music, I was somewhat baffled at the hordes of adoring fans that came out for this guy. His fans were definitely the most visible on Saturday, and the crowd was absolutely packed for his set. As I’m mostly unable to tell house music apart from other electronic music, I can say that his was a very simple, stripped-down style of epic tension-release beats and electronic sounds meant solely to make you dance. His stage show was the most elaborate of the weekend, taking a page straight out of the Daft Punk playbook. Deadmau5, with glowing mouse head on at all times, was perched atop a giant cube, which projected various images and light displays. This all combined to be a fun, high-energy experience, though not musical in nature. Talking with a fan later, I learned that the man uses no samples in his live show and creates all sounds in the moment with analog equipment. That said, I respect Deadmau5 for what he does, but can’t say the music engages me.
Continue reading for Sunday highlights…
Treasure Island Sunday Highlights
Broken Social Scene by Josh Miller |
1. Broken Social Scene :: 5:35-6:25 :: Bridge Stage
Though I was mostly unfamiliar with this Canadian musician collective before this set, I was soon converted. Their ensemble approach to playing continually surprised me, with musicians continually switching instruments after every song. The band plays a sort of alt-rock chamber music, with each musician in the eight-piece band playing a very specific role in the sound and always serving the song. The set started with four guitars jangling away, and yet the sound was lean and not overly busy. “7/4 (Shoreline)” was rocked out nicely, and the mid-tempo “Texaco Bitches” was made interesting with some bloopy synths. At times the band evoked the wide-open-spaces feel of early U2, with shimmering guitar parts and soaring vocals. But the peak of the set had to be “Anthems for a Seventeen-Year-Old Girl,” a slow-building loop of a tune which repeated itself, each band member gradually adding something new at every repetition until it built to a soaring, heartfelt crescendo. As the band peaked the song out, singer Kevin Drew successfully crowd-surfed all the way back to the soundboard – a triumphant way to end the set.
2. Superchunk :: 2:30-3:15 :: Bridge Stage
I’d never heard of these guys either, and they thoroughly impressed me with their meaty, poppy punk rock. Superchunk has influenced countless indie rockers having been around for over 20 years, and listening to them play it’s easy to tell why. They work as a unit, slugging it out with duel guitar power chords and a rockin’ female bassist, her axe slung low, to boot. Singer-guitarist Mac McCaughan was right on all set with his great voice. Their new track “Digging for Something” had me rocking hard, and included the first real guitar solo of the entire weekend, believe it or not. “My Gap Feels Weird” was also awesome, and the anthemic “Crossed Wires” had a rip-roaring, jangly guitar duel. They closed their utterly satisfying afternoon set in grand rock fashion, with thrashing guitars and windmill power chords.
3. Belle & Sebastian :: 9:05-10:20 :: Bridge Stage
Another band I haven’t given a chance, these guys closed the festival out on a cheery note with their immaculate, gorgeous pop-rock melodies. In a day filled with large ensemble bands, this group beat them all with an 11-piece band, complete with horn and string sections. Lead man Stuart Murdoch was in high spirits, bouncing around the stage while his band churned out bright, meticulously crafted pop. All the songs were light and catchy, with a high gloss production that gave them a kind of George Martin feel. Songs like “I’m A Cuckoo” were amazingly clean and precise in their sound, and the audience was all smiles and extraordinarily attentive. Indeed, in between songs, I had never heard a quieter, more well behaved audience in all my years. This allowed the band to give their music the delicacy it required, what with its lovely flute and string parts and three-part madrigal harmonies. Tunes like “Suki In The Graveyard” and “The Boy With The Arab Strap” were gleaming, radio-friendly nuggets that got people bouncing around before the epic, feel-good climax of “Sleep The Clock Around” sent us to the shuttle buses, closing out a big day of music.
4. The National :: 7:15-8:15 :: Bridge Stage
This band is Matt Berninger. Everything about the archetypal indie rock this band plays revolves around his aching, Morrissey-like baritone and the heartbreaking lyrics it delivers. In this eight-piece band, all instruments function to serve the song, first and foremost. Strings, horns, guitars and keyboard are all complimentary color to his deeply soulful voice. Most all of his songs are about relationships and getting older, and all are tinged with melancholy. The music is always achingly beautiful, and tunes like “Apartment Story” and “Conversation 16″ make you feel more than you might expect. This was a deep show, and every now and then Berninger would freak out, as he did in “Abel,” screaming, “My mind’s not right!” His performance contrasted drastically with his funny, witty stage banter – definitely the winner for best banter of the weekend. Berninger has great stagecraft, and knows how to be a leading man to great effect. Some other lead singers from the weekend could have taken a tip or two from him…
M. Ward by Josh Miller |
5. She & Him :: 4:00-4:50 :: Bridge Stage
This collaboration between M. Ward and Zooey Deschanel was a fun afternoon romp into 60s era doo-wop pop. Their band had a jukebox feel to it, with M. Ward’s soul-fried guitar work leading the band. Though Deschanel has a great voice, it was a cold, windy day, and she seemed a bit unsure onstage, and her voice didn’t fill the open field very well as a result. This would clearly be a great band to see in a small venue, but their delicate sound didn’t translate very well to a gigantic, open-air stage. Regardless, songs like “Black Hole” were fun and lighthearted, with backup singers doo-wopping it up. My favorite song had to be “This Is Not A Test,” a sunny, strummy, acoustic feel-good number. Another highlight included M. Ward leading the band through a folkified version of “Roll Over Beethoven” to close out a fun set.
6. Papercuts :: 1:55-2:25 :: Tunnel Stage
A short 30-minute set started my day off right with an introduction to Papercuts’ etheral indie-pop. Based in SF, they are led by vocalist Jason Robert Quever, whose high-pitched, quavering tenor blends with the band’s lo-fi sounds. Their songs are punctuated with strange washes of organ sounds, and are catchy if a bit generic sounding. I would definitely give them another chance, as a half hour is not much time to prove one’s worth as a band.
Continue reading for Josh Miller’s photo gallery…
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Tadić, Dodik to visit towns together
Serbian President Boris Tadić and Republic of Srpska (RS) Prime Minister Milorad Dodik will on Saturday visit Užice and Višegrad. Užice is a western Serbian town, while Višegrad is located in eastern RS.
Autopsies for bodies found in lake
The remains of some 60 victims found in Lake Perućac will be sent for autopsy to the town of ViÅ¡egrad, in eastern Bosnia. The Bosnian Missing Persons Institute President Amor MaÅ¡ović said the victims were Bosnian Muslims from ViÅ¡egrad, killed in the 1992-95 war, and that they would be identified in this town’s morgue.
“Saw VII: 3D†Release Date Moved To Oct. 29 To Avoid Competition With “Paranormal Activity 2″
Horror sequels Paranormal Activity 2 and Saw VII: 3D will no longer slay victims on the same opening weekend.Both horror blockbusters had been slated for Oct. 22 release dates, however Lionsgate — who produces Saw — has decided to bow out of a box office showdown with the eagerly-anticipated follow-up to last year’s Paranormal Activity. [...]
“Saw†Guinness World Record: “Most Successful Horror Series In Historyâ€
The Saw film franchise has earned an unlikely honor: a place in the Guiness Book of World Records. Saw has been dubbed the “Most Successful Horror Movie Series.” “I’m still in shock. The fact that we beat out (such horror franchises as) ‘Friday the 13th,’ ‘Nightmare on Elm Street,’ ‘Halloween’ and ‘Texas Chain Saw Massacre’ is [...]
VH1 “Scream Queens†Season 2 Premieres Aug. 2
Set your DVRs, Horror Fanatics, it’s time for a new season of VH1’s tacky reality frightfest, Scream Queens. Produced by Lionsgate and Joke Productions, the next installment of the horror-actress reality competition is set to hit VH1 next month, and this time, the potential Queens will be competing for a role in Saw 3D (the [...]
Marilyn Monroe X-Rays Fetch $45G At Las Vegas Auction
A set of three chest X-rays of blonde Tinseltown icon Marilyn Monroe sold for five-figures at an auction in Sin City over the weekend.The images lifted from a 1954 hospital visit sold for $45,000 at the Hollywood Legends auction at Planet Hollywood Resort and Casino in Las Vegas on Sunday. Julien’s Auctions, which sold the X-rays, [...]
Vienna Girardi Sold Story Of Jake Pavelka Split To Star Magazine For $90K
Jake and Vienna have split. Our faith in love is forever shaken! Newly-single Bachelor star Vienna Girardi is crying all the way to the bank. We hear the “heartbroken” blonde sold the story of her split from icy ex Jake Pavelka on the pages of Star Magazine for $90,000.“Vienna sold the split story to Star [...]
Symantec Chairman Thompson Named CEO of Virtual Instruments
UPDATED: John Thompson replaces founding CEO Mark Urdahl as the head of Virtual Instruments. Urdahl, a major stockholder, is staying on as a member of the company board of directors.
– Former Symantec CEO and current board Chairman
John Thompson, widely considered by industry watchers to be one of the true
quot;class acts quot; in Silicon Valley, on May 6 was
named CEO of Virtual Instruments.
Thompson replaces Mark Urdahl, who was VI’s founding CEO
in 2008. Urdahl, a major…
Man dies in floods in east
The Serbian police (MUP) Emergency Situations Sector said early this morning that a mad had died in a neighborhood flooded by the Beli Timok River.
MUP’s Dragan DonÄevski explained that an elderly man drowned in ViÅ¡njar when he fell in to the water while climbing down the stairs of his house.
The Isaac Foundation Children’s Charity Defends John Mayer As “Compassionate, Kind Personâ€
John Mayer’s still catching Holy Hell over his racially insensitive and anti-gay remarks (He’s still yet to apologize for the latter….) during an interview published in the March issue of Playboy Magazine last week, but at least one charity organization has spoken out in defense of the embattled singer.
A spokesperson for The Isaac Foundation – [...]
Two convicted for crimes against humanity
The Bosnia-Herzegovina Court in Sarajevo has convicted Predrag Bastah and Goran Višković of crimes against humanity, sentencing them to 18 years of prison. The trial chamber confirmed that the two, Bastah serving as a police reservist at the public security station in Vlasenica, and Višković as a member of the Republic of Srpska army, were guilty of nine points in their indictments.
Microsoft Windows 7 Battery Life Claims Spark Investigation
Microsoft is investigating claims from irate users over allegedly poor battery life for laptops running Windows 7, an issue that primarily seems to be affecting users who upgraded from either Windows Vista or Windows XP. While the number of users affected is unknown, complaints about battery life as low as 15 minutes have been reported on Microsoft forums as far back as June 2009. Microsoft has seen the adoption rate for Windows 7 steadily climb since its Oct. 22 release, with one research firm suggesting that 7.5 percent of PCs now run the operating system.
– Microsoft is investigating user complaints related to the
battery life of laptops running Windows 7, a problem that apparently
existed
even before the operating systems Oct. 22 launch. The issue seems to
primarily
affect those users who upgraded their system to Windows 7 from either
Windows Vi…
“Paranormal Activity 2″ October 2010
Paramount Studios has hired Saw VI director Kevin Greutert to step behind the camera for the eagerly-anticipated Paranormal Activity sequel, The Hollywood Reporter said Tuesday. Paranormal Activity 2 hits theaters Oct. 22, going head to head against the latest Saw movie at the box office this Halloween.
Oren Peli, who directed the original Paranormal Activity as [...]
Final Johnny Cash Volume
JOHNNY CASH’S AMERICAN RECORDINGS ALBUM SERIES CONCLUDES WITH IV RELEASE
Johnny Cash |
American VI: Ain’t No Grave, the sixth and final installment of Johnny Cash‘s critically-acclaimed American Recordings album series, will be officially released on February 26 (American Recordings/Lost Highway), the day that would have been The Man in Black’s 78th birthday. As with the previous five albums in the American Recordings series, American VI was produced by Rick Rubin.
American VI is deeply elegiac and spiritual, with each song its own piece of the puzzle of life’s mysteries and challenges – the pursuit of salvation, the importance of friendships, the dream of peace, the power of faith, and the joys and adversities that entail simple survival. It is an achingly personal and intimate statement, as, from the end of the line, Johnny Cash looks back on a most extraordinary life.
The songs on American VI are drawn from all over the musical landscape and from various eras, and include Sheryl Crow‘s moving “Redemption Day,” close Cash friend Kris Kristofferson‘s “For The Good Times,” “Can’t Help But Wonder Where I’m Bound” by Tom Paxton, Bob Nolan‘s “Cool Water,” the hopeful “Last Night I had the Strangest Dream” by Ed McCurdy, J.H. Red Hayes and Jack Rhodes‘s “Satisfied Mind,” Queen Lili’uokalani‘s song of farewell, “Aloha Oe,” and the never before heard Cash original, “I Corinthians: 15:55,” written over the last three years of his life.
American VI was recorded by Cash’s long-time engineer, David “Fergie” Ferguson, and, as with its American V predecessor, tracked at the Cash Cabin
Studio in Henderson, TN, and at Akadamie Mathematique of Philosophical Sound Research in Los Angeles, CA. Guitarist Mike Campbell and keyboardist Benmont Tench, who played on all of the series’ albums sans the first one, were joined in the studio by guitarists Matt Sweeney and Jonny Polonsky, as well as Smokey Hormel, who also played on American IV and V. In addition, The Avett Brothers‘ Scott and Seth made cameo appearances on the track “Ain’t No Grave.”
Cash and Rubin recorded many songs between the completion of American IV: The Man Comes Around in 2002 right up until September 12, 2003, the day Cash passed. Songs recorded during this time frame were released in 2006 as American V: A Hundred Highways, and now this final grouping of songs, American VI: Ain’t No Grave, ends the series that began in 1994 with American Recordings.
During these sessions, in May of 2003, less than four months before his death, Cash lost his wife June Carter Cash due to surgical complications. According to Rubin, “Johnny said that recording was his main reason for being alive. I think it was the only thing that kept him going.”
Cash feared that American IV might be his last release, so Rubin suggested that he immediately begin writing and recording new material. Due to the artist’s frail condition, Rubin arranged for an engineer and guitar players to always be on call. “Every morning, when he’d wake up, he would call the engineer and tell him if he was physically up to working that day,” Rubin explains.
During those months, Rubin went to Nashville several times to record with Cash and associate producer John Carter Cash. After a particularly productive four days of sessions, the artist said to the producer, “Oh, this is great; please stay longer.” So Rubin canceled his return flight to L.A., only to get a call the next morning that Cash was back in the hospital. “So there was a lot of stopping and starting, based on his health,” says Rubin. “But he always wanted to work. The doctors in the hospital kind of lectured me, saying, ‘He’s not going to stop, so you have to make sure he doesn’t work too much.’”
Though Cash knew his days were short, “There was no fear,” Rubin says. “I remember speaking to him maybe an hour after June died. He had been with her in the hospital, and I’d never heard him so distraught. And he said, ‘You know, I’ve been through tremendous pain in my life, and I’ve never felt anything like this.’ It was so bad that I didn’t know what to say. He sounded so weak, so beaten, and I’d never really heard him like that before. I’m not sure where the question came from, but I said, ‘Do you feel like somewhere you can find faith?’ And when he heard that word, a switch went off in his head, and he answered in a strong voice, ‘My faith is UNSHAKABLE.’ And the conversation changed after that. So he had tremendous faith, he didn’t really have fear and he already was dealing with pain; I think he had acceptance. When he knew he was going to die, he was calm and matter of fact about it, and… that was it.”
Highway to link RS, Serbia over Drina River?
Prime Minister of Republic of Srpska (DS) Milorad Dodik has accepted Užice Mayor Jovan Marković’s initiative to build Požega-Višegrad highway. Marković launched the initiative to build a 90-km highway from Požega in western Serbia, across the Drina River, to Višegrad, in the Serb entity of Bosnia-Herzegovina, Belgrade daily Danas writes.
“Paranormal Activity†Most Profitable Film Ever; Hit Horror Flick Breaks “Blair Witch Project†Record
Paranormal Activity has surpassed The Blair Witch Project to become the most profitable movie ever made, The Wrap has learned.
The film became a slashing smash as the box office after word of mouth on social networking site like Facebook and Twitter rose its profile. Directed by Oren Peli on a budget of $15,000, P.A. beat [...]
“Paranormal Activity†Slays “Saw VI†At Pre-Halloween Weekend Box Office
The low-budget chiller Paranormal Activity won a weekend battle of slashers flicks, overtaking part six of the Saw franchise and scooping up $22 million at the weekend box office.
Fueled by rave word-of-mouth reviews on social media sites like Facebook and Twitter, Paranormal Activity has taken the box office by storm to become the year’s most [...]





Treasure Island Fest ’10 by Josh Miller
LCD’s James Murphy by Josh Miller
Deadmau5 by Josh Miller
Broken Social Scene by Josh Miller
M. Ward by Josh Miller
Johnny Cash