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Watch This Week – 10/29/19
This week: This Is Us, Mixed-ish, Emergence, Arsenio Hall: Smart & Classy, Castle Rock, Chicago Med, Stumptown, The Good Place,
Queer Eye: We’re in Japan!, VICE Investigates, Atypical, American Son, Titans
This week: This Is Us, Mixed-ish, Emergence, Arsenio Hall: Smart & Classy, Castle Rock, Chicago Med, Stumptown, The Good Place,
Queer Eye: We’re in Japan!, VICE Investigates, Atypical, American Son, Titans
Basslines and Protest Signs is Brett Callwood’s column looking at the intersection of music and politics. This week breaks down the history and influence of the Dead Kennedys.
Renée Zellweger becomes a moving memory of Judy Garland.
Tropical Storm Irma made landfall in Houston this past week. Miraculously, Dallas was saved from the storm by the power of DAY6’s Korean pop-rock (and, to a lesser extent, meteorological physics).
Basslines and Protest Signs is Brett Callwood’s column looking at the intersection of music and politics. This week talks about Ice-T and Body Count.
This was the most packed my show has ever been and you are welcome. Chase Atlantic came by to co-host and brought their homie Lauren Sanderson, Hoodie Allen and Bruce Wiegner stopped by and RØYLS called in! Also did an interview with Spencer Sutherland and wanted to add it in here cause he performed live in studio and gosh darnit his voice is angelic.
It’s never too early for good tunes. It’s time to Rise Rock n’ Shine…
Picture this: It’s a humid 90 degrees and you’re on a rooftop in New York City with 3000 other people. On one side is the Manhattan skyline; on the other Brooklyn. Everyone is turned toward a stage—the Brooklyn Bridge visible just behind it. On it, a band dressed in pink stands. One of the members holds up a sign that says “We Are All the Same” and the crowd screams. Welcome to Sad Summer Fest 2019, the tour of your dreams that will undoubtedly replace the Warped-size hole in your heart. Outside NYC’s Pier 17—a fantastic venue with a couple… Read more »
Basslines and Protest Signs is Brett Callwood’s new column looking at the intersection of music and politics. This week examines the rise of Riot Grrrl.
Zr. King is throwing back to the days when genres were a little simpler, music was a little more raw, and rock bands reigned supreme.