idobi Hosts’ Top Picks of 2020
idobi’s hosts raise one last White Claw to the things that kept us going in 2020—the music, the memes, and the hopes for a better 2021.
idobi’s hosts raise one last White Claw to the things that kept us going in 2020—the music, the memes, and the hopes for a better 2021.
Basslines and Protest Signs is Brett Callwood’s column looking at the intersection of music and politics. This week highlights the importance of Anti-Flag.
Movies are becoming ever so creative at dispatching horny teenagers, tripping heroines, cocky antagonists, and non-believers. Many have stuck with me so I combed through all my bookmarked flicks to jot down the most memorable deaths.
Ain’t no sophomore slumps to be found on this week’s Geek Girl Riot, only the epic return of both The Handmaid’s Tale and Dear White People for their respective second seasons.
This week: Good Girls, The Flash, This Is Us, Kevin (Probably) Saves the World, Chicago Med, Hard Sun, Grown-ish, Riverdale, Life Sentence, Jessica Jones, Atlanta, LOVE, Collateral, The Walking Dead
The first ever TRNSMT Festival in Glasgow was a thrilling, rain-soaked experience.
“Callwood at the Cooler” sees Brett Callwood waxing lyrical about events in the news, pop culture and the etc. This week features a weirdly-timed defense of Milli Vanilli.
Greg from Allegaeon was almost formerly from Allegaeon until an idol intervened.
Long before Tumblr became a lifestyle, pizza culture reigned, and Glamour Kills was the unofficial stylist of every dude you know, lived Good Charlotte. The band formed twenty years ago, and found their way to the top of every chart back in pop punk’s glory days.
As Portishead finished its meticulously sparse evening performance at the Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival, the typically reticent Beth Gibbons suddenly leapt off the stage and ran a 100-yard dash along the fenced-in crowd, exuberantly shaking their hands. Percussionist Geoff Barrow and guitarist Adrian Utley soon exited more quietly. Barrow, though, paused in front of a microphone to say, simply, “Thanks for waiting.” After a ten-year hiatus, Portishead is back. This is not a reunion bow, though, but rather an energized reboot of a band that ten years ago found itself burnt out from a rock ‘n’ roll life… Read more »