“Ms. Lemon, as I’m sure you know, it is Green Week, and NBC—”
“Oh brother, are they actually going to do something this year? Or are they just going to put that stupid green peacock in the corner of the screen?”
/30 rock
“Ms. Lemon, as I’m sure you know, it is Green Week, and NBC—”
“Oh brother, are they actually going to do something this year? Or are they just going to put that stupid green peacock in the corner of the screen?”
“Whatever Brian, I am over it.”
“Over what?”
“IIIITTTT!!!!”
“Love Cry” by Four Tet
First single from Four Tet’s upcoming new album titled “There is Love in You”, out January 25, 2010!
Lessons from MuchMusic's glory days »
This article is a few months old, but I think a lot of Canadians will be interested in reading it. It’s such a shame the MuchMusic of 1984 isn’t the MuchMusic of today.
John Doyle of the Globe and Mail:
It was 25 years ago today, on Aug. 31, 1984, that MuchMusic went on the air. In the United States, MTV had already caused a sensation. In those pre-Internet, pre-500-channel universe days, the arrival of an all-music video channel was a seismic shift in the media universe.
Much was not MTV, to the relief of everyone who cared in Canada. While MTV was bland and predictable, Much was raw, on-the-fly TV. The VJs weren’t so slick and they often improvised a bit of comedy. They laughed when things went awry. Sometimes they cursed. They sought out interesting, unknown Canadian bands and gave them oodles of attention. And it was never just about music.
They’re not doing much to mark the anniversary at Much. That’s their choice. Maybe Much doesn’t want to look old, to mark milestones and remind today’s viewers that the channel existed long before they were born. Fair enough. But it’s worth noting that there was time when MuchMusic was glorious TV and it mattered.
Calvin Harris would like to be the next Sugababe, y’all.
I LOVE THIS MAN TOO MUCH







FLAUNT #105 - Outer Boroughs - ph. Arnaldo Anaya-Lucca
Models: Lenz Von Johnston, Matthew Coatsworth, Sean Harju, Simon Nessman
» bigger scans at STEELMACHINES
The 30-second spot from HTC’s “You” campaign, this time filmed from the perspective of the phone.