March 2010
1 post
January 2010
1 post
December 2009
19 posts
Adam Ficek :') awww
Interviewer: Definitely, because actually Adam is only one week old.
Adam: You may not believe that, but it's true. I was cloned and kind of grown up in a microwave oven. In one week. And the real Adam's out there somewhere working.
Interviewer: A bit like popcorn. Erm..
Adam: Ohhh, popcorn! No, I'll tell you a story about popcorn. Bascially, my girlfriend's away in America, but anyway, last night I had some microwave popcorn. You're sposed to put it in for two minutes. No, it said three to four minutes in the microwave. It says, 'When it stops popping take it out'. I put it in, in the microwave and I was just sitting down, and I just smell this burning, and I opened up my kitchen door and it was like the whole thing was on fire, and the house now stinks and I'm gonna get killed. And it was like it was choking me and making me feel sick, and it was like the popcorn in the microwave was just bellowing like yellow mustard gas smoke. I dunno what went wrong there or whether I've been poisoned, that's why I feel so ill today but popcorn in the microwave, be careful because if you keep it in too long.. it's not good. Honestly, that's a word of warning.
I don't know why this made me laugh so much. He just starts babbling about popcorn, and how he thinks he may have been poisoned by it, in an interview : ')
I don’t love reality, I prefer that which is imaginary.
– Peter Doherty (via thingsgohazy) (via suzywire)
Interviewer: The cover of the album Up The Bracket has lines of riot police, and 'Time for Heroes' talks about 'the stylish kids in the riot' and 'truncheons and shields'. Where did those ideas come from?
Peter: I wrote 'Time for Heroes' after May Day in 2001. At the time it was one of the most exciting days of my life. Everyone said, 'Oh, it was rubbish, we got penned in at Oxford Circus,' but we didn't. Quite a lot of people got penned in, but some of us made a break for it, and that was a great feeling. It was quite a peaceful protest up until the police attacked. But I like the fact that when the police kicked off, and it wasn't justified, a lot of people stood their ground. And it felt quite good to be fighting for a cause. I felt like there were so many things wrong, and I didn't know where to channel it, and for that moment it felt like I was with a lot of people who believed in the same thing, and we were all channelling it together. If there had been more, we'd have gone to parliament - that was the dream. You can have people who disagree on things, but they can unite for the important things. It's like, if we were to go on stage as a band and not have a name, it would be very difficult to organise gigs, to release records - it would be chaos. But we have a name, The Libertines, and it makes things a lot easier. What I'm trying to say is that you've got this unrest, this general feeling that things are wrong. But you call it anti-capitalism � and you can pick that apart bit by bit, and show where that's wrong and doesn't make sense - but basically you've got a heading for it, and you can channel it there. It's a direction, and it's the right direction, and people notice - anti capitalism, pro society, pro equality, anti inequality. That's the way I see it. Capitalism breeds inequality everywhere in the world. There isn't a case where it doesn't. The gaps are bigger. The rich are richer than ever.
November 2009
22 posts
Scary! Glad he's alright. →
i remember when me and beth spent a whole english...
itsjustlikeshesinanotherworld:
robynnnnnn:
kerrie:
itsjustlikeshesinanotherworld:
good times.
did you ever figure out what it was?!
i spent a lot of high school art lessons trying to figure out the same thing. i came to the conclusion that its ‘get out of it’ except shouting rather oddly, so it turns in to GERRRR OUT OV ITTTTT! :’)
aah yeah, i think we thought it was something like...
waitingformagic:
jifs:
October 2009
87 posts