Emily N.: Hi, I’m very interested in Linux but Im a Super Newbie and I’m having trouble deciding on the right distribution for me (Havent you heard this a million...
vs: i believe the correct punch line would be: “this conversation”
adipex-d-no-perscrip: adipex d no perscription or canada adipex diet pills or buy brand name adipex without prescription or adipex p how it works or adipex fedex
Xakhdiezi: Asura looked its hollow alternatives to elavil for migraines arrow set hat calls aricept after market studies because right the magician coming off lo ovral sid...
ala nickolodean game shows, visual artist Alison Brady brings us a more adult version of the most exciting thing that happened on children’s television in my childhood.
more than just her double dare recreation, she’s got an array of somewhat morbidly fascinating and mind-fuckling work in her portfolio.
As a remedy for the insanity that is the last workday before a holiday weekend, I recommend this clip of Donovan and Bobbie Gentry performing “There is a Mountain” together on Bobbie’s TV show.
Donovan needs no introduction, of course, but Ms. Gentry deserves credit for more than her best-known hit, “Ode to Billy Joe.” Born and raised in rural Chickasaw County, Mississippi, she moved to California in her early teens. As a musician on the nightclub circuit in LA, she used her childhood experiences in the South as inspiration for her expertly crafted lyrics. Her sound was somewhere between sophisticated, pop-oriented country and sweet, mellow blue-eyed soul. Sadly, after the initial success of “Ode,” only her 1968 duet album with Glen Campbell and her 1970 single “Fancy” received much notice in the U.S. charts. Even so, she continued to tour, record, and make numerous television appearances. After 1978, she vanished from the public eye. Apparently she is still alive, but what she has been up to all these years is a mystery.