I like that song "Love changes everything" by Climie Fisher.
It just got me at an impressionable age and it's stuck in my fond memories.
I like that song "Love changes everything" by Climie Fisher.
It just got me at an impressionable age and it's stuck in my fond memories.
You sound like a bit of a player, earth. You know lots of women.
:)
Oh I am not :)
I like LeBron.
I was a farkin depressed man. Good grief. The prison especially, although the skull monument and walking around and seeing the bones in the ground etc. powerful reminder.I was a changed man after visiting the prison and then the Killing FieldsIn Phnom Penh a few years ago l got to the gate of S21, the school where the Khmer Rouge bludgeoned 20,000 + to death. The records say only 3 people managed to escape the place alive. l hesitated at the gate, not sure if l could go in. ln the end l did, l felt l owed it the memories of the dead to not wimp out. A photographer had done a fine retrospective inside with plenty of portraits of the dead, the reflections were a bit spooky as well, l felt like l was walking through a graveyard of ghosts. l opted out of a trip to the Killing Fields, l had seen enough.
Ok, what about this one ?I love 80's music but that is a horrible song :(
Probably my favourite 80's song.
Lead singer from Mr Mister (Richard Page).
What a voice !
http://youtu.be/F4LAO2NMz8Y
Oh I am not :)You sound like a bit of a player, earth. You know lots of women. :)
I like that song "Love changes everything" by Climie Fisher.
It just got me at an impressionable age and it's stuck in my fond memories.
the older ive got the more ive appreciated st elmos fire.
The Feargal Sharkey song "You little thief". I liked it in the 80's. I just heard it again. I still like it.
I like this song for the trivia as much as the actual song.
A Good Heart was written by Maria McKee (Fairytale of New York) about her relationship with Benmont Tench from The Heartbreakers.
You Little Thief is written by Tench about the same relationship.
I reckon that's awesome.
Edit: I'm guessing Tench took the break-up a little harder than McKee.
That Iggy performance was hilariously epic. The interview section was an deadset ■■■■■■ and then when he tried to perform his lip sync wasnt in the same time zone as the backing tape, gave up altogether and rolled around, spat on the crowd and started some weird ■■■■ karate kicks, lol.Countdown awards?He was crap at the Countdown Awards, though...
Just watching them would be shameful.
Pretty sure there were no ARIA's at the time.
And any show that allows Lydon to host and Iggy to perform off his face is alright by me.
The Feargal Sharkey song "You little thief". I liked it in the 80's. I just heard it again. I still like it.
Turn it up a bit.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wAtUw6lxcis
I was a farkin depressed man. Good grief. The prison especially, although the skull monument and walking around and seeing the bones in the ground etc. powerful reminder.
I was a changed man after visiting the prison and then the Killing FieldsIn Phnom Penh a few years ago l got to the gate of S21, the school where the Khmer Rouge bludgeoned 20,000 + to death. The records say only 3 people managed to escape the place alive. l hesitated at the gate, not sure if l could go in. ln the end l did, l felt l owed it the memories of the dead to not wimp out. A photographer had done a fine retrospective inside with plenty of portraits of the dead, the reflections were a bit spooky as well, l felt like l was walking through a graveyard of ghosts. l opted out of a trip to the Killing Fields, l had seen enough.
Might be somewhere I have to visit as for some reason as I'm truly captivated by prisons (secret shame?). Killing fields sound pretty full on though....
They are full on, as they are not prisons, they are not camps of any sort, they are slaughter houses, they were set up for one purpose only, places to kill. Knowing that in advance is why l hesitated at the front gate, but it also why l decided finally to go inside. S21 is a sombre place, as is only befitting, knowing its history. These days there is an incongruous juxtaposition between S21 and what it stood for, compared to the ultra modern, 3 storey town houses across the street. l can envisage a day, where the local residents will want it torn down, as they won't want to be reminded of such a grim past, and the land value will make it a prime redevelopment site.
Cos I'm a girly girl (and after quite a few sav blancs) and I like songs that make me sing out loud and make me go faster on the tready & the bike; I like Justice Crew and Que Sera; plus I think the words equate to EFC - "at the end of the days some you win some you don't, so that I'm here with some friends that I know, always there with a smile............."
On travels through Europe we visited a few concentration camps and some of them were gruesome. We were driving to Matthaus and as we approached my wife commented that the fence looked strange, only closer inspection it was made of human skulls then when we got inside the main buildings it stank and there were blood stains all over the stone floor. Some pretty horrible pictures and stories in that place and we watched a short movie on the place, most tourists left with a tear or sick feelingMight be somewhere I have to visit as for some reason as I'm truly captivated by prisons (secret shame?). Killing fields sound pretty full on though....I was a farkin depressed man. Good grief. The prison especially, although the skull monument and walking around and seeing the bones in the ground etc. powerful reminder.I was a changed man after visiting the prison and then the Killing FieldsIn Phnom Penh a few years ago l got to the gate of S21, the school where the Khmer Rouge bludgeoned 20,000 + to death. The records say only 3 people managed to escape the place alive. l hesitated at the gate, not sure if l could go in. ln the end l did, l felt l owed it the memories of the dead to not wimp out. A photographer had done a fine retrospective inside with plenty of portraits of the dead, the reflections were a bit spooky as well, l felt like l was walking through a graveyard of ghosts. l opted out of a trip to the Killing Fields, l had seen enough.
Ok hear we go. In the late '80s, when I was a teenager, I liked carlton. Yep. I liked their jumper and I liked their players. I even thought that they could be my second team. Fark me what was I thinking? Now, I hate them more than Hitler. FARK CARLTON!!!
Ok hear we go. In the late '80s, when I was a teenager, I liked carlton. Yep. I liked their jumper and I liked their players. I even thought that they could be my second team. Fark me what was I thinking? Now, I hate them more than Hitler. FARK CARLTON!!!
Ok hear we go. In the late '80s, when I was a teenager, I liked carlton. Yep. I liked their jumper and I liked their players. I even thought that they could be my second team. Fark me what was I thinking? Now, I hate them more than Hitler. FARK CARLTON!!!
Halter hated Carlton. It makes a certain kind of sense
both loved a good tank
I guess it's a secret shame, but it's more of an I feel ridiculous.
That song 'Fancy' by the Australian born rapper. Singing the words 'I'm so fancy.'
I am not, in any way, shape or form, fancy.
I like B52s. The cocktail shot. Bailey's, Kahlua and Cointreau. Girliest of girly drinks. Also a kind of bomber though so...
I like B52s. The cocktail shot. Bailey's, Kahlua and Cointreau. Girliest of girly drinks. Also a kind of bomber though so...
Get a KFC shot in ya - Kahlua, Frangelico and Cointreua. That's the stuff!
I like B52s. The cocktail shot. Bailey's, Kahlua and Cointreau. Girliest of girly drinks. Also a kind of bomber though so...
Get a KFC shot in ya - Kahlua, Frangelico and Cointreua. That's the stuff!
I'm half sure I've done this through experimentation. Memory is a little cloudy though...