How Charlie Chaplin, Buster Keaton & Harold Lloyd Pulled Off Their Spectacular Stunts During Silent Film’s Golden Age | Open Culture
31 Oct 2025 Leave a comment
Winners and losers from the Broncos 33-32 victory over the Giants | Mile High Report
21 Oct 2025 Leave a comment
Winners and losers from the Broncos 33-32 victory over the Giants | Mile High Report
20 Oct 2025 Leave a comment
Denver Broncos vs. New York Giants results, final score NFL Week 7 | Mile High Report
20 Oct 2025 Leave a comment
RIP Ace Frehley
17 Oct 2025 Leave a comment
“Decades later, fans still talk about that Tokyo solo in the same breath as Hendrix at Monterey or Page at Madison Square Garden. It’s that level of myth. The Budokan wasn’t just another stop — it was the night the Spaceman left orbit. That moment, frozen in sound and smoke, became one of the purest examples of what made KISS larger than life.
Now, rewatching it carries a deeper ache. In October 2025, Ace Frehley — the legendary Spaceman — passed away at seventy-four after complications from a fall. The news hit like feedback after silence. Guitarists across generations revisited the Budokan footage, searching for that grin, that effortless tone, that confidence that said, “Yeah, I’ve got this.” You can feel it now — a bittersweet pulse that turns every sustained note into a goodbye.”
From Heavy Metal World on Facebook: When Ace was at his peak, he was unstoppable — pure electricity in human form. That 1977 solo, hailed by fans as one of the greatest in rock history, still sends shivers down the spine decades later. There’s simply nothing like the raw, unfiltered tone of a seventies guitarist, and Ace embodied it better than anyone. His sound wasn’t just music; it was attitude, rebellion, and freedom all wrapped into one blazing moment of perfection.
Thriller vs Let’s Dance: The time Michael Jackson went head to head with David Bowie – Steve Pafford
14 Oct 2025 Leave a comment
Elizabeth Taylor searches up 9000% thanks to Taylor Swift
09 Oct 2025 Leave a comment
Thanks Taylor Swift for introducing gen Z to Elizabeth Taylor, my favorite actress of all-time. One of these days, I hope to visit Windsor Ruins in Mississippi and I hope that Raintree County gets a proper blu-ray release someday. The official Elizabeth Taylor website is selling t-shirts and sweatshirts in homage to the new Swift album. https://elizabethtaylor.com/


Looking back at MJ’s Dangerous Nov. 1991
06 Oct 2025 Leave a comment
https://pitchfork.com/reviews/albums/22044-dangerous/

The official Rolling Stone-canonical version of events holds that the ouster of Jackson’s new-jack album from the top of the Billboard charts in favor of Nirvana’s Nevermind signaled the unmistakable death knell for the 1980s and the arrival of the ’90s. Never mind that both albums were certified blockbusters, as was the release that supplanted Nirvana the very next week: Garth Brooks’s Ropin’ the Wind. The sense at the time, amid the unprecedented promotional push for Jackson’s latest effort and its analogous chart performance, was that the crown was slipping from the king of pop’s fingers.
Not that Jackson was ready to go down without a well-choreographed fight.


