Remove ads, unlock a dark mode theme, and get other perks by upgrading your account. Experience the website the way it's meant to be.

Brand New - Science Fiction (August 17, 2017) [ARCHIVED] Album • Page 785

Discussion in 'Music Forum' started by Dirty Sanchez, Aug 15, 2017.

Thread Status:
This thread is locked and not open for further replies.
  1. Colin Your Enthusiasm

    It's nobody's battle but your own. Prestigious

    Yeah i do. I mean its a total trip. One of Gaspar's favorite films is the ultimate trip 2001 so this is his hommage to it in a way. To give you an idea of what you are in for, the opening credits alone are even worth watching lol

     
    bachna84 likes this.
  2. bachna84

    we are nothing more than mannequins Prestigious

    Just added this to my list!
     
    DejaMoi likes this.
  3. Dog with a Blog

    Guest

    Do you like Twin Peaks? There's an episode in the newest season that is easily the most cinematic thing I've ever seen on TV.
     
    fenway89 likes this.
  4. Colin Your Enthusiasm

    It's nobody's battle but your own. Prestigious

    Sadly ive never watched twin peaks...i know its bad. Definitely want to tho
     
    fenway89 likes this.
  5. Colin Your Enthusiasm

    It's nobody's battle but your own. Prestigious

    EmmanuelSCastle and bachna84 like this.
  6. The Mysterious

    Yes...but a thing isn't beautiful because it lasts

    yikes, listening to A Crow Looked At Me while at work was a mistake...
     
  7. Colin Your Enthusiasm

    It's nobody's battle but your own. Prestigious

    Seeing the beginning and especially the ending of Melancholia in theaters was worth the price of the admission alone.
     
    bachna84 and Bloodsucker II like this.
  8. vein.ftm

    Trusted Prestigious

    Heartbreaking album
     
    Bloodsucker II and KennedyBN like this.
  9. Colin Your Enthusiasm

    It's nobody's battle but your own. Prestigious

    True Detective season 1, episode 4 is probably still the most cinematic thing i've seen on tv in quite awhile. That whole first season is a masterpiece.
     
  10. Dog with a Blog

    Guest

    Yeah, I mean, watching a show takes a lot more commitment than watching a movie, but dude...



    This doesn't spoil anything, however if anyone is reading this and they are already watching TP they might as well stay away so they can just experience it when it happens. This is taken from episode 8 of the new season and the whole episode is this level of insanity
     
    DejaMoi likes this.
  11. Colin Your Enthusiasm

    It's nobody's battle but your own. Prestigious

    Thanks for sharing. Vin's solo in 137 wouldnt be out of place in that sequence thats for sure. On loop lol

    It made me think of this the whole time i was watching is the DMT trip sequence from ETV:



    Watch it and let me know what you think. Now i want to watch Twin Peaks even more than i already did!
     
    EmmanuelSCastle likes this.
  12. Kingjohn_654

    Longtime Sunshine Prestigious

    Today is a Crime in Stereo day.
     
  13. Dog with a Blog

    Guest

    That was both awesome and terrifying. I've had this movie recommend to me multiple times, I really need to just sit my ass down and watch it. I find that I have a really hard time watching a movie unless I'm at the theatre or if I'm showing a movie to someone I know.
     
    DejaMoi likes this.
  14. The Mysterious

    Yes...but a thing isn't beautiful because it lasts

    Every day is a Crime in Stereo day!

    Unless it's a Right Away, Great Captain! day.
     
  15. Colin Your Enthusiasm

    It's nobody's battle but your own. Prestigious

    Any salad fingers fans in here?

     
  16. Dog with a Blog

    Guest

    Yes!! This was my shit in junior high/high school. It introduced me to Aphex Twin.
     
    fenway89 and DejaMoi like this.
  17. Raditz

    SSJ

    You can take your rusty spoons! I'll stick to training with Hubert Cumberdale thank you!
     
  18. Kingjohn_654

    Longtime Sunshine Prestigious

    I've been watching Atlanta all day

    "The price is on the can though"
     
  19. circasurviver

    Trusted

    So I was taking Halloween decorations out of my storage shed and I came across a box I haven't looked at in over a decade. It's the box I used to clean out my Scion Tc after it was totaled in an accident. It was pretty neat looking through the cd case I had in there, it's like finding a time capsule for the music I was into at the time.
    It's mostly albums that I haven't listened to in years, so that's what I'll be doing this weekend.
     
  20. Kingjohn_654

    Longtime Sunshine Prestigious

    Donald Glover is funny.
     
    Dr. Phil Jr., fenway89 and bachna84 like this.
  21. Kingjohn_654

    Longtime Sunshine Prestigious

    John Cleese is funny.
     
    fenway89 and bachna84 like this.
  22. bachna84

    we are nothing more than mannequins Prestigious

    Kingjohn_654 is funny.
     
  23. circasurviver

    Trusted

    Don Knotts was the greatest
     
    fenway89 and Kingjohn_654 like this.
  24. bachna84

    we are nothing more than mannequins Prestigious

    I can't help it, but the thing I associate most with Don Knotts is Scooby Doo.
     
  25. Dirty Sanchez

    Prestigious Prestigious

    Some fascinating facts about Don Knotts.

    HE SERVED IN AN ARMY COMEDY TROUPE DURING WWII.


    Knotts served from 1943 to '46. He was part of a performance group called Stars and Gripes, which performed in the Pacific. Earlier this year, someone uploaded an autograph card to Flickr that featured signatures of the Stars and Gripes performers. Knotts wrote: "Happy Birthday, Mrs. Checco, from Al's Morgantown buddy, Don Knotts."


    HE PERFORMED WITH A VENTRILOQUIST DUMMY NAMED DANNY "HOOCH" MATADOR.


    At first, Knotts only performed with a wooden dummy named Danny. As he recalled in his memoir, Barney Fife, and Other Characters I Have Known, Knotts received a compliment from elder comedian Red Ford, who said, "You're a funny little son of a bitch." The dummy was ditched…


    HE TOSSED DANNY MATADOR INTO THE OCEAN.


    According to Knotts, he threw the dummy into the South Pacific. Who knows if that's the truth, but we like to imagine him sitting somewhere on the ocean floor.


    HIS FIRST TELEVISION ROLE WAS ON A SOAP OPERA.


    The casting director certainly did not know how to best utilize Knott's talents in Search for Tomorrow, as the young actor played Wilbur, a man lying unconscious in a bed. Watch a clip.


    HE RECORDED ONE STAND-UP COMEDY ALBUM.


    It's no wonder that The Andy Griffith Show was so darn funny, and continues to tickle today. Andy Griffith broke onto the scene in 1953 with his gut-busting monologue "What It Was, Was Football." His television co-star and great friend had the chops to be a stand-up comedian, too. On his only comedy album, 1961's An Evening with Me, Knotts delivers his riotous "Weatherman" routine, which he would also famously perform on The Steve Allen Show.


    HE WON THREE EMMY AWARDS IN THE FIRST FIVE SEASONS OF 'THE ANDY GRIFFITH SHOW.'


    Knotts nabbed Primetime Emmys in '61, '62 and '63, taking home trophies for both Outstanding Performance in a Supporting Role by an Actor or Actress in a Series and Outstanding Performance in a Supporting Role by an Actor, beating talents like Robert Redford, Tim Conway, George C. Scott and Barbara Hale. He would go on to win two more for his work on the series in '66 and '67.


    HE LEFT 'THE ANDY GRIFFITH SHOW' BECAUSE HE THOUGHT ANDY WOULD END THE SERIES AFTER FIVE SEASONS.


    According to Knotts, Andy Griffith repeatedly expressed his desire to end the sitcom after its fifth season. So, during the production of that fifth season, Knotts began to explore a big screen film career, and entered talks with Universal Pictures. When Andy decided to keep the show going another three years, Knotts opted to stick with his film career, entering a five-movie contract with the studio.


    'THE GHOST AND MR. CHICKEN' WAS BASED ON AN 'ANDY GRIFFITH SHOW' EPISODE AND FEATURED MUCH OF THE CAST AND CREW.


    For his first movie after leaving the sitcom, Knotts brought along many coworkers — and a concept. Knotts took the idea for the plot from the episode "The Haunted House." Frequent Andy Griffith writers Jim Fritzell and Everett Greenbaum handled the script. Director Alan Rafkin had helmed 27 episodes of Andy. Several familiar Mayberry faces popped up, too. Hal Smith, a.k.a. Otis, appears, as do Dorthy Neumann (Otis' wife) and Hope Summers.

    EVEN ANDY GRIFFITH WAS A, ER, GHOST WRITER ON 'THE GHOST AND MR. CHICKEN.'


    Yep, even Andy himself had a hidden hand in the development. Knotts recalled, "Remembering what a good story constructionist Andy Griffith is, I called Andy and asked if he would consider helping us put this story together. He said he'd be happy to."


    HE HOSTED A SHORT LIVED VARIETY SHOW WITH GARY BURGHOFF IN 1970.


    The Don Knotts Show lasted mere weeks in the 1970–71 season, despite the comedy show featuring a ton of talent. Gary Burghoff, best known as Radar on M*A*S*H, was a featured player. Additionally, Florence Henderson, Chuck Connors, the Carpenters, Jill St. John and most of the Bridges family (pictured here) appeared.


    HIS 'THREE'S COMPANY' CHARACTER TOOK CHRISSY'S LINES WHEN SUZANNE SOMERS WALKED FROM THE SHOW.


    In 1980, riding a wave of fame, Somers demanded more money, requesting a significant pay bump from $30,000 an episode to $150,000. The actress skipped tapings of the sitcom. The writers would produce alternate scripts that included Chrissy, printed in pink, and that omitted her character, printed in blue. In her absence, her lines often went to Knott's Mr. Furley, as in “And Justice for Jack.”

    DICK VAN DYKE WAS ORIGINALLY INTENDED TO PLAY THE TV REPAIRMAN IN 'PLEASANTVILLE.'


    In early drafts, the script intended for Van Dyke to fill the nostalgic role, running Rob's TV Repair, which was named for his character Rob Petrie on The Dick Van Dyke Show.

    KNOTTS WAS UNAVAILABLE TO RE-RECORD HIS DIALOGUE IN 'PLEASANTVILLE,' SO AN IMPERSONATOR SUPPLIED HIS VOICE.


    In the business, the process of re-recording actors' dialogue in post-production is known as looping. Knotts was not able to tape his lines in post, so comedian Craig Shoemaker had to fill in, doing his best Don Knotts impersonation.


    A STATUE OF BARNEY FIFE WAS DESTROYED DUE TO USAGE RIGHTS.
    In 2006, after the passing of Knotts, Tom Hellebrand commissioned a statue of Barney Fife to be erected in Mount Airy, North Carolina, the hometown of Andy Griffith and the inspiration for Mayberry. Work on the statue was halted after Paramount/CBS, which owns the rights to The Andy Griffith Show, withdrew its approval, citing the rights to Knotts' likeness belonging to his estate. After three months of trying to find a new home for the statue, Hellebrand had it destroyed.




    [​IMG]
    THERE IS NOW A NEW STATUE OF DON KNOTTS IN HIS HOMETOWN IN WEST VIRGINIA.


    No worries, though, as Knotts eventually got his much deserved statue. The sculpture will be unveiled on July 22, 2016, in his hometown of Morgantown. Sculptor Jamie Lester is the artist who crafted the piece.
     
Thread Status:
This thread is locked and not open for further replies.