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|
| Author |
Message |
| 25 new of 644 responses total. |
jules
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|
response 50 of 644:
|
Apr 22 20:22 UTC 2000 |
there must be some misunderstanding
there must be some kinda mistake
|
albaugh
|
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response 51 of 644:
|
Apr 23 06:39 UTC 2000 |
Why, did a Red Wing get a penalty? :-)
|
hematite
|
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response 52 of 644:
|
Apr 23 18:49 UTC 2000 |
(Okay a fairly easy one cause i"m unoriginal)
This "Oldie" song was given a "special feature" in the film "10 Things
I Hate About You".
|
diznave
|
|
response 53 of 644:
|
Apr 23 23:25 UTC 2000 |
What is "I want you to want me" by Cheap Trick?
|
brighn
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response 54 of 644:
|
Apr 24 01:46 UTC 2000 |
Letters to Cleo covered a couple classics in that movie... they also did Nick
Lowe's "Cruel to be Kind". I don't recall which song was particularly
"featured."
|
hematite
|
|
response 55 of 644:
|
Apr 24 02:53 UTC 2000 |
Neither is what I was looking for, but I'll give it to Diznave since it
was in the movie, and because I can.
(I was looking for "Can't Take My Eyes Off of You". incyc.)
|
diznave
|
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response 56 of 644:
|
Apr 24 14:45 UTC 2000 |
Bob Dylan made his record debut as a harmonica player on this artist's 1961
album.
|
albaugh
|
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response 57 of 644:
|
Apr 24 16:08 UTC 2000 |
Who is Elvis Presley?
|
diznave
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response 58 of 644:
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Apr 24 19:09 UTC 2000 |
re #57: nope
|
brighn
|
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response 59 of 644:
|
Apr 24 23:00 UTC 2000 |
Harry Belafonte
is who?
|
raven
|
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response 60 of 644:
|
Apr 25 01:07 UTC 2000 |
who is Pete Seeger?
|
diznave
|
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response 61 of 644:
|
Apr 25 05:35 UTC 2000 |
Harry Belafonte it is. Good show, Paul! You're up! :)
|
brighn
|
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response 62 of 644:
|
Apr 25 14:34 UTC 2000 |
The uncharacteristic nature of one musician's movie appearance in Jawbreaker,
and another's in Strangeland (but not of a third, in Wayne's World).
(For bonus points, name the musicians.)
(And yes, "musician" is being used loosely... =} )
|
otaking
|
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response 63 of 644:
|
Apr 25 15:13 UTC 2000 |
Were they members of Twisted Sister?
|
tpryan
|
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response 64 of 644:
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Apr 25 16:39 UTC 2000 |
Who is Wild Man Fisher?
|
brighn
|
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response 65 of 644:
|
Apr 25 16:49 UTC 2000 |
otaking's on the right track... it was Dee Snider in Strangeland.
but the others have nothing to do with Twisted Sister
|
orinoco
|
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response 66 of 644:
|
Apr 26 04:06 UTC 2000 |
Wild guess: they were appearing as non-musicians?
|
otaking
|
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response 67 of 644:
|
Apr 26 13:47 UTC 2000 |
OK, were they members of Widowmaker?
|
brighn
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response 68 of 644:
|
Apr 26 14:34 UTC 2000 |
hrmmmm... ori's closer. but there's a reason I didn't include LL Cool J,
Aaliyah, Don Henley, Madonna, etc., who have also appeared in movies and/or
TV. Although I should've included Gene Simmons...
|
otaking
|
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response 69 of 644:
|
Apr 26 15:07 UTC 2000 |
Were they appearing in movies after ending their music career (as opposed to
doing both like Will Smith)?
|
scott
|
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response 70 of 644:
|
Apr 26 16:50 UTC 2000 |
What is "appearing in movies as a villain"?
|
otaking
|
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response 71 of 644:
|
Apr 26 17:29 UTC 2000 |
Ooh. I should've thought of that.
|
brighn
|
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response 72 of 644:
|
Apr 26 18:49 UTC 2000 |
Nah. The Jawbreaker role was a bit part, certainly not enough to be villainy
at all. And the guy in Jawbreaker is still a recording artist.
It has to do with *how* they perform as musicians, and their movie roles
provide evidence for why they perform this way.
|
brighn
|
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response 73 of 644:
|
Apr 26 18:53 UTC 2000 |
here's another hint about Jawbreaker: the musician in question got the role
primarily because he's engaged to one of the movie's stars
|
diznave
|
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response 74 of 644:
|
Apr 26 20:58 UTC 2000 |
What is "as a romantic interest?"
|