Category Archives: Category

great gentle music for a peaceful evening at home. We listened to it while we played Munchkin. All enjoyed it. Amityville, agent as well as Me E.P by burgy

In the Flesh-Ween Thin Ice-Ween Run like Hell-Sumilan Young Lust-Soap Another brick in the Wall-Big Something Comfortably Numb-Is Is There anybody Out There?-Somah

The three interesting stories James Otis Smith tells in Black Heroes of the Wild West — those of Mary Fields, Bass Reeves, as well as Bob Lemmons — represent only a small part of the variety of Black experience on the American frontier. All three people were born into slavery however used their skills to set their own paths. These tales are told to refute the popular assumption that cowboys as well as other Wild West denizens were white. Mary fields was a stagecoach motorist who held off a pack of wolves single-handedly. She astounded everybody with her strength, determination, as well as difficult work. The chapter on Bass Reeves shows him going undercover as a traveling worker in purchase to apprehend wanted criminals. He was really a deputy U.S. Marshal who, based on this story, took advantage of exactly how people’s stereotypes led to them underestimating him. He likewise…

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Ani-Imo by Haruko Kurumatani has one of those “only in manga” premises. Be sure to keep it away from parents or busybodies, because it plays with implications of incest as comedy. Youta is a caring boy. He fixes breakfast for his family, and he particularly takes care of his twin sister Hikaru (so much so that rumors swirl around their high school regarding his “sister complex” and how freaky the twins are). She’s quiet and reserved, but he finds her adorable and can read her moods, except for one big secret. Their parents haven’t bothered to tell him that the two aren’t actually related. They were born on the same day, yes, but with other partners before the parents got together, so they don’t share any blood. Which allows Hikaru to plant a kiss on Youta, since she wants to date him. But wait! That’s not all! There’s an accident,…

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Pulling its name from the classic Bob Marley track, this collection of free-flowing instrumental jams does certainly have a reggae(ish) feel to it—it’s about groove and rhythm, and it’s laid back as fuck. I’m loving it—especially “And The Stylus Follow…” Check it out. Concrete Jungle by Blktop Project

Media release — The Baltimore Comic-Con is thrilled to welcome the creators of DC Comics’ Batman-line to this year’s show! Neal Adams (Batman: Odyssey), Greg Capullo (Batman), David Finch (Batman: The Dark Knight), Scott Snyder (Batman), as well as Peter Tomasi (Batman as well as Robin) will all going to the 13th annual show, taking location the weekend of September 8-9, 2012. Neal Adams is no complete stranger to the world of Batman at DC Comics. His work on such DC Comics characters as Batman, Superman, eco-friendly lantern as well as eco-friendly Arrow redefined an age of comics, bringing a photorealistic feel to the pages their respective books. In April of this year, Adams wrapped up composing as well as drawing the 7-issue second volume of Batman: Odyssey, a self-contained story complying with up on the very first volume that takes location outside of DC’s new 52 continuity. Greg Capullo…

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Wow. I understood the DC line of graphic novels for women young adults (as DC puts it, as well as that wishy-washiness may have been one of its problems) wasn’t getting a great deal of attention, however I expected it to last with its second year instead of being truncated. Comic book resources is reporting that DC has cancelled the Minx line. After putting out six books in 2007, this year so far they’d released Burnout (best of the lot, in my opinion) Water Baby Janes in Love, sequel to the debut release The new York Four The huge problem? Distribution. CBR specifies Random House, DC’s book trade distributor, has not been able to effectively location MINX titles in the coveted young adult sections of bookstores I’ve previously speculated that the books were selling much better in the established comic direct market than bookstores, which wasn’t the goal for the…

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If you like 1980s Rolling Stones, you probably like The Foo Fighters—not because they sound similar, but because in the 1980s, the stones stopped experimenting with psychedelia and just chose to make Rolling stones music. album after album. You knew exactly what you were getting, and if you liked it, then you got a little treat once a year or so. The Foos are like that. Their songs, building on the slow-fast-slow structure of1990s bands like The Pixies (and, come to think of it, The Rolling Stones), are straightforward and their albums include between 2-4 ballads each. Not that there’s anything wrong with that. Here’s to keeping the flame burning for real rock and roll. Recommended cuts: Run, The sky is a Neighborhood.

totally free instrumentals. That kinda rock. inspect it out. Rituals by birthday Girl

Media release — new creative teams. new series. new directions. new beginnings. it all kicks off this may with BLACK PANTHER #1! “Over the next couple of weeks, we’ll be rolling out new beginnings for a few of our essential franchises—new creative teams, new starting points, new storylines—all the big stuff that we’ve been building towards because legacy began,” said SVP and executive Editor Tom Brevoort. “This isn’t a clearing of the slate—while these new starts will kick off with new #1s, we’ll be maintaining the classic legacy issue counts as dual numbering on these titles as well. Oh, and don’t read anything into not seeing a character on the Jim Cheung piece…we can only squeeze so numerous characters onto there without killing poor Jim!” For much more information on BLACK PANTHER #1, including developer interviews, visit Marvel.com. For up-to-date information on all new #1 titles, visit . BLACK PANTHER…

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