DRINK SPECIALS AND EVENT LISTINGS
Axis: Monday: Monday Night Football $2 cover; 25 cent Bud, Bud Light and Rolling Rock bottles Tuesday: Karaoke contest, $1 cover ($150 cash prize) Thursday: 5 cent drafts; cover $3 before midnight
Axis: Monday: Monday Night Football $2 cover; 25 cent Bud, Bud Light and Rolling Rock bottles Tuesday: Karaoke contest, $1 cover ($150 cash prize) Thursday: 5 cent drafts; cover $3 before midnight
There's never been a better time to be a part of the crew from the dirty South. The artists and albums coming out of the area are leading the rap charts. Representing the ATL, the YoungBloodZ Drankin' Patnaz goes down as smooth as your favorite shot.
As everyone knows, the rock revival is in full force. And as someone who grew up on punk rock in a medium-sized Midwestern city, I was annoyed at first. I felt betrayed; since middle school I had listened to underground music, wore the thrift-store clothes and espoused leftist politics.
Quelle horreur! Le Divorce is a bit of a disappointment. I expected a sparkly little chick flick with plenty of good-looking French men. The reality was a quasi-comedy full of overwrought drama in all the wrong spots and a climax that was amazingly anticlimactic.
Even the country folks inevitably turn their head toward the cities at some point. In a genre as urbanized as hip hop, it's not terribly surprising that the Nappy Roots' sophomore album Wooden Leather features a more worldly sound and outlook than its uniquely Southern first album, Watermelon, Chicken & Gritz.
Nintendo's new futuristic racer, "F-Zero GX," while shimmering on the outside, may frustrate gamers upon closer inspection. The game boasts outstanding graphics and exhilaratingly fast-paced gameplay, beautifully updating the traditional F-Zero experience to next-generation console standards.
CRAZY HORSE FOOD AND DRINK EMPORIUM 214 W. FIFTH STREET They're back. Latin dance parties and local bands plan to rock Second Story for the second time around, as the bar opens after a short hiatus. Owner Phil Rhoade says the bar is available for benefits and special parties for anyone and everyoneys Second Story has gone back to the basic things that worked for their crowd in the past, like booking local ban,.
There's never been a better time to be a part of the crew from the dirty South. The artists and albums coming out of the area are leading the rap charts. Representing the ATL, the YoungBloodZ Drankin' Patnaz goes down as smooth as your favorite shot.
A common theme among family dramas in recent movie history is the breakup of a marriage under a supposedly idyllic scenario. These films have ranged from great (American Beauty) to so-so (Unfaithful) to brutally bad (The Story of Us).
As a film, "Swimming Pool" is somewhat as its title suggests: there's a surface to it, and beneath that surface there is so much more going on. The problem is the water gets a little murky. Sarah Morton (Charlotte Rampling) is a crime novelist lost for inspiration. At the suggestion of her publisher, John (Charles Dance), she escapes to his house in France to relax and concentrate on her next book.
Every 23rd spring, for 23 days, it gets to eat." The Creeper (Jonathan Breck) is back, and it's only been a few days since the first movie left off. Jeepers Creepers 2 is the tale of a school bus full of egotistical basketball players and cigarette-smoking cheerleaders that spend a day and night in a broken-down bus watching teammate after teammate get consumed by the gruesome Creeper.
For Internet aficionado and Vermont resident "NationalJ," logging onto Governor Howard Dean's Web site is a form of electronic therapy. "Honestly, lately when it gets to be too much, I get on this blog and am lifted to know that here's a big community of people from all over the place that are trying every day now to change all that jazz," he writes, a reference to the circus that typifies American politics. "The blog is my therapy."
While most of you were spending the last weeks of your summer moving, finishing jobs and/or internships or simply savoring your final days of freedom poolside with cocktail in hand, I was hanging out with my grandmother.
As everyone knows, the rock revival is in full force. And as someone who grew up on punk rock in a medium-sized Midwestern city, I was annoyed at first. I felt betrayed; since middle school I had listened to underground music, wore the thrift-store clothes and espoused leftist politics.
Quelle horreur! Le Divorce is a bit of a disappointment. I expected a sparkly little chick flick with plenty of good-looking French men. The reality was a quasi-comedy full of overwrought drama in all the wrong spots and a climax that was amazingly anticlimactic.
It's back to Middle Earth for all you Tolkien fans, and director Peter Jackson goes all out. We witness the miraculous return of Gandalf the Wizard (played by Ian McKellen), we're introduced to the incredible and often disturbing Gollum and experience the epic battle fought at Helm's Deep.
In the song "It's a Wrap" from her new album Love & Life, Mary J. Blige disses the cheating man in her life and you begin to wonder if Blige gets her sense of empowerment from the deepest depths as well as the highest highs. Such is her nature. Love & Life is such an emotionally-drenched operatic piece of work that after 18 tracks and 70 minutes, I was exhausted and felt a sudden urge for bon bons.
Even the country folks inevitably turn their head toward the cities at some point. In a genre as urbanized as hip hop, it's not terribly surprising that the Nappy Roots' sophomore album Wooden Leather features a more worldly sound and outlook than its uniquely Southern first album, Watermelon, Chicken & Gritz.
Critics have begun singing Robert Pollard's praises again … perhaps they spoke too soon. With his highly prolific band, Guided By Voices, Pollard has unleashed Earthquake Glue. What's here is well-written, sung nicely in Pollard's trademark cigarette-tinged rasp and backed more than ably by his bandmates. True to form, most of the cuts are either too short or too long.
Jessica Simpson returns with her junior album, In This Skin. After hit singles and power ballads such as "Irresistible" and "Where You Are," featuring husband Nick Lachey, Simpson proves she possesses a more sultry side to her voice in her latest album.