48 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
(11/25/02 5:00am)
Of all the lead singers that emerged from the Seattle grunge scene in the early 1990s, Chris Cornell of Soundgarden had the strongest voice. With vocal chords that ranged from soaring to subtle, listeners knew when he screamed, "I'm gonna break my rusty caaaaaaage!," he meant it. When Cornell shouted, "I don't mind stealing bread from the mouths of decadence!" in Temple of the Dog's "Hunger Strike," it conjured the image of the crazy, little, long-haired grunge rocker smashing open refrigerators and stealing the Wonder bread.
(11/25/02 5:00am)
There are still some moviegoers, individuals best characterized as "simple," that shout out loud, "Oh, that could never really happen," during James Bond films.
(11/06/02 5:00am)
When colleges invite speakers to address students, they usually request dignitaries, such as businessmen, individuals with doctorates and ex-politicians.
(10/25/02 4:00am)
Opens today
(10/16/02 4:00am)
With the number one music video last week on MTV's Total Request Live, a new album debuting on the seventh slot of the Billboard charts and a sold-out show last night at the Showplace Theater, it's odd that Billy, the guitarist for Good Charlotte, is so concerned with getting respect.
(09/23/02 4:00am)
Diving into the radio-friendly "Livin' It Up," his first single from his latest album, "Pain is Love." On stage in a white headband and a wifebeater, Ja Rule wasn't as active as LL Cool J. It was probably for the best. While LL Cool J easily bounced in and out of the speaker towers, Ja Rule hit his head trying.
(09/18/02 4:00am)
One of Dennis Miller's weekly rants previously featured on his now defunct HBO show made several remarks about his college experience.
(09/13/02 4:00am)
When Incubus performs at 7:30 p.m. at Darien Lake Performing Arts Center this Sunday, it will be exactly one year and a day after the toughest concert of their career. Unlike almost every other band that canceled their shows after the terrorist attacks, Incubus decided that a moment of silence was not the suitable response.
(09/04/02 4:00am)
About two years ago, Coldplay released "Parachutes," the perfect, post-breakup album. The calm yet dejected tone of the music of the mopey British four-piece band was the perfect sedative for stressed, jilted and loveless young adults.
(09/04/02 4:00am)
Jason Aupperle plays Jason Stark: a hard-nosed, womanizing reporter, whose activities consist of sleeping with a colleague's wife and throwing pencils at Ron the Camera Guy. Robert Imbs plays Robert Munroe: a self-described "weenie," adorned with a fake mustache and huge glasses. Erica Duggan plays herself: the rational, by-the-books journalist. Her secondary job is fending off Stark's advances with a slap on the face.
(09/04/02 4:00am)
At face value, "Possession" is the kind of film most undergraduates imagine only their English professors could love. It's difficult to grasp that any sane person who has a relevant job working the nine-to-five grind could see the value in a storyline that centers on whether a dead, schmaltzy, English poet wrote love letters to an upper class lesbian over a hundred years ago. Amazingly, Director Neil LaBute succeeds; the audience not only cares by the end of the movie, but also sees past the "scandal" to focus on the film's more crucial themes of romance and wordplay.
(09/04/02 4:00am)
Hey everybody up front! Get up off your seats and bring your drinks up here! That's what you paid three bucks for!"
(08/28/02 4:00am)
Joe Tyler, played by Matthew Perry, is your average schmuck. His job has "no future, no benefits," so he takes out his frustration by displeasing the individuals that surround him. This actually works itself out nicely because in Serving Sara, he's a process server; he makes a living handing subpoenas to evasive clients.
(08/28/02 4:00am)
Daryl Taberski, lead singer of Buffalo hardcore punk band Snapcase, made one final request to his audience before screaming into his set:
(08/28/02 4:00am)
"There's going to be 20 tons of wings."
(08/28/02 4:00am)
Paul Langlois, guitarist for The Tragically Hip, does not have a lot of spare time on the road but he did manage to rent a video: "Rock Star," last year's cinematic tribute to eighties hair bands.
(08/28/02 4:00am)
In Simone, the essence of the title character is nothing more than the combination of "ones and zeroes," as Viktor Taransky (Al Pacino) would say. She's only as real as her computer-generated image, but that's enough to convince everyone else that she's flesh and blood. It's an easy premise to understand: "Hey, if I see her on TV, she's got to be real."
(08/28/02 4:00am)
Boxing in the movies is far more interesting than the actual sport. In films, there are no lame, one-sided, three-minute knockout fights that fail to live up to the Vegas hype machine. Undisputed doesn't stray far from this rule. It lacks the epic scale of token boxing films like Raging Bull, Rocky, and Ali, but with its hour-and-a-half runtime, Undisputed is a compact display of fights and insights.
(04/17/02 4:00am)
Staring down his chief rival, Mathayus, the Scorpion King coolly tells the evil ruler Memnon: "I've come for the girl . and your head."
(04/15/02 4:00am)
After an eight-hour meeting in a stuffy conference room at the downtown Buffalo Hyatt Regency on Saturday, George Pape, a junior pursuing three majors at UB, reflected on his future.