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Top Albums of the Decade (2010-2019)

As we roll into the roaring 20’s like a thunderous clan of horny chipmunks, I thought it prudent to take a look back at some of the wonderful music that was released during the last decade. In compiling this list of my favorite albums from the last ten years, I was amazed at how quickly time has moved forward. You don’t really realize how long ten years is until you take a few moments to reflect during an endeavor like this. I can’t believe some of these albums are so old. In many cases, it feels like just yesterday that I heard these songs. Before you read on, you must realize that this is not a list of what I feel are the best albums of the last decade. This is simply a list of the albums that had the most impact for me on a personal level. They are my favorite albums of the last ten years. If nothing else, I hope you read this eclectic list and give a listen to something new. At the end of the day, I am passionate about music and want to share it with as many people as I can. I am sure I left something out, but that is life. So…here goes:

10. Behemoth- The Satanist (2014)

9. Symphony X- Iconoclast (2011)

8. Mastodon- Emperor of Sand (2017)

7. Opeth- In Cauda Venenum (2019)

6. Kid Rock- Born Free (2010)

5. Dead Sara- Dead Sara (2012)

4. Everygrey- The Storm Within (2016)

3. Will Hoge- Never Give In (2013)

2. Deftones- Diamond Eyes (2010)

1. Gojira- Magma (2016)

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Joker – Review

Joker

Rating: 5 out of 5

Let me just preface this review saying that Joker is by far my favorite villain of all time.  Joker has a special place in my heart much like boobs have a special place on my face. He is forever a compelling, interesting character that is full of surprises and fun. 

There. That is out of the way.

The latest incarnation of Joker is a demented trip into the mind of a mentally ill man living in a disheveled Gotham. However, the thing that I found most intriguing about this movie was that it didn’t need this setting. It didn’t need any connection to the Batman universe at all. That connection only enhanced the movie by providing a startling backstory for America’s favorite clown (next to Bernie Sanders. Feel the buuuuuuuuuuuuurn).

This was not the Heath-era Joker that loves chaos with no real rhyme or reason for his destructive actions.  I love, even prefer, that interpretation of the character, but this was not it. This was a mentally-disturbed man that spent his life slowly descending into a pit of solitude until he finally hit rock bottom and rose from the depths with a desire to get back at a world that never loved him and never accepted him. It was a very real, very uncomfortable experience, and I thought it was brilliant. 

Uncomfortable is the best way I can describe it. I left the theater feeling uncomfortable. The thing is, it’s difficult to describe why it made me feel so uncomfortable. It’s like when you’ve just masturbated, and you walk out of your grandmother’s bathroom and you are immediately certain that everyone knows what you have been up to. Your cousins are staring at you, your niece is drooling and mumbling something that sounds like thinly veiled racism, and your wife is shaking her head in disbelief. You start to wonder if your hand smells like dude yogurt, and one tear begins to roll down your face in shame. That is what watching Joker was like.

Joaquin Phoenix gave a performance that was otherworldly. He completely transformed himself, and if he does not receive an Oscar for the role, I will travel to the Academy Headquarter Place of Doom and dump a truckload of thirty-seven-day old porta potty dookie in their lobby. He deserves that shit. I loved the writing as well. It was political without being pushy, and it was disturbing without being unnecessary. To me, it was a perfectly balanced film.

I must say this: Don’t listen to the critics. Those dildo chompers wanted to call Joker derivative and uninspired, but all I got from their reviews was that they are the ones who are derivative and uninspired. They are bags of shit on the soles of my shoes. I hope President Donnie-licious signs an Executive Order forcing these critics to live in solitude in cages made of butthole skin.

Overall, I thought Joker was fantastic, and I highly recommend getting the full experience while it is in theaters. I give it a five out of five.       

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Robin Williams

Today is Tuesday, July 21, 2015. On the surface, it seems like a normal day without any sort of significance. In fact, it seems utterly boring given the fact that I have been sick and throwing up for the past two days. Combine that with the fact that our newly installed air conditioning system is not working on a particularly hellish afternoon and you have the makings of a perfectly imperfect day. This day is important, however. This day is historical.

You see, today would have been Robin Williams’ sixty-fourth birthday. Think about that for a moment…would have been. We all know how beloved he was. Even those who were annoyed by his endless energy and childish antics cannot deny the impact he had on the world as a whole. He was a legend and he was my hero.

When I was a very young and very aspiring comedian, I would watch in awe as Jim Carrey flopped around the screen in a silly serenade of absurdity. I fed off of his life and his energy. Yet he was not the king. He was a duke…or an earl…maybe a baron…he was someone I looked up to because I was just a child with a dream, and because other kids told me I looked like him. I’m not sure that was a compliment. For me, he was a stepping stone.

This is not to diminish the career of Jim Carrey by any means, but let’s face it; he was strictly an outlandish comic for most of my childhood when my tastes as an actor and a writer were in their earliest development. His presence in my early life was meaningful, but it was only a launching pad for what I would discover as I explored the depths of cinema. When I discovered Robin Williams, my entire world changed. You see, Robin was not just a brilliant comedian and improviser. He was not just a vibrant and exuberant warrior of humor. He was an inspired actor in every sense of the word. He had a unique ability to inject real emotion and feeling into every role he took. He did something that every actor has tried to do since Shakespeare was sipping from his mother’s teat: He made people feel.

I remember becoming fascinated by movies and the ability to transition effortlessly from laughter to tears. It was seeing the ups and downs in the human emotional spectrum and the way they were often so intertwined that made me want to act and write, and they are what made me love Robin Williams. He showed this range flawlessly in his roles, and we are so often reminded of movies like Mrs. Doubtfire and Patch Adams when we think of both his child-like charm and dramatic aura. These movies were starting points for us children of the 90’s, and they led us to discover tremendous movies like Good Morning, Vietnam and Dead Poets Society. When I first saw What Dreams May Come, I was astonished by the beautiful love story and the complexity that I witnessed in Robin’s character. To this day, I feel it is a highly underrated film.

When I was in high school, I found out that Robin attended Juilliard, and I wanted so badly to follow in his footsteps. Of course, it was not meant to be. By that point, I was realizing that I was more talented as a writer than as an actor (which has gotten me precisely nowhere since then). When I was introduced to improvisational comedy by a drama teacher and a former student, I was enthralled by the freeing nature of the craft. I was drawn to the same freedom Robin Williams must have felt throughout his life.

I followed him throughout his career as I grew into the eccentric man-child that I am today. I respected him, and I enjoyed every gift he gave to the world. Even when a friend would say how annoying he was in Robots, I would silently hope we would part ways and I would find out that he had tripped on a curb somewhere and broken his dick. It seemed only right. To me, Robin could do no wrong. Even his shortcomings were examples of brilliance. So what if the rest of the cast and crew were not on his level? Not his fault!

When I found out that he died, it hurt me. It hurt more than it should ever hurt to hear that some celebrity you were fond of had died. Then the story of his depression and his inner demons began to surface more and more and I felt even more of a connection to him. I had spent the entirety of my teenage years in a depressed stupor. I had been a class clown hiding a dark secret in whatever crevice I could find, hoping to wake up in another life, or perhaps not at all. Although I pushed through that turmoil as an adult and discovered a self-reliance that changed my outlook, the story of the comedian in pain hit home very deeply. It was hard to see him go, but I hope he went in peace.

Robin Williams was a legendary actor and comedian. He was a hero and a rebel, and from what I have heard, he was also a stellar and generous individual. He was everything we need our celebrities to be. In fact, using the word celebrity for him does not feel quite right. Robin Williams was simply a great man. It is still difficult for me to understand that he no longer exists. It is difficult to accept that his career is over, and that we will not be seeing him again. What we are left with is the legacy of a brilliant man that will live on forever.

I regret that I never made it as a writer and was never able to tell him how much he meant to me. There is an understandable higher trust of someone who is also well-known in the business, and I would have been able to tell him without sounding like a freak. I hope, however, that his family truly knows what he meant to world. Who knows, maybe someday I will make something of my dreams and they will be able to read this themselves. For now, happy birthday Robin Williams. Thank you for everything.

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25 Favorite Cartoons of All Time

Sometimes you get bored, and sometimes you make a list of your favorite cartoon shows of all time. Let me know what you think or what your list is.

25. Recess

24. Tiny Toon Adventures

23. Beast Wars: Transformers

22. Roughnecks: The Starship Troopers Chronicles

21. Gravity Falls

20. Invader Zim

19. Pokémon

18. Avatar: The Last Airbender

17. Pinky and the Brain

16. Spongebob Squarepants

15. Archer

14. Bob’s Burgers

13. Rugrats

12. Rocko’s Modern Life

11. X-Men

10. Adventure Time

9. Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles

8. King of the Hill

7. Animaniacs

6. The Boondocks

5. Looney Tunes

4. Batman: The Animated Series

3. The Simpsons

2. Rick and Morty

1. South Park

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25 Favorite Albums of All Time

Everyone loves a good list, and most people (non-freakazoids) have a soft spot for certain creations of musical art. After hours of inner debate, self-doubt, and painful thinking, I have come up with my list of Top 25 Albums Ever. Now, this is not a list of what I think are strictly the best albums to ever be recorded. This list represents my favorite creations, albums that influenced my life or got me through tough times, and things I have listened to until the CD’s, records, etc turned to dust from overuse. I have slaved over this list of top albums, and I am now ready to share it with you creeps. Please, let me know what you think of this list, what you like or dislike, and what your favorites are.

25. Five For Fighting

24. Matchbox Twenty- Yourself or Someone Like You

Yourself or Someone Like You

23. Evergrey- The Inner Circle

The Inner Circle

22. Blues Traveler- Four

Four

21. Judas Priest- British Steel

British Steel

20. Slipknot- Iowa

Iowa

19. Destines- White Pony

White Pony

18. Slayer- Reign in Blood

Reign in Blood

17. Tool- Undertow

Undertow

16. Dream Theater- Images and Words

Images and Words

15. Collective Soul- Disciplined Breakdown

Disciplined Breakdown

14. Gojira- The Way of All Flesh

The Way of all Flesh

13. Korn- Issues

Issues

12. Phil Collins- No Jacket Required

No Jacket Required

11. Living Colour- Time’s Up

Time’s Up

10. Pearl Jam- Ten

Ten

9. Alice In Chains- Dirt

Dirt

8. Lamb of God- Ashes of the Wake

Ashes of the Wake

7. Metallica- Metallica

Metallica

6. Smashing Pumpkins- Mellon Collie and the Infinite Sadness

Mellon Collie and the Infinite Sadness

5. Van Halen- OU812

OU812

4. Counting Crows- August and Everything After

August and Everything After

3. Marilyn Manson- Mechanical Animals

Mechanical Animals

2. Pink Floyd- The Wall

The Wall

1. Guns N Roses- Use Your Illusion I & II (Both were released on the same day, so I count them as one)

Use Your Illusion best album

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Unite America (A Theory)

In case you, Brave Reader, were not aware, midterm elections have come and gone and have proven once again that we as a collective American consciousness are about as skilled at critical thinking as a pile of old dandruff flakes. How dare I, you say? This was the most important election in the history of this country, you say? To me, this felt more like a playoff game in some weird sport full of players with fake smiles, wrinkly butt holes, and trendy talking points than it did an election. Our political system has slowly evolved into a practice of figuring out which team you want to play for, and then carpet-bombing social media with misconstrued statistics and declarations that the other team is full of terribly bad, no good people. Oh, and don’t forget to vote for anyone with your team name printed next to their picture. Remember, their views, history, and opinions don’t matter as long as the other team never wins. Great fucking system everyone!

How exactly did we get here? How did we reach a moment where we do not simply find ourselves on opposing sides of an issue, but on a death train where every different opinion is a break in the track, and the only foreseeable conclusion is a fiery death in a pit of giant semen-breathing dragon pandas? How did every single disagreement become a perceived assault by an opposition that wishes only to steal your freedoms and drown you in a sea of whatever “ism” you decide to project upon them. This has become our America, and this old bitch needs a Band-Aid and a nice blended margarita.

Gone is the age of understanding! Gone is the age of reason! Gone is the age of discussion!  Say goodbye to the age of spirited debate! We have entered a new era, where the individual with a different opinion is clearly a racist, homophobic, sexist, fascist, communist, snowflake libtard with a sick sexual appetite for dogs with fat heads and an irrational hatred of retro Polly Pocket play sets (god damn white cis-gender male bastards).

Everything is labeled with the most diabolical name tag possible in order to have individual arguments dismissed as automatically evil and deconstructive. What if I were to tell you that most people probably have a rational reasoning behind their beliefs that is not rooted in hatred or disdain for particular groups of people? What if I were to tell you that most people are not out to steal your country, but to make it better? What if I were to tell you that open-mindedness, discussion, and informed, transparent political participation would help us as a people come together in order to find the best possible path for our country? Why, you would probably lob a rude, dismissive name my way like a sack of dirty vaginas at an Ed Sheeran concert. “Oh, that Sir Chase…he makes offensive and inappropriate jokes. He must love Hitler. I heard he has a rubber mold of Hitler’s taint on his wall.”

Yep. You got me.

The end of this road is not in sight, but I am fearful of where it might lead. I do not wish to ride this screaming eagle to its death. I do not wish to see Lady Liberty on the side of the road, broken and smelling of broccoli and crushed dreams. There is but one solution I see, and it is the only realistic conclusion to this wave of bigotry and hatred that has invaded our country from all sides of the political spectrum.

An orgy. A big fucking orgy.

We need a gathering where everyone from both the right and the left can get some food and drinks (maybe at a Dave & Buster’s or something) and then just bang it out. Bang it out until everything is covered in the warm sex fluids of freedom! Let the juices of ‘Merica flow free until only Old Glory can stand in its slippery wake! Let’s join pee-pees and vee-vees in unity, and move on to better days. This is how we make America great again.

Thank you for listening.

-Sir Chase, 2018

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The Tragic Tale of the 5th Beatle

the tragic tale of the fifth member of the beatles

In 1964, the unstoppable force of the Beatles swept across America. It is a period that adults across the world remember to this day, and it is a period that changed the landscape of the music industry forever. What many people don’t know is that the Beatles landed that day with a fifth member, whom they shunned amidst the racial tension and pressures that were so present in the world at the time. Since then, the surviving members have worked tirelessly to eradicate the controversial history of the Beatles and take credit for the work of another. Today, the world will hear the real story of a rock ‘n’ roll visionary and the events that led to his downfall. This is the story of David Sasquatch.

David P Sasquatch was a singer, songwriter, and kazoo player that was born in 1942 in Liverpool, England. His mother, Mildred Sasquatch, was a door to door vacuum salesperson who struggled to make ends meet. His father, Robert Sasquatch, left the family before David was born and spent his life roaming the countryside in solitude. To this day, there is speculation that the father David heard about so often never even existed.

David was a mediocre student, who was kicked out of several private schools for attempting to eat the other children and had to settle for an in-home education led by a wandering gypsy named Nessy Munstar. It was during these troubled years that David began to discover his tremendous gifts as a songwriter. It was not long before David, needing to express himself further, began to sing and play an old left-handed kazoo that he bought from a second-hand store in London. David had truly found his calling.

By 1957, David was touring the London area with his first band, the Bo Daggetts, who played a mix of rock ‘n’ roll and hobnob, a type of popular music with jazz, blues, and sheep-noise influences. Word of mouth was quickly spreading, and the Bo Daggetts soon secured a gig playing with another young band, the Quarrymen, who featured John Lennon and Paul McCartney. The show was an immense success, and Lennon soon asked David to join their ranks in order to strengthen their songwriting and swoon audiences with his silky voice.

George Harrison joined in 1958 as lead guitarist, followed by Lennon’s art school friend Stuart Sutcliffe on bass. By May of 1960, the band had tried several names including Johnny and the Moondogs, Fart Butt, and the Silver Beetles. They adopted the name the Beatles in August of 1960 and recruited drummer Pete Best shortly before a five-engagement residency in Hamburg.

David quickly established himself as the chief songwriter of the group, and took on double duties as the singer and kazoo player. He was praised for his unique voice and approach to the kazoo, and he was the first player to go completely electric. In the early days, he often ended shows with a ten-minute kazoo shred fest, described as both mesmerizing and panty-soaking by critics at the time.

Lennon and McCartney could sense that David was achieving notoriety more quickly than the rest of the band, and their boiling jealousy led them to reveal in subsequent interviews that David was not a man, but a sasquatch. This quickly led to backlash from the public, as longstanding prejudices in western societies led many to question whether sasquatches should be allowed to make music. David’s role in the Beatles was immediately diminished, as the group fought to continue their growth in popularity. David was no longer allowed to sing, and he was forced to stand off stage during their performances. Years later, it was revealed that the crew had also stopped plugging in his kazoo during this time. Things were beginning to fall apart for David Sasquatch.

In 1962, Ringo Starr replaced Pete Best as the drummer, and the band had their first hit with “Love Me Do” later that year. Though the song was written exclusively by David, the band felt that his sasquatch heritage would take away from the song, so he was excluded from songwriting credits. By 1964, Beatlemania had swept across the Atlantic, and the Beatles found themselves in America. Unfortunately, the day when the band landed in America was the last day David was a part of the Beatles. The rest of the band told him they were going to buy cinnamon rolls in the terminal, but they ditched him, leaving him with nothing but his favorite kazoo and a broken heart.

The Beatles went on to have one of the most incredible careers in the history of music, and released many songs that were actually written by David including “Yesterday,” “Here Comes the Sun,” and “Hey Jude” (which originally contained a thirty-three-minute kazoo solo). David was never given credit for his contributions, and he never received any compensation. As a result, he was forced to live in poverty, foraging for food in the woods and remaining a recluse for much of his life.

On December 8th, 1980 David met with Mark David Chapman in an empty Denny’s parking lot and paid him fifty-three dollars to murder John Lennon. Unfortunately for David, his hired hand was a bit looney and hung around the crime scene until the police arrived. The killer was given a life sentence, but not before he gave authorities information that led to a nationwide manhunt for David. The police searched for months, but they were unable to locate the poor sasquatch, who spent the next three decades hiding in various forests across the United States and Canada. In 2010, a lone hiker in Oregon spotted the body of a large primate huddled up next to a tree trunk. The body was badly decomposed, but it was clearly hugging an old, rusty kazoo. When the hiker returned with the police, the body was gone. No trace of David was ever seen again. No one has ever been able to prove the fate of David P Sasquatch, and though his story is a tragic one, it is important to remember his endless contributions to music.

This writer hopes that David P Sasquatch finally found peace and is playing an epic kazoo solo for a bunch of topless angels right now.

-Sir Chase Hooper, 2017