Once in a while you get shown the light, in the strangest of places, if you look at it right
The world would be so much better off if Trump’s ambitions were confined to Florida
Is this the dude Colin Farrell was designed to be as The Penguin?
TODAY IN ROCK AND ROLL HISTORY - 11/28/1974
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Elton John was joined on stage by John Lennon at Elton's Madison Square Garden concert. They performed three numbers together, "Whatever Gets You Through the Night", "Lucy in the Sky With Diamonds" and "I Saw Her Standing There". Lennon had promised the flamboyant rocker that he would make a stage appearance with him if his "Whatever Gets You Through the Night" became a #1 hit, which it did two weeks earlier. Later that same night, Lennon and his estranged wife Yoko Ono reconciled backstage after being separated for a year.
TODAY IN ROCK AND ROLL HISTORY - 11/27/1970
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George Harrison releases his first post-Beatles album, "All Things Must Pass", produced by Phil Spector and featuring Eric Clapton, Dave Mason, Ringo Starr and Jim Gordon. The triple disc set would go on to be certified 6X Platinum by the RIAA, making it the best selling album by a solo Beatle.
You nailed it on the head—if X owns all X accounts, then X should absolutely be held liable and named as codefendants in all past and future litigation where content posted on X is used in the suit. By asserting ownership over the accounts, X is effectively taking on a level of responsibility for the platform's use and misuse, akin to how a publisher is held liable for the content it distributes.
This raises serious implications for legal accountability. If X claims ownership, they are asserting control, and with control comes liability. They can't just cherry-pick the benefits of owning the accounts (like monetization, data, and influence) without accepting the risks, including being dragged into lawsuits where harmful, defamatory, or illegal content originates from their platform.
It would also set a precedent for greater accountability in tech. Platforms often hide behind Section 230 protections to dodge responsibility, but if they step forward and say, 'We own the content or accounts,' then they lose the shield of neutrality and should face the consequences accordingly. It’s a slippery slope that X might regret going down if this theory gains traction in courtrooms.
TODAY IN ROCK AND ROLL HISTORY - 11/26/1955
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Tennessee Ernie Ford's rendition of a 1946, Merle Travis song, "Sixteen Tons", tops the Billboard Top 100 chart, becoming the fastest selling single in recording industry history up to that time. The song would lead the chart for eight weeks before crossing the Atlantic to claim the top spot on the UK charts for four weeks early in 1956. On March 25th, 2015, Ford's version was inducted into the Library of Congress's National Recording Registry.
TODAY IN ROCK AND ROLL HISTORY - 11/25/1978
Six songs into their show at the Spectrum in Philadelphia, Aerosmith's lead singer Steven Tyler has his face cut by broken glass. A bottle thrown from the audience hit the monitor directly in front of him and shattered, causing a shard of glass to puncture his cheek. The band halts the performance immediately and leaves the building.
TODAY IN ROCK AND ROLL HISTORY - 11/24/1972
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ABC-TV debuts its late-night Rock show, In Concert, put together by The Monkees' producer, Don Kirshner. The first show stars Alice Cooper, Chuck Berry, Blood, Sweat And Tears, Poco and the Allman Brothers Band.
TODAY IN ROCK AND ROLL HISTORY - 11/23/1976
After Elvis had invited him, Jerry Lee Lewis shows up at Presley's Graceland mansion just before three o'clock in the morning, driving a brand new Lincoln Continental, which he accidentally rams into the famous front gates with the wrought-iron music notes. Elvis' cousin, Harold Lloyd, who was manning the gates, didn't recognize Jerry Lee and called the police. The press later reported that The Killer was waving a pistol in the air, demanding to see Elvis. It was a story that tour guides at Graceland told for years, but Jerry Lee emphatically denied. "I really didn't mean to do nothin' to harm Elvis. He was my friend. I was his." The two never saw each other again.
TODAY IN ROCK AND ROLL HISTORY - 11/22/1965
24-year-old Bob Dylan married 26-year-old former Playboy Bunny, Sara Lowndes, under an oak tree on a judge's lawn on Mineola, Long Island. She was to be the inspiration for the songs "Sara" and "Sad Eyed Lady of the Lowlands". Sara would file for divorce in March, 1977.
TODAY IN ROCK AND ROLL HISTORY - 11/21/1981
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The Queen and David Bowie collaboration "Under Pressure" hits #1 in the UK, making it Queen's first chart-topper there since "Bohemian Rhapsody" in 1975.
Sooo take it back? Corporate liability laws are too soft.
TODAY IN ROCK AND ROLL HISTORY - 11/20/1965
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Decca Records releases The Who's "My Generation" in America. Issued three weeks earlier in Great Britain, the song had become a sort of anthem for British teens, rising to number two on the UK chart. In the US however, despite performing the tune on The Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour, the song will be mostly ignored and would get no higher than number 74 on the Billboard chart. "My Generation" was later named #11 on Rolling Stone magazine's list of the 500 Greatest Songs of All Time.
TODAY IN ROCK AND ROLL HISTORY - 11/19/1965
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Nancy Sinatra, backed by studio musicians known as The Wrecking Crew, record "These Boots Are Made For Walkin'" at Western Recorders in Hollywood. The record will peak at #1 on the Billboard Hot 100 on February 26th, 1966, and become the first of Nancy's ten US Top 40 hits. The song was written by Lee Hazlewood, who was inspired by a line spoken by Frank Sinatra in the 1963 comedy-western film 4 for Texas, "They tell me them boots ain't built for walkin'.
Trump and his cronies want to privatize the world. That’s the end goal. Gut all government agencies and sell them off to Elon or some private equity firm. If you want to live in the future they’re building it’s gonna be pay to play. You want healthcare, pay for it. You want education, pay for it. You want oxygen, pay for it!
….and 76 million people voted for it. 76 million people have fucked over 260 million people all cause they drank the orange kool-aid.
Of course they are.
Exactly the same as 2019, when the US recognized Juan Guaido as President. Sooooo, nothing.
It’d be “zero cool” if this wasn’t released to the public
And nothing will happen. Here are some sanctions and tariffs that will be paid by the citizens of the issuing nation.
If you shop online you 99.9999989% have indirectly supported Shopify somewhere and many companies use Quicken so, again, non-intentional support. My point being, no matter how hard we try We The People will always be force fed corporate choices….until we finally dismantle capitalism
They might have a fully open staff to employee after Trump finishes naming his secretary picks. After all, the only thing more qualifying for a senior government position than hosting a TV show on Fox News is hosting one on NBC
They’re exactly the same. Biden didn’t act to maintain the status quo; same deal with Garland. You don’t play nice with shitty people, like Trump. You need to be more ruthless. The world watched Jan. 6th happened and the people put in power did nothing to nip it in the bud. Now, we’ve got a second Trump term and it’s all because of inaction because people were scared to ruffle feathers. Those mf’ers deserved to be Randy Johnson’ed
Diesel is the cure-all for your flame starting needs
TODAY IN ROCK AND ROLL HISTORY - 11/18/1979
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Since Mariah’s tune is getting airtime already….
Paul McCartney releases "Wonderful Christmastime", a tune on which he plays all the instruments himself. The song would peak at #6 on the UK singles chart and #83 on the Cash Box Best Sellers chart, but did not reach the Billboard Hot 100. Considered by many fans as one of his weakest efforts, the record reportedly earns Maca $400,000 a year, which puts its cumulative earnings at near $15 million.
Learn to swim
The first time I flew out of the US after Trump became president I was so embarrassed of being American because of all the questions about his crazy ass. When I landed back in the US and saw his portrait on the wall in the airport, I stared at it perplexingly trying to understand what the fuck his stupid face was doing there….then it hit me that it’s there cause he was the president. Trump is a laughing stock and him at the helm of the US makes all Americans laughing stock for allowing this country to elect an orange makeup-caked, lying, shyster.
So glad we get to do it again!!
TODAY IN ROCK AND ROLL HISTORY - 11/17/1971
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Rod Stewart and The Faces release "A Nod Is As Good As A Wink... To A Blind Horse", their third LP together. The album contains the band's biggest hit, "Stay with Me", which reached #17 in the US and #6 in the UK, while the LP went to #6 in the US and #2 in the UK.
TODAY IN ROCK AND ROLL HISTORY - 11/16/1964
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The Animals record their rendition of "Don't Let Me Be Misunderstood". It would reach #3 on the UK Official Chart and #15 on the Billboard Hot 100. Lead singer Eric Burdon would later say of the song, "It was never considered Pop material, but it somehow got passed on to us and we fell in love with it immediately."
Elon’s gonna try and sue all the users that migrate off his platform cause his lil feelings are hurt and it’s not fair that his users are allowed to leave because they don’t like him or his platform
Push that shit as quick as possible….so Biden can veto it and require more votes for it to pass. Any Republican move at this point and Biden has one response, VETOOOOO!
Unless it serves the greater good I hope he kills everything they put in front of him, the same way they continue to kill basic human rights
You know, if Matt Gaetz at 35 years old didn’t pay to have sex with an underaged 17 year old girl…this wouldn’t be an issue.
PSA, in 2021 Kansas received about $7.1 Billion in aid from the federal government, accounting for about 16.8% of its annual revenue. Cutting taxes at home with your hand out for federal funds is kinda BS.
Unless its a planned trilogy with 3 strong stories that could semi-standalone (short of context being lost without the other installments) then any movie that needs more than 2 hours should just be a mini series. You wanna tell a 4 hour long story about the Wizard of Oz? Fine, stick it on Netflix and anyone who wants to binge watch it can to make it “feel like a movie” and those who don’t will have 4 - hour long episodes.
TODAY IN ROCK AND ROLL HISTORY - 11/15/1969
Janis Joplin is arrested at her concert in Tampa, Florida and charged with using "vulgar and indecent language". The incident began when a policeman with a bullhorn ordered people in the audience to sit down and Joplin responded, "Don't fuck with those people! Hey, Mister, what're you so uptight about? Did you buy a five dollar ticket?" When police backstage instructed Joplin to tell the audience to take their seats, she replied, "I'm not telling them shit." After being arrested in her dressing room, Joplin was released on bond and all charges were eventually dropped
TODAY IN ROCK AND ROLL HISTORY - 11/14/1962
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Bob Dylan records "Don't Think Twice, It's All Right", which will be released as the B-side to "Blowin' In The Wind". The tune was covered by many other artists, including Peter, Paul And Mary, who took it to #2 on the Billboard Hot 100 in 1963.
TODAY IN ROCK AND ROLL HISTORY - 11/13/1982
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Men at Work's debut album, "Business as Usual" tops the Billboard 200 album chart, where it would stay for fifteen consecutive weeks until it is dethroned by Michael Jackson's "Thriller".
TODAY IN ROCK AND ROLL HISTORY - 11/12/1966
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As many as 1,000 teenagers who are protesting a recent 10 PM curfew, clash with police on Los Angeles' Sunset Strip. The scene inspires Stephen Stills to write, "For What It's Worth", which will peak at #7 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart in the spring of 1967 for Buffalo Springfield.