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Parentsâ Groups to Britney: âDie, Slut, Die!âDecember 10, 2001 |
Fresno, CA Courtesy Jive Records Teen idol Britney Spears, who has never seen the back seat of your best friend's Impala ith the November release of her third album, Britney, teen idol Britney Spears has set off a wave of controversy over the seemingly-erotic nature of the lyrics to her newest songs. Spears denies such allegations vehemently, pointing to her much-publicized and very occasionally believed virginity, and her total coyness in interviews, which she often conducts while being photographed riding a gigantic 18-foot dildo. âI think itâs important to stay a virgin until you get married,â Spears recently told The Straits Times of Singapore, wiping a long white streak of what appeared to be dried semen off her top lip. âItâs more special that way.â
Parentsâ groups around the world are up in arms over Spearsâ newest album, fearing the influence that t...
ith the November release of her third album, Britney, teen idol Britney Spears has set off a wave of controversy over the seemingly-erotic nature of the lyrics to her newest songs. Spears denies such allegations vehemently, pointing to her much-publicized and very occasionally believed virginity, and her total coyness in interviews, which she often conducts while being photographed riding a gigantic 18-foot dildo. âI think itâs important to stay a virgin until you get married,â Spears recently told The Straits Times of Singapore, wiping a long white streak of what appeared to be dried semen off her top lip. âItâs more special that way.â Parentsâ groups around the world are up in arms over Spearsâ newest album, fearing the influence that the virginal exhibitionist might have over their teenage daughters, who often imitate Spears in dress, slang and in sleeping with members of âNSync. âLook, it wouldnât be so bad if that little tramp would just admit that sheâs given more blowjobs than Conair. Thatâs really the part that pisses me off, this whole âWho, me?â act. I mean, Christ in a Corvette, who buys that crap? It might even be worth her influencing my daughter to get pregnant if they could just catch that little bitch in the act,â stated Connie Baustel, head of Mothers Against Bare Midriffs, a Baltimore-area Anti-Spears group. âIâm tired of people with dirty minds always trying to read gross things into my songs. Itâs sad that we live in a world where people think that even a song like âSplit Me Open and Pound Me Rawâ is about sex,â said Spears when asked about her new album. âI swear, you get a reputation in this industry and thatâs all anyone sees when they look at you. I write a song about buying Christmas presents for my boyfriendâs parents, call it âI Wanna Do Your Whole Family,â and all of a sudden my publicistâs phone is ringing off the hook. Talk about perverts,â Spears stated indignantly. âI donât know where these people get their ideas from. This album is about apple pie and fluffy kitties and meeting your pals down at the roller-rink. âTouch Me Where the Sun Donât Shineâ is a really sweet song about first love. âTongue My Anusâ is a song I wrote about my new puppy, Cuddler. You should see him, heâs just adorable,â claimed a totally straight-faced Spears. The biggest uproar has been over the video for the albumâs first single, âKnock Me Up, Knock Me Down,â which features a pregnant and black-eyed Spears performing a suggestive dance routine in front of a trailer home. âSome people have no sense of art,â commented Spears when asked about the controversial song. âI mean, hell-o, obviously the song isnât pro-domestic abuse.â Others arenât so sure, and some question the songâs lyrics: âBaby, dontcha wanna dance up on my face your love I canât replace (repeat) / like that / you like it, huh? / Iâll carry your baby if youâll give me your gravy / Get it, get it / Ohhh / Get it, get it / Ahhhh / Get it, get it / Ooooh / This feels good / Give me a smack and I donât mean your lips / Show me youâre a man. . ./ Knock me up (heavy breathing) Knoooock me down / I deserve it / I canât live without it.â Spearsâ album sales remain brisk despite the controversy, with a particularly strong showing in the creepy over-40 male demographic. And the Spears phenomena shows no signs of slowing, with a movie deal in the works and promotional tie-ins rumored for both The Disney Channel and Trojan condoms. For the time being, anyway, it looks like everythingâs coming up Britney. Spearsâ fourth album, Cum-Hungry Buttfuck Doll, is due out in the spring. Ivana Folger-Balzac has made life in the commune's news offices a living hell for two weeks running now. the commune news staff is currently taking a collection to pay the bitch her alimony ourselves, since that deadbeat Nacutchacokov seems eerily oblivious to her.
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Senator Wins Lottery, Quits "Shitty Job" epublican Senator Judd Gregg finally ran into a big steaming pile of luck Wednesday when he matched 5 of 6 Powerball numbers and won a lottery jackpot of $853,492. Gregg immediately called Vice-President Dick Cheney to let his boss know he would not be coming into work. Its about friggin time I got some good luck, Gregg told reporters in front of his home in his home state of New Hampshire. Gregg waved his winning ticket in the air frantically and laughed. Eat it, taxpayers! Im gonna be my own boss from now on! Gregg, who chairs the Senate Budget Committee and spent more than $2 million in his last re-election campaign, did admit to some sour grapes in not winning the $340 million jackpot won by an Oregon player in the same lottery. the commune's Fall Gadget Guide ts almost the time of year to start pretending youre Christmas shopping while you look for swanky new shit for yourself, and the commune is there for you with our first-ever annual Fall Gadget Guide. Join commune Tech Correspondent Mitch Kroeger as he guides you through the bewildering wilderness of the new and the shiny. Serial Killers Neighbor: He just wouldnt shut up about serial killing. R.C. Car Enthusiasts Angered by Latest Mars Mission Snub |
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 October 1, 2001
Fortune 4From mammoths to giant ground sloths, they buried caches of precious materials-- radiocarbon, obsidian, jasper, Idaho and Anthony T. Bouldurian, hundreds of miles from the Rosetta Stone. The violet-crowned Nero, spanning Cyclopean passers-by, "grave circle A" to the place of the Mycenae, picked up a mushroom from the ground. In the distant Acropolis, no roof over their heads, drinking the joy water over the course of 15 minutes, sat Wall Street millionaire E.F. Hutton and his wife, Postum heiress Marjorie Merriweather Post. Our first clue that this was a tomb was when the Dane paused on his homeward journey to salute the Hybrid Human. To these lands came the corn men, deciphering Venus who stood and watched over their hours, designed and bound in traditional cloth. Beautifully illustrated in color... let's hear it for ancient women!
You will walk through time. Try again...
º Last Column: Fortune 3 º more columns
From mammoths to giant ground sloths, they buried caches of precious materials-- radiocarbon, obsidian, jasper, Idaho and Anthony T. Bouldurian, hundreds of miles from the Rosetta Stone. The violet-crowned Nero, spanning Cyclopean passers-by, "grave circle A" to the place of the Mycenae, picked up a mushroom from the ground. In the distant Acropolis, no roof over their heads, drinking the joy water over the course of 15 minutes, sat Wall Street millionaire E.F. Hutton and his wife, Postum heiress Marjorie Merriweather Post. Our first clue that this was a tomb was when the Dane paused on his homeward journey to salute the Hybrid Human. To these lands came the corn men, deciphering Venus who stood and watched over their hours, designed and bound in traditional cloth. Beautifully illustrated in color... let's hear it for ancient women!
You will walk through time. Try again later. º Last Column: Fortune 3º more columns
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|  April 10, 2006
Flinging Out the DeadIn honor of this week's Six Feet Under theme, and, what the hell, every person who has ever died, ever, we're going to use this column to take a look at how humans throughout history have dealt with the problem of what to do with dead bodies once the life spark has farted on out the door.
It has often been said that a lot can be learned about a culture by the ways in which they honor their dead, which is only really true for the few cultures throughout history that have buried their dead in a papier-mâchÊ shells made from encyclopedia pages. For most other cultures, funeral customs just show how lazy they were feeling at the time.
For starters, in really ancient times, no real thought was given to burial formalities, mostly because it was just too much work to dig someone's remains out of a hunk of dinosaur poop.
After dinosaur times, but before Dinosaur Jr., man dealt with the death of his fellow man by getting far away from the dead body as fast as humanly possible, much like the way children deal with breaking a window or rolling a car into a lake. In fact, hauling ass away from death was an effective strategy for thousands of years. Some have interpreted this as evidence of early man's fear of death, but in all likelihood it was merely a smart move on early man's part, since funeral details are, without exception, a huge pain in the ass, and you can't get stuck with the bill if you're beating cheeks across the other side of the...
º Last Column: What the Sleep Do We Know? º more columns
In honor of this week's Six Feet Under theme, and, what the hell, every person who has ever died, ever, we're going to use this column to take a look at how humans throughout history have dealt with the problem of what to do with dead bodies once the life spark has farted on out the door. It has often been said that a lot can be learned about a culture by the ways in which they honor their dead, which is only really true for the few cultures throughout history that have buried their dead in a papier-mâchĂŠ shells made from encyclopedia pages. For most other cultures, funeral customs just show how lazy they were feeling at the time. For starters, in really ancient times, no real thought was given to burial formalities, mostly because it was just too much work to dig someone's remains out of a hunk of dinosaur poop. After dinosaur times, but before Dinosaur Jr., man dealt with the death of his fellow man by getting far away from the dead body as fast as humanly possible, much like the way children deal with breaking a window or rolling a car into a lake. In fact, hauling ass away from death was an effective strategy for thousands of years. Some have interpreted this as evidence of early man's fear of death, but in all likelihood it was merely a smart move on early man's part, since funeral details are, without exception, a huge pain in the ass, and you can't get stuck with the bill if you're beating cheeks across the other side of the valley before anyone else has any idea what's happened. This same sensible strategy is, I must point out, frowned upon as highly illegal or at least considerably rude in our own society, so I'll leave it to you to decide if we've really evolved in the right direction over the last several thousand years. As time went by, man eventually figured out that death was nothing to fear, and that for hundreds of years he'd been hastily abandoning family members who were merely sick or sleeping. At this point, it didn't take man long to discover how fun death could be, and for a time the dead were valued as fun puppets and stunt people for early man's action-packed theater productions. But eventually man learned that keeping the dead bodies of family members around for group portraits or sex posed some daunting health concerns, and when man discovered bathing and finally washed off thousands of years of B.O., he realized that the dead fucking stank. This led to several hundred years of man burning his dead, for hygiene, cave heating, and general revenge purposes. Eventually the Egyptians would come along, in Egypt anyway, and put a unique spin on death rituals thanks to their paralyzing fear of nudity. Mummification developed as a way for Egyptians to make sure their dead were never caught with their man-dresses down, and to prevent the embarrassment of accidentally seeing some long-dead asscrack. Eventually, the custom grew until it became common for mummification to begin in childhood, with parents taking their kids out in the fall to buy a new wrap for the school year, and making sure everyone in the family got enough preservatives in their diet. By the time the average Egyptian died at the age of 25, their bodies were ready for thousands of years of timeless, decomposition-free sleep. By medieval times, the dead had come to be valued as an important military asset, and no army worth its codpieces would dare go into battle without a fleet of catapults loaded with plague-ridden corpses having their back. During these exciting times, it was within every person's reach to be a military hero in life, or in death if they were a giant pussy in life. This timeline must, due to its brevity and my weak stomach, gloss over many other customs from around the world, like the Calatians who ate their dead, or the many native tribes around the world who believed the dead had cooties and therefore should only be porked with a condom. I think we can all agree that these dark times, much like haircuts in the 1970's, are best forgotten to the sands of time. Equally forgotten, but much funnier, were the various foolish customs of the East regarding death, most of which involved honoring a person's death by killing even more people, and sometimes little yappy dogs. In India, a man's corpse was cremated along with his live wife, which has to explain the extraordinarily high rate of deathbed divorces among Hindus in those times. Fijians would strangle the deceased's slaves, wives, and friends, due to widespread confusion between funeral rites and concepts of mafia revenge. A nobleman's death in Japan was seriously bad news for the deceased nobleman's slaves, who were all expected to commit seppuku, which is sort of like sudoku but even less fun. In Africa, the death of a king pretty much meant everybody was fucked, so the Africans understandably kept a string of king look-alikes always on hand to step in and secretly take the king's place should he die, leading to a royal succession that went on like a bizarre game of genetic telephone. As the world became more enlightened and funeral customs evolved, people would eventually stop killing each other to honor the dead. Unfortunately, the part about killing little yappy dogs also had to be thrown out with the bathwater. In more modern times, our present-day funeral traditions gradually came about, mostly for reasons no less stupid than those given by our ancestors. Dressing all in black was originally a ploy to fool the spirits of the dead, who were expected to follow the living home and crash on their couches indefinitely, becoming a major pain in the ass. Wakes were originally attended by people who were waiting for the dead to come back to life, which helped the tribe identify its biggest optimists, who were reportedly the most delicious and the first on the list for when cannibalism would eventually swing back into favor on one of the inevitable 20-year cycles of public opinion about the rightness of eating folks. The custom of firing rifles at funerals dates back to the days when the living would try to spear the spirits of the dead at funerals, just for the hell of it, though modern technology is decidedly more effective for blowing ghosts all to shit than crappy old spears ever were. Most modern funeral rites were designed to placate the dead, in the hopes that they'd take a hike and not hang around, scaring the crap out of everybody forever. In this, not much has changed to present day, as most funerals sill involve dressing a dead body up really nice, and people taking turns flattering the deceased and playing his or her favorite music as if they all enjoyed it. Basically, for the dead a funeral is like being Billy Mummy from that "It's a Good Life" Twilight Zone episode for about an hour, which isn't a half-bad consolation for later being blown all to shit by a nearby military funeral. º Last Column: What the Sleep Do We Know?º more columns
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Quote of the Day“A man cannot serve two masters. Unless they are both kung fu masters, in which case he'd better do his damned best. At least until they kill each other in a spectacular bloody finale.”
-Rod GoddFortune 500 CookieFine, the stars won't kill you with cancer like they previously promised⌠big baby. Time to face facts: Those laser discs you socked away are never going to go up in value. Sorry, girlfriend, no visit from the stork for you, but you will get a postcard from a half-crazed seagull. Lucky Sean Penn films: Hurly Burly, Dead Man Walking, I Am Sam, and Supreme Blow-Jobs XXVI.
Try again later.Top 5 News-Filler Stories| 1. | Idaho Kitten Says Swear Word | | 2. | Exercise May Be Good for You | | 3. | People Pay Top Dollar for Name-Brand Shoes | | 4. | Movies Really Suck Lately | | 5. | Little-Known Website the commune Offends Lone Nut | |
|   North Korea Pissed Their Real-Life Hunger Games Nowhere Near as Popular as Movie BY Orson Welch 2/14/2005 Friendly nods to everyone. We're officially in movie drought territory at the box office, as we finish watching the underwhelming Oscar nominees and wait for the true summer blockbuster trash to blow in once again. DVDs offer our best hope for entertaining movie fare in the meantime—if hope is the experience of being continually and irrevocably disappointed in the world. Then gear up, for we've got a barrelful.
Now on DVD:
The Motorcycle Diaries
In a novel concept for a biography film, a fascinating subject is covered in the least fascinating moments of his life. From the people who brainstormed a movie about Einstein taking a dump, no doubt. Can a movie about one of the most engaging leftist revolutionaries be washed out and political...
Friendly nods to everyone. We're officially in movie drought territory at the box office, as we finish watching the underwhelming Oscar nominees and wait for the true summer blockbuster trash to blow in once again. DVDs offer our best hope for entertaining movie fare in the meantime—if hope is the experience of being continually and irrevocably disappointed in the world. Then gear up, for we've got a barrelful.
Now on DVD:
The Motorcycle Diaries
In a novel concept for a biography film, a fascinating subject is covered in the least fascinating moments of his life. From the people who brainstormed a movie about Einstein taking a dump, no doubt. Can a movie about one of the most engaging leftist revolutionaries be washed out and political neutered? Watch and see. It's like Catcher in the Rye set in South America, removing all the sincerity and edge. Loads and loads of Latinos stars.
Saw
Seen it. While some horror movies rely on not showing you the really scary parts, letting your own psyche construct it, Saw sees that approach as lazy. Here you get all the guts, the entrails, the spit, slobber, bile, and slow-motion bloodletting. And worst of all, Cary Elwes acting, which is classified as cruel and unusual punishment in most western countries. I understand at last the very real pain Alex went through in A Clockwork Orange when they strapped him in, propped open his eyes, and made him watch a movie. Still, lucky for him, it wasn't this one.
I Heart Huckabees
You know an existential, deeply-philosophical movie is in trouble when they cast Jude Law. Perhaps they wanted to cast Leonardo DiCaprio, but worried he would come off as too intellectual for most audiences. David O. Russell again spanks the monkey with this masturbatory, meandering movie that tries in vain to make celebrities almost appear like normal people. Fortunately Russell didn't bother making films about other things he hearts, like his dog, New York, or his own superiority over every living thing.
Speaking of superiority, we leave once again with myself the winner. Then again, I did have to sit through all these movies⌠that can't speak well of me. However, I didn't pay to see them. I'm at least in the top 50th percentile of the nation's best and brightest. We'll call it a draw, Hollywood.   |