Isn't that already called "Behind the Music"?
BtM is just the highlight reel. I want this show to be awesome and do well so I can write the episode where they threaten to not perform because the venue manager won't buy them cigarettes. (True. Story.)
Also, sumi, I thought that the new song was bad enough when I heard it. But, now, I'm reading the lyrics. OurSong:SucksDonkeysBalls, indeed.
I have a crafty question, this is the right thread, right?
Okay, so I have been collecting wool sweaters from thrift shops with the idea that I would felt them, cut them up, and sew them into a blanket/throw. I saw this idea in a book I do not have, and now I have a question about the exectution. I've washed the sweaters a couple of times and they've all felted to different degrees. How do I know when they're felted enough that I can cut them up without them unravelling?
Sue, I think the piece should look like a solid fabric and not seperate threads.
Okay, so if I can see the knitted threads through the matted fuzz, I should wash them again?
I think if you can see them clearly without really getting down in there and trying, then yeah.
I had better luck felting by hand in a sink with hot water (wear plastic gloves) and rubbing the piece against itself (like getting out a stain), than I did washing it in a machine.
Going back to the Dave Navarro pilot for a moment, I just read more about it at Variety.com and, apparently, the "fictional dysfunctional rock band" is called Load.
"Product" revolves around international rock icon Load as it embarks on recording its next album. Problem is that the band members, who are in their early 30s, haven't spoken to each other in at least three years.
Pilot episode follows them as they reunite, with a young Rolling Stone journalist in tow to report on Load's studio sessions for a cover story.
Methinks someone's been watching Some Kind of Monster. HA.
Reanimator is on TV tonight here. Wasn't Tim an AD on it or some such?
I thought that looked familiar when I saw it in the TV guide. Consider it Sky +'d.