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A band you have to see to believe, the Black Lips are the kings of today's psychedelic garage rock underground. They started the band when they were 15 years old and spent the next seven years touring the world, booking themselves, playing for scraps. Underground parties, basement shows, outlaw festivals, the odd tour opening for Yeah Yeah Yeahs, The Dirtbombs, and Be Your Own Pet in actual legitimate venues(!), plus three classic albums, countless 7"s, a couple DVDs, and their own vinyl garage rock label Die Slaughterhaus cemented their reputation. They're now 22 years old, grizzled veterans of the underground, and legends in the scene.
Buzz Report: Vista vainly vies for cool
'Daily Show' appearances, big parties, cool underground bands, Demetri Martin--wow, Microsoft is trying everything to make Vista seem cool. Except making it cool.
E-40: "The Making of the 'Tell Me When To Go' Video"
This is a behind-the-scenes look at the video shoot for the first single from My Ghetto Report Card, E-40's soon-to-be released 12th album. "Tell Me When To Go" features Keak Da Sneak, and was recently shot by Lil' Jon and Director, Bernard Gourley (Lyfe Jennings, Three 6 Mafia, Beanie Siegle). The video introduces the world to the Hyphy movement in the Bay. "Hyphy music is like Crunk, but in a more up-tempo way. The culture is a way of life for Bay kids. We got the side shows, the muscle cars, we ghost ride the whip, we got the invisible driving, the music, the go dumb get stupid dances, we just actin' a fool expressing ourselves," explains E-40. Thousands of people showed up at the shoot including just about every rapper in the bay, members of the Hieroglyphics crew, and members of The BME Click including Lil' Jon, Lil' Scrappy, and Bohagon. "We were smokin' up the block, turning donuts and figure 8's. We had the hyphy train crackin'. Just imagine 300 cars riding back to back after a party with every car, van, camper or truck with all they doors open, shakin' their dreads, showing their grill, sporting stunna shade glasses, dancing on top of the roofs and hoods of the whip, campaigning like the president, like a big parade. It's just a whole bunch of super energy. You gotta see it," explains E-40.
Systm: Build your own lightsaber
Luke, Darth, and Obi-Wan's lightsabers were pieced out of junk piles. David shows you how to build exact replicas and an original design from the Custom Saber Shop. Then he picks a fight with Patrick.
The 404 392: Where we get spiflicated
Today, we're joined by two ladies, Ace Reporter Caroline McCarthy again and "Allie" of Heavy & Flo fame. This makes the two remaining boys of The 404 very happy. On today's show, we've got sex offenders, speak easys, 1920s Prohibition and Ashton Kutcher. Excited? We are.
'60 Minutes': Watch the Kanzius machine work
Lesley Stahl looks at one of John Kanzius's first cancer fighting machines and learns how it works.
Bloc Party: "I Still Remember"
Kele sings, 'tonight make me unstoppable,' on 'The Prayer' from the forthcoming Bloc Party record, A Weekend In the City, but it's pretty clear he already is. After so many tours behind their debut record Silent Alarm, through the release of Silent Alarm Remixed and the God Bless Bloc Party DVD, a kick-ass new record full of epic, thumping, pumping, dark and hopeful songs was the only possible next step. On February 6 A Weekend In the City will be in stores. If you're one of the first 1000 people to PRE-ORDER A Weekend in the City from Insound you'll receive a limited edition Bloc Party 7 inch featuring 'I Still Remember' and the exclusive b-side 'We Were Lovers.'
Prizefight: Apple iPod vs Microsoft Zune, part 1
Ladies and gentlemen, gather around. It's the fight of the year: the Cupertino Killer vs. the Redmond Rager. That's right, it's iPod vs. Zune day!
Clubby, party, video shot on mini DV. Low budget underground, UrbanGemz, Hip-Hop smash.
Despite some trade-offs in color fidelity, the HP PL4200N delivers a surprisingly solid picture with excellent blacks and plenty of punch.
