Ramones - Tumblr Posts
shuffle your favorite playlist and post the first five songs that come up. then copy/paste this ask to your favorite mutuals. 🫶🫶
feel again - sir chloe
american idiot - green day
ten duel commandments - hamilton
blitzkrieg bop - the ramones
this is how I disappear - my chemical romance
Dee Dee Ramone’s Rap Album: Was It Really That Bad? - TheHappySpaceman Reviews
Yep, this was real. Spaceman looks at Dee Dee Ramone’s infamous 1989 rap album, Standing in the Spotlight.
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48 years ago
"I Wanna Be Your Boyfriend" is a song by the American punk rock band the Ramones, released in September 1976 as the second single of the band

That was once punk and in the end everything ends up in the capitalist sausage machine and all that's left is a can, if it doesn't get any worse, a limited edition.
Which is actually completely meaningless in a mass society, but there are only two cans!
Punk has thus ended up where it never wanted to go, every subculture is ultimately eaten by capitalism... that's the cruel evolution of things.
mod
Artists want attention and that means money 💰 was and is cruel to those who cling to ideals.
In the end, punk is just a can.
The ‘fuck nazi punk’ is nice, but Nazi punks are a contradiction in terms! Then just a caffeinated soft drink with taurine.
Cheers, have a good weekend punx 🍻





PET SEMATARY (Dir: Mary Lambert, 1989).
Probably to my detriment I have never read a Stephen King novel, although I have enjoyed many movies based upon his works notably Stand By Me (Rob Reiner, 1986), Misery (Rob Reiner, 1990), Shawskank Redemption (Frank Darabont, 1994) and the recent It (Andy Muschietti, 2017). So I sat down to this, my first viewing of Pet Sematary, with reasonably high expectations.
King’s novel was first published in 1983 to critical and commercial success so a movie adaptation was inevitable. The plot, which concerns the resurrection of dead pets and - whoops!- one or two humans, should have made for a creepy, maybe even darkly humorous horror. Instead we have a movie that feels cheaply made, is both schlocky and hokey and is occasionally unintentionally funny. Herman Munster himself Mr Fred Gwynne is a welcome familiar face and offers easily the best performance from an otherwise no star cast. He and the decent end-title song by a past their prime Ramones are the undoubted highlights of this sorry affair.
To be honest, I am not particularly a fan of the horror genre; gore does nothing for me but I do enjoy a creepy atmosphere. Pet Sematary has its share of gore but unfortunately little atmosphere, unless the atmosphere is that of a made for TV movie. Although critically reviled upon release the movie did spawn a sequel: the largely forgotten Pet Sematary Two (Mary Lambert, 1992). A remake was released in April 2019 and for once, perhaps, a remake is justified as it will almost certainly be an improvement on the original.
Perhaps I am being a little too harsh on a film belonging to a genre of which I am admittedly not fond. I realise this movie has its fans and if you can see something in it that I cannot then fair play to you. Ultimately I just expected more than Pet Sematary was able to deliver.
Visit my blog JINGLE BONES MOVIE TIME for more movie reviews! Link below.
49 years ago today
Dee Dee Ramone, Tommy Ramone, Johnny Ramone and Joey Ramone outside CBGB, NYC July 18, 1975.
Photo by Bob Gruen

315 Bowery, New York, NY 10003, USA.
"Founded on the Bowery in New York City by Hilly Kristal in 1973; CBGB was originally intended to feature its namesake musical styles, but became a forum for American punk and new wave bands like the Ramones, Blondie, Talking Heads, Misfits, Television, Patti Smith Group, The Dead Boys, The Dictators, The Cramps, and Joan Jett."
+ https://www.cbgb.com/about








