Review: The Zombies “Odessey and Oracle,” a forgotten classic

Released: 1968
CBS Records (U.S.), Date Records (U.K.)

There was more to the British Invasion than The Beatles and The Rolling Stones. One of the best and most overlooked bands of that era is The Zombies. And Odessey and Oracle is their masterpiece.

Fronted by Rod Argent, the band was formed in St. Albans during the early 60s. Melding Beatles-esque melodies with the baroque inclinations of the latter day Beach Boys, Odessey and Oracle is the first Zombies album without any covers. Songwriters Chris White (bass) and Argent prove able to provide quality songwriting throughout,  with only a few let downs.
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Strange Days: your weird and stupid news roundup for Dec. 8

Welcome to Strange Days, a collection of stories found around the interweb that will make you smack your head, sigh with wonder, or just say to yourself, “Well, that’s stupid.” Today: making good use of beer, an 80-year-old woman facing prison, and a really, really old dog. 

  • Eastern Alaska — A man named Clifton Vial crashes his truck into a snowdrift 40 miles north of Nome. Alone and unable to dig himself out, he searches his car and finds only three frozen cans of Coors Light. He survives for three days on the Coors Light before being rescued. Wonder if the cans were still cold-certified by the time he was found? Inquiring minds want to know. [ Time ]     Continue reading

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Rick Perry’s comical Youtube folly

Texas Governor and GOP presidential nominee Rick Perry, whose support has dipped to about 5 per cent amongst his party, is making sure he stays top-of-mind. And while his new ad is getting attention, it appears that Youtube users, at least, aren’t buying what he’s selling.
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What’s wrong with Nikolai Kulemin?

Nikolai Kulemin

Over the past few season, Nikolai Kulemin has been among the most consistent Leafs forwards. But through 28 games of the 2011-12 campaign, he’s been among their most disappointing.

Kulemin was held pointless in the Leafs’ 3-2 loss to the New Jersey Devils on Dec. 6, extending his goalless drought to a career-high 20 games. After showing steady improvement over his first two seasons in the league, Kulemin’s production has dropped off the map. Why?
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Well, this is pretty genius

Bruce Boudreau meets The Mighty Ducks. Highly enjoyable. Some bleeped language.

(Benstonium via Puck Daddy)

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Can’t call the Black Keys sell-outs

Check out this video featuring the excellent Jiam Ghomeshi talking to the Black Keys, Dan Auerbach and Patrick Carney, about the idea of selling out.

I have to say, I totally agree with their viewpoint here. They’ve made seven albums since 2001, and have only recently gained mainstream recognition. And they didn’t get famous because they changed their sound.

There’s no doubt that turning down 200,000 GBP for their track to appear in a mayo commercial was a bad play. At some point, being able to support yourself is more important than the opinions of anonymous faces on the Internet. It’s refreshing to see them acknowledge the error of their ways.

They haven’t changed much, their band grew virally, and now corporate America wants a piece. It’s hard to picture someone criticizing them for that. I say kudos to the Keys. What do you think?

Thanks to Brad for the heads up. @brollybain

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Milanovich hired; 5 CFL stars who played in the XFL


Photo: argonauts.ca

Scott Milanovich is the new head coach of the Toronto Argonauts. He’s also the answer to an extremely obscure sports trivia question.

In 2001, Milanovich, now 38, was the first ever pick in the only XFL Draft. He didn’t end up playing much, stuck behind Tommy Maddox on the team’s depth chart. Maddox went on to a moderately successful second try at the NFL, while Milanovich finished his playing career in the CFL, backing up for Calgary in 2003 under Jim Barker.

Huge XFL fan

The two leagues are weirdly linked. Vince McMahon actually started the XFL after being rebuffed in his attempt to buy the CFL — yes, the entire league. God knows how that would have turned out. Likely something like this.

Today, McMahon’s much-maligned experiment is remembered for a few things: wacky rules, stupid cross-promotion with WWE, the Madden-style flying camera, and players being allowed to customize their names on their jerseys (“He Hate Me.”)  The league tried to legitimize itself by the end of its first-and-last season, but by then, nobody was watching and the damage was more than done.

Playing a schedule that kicked off in February 2001, the league attracted some CFL players. A number of other players moved on to the Canadian game after the XFL folded. Let’s take a look at five players who have found the most success in both leagues.
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