How much has changed since then?
-
Jaja — 4 years ago(August 01, 2021 06:12 AM)
Don't the All Blacks play in the nude sometimes?
I was searching porn once and came upon the All Blacks team playing rugby nude against a clothed female team.
I love that kind of s***!!
Im into CFNM.
Coming back en 2026-Viva Venezuela! -
MortSahlFan — 4 years ago(August 01, 2021 08:06 AM)
Everything got worse especially music and movies and the voodoo economics but because of the internet I'm able to access all the stuff I want for free, including ebooks and thus I don't have to be a part of this **** society and the don't have to waste my time on the lack of culture.
https://www.patreon.com/LoyalOpposition -
cryptoflovecraft — 4 years ago(August 01, 2021 01:10 PM)
My favorite year for music. There were smashing debuts by Black Flag (Damaged), Minor Threat (the two EPs), TSOL (Dance With Me), Go-Go's (Beauty and the Beat), Men At Work (Business As Usual), Adolescents (self-titled LP), Saccharine Trust (Paganicons) and Agent Orange (Living in Darkness). X put out their finest album and maybe the greatest punk album of all time (Wild Gift) and NYC headbangers Riot put out what is perhaps the greatest HM album of all time (Fire Down Under). Devo released the unforgettable New Traditionalists LP, arguably the band's last great album, and Adam and the Ants stood and delivered with Prince Charming. Plasmatics went slightly metal on Metal Priestess, the band's finest record. The Psychedelic Furs dazzled the new wave world with Talk Talk Talk. The Ramones continued to evolve with the poppy Pleasant Dreams LP (though some fans were hoping for another Rocket To Russia). Kim Wilde's "Kids In America" and Tommy Tutone's overplayed but still great "867-5309/Jenny" were hard to forget singles. The Police released one of their finest tunes (the awesome "Invisible Sun") and a so-so album (Ghost in the Machine). AC/DC could never top the previous year's Back in Black LP but For Those About To Rock (We Salute You) was still a nice kick in the pants. The Pretenders proved no sophomore slump with the engaging Pretenders II LP. And those 'old guys' of rock The Who still had some life left in them after all with the amazing Face Dances LP, featuring the single "You Better You Bet".
Too much has changed since then. I doubt we'll ever see anything like the punk and new wave explosion that peaked in 1981 again.