Find a show you like and click the
button. The show will be added to your My Playlist page and updated 24/7 with new videos.
Search Results
8 Views
13:26:19 05/27/12
X-MEN Origins: Wolverine
[LESS INFO] 8 VIEWS | ADDED 13:26:19 05/27/12
Hugh Jackman reprises the role that made him a superstar - as the fierce fighting machine who possesses amazing healing powers, retractable claws a
0 Views
23:19:59 05/24/12
Ghost Recon: Future Soldier - Mission 2: Sandstorm Walkthrough (Deutsch) | 2012 | HD
[LESS INFO] 0 VIEWS | ADDED 23:19:59 05/24/12
Ghost Recon: Future Soldier - Mission 2: Sandstorm Walkthrough (Deutsch) | 2012 | HD
Watch the great Sandstorm Mission of Ghost Recon: Future Soldier here on XboxViewTV. LIKE us: Facebook.com FOLLOW us: Twitter.com ABOUT THIS GAME --------------------------------- Tom Clancy's Ghost Recon: Future Soldier, a new game developed at Ubisoft's Paris studio and set to be available in US on May 22th, 2012 and in Europe on May 24th, 2012. As a member of the elite Ghost Recon, you are among the few who possess the power, the adaptability, and the cognitive fortitude of the future soldier. Specialized in every area of combat, equipped for survival, and trained in absolute discretion, you are entrusted with the missions no other soldier can handle, in the world's most complex, high-risk warzones. Ghost Recon: Future Soldier --------------------------------------------- GENRE: Third-Person Shooter RELEASE DATE(S): + US: May 22, 2012 + EU: May 25, 2012 PLATFORM: Xbox 360 ALSO ON: PS3, PC WEBSITE: www.ghostrecon.com PRE-ORDER / BUY on AMAZON: amzn.to PUBLISHER: Ubisoft DEVELOPER: Ubisoft Paris ESRB: RP-M+ for Rating Pending, Targeting a Rating of Mature or Above TAGS: "Ghost Recon Future Soldier" "Mission 2" "Sandstorm Walkthrough" Deutsch "Ghost Recon" grfs "grfs deutsch" "grfs gameplay" "Future Soldier" "team ghost" grfs "Ghost Recon Future Soldier" "grfs kinect" xbox "xbox 360" game trailer spiel 2012 xboxviewtv multiplayer ubisoft gaming "video game" hd official gameplay video "playstation 3" ps3 pc steam shooter warfighter "tom clancy" gunsmith "ghost network" "4 ... From: XboxViewTV Views: 1669 35 ratings Time: 15:59 More in Gaming
0 Views
23:08:30 05/24/12
Ghost Recon: Future Soldier - Spiele-Test / Game-Review (2012) | HD
[LESS INFO] 0 VIEWS | ADDED 23:08:30 05/24/12
Ghost Recon: Future Soldier - Spiele-Test / Game-Review (2012) | HD
Der exklusive Ghost Recon: Future Soldier Spiele-Test / Game-Review mit SiriuS. LIKE us: Facebook.com FOLLOW us: Twitter.com Mehr Gameplays dazu seht ihr hier: www.youtube.com ABOUT THIS GAME --------------------------------- Tom Clancy's Ghost Recon: Future Soldier, a new game developed at Ubisoft's Paris studio and set to be available in US on May 22th, 2012 and in Europe on May 24th, 2012. As a member of the elite Ghost Recon, you are among the few who possess the power, the adaptability, and the cognitive fortitude of the future soldier. Specialized in every area of combat, equipped for survival, and trained in absolute discretion, you are entrusted with the missions no other soldier can handle, in the world's most complex, high-risk warzones. Ghost Recon: Future Soldier --------------------------------------------- GENRE: Third-Person Shooter RELEASE DATE(S): + US: May 22, 2012 + EU: May 25, 2012 PLATFORM: Xbox 360 ALSO ON: PS3, PC WEBSITE: www.ghostrecon.com PRE-ORDER / BUY on AMAZON: amzn.to PUBLISHER: Ubisoft DEVELOPER: Ubisoft Paris ESRB: RP-M+ for Rating Pending, Targeting a Rating of Mature or Above TAGS: "Ghost Recon" "grfs test" "grfs review" "grfs spieltest" "grfs game review" "grfs deutsch" "grfs SiriuS" deutsch "grfs gameplay" "Future Soldier" "team ghost" grfs "Ghost Recon Future Soldier" "grfs kinect" xbox "xbox 360" game trailer spiel 2012 xboxviewtv multiplayer ubisoft gaming "video game" hd official gameplay video "playstation 3" ps3 pc steam shooter ... From: XboxViewTV Views: 978 30 ratings Time: 05:41 More in Gaming
0 Views
15:20:09 05/24/12
Ghost Recon: Future Soldier - Official Launch Trailer (Deutsch) | 2012 | HD
[LESS INFO] 0 VIEWS | ADDED 15:20:09 05/24/12
Ghost Recon: Future Soldier - Official Launch Trailer (Deutsch) | 2012 | HD
Den Launch-Trailer zu Tom Clancy's Ghost Recon Future Soldier. Das Video belegt eindrucksvoll wie viel Abwechslung das Spiel bietet: Von der umfangreichen Kampagne f%uumlr bis zu vier Spieler kooperativ %uumlber den spannenden Guerrilla-Modus bis hin zum motivierenden Mehrspielermodus. LIKE us: Facebook.com FOLLOW us: Twitter.com ENGLISH ------------------ The launch trailer for Tom Clancy's Ghost Recon Future Soldier. The video shows impressively how much variety the game offers: From the extensive campaign for up to four players cooperatively over the exciting guerrilla mode up to the motivating multiplayer mode. ABOUT THIS GAME --------------------------------- Tom Clancy's Ghost Recon: Future Soldier, a new game developed at Ubisoft's Paris studio and set to be available in US on May 22th, 2012 and in Europe on May 24th, 2012. As a member of the elite Ghost Recon, you are among the few who possess the power, the adaptability, and the cognitive fortitude of the future soldier. Specialized in every area of combat, equipped for survival, and trained in absolute discretion, you are entrusted with the missions no other soldier can handle, in the world's most complex, high-risk warzones. Ghost Recon: Future Soldier --------------------------------------------- GENRE: Third-Person Shooter RELEASE DATE(S): + US: May 22, 2012 + EU: May 25, 2012 PLATFORM: Xbox 360 ALSO ON: PS3, PC WEBSITE: www.ghostrecon.com PRE-ORDER / BUY on AMAZON: amzn.to PUBLISHER: Ubisoft DEVELOPER: Ubisoft Paris ... From: XboxViewTV Views: 1088 27 ratings Time: 01:32 More in Gaming
0 Views
01:40:15 05/24/12
Avengers vs. X-Men: Fanboy Faceoff Results!
[LESS INFO] 0 VIEWS | ADDED 01:40:15 05/24/12
Avengers vs. X-Men: Fanboy Faceoff Results!
bit.ly - Fanboy Faceoff Playlist! bit.ly - The Avengers Clevver U! bit.ly - Click to Subscribe! Facebook.com - Become a Fan! Twitter.com - Follow Us! This week's Fanboy Faceoff was all about teamwork as two of the most popular superhero franchises of all time faced off with your votes deciding the winner. The Avengers and X-Men may be battling it out in the comic books, but The Avengers are clearly on everyone's minds in the movie world which has helped garner them a lot of fans. Many of you thought there was one thing The Avengers had that the X-Men didn't that would be the key to their winning and it can be summed up in four words. Yes, the big green wrecking machine was the topic of many debates. Viewer littlelarry05 even thought Hulk could take on the entire X-Men alone saying, "The Hulk would do it himself while the rest of The Avengers stand around drinking tea." While most agreed that Hulk would be pretty unstoppable, some did think there were a few members of the X-Men that could challenge him including Wolverine, Rogue and especially Jean Grey as Phoenix. shykstuma countered by saying, "There's just no way [Hulk] could solo the entire X-MEN...Phoenix Jean can outright kill the hulk or slow him down considerably (because of his regeneration) by continuously disintegrating him." So even though the Avengers have Hulk and a straight up god, some believe sheer numbers and diversity of powers the X-Men possess would be enough to take them out. aquamarine11500 brought ... From: ClevverMovies Views: 10928 246 ratings Time: 03:05 More in Film & Animation
0 Views
15:56:50 05/21/12
Vindictus Europe Succubus and Glas Trailer [HD]
[LESS INFO] 0 VIEWS | ADDED 15:56:50 05/21/12
Vindictus Europe Succubus and Glas Trailer [HD]
Vindictus Europe Succubus and Glas Trailer [HD] Developer: devCat Studios Release: 2012 Genre: RPG Platform: PC Publisher: Nexon Website: vindicus.nexoneu.com Succubus Enter the chambers of this beautiful seductress, a lady that is sure to take your breath away. But be weary of her beauty, as love and lives are fragile things. Two possessions this deadly mistress can easily take. Glas Ghaibheleann A demonic colossal who, for many years, has been chained and made to suffer. Now he's free from his prison and his suffering is trivial compared to his burning desire to kill. Mercenaries who face him will test not only their skills but their courage and faith. Glas Ghaibheleann not only awes the player with its appearance, but it has unique abilities as well. Mercenaries, prepare for a whole new battle! IF IT'S NEW, YOU'LL FIND IT HERE: www.insidegamingdaily.com FOR MORE MACHINIMA, GO TO: www.youtube.com www.youtube.com www.youtube.com www.youtube.com www.youtube.com TAGS: Vindictus Europe Trailer succubus glas ghaibheleann official gameplay machinima video game gaming pc steam windows nexon rpg expansion From: MachinimaTrailer Views: 1160 33 ratings Time: 01:24 More in Gaming
0 Views
02:35:58 05/19/12
Immigrant workers at high risk of sexual violence need Senate's Violence Against Women Act
[LESS INFO] 0 VIEWS | ADDED 02:35:58 05/19/12
Immigrant workers at high risk of sexual violence need Senate's Violence Against Women Act
Grace Meng, a researcher for Human Rights Watch, joins "Viewpoint" host Eliot Sptizer to talk about a newly released Human Rights Watch report that finds immigrant workers in the agricultural industry face an extremely high risk of sexual violence and harassment. This data was published the day before the House GOP passed a version of the Violence Against Women Act that strips the limited but vital protections undocumented workers currently possess and which the Senate version includes. "All persons, regardless of their immigration status, have a right to protection from crimes and other abuses," Meng says. "But what is really troubling about the growing anti-immigrant sentiment is that there's this idea that if you have violated immigration law suddenly you're no longer entitled to these rights." Tune in Weeknights at 8:00/7:00c on Current TV current.com From: Current Views: 369 19 ratings Time: 03:31 More in Shows
0 Views
23:07:30 05/18/12
The Possession Trailer Official 2012 [1080 HD] - Jeffrey Dean Morgan, Kyra Sedgwick
[LESS INFO] 0 VIEWS | ADDED 23:07:30 05/18/12
The Possession Trailer Official 2012 [1080 HD] - Jeffrey Dean Morgan, Kyra Sedgwick
bit.ly - Click to Subscribe! Facebook.com - Become a Fan! Twitter.com - Follow Us! The Possession hits theaters on August 31st, 2012. Cast: Jeffrey Dean Morgan, Kyra Sedgwick Based on a true story, THE POSSESSION is the terrifying story of how one family must unite in order to survive the wrath of an unspeakable evil Clyde (Jeffrey Dean Morgan) and Stephanie Brenek (Kyra Sedgwick) see little cause for alarm when their youngest daughter Em becomes oddly obsessed with an antique wooden box she purchased at a yard sale. But as Em's behavior becomes increasingly erratic, the couple fears the presence of a malevolent force in their midst, only to discover that the box was built to contain a dibbuk, a dislocated spirit that inhabits and ultimately devours its human host. Starring Jeffrey Dean Morgan (WATCHMEN) and Kyra Sedgwick ("The Closer"), THE POSSESSION is directed by Ole Bornedal (NIGHTWATCH), written by Juliet Snowden & Stile. s White, and produced by horror master Sam Raimi along with Rob Tapert and JR Young. Lionsgate and Ghost House Pictures present. The Possession trailer courtesy Lionsgate. From: ClevverMovies Views: 13633 367 ratings Time: 02:34 More in Film & Animation
0 Views
20:18:32 05/18/12
Possession - Official Trailer [HD]
[LESS INFO] 0 VIEWS | ADDED 20:18:32 05/18/12
Possession - Official Trailer [HD]
Subscribe ow.ly | Facebook ow.ly | Twitter ow.ly Release Date: 31 August 2012 Genre: Horror | Thriller Cast: Natasha Calis, Jeffrey Dean Morgan, Kyra Sedgwick Directors: Ole Bornedal Writer: Juliet Snowden, Stiles White Studio: Lionsgate Plot: A young girl buys an antique box at a yard sale, unaware that inside the collectible lives a malicious ancient spirit. The girl's father teams with his ex-wife to find a way to end the curse upon their child. From: trailers Views: 66166 1379 ratings Time: 02:31 More in Entertainment
2 Views
15:22:42 05/18/12
0 Views
02:02:29 05/18/12
'The Possession' Trailer - New thriller starring Madison Davenport and Jeffrey Dean Morgan
[LESS INFO] 0 VIEWS | ADDED 02:02:29 05/18/12
'The Possession' Trailer - New thriller starring Madison Davenport and Jeffrey Dean Morgan
Hannah (Madison Davenport) is possessed by an ancient demon in this trailer for horror 'Possession'. Hannah's father (Jeffrey Dean Morgan) and mother (Kyra Sedgwick) are helpless to save her. Find out what's next on www.hitfix.com and subscribe to our YouTube channel From: hitfixcom Views: 295 8 ratings Time: 02:31 More in Entertainment
2 Views
22:48:30 05/17/12
It's Casual - Live in Studio B - Part 1 - The New Los Angeles
[LESS INFO] 2 VIEWS | ADDED 22:48:30 05/17/12
Part 1 of It's Casual performing live at Mevio Studios in San Francisco
For the entire performance CLICK HERE
WEBSITE FACEBOOK TWITTER MYSPACE YOUTUBE
BIO:
Like most Angelenos, Eddie Solis is pissed about the traffic on the 101. Unlike most Angelenos, Eddie Solis writes songs about being pissed about the traffic on the 101.
Solis’ band, an impossibly loud punk/hardcore duo called It’s Casual, addresses transit issues with an urgency hitherto unmatched in the realm of urban planning. Imagine Henry Rollins at a City Council Transportation Committee meeting, all neck veins and municipal outrage, and you get the picture.
Onstage, Solis’ eyes bulge amid a shock of curly hair, his throat emitting the collective war cry of a million frustrated commuters: “Los Angeles! There’s too many people! I want them to go away!”
His isn’t the Los Angeles of Priuses, Pilates and brunch, but the L.A. of undocumented immigrants, hardcore music and bus-stop delays. After nearly 10 years of ceaseless yelling, It’s Casual have a busy year ahead of them, what with slots on Fu Manchu’s North American tour, a forthcoming sequel to their ’08 ode to the city, The New Los Angeles, and, maybe, a European tour.
“We’ve been working at it and believing in this kind of music — which I call L.A. hardcore or L.A. skate rock — every day,” says Solis. His gaze is unflinching, and his voice is smog-raspened. He calls It’s Casual “L.A.’s only two-piece hardcore band” and is serious about his art. “I don’t take it lightly. It all comes from deep within.”
It’s Casual formed in 2001, the name inspired by a line in Cameron Crowe’s obscure follow-up to Fast Times at Ridgemont High, called The Wild Life. In it, a character played by the late Christopher Penn replies with “It’s casual” every time he is asked a question. Solis currently has a similar relationship with drummers — he’s between them. As far as a third member? “We kept trying to find a bassist, and they kept flaking,” Solis says.
The band’s sonic boom is amazing, considering there are only two of them. The secret to their sound is a unique pedal and mic’ing system. Solis’ guitar is actually wired to two amps for added punch. The results are so thunderous that fellow musicians have been known to come early to shows to watch him set up. (“There is a special formula with different pedals,” he explains of his sound. He’s trying to register it as intellectual property.)
It’s Casual’s first record, The New Los Angeles, came out in fall 2007, and was inspired by Solis’ commute from Pico Rivera to Hollywood. Tracks include “EZ Pass,” about the public transit ticket, and “The Red Line” (the handy subway that connects North Hollywood to Union Station). Most of It’s Casual’s songs last around two minutes and contain no more than three or four lyrics, hammering home their message with a directness most public servants and council officials have yet to master. Even Councilman Bill Rosendahl, chair of Los Angeles’ Transportation Committee, is impressed. “Music is a good way to get transportation messages across,” he says during a recent phone call, adding that he hoped It’s Casual were aware that plans for the Purple Line are afoot. “They should write a song about the Purple Line!” he enthuses, suggesting possible lyrics, singing: “The Purple Line/In my lifetime!”
It’s not all subways and off-ramps. Solis ventures into other matters. “Cholas Are Loyal,” for example, is all about the advantages of dating Latinas. And It’s Casual’s next album, The New Los Angeles II: Less Violence, More Violins, is inspired primarily by the California education budget deficit. “Do you think It’s Casual will translate in Europe?” he wonders, aware of his band’s distinctly local messages. But wherever there is a rush hour, there are people who identify with Eddie Solis.
Born and raised in East Los Angeles County, Solis is “the result of basically growing up around a gang-infested area with lots of negativity.” He turned to music and skateboarding as an escape, and was 15 when he started his first band — a Ramones cover group called Endless Vacation, which played shows in his parents’ living room. He got “the heaviness” from his father, who used to carry his young son around the house on his shoulders while listening to Black Sabbath, Led Zeppelin and the Who. “They weren’t handing me money to buy me instruments,” Solis says, “but they were, like, ‘Hey, listen, we know you wanna do this, so here’s our backyard and here’s our living room.’ Which is pretty punk.”
His parents let him build a halfpipe in the back, and Solis would “put Slayer on the radio superloud” and learn skateboarding tricks with his friends. “That would be Friday night, and then Saturday we would have a show on the ramp and take donations to keep it refurbished.” Skate videos informed his taste in music — the teenage Solis would grab a pen and paper and pause the VCR to jot down names of bands like Black Flag, Dinosaur Junior, Hüsker Dü, “… all the good stuff on SST.”
Fast-forward to 1993, when Solis started interning at metal record label Century Media, which gave him a taste of hardcore commuting. Taking the bus from Pico Rivera to the label’s headquarters in Santa Monica every day was a formative experience, but he only lasted about a month (“Well, you know, it was a long trek”). That job led to a position at Priority Records, down the street in the CNN building. That’s where he learned how to sell records, a job he still does today as sales manager at doom-metal label Southern Lord.
Solis also worked as a publicist for Black Flag at SST, under the label’s founder, Black Flag guitarist Greg Ginn. Basically it was the gig of Solis’ 15-year-old dreams. “I took the job because I thought it would be great to work for an icon, a legend,” he says. It was there that he learned the philosophy of DIY.
Three years ago, while strolling down the road near the Southern Lord offices in East Hollywood, Solis came upon the Relax Bar, a 150-person capacity Thai karaoke bar with an orange awning. Solis has single-handedly transformed it into a hub for L.A.’s heavy music scene. He’s booked more than 400 thrash, doom, noise and punk bands there in the last three years. “I was going to lunch, walking past the Relax Bar and the door was open. I saw a stage and it had this dark, musty kind of vibe. Kind of grim in terms of the atmosphere but real positive in terms of what you could do there. I thought, if I could get these owners on the same page and book any format — whether it’s satanic black metal or really avant-garde stuff — that would be great.”
The Relax Bar’s owners, despite not being fluent in English, supported Solis’ vision, prompting the most unlikely cultural union since Weezer recruited Kenny G. “They had a guy translating as I tried to describe the kinds of bands I wanted to book, using metal as my main focus. I said ‘Ozzfest, no — not those kinds of bands. Stuff that’s a little more creative, full of more soul, and more organic.” He played them some It’s Casual and High on Fire and a selection of punk and grindcore CDs, and they seemed to like it. Turns out the ballad-loving Thai karaoke bar owners, like Solis, possessed an unyielding passion for DIY. “They know how much work it is to bring your gear out, record your own stuff and self-release records,” says Solis. “They are all musicians themselves.” It’s been a happy union ever since, with some of the gnarliest underground bands in L.A., from Municipal Waste to Chingalera, rocking the Relax Bar’s tiny stage amid the perpetual aroma of green curry and ginger — and, when the door pops open, the faint smell of bus exhaust.
0 Views
22:39:27 05/17/12
It's Casual - Live in Studio B - Part 2 - The Red Line
[LESS INFO] 0 VIEWS | ADDED 22:39:27 05/17/12
Part 2 of It's Casual performing live at Mevio Studios in San Francisco
For the entire performance CLICK HERE
WEBSITE FACEBOOK TWITTER MYSPACE YOUTUBE
BIO:
Like most Angelenos, Eddie Solis is pissed about the traffic on the 101. Unlike most Angelenos, Eddie Solis writes songs about being pissed about the traffic on the 101.
Solis’ band, an impossibly loud punk/hardcore duo called It’s Casual, addresses transit issues with an urgency hitherto unmatched in the realm of urban planning. Imagine Henry Rollins at a City Council Transportation Committee meeting, all neck veins and municipal outrage, and you get the picture.
Onstage, Solis’ eyes bulge amid a shock of curly hair, his throat emitting the collective war cry of a million frustrated commuters: “Los Angeles! There’s too many people! I want them to go away!”
His isn’t the Los Angeles of Priuses, Pilates and brunch, but the L.A. of undocumented immigrants, hardcore music and bus-stop delays. After nearly 10 years of ceaseless yelling, It’s Casual have a busy year ahead of them, what with slots on Fu Manchu’s North American tour, a forthcoming sequel to their ’08 ode to the city, The New Los Angeles, and, maybe, a European tour.
“We’ve been working at it and believing in this kind of music — which I call L.A. hardcore or L.A. skate rock — every day,” says Solis. His gaze is unflinching, and his voice is smog-raspened. He calls It’s Casual “L.A.’s only two-piece hardcore band” and is serious about his art. “I don’t take it lightly. It all comes from deep within.”
It’s Casual formed in 2001, the name inspired by a line in Cameron Crowe’s obscure follow-up to Fast Times at Ridgemont High, called The Wild Life. In it, a character played by the late Christopher Penn replies with “It’s casual” every time he is asked a question. Solis currently has a similar relationship with drummers — he’s between them. As far as a third member? “We kept trying to find a bassist, and they kept flaking,” Solis says.
The band’s sonic boom is amazing, considering there are only two of them. The secret to their sound is a unique pedal and mic’ing system. Solis’ guitar is actually wired to two amps for added punch. The results are so thunderous that fellow musicians have been known to come early to shows to watch him set up. (“There is a special formula with different pedals,” he explains of his sound. He’s trying to register it as intellectual property.)
It’s Casual’s first record, The New Los Angeles, came out in fall 2007, and was inspired by Solis’ commute from Pico Rivera to Hollywood. Tracks include “EZ Pass,” about the public transit ticket, and “The Red Line” (the handy subway that connects North Hollywood to Union Station). Most of It’s Casual’s songs last around two minutes and contain no more than three or four lyrics, hammering home their message with a directness most public servants and council officials have yet to master. Even Councilman Bill Rosendahl, chair of Los Angeles’ Transportation Committee, is impressed. “Music is a good way to get transportation messages across,” he says during a recent phone call, adding that he hoped It’s Casual were aware that plans for the Purple Line are afoot. “They should write a song about the Purple Line!” he enthuses, suggesting possible lyrics, singing: “The Purple Line/In my lifetime!”
It’s not all subways and off-ramps. Solis ventures into other matters. “Cholas Are Loyal,” for example, is all about the advantages of dating Latinas. And It’s Casual’s next album, The New Los Angeles II: Less Violence, More Violins, is inspired primarily by the California education budget deficit. “Do you think It’s Casual will translate in Europe?” he wonders, aware of his band’s distinctly local messages. But wherever there is a rush hour, there are people who identify with Eddie Solis.
Born and raised in East Los Angeles County, Solis is “the result of basically growing up around a gang-infested area with lots of negativity.” He turned to music and skateboarding as an escape, and was 15 when he started his first band — a Ramones cover group called Endless Vacation, which played shows in his parents’ living room. He got “the heaviness” from his father, who used to carry his young son around the house on his shoulders while listening to Black Sabbath, Led Zeppelin and the Who. “They weren’t handing me money to buy me instruments,” Solis says, “but they were, like, ‘Hey, listen, we know you wanna do this, so here’s our backyard and here’s our living room.’ Which is pretty punk.”
His parents let him build a halfpipe in the back, and Solis would “put Slayer on the radio superloud” and learn skateboarding tricks with his friends. “That would be Friday night, and then Saturday we would have a show on the ramp and take donations to keep it refurbished.” Skate videos informed his taste in music — the teenage Solis would grab a pen and paper and pause the VCR to jot down names of bands like Black Flag, Dinosaur Junior, Hüsker Dü, “… all the good stuff on SST.”
Fast-forward to 1993, when Solis started interning at metal record label Century Media, which gave him a taste of hardcore commuting. Taking the bus from Pico Rivera to the label’s headquarters in Santa Monica every day was a formative experience, but he only lasted about a month (“Well, you know, it was a long trek”). That job led to a position at Priority Records, down the street in the CNN building. That’s where he learned how to sell records, a job he still does today as sales manager at doom-metal label Southern Lord.
Solis also worked as a publicist for Black Flag at SST, under the label’s founder, Black Flag guitarist Greg Ginn. Basically it was the gig of Solis’ 15-year-old dreams. “I took the job because I thought it would be great to work for an icon, a legend,” he says. It was there that he learned the philosophy of DIY.
Three years ago, while strolling down the road near the Southern Lord offices in East Hollywood, Solis came upon the Relax Bar, a 150-person capacity Thai karaoke bar with an orange awning. Solis has single-handedly transformed it into a hub for L.A.’s heavy music scene. He’s booked more than 400 thrash, doom, noise and punk bands there in the last three years. “I was going to lunch, walking past the Relax Bar and the door was open. I saw a stage and it had this dark, musty kind of vibe. Kind of grim in terms of the atmosphere but real positive in terms of what you could do there. I thought, if I could get these owners on the same page and book any format — whether it’s satanic black metal or really avant-garde stuff — that would be great.”
The Relax Bar’s owners, despite not being fluent in English, supported Solis’ vision, prompting the most unlikely cultural union since Weezer recruited Kenny G. “They had a guy translating as I tried to describe the kinds of bands I wanted to book, using metal as my main focus. I said ‘Ozzfest, no — not those kinds of bands. Stuff that’s a little more creative, full of more soul, and more organic.” He played them some It’s Casual and High on Fire and a selection of punk and grindcore CDs, and they seemed to like it. Turns out the ballad-loving Thai karaoke bar owners, like Solis, possessed an unyielding passion for DIY. “They know how much work it is to bring your gear out, record your own stuff and self-release records,” says Solis. “They are all musicians themselves.” It’s been a happy union ever since, with some of the gnarliest underground bands in L.A., from Municipal Waste to Chingalera, rocking the Relax Bar’s tiny stage amid the perpetual aroma of green curry and ginger — and, when the door pops open, the faint smell of bus exhaust.
0 Views
22:21:27 05/17/12
It's Casual - Live in Studio B - Part 3 - EZ Pass
[LESS INFO] 0 VIEWS | ADDED 22:21:27 05/17/12
Part 3 of It's Casual performing live at Mevio Studios in San Francisco
For the entire performance CLICK HERE
WEBSITE FACEBOOK TWITTER MYSPACE YOUTUBE
BIO:
Like most Angelenos, Eddie Solis is pissed about the traffic on the 101. Unlike most Angelenos, Eddie Solis writes songs about being pissed about the traffic on the 101.
Solis’ band, an impossibly loud punk/hardcore duo called It’s Casual, addresses transit issues with an urgency hitherto unmatched in the realm of urban planning. Imagine Henry Rollins at a City Council Transportation Committee meeting, all neck veins and municipal outrage, and you get the picture.
Onstage, Solis’ eyes bulge amid a shock of curly hair, his throat emitting the collective war cry of a million frustrated commuters: “Los Angeles! There’s too many people! I want them to go away!”
His isn’t the Los Angeles of Priuses, Pilates and brunch, but the L.A. of undocumented immigrants, hardcore music and bus-stop delays. After nearly 10 years of ceaseless yelling, It’s Casual have a busy year ahead of them, what with slots on Fu Manchu’s North American tour, a forthcoming sequel to their ’08 ode to the city, The New Los Angeles, and, maybe, a European tour.
“We’ve been working at it and believing in this kind of music — which I call L.A. hardcore or L.A. skate rock — every day,” says Solis. His gaze is unflinching, and his voice is smog-raspened. He calls It’s Casual “L.A.’s only two-piece hardcore band” and is serious about his art. “I don’t take it lightly. It all comes from deep within.”
It’s Casual formed in 2001, the name inspired by a line in Cameron Crowe’s obscure follow-up to Fast Times at Ridgemont High, called The Wild Life. In it, a character played by the late Christopher Penn replies with “It’s casual” every time he is asked a question. Solis currently has a similar relationship with drummers — he’s between them. As far as a third member? “We kept trying to find a bassist, and they kept flaking,” Solis says.
The band’s sonic boom is amazing, considering there are only two of them. The secret to their sound is a unique pedal and mic’ing system. Solis’ guitar is actually wired to two amps for added punch. The results are so thunderous that fellow musicians have been known to come early to shows to watch him set up. (“There is a special formula with different pedals,” he explains of his sound. He’s trying to register it as intellectual property.)
It’s Casual’s first record, The New Los Angeles, came out in fall 2007, and was inspired by Solis’ commute from Pico Rivera to Hollywood. Tracks include “EZ Pass,” about the public transit ticket, and “The Red Line” (the handy subway that connects North Hollywood to Union Station). Most of It’s Casual’s songs last around two minutes and contain no more than three or four lyrics, hammering home their message with a directness most public servants and council officials have yet to master. Even Councilman Bill Rosendahl, chair of Los Angeles’ Transportation Committee, is impressed. “Music is a good way to get transportation messages across,” he says during a recent phone call, adding that he hoped It’s Casual were aware that plans for the Purple Line are afoot. “They should write a song about the Purple Line!” he enthuses, suggesting possible lyrics, singing: “The Purple Line/In my lifetime!”
It’s not all subways and off-ramps. Solis ventures into other matters. “Cholas Are Loyal,” for example, is all about the advantages of dating Latinas. And It’s Casual’s next album, The New Los Angeles II: Less Violence, More Violins, is inspired primarily by the California education budget deficit. “Do you think It’s Casual will translate in Europe?” he wonders, aware of his band’s distinctly local messages. But wherever there is a rush hour, there are people who identify with Eddie Solis.
Born and raised in East Los Angeles County, Solis is “the result of basically growing up around a gang-infested area with lots of negativity.” He turned to music and skateboarding as an escape, and was 15 when he started his first band — a Ramones cover group called Endless Vacation, which played shows in his parents’ living room. He got “the heaviness” from his father, who used to carry his young son around the house on his shoulders while listening to Black Sabbath, Led Zeppelin and the Who. “They weren’t handing me money to buy me instruments,” Solis says, “but they were, like, ‘Hey, listen, we know you wanna do this, so here’s our backyard and here’s our living room.’ Which is pretty punk.”
His parents let him build a halfpipe in the back, and Solis would “put Slayer on the radio superloud” and learn skateboarding tricks with his friends. “That would be Friday night, and then Saturday we would have a show on the ramp and take donations to keep it refurbished.” Skate videos informed his taste in music — the teenage Solis would grab a pen and paper and pause the VCR to jot down names of bands like Black Flag, Dinosaur Junior, Hüsker Dü, “… all the good stuff on SST.”
Fast-forward to 1993, when Solis started interning at metal record label Century Media, which gave him a taste of hardcore commuting. Taking the bus from Pico Rivera to the label’s headquarters in Santa Monica every day was a formative experience, but he only lasted about a month (“Well, you know, it was a long trek”). That job led to a position at Priority Records, down the street in the CNN building. That’s where he learned how to sell records, a job he still does today as sales manager at doom-metal label Southern Lord.
Solis also worked as a publicist for Black Flag at SST, under the label’s founder, Black Flag guitarist Greg Ginn. Basically it was the gig of Solis’ 15-year-old dreams. “I took the job because I thought it would be great to work for an icon, a legend,” he says. It was there that he learned the philosophy of DIY.
Three years ago, while strolling down the road near the Southern Lord offices in East Hollywood, Solis came upon the Relax Bar, a 150-person capacity Thai karaoke bar with an orange awning. Solis has single-handedly transformed it into a hub for L.A.’s heavy music scene. He’s booked more than 400 thrash, doom, noise and punk bands there in the last three years. “I was going to lunch, walking past the Relax Bar and the door was open. I saw a stage and it had this dark, musty kind of vibe. Kind of grim in terms of the atmosphere but real positive in terms of what you could do there. I thought, if I could get these owners on the same page and book any format — whether it’s satanic black metal or really avant-garde stuff — that would be great.”
The Relax Bar’s owners, despite not being fluent in English, supported Solis’ vision, prompting the most unlikely cultural union since Weezer recruited Kenny G. “They had a guy translating as I tried to describe the kinds of bands I wanted to book, using metal as my main focus. I said ‘Ozzfest, no — not those kinds of bands. Stuff that’s a little more creative, full of more soul, and more organic.” He played them some It’s Casual and High on Fire and a selection of punk and grindcore CDs, and they seemed to like it. Turns out the ballad-loving Thai karaoke bar owners, like Solis, possessed an unyielding passion for DIY. “They know how much work it is to bring your gear out, record your own stuff and self-release records,” says Solis. “They are all musicians themselves.” It’s been a happy union ever since, with some of the gnarliest underground bands in L.A., from Municipal Waste to Chingalera, rocking the Relax Bar’s tiny stage amid the perpetual aroma of green curry and ginger — and, when the door pops open, the faint smell of bus exhaust.
0 Views
21:54:59 05/17/12
It's Casual - Live in Studio B
[LESS INFO] 0 VIEWS | ADDED 21:54:59 05/17/12
It's Casual performs live at Mevio Studios in San Francisco
BIO:
Like most Angelenos, Eddie Solis is pissed about the traffic on the 101. Unlike most Angelenos, Eddie Solis writes songs about being pissed about the traffic on the 101.
Solis’ band, an impossibly loud punk/hardcore duo called It’s Casual, addresses transit issues with an urgency hitherto unmatched in the realm of urban planning. Imagine Henry Rollins at a City Council Transportation Committee meeting, all neck veins and municipal outrage, and you get the picture.
Onstage, Solis’ eyes bulge amid a shock of curly hair, his throat emitting the collective war cry of a million frustrated commuters: “Los Angeles! There’s too many people! I want them to go away!”
His isn’t the Los Angeles of Priuses, Pilates and brunch, but the L.A. of undocumented immigrants, hardcore music and bus-stop delays. After nearly 10 years of ceaseless yelling, It’s Casual have a busy year ahead of them, what with slots on Fu Manchu’s North American tour, a forthcoming sequel to their ’08 ode to the city, The New Los Angeles, and, maybe, a European tour.
“We’ve been working at it and believing in this kind of music — which I call L.A. hardcore or L.A. skate rock — every day,” says Solis. His gaze is unflinching, and his voice is smog-raspened. He calls It’s Casual “L.A.’s only two-piece hardcore band” and is serious about his art. “I don’t take it lightly. It all comes from deep within.”
It’s Casual formed in 2001, the name inspired by a line in Cameron Crowe’s obscure follow-up to Fast Times at Ridgemont High, called The Wild Life. In it, a character played by the late Christopher Penn replies with “It’s casual” every time he is asked a question. Solis currently has a similar relationship with drummers — he’s between them. As far as a third member? “We kept trying to find a bassist, and they kept flaking,” Solis says.
The band’s sonic boom is amazing, considering there are only two of them. The secret to their sound is a unique pedal and mic’ing system. Solis’ guitar is actually wired to two amps for added punch. The results are so thunderous that fellow musicians have been known to come early to shows to watch him set up. (“There is a special formula with different pedals,” he explains of his sound. He’s trying to register it as intellectual property.)
It’s Casual’s first record, The New Los Angeles, came out in fall 2007, and was inspired by Solis’ commute from Pico Rivera to Hollywood. Tracks include “EZ Pass,” about the public transit ticket, and “The Red Line” (the handy subway that connects North Hollywood to Union Station). Most of It’s Casual’s songs last around two minutes and contain no more than three or four lyrics, hammering home their message with a directness most public servants and council officials have yet to master. Even Councilman Bill Rosendahl, chair of Los Angeles’ Transportation Committee, is impressed. “Music is a good way to get transportation messages across,” he says during a recent phone call, adding that he hoped It’s Casual were aware that plans for the Purple Line are afoot. “They should write a song about the Purple Line!” he enthuses, suggesting possible lyrics, singing: “The Purple Line/In my lifetime!”
It’s not all subways and off-ramps. Solis ventures into other matters. “Cholas Are Loyal,” for example, is all about the advantages of dating Latinas. And It’s Casual’s next album, The New Los Angeles II: Less Violence, More Violins, is inspired primarily by the California education budget deficit. “Do you think It’s Casual will translate in Europe?” he wonders, aware of his band’s distinctly local messages. But wherever there is a rush hour, there are people who identify with Eddie Solis.
Born and raised in East Los Angeles County, Solis is “the result of basically growing up around a gang-infested area with lots of negativity.” He turned to music and skateboarding as an escape, and was 15 when he started his first band — a Ramones cover group called Endless Vacation, which played shows in his parents’ living room. He got “the heaviness” from his father, who used to carry his young son around the house on his shoulders while listening to Black Sabbath, Led Zeppelin and the Who. “They weren’t handing me money to buy me instruments,” Solis says, “but they were, like, ‘Hey, listen, we know you wanna do this, so here’s our backyard and here’s our living room.’ Which is pretty punk.”
His parents let him build a halfpipe in the back, and Solis would “put Slayer on the radio superloud” and learn skateboarding tricks with his friends. “That would be Friday night, and then Saturday we would have a show on the ramp and take donations to keep it refurbished.” Skate videos informed his taste in music — the teenage Solis would grab a pen and paper and pause the VCR to jot down names of bands like Black Flag, Dinosaur Junior, Hüsker Dü, “… all the good stuff on SST.”
Fast-forward to 1993, when Solis started interning at metal record label Century Media, which gave him a taste of hardcore commuting. Taking the bus from Pico Rivera to the label’s headquarters in Santa Monica every day was a formative experience, but he only lasted about a month (“Well, you know, it was a long trek”). That job led to a position at Priority Records, down the street in the CNN building. That’s where he learned how to sell records, a job he still does today as sales manager at doom-metal label Southern Lord.
Solis also worked as a publicist for Black Flag at SST, under the label’s founder, Black Flag guitarist Greg Ginn. Basically it was the gig of Solis’ 15-year-old dreams. “I took the job because I thought it would be great to work for an icon, a legend,” he says. It was there that he learned the philosophy of DIY.
Three years ago, while strolling down the road near the Southern Lord offices in East Hollywood, Solis came upon the Relax Bar, a 150-person capacity Thai karaoke bar with an orange awning. Solis has single-handedly transformed it into a hub for L.A.’s heavy music scene. He’s booked more than 400 thrash, doom, noise and punk bands there in the last three years. “I was going to lunch, walking past the Relax Bar and the door was open. I saw a stage and it had this dark, musty kind of vibe. Kind of grim in terms of the atmosphere but real positive in terms of what you could do there. I thought, if I could get these owners on the same page and book any format — whether it’s satanic black metal or really avant-garde stuff — that would be great.”
The Relax Bar’s owners, despite not being fluent in English, supported Solis’ vision, prompting the most unlikely cultural union since Weezer recruited Kenny G. “They had a guy translating as I tried to describe the kinds of bands I wanted to book, using metal as my main focus. I said ‘Ozzfest, no — not those kinds of bands. Stuff that’s a little more creative, full of more soul, and more organic.” He played them some It’s Casual and High on Fire and a selection of punk and grindcore CDs, and they seemed to like it. Turns out the ballad-loving Thai karaoke bar owners, like Solis, possessed an unyielding passion for DIY. “They know how much work it is to bring your gear out, record your own stuff and self-release records,” says Solis. “They are all musicians themselves.” It’s been a happy union ever since, with some of the gnarliest underground bands in L.A., from Municipal Waste to Chingalera, rocking the Relax Bar’s tiny stage amid the perpetual aroma of green curry and ginger — and, when the door pops open, the faint smell of bus exhaust.
0 Views
22:35:26 05/16/12
The Possession Official Trailer #1 (2012) - Horror Movie HD
[LESS INFO] 0 VIEWS | ADDED 22:35:26 05/16/12
The Possession Official Trailer #1 (2012) - Horror Movie HD
Subscribe to TRAILERS: bit.ly Subscribe to COMING SOON: bit.ly The Possession Official Trailer #1 (2012) - Horror Movie HD A young girl buys an antique box at a yard sale, unaware that inside the collectible lives a malicious ancient spirit. The girl's father teams with his ex-wife to find a way to end the curse upon their child. "Ole Bornedal" "Sam Raimi" "Natasha Calis" "Jeffrey Dean Morgan" "Kyra Sedgwick" "The Possession movie" "The Possession trailer" "The Possession HD" HD 2012 movie clips movieclips movieclipstrailers movieclipscomingsoom "Juliet Snowden" "Stiles White" From: MovieclipsCOMINGSOON Views: 10667 140 ratings Time: 02:31 More in Film & Animation




![Vindictus Europe Succubus and Glas Trailer [HD]](http://i.ytimg.com/vi/X-nIB-XIxxo/default.jpg)

![The Possession Trailer Official 2012 [1080 HD] - Jeffrey Dean Morgan, Kyra Sedgwick](http://i.ytimg.com/vi/aNf8GtSamGk/default.jpg)
![Possession - Official Trailer [HD]](http://i.ytimg.com/vi/OxMoJtipJg0/default.jpg)



