Patrick Bateman
Just trying to fit in.
By now, we're all familiar with the blogs 'Totally Looks Like' and 'Cannot Unsee.' A new blog called 'Facemath' has taken the best elements from both of those popular online destinations and added arithmetic to give us the recipe for famous facial deconstruction.
There comes a point in media production when the quality of content is so bad, it's good. This rule definitely applies to the worst album covers ever produced by modern music.
'Gracias Por La Musica'
Uh... de nada?
This is the official stamp of '70s Swedish pop/rock. If you wanted to get it there yesterday, slap this bad boy on your package.
The colorful flight suits could indicate the group's about to take you on a flight to "funkytown," but their demeanor says, "Hey, we're already there -- did you enjoy the trip?"
While the ladies kind of pull it off, it's a whole 'nother story for the men. Still, we'd rat
'Back to the S__t!'
This 1989 album by soul queen Millie Jackson features the R&B singer sitting on a toilet with a pair of panties down to her ankles, with a strained expression on her face. First of all, girls
The second half of 'Tosh.0's' fourth season kicked off last night with a "Web Redemption" for the singer and songwriter behind the internet jam about cheating and verification of said cheating via smelling your partner's privates.
Though the show had plenty of cringeworthy clips, perhaps the one portion that made the most waves was Daniel's announcement about the premiere date for his new Comedy Central TV show, 'Brickleberry.'
Summer is wedding season but it's also a time for incredibly orchestrated and coordinated (possibly over-the-top?) videos of marriage proposals. There was the guy who rented out a movie theater and had the trailer of his love story play out into his eventual question, the one in the park, the one at Disney. This season kicks off with what the question-popper claims is the "world's first live lip dub marriage proposal."
Bill Murray is not your typical movie star. He has a knack for popping up in random situations and pulling out memorable moments for fans that go far beyond a picture, a handshake and an autograph. Though this video is just about a year old, it recently caught fire. Why? It's a mystery. We do know it's yet another reason to be a Bill Murray fan -- his off-screen antics are just as classic as his professional credits.
Showing up to events uninvited is a science. Unlike the unbelievable success of Vince Vaughn and Owen Wilson's characters in 'Wedding Crashers,' the brave attempt usually ends with the spontaneous guests escorted to the door. In Boxford, however, it was a herd of cattle that killed the moooooood and sent the attendees packing.
Simpsons did it! Simpsons did it! That was the collective criticism facing 'South Park' co-creators Trey Parker and Matt Stone in the midst of the show's sixth season. In 2002, the animated series had attained amazing success, but, much like 'Family Guy', would come under scrutiny for "copying" 'The Simpsons.' So, Trey and Matt created an entire episode poking fun at that claim.
A decade later, a Tumblr comes along that shows less cultivated 'Simpsons' diehards just how much 'The Simpsons' has "copied" (read: paid homage to) classic movies.
If you've ever watched 'Jimmy Kimmel Live,' you know they have a segment where parents royally mess with their kids. It's some of the funniest content on the show, but part of us thinks it encourages parents everywhere to become gonzo filmmakers and potential 'Jackass' cast members.
It also leads us to believe that maybe parents and kids are in cahoots, staging these cute snippets from domestication. Take this video featuring a kid trying to retrieve his shoe from a laundry hamper (what is it doing in the hamper in the first place?) who gets stuck.