Word: ok
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...told her there was one other long pole in the room that she needed to grab,” he remembers, “so she punched me in the kidney and left.” Ruminated a chagrined Friedkin: “I guess it’s OK. I mean, I only have to see her for, hmmm, four hours a week in tutorial, two hours in lecture for Samurai, two hours in lecture for War and Politics and one hour for War and Politics section.” He paused. “Kill me now?...
...dexterity: “Scandal love, cause love full of scandal / . . .Well it’s the same tainted love in the music business / People they lose they brain just to get up in this / Let’s be a star for day, everything in life is just OK.” He connects this scenario to the T3’s earlier verse of a love between a man and a woman tainted and gone sour...
...there was no resentment in Kulash’s eyes last Friday as he played to a capacity crowd of frenzied fans at the House of Blues. After all, just two weeks earlier, his band, OK Go, released their eponymous first album to resounding critical acclaim. The disc debuted in the top spot on Billboard’s Heatseeker Album chart and their lead single, “Get Over It,” is shooting up through the Modern Rock chart. And he has since patched up things with Andy quite nicely. After the yo-yo incident, he claims...
Kulash is confident, and deservedly so. After meeting future OK Go bassist Tim Nordwind at the age of 11, the native Chicagoans started a band called the Greased Ferrets. Andy Duncan, after overcoming initial missteps, joined the party in high school, and Kulash met current drummer Dan Konopka while studying at Brown. After officially forming in 1999, OK Go finally broke when Ira Glass, host of the public radio show “This American Life,” requested that the band perform with him on a touring version of the show. Their fan base grew rapidly, and they...
...relatively fun and melodic gets us associated with the ’80s a lot. But I grew up on ’80s pop music, so it feels good to me.” But Kulash is also wary of the labels that critics often impose on OK Go. “I think a lot of times, people will throw in a description of us like ‘they’re part ’60s or part ’80s,’ but we’re certainly not one of those bands...