Word: rem
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...unlike the “Rem-Dog” (McDonough’s nickname for Remy), McDonough has gained a soft-spot in the hearts of Boston fans with demonstrated baseball knowledge, humor, and intelligent game-observations. Remy seems like a nice guy, but his baseball knowledge out side of the American League is questionable at best (he once admitted on-air that he had never heard of many of the reserves on the National League All-Star team...
...group possesses a harder drum sound than most punk bands. Baker described them as having “more of a rock edge,” with various influences from Slayer to REM to Elvis. REM was Baker’s favorite band as a kid: “I was a huge fan. I would daydream about something happening to one of the members and me filling...
...trash, as well as New Yorkers’ orange peels, abandoned shirts and a few seemingly lost souls. Tillmans, photographer extraordinaire and winner of the 2000 Turner Prize, has danced within the art and advertising worlds (simultaneously) while taking pictures of everyone from his punky friends to Rem Koolhaas and other culture-starlets. His first solo exhibition at an American museum opened last Friday at the Busch-Reisinger Museum and runs through...
Invisible Downtown is an American band of the old-fashioned REM school. Their lyrics are full of locale-specific imagery and stories of cruel women; one song even name-checks “The Great Gatsby.” There is little room for Radiohead-style navel-inspection in their power-pop broadside. “Power-pop” is an unfortunate term for anything except a large bubblegum balloon, but such are the vagaries of music terminology. Luckily, Invisible Downtown’s debut The Safest Place is one of the strongest arguments for the term?...
...Times Square, also by Gensler, is similarly divided into zones that let children act out their fantasies: Barbie merchandise is displayed in a life-size dream house, and an animatronic T. rex guards the dinosaur toys. One New York City Prada store, designed by the austerely hip Dutch architect Rem Koolhaas, is more than half amusement arcade, with everything from glass dressing rooms that become opaque when locked to a fold-out stage for performances and movie screenings. Theme-park shopping isn't just for Disney World...