Duff McKagan’s Loaded “The Taking” Ep.1 – Seattle

Exploring the lyrical content of The Taking album (released April 2011/Armoury Records), with a blend of documentary story-telling and music videos/live performance, The Taking was filmed in the band’s homebase of Seattle, WA. It is described as contemporary version of The Beatle’s “A Hard Day’s Night” meets Led Zeppelin’s “The Song Remains The Same”. In addition to band members Duff McKagan, Mike Squires, Jeff Rouse, and Isaac Carpenter, the film also features guest appearances by Jerry Cantrell and Sean Kinney (Alice In Chains), Gilby Clarke (Guns N’ Roses), Steve Jones (Sex Pistols), Billy F Gibbons (ZZ Top), and Lemmy Kilmister (Motörhead), among others.

Best Power Bank For The Steam Deck 🔋 Hands-On Testing With 5 Portable Batteries

Looking for a battery pack to charge the Deck on the Go? In this video, we test out 5 Portable Battery Banks on the new Valve Steam Deck from Anker, RavPower, Baseus, Blackweb and No Name COmpany on Amazon. Is A 20000 mAh Battery Pack Enough? The Steam deck has a 40Wh battery and can be charged at up to 40 Watts using a PD 3.0 Charger or external Battery back. Steam Deck Accessories

My Resident Evil Collection (Over 60 Games) – Radical Reggie

Radical Reggie – I don’t really Talk about the Resident Evil games much these days, but I do love the Series and the Lore it brought upon us over the years, I’m more of a old school Resident Evil fan meaning I’m into the tank controls and awkward camera angels the series was known for back in its beginnings. I do like the modern games as well, but not have actually made me scared like the original games.

 

OVER THE TOP (1987) Revisited: Sylvester Stallone Movie Review

Cannon Films were the kings of B-action movies in the mid-eighties, but they wanted to move into the big leagues. They set their sites on Sylvester Stallone, then at the peak of his popularity, to star in movies for them. Their first film together, Cobra, was not a typical Cannon movie. It had a huge budget – $25 million and was a co-production with a major studio, Warner Bros. It was meant to be a blockbuster and indeed was a financial success grossing $48 million at the domestic box office and about twice that domestically. Yet, it was considered a mild disappointment because Marion Cobretti did not become the next Rambo. Even still, Cannon had to be happy, and they doubled down on Sly, offering him the highest salary ever paid to a movie star at the time – $12 million – to star in 1987’s Over the Top.

Based on a script by actor Gary Conway and David Engelbach, the film was pitched as a low-key character-driven drama, with the lead earmarked for a guy like Don Johnson. The story of a man trying to win back his estranged son, once writer Stirling Silliphant, the writer of In The Heat of the Night, The Poseidon Adventure, and The Towering Inferno was brought in, it was pumped up to become an epic Rocky-esque tale, so who else could they get on board but Stallone?

The result was a major box office flop whose entire domestic gross didn’t cover Stallone’s salary, but in the decades since its cult status has grown to the point that it’s now one of Stallone’s most popular eighties movies.

Retro Gaming with a Heavy Metal Soundtrack