What is your all time favorite rock band or artist that 81% or more of this bored dislikes?

The Eagles may be hated enough by now to qualify

80's hair metal too

Ratt. Severely underrated.

Fuck.

I hate it when you have a solid poast.

This explains your prolonged absence. That, and the travel ban.

Travel ban???

No way I’m more concerned about deportation vato...

Trump ain’t a friend of my kind ...

Sledog? That you?[/b] There is something oddly familiar about your comebacks.

Not sure if this is some odd spit roast fantasy of yours.

Yep. That's you.
 
My first concert was Grand Funk Railroad in like 1970. My mom drove us to Seattle

I love Def Leppard. I only started listening to then this century so its still kind of new

I spent the 80's listening to funk and dance music

Why not both.gif?

Gap Band

 
My first concert was Grand Funk Railroad in like 1970. My mom drove us to Seattle

I love Def Leppard. [/b]I only started listening to then this century so its still kind of new

I spent the 80's listening to funk and dance music

The very earliest stuff is the best. It got a little poppy there in the early 90s. Every fucking fraternity on campus could not stop playing "Pour Some Sugar" day and fucking night. You could hear it from the fucking Ave. Those frat boys really loved their Def Leppard back in the day.

Let it Go and High and Dry - good shit.

Fun Fact: Pete Doubleday, the managing partner of EY's Portland office, was in the band that was to become Def Leppard. The guy actually did what is the right thing for 99.999% of the people 99.999% of the time by quitting the rock business and becoming an accountant. He didn't.

But in fairness, as the managing partner in Portland, and having run their London office, he's a fairly senior guy in a global firm and is not hurting for money.
 
My first concert was Grand Funk Railroad in like 1970. My mom drove us to Seattle

I love Def Leppard. [/b]I only started listening to then this century so its still kind of new

I spent the 80's listening to funk and dance music

The very earliest stuff is the best. It got a little poppy there in the early 90s. Every fucking fraternity on campus could not stop playing "Pour Some Sugar" day and fucking night. You could hear it from the fucking Ave. Those frat boys really loved their Def Leppard back in the day.

Let it Go and High and Dry - good shit.

Fun Fact: Pete Doubleday, the managing partner of EY's Portland office, was in the band that was to become Def Leppard. The guy actually did what is the right thing for 99.999% of the people 99.999% of the time by quitting the rock business and becoming an accountant. He didn't.

But in fairness, as the managing partner in Portland, and having run their London office, he's a fairly senior guy in a global firm and is not hurting for money.

Found the GDI
 
My first concert was Grand Funk Railroad in like 1970. My mom drove us to Seattle

I love Def Leppard. [/b]I only started listening to then this century so its still kind of new

I spent the 80's listening to funk and dance music

The very earliest stuff is the best. It got a little poppy there in the early 90s. Every fucking fraternity on campus could not stop playing "Pour Some Sugar" day and fucking night. You could hear it from the fucking Ave. Those frat boys really loved their Def Leppard back in the day.

Let it Go and High and Dry - good shit.

Fun Fact: Pete Doubleday, the managing partner of EY's Portland office, was in the band that was to become Def Leppard. The guy actually did what is the right thing for 99.999% of the people 99.999% of the time by quitting the rock business and becoming an accountant. He didn't.

But in fairness, as the managing partner in Portland, and having run their London office, he's a fairly senior guy in a global firm and is not hurting for money.

Found the GDI

Frat boys still love their Def Leppard.

 
My first concert was Grand Funk Railroad in like 1970. My mom drove us to Seattle

I love Def Leppard. [/b]I only started listening to then this century so its still kind of new

I spent the 80's listening to funk and dance music

The very earliest stuff is the best. It got a little poppy there in the early 90s. Every fucking fraternity on campus could not stop playing "Pour Some Sugar" day and fucking night. You could hear it from the fucking Ave. Those frat boys really loved their Def Leppard back in the day.

Let it Go and High and Dry - good shit.

Fun Fact: Pete Doubleday, the managing partner of EY's Portland office, was in the band that was to become Def Leppard. The guy actually did what is the right thing for 99.999% of the people 99.999% of the time by quitting the rock business and becoming an accountant. He didn't.

But in fairness, as the managing partner in Portland, and having run their London office, he's a fairly senior guy in a global firm and is not hurting for money.

Plus, he's alive and I'm assuming has two arms. That means he's better off than half the band.

Whatever album that was with Pour Some Sugar on it was a piece of shit. Hysteria? I knew it was garbage when the girl I was with at the time bought it. Her musical taste was horrific.

On Through The Night, High n Dry and Pyromania were all good albums, though. They got paid with Hysteria, like Metallica did with the black album. Garbage compared to their earlier work, but big sellers.

Money is bad for bands. They always make better music when they're poor.
 
My first concert was Grand Funk Railroad in like 1970. My mom drove us to Seattle

I love Def Leppard. [/b]I only started listening to then this century so its still kind of new

I spent the 80's listening to funk and dance music

The very earliest stuff is the best. It got a little poppy there in the early 90s. Every fucking fraternity on campus could not stop playing "Pour Some Sugar" day and fucking night. You could hear it from the fucking Ave. Those frat boys really loved their Def Leppard back in the day.

Let it Go and High and Dry - good shit.

Fun Fact: Pete Doubleday, the managing partner of EY's Portland office, was in the band that was to become Def Leppard. The guy actually did what is the right thing for 99.999% of the people 99.999% of the time by quitting the rock business and becoming an accountant. He didn't.

But in fairness, as the managing partner in Portland, and having run their London office, he's a fairly senior guy in a global firm and is not hurting for money.

Plus, he's alive and I'm assuming has two arms. That means he's better off than half the band.

Whatever album that was with Pour Some Sugar on it was a piece of shit. Hysteria? I knew it was garbage when the girl I was with at the time bought it. Her musical taste was horrific.

On Through The Night, High n Dry and Pyromania were all good albums, though. They got paid with Hysteria, like Metallica did with the black album. Garbage compared to their earlier work, but big sellers.

Money is bad for bands. They always make better music when they're poor.

Entirely agree. Hysteria had some shit bubble gum music for the frat boy crowd, who eats that shit up. Rocket. Yeah. See ya later! Rocket. Yeah. See ya later. Armagedonit? Jesus. Garbage pop rock.
 
My first concert was Grand Funk Railroad in like 1970. My mom drove us to Seattle

I love Def Leppard. [/b]I only started listening to then this century so its still kind of new

I spent the 80's listening to funk and dance music

The very earliest stuff is the best. It got a little poppy there in the early 90s. Every fucking fraternity on campus could not stop playing "Pour Some Sugar" day and fucking night. You could hear it from the fucking Ave. Those frat boys really loved their Def Leppard back in the day.

Let it Go and High and Dry - good shit.

Fun Fact: Pete Doubleday, the managing partner of EY's Portland office, was in the band that was to become Def Leppard. The guy actually did what is the right thing for 99.999% of the people 99.999% of the time by quitting the rock business and becoming an accountant. He didn't.

But in fairness, as the managing partner in Portland, and having run their London office, he's a fairly senior guy in a global firm and is not hurting for money.

Plus, he's alive and I'm assuming has two arms. That means he's better off than half the band.

Whatever album that was with Pour Some Sugar on it was a piece of shit. Hysteria? I knew it was garbage when the girl I was with at the time bought it. Her musical taste was horrific.

On Through The Night, High n Dry and Pyromania were all good albums, though. They got paid with Hysteria, like Metallica did with the black album. Garbage compared to their earlier work, but big sellers.

Money is bad for bands. They always make better music when they're poor.

On Through The Night isn't that good, but you can hear the seeds of something speshul once Mutt Lange got his hands on the boys and refined their sound. High n Dry is in my minivan's CD changer; still one of the best aggressive driving albums evar made. Pyromania came out when I was a freshman in high school; Photograph and Rock of Ages made me fall in luv with them, and even now I can pop in the CD and sing along to every fucking song on the album. Hysteria was pop shit, but when you're 17 and your nympho GF thinks Pour Some Sugar On Me is good music to act out stripper fantasies to, well, you don't mind it that much. Saw Def Lep in Andover MD on Election Night 1992; Joe Eliot came out for their encore and said "Word is, there's a new sheriff in town.." which is how I found out that Clinton had won.
 
My first concert was Grand Funk Railroad in like 1970. My mom drove us to Seattle

I love Def Leppard. I only started listening to then this century so its still kind of new

I spent the 80's listening to funk and dance music

Why not both.gif?

Gap Band

The Gap Band wore me out at the Paramount . Grateful Dead length concert

Snoops father in law
 
My first concert was Grand Funk Railroad in like 1970. My mom drove us to Seattle

I love Def Leppard. I only started listening to then this century so its still kind of new

I spent the 80's listening to funk and dance music

Why not both.gif?

Gap Band

The Gap Band wore me out at the Paramount . Grateful Dead length concert

Snoops father in law

For some reason I can picture Race partying at the club in 48 Hours.
 
My first concert was Grand Funk Railroad in like 1970. My mom drove us to Seattle

I love Def Leppard. I only started listening to then this century so its still kind of new

I spent the 80's listening to funk and dance music

Why not both.gif?

Gap Band

The Gap Band wore me out at the Paramount . Grateful Dead length concert

Snoops father in law

I had you pegged as more of a Lakeside or Cameo guy.

 
My first concert was Grand Funk Railroad in like 1970. My mom drove us to Seattle

I love Def Leppard. I only started listening to then this century so its still kind of new

I spent the 80's listening to funk and dance music

Why not both.gif?

Gap Band

The Gap Band wore me out at the Paramount . Grateful Dead length concert

Snoops father in law

I had you pegged as more of a Lakeside or Cameo guy.

All of the above and more
 
Another guilty pleasure...Otis Redding...but no wai 81% of this bored hates Otis, cause he is one bad motherfucker.
 
My first concert was Grand Funk Railroad in like 1970. My mom drove us to Seattle

I love Def Leppard. [/b]I only started listening to then this century so its still kind of new

I spent the 80's listening to funk and dance music

The very earliest stuff is the best. It got a little poppy there in the early 90s. Every fucking fraternity on campus could not stop playing "Pour Some Sugar" day and fucking night. You could hear it from the fucking Ave. Those frat boys really loved their Def Leppard back in the day.

Let it Go and High and Dry - good shit.

Fun Fact: Pete Doubleday, the managing partner of EY's Portland office, was in the band that was to become Def Leppard. The guy actually did what is the right thing for 99.999% of the people 99.999% of the time by quitting the rock business and becoming an accountant. He didn't.

But in fairness, as the managing partner in Portland, and having run their London office, he's a fairly senior guy in a global firm and is not hurting for money.

Found the GDI

what's the GDI?
 
My first concert was Grand Funk Railroad in like 1970. My mom drove us to Seattle

I love Def Leppard. [/b]I only started listening to then this century so its still kind of new

I spent the 80's listening to funk and dance music

The very earliest stuff is the best. It got a little poppy there in the early 90s. Every fucking fraternity on campus could not stop playing "Pour Some Sugar" day and fucking night. You could hear it from the fucking Ave. Those frat boys really loved their Def Leppard back in the day.

Let it Go and High and Dry - good shit.

Fun Fact: Pete Doubleday, the managing partner of EY's Portland office, was in the band that was to become Def Leppard. The guy actually did what is the right thing for 99.999% of the people 99.999% of the time by quitting the rock business and becoming an accountant. He didn't.

But in fairness, as the managing partner in Portland, and having run their London office, he's a fairly senior guy in a global firm and is not hurting for money.

Plus, he's alive and I'm assuming has two arms. That means he's better off than half the band.

Whatever album that was with Pour Some Sugar on it was a piece of shit. Hysteria? I knew it was garbage when the girl I was with at the time bought it. Her musical taste was horrific.

On Through The Night, High n Dry and Pyromania were all good albums, though. They got paid with Hysteria, like Metallica did with the black album. Garbage compared to their earlier work, but big sellers.

Money is bad for bands. They always make better music when they're poor.

Entirely agree. Hysteria had some shit bubble gum music for the frat boy crowd, who eats that shit up. Rocket. Yeah. See ya later! Rocket. Yeah. See ya later. Armagedonit? Jesus. Garbage pop rock.

And many forget that Hysteria was tanking big time. Critics ripped it and no one was buying it. That was until they released Poor Some Sugar on Me as a single. And then after that sales boomed and just about every other single got released. But that is where Def Lep died. I saw em in Eugene in 2016. Decent show. Only because they played 4 songs off of high n dry.
 
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