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April 30, 2021
“Not in Utica, no it’s an Albany expression.” So goes one of the deadpan lines in a much-loved, and oft-imitated, segment of “The Simpsons.” The segment, in an episode that first aired 25 years ago this month, carries the official name of “Skinner and the Superintendent,” but has become shortened into a two-word fan catchphrase: “Steamed hams.”
The segment built a cult following over time, to the point that online videos using the “steamed hams” plot and characters have proliferated in recent years. The explosion of the meme shows how the show became a cultural icon of American television. Indeed, the evolving history of the “steamed hams” bit illustrates the former power of a widely watched show that used to define comedy for millions of Americans.
01.03.21 | Alex Sievers
A fake but also real energy drink, product placements =, a one-shot filmed with a robotic arm, and riding a motherfucking army tank as it crushes cans and cars; it’s all happening in the music video for Dregg’s ‘Evolve.’ So I decided to review said new song
and this new drink of theirs together. Why? I don’t know why.
Prior to the Melbourne-based and Epitaph-signed
Dregg releasing the well-produced if very familiar-sounding ‘
Evolve‘ recently, the group shared they were sponsored by a previously unknown energy drink brand. If you didn’t already know
Dregg, their songs, and the values they stand behind in their lyrics, this would’ve looked like one big sell-out move. How did a small Australian band that blends hardcore, rap and thrash net a deal with an energy drink? In the current year no less? Of course,
. Born Allen Duaine Pruett in Texas, Fox and Chris O Brien hosted the hugely popular morning show on WKRQ-FM in the 1970s and 80s, and hosted country music on WUBE-FM in the 1990s.
Other local deaths include UC basketball analyst Chuck Machock; radio personalities Laura Powell, Bob Nave, Bill Ridenour, Larry Thomas, Geoff Nimmo, Ron Britain and Vic Henley; Joe Morgan, the Reds Hall of Famer turned TV analyst for Reds TV and ESPN
Sunday Night Baseball; Bengals coach and NFL analyst Sam Wyche; movie producer/distributor Phil Borak; former Enquirer writers Sara Pearce and Lonnie Wheeler; Blue Wisp saxophonist Joe Gaudio; bandleader Jerry Conrad; and WLWT-TV engineer Ron Whitaker.