Hopefully your DVR is enjoying its summer vacation, resting its gears, pistons and what not, because TVLine is about to drop on you more than 90 premiere dates for the Fall TV season.
RelatedFall TV Grid 2016: What’s on When? And Versus What?
Yes, it is already time for our famously handy calendar (and it is a legit calendar) of season and series launches, kicking off with a bit of (Masters of) Sex and some Dancing stars (or “stars”) before going absolutely bonkers the week of Sept. 19, where 54 (!) premieres await you.
Here is our round-up of September and October’s big bows,...
RelatedFall TV Grid 2016: What’s on When? And Versus What?
Yes, it is already time for our famously handy calendar (and it is a legit calendar) of season and series launches, kicking off with a bit of (Masters of) Sex and some Dancing stars (or “stars”) before going absolutely bonkers the week of Sept. 19, where 54 (!) premieres await you.
Here is our round-up of September and October’s big bows,...
- 6/28/2016
- TVLine.com
Now is the time to start administering extra TLC to your DVR, because we’re about to drop on you nearly 100 season and series premiere dates for the fall.
Yes, it’s time for TVLine’s preternaturally handy calendar for the fall TV season, which quietly kicks off with Sons of Anarchy‘s farewell cycle and the three-part launch of Fox’s Utopia, gets absolutely ba-na-nas the week of Sept. 21 (with 41 premieres!) and on Sunday the 28th alone uncorks another nine shows.
Related Get TVLine’s First Impression of Gotham, The Flash, How to Get Away with Murder, Jane the...
Yes, it’s time for TVLine’s preternaturally handy calendar for the fall TV season, which quietly kicks off with Sons of Anarchy‘s farewell cycle and the three-part launch of Fox’s Utopia, gets absolutely ba-na-nas the week of Sept. 21 (with 41 premieres!) and on Sunday the 28th alone uncorks another nine shows.
Related Get TVLine’s First Impression of Gotham, The Flash, How to Get Away with Murder, Jane the...
- 7/21/2014
- TVLine.com
Samaire Armstrong is ready to start preaching. The “O.C.” veteran, who currently stars in the hit ABC drama “Resurrection,” will star as a female minister in the upcoming TV movie “Match Made in Heaven,” which will premiere on the Up network later this year. Based on the novel “Heavens to Betsy” by female minister Beth Pattillo, “Match Made in Heaven” will star Armstrong as Rev. Casey Hart, a senior minister who finds herself at a crossroads in her professional and love life. Faced with a leaking baptistery and match-making parishioners who steal from the collection box and doubt the validity of.
- 4/1/2014
- by Tim Kenneally
- The Wrap
"I'm just going to try a bunch of shit on," Carrie Brownstein says. On an icy February afternoon in Manhattan, the co-star of IFC's sketch-comedy series Portlandia has just ducked into a brightly lit Opening Ceremony boutique in search of an outfit for a New York Fashion Week event that night. "I like to go to other cities because I can dress up," she says, eyeing a stylish black blazer with blue and white checks. "I live in a city where fleece is considered an appropriate fabric for any event.
- 3/20/2014
- Rollingstone.com
Heavens to Betsy, there's a Black man in Downton Abbey! Quick, somebody hand out the smelling salts and make absolutely sure everyone has at least one eyebrow raised to fully capture an uncomfortable mix of bemusement and fear! Oh, and do make a very quiet, restrained phone call to the authorities! This is bedlam, mind you, bedlam! Okay, it's not that big of a deal when Rose "surprises" Robert with a jazz band on his birthday. Robert reacts initially, then gets over it when he sees no one else has burst into flame. Even Carson, who fumbles his way through a truly...
- 2/3/2014
- by Liane Bonin Starr
- Hitfix
In The Fullbright Company’s Gone Home, you play as Katie Greenbriar after she arrives home from spending a year in Europe. The twist is that this home is a place that Katie has never stepped foot in, as her family moved in shortly after she left. It’s the summer of 1995, and there’s an ominous note left on the door from Katie’s 17 year-old sister, which informs you that no one is inside. Figuring out what’s going on is a matter of exploring the house for clues.
The house is enormous. There’s a wide staircase directly across from the front door that leads to a full upper level. A basement, which spans several corridors, lies just behind a locked door. Being the middle of the night, windows provide very little in the way of light. A constant barrage of rain is intermixed with thunderclaps. Sporadic electrical...
The house is enormous. There’s a wide staircase directly across from the front door that leads to a full upper level. A basement, which spans several corridors, lies just behind a locked door. Being the middle of the night, windows provide very little in the way of light. A constant barrage of rain is intermixed with thunderclaps. Sporadic electrical...
- 8/21/2013
- by Cody Steffen
- We Got This Covered
The Fullbright Company, a team founded by the folks who worked on the Minerva’s Den downloadable content for BioShock 2, announced today that they will be releasing their first game as an independent company called Gone Home - slated to be released on August 15th.
Gone Home is a first-person exploration game where you play as a young woman returning to her American Pacific Northwestern family home all the way back in the year 1995 – when Tupac was still alive, Bill Clinton had yet to win re-election, and MTV played copious amounts of alternative rock music made by plaid-clad Gen-Xers.
Upon arriving home, you discover the large home empty. Well, Ok, not entirely – there’s some furniture and posters. It still looks lived in, it still resembles the house you grew up in, but something important is missing – your family. It’s up to you to search through the place, to...
Gone Home is a first-person exploration game where you play as a young woman returning to her American Pacific Northwestern family home all the way back in the year 1995 – when Tupac was still alive, Bill Clinton had yet to win re-election, and MTV played copious amounts of alternative rock music made by plaid-clad Gen-Xers.
Upon arriving home, you discover the large home empty. Well, Ok, not entirely – there’s some furniture and posters. It still looks lived in, it still resembles the house you grew up in, but something important is missing – your family. It’s up to you to search through the place, to...
- 8/3/2013
- by Cody Steffen
- We Got This Covered
On TV this weekend: Zach Galifianakis hangs over at Studio 8H, Jason Collins outlines his Next Chapter, American Dad! hits a milestone, Revenge re-engages; and The Amazing Race, The Mentalist and three other shows finish their seasons. As a supplement to TVLine’s original features (linked within), here are 15 programs to keep on your radar.
Saturday, May 4
8 pm Smash (NBC) | An unexpected event bonds Bombshell and Hit List.
8 pm Cops (Fox) | Season 25 finale: Officers from the Las Vegas Metro Pd stop a woman who appears to be soliciting prostitution on the Strip. Heavens to Betsy! A prostitute? In Las Vegas?...
Saturday, May 4
8 pm Smash (NBC) | An unexpected event bonds Bombshell and Hit List.
8 pm Cops (Fox) | Season 25 finale: Officers from the Las Vegas Metro Pd stop a woman who appears to be soliciting prostitution on the Strip. Heavens to Betsy! A prostitute? In Las Vegas?...
- 5/4/2013
- by Kimberly Roots
- TVLine.com
By Joseph Leray
We haven’t covered “Gone Home” here at MTV yet, but a new trailer featuring the dulcet tones of early-90’s Bratmobile seems like as good an angle as any.
“Gone Home” is an exploration game about the Greenbriar family, set in rural Oregon in 1995. Katie comes home from a trip abroad to find out that her entire family -- Mom, Dad, and sister Samantha -- have disappeared. As I understand it, the entire game takes place in the Greenbriar’s somewhat expansive home and follows Katie as she pokes through her family’s life to figure out what happened to them.
It seems very point-and-clicky, but a point-and-click in which puzzles have been replaced by little nostalgic narrative touches and exploration, and authenticity -- the music, the X-Files tapes, the Secret Image puzzle (spoiler: it’s a shark), the Lisa Frank-esque Trapper Keeper with the...
We haven’t covered “Gone Home” here at MTV yet, but a new trailer featuring the dulcet tones of early-90’s Bratmobile seems like as good an angle as any.
“Gone Home” is an exploration game about the Greenbriar family, set in rural Oregon in 1995. Katie comes home from a trip abroad to find out that her entire family -- Mom, Dad, and sister Samantha -- have disappeared. As I understand it, the entire game takes place in the Greenbriar’s somewhat expansive home and follows Katie as she pokes through her family’s life to figure out what happened to them.
It seems very point-and-clicky, but a point-and-click in which puzzles have been replaced by little nostalgic narrative touches and exploration, and authenticity -- the music, the X-Files tapes, the Secret Image puzzle (spoiler: it’s a shark), the Lisa Frank-esque Trapper Keeper with the...
- 3/20/2013
- by MTV Video Games
- MTV Multiplayer
Heavens to Betsy! Not only do we have a new Tree Of Life one-sheet to show off, UK readers will be happy to know Terrence Malick’s latest opus now has an official UK release date. About bloomin’ time, too.
The Brad Pitt and Sean Penn starring flick is set for UK release on May 4th, which means it isn’t being premiered or playing “in competition” at Cannes. Never mind, at least we’ll finally be able to see the bloody thing. Just hope Terry Malick doesn’t pull it from release for further tinkering. Wouldn’t put it past him.
Synopsis:
From Terrence Malick, the acclaimed director of such classic films as Badlands, Days of Heaven and The Thin Red Line, The Tree of Life is the impressionistic story of a Midwestern family in the 1950’s. The film follows the life journey of the eldest son, Jack, through...
The Brad Pitt and Sean Penn starring flick is set for UK release on May 4th, which means it isn’t being premiered or playing “in competition” at Cannes. Never mind, at least we’ll finally be able to see the bloody thing. Just hope Terry Malick doesn’t pull it from release for further tinkering. Wouldn’t put it past him.
Synopsis:
From Terrence Malick, the acclaimed director of such classic films as Badlands, Days of Heaven and The Thin Red Line, The Tree of Life is the impressionistic story of a Midwestern family in the 1950’s. The film follows the life journey of the eldest son, Jack, through...
- 3/28/2011
- by Martyn Conterio
- FilmShaft.com
The timing couldn't be more exciting for movie fans and stargazers alike: Natalie Portman is pregnant and engaged smack in the middle of awards season! And not just any awards season, but the one where her dark and twisted turn in Black Swan makes her a contender for every little golden statue in the game. Since we frankly cannot wait to see how it all pans out (Will she win? Will she lose? Heavens to Betsy, What Will She Wear?), we at Celebuzz launched into fantasy mode, crafting a week-by-week narrative of how Natalie's awards season might go down. Will we...
- 1/14/2011
- by Celebuzz
- Celebuzz.com
If you were a fan of punk rock during the early 1990s, there's no way you could have missed the noise coming out of the Pacific Northwest. An underground feminist movement known as riot grrl gripped the scene, calling for great accessibility for women and it spawned a creative outpouring with zines, art and activism all aimed at giving women a voice. And of course, there was the music. Bands like Bratmobile, Excuse 17, Heavens to Betsy, Huggy Bear, Sleater-Kinney and Team Dresch contributed to the outpouring of female-led acts--some more notable and memorable than others--but none would have the…...
- 11/25/2010
- The Playlist
“In her kiss, I taste the revolution!”So goes the ecstatic shriek at the pinnacle of Bikini Kill’s punk girl-power anthem “Rebel Girl.” Released at least three times between 1991 and 1994 — including one version produced by Joan Jett — the track was a fight song for Riot Grrrl, a punk feminist movement of young women that flourished across the United States, and in Canada and the U.K., in the early and mid ’90s.Riot Grrrl had its roots in the punk scenes of Olympia, Wash., and Washington, D.C. It spread first through the music of all- or mostly female bands based in these two towns, including Bikini Kill, Bratmobile, and Heavens to Betsy. (Kathleen Hanna, the lead singer of Bikini Kill, later went on to front the feminist electro-pop band Le Tigre; Heavens to Betsy’s singer-guitarist, Corin Tucker, cofounded the power trio Sleater-Kinney.)The movement was about far more than music,...
- 10/6/2010
- The Advocate
“In her kiss, I taste the revolution!”So goes the ecstatic shriek at the pinnacle of Bikini Kill’s punk girl-power anthem “Rebel Girl.” Released at least three times between 1991 and 1994 — including one version produced by Joan Jett — the track was a fight song for Riot Grrrl, a punk feminist movement of young women that flourished across the United States, and in Canada and the U.K., in the early and mid ’90s.Riot Grrrl had its roots in the punk scenes of Olympia, Wash., and Washington, D.C. It spread first through the music of all- or mostly female bands based in these two towns, including Bikini Kill, Bratmobile, and Heavens to Betsy. (Kathleen Hanna, the lead singer of Bikini Kill, later went on to front the feminist electro-pop band Le Tigre; Heavens to Betsy’s singer-guitarist, Corin Tucker, cofounded the power trio Sleater-Kinney.)The movement was about far more than music,...
- 10/6/2010
- The Advocate
“In her kiss, I taste the revolution!”So goes the ecstatic shriek at the pinnacle of Bikini Kill’s punk girl-power anthem “Rebel Girl.” Released at least three times between 1991 and 1994 — including one version produced by Joan Jett — the track was a fight song for Riot Grrrl, a punk feminist movement of young women that flourished across the United States, and in Canada and the U.K., in the early and mid ’90s.Riot Grrrl had its roots in the punk scenes of Olympia, Wash., and Washington, D.C. It spread first through the music of all- or mostly female bands based in these two towns, including Bikini Kill, Bratmobile, and Heavens to Betsy. (Kathleen Hanna, the lead singer of Bikini Kill, later went on to front the feminist electro-pop band Le Tigre; Heavens to Betsy’s singer-guitarist, Corin Tucker, cofounded the power trio Sleater-Kinney.)The movement was about far more than music,...
- 10/6/2010
- The Advocate
“In her kiss, I taste the revolution!”So goes the ecstatic shriek at the pinnacle of Bikini Kill’s punk girl-power anthem “Rebel Girl.” Released at least three times between 1991 and 1994 — including one version produced by Joan Jett — the track was a fight song for Riot Grrrl, a punk feminist movement of young women that flourished across the United States, and in Canada and the U.K., in the early and mid ’90s.Riot Grrrl had its roots in the punk scenes of Olympia, Wash., and Washington, D.C. It spread first through the music of all- or mostly female bands based in these two towns, including Bikini Kill, Bratmobile, and Heavens to Betsy. (Kathleen Hanna, the lead singer of Bikini Kill, later went on to front the feminist electro-pop band Le Tigre; Heavens to Betsy’s singer-guitarist, Corin Tucker, cofounded the power trio Sleater-Kinney.)The movement was about far more than music,...
- 10/6/2010
- The Advocate
“In her kiss, I taste the revolution!”So goes the ecstatic shriek at the pinnacle of Bikini Kill’s punk girl-power anthem “Rebel Girl.” Released at least three times between 1991 and 1994 — including one version produced by Joan Jett — the track was a fight song for Riot Grrrl, a punk feminist movement of young women that flourished across the United States, and in Canada and the U.K., in the early and mid ’90s.Riot Grrrl had its roots in the punk scenes of Olympia, Wash., and Washington, D.C. It spread first through the music of all- or mostly female bands based in these two towns, including Bikini Kill, Bratmobile, and Heavens to Betsy. (Kathleen Hanna, the lead singer of Bikini Kill, later went on to front the feminist electro-pop band Le Tigre; Heavens to Betsy’s singer-guitarist, Corin Tucker, cofounded the power trio Sleater-Kinney.)The movement was about far more than music,...
- 10/6/2010
- The Advocate
“In her kiss, I taste the revolution!”So goes the ecstatic shriek at the pinnacle of Bikini Kill’s punk girl-power anthem “Rebel Girl.” Released at least three times between 1991 and 1994 — including one version produced by Joan Jett — the track was a fight song for Riot Grrrl, a punk feminist movement of young women that flourished across the United States, and in Canada and the U.K., in the early and mid ’90s.Riot Grrrl had its roots in the punk scenes of Olympia, Wash., and Washington, D.C. It spread first through the music of all- or mostly female bands based in these two towns, including Bikini Kill, Bratmobile, and Heavens to Betsy. (Kathleen Hanna, the lead singer of Bikini Kill, later went on to front the feminist electro-pop band Le Tigre; Heavens to Betsy’s singer-guitarist, Corin Tucker, cofounded the power trio Sleater-Kinney.)The movement was about far more than music,...
- 10/6/2010
- The Advocate
“In her kiss, I taste the revolution!”So goes the ecstatic shriek at the pinnacle of Bikini Kill’s punk girl-power anthem “Rebel Girl.” Released at least three times between 1991 and 1994 — including one version produced by Joan Jett — the track was a fight song for Riot Grrrl, a punk feminist movement of young women that flourished across the United States, and in Canada and the U.K., in the early and mid ’90s.Riot Grrrl had its roots in the punk scenes of Olympia, Wash., and Washington, D.C. It spread first through the music of all- or mostly female bands based in these two towns, including Bikini Kill, Bratmobile, and Heavens to Betsy. (Kathleen Hanna, the lead singer of Bikini Kill, later went on to front the feminist electro-pop band Le Tigre; Heavens to Betsy’s singer-guitarist, Corin Tucker, cofounded the power trio Sleater-Kinney.)The movement was about far more than music,...
- 10/6/2010
- The Advocate
“In her kiss, I taste the revolution!”So goes the ecstatic shriek at the pinnacle of Bikini Kill’s punk girl-power anthem “Rebel Girl.” Released at least three times between 1991 and 1994 — including one version produced by Joan Jett — the track was a fight song for Riot Grrrl, a punk feminist movement of young women that flourished across the United States, and in Canada and the U.K., in the early and mid ’90s.Riot Grrrl had its roots in the punk scenes of Olympia, Wash., and Washington, D.C. It spread first through the music of all- or mostly female bands based in these two towns, including Bikini Kill, Bratmobile, and Heavens to Betsy. (Kathleen Hanna, the lead singer of Bikini Kill, later went on to front the feminist electro-pop band Le Tigre; Heavens to Betsy’s singer-guitarist, Corin Tucker, cofounded the power trio Sleater-Kinney.)The movement was about far more than music,...
- 10/6/2010
- The Advocate
“In her kiss, I taste the revolution!”So goes the ecstatic shriek at the pinnacle of Bikini Kill’s punk girl-power anthem “Rebel Girl.” Released at least three times between 1991 and 1994 — including one version produced by Joan Jett — the track was a fight song for Riot Grrrl, a punk feminist movement of young women that flourished across the United States, and in Canada and the U.K., in the early and mid ’90s.Riot Grrrl had its roots in the punk scenes of Olympia, Wash., and Washington, D.C. It spread first through the music of all- or mostly female bands based in these two towns, including Bikini Kill, Bratmobile, and Heavens to Betsy. (Kathleen Hanna, the lead singer of Bikini Kill, later went on to front the feminist electro-pop band Le Tigre; Heavens to Betsy’s singer-guitarist, Corin Tucker, cofounded the power trio Sleater-Kinney.)The movement was about far more than music,...
- 10/6/2010
- The Advocate
“In her kiss, I taste the revolution!”So goes the ecstatic shriek at the pinnacle of Bikini Kill’s punk girl-power anthem “Rebel Girl.” Released at least three times between 1991 and 1994 — including one version produced by Joan Jett — the track was a fight song for Riot Grrrl, a punk feminist movement of young women that flourished across the United States, and in Canada and the U.K., in the early and mid ’90s.Riot Grrrl had its roots in the punk scenes of Olympia, Wash., and Washington, D.C. It spread first through the music of all- or mostly female bands based in these two towns, including Bikini Kill, Bratmobile, and Heavens to Betsy. (Kathleen Hanna, the lead singer of Bikini Kill, later went on to front the feminist electro-pop band Le Tigre; Heavens to Betsy’s singer-guitarist, Corin Tucker, cofounded the power trio Sleater-Kinney.)The movement was about far more than music,...
- 10/6/2010
- The Advocate
“In her kiss, I taste the revolution!”So goes the ecstatic shriek at the pinnacle of Bikini Kill’s punk girl-power anthem “Rebel Girl.” Released at least three times between 1991 and 1994 — including one version produced by Joan Jett — the track was a fight song for Riot Grrrl, a punk feminist movement of young women that flourished across the United States, and in Canada and the U.K., in the early and mid ’90s.Riot Grrrl had its roots in the punk scenes of Olympia, Wash., and Washington, D.C. It spread first through the music of all- or mostly female bands based in these two towns, including Bikini Kill, Bratmobile, and Heavens to Betsy. (Kathleen Hanna, the lead singer of Bikini Kill, later went on to front the feminist electro-pop band Le Tigre; Heavens to Betsy’s singer-guitarist, Corin Tucker, cofounded the power trio Sleater-Kinney.)The movement was about far more than music,...
- 10/6/2010
- The Advocate
“In her kiss, I taste the revolution!”So goes the ecstatic shriek at the pinnacle of Bikini Kill’s punk girl-power anthem “Rebel Girl.” Released at least three times between 1991 and 1994 — including one version produced by Joan Jett — the track was a fight song for Riot Grrrl, a punk feminist movement of young women that flourished across the United States, and in Canada and the U.K., in the early and mid ’90s.Riot Grrrl had its roots in the punk scenes of Olympia, Wash., and Washington, D.C. It spread first through the music of all- or mostly female bands based in these two towns, including Bikini Kill, Bratmobile, and Heavens to Betsy. (Kathleen Hanna, the lead singer of Bikini Kill, later went on to front the feminist electro-pop band Le Tigre; Heavens to Betsy’s singer-guitarist, Corin Tucker, cofounded the power trio Sleater-Kinney.)The movement was about far more than music,...
- 10/6/2010
- The Advocate
“In her kiss, I taste the revolution!”So goes the ecstatic shriek at the pinnacle of Bikini Kill’s punk girl-power anthem “Rebel Girl.” Released at least three times between 1991 and 1994 — including one version produced by Joan Jett — the track was a fight song for Riot Grrrl, a punk feminist movement of young women that flourished across the United States, and in Canada and the U.K., in the early and mid ’90s.Riot Grrrl had its roots in the punk scenes of Olympia, Wash., and Washington, D.C. It spread first through the music of all- or mostly female bands based in these two towns, including Bikini Kill, Bratmobile, and Heavens to Betsy. (Kathleen Hanna, the lead singer of Bikini Kill, later went on to front the feminist electro-pop band Le Tigre; Heavens to Betsy’s singer-guitarist, Corin Tucker, cofounded the power trio Sleater-Kinney.)The movement was about far more than music,...
- 10/6/2010
- The Advocate
“In her kiss, I taste the revolution!”So goes the ecstatic shriek at the pinnacle of Bikini Kill’s punk girl-power anthem “Rebel Girl.” Released at least three times between 1991 and 1994 — including one version produced by Joan Jett — the track was a fight song for Riot Grrrl, a punk feminist movement of young women that flourished across the United States, and in Canada and the U.K., in the early and mid ’90s.Riot Grrrl had its roots in the punk scenes of Olympia, Wash., and Washington, D.C. It spread first through the music of all- or mostly female bands based in these two towns, including Bikini Kill, Bratmobile, and Heavens to Betsy. (Kathleen Hanna, the lead singer of Bikini Kill, later went on to front the feminist electro-pop band Le Tigre; Heavens to Betsy’s singer-guitarist, Corin Tucker, cofounded the power trio Sleater-Kinney.)The movement was about far more than music,...
- 10/6/2010
- The Advocate
“In her kiss, I taste the revolution!”So goes the ecstatic shriek at the pinnacle of Bikini Kill’s punk girl-power anthem “Rebel Girl.” Released at least three times between 1991 and 1994 — including one version produced by Joan Jett — the track was a fight song for Riot Grrrl, a punk feminist movement of young women that flourished across the United States, and in Canada and the U.K., in the early and mid ’90s.Riot Grrrl had its roots in the punk scenes of Olympia, Wash., and Washington, D.C. It spread first through the music of all- or mostly female bands based in these two towns, including Bikini Kill, Bratmobile, and Heavens to Betsy. (Kathleen Hanna, the lead singer of Bikini Kill, later went on to front the feminist electro-pop band Le Tigre; Heavens to Betsy’s singer-guitarist, Corin Tucker, cofounded the power trio Sleater-Kinney.)The movement was about far more than music,...
- 10/6/2010
- The Advocate
“In her kiss, I taste the revolution!”So goes the ecstatic shriek at the pinnacle of Bikini Kill’s punk girl-power anthem “Rebel Girl.” Released at least three times between 1991 and 1994 — including one version produced by Joan Jett — the track was a fight song for Riot Grrrl, a punk feminist movement of young women that flourished across the United States, and in Canada and the U.K., in the early and mid ’90s.Riot Grrrl had its roots in the punk scenes of Olympia, Wash., and Washington, D.C. It spread first through the music of all- or mostly female bands based in these two towns, including Bikini Kill, Bratmobile, and Heavens to Betsy. (Kathleen Hanna, the lead singer of Bikini Kill, later went on to front the feminist electro-pop band Le Tigre; Heavens to Betsy’s singer-guitarist, Corin Tucker, cofounded the power trio Sleater-Kinney.)The movement was about far more than music,...
- 10/6/2010
- The Advocate
“In her kiss, I taste the revolution!”So goes the ecstatic shriek at the pinnacle of Bikini Kill’s punk girl-power anthem “Rebel Girl.” Released at least three times between 1991 and 1994 — including one version produced by Joan Jett — the track was a fight song for Riot Grrrl, a punk feminist movement of young women that flourished across the United States, and in Canada and the U.K., in the early and mid ’90s.Riot Grrrl had its roots in the punk scenes of Olympia, Wash., and Washington, D.C. It spread first through the music of all- or mostly female bands based in these two towns, including Bikini Kill, Bratmobile, and Heavens to Betsy. (Kathleen Hanna, the lead singer of Bikini Kill, later went on to front the feminist electro-pop band Le Tigre; Heavens to Betsy’s singer-guitarist, Corin Tucker, cofounded the power trio Sleater-Kinney.)The movement was about far more than music,...
- 10/6/2010
- The Advocate
“In her kiss, I taste the revolution!”So goes the ecstatic shriek at the pinnacle of Bikini Kill’s punk girl-power anthem “Rebel Girl.” Released at least three times between 1991 and 1994 — including one version produced by Joan Jett — the track was a fight song for Riot Grrrl, a punk feminist movement of young women that flourished across the United States, and in Canada and the U.K., in the early and mid ’90s.Riot Grrrl had its roots in the punk scenes of Olympia, Wash., and Washington, D.C. It spread first through the music of all- or mostly female bands based in these two towns, including Bikini Kill, Bratmobile, and Heavens to Betsy. (Kathleen Hanna, the lead singer of Bikini Kill, later went on to front the feminist electro-pop band Le Tigre; Heavens to Betsy’s singer-guitarist, Corin Tucker, cofounded the power trio Sleater-Kinney.)The movement was about far more than music,...
- 10/6/2010
- The Advocate
“In her kiss, I taste the revolution!”So goes the ecstatic shriek at the pinnacle of Bikini Kill’s punk girl-power anthem “Rebel Girl.” Released at least three times between 1991 and 1994 — including one version produced by Joan Jett — the track was a fight song for Riot Grrrl, a punk feminist movement of young women that flourished across the United States, and in Canada and the U.K., in the early and mid ’90s.Riot Grrrl had its roots in the punk scenes of Olympia, Wash., and Washington, D.C. It spread first through the music of all- or mostly female bands based in these two towns, including Bikini Kill, Bratmobile, and Heavens to Betsy. (Kathleen Hanna, the lead singer of Bikini Kill, later went on to front the feminist electro-pop band Le Tigre; Heavens to Betsy’s singer-guitarist, Corin Tucker, cofounded the power trio Sleater-Kinney.)The movement was about far more than music,...
- 10/6/2010
- The Advocate
“In her kiss, I taste the revolution!”So goes the ecstatic shriek at the pinnacle of Bikini Kill’s punk girl-power anthem “Rebel Girl.” Released at least three times between 1991 and 1994 — including one version produced by Joan Jett — the track was a fight song for Riot Grrrl, a punk feminist movement of young women that flourished across the United States, and in Canada and the U.K., in the early and mid ’90s.Riot Grrrl had its roots in the punk scenes of Olympia, Wash., and Washington, D.C. It spread first through the music of all- or mostly female bands based in these two towns, including Bikini Kill, Bratmobile, and Heavens to Betsy. (Kathleen Hanna, the lead singer of Bikini Kill, later went on to front the feminist electro-pop band Le Tigre; Heavens to Betsy’s singer-guitarist, Corin Tucker, cofounded the power trio Sleater-Kinney.)The movement was about far more than music,...
- 10/6/2010
- The Advocate
“In her kiss, I taste the revolution!”So goes the ecstatic shriek at the pinnacle of Bikini Kill’s punk girl-power anthem “Rebel Girl.” Released at least three times between 1991 and 1994 — including one version produced by Joan Jett — the track was a fight song for Riot Grrrl, a punk feminist movement of young women that flourished across the United States, and in Canada and the U.K., in the early and mid ’90s.Riot Grrrl had its roots in the punk scenes of Olympia, Wash., and Washington, D.C. It spread first through the music of all- or mostly female bands based in these two towns, including Bikini Kill, Bratmobile, and Heavens to Betsy. (Kathleen Hanna, the lead singer of Bikini Kill, later went on to front the feminist electro-pop band Le Tigre; Heavens to Betsy’s singer-guitarist, Corin Tucker, cofounded the power trio Sleater-Kinney.)The movement was about far more than music,...
- 10/6/2010
- The Advocate
“In her kiss, I taste the revolution!”So goes the ecstatic shriek at the pinnacle of Bikini Kill’s punk girl-power anthem “Rebel Girl.” Released at least three times between 1991 and 1994 — including one version produced by Joan Jett — the track was a fight song for Riot Grrrl, a punk feminist movement of young women that flourished across the United States, and in Canada and the U.K., in the early and mid ’90s.Riot Grrrl had its roots in the punk scenes of Olympia, Wash., and Washington, D.C. It spread first through the music of all- or mostly female bands based in these two towns, including Bikini Kill, Bratmobile, and Heavens to Betsy. (Kathleen Hanna, the lead singer of Bikini Kill, later went on to front the feminist electro-pop band Le Tigre; Heavens to Betsy’s singer-guitarist, Corin Tucker, cofounded the power trio Sleater-Kinney.)The movement was about far more than music,...
- 10/6/2010
- The Advocate
“In her kiss, I taste the revolution!”So goes the ecstatic shriek at the pinnacle of Bikini Kill’s punk girl-power anthem “Rebel Girl.” Released at least three times between 1991 and 1994 — including one version produced by Joan Jett — the track was a fight song for Riot Grrrl, a punk feminist movement of young women that flourished across the United States, and in Canada and the U.K., in the early and mid ’90s.Riot Grrrl had its roots in the punk scenes of Olympia, Wash., and Washington, D.C. It spread first through the music of all- or mostly female bands based in these two towns, including Bikini Kill, Bratmobile, and Heavens to Betsy. (Kathleen Hanna, the lead singer of Bikini Kill, later went on to front the feminist electro-pop band Le Tigre; Heavens to Betsy’s singer-guitarist, Corin Tucker, cofounded the power trio Sleater-Kinney.)The movement was about far more than music,...
- 10/6/2010
- The Advocate
“In her kiss, I taste the revolution!”So goes the ecstatic shriek at the pinnacle of Bikini Kill’s punk girl-power anthem “Rebel Girl.” Released at least three times between 1991 and 1994 — including one version produced by Joan Jett — the track was a fight song for Riot Grrrl, a punk feminist movement of young women that flourished across the United States, and in Canada and the U.K., in the early and mid ’90s.Riot Grrrl had its roots in the punk scenes of Olympia, Wash., and Washington, D.C. It spread first through the music of all- or mostly female bands based in these two towns, including Bikini Kill, Bratmobile, and Heavens to Betsy. (Kathleen Hanna, the lead singer of Bikini Kill, later went on to front the feminist electro-pop band Le Tigre; Heavens to Betsy’s singer-guitarist, Corin Tucker, cofounded the power trio Sleater-Kinney.)The movement was about far more than music,...
- 10/6/2010
- The Advocate
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