Showing All "Brokencyde" Posts

They say that the only reliable thing in this world is change. That can be very disconcerting or very wonderful, depending on your attitude towards change. On the one hand, change can be very…   Read Story »
Remember Millionaires? "Brokencyde for girls"? They're terrible! (See also: this.) Well, now you can donate money on kickstarter to fund their debut album and also get a trip to...Disneyland with…   Read Story »
It has been almost a year since we last heard from "musician" T Mills, and a lot has happened since then. A year is a long time, especially for young people, whose bodies are going through all of…   Read Story »
My grandfather on my mother's side fought in the Battle of the Bulge in World War II and he still hates to talk about it. You find this kind of thing with a lot of veterans. The trauma of war, at…   Read Story »
We always knew that Brokencyde were assholes, but we didn't know they were, like, assholes assholes. It makes sense, though.   Read Story »
Bad news, you guys. There is another one, and its name is "Crazy Crazy Awesome Awesome." Whoops! I think you're using those words wrong. Your band should probably called "Awful Awful Awful Awful."…   Read Story »
Someone has been patient enough to explain the lyrics of a Brokencyde song for old people. Example: "I thought you loved me/you never gave a fuck" means "playing with his emotions." Neat!   Read Story »
From Germany's Wikipedia page: Germany (i /ˈdʒɜrməni/), officially the Federal Republic of Germany (German: Bundesrepublik Deutschland, pronounced [ˈbʊndəsʁepuˌbliːk ˈdɔʏtʃlant] is a…   Read Story »
[Ed. note: Joe Mande, stand-up comedian and the creator of the popular blog Look At This Fucking Hipster(now a popular book!) is forced to do things that we don’t want to do, for our education…   Read Story »
We live in a world of constant transition. No duh. It's like that old R.E.M. song: Everybody Changes. Remember that one? "Everybody changes, sometime." Right? And so: seasons change, politics change,…   Read Story »