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""Agenda Suicide" is the first single released from the album, Danse Macabre by The Faint. It was released only in the UK, February 26, 2002 on City Slang. The song is about overwork of people, to get "pretty little homes". The song was covered by Cancer Bats and released on their split with Rolo Tomassi in April 2009. ==Music video== The music video, by animation studio MK12, shows bosses bullying employees, while they continue to work. It includes one employee who takes pills with coffee in the beginning of the day. Throughout the video it shows people in business suits throwing themselves in front of subway trains. At the end of the video, the main character throws himself into the path of a train, while others look down into the track where he jumped. The music video was banned from MTV because it showed people jumping in front of trains to kill themselves, though it has on occasion been shown as a part of 120 Minutes which is broadcast post-watershed. ==Track listing== # "Agenda Suicide (album version)" # "Agenda Suicide (club mix)" # "Falling Out Of Love At This Volume (Bright Eyes cover)" +video ==External links== *The Faint official website *Saddle Creek Records * Category:2002 singles Category:The Faint songs Category:2001 songs "

— Agenda Suicide 🦚

"Eivets Rednow is an easy listening instrumental album by Stevie Wonder released on the Gordy Records label in 1968. The album was created as a follow-up to the successful easy listening instrumental single "Alfie". "A House Is Not a Home", another song by Burt Bacharach and Hal David, also appears on the album. Eivets Rednow is Stevie Wonder spelled backwards; Wonder's name does not appear on the cover of the original releases. This was Wonder's ninth studio album, released on November 20, 1968. Wonder plays the harmonica, drums, piano and clavinet on this album, though like his debut album, he does not sing on any of the tracks. On some reissues, "How do you spell Stevie Wonder backwards" is printed on the top corner of the album sleeve in small print. This is also the first album that has song credits solely by Wonder himself. ==Track listing== Side One #"Alfie" (Burt Bacharach, Hal David) – 3:14 #"More than a Dream" (Henry Cosby, Stevie Wonder) – 3:48 #"A House Is Not a Home" (Burt Bacharach, Hal David) – 3:32 #"How Can You Believe" (Stevie Wonder) – 3:04 #Medley: "Never My Love/Ask the Lonely" (Don Addrisi, Dick Addrisi/Ivy Jo Hunter, William "Mickey" Stevenson) – 2:30 Side Two #"Ruby" (Mitchell Parish, Heinz Roemheld) – 6:48 #"Which Way the Wind" (Stevie Wonder) – 2:47 #"Bye Bye World" (Stevie Wonder) – 3:21 #"Grazin' in the Grass" (Philemon Hou) – 2:57 ==Personnel== *Stevie Wonder – harmonica, keyboards, drums, percussion *Benny Benjamin – drums *James Jamerson – bass guitar *The Funk Brothers – instrumentation ==References== Category:1968 albums Category:Gordy Records albums Category:Stevie Wonder albums Category:Instrumental albums Category:Albums produced by Henry Cosby Category:Albums recorded at Hitsville U.S.A. "

— Eivets Rednow 🦚

"The Underground Comedy Movie is a 1999 film directed by and starring Vince Offer. Alongside short comedy sketches it features music by NOFX and Guttermouth, among others. It is considered by some as one of the worst films of all time. ==Synopsis== The film mainly consists of skits featuring celebrities in various roles, based on concepts Offer had originally performed on a public-access television show he had hosted. Skits included Gena Lee Nolin posing as Marilyn Monroe, supermodels loudly using the restroom, and a superhero named "Dickman" who dressed in a penis costume and defeated his enemies by squirting them with semen. ==Cast== ;Supermodels Taking a Dump * Barbara Snellenburg as Supermodel #1 * Rebecca Chaney as Supermodel #2 ;Bat Man * Gloria Sperling as Old Lady * Sam Costello as Security Guard * Chris Watson as Rhymer * Vince Offer as Batman ;Boobwatch * Karen Black as Mother * Brian Van Holt as Lifeguard ;Virgin Hunter * Lightfield Lewis as Virgin Hunter * Barbara Snellenburg as Virgin ;Gay Virgin * Ant as Gay Man * Michael Clarke Duncan as Gay Virgin ;I Hate L.A. * Vince Offer, David Rotter, and Danny Rotter as Singers * Jeffrey Jaeger as Transvestite ;The Godmother * Michael "Wheels" Parisi as Godmother * Joey Buttafuoco as Sonny * Vince Offer as Fetus Salesman ;The Adventures of Dickman * Peachy Keene as Lesbian #1 * Melanie Pullen as Lesbian #2 * Rebecca Chaney as Lesbian #3 ;Watts Up Talk Show * Vince Offer as JJ Cool * Morgan Alvet as KKK ;Psychology Today * Zoska Myock as Patient * Michael "Wheels" Parisi as Psychologist ;Beautiful Girl With Old Man * Barbara Snellenburg as Beautiful Girl * George Smity as Old Man ;Miss America Bag Lady Pageant * Slash as Host * Rebecca Chaney as Co-host ;Flirty Harry * Tony Vera as Bad Guy * Vince Offer as Flirty ;Porno Review * Bobby Lee as Chinese Man * Paolo Scandarisi as Arnold Swollenpecker * Sam Costell as Mailman * Vince Offer as Vincenzo Butafungu * Sam Mactaggert as Spanky Shvatsa * Joe Shapiro as Man-goo Man/Tutu Girl ;Jury Making Right Decision * Jerry "Mongo" Brown as Black Juror #1 * Ella Mae Davis as Black Juror # 2 * Mike Boito as White Juror #1 * Lightfield Lewis as White Juror #2 ;Marilyn Monroe * Gena Lee Nolin as Marilyn * Sam Costello as Bystander #1 * Joe Shapiro as Bystander #2 ==Production== Although the film was released and screened in 1999, Offer was bankrupt by 2002 and home video distribution plans were shelved. Offer, who had previously been a successful vegetable chopper salesman and businessman, resumed selling vegetable choppers at swap meets to support himself and raise money to complete his film project. Within a few months, he had earned enough to resume production, and the movie was finally completed, released, and marketed entirely on late-night infomercials that Offer paid for with his earnings from the swap meet vegetable chopper sales. The film has reportedly sold in excess of 100,000 copies. ==Reception== According to IMDb, The Underground Comedy Movie played on one movie theater screen on May 16, 1999, earning $856.https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0201290/business?ref_=tt_dt_bus The film earned less-than-favorable reviews, receiving a 33% from Rotten Tomatoes based on 6 reviews. The New York Post said it "may be the least amusing comedy ever made." Lawrence Van Gelder of The New York Times offered a scathing review, describing the movie as "a series of sketches built around subjects like masturbation, defecation, alienation, urination, necrophilia, voyeurism, casual brutality, and mockery of the unfortunate." Van Gelder added that tasteless or offensive material can be funny in the right hands, but that Offer "makes the common mistake of equating the recognition of comic potential for comedy itself. For the successful, talent bridges the gap, but, here, [talent] is absent." ==Lawsuits== The film was the subject of several lawsuits filed by Offer against others. On September 23, 1998, Vince Offer filed a suit against 20th Century Fox and the co-directors of There's Something About Mary, Bobby and Peter Farrelly. Offer claimed that 14 scenes in Mary were lifted from his film. The Farrellys released this statement: "We've never heard of him, we've never heard of his movie, and it's all a bunch of baloney." The case was dismissed with prejudice on a motion for summary judgment by order of the court in 2000, and 20th Century Fox was awarded $66,336.92 in attorneys' fees.Offer v. Farrelly, Case No. CV 98-7697 RAP(RCx) (C.D. Cal. Jan. 13, 2000); id. (Mar. 14, 2000). In 2000, Offer successfully sued Anna Nicole Smith for $4 million, claiming that Smith had agreed to be in his movie, but backed out in 1996 over fears that appearing in the movie would be detrimental to her career.Movie & TV News @ IMDb.com – WENN – 23 October 2000 In 2004, Offer sent out a press release through prnewsonline.com announcing his intention to sue the Church of Scientology. In 1997, while production was ongoing, the Church of Scientology had allegedly begun a large-scale smear campaign against Offer and his film (Offer was a Scientologist at the time)."Filmmaker Sues Church of Scientology" The director claimed the Scientologists' "Celebrity Centre" in Hollywood labeled him a "criminal" (based on the rules of Scientology) and threatened his Scientology friends in the movie business with "condemnation" punishment that could be lethal to their careers if they did not write malicious reports against Offer. ==Sequel== In June 2010, it was revealed that Offer had completed filming of scenes starring Lindsay Lohan and model Joanna Krupa for a follow-up movie.Lindsay Lohan Shoots Paparazzi with Guns in Comedy Sketch The film was released in 2013 with the title InAPPropriate Comedy.Someone Thought It Was a Good Idea to Spend Money On This ==ReferencesExternal links== * Underground Comedy 2010 – official promotional site * Category:1999 comedy films Category:1999 direct-to-video films Category:American independent films Category:English-language films Category:American comedy films Category:American films Category:Scientology- related controversies "

— The Underground Comedy Movie 🦚

Released under the MIT License.

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