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Stereo Mood SNIPER! GET DOWN!! XBMC XBMC is an award-winning free and open source (GPL) software media player and entertainment hub that can be installed on Linux, OSX, Windows, iOS, and Android, featuring a 10-foot user interface for use with televisions and remote controls. It allows users to play and view most videos, music, podcasts, and other digital media files from local and network storage media and the internet. Our forums and Wiki are bursting with knowledge and help for the new user right up to the application developer. We also have helpful Facebook, Google+, Reddit, Twitter and Youtube pages. Music XBMC can play all your music including mp3, flac, wav and wma formats. Movies XBMC can do Movies too! TVShows The TVShows library supports episode and season views with posters or banners, watched tags, show descriptions and actors. Pictures Import pictures into a library and browse the different views, start a slideshow, sort or filter them all using your remote control. Add-Ons Skin Bello UPnP Web Interfaces

Shuffler Satan Stole My Teddybear music reviews Celebutards, Dystopian Landscapes and Pseudo-Scientific Morons.... Church of Zer Aurgasm | your favorite music you've never heard Functional Rubbish Sister Outsider Headbanger On Being a Black Feminist Metalhead I'm not sure exactly when or how it happened, but at some point in my childhood I began to think I was a white guy trapped in the body of a black girl. And not just any white guy, either—a guitar player in a heavy-metal band. Ok, stop laughing. It's no joke. I'm a black female metalhead. Over the next few years, I embraced my heavy metal destiny. But in the early '80s, some of us kids in the 'hood did listen to metal. I buried my metal affection at first, not wanting to seem like too much of a freak to my friends, sneaking Metallica songs in between Salt 'N Pepa and Digital Underground on mix tapes. And yet I think that contradiction was what appealed to me in the first place. And so it went for a couple of years—maintaining the dual identity of regular high-school student by day, hard-rockin' metalhead by night—but I felt pretty isolated. By sophomore year, I had encountered some kindred spirits. I can buy that. But metal did empower me.

The Day After The Sabbath

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