Happy 53rd birthday to the legendary Oasis vocalist Liam Gallagher!
Here is Liam Gallagher with Oasis performing "Wonderwall" a few weeks ago.
30 years later and he sounds exactly the same. BIBLICAL.
Awful news: Walt Jocketty, the fabulous GM of the Oakland Athletics, St. Louis Cardinals and Cincinnati Reds, has died at the age of 74.
Jocketty, one of the finest, nicest and genuine executives in all of baseball, has been battling serious health issues the past 2 years.
Critic Fans!!!!
You keep telling me you want it back.
I've been trying for years!
Well, now, creator Al Jean is on board!!!
If you want it back, we need your help!
Please like this post and spread the word! So we can show the studio, how many people want it!
Christopher Nolan says “if you buy a 4K UHD it’s on your shelf it’s yours, no company is going to break into your house & take it from you.”
“That’s never really the case with digital distribution, you’re relying on the continued health of the supplier.”
@liamgallagher I’m disappointed in you, Liam. No St. Louis date for the US tour? Still waiting for you to make up the canceled St. Louis show from 1994!
Astros 1B Lance Berkman remembers how quiet. How he once described the blast to Cardinals Magazine is one of our all-time favorite quotes: “After Edmonds walked, Gar (Houston manager Phil Garner) came out to the mound and I went over, too. I was like, let’s not pitch to this guy because Reggie Sanders was standing over there on deck. But we talked about not wanting to walk the bases loaded and Gar said just pitch real carefully and don’t give him anything to hit. That is kind of the kiss of death. On the first pitch, Lidge threw about a 50-foot slider and Albert swung at it. I’d never seen him swing at a pitch that far out of the strike zone so I’m thinking, ‘that’s great, he doesn’t see it.’ The count’s 0-1 and Lidge tried to throw the same pitch. But he hung it and Albert hit it 800 feet (The distance was estimated at 470 feet, with a 117 mph exit velocity). “What I remember most is that Minute Maid Park, one of the loudest to places you can play in when people are jammed in there like they were, you could not hear yourself think. They were going absolutely crazy. As soon as Albert hit that ball, it went to being dead silent to where I could hear Albert’s cleats digging into the ground as he was rounding first base. I’ve never in my life experienced the juxtaposition of those two extremes."