Antony Starr’s acting is so powerful that you’d really root for Homelander to get the V even though he’s the antagonist of @TheBoysTV. Gonna miss Antony Starr as Homelander
I watched #Banshee. It’s brutal, addictive, and surprisingly emotional. Have to say it’s an underrated crime thriller! Banshee remains Antony Starr’s masterclass.
Sir Matt Busby Player of the Year ✅
United Players' Player of the Year ✅
FWA Footballer of the Year ✅
Premier League Player of the Season ✅
That's our Bruno 🐐
What was that even! @TheBoysTV creators did #Homelander dirty. Built one of the most terrifying, layered villains on TV only to flatten him into shock value chaos in the end.
Led Zeppelin IV, also known as Four Symbols or Zoso, is the British band’s fourth studio album and one of the most important in Rock History.
It was released on November 8, 1971, with no official title on the cover and no mention of the band’s name, which sparked controversy with their record label, Atlantic.
Following the success of Led Zeppelin III, which had a more acoustic and folk-oriented sound, the band sought to evolve. Jimmy Page and Robert Plant returned to the Bron-Yr-Aur cabin in Wales to compose away from touring and reconnect with nature. They decided that this album would not feature a visible title as an artistic statement.
Each member chose a personal symbol to represent themselves on the back cover: Jimmy Page chose his mysterious ZoSo, Robert Plant a feather in a circle, John Paul Jones a sign of trust, and John Bonham three interlocking circles symbolizing his family.
Recording began in December 1970 at Island Studios in London. They then moved to Headley Grange, a dilapidated old country house in Hampshire, where they used the Rolling Stones’ mobile studio. That isolated setting with its special atmosphere was key. John Bonham recorded the drums for “When the Levee Breaks” in a three-story hallway, hanging microphones from the stairs to achieve that epic sound. Tracks like “Rock and Roll” emerged from spontaneous improvisations. The overdubs were done later in London, and the final mix was supervised by Jimmy Page in Los Angeles.
The cover features an old painting of an elderly man carrying firewood, found by Robert Plant and photographed on a crumbling wall. The back cover shows a modern building in Birmingham to contrast the old and the new. Inside, the figure of the Hermit from the Tarot appears alongside part of the lyrics to “Stairway to Heaven.”
It debuted at the top of the charts and became Led Zeppelin’s best-selling album, with over 37 million copies sold worldwide.