This song was a sad and personal story about Merle Haggard's loss of his girlfriend..I"m almost done,Couple More,Then I"ll hit some other Classics
This song was a sad and personal story about Merle Haggard's loss of his girlfriend..I"m almost done,Couple More,Then I"ll hit some other Classics
I had heard that,never researched it thoughThis song was a sad and personal story about Merle Haggard's loss of his girlfriend..
I drifted away from football maybe 10-15 years ago. I could no longer stand the 'show'...spiking the ball, dancing, goading each other, self-celebrating when you score, and unecessarily roughing each other up like it's a hockey game.
While football is an inherently violent sport, over the decades the worst of the carnage has been removed from the game. The threshold for incurring a penalty for unnecessary roughness today is far lower than what it was when I was a young man. This year, the NFL is also cracking down on taunting. As for the showtime elements of the game, well, that is not going away any time soon. I can tolerate your average touchdown celebration. What's more annoying is, for instance, someone celebrating a third-down stop when their team is trailing 31-7 late in the fourth quarter.You mean when the player who catches the touchdown pass and his teamate run towards each other, then jump up and bump their chests together? That is so primitive.I can tolerate your average touchdown celebration.


I still have the same album I bought back then. This song now has a lot more meaning to me now, considering my age, and especially since I lost many good friends in the past 10 years. Back in the mid-70's, injecting methedrine and other bad stuff was prevalent, and some also smoked 2 packs a day, even into their 40's and beyond, leading to COPD.I got that album right after it was released and it's still one of my favorites.
Hilarious! I could not understand the second story until the third time I listened to it.Not a song but I couldn't resist
Ive always loved this song. I"ve been to the museum on Whitefish PointFifty years ago today, the Edmund Fitzgerald sank in Lake Superior. All twenty-nine of her officers and crew were lost. Gordon Lightfoot's classic about the disaster has been posted before on this thread, but on this anniversary, it seems appropriate to offer it again.
Fifty years ago today, the Edmund Fitzgerald sank in Lake Superior.