Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
"Make Me Bad" is a song written and recorded by the American nu metal band Korn for their fourth studio album, Issues. Many Korn fans interpret the lyrics to be about frontman Jonathan Davis ' getting tired of drinking or drug abuse and his decision to get sober a year prior to Issues coming out.
"Make Me Bad (sickness in salvation remix)" Korn 5. "Southtown" P.O.D. 6. "Just Go" Staind 7. "From This Day" Machine Head ...
"Make Me Bad" was on that chart for 12 weeks. [16] "Make Me Bad" also went to number 9 on the Mainstream Rock Songs chart [14] and number 7 on the Modern Rock Tracks chart. [15] "Falling Away from Me" went to number 1 on MTV's Total Request Live many times during both November and December 1999. [17] [18]
The final game of the day ended the streak of blowout victories, as the first-seeded Oklahoma City Thunder picked up a narrow 94-92 victory against the No. 8 New Orleans Pelicans.
Welcome back to the playoffs, Damian Lillard. With Lillard resting to start the second quarter, Milwaukee remained in control and used a 10-0 run to extend its nine-point first quarter lead to 44-24.
"Somebody Someone" is a promotional single by American nu metal band Korn from their fourth album Issues. It was the least successful single from the album, and failed to reach the top 20 of Billboard's Mainstream Rock and Modern Rock charts, although it gained moderate airplay on MTV's Total Request Live.
Kier also appeared in the music videos for Korn's "Make Me Bad", Eve's "Let Me Blow Ya Mind", and "Die Schöne und das Biest" by defunct German band Rauhfaser. He has also worked extensively as a voice actor, starring as the psychic Yuri (as well as the voice of the PsiCorps) in Command & Conquer: Red Alert 2 and its expansion, Yuri's Revenge.
Crazy, Just Like Me was produced as part of the 2009 San Francisco Theatre Festival and the 2011 New York Musical Theatre Festival, where it won Best of Fest and was runner-up for Best Book. [8] [9] Make Me Bad. Make Me Bad, with music and lyrics by Gasparini and book by Alex Brightman, premiered at the Bloomington Playwrights Project in 2011. [10]