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Sloppy seconds (or slops in Australian slang [1]) is a slang phrase for when a man has sexual intercourse with a (female or male [2]) partner shortly after that person has had intercourse with someone else, and is therefore wet or "sloppy". [3] [4] The phrase "buttered bun" is sometimes used to refer to said orifice.
Sloppy Seconds is an American, Ramones-influenced punk band sometimes referred to as a junk rock band from Indianapolis, Indiana, that started in 1984.They gained notoriety in the underground punk scene with gritty and controversial [citation needed] songs like "Come Back, Traci," "I Don't Want to be a Homosexual", "Janie is a Nazi", "I Want 'em Dead" and "So Fucked Up."
Live: No Time for Tuning is the first live album by Sloppy Seconds. It was released in 1996 on Triple X Records, and was recorded at The Emerson Theater in their hometown Indianapolis , Indiana . [ 1 ]
The First Seven Inches is the first EP released by punk band Sloppy Seconds. It was released in 1987 on the band's own Alternative Testicles label. In 1992, it was reissued on Taang! Records under the title The First Seven Inches...And Then Some! along with 10 bonus tracks of various b-sides and outtakes from the band's first two albums and prior.
"Zaroori Tha" by Rahat Fateh Ali Khan is the most-viewed Pakistani video on YouTube. It is also the first Pakistani video to reach 1 billion views. On the American video-sharing website YouTube, "Tajdar-e-Haram" sung by Atif Aslam became first Pakistani music video to cross 100 million views.
The song describes a driver who lost control of a car on a slick road and crashed into a pole. The subject is paralyzed and connected to machines in the hospital. "Sloppy Seconds" Watsky: 2013: From the album Cardboard Castles; first verse details a car crash "Slow Car Crash" Headphones: 2005 "Your purse hit the wind shield when I locked the ...
Destroyed is the first full-length studio album by punk band Sloppy Seconds.It was released by Toxic Shock Records, on LP and cassette, and co-released on CD by the Musical Tragedies label in Germany, both in 1989.
Soon after, the two remaining members met Natti, a fellow Kentucky emcee. Deacon and Kno describe his joining as a casual process, with Natti already being featured on Sloppy Seconds Vol. 2 and being involved in Deacon's side group Kynfolk. [11] Natti would be the final member to join the group and end its formation. [12] [13]