
Greg from Alaska I always thought it was about Jesus.Brooke Burkett from Norfolk, VaHow could you leave out the 90's movie, Tales from the Crypt: Demon Knight? The opening scene playing this song was so badass.
Shay Shay In Ga from GaGreg from Alaska - ME TOO!!!. And so many VCRed it and made copies of the footage. I know for sure at least 3 differnt camera angles were filmed and brodcasted live. I got copies from a friend on a Faces of Death compilation video he made me. As maybe known it was best to be seen? Even repeated in parts later. I switched channels quickly to 3 and then 10 as they were usually on more of a delay. As many begged him not to do it he quickly put the gun in his mouth and had very little hesatation. He came off very afriaid and then determined after his speach. The second people saw the gun, they did not even scatter in fear really. If some were not already in danger and that is why he made it so public, not sure. So deemed suicide was the only way to protect his family. It was a big new story that interupted all programs, thus forcing many to watch.īelief was that Budd was working for the mob.
I am from the area so heard all about the going ons.
J From Pa from Bucks, PaWatched it live January 22nd 1987.
Vicki Shannon Wilson from TexasMatt from Atlanta Ga.
NICE SHOT MAN MEANING TV
He did it on live TV to flip the bird to everyone. Had he been sentenced and removed from office he would have forfeited both.
Rel from PaIt is believed that Bud killed himself on his last day in office before sentencing so his wife would be able to collect his State secured life insurance and his State pension. If from NebraskaI would have thought it was about Timothy McVeigh and what he stood for and did in Oklahoma. Greg Oaster from Delco, PaSong was in the opening scene of The Blacklist, Season 1, Episode3, Wujing. I thought, 'That sounds like the Chameleons, but it's pretty bad bass.'" I'm going to hit it out of the park.' And that bass line spoke to me immediately when I wrote that. If I'm going to do it, I'm going to just kill. That s-t's been done.' It was so puritanical and I'm so far removed from that.Īnd so when I wrote the chorus, I was like, 'Well, there you go. I mean, the fact that I had anything remotely sounding like choruses to me was almost like selling out, because I was so into Skinny Puppy and the music that I was listening to was so avant-garde that I was like, 'You can't write choruses anymore, man. I really didn't even notice I was creating a hook, because I didn't want it to sound like, 'Oh, this is a hook.' I was so far removed. You can tell that I wanted to build the song. I threw in some atmospheric overdubs and stuff. I really had to focus on the verse, and so I just made the verse as sparse as possible. Then we had that in the computer for a long time. "'Hey Man, Nice Shot' was the 'aha moment,' where you're like, 'That was so easy.' Coming up with the riff and chorus was one of those things like, 'Well, how the f-k hasn't anyone ever done this?' Like, in the last 500 years of music, how in the hell has someone never just pieced this together? Because it makes so much sense, such a perfect little never-ending riff that you could just play forever and ever and ever and it would never get old. Richard Patrick tells us that this song hit like a bolt of lightning.