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Gimpy Geek 1.0

A Journey for 9/11 Home Page

This is definitely a story that does not get enough attention in the media. A scarily large number of people who were Ground Zero first responders on 9/11 in New York are suffering from various physical ailments including cancer as a result of being exposed to the construction materials of the Two Towers. Too many of these folks cannot afford their medical expenses. (Who can afford medical expenses?) Well, there is at least one man who wants to do something about this. Former New York Giants football player George Martin is literally walking across the country from New York to San Francisco to raise money for these heroes. Mr. Martin has covered over 1,000 miles since September and has raised about $1.5 million of his $10 million goal. Peter King devoted the first half or so of his Monday Morning Quarterback column today to this awesome story. I urge you to read it and check out the A Journey for 9/11 Home Page to donate. Great story and a great cause. Way to go, Mr. Martin.

My Name Is Bruce Movie

Now, we all know that Bruce Campbell is one of America’s leading movie/TV actors, right? (You don’t know that? You Primitive Screw-head.) Bruce is back playing his greatest role since Elvis: himself.

In the upcoming straight-to-DVD movie “My Name Is Bruce” Bruce plays himself being recruited to save a bunch of college “geniuses” from a Chinese demon they released. Fellow B-movie actor and buddy Ted Raimi co-stars. (Ted being a younger brother of “Spiderman” franchise director Sam Raimi. Bruce, Ted, and Sam all got their starts making the cinematic classic “Evil Dead” movies, but I’m sure you know this. You should, anyway.)

The Bloody Disgusting website has the trailer at www.bloody-disgusting.com/bdtv/Player.php?id=1517.
It looks a bit gross but seems to hark back to Army of Darkness horror-fun.

“Hail to the King, Baby!”

56 Kinds of Geek

On NewLaunches.com I spotted this chart of 56 Kinds of Geek. How many are you? I counted 13 that applied to me including, yes, KISS Geek! :)

RIP Kevin Dubrow

As is widely known, now, Quiet Riot frontman Kevin Dubrow passed away last week at 52. As I write this no cause of death has been announced. I will not assume, as some have, that it “must be drugs” because he was an old ’80s rocker. Let’s wait and see what the official word is eventually. Mr. Dubrow simply died too young at only 52. The reasons are unimportant right now.

Quiet Riot opened the first real concert I ever saw as a high school senior in 1983. My friends and I elected not to attend school that day due to it being the unofficial “Senior Skip Day” and we made our way to, I think, Des Moines, Iowa to see the Scorpions on their “Blackout” tour. We’d never heard of Quiet Riot. They blew us away. Not long after, “Cum On Feel the Noize” blew up on MTV and their album “Metal Health” knocked Michael Jackson’s “Thriller” album out of the #1 spot. The Age of ’80s Metal had begun, thanks to Quiet Riot. I later that summer saw Quiet Riot again opening for Loverboy of all bands, with Joan Jett sandwiched in between. Then, in the Fall of 1983, as a college freshman, I traveled with some guys to Davenport, Iowa’s Col Ballroom to see QR finally headline a show with AXE opening. It was a small venue and we got to be right up front, one of the few perks of being a gimp. It was fantastic! I still remember being just feet away from Kevin, Carlos, Rudy and Frankie. I was a hooked Metal Head at that point.

QR didn’t last as long as some bands as their next albums gradually sold less and less and Dubrow even got himself fired from the band in the late ’80s. By 1993, Kevin and Frankie Banali had reconciled and they occasionally recorded as Quiet Riot and toured. I caught them on one of those package tours in 2001, I think, with Poison the headliner. It was QR’s “Metal Health” lineup and it rocked! Just like old times. Connie and I caught them in Peoria on another package in 2005 with Firehouse, Ratt and Cinderella. Only Kevin and Frankie remained in the band but it was a good show. I guess they even stayed in the same hotel as we did in Peoria and ate in the Bennigan’s just before we did.

They were still making music and playing shows even recently. I downloaded their 2006 CD “Rehab” and it’s pretty good. I’m going to pick up 2001’s “Guilty Pleasures,” too, I think.

At that last show I saw in 2005, QR was at a table signing autographs after their set but I didn’t get in line because I’d just waited in line for Firehouse autographs. I also didn’t want to miss Ratt. I wish I had gotten in line and taken the time to tell Kevin Dubrow how much Quiet Riot meant to me in 1983, how they taught me to bang my head and gave us all a soundtrack for 1983 as we transitioned from high school to college. QR opened the “radio door” for all the others: Ratt, Poison, Cinderella, Warrant, Skid Row, etc. Thanks, Quiet Riot. Rest in peace, Kevin, and my condolences to the Quiet Riot family.

YouTube - Scrap Metal Resurrects Slaughter, Night Ranger, Mr. Big and Nelson!

Check out this promo video on YouTube of ’80s “all star band” Scrap Metal! It’s a sort of “all lead singer” group with only one non-singer I could spot on guitar. It’s made up of singers from Slaughter (Mark Slaughter), Night Ranger (Kelly Keeagy), Mr. Big (Eric Martic) and Nelson (Gunnar and Matthew Nelson). I also found a review of a performance at Glam-metal.com. Call the ’80s cheesey, but I have CDs from all of these bands except Nelson and I’d pay to see their show. I worshipped Mr. Big and never got to see them live so just seeing Eric Martin would be worth it to me. From what I’ve found online, various other ’80s rockers make guest appearances at shows, too. They have a MySpace page at http://www.myspace.com/ScrapMetalBand although I’m no fan of MySpace…

“You Can Still Rock In America” baby.

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