In fact I do. "Ping" is a word that my boss and my teammates use quite a bit. It's just happens to be part of the vernacular at my company. As for disc... old habits die hard. Of course, now that I'm being mocked for it, I will use more frequently.Ping? Disc? You don't say these things in real life, do you?
And chances are good, in the 10+ years I've spent on RC, I've done little to dissuade you of that notion.so since then i have always associated the word "disc", when referring to a music album, with people who are into terrible music
i just googled up a random review of his, check it out http://www.ssmt-reviews.com/artist/white_w.html – search for "disc" on this page and lol
You can always tell a reviewer sucks if he uses "haunting" to describe something
Plus, using "very" as an adjective (or a DOUBLE adjective, like here) in any writing context is pretty much a forehead stamp saying, "I'm dumber than a bag of hammers"
True. What's always made RC an interesting place is the wide variety of tastes, and people's willingness to stand up for the shit they like, rather than follow the herd (Negura Bunget not withstanding... who, let's face it people, are just awful, and no one really likes them, they only claim to like them for cool points).naw, you're alright
i mean i'm sure you listen to your share of terrible bands but who doesn't
Yes. I literally stopped reading music reviews after Royal Carnage died.music journalism is so fucking stupid and full of complete hacks
I love reading reviews, as long as they're scathing
agreedSomehow reviews always piss me off, even if I agree with them.