Archive for the 'iPod' Category
BILLY CORGAN AND TILA TEQUILA…

The earth just tilted even slightly more off axis and every Smashing Pumpkins fan has died a little inside after discovering that 90s rock god Billy Corgan is dating reality TV “star” Tila Tequila. The pairing marks the first documented relationship in United States history between a pygmy and an albino. I’m already taking their kids’ lunch money.
2:1 odds that Tila Tequila has zero Smashing Pumpkins songs on her iPod. The couple made their public “debut” at Bravo’s 2009 A-List Awards last week. I honestly can’t remember if I ever took Billy Corgan seriously, but now there’s no doubt in my mind that any music released while he’s under the wrath of Tila Tequila will not make its way into my iTunes library.
How about some “Disarm”? Good excuse to post it.
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NEW AND IMPROVED iPOD SHUFFLE

Apple released the latest in their iPod line today, a new and improved iPod Shuffle. For $79, you can get a 4GB shuffle that holds up to 1,000 songs and has a few notable features:
It’s tiny and smaller than its predecessor. The controls are now attached to the headphone cord, giving you the ability to change the song with it in your pocket.
Has a new “Voice Over” feature that, with the press of a button, tells you what song is playing and who is performing it.
A step in the right direction for the smaller iPod, usually purchased by runners and people on-the-go. We’re still waiting on wireless ear buds, Apple. Make it happen.
No comments10 WORDS TO DEFINE THE 21ST CENTURY

First, I must apologize because this is my longest post ever on That’s So Fetch. This post is a microcosm of why I created this blog in the first place. This post is my best attempt to define a generation; Generation Y, if you will. Those born between the early 1980s and the 21st century. Those born into a life with computers.
Every generation seems to be strikingly dissimilar to the generations preceding it due to not only cultural changes, but advances in technology. In the 21st century, we are upon a generation driven by the advent of computers, and more precisely, the internet. Being born in the early 1980s makes people my age one of the last to understand a world without texting, Google, or listening to music on anything other than a tape or disc. In the mid-1990s, chat rooms and instant messaging changed the face of social interaction, but texting, social networking sites, and video conferencing is shaping a generation.
Eight-year-olds with cell phones. Twelve-year-old girls taking pictures of themselves in front of mirrors for their MySpace profiles. Sixteen-year-olds who have never purchased a CD because all music is “free”. Adults who spell “your” as “ur” and update their Facebook status every 30 minutes because they think people care.
I know these aren’t all just one word. Just pretend they are…
10 WORDS TO DEFINE
THE 21ST CENTURY
NARCISSISM

If you have ever taken a picture of yourself and you’re the only person in the picture, this applies to you. Facebook and MySpace have spawned a strange sense of self-importance among American youth. Hundreds of pictures, most taken in some stupid pose in front of a mirror or what I like to call “The MySpace Picture”, where one holds the camera with one arm and snaps a photo of themselves in a “glamorous” pose. Usually perpetrated by underage girls baring their midriffs or depressed emo boys with stupid-ass haircuts. Otherwise extremely boring people thinking their lives are important enough to update us with their every move, whether they’re at the grocery or “out 2 lunch with tha gurlz!”, they seem to think we care.
BAD GRAMMAR

Before the internet, people actually had to write - GASP - on paper to each other. Spelling “your” as “ur” and “to” as “2″ wasn’t acceptable. But give a 21st century child an email address and AOL screen name and you will struggle to find at least an attempt at writing like an educated human being. Awful spelling and absent punctuation are commonplace in the 21st century. The shift key has become an afterthought.
TEXT

We all have that friend whom you will call and they won’t answer, immediately followed by a “hey, what’s up?” or a “you called?” text. Texting, instant messaging, and Facebook/MySpace messaging has made communication too easy and is ruining interpersonal skills. Keeping a conversation on the phone in the 21st century is like pulling teeth. Not to mention, hitting on chicks has become way too easy. Impersonal flirting via text and Facebook wall posts has made getting laid much easier for boring (or lazy) dudes.
MP3

In 1998, a computer program called Napster bent the music business over and made it it’s bitch. From that point on, music has become degraded and to this day, there are people who don’t pay for the music they listen to. The iPod and listening to music through the shitty speakers on your laptop or your cellular phone has become the standard for most American consumers. Apple’s iTunes is both the worst and best thing to ever happen to the music business. While artists are getting paid for their songs (as opposed to not paid at all), people are getting their music a la carte. Instead of paying $15 for an entire album, the average person will pick their 3 or 4 favorite songs and move on. That’s a loss of $11-12 an album. The “mix tape” has taken a whole new meaning in the 21st century and it’s slowly killing an industry that was on top of the world 10+ years ago.
CHILD MEGA-STARS

The late 90s ushered in a new kind of star: the child mega-star. Currently, three brothers (two under the age of 18) and Disney channel stars (all under 18) are the biggest celebrities in America. Fame is being achieved, and cashed in on, at younger and younger ages. Miley Cyrus and The Jonas Brothers are walking dollar signs for deep pocketed corporate executives and are products, not human beings. I’m not saying that there wasn’t a fair share of child stars before the year 2000. We must not forget the Jonathan Taylor Thomases and Olsen Twins of years past. This century has bred insane parents living vicariously through their children and frankly, getting rich from turning their offspring into a product.
GOOGLE IT

Encyclopedias. Libraries. Books. Three things that the 21st-century person does not need because of one company: Google. We are obsessed with instant satisfaction and Google is the poster company for this necessity. Anything you want to know can be solved from a search engine. It’s like taking every book in every library in the world and condensing it into pages of text refined to your specific query. As someone born in the 1980s, I can say that I do not remember the last time I opened an encyclopedia or used a book for reference.
METROSEXUAL

Women’s jeans. Skin-tight clothing. Leather pants. Facials. Botox. Spray-on tans. Chest/Leg/Arm waxing. Somewhere around 5 or so years ago, all the aforementioned items suddenly transformed from taboo to accepted. A man without chest hair was suddenly “hot” and dudes wearing their sister’s jeans were picking up chicks. Straight guys in women’s jeans, a fake tan, walking out of a salon after a pedicure? No problem.
HEALTH OBSESSED

“OH MY GOD, high fructose corn syrup? WTF … I’m not eating that.” Eating a cheeseburger in the 2nd millennium A.D. is now equatable to killing one’s first born child. In a country where 20% of its population smokes, indulging one’s self in a milkshake or a basket of french fries has become a no-no. We live in a world where if a female celebrity gains 5 or more pounds, the media thinks she pregnant. A guy with some meat on the bones is overweight and love handles are frowned upon.
ADD

“Oh, my kid has two Fs, but don’t worry, he’s ADD.”
“Dude, don’t laugh at my G.P.A., I have ADD.”
At some point in the 90s, the amount of children “diagnosed” with Attention Deficit Disorder, or “ADD” as it is more commonly known, began to skyrocket. Parents began blaming the shortcomings of their children on a medical disorder, subsequently medicating them with prescription speed. I am just going to give it to you straight: children with ADD are one of the following: 1) bored with their coursework, 2) lazy, 3) stupid, or a combination of all three. I am not saying that every child claiming to be ADD is stupid, because being bored with school or laziness doesn’t necessarily make someone dumb. It’s an overused excuse for the below average test scores of incompetent children.
REALITY TELEVISION

A lot of things have been created that directly make the general population dumber. Reality television is at the top of that list. Telling you that I don’t enjoy a good dose of reality television every now and then would be a lie. The Real World and Survivor were some of the first, but the 21st century has brought upon the worst of the worst. Everything from Hulk Hogan’s family getting their own TV show to most recently, True Beauty on ABC, a show that searches for the “hottest” person in America. Reality is equally the same as turning on your TV and watching train wrecks. Scripted nonsense and unlikable characters make it one of the most embarrassing aspects of the 21st century.
5 commentsThe .99 Cent Download & The Demise of The ‘Album’
It’s 2008 and you’ve got places to be and a schedule to keep. It’s all about your iPod and your playlist. With the unveiling of Apple’s iTunes 8 today, the single song download generation has digressed another step - as far as the ‘album’ or ‘LP’ is concerned. Apple has added a new feature to the highest selling music store on earth, Genius Playlists and The Genius Sidebar, in an effort to help you create “on the go” playlists. It’s a great idea and we give it the TSF seal of approval - but it’s another step towards the inevitable obsolescence of the ‘album’ and eventually the compact disc.
The Beach Boys had Pet Sounds, The Beatles had Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band, and Pink Floyd had Dark
Side of the Moon - 3 great concept albums that were meant to flow as one and be listened to linearly - in one sitting. Each song has a meaning and a purpose and the album wouldn’t be complete without it. Apple has single-handedly killed this ideal. Ironically, I am huge Apple fan and owner of 3 iPods - not to mention, I haven’t owned a PC since 2001. The iPod is the best thing to happen to the music fan and the worst thing to happen to the music business as we know it. It’s no coincidence that album sales began to plummit the moment Apple’s hand-held, hard-drive-based music player began to catch on. Here we are, roughly 7 years later, and album sales have taken a nose dive every year.
So, the question is, will this end? The answer is no. Young adults and teens born in the 80s and 90s are generally not purchasing albums. They burn CDs of “mixes” or listen to their favorite songs on their iPods. I’d put money down that if you could survey every single 13-21 year old in America today on how many albums they’ve purchased in the last year, the average would be somewhere around 0-1. “Why buy the entire album when you can just buy the best 3 songs on iTunes…?”
So let’s discuss the Genius Playlist iTunes released today. While you are listening to one of your favorite songs, you can click this Genius button in the bottom right hand corner of iTunes (as seen above), which will then instantly create a 25, 50, 75, or 100 song playlist of songs in your library similar to the song you selected. This is a pretty effective feature - much better than the dated “party shuffle” feature that frankly, I think is terrible.
For example, I chose “That’s All” by Genesis and here is the subsequent 25 song playlist:
It would be pretty cool for a party. If you don’t have someone to DJ and someone requests rap songs, pick your favorite rap song and let the Genius Playlist do the work.








