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The ex-Smiths frontman has a reputation for lashing out at other figures in the media, but he does have a soft spot for those who consistently "fascinate" him.
Chris Evans might come across like a vision of cool, but he fluffed up one audition after being star struck by the director.
The Velvet Underground were a New York band through and through, so when they first landed in California in 1966, it was never going to work for them.
Taking a look at the lifelong friendship and creative partnership between Seth Rogen and Evan Goldberg that was formed in the most unlikely of places.
Tom Petty got himself in a spot for using a "cliché" line from 'I'll Be You' by The Replacements in one of his most popular songs ...
Martin Scorsese might be a genius, but he's never been described as a comedian, something that changed after an unexpectedly "funny" short film.
Joey Ramone once discussed why he thought the first Beatles album was the most important, suggesting that debut albums are the most crucial.
While rarely blessed with significant commercial attention, New York's original CBGB movement did see one key 1970s punk album sell by the tens of millions.
Paul Thomas Anderson wrote and directed a 2000 'Saturday Night Live' sketch starring Ben Affleck, which cast Affleck as an Anna Nicole Smith superfan.
Cults are notoriously toxic environments, but when you reach Arcosanti in Arizona, their very motto is the antithesis to this problematic ideal.
One of the most acclaimed rock records of the 2000s, Queens of the Stone Age's 'Songs for the Deaf' boasts an intriguing slew of fictitious DJ and radio hosts.
After starring with her in a 1950s psychological thriller, one actor called Marilyn Monroe "impossible" to work with.
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