Author Topic: Goth, Metalhead Overcome Subcultural Differences to Find  (Read 2361 times)

HoyaSaxa03

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Goth, Metalhead Overcome Subcultural Differences to Find
« on: May 26, 2005, 04:58:00 pm »
http://www.theonion.com/news/index.php?issue=4121&n=2
 
 DANVILLE, ILā??People fall in love every day, but self-proclaimed "Goth for life" Danielle Richardson, 24, and avid metal-music fan Rick Halloway, 26, faced bigger obstacles than most couples. In spite of having come from vastly different subcultural groups, the unlikely couple celebrated their three-month anniversary Monday.
 
  <img src="http://www.theonion.com/images/439/article3225.jpg" alt=" - " />
 
 "It hasn't been easy dating someone so totally different," said Halloway, wearing faded black jeans and a Mastodon T-shirt. "There have been times, like when Dani asked who Phil Anselmo was, that I almost wanted to say 'forget this bullshit.' But then I reminded myself that nothing good is ever easy. That's why I chose the path of metalā??living fast and rocking hard. I never in my craziest dreams thought that path would lead me to Dani, but I'm so glad it did."
 
 Added Halloway: "Fuckin' A, she totally rocks."
 
 Richardson said that, although she has lived her whole life in the same small, largely middle-class Midwestern town as Halloway, the two couldn't be more different. While Halloway spends his free time fixing his car or plugging the jukebox at T.J.'s Tap, Richardson spends her free time shopping at thrift stores and reading poetry at The Black Cat, a red-velvet-curtained bar nearly 10 blocks away from T. J.'s.
 
 "No one is more surprised by our union than I," Richardson said. "When we met, there was a strong attraction, but so much more is required for lasting love. I never believed one such as Rick could touch my shadowed heart, but touch it he has."
 
 Halloway admitted that the relationship got off to a shaky start.
 
 "Me and some of my friends were hanging out in front of the Midas when Dani walked by with a big, black umbrella," Halloway said. "Well, it wasn't raining, so my friends started making fun of her. But when she looked over, our eyes locked. I was like, 'Whoa.'"
 
 A few days later, Halloway ran into Richardson at the Danville Cineplex.
 
 "I asked her what she was going to seeā??I think it was that gay-ass Blade: Trinity movie," Halloway said. "Danielle was wearing this weird black lacy thing. I like women who wear black, but usually it's leather with studs. But something about her made me wait for her after my movie got out. I'm so glad I did."
 
 Richardson said she began dating Halloway with serious reservations.
 
 "Our first date was positively chillingā??Rick's soul seemed to be crying out to me," Richardson said. "Still, it brought me much pain to realize that we would have no future togetherā??we were so very different."
 
 "But at the end of the night, when I reached out to take Rick's hand, I noticed that his fingernails were painted black," Richardson added. "I told him how sexy it was, and he told me he got the idea from a Danzig video. That was the first time I realized we had something deep and eternal in common."
 
 Although he had similar doubts, Halloway said he "decided to say 'fuck it' and go for it."
 
 "On our next date, Danielle took me to this place where a house had burned to the groundā??the whole place was all scorched and shit," Halloway said. "It looked like a Sepultura video. It was such a kickass spot that we started making out like animals."
 
 Continued Halloway: "For a girl who writes poetry, Danielle is a totally crazed hell-demon in the sack. She tears the shit out of my back. She's a righteous chick, even if she doesn't like me calling her that."
 
 Although the couple overcame subcultural differences, their friends have not been so open-minded.
 
 "I thought Danielle was just trying to get a reaction from us by going out with some loser," said Valerie Brasher, a longtime Goth. "I could see how our outrage might be delicious to her, but now, she actually seems serious about Rick. This lunacy makes my mind swim with sadness."
 
 "Danielle will always be very dear to me, but I can't support that relationship," Brasher added. "Once, I suggested that Rick wax his goatee into a tapered, devilish point and he told me to keep my pale-ass freak hands to myself. I mean, talk about your typical close-minded metalhead vulgarian behavior."
 
 Halloway's friends have similarly disparaged the union.
 
 "I told Rick that there's a reason why, when we were all in high school, our friends would hang out under the bleachers and the Goths would hang out in the atrium," Mike Kryzinski said. "It was because our kinds don't get along. What's gonna happen at their wedding when Danielle starts playing Sisters Of Mercy or some shit like that? What kind of music are their kids gonna listen to? Hasn't he ever stopped and thought about the future?"
(o|o)

Bags

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Re: Goth, Metalhead Overcome Subcultural Differences to Find
« Reply #1 on: May 26, 2005, 05:10:00 pm »
Quote
No one is more surprised by our union than I,"
God bless, the goth chick uses correct grammar.  And in particular, a rule rarely followed, even by screenwriters these days.  She deserves more than a metalhead who doesn't --
 
 
Quote
"Me and some of my friends were hanging out in front of the Midas when Dani walked by with a big, black umbrella," Halloway said.

Dandy01

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Re: Goth, Metalhead Overcome Subcultural Differences to Find
« Reply #2 on: May 26, 2005, 08:37:00 pm »
Too funny; sounds familiar though.

snailhook

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Re: Goth, Metalhead Overcome Subcultural Differences to Find
« Reply #3 on: May 27, 2005, 04:51:00 am »
hahaha, best onion story in a while...
 
 but what about type o negative?   :p

Frank Gallagher

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Re: Goth, Metalhead Overcome Subcultural Differences to Find
« Reply #4 on: May 27, 2005, 07:50:00 am »
3 months give me an eff'n break.
 
 Bags, on the subject of grammar, ......which is correct. "Billy and me" or "Billy and I"? We were always taught the latter at school then I took a writing course at MC years ago and was told the first one was correct. I just assumed it was yet another example of the doodles destroying a perfectly good language.

HoyaSaxa03

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Re: Goth, Metalhead Overcome Subcultural Differences to Find
« Reply #5 on: May 27, 2005, 08:18:00 am »
Quote
Originally posted by O'Mankie:
  3 months give me an eff'n break.
 
 Bags, on the subject of grammar, ......which is correct. "Billy and me" or "Billy and I"? We were always taught the latter at school then I took a writing course at MC years ago and was told the first one was correct. I just assumed it was yet another example of the doodles destroying a perfectly good language.
it's all about the context ... the easiest way to think about it is to strip away the "Billy" and just think of how you would say it with one person ... so it sounds horrible to say "Me is going to the store", so it's clearly "Billy and I are going to the store" rather than "Billy and me are going to the store" ... i'm sure there's much more technical explanations, but that pretty much sums it up
(o|o)

thirsty moore

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Re: Goth, Metalhead Overcome Subcultural Differences to Find
« Reply #6 on: May 27, 2005, 10:34:00 am »
I thought the Cockneys already did that.
 
   
Quote
Originally posted by O'Mankie:
 I just assumed it was yet another example of the doodles destroying a perfectly good language.

ratioci nation

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Re: Goth, Metalhead Overcome Subcultural Differences to Find
« Reply #7 on: May 27, 2005, 10:38:00 am »
Quote
Originally posted by HoyaParanoia:
 it's all about the context ... the easiest way to think about it is to strip away the "Billy" and just think of how you would say it with one person ... so it sounds horrible to say "Me is going to the store", so it's clearly "Billy and I are going to the store" rather than "Billy and me are going to the store" ... i'm sure there's much more technical explanations, but that pretty much sums it up
so wait.....
 
 "I is going to the store" sounds right to you?

Frank Gallagher

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Re: Goth, Metalhead Overcome Subcultural Differences to Find
« Reply #8 on: May 27, 2005, 11:34:00 am »
Quote
Originally posted by general grievous:
   
Quote
Originally posted by HoyaParanoia:
 it's all about the context ... the easiest way to think about it is to strip away the "Billy" and just think of how you would say it with one person ... so it sounds horrible to say "Me is going to the store", so it's clearly "Billy and I are going to the store" rather than "Billy and me are going to the store" ... i'm sure there's much more technical explanations, but that pretty much sums it up
so wait.....
 
 "I is going to the store" sounds right to you? [/b]
In S.E. Washington D.C., most certainly.

Bags

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Re: Goth, Metalhead Overcome Subcultural Differences to Find
« Reply #9 on: May 27, 2005, 11:55:00 am »
Hoya hit it on the compound subject issue.  What's tough about the goth chick's sentence, and what most people get wrong, is that you have to use the subjective "I" at the end of the sentence because there's an implied verb "am", making the pronoun the subject of a phrase:
 
 "No one is more surprised by our union than I,"
 
 Implied -- "No one is more surprised by our union than I [am]" -- 'I am' being a phrase which requires the pronoun to be a subject.
 
 You'd use the objective 'me' if it's the object of a phrase, "No one is more surprised than I that he threw that can at me."
 
 It's a rule that is so often messed up, even in fine shows like "West Wing" and "Law and Order," that it may not stay a rule much longer.  [That happens over time, and I hate it.]

Frank Gallagher

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Re: Goth, Metalhead Overcome Subcultural Differences to Find
« Reply #10 on: May 27, 2005, 12:14:00 pm »
Quote
Originally posted by Bags:
  It's a rule that is so often messed up, even in fine shows like "West Wing" and "Law and Order," that it may not stay a rule much longer.  [That happens over time, and I hate it.]
Fine shows?

smakawhat

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Re: Goth, Metalhead Overcome Subcultural Differences to Find
« Reply #11 on: May 28, 2005, 11:01:00 pm »
There's a real twist of Cain for ya!

Bags

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Re: Goth, Metalhead Overcome Subcultural Differences to Find
« Reply #12 on: May 29, 2005, 12:34:00 am »
Quote
Originally posted by O'Mankie:
   
Quote
Originally posted by Bags:
  It's a rule that is so often messed up, even in fine shows like "West Wing" and "Law and Order," that it may not stay a rule much longer.  [That happens over time, and I hate it.]
Fine shows? [/b]
Well, their writers always win emmies, so I figue the writers should know the rules of grammar...