Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Thing a Week Two is the second Thing a Week album, and the fifth studio album by Jonathan Coulton.It features some of Coulton's most popular songs, including "Re: Your Brains," which would later be featured in Valve's popular 2009 video game, Left 4 Dead 2, and later re-recorded in French language in the album The Aftermath.
Concert. Ever and Jonathan Coulton's Greatest Hit (Plus 13 Other Songs), a compilation created for the Humble Music Bundle. The album features 20 previously released tracks from Coulton's first four studio albums, plus the two EPs Our Bodies, Ourselves, Our Cybernetic Arms and Where Tradition Meets Tomorrow. The album was released on October 22 ...
Produced by Jonathan Coulton; Released on December 12, 2006; Third season of Thing a Week; Contains "Code Monkey" and "Tom Cruise Crazy" 2006 Thing a Week Four. Produced by Jonathan Coulton; Released on December 12, 2006; Fourth season of Thing a Week; Contains "Creepy Doll" and "Mr. Fancy Pants" 2011 Artificial Heart. Produced by John Flansburgh
This spooky song has people rehashing disturbing moments from their lives. The post TikTokers are sharing their eerie premonitions to the tune of an unsettling song appeared first on In The Know.
She came out to play — and petrify. A 134-year-old talking doll invented by Thomas Edison managed to spook social media users — who called it “horrifying” and “the stuff of nightmares.”
Jonathan Coulton is the founder and biggest draw of the JoCo Cruise. The JoCo Cruise was started in 2011. It is a specialized nerd cruise that is a week long. [49] It is popular with fans of board games, video games, and nerdy music. Jonathan Coulton plays his music live on each of these cruises and attends the cruise himself.
A post out of Oklahoma City advertising a freakishly creepy doll on sale for $1 surfaced online on Tuesday. ... 21 songs from the 1990s that feel like they came out yesterday. Lighter Side.
The song is about a computer programmer who thinks in ape-like terms, and has been described as a "rocking anthem about dead-end programming jobs." [4] The song was accidentally mastered and released in mono on the album Thing a Week Three. Jonathan Coulton later released the song in stereo for his compilation album JoCo Looks Back. [5]