Old School Big Wheel T Shirt. T Shirts Made Fast. Mean Girls T Shirt.
Old School Big Wheel T Shirt
Used, usually approvingly, to refer to someone or something that is old-fashioned or traditional
Danger Doom (styled as DANGERDOOM) is a musical collaboration between DJ and producer Danger Mouse and rapper MF Doom. Their first album, The Mouse and the Mask, was released in 2005 , and followed by the Occult Hymn EP in 2006.
Bike or Die! is a trial bike game for Palm OS and iPhone OS devices by Toyspring. It was released in 2004 for Palm OS devices, and in 2008 for iPhone OS devices. Players try to ride a bike with simulated physics, to collect flags as quickly as possible. Bike or Die!
a class of people favoring traditional ideas
A Big Wheel is a type of tricycle, usually made of plastic, with an oversized front wheel, that rides very low to the ground.
big shot: an important influential person; "he thinks he's a big shot"; "she's a big deal in local politics"; "the Qaeda commander is a very big fish"
Big Wheel is the fourth studio album by Canadian country music singer Aaron Pritchett. It was released on April 18, 2006 by OPM Records. "Big Wheel," "Hold My Beer," "Warm Safe Place," "The Weight" and "Done You Wrong" were released as singles.
T Shirt is a 1976 album by Loudon Wainwright III. Unlike his earlier records, this (and the subsequent 'Final Exam') saw Wainwright adopt a full blown rock band (Slowtrain) - though there are acoustic songs on T-Shirt, including a talking blues.
A short-sleeved casual top, generally made of cotton, having the shape of a T when spread out flat
jersey: a close-fitting pullover shirt
A T-shirt (T shirt or tee) is a shirt which is pulled on over the head to cover most of a person's torso. A T-shirt is usually buttonless and collarless, with a round neck and short sleeves.
Internationally known to rock the microphone..
well maybe not. Probably more locally. :-)
Good lord! I was even doing self-portraits pre-Flickr era. This was more a documentary shot than anything else. This is in the glorious WKDU-FM studios at Drexel University here in Philly. I had been spinning jazz on my weekly, sometimes twice weekly radio program since I was 17. I'm guessing this was after I left Drexel and they were still letting me come in to do guest spots. I can't quite remember. Since this was the 80's and summer I was wearing Sweats dd gear. Remember that label? It appears that I was also wearing a black mesh v-neck t-shirt as well. Knowing me I was probably also wearing Drexel gym trunks or very short cut-off denims because I rode my bike everywhere.
I always wanted to have a show on this station even when I was in high-school. So in my freshman year I applied for a slot and got it the next day! It was so cool to meet all of the other on-air folks I listened to. I had a week to prepare for it but that didn't stop me from forgetting my name when I opened the mic for the first time. :-) I had enlisted my girlfriend at the time to do the local weather and news off of the AP teletype machine that always got jammed with paper! To this day when ever I talk into a microphone my voice automatically drops down two octaves. :-)
One show I had was called Musical Journey. I played all kinds of black music in four hours. In that space of time you would hear Motown, Stanley Clark, Peter Tosh, Labelle, Sun Ra, Count Basie, Duke Ellington, Nina Simone, Stevie Wonder, Miles Davis, Art Ensemble of Chicago, Fela Kuti, etc.. and they all fit together or as we would say they all segue-wayed in a kind of related way most times. It was so much fun to have that kind of freedom on the air.
I also discovered DJ'ing and mixing for parties as disco was big and house music was coming into it's own. I'm not on the air anymore but have continued mixing over the years. I am preparing to get back into spinning the wheels of steel now that you can control digital music files with turntables. It's almost like spinning vinyl again.
d"Girl but-tons, girl but-tons"d
I used to keep ALL of these on the strap of my emo-satchel, before emo was Emo, and before Emo became Fashioncore. Thankfully, a hard drive crash claimed every photo of me from that era.