Kentucky25
Platinum Member
Enter your message here...
Joined: January 2014
Posts: 1,287
|
Post by Kentucky25 on Jul 24, 2016 22:57:00 GMT -5
Finally bought the song and gave it the first listen.... and I've been listening to it on repeat all afternoon. This is one catchy freakin song!!! I love it!! Honestly this has been my thoughts on this song all along, so catchy. Obviously not a song of the year candidate, but fun nonetheless.
|
|
hosssulpizio
Gold Member
Banned
Joined: July 2014
Posts: 718
|
Post by hosssulpizio on Jul 24, 2016 23:53:19 GMT -5
Finally bought the song and gave it the first listen.... and I've been listening to it on repeat all afternoon. This is one catchy freakin song!!! I love it!! Honestly this has been my thoughts on this song all along, so catchy. Obviously not a song of the year candidate, but fun nonetheless. Has this one charted yet? I really think Broken Bow has some artists on their label who are not putting out the best songs. I think they really need to find something that works. With Parmalee, I think it was that "Roots" was trying to be a rootsy song but it kind of was also a Rock song. With Thompson Square's "You Make It Look So Good", the song was not really all that great because I thought the lyrics could've been better and that the production did not fit the song. As for Joe Nichols, I think maybe he's trying to combine that Traditional sound with a much more Contemporary sound. I think with "Undone", maybe they could've stripped it more down because I think the sound doesn't really fit him. Who knows what they are gonna do with Jackie Lee and Lindsay Ell, but I'm hoping Lindsay gets another shot. As for Mr. Houser, I do not like the second and third singles from Fired Up. He's kind of selling out in a way because those are both party songs with a very weird sound, well at least that rings true for "Chasing Down a Good Time". I'm really wondering what BBR will do with their artists if this keeps happening. I have a strong suspicion this song will get lost in the shuffle of new releases, but we'll just have to see.
|
|
bboat11
Moderator
Pulse's Resident Martina McBride Expert
Joined: February 2013
Posts: 27,412
My Reviews
Pronouns: He/Him/His
Staff
|
Post by bboat11 on Jul 25, 2016 0:13:14 GMT -5
"Seein Red" debuts at #50 on MB. Dustin Lynch should see a nice jump on BB, as I have him at #45 with a chance of moving up to #44. Dustin should pass Toby Keith, (he mysteriously had an awful week this week) Runaway June, and Easton Corbin along with the two rexurrents (David Nail and Keith Urban), while Dustin will of course have a setback from the two iHeartMedia debuts this week (Brantley Gilbert and Miranda Lambert). But overall Dustin is doing fairly good, "Seein Red" is selling well so I'm thinking Dustin probably has another decent sized hit on his hands. hosssulpizio, this is what raylatch said 2 posts before yours. Yep, I'd say it's charting!
|
|
hosssulpizio
Gold Member
Banned
Joined: July 2014
Posts: 718
|
Post by hosssulpizio on Jul 25, 2016 0:44:22 GMT -5
"Seein Red" debuts at #50 on MB. Dustin Lynch should see a nice jump on BB, as I have him at #45 with a chance of moving up to #44. Dustin should pass Toby Keith, (he mysteriously had an awful week this week) Runaway June, and Easton Corbin along with the two rexurrents (David Nail and Keith Urban), while Dustin will of course have a setback from the two iHeartMedia debuts this week (Brantley Gilbert and Miranda Lambert). But overall Dustin is doing fairly good, "Seein Red" is selling well so I'm thinking Dustin probably has another decent sized hit on his hands. hosssulpizio , this is what raylatch said 2 posts before yours. Yep, I'd say it's charting! I'm somewhat surprised by this. I didn't think it would debut in the top 45 or anything like that. We'll see if this lasts though. You never know anymore with 2016 Country radio. Many songs that were bad imo also did not do as well, like Randy's second single "Song Number 7" and Chase Rice's "Whisper".
|
|
|
Post by myeverything on Jul 31, 2016 10:59:09 GMT -5
^^ And that's the point of having an opinion. Not everyone thinks they are bad ;)
|
|
Deleted
Joined: January 1970
Posts: 0
|
Post by Deleted on Jul 31, 2016 11:37:15 GMT -5
Anyway Dustin Lynch "Seein Red" will go up 7 spots on MB all the eay to #43 tonight, so Dustin is certainly doing well with this song and is moving at a solid pace.
BB I am thinking Dustin will be at #42 or #43 so Dustin is fast approaching the Top 40.
|
|
robenglund
Gold Member
Joined: July 2015
Posts: 998
|
Post by robenglund on Aug 30, 2016 22:19:14 GMT -5
I like Dustin as an artist and he seems like a cool guy. I loved the Where It's At album. It's a very contemporary album but I love how he mixes in some old school elements especially the steel. The production and mixing was really good on most of the songs... but I don't know if I've ever seen someone blatantly admit to trend chasing like he has. Most artists play it off as "country is evolving and it always has". Here is what Dustin says: "I’m about halfway done with it [album #3], I’m taking my time and seeing how the fall shapes up. Selfishly see where country music goes a little more, it’s going everywhere right now." :o Here is the full article: www.soundslikenashville.com/news/dustin-lynch-is-single-and-not-ready-to-mingle/
|
|
.indulgecountry
Diamond Member
Best Country Poster 2011, 2017, & 2018
"You left a mark on my face // And brought a dozen red flags in a vase"
|
Post by .indulgecountry on Aug 30, 2016 22:42:06 GMT -5
I like Dustin as an artist and he seems like a cool guy. I loved the Where It's At album. It's a very contemporary album but I love how he mixes in some old school elements especially the steel. The production and mixing was really good on most of the songs... but I don't know if I've ever seen someone blatantly admit to trend chasing like he has. Most artists play it off as "country is evolving and it always has". Here is what Dustin says: "I’m about halfway done with it [album #3], I’m taking my time and seeing how the fall shapes up. Selfishly see where country music goes a little more, it’s going everywhere right now." :o Here is the full article: www.soundslikenashville.com/news/dustin-lynch-is-single-and-not-ready-to-mingle/Maybe I'm weird, but I'd rather him admit to that then pretend like "country music is evolving" because to me that is the shady excuse (songs like "Burnin' It Down," "Vacation," "Truck Yeah" etc.... that's not 'evolving'). I don't really get what's wrong with acknowledging that you have to make music that's contemporary enough for country radio in 2016. I mean... if he doesn't make music that is commercial enough ("Mind Reader," i.e. was a perfect mix of being country but being radio-friendly, imo) that he continues being successful, then he's not going to get to keep making music, "country" or otherwise. I see nothing wrong with what the guy's been doing thus far. I can understand why people criticize him for this stuff, but at the same time, I don't. His music from album 1 to album 2 didn't change all that drastically, and he's on a roll right now with 3 big hits. Just because he got a hit with "Cowboys and Angels" as a debut single it seems like there's some expectation that this guy should be more like Jon Pardi and just say "f**k it I'm country, play me if you dare." Idk, I just don't see him doing anything bad enough that comes off as desperately chasing trends to me (yet -- I haven't heard what he's putting on album #3 obviously, but so far, nothing too outside the box from Dustin Lynch, honestly).
|
|
robenglund
Gold Member
Joined: July 2015
Posts: 998
|
Post by robenglund on Aug 30, 2016 23:05:00 GMT -5
I like Dustin as an artist and he seems like a cool guy. I loved the Where It's At album. It's a very contemporary album but I love how he mixes in some old school elements especially the steel. The production and mixing was really good on most of the songs... but I don't know if I've ever seen someone blatantly admit to trend chasing like he has. Most artists play it off as "country is evolving and it always has". Here is what Dustin says: "I’m about halfway done with it [album #3], I’m taking my time and seeing how the fall shapes up. Selfishly see where country music goes a little more, it’s going everywhere right now." :o Here is the full article: www.soundslikenashville.com/news/dustin-lynch-is-single-and-not-ready-to-mingle/Maybe I'm weird, but I'd rather him admit to that then pretend like "country music is evolving" because to me that is the shady excuse (songs like "Burnin' It Down," "Vacation," "Truck Yeah" etc.... that's not 'evolving'). I don't really get what's wrong with acknowledging that you have to make music that's contemporary enough for country radio in 2016. I mean... if he doesn't make music that is commercial enough ("Mind Reader," i.e. was a perfect mix of being country but being radio-friendly, imo) that he continues being successful, then he's not going to get to keep making music, "country" or otherwise. I see nothing wrong with what the guy's been doing thus far. I can understand why people criticize him for this stuff, but at the same time, I don't. His music from album 1 to album 2 didn't change all that drastically, and he's on a roll right now with 3 big hits. Just because he got a hit with "Cowboys and Angels" as a debut single it seems like there's some expectation that this guy should be more like Jon Pardi and just say "f**k it I'm country, play me if you dare." Idk, I just don't see him doing anything bad enough that comes off as desperately chasing trends to me (yet -- I haven't heard what he's putting on album #3 obviously, but so far, nothing too outside the box from Dustin Lynch, honestly). Just to be clear, I started off my post that way to say that I have nothing against the guy. I think were on the same page. But I never thought of it that way. I like people that are more straight up and don't dance around things, so I really like and agree with your point of view. I mean big music labels and the music industry in general are really just like any other business. The Texas scene doesn't seem to be as business oriented as Nashville. The art of music seems to be more appreciated in Texas. Anyways, in a business you're selling a product that you want people to buy. When people buy your product you make money. The product here is the music and how it is distributed and all the various profits, royalties, all that jazz, that come about when music is streamed, bought, played in the radio, etc. You need money to make a living, survive, pay your bills, all that good stuff. So in order for Dustin to make a living off of his music, he just needs to keep doing what he does like you said.
|
|
Deleted
Joined: January 1970
Posts: 0
|
Post by Deleted on Aug 31, 2016 5:52:29 GMT -5
My issue is that Dustin clearly has no regard for his core fanbase and what they want.
Over the course of 3 years he has gone from twangy traditional with a punch to hard-hitting rock to more R+B to now apparently "whatever is coming next." Like...really? That's a transition that other artists literally take 10 years to make.
There's no evolution here. It's just trying to stay relevant. I don't know why. He was on the right track developmentally with his first album and his second album made some more good strides. "Hell of a Night" kind of threw a wrench in any acclaim he could have hoped to receive and "Seein' Red" is just as bland, pointless, and unnecessary.
|
|
dm2081
7x Platinum Member
Joined: April 2014
Posts: 7,072
|
Post by dm2081 on Aug 31, 2016 9:39:13 GMT -5
I think it's especially frustrating with Dustin because he is capable of some pretty exceptional music ("Your Daddy's Boots" being a prime example), but he keeps going with safe fun songs that don't make a lot of impact once the buzz of the #1 peak wears off. It's kind of like in football, where a team just keeps using safe plays like run and screens. Eventually you have to open up the playbook and throw the ball down the field, or else you're never going to score quickly. We will see what his album sales are this next time, but it doesn't seem like his fan base has rapidly expanded maybe as much as it could.
For the record, I like Dustin and I like this song. But I know he's capable of better.
|
|
|
Post by myeverything on Aug 31, 2016 9:51:10 GMT -5
I like Dustin as an artist and he seems like a cool guy. I loved the Where It's At album. It's a very contemporary album but I love how he mixes in some old school elements especially the steel. The production and mixing was really good on most of the songs... but I don't know if I've ever seen someone blatantly admit to trend chasing like he has. Most artists play it off as "country is evolving and it always has". Here is what Dustin says: "I’m about halfway done with it [album #3], I’m taking my time and seeing how the fall shapes up. Selfishly see where country music goes a little more, it’s going everywhere right now." :o Here is the full article: www.soundslikenashville.com/news/dustin-lynch-is-single-and-not-ready-to-mingle/Maybe I'm weird, but I'd rather him admit to that then pretend like "country music is evolving" because to me that is the shady excuse (songs like "Burnin' It Down," "Vacation," "Truck Yeah" etc.... that's not 'evolving'). I don't really get what's wrong with acknowledging that you have to make music that's contemporary enough for country radio in 2016. I mean... if he doesn't make music that is commercial enough ("Mind Reader," i.e. was a perfect mix of being country but being radio-friendly, imo) that he continues being successful, then he's not going to get to keep making music, "country" or otherwise. I see nothing wrong with what the guy's been doing thus far. I can understand why people criticize him for this stuff, but at the same time, I don't. His music from album 1 to album 2 didn't change all that drastically, and he's on a roll right now with 3 big hits. Just because he got a hit with "Cowboys and Angels" as a debut single it seems like there's some expectation that this guy should be more like Jon Pardi and just say "f**k it I'm country, play me if you dare." Idk, I just don't see him doing anything bad enough that comes off as desperately chasing trends to me (yet -- I haven't heard what he's putting on album #3 obviously, but so far, nothing too outside the box from Dustin Lynch, honestly). PREACH. Has anyone heard a song by him called "Small Town Boy Like Me?" He's performed it a couple times this year at events like CMA Fest and probably at his live shows here and there too. I heard it and fell in love with it immediately. I do know that it'll be on his next album and I'm sure has strong potential to be an upcoming single. (Maybe even after Seein Red?) Anyway, the song is nothing like Seein Red and far from bro-country.. I'm my opinion at least, but then again I only heard it live once and didn't hear a recorded/produced version. Either way though, I'm really excited for that one to get out.
|
|
.indulgecountry
Diamond Member
Best Country Poster 2011, 2017, & 2018
"You left a mark on my face // And brought a dozen red flags in a vase"
|
Post by .indulgecountry on Aug 31, 2016 10:35:36 GMT -5
My issue is that Dustin clearly has no regard for his core fanbase and what they want.Over the course of 3 years he has gone from twangy traditional with a punch to hard-hitting rock to more R+B to now apparently "whatever is coming next." Like...really? That's a transition that other artists literally take 10 years to make. There's no evolution here. It's just trying to stay relevant. I don't know why. He was on the right track developmentally with his first album and his second album made some more good strides. "Hell of a Night" kind of threw a wrench in any acclaim he could have hoped to receive and "Seein' Red" is just as bland, pointless, and unnecessary. 1) How do you know he's ignoring his fanbase? He's been a lot more successful since "Where It's At" happened than before that, so I can imagine that his fanbase has grown considerably since then and my educated guess would be that more likely than not, he's appealing to his current fanbase right now just fine with his music. 2) Has he though? I don't hear any RnB in his music personally. "Seein' Red" and "Hell of a Night" are taking a page from the country rock playbook of Jason Aldean musically, but "Where It's At" and "Mind Reader" are pretty much just contemporary country music and don't sound very removed from "She Cranks My Tractor" or "Wild in Your Smile" to me (both of which were considerably less successful -- so I'd say any move he's made since then has been an improvement to his career) 3) You do know why. He's built up a string of successful singles because he's appealing to what will get him played on country radio, something he needed to do to even still be around to have this discussion. Before "Where It's At," it looked like Dustin Lynch could've just as easily faded away because his momentum dropped considerably after his debut hit and his second/third singles sold poorly. I think it's especially frustrating with Dustin because he is capable of some pretty exceptional music ("Your Daddy's Boots" being a prime example), but he keeps going with safe fun songs that don't make a lot of impact once the buzz of the #1 peak wears off. It's kind of like in football, where a team just keeps using safe plays like run and screens. Eventually you have to open up the playbook and throw the ball down the field, or else you're never going to score quickly. We will see what his album sales are this next time, but it doesn't seem like his fan base has rapidly expanded maybe as much as it could. For the record, I like Dustin and I like this song. But I know he's capable of better. I'm pretty sure I remember there being one of these interviews where he specifically mentioned that song ("Your Daddy's Boots") as something he wanted to release, but as I'm sure everyone understands, the singles Dustin Lynch release to radio are most likely not of his choosing at all. I really think "Cowboys and Angels" being his debut hit has tainted people's perception of his music and the direction his career should be headed. He still makes music like that, but it isn't the easy route to turn that stuff into a hit on country radio right now so it makes sense for his label to want to release stuff that will build up his career so he can release more singles like that one in the future. At any rate, I don't think his "trend chasing" has even been that egregious... like he isn't making music like Thomas Rhett or Sam Hunt that blatantly pushes the boundaries of country music over the genre lines. He hasn't even changed that much, and him openly admitting that he's doing it because he has to (to keep being successful and have a record label and be able to actually continue making music) rather than "this is the future of country music, get with the times" message that Jason Aldean and others like to insinuate is better to me. I'm also more forgiving of someone like Dustin Lynch admitting to trend chasing because he really doesn't have the freedom to do w/e he wants. Jason Aldean and Blake Shelton and Luke Bryan etc. take advantage of their automatic airplay and still release subpar songs on the regular. I have more of a problem with that than anything Dustin Lynch has ever done, because he doesn't have the luxury to do whatever he wants. And I know some people can get away with being "country to the core" and still making strides (like we've just seen with Jon Pardi and WMM recent singles), but that's definitely not the sure path to take right now... and we don't know that Dustin doesn't like songs like "Where It's At" or "Seein' Red" anyway. Like we're assuming he doesn't purely because he's admitted to altering his sound a bit to fit in, but maybe he still enjoys balancing country and commercial? I think "Mind Reader" in particular is a perfect example of compromise done well. I wish Luke Bryan still put out music to radio that sounded that good. Anyway, I'll get off my soap box because this discussion has been had several times now in regards to Dustin Lynch and I'm not even that big of a fan of his in all honesty, lol.
|
|
Deleted
Joined: January 1970
Posts: 0
|
Post by Deleted on Sept 22, 2016 20:50:47 GMT -5
Hey um I just saw on Country Perspective (one of the commentators said this) that "Seein Red" is struggling badly? I actually thought it was doing rather well, nothing outstanding but nothing humiliating.
I don't know, Dustin Lynch hasn't sold much.
|
|
.indulgecountry
Diamond Member
Best Country Poster 2011, 2017, & 2018
"You left a mark on my face // And brought a dozen red flags in a vase"
|
Post by .indulgecountry on Sept 22, 2016 20:57:18 GMT -5
Hey um I just saw on Country Perspective (one of the commentators said this) that "Seein Red" is struggling badly? I actually thought it was doing rather well, nothing outstanding but nothing humiliating. I don't know, Dustin Lynch hasn't sold much. Nah, he's actually doing a bit better than most people in the same region of the chart with similar star-power, both in moving up the charts in airplay and in respect to sales (he's in the 100s right now on iTunes which is a good place to be considering where his song is at).
|
|
Deleted
Joined: January 1970
Posts: 0
|
Post by Deleted on Sept 23, 2016 6:42:44 GMT -5
Hey um I just saw on Country Perspective (one of the commentators said this) that "Seein Red" is struggling badly? I actually thought it was doing rather well, nothing outstanding but nothing humiliating. I don't know, Dustin Lynch hasn't sold much. I think it's acting very similar to his last 3 singles. On one hand, that's a good thing because those all hit #1. On the other hand, he isn't ever going to break into that next level if he keeps releasing trend-chasing wafers.
|
|
Ten Pound Hammer
9x Platinum Member
Banned
I watched it all on my radio
Joined: August 2006
Posts: 9,595
|
Post by Ten Pound Hammer on Sept 26, 2016 14:14:39 GMT -5
At least "Yep Yep" was catchy as hell, and "Mind Reader" was kind of mellow by bro standards. This is just another third rate Jason Aldean wannabe mess.
I reviewed his first album and I remember it having a few other songs that were more like this. "Cowboys and Angels" was truly the outlier.
|
|
|
Post by myeverything on Sept 27, 2016 8:53:12 GMT -5
Funny seeing that's the only song of his he's ever recorded that I DON'T like. I think "Seein' Red" is incredibly catchy. When it first came out it was stuck in my head for daysssss. Good thing for differing opinions/taste in music
|
|
Deleted
Joined: January 1970
Posts: 0
|
Post by Deleted on Sept 27, 2016 11:40:19 GMT -5
Funny seeing that's the only song of his he's ever recorded that I DON'T like. I think "Seein' Red" is incredibly catchy. When it first came out it was stuck in my head for daysssss. Good thing for differing opinions/taste in music Not trying to play devil's advocate, just trying to engage. The verses of "Seein' Red" remind me far too much of "Hell of a Night" and the chorus is irritatingly similar to Taylor Swift's "Style". But it IS catchy. My question is: do you ever long for a song that is something beyond catchy? If no that's fine, but if I'm looking for a catchy song I'd much rather listen to a "Rain is a Good Thing" or "Free and Easy" that are at least a little twangy and clever and more rich with regards to instrument arrangement. I just want to hear your opinion on the breakdown of the tune.
|
|
|
Post by myeverything on Sept 28, 2016 9:36:44 GMT -5
In the grand scheme of things: to me, if I like a song, I like a song. If I connect with something, think it's catchy, whatever...then I do. I can think into it more, but truthfully most of the time I don't. When I really want "substance" to my songs, I turn to Keith's music. "Seein' Red" obviously doesn't have as much substance when it comes to lyrics and maybe even melody/instruments/whatever, but it's still a downright catchy and carefree tune. The beat, the production...it all just makes me wanna move and sing and jam out. It gets stuck in your head. To me, that's what a catchy song does. As far as "breakdown" of the tune... I'm not really sure what you want me to say, adjectives? I usually don't analyze things the way a lot do here, I'm more of a generalized poster, lol.
|
|
bksouthga
Charting
Joined: September 2015
Posts: 493
|
Post by bksouthga on Oct 18, 2016 17:04:33 GMT -5
I finally heard this on the radio today. Holy crap, the production is annoying to me!
|
|
bksouthga
Charting
Joined: September 2015
Posts: 493
|
Post by bksouthga on Oct 18, 2016 21:36:28 GMT -5
In the grand scheme of things: to me, if I like a song, I like a song. If I connect with something, think it's catchy, whatever...then I do. I can think into it more, but truthfully most of the time I don't. When I really want "substance" to my songs, I turn to Keith's music. "Seein' Red" obviously doesn't have as much substance when it comes to lyrics and maybe even melody/instruments/whatever, but it's still a downright catchy and carefree tune. The beat, the production...it all just makes me wanna move and sing and jam out. It gets stuck in your head. To me, that's what a catchy song does. As far as "breakdown" of the tune... I'm not really sure what you want me to say, adjectives? I usually don't analyze things the way a lot do here, I'm more of a generalized poster, lol. Maybe blue just ain't your color and that's why you like this song.
|
|
|
Post by myeverything on Oct 19, 2016 9:27:35 GMT -5
Ha, well aren't you clever? Or trying to be a jerk. Can't tell, don't really care. I try explaining myself and my thoughts/opinions and get called out for doing so, so whatever.
|
|
Deleted
Joined: January 1970
Posts: 0
|
Post by Deleted on Oct 19, 2016 11:04:04 GMT -5
Ha, well aren't you clever? Or trying to be a jerk. Can't tell, don't really care. I try explaining myself and my thoughts/opinions and get called out for doing so, so whatever. He was just joking around cause blue and red represent opposite of colors. It was meant as a lighthearted joke.
|
|
|
Post by myeverything on Oct 19, 2016 14:16:26 GMT -5
Hmm, you sure it wasn't a Keith Urban reference? Since yanno, I'M the one to jump down people's throats.
|
|
Deleted
Joined: January 1970
Posts: 0
|
Post by Deleted on Oct 19, 2016 14:24:35 GMT -5
Hmm, you sure it wasn't a Keith Urban reference? Since yanno, I'M the one to jump down people's throats. It probably is, but is best to have a sense of humor and if someone makes fun of a Keith Urban song or a Dustin Lynch song in a lighthearted way, it's not that big of a deal. Also, I never said you jump down people's throats so don't accuse me of stuff I didn't say.
|
|
bksouthga
Charting
Joined: September 2015
Posts: 493
|
Post by bksouthga on Oct 19, 2016 20:54:23 GMT -5
Hmm, you sure it wasn't a Keith Urban reference? Since yanno, I'M the one to jump down people's throats. Of course it was a keith urban reference! Are you people crazy? I thought you liked Keith Urban!
|
|
phil1996
4x Platinum Member
Joined: October 2009
Posts: 4,850
|
Post by phil1996 on Oct 21, 2016 14:41:49 GMT -5
The chorus sounds just like Style by Taylor Swift...lol.. Sad that he's gone from Cowboy and Angels to this. Following in Thomas Rhett's footsteps. Too bad.
|
|
Deleted
Joined: January 1970
Posts: 0
|
Post by Deleted on Nov 13, 2016 8:38:43 GMT -5
This song last week managed to enter the MB Top 20. This week Dustin Lynch has gained about 300 spins this week and and 579 spins so far this month. Dustin Lynch also gained 2296k in audience.
This song is still for me a snoozer. But I definitely expect this song to hit the top of the chart as this song is still young enough and selling enough for me to believe this will hit #1.
|
|
Ten Pound Hammer
9x Platinum Member
Banned
I watched it all on my radio
Joined: August 2006
Posts: 9,595
|
Post by Ten Pound Hammer on Nov 13, 2016 14:06:35 GMT -5
Please let this piece of crap be the last dying gasp of bro-country.
|
|