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Stephen A. Smith Drops Hint That Wes Moore Could Be His Running Mate - Though He Doubts He'll Actually Run
Celebrity News

Stephen A. Smith Drops Hint That Wes Moore Could Be His Running Mate – Though He Doubts He’ll Actually Run

by jummy84 October 11, 2025
written by jummy84

Stephen A. Smith Drops Hint That Wes Moore Could Be His Running Mate – Though He Doubts He’ll Actually Run

Popular sports commentator Stephen A. Smith speculated that if he ever threw his hat in the presidential ring, he might tap Governor Wes Moore of Maryland as his running mate. But he was clear — a formal run is “highly unlikely.”

Smith had previously said he felt he “had no choice” but to consider a 2028 presidential bid. In his recent comments, he described Moore as someone he “really, really” admires. He called Moore a realistic leader who “cares about people and cares about what’s in our best interest.”

Smith also noted that Moore “deserves to win” — signaling underlying respect without confirming any real political ambition together. As for his own chances, the sports media figure didn’t commit. He left the door open but maintained it was more talk than plan.


October 11, 2025 0 comments
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UK Venues to Run on Renewable Energy
Music

UK Venues to Run on Renewable Energy

by jummy84 October 6, 2025
written by jummy84

AEG Europe announced a landmark agreement on Tuesday (Oct. 7) that will make its U.K. venues the first to run on the country’s greenest energy.

The European subsidiary of the global live entertainment promoter AEG has collaborated with green energy company Ecotricity on the agreement, which includes the introduction of PPAs (Power Purchase Agreements) with a 100% renewable energy supply, and is backed by hourly-matched REGOs (Renewable Energy Guarantees of Origin).

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The PPAs will allocate specific renewable energy assets to a number of AEG’s venue portfolio in the U.K. including The O2 in London, indigo at The O2, Eventim Apollo, Watford Colosseum and University of Wolverhampton at The Halls. As a result, these venues will operate predominantly on the deepest green energy generated by solar and hydro assets and meet audit-level scrutiny and transparency standards.

“PPAs are widely recognised as the gold standard in energy procurement, and we’re proud to play a role in launching this first-of-its-kind agreement,” said Sam Booth, AEG Europe’s director of sustainability. “It marks a significant milestone in the ongoing journey to decarbonise the live entertainment industry, and we’re pleased to help drive this progress.”

Earlier this summer, AEG’s All Points East and LIDO festivals harnessed the power of renewable battery energy during their events. During the latter, Grid Faeries x Ecotricity powered the main stage and parts of the site with renewable electricity, a first for the English capital. Massive Attack’s headline show on June 6 in Victoria Park, east London saw the entire event site operating for more than 32 hours on battery power alone.

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Sphere

Dale Vince OBE, founder of Ecotricity, said: “This is big news for live music, as venues across Britain – including London’s iconic The O2 – will be powered by deep green energy. AEG has already been working with us to bring clean power to outdoor festivals like All Points East and LIDO earlier this summer, with our Grid Faeries x Ecotricity battery. Now they’re going even further – bringing green power indoors. It’s a major step forward, and a proper milestone on the road to greening up the live entertainment world.”

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October 6, 2025 0 comments
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Minnesota Snow Plow Horror Film 'Delivery Run' Wild Official Trailer
Hollywood

Minnesota Snow Plow Horror Film ‘Delivery Run’ Wild Official Trailer

by jummy84 October 1, 2025
written by jummy84

Minnesota Snow Plow Horror Film ‘Delivery Run’ Wild Official Trailer

by Alex Billington
September 30, 2025
Source: YouTube

“Who’s the guy in the snow plow truck, Rebecca?! Mr. Plow??” Plaion Pictures has debuted the official UK trailer for an indie horror thriller film called Delivery Run, made by the Finnish filmmaker Joey Palmroos as his second feature following The Outlaws. This actually looks like some wacky horror out of the 80s or 90s – about a mad snow plow truck driver hunting down a delivery driver. Might be snowy, cold fun? A food delivery driver gets caught in a deadly chase in the icy Minnesota wilderness, pursued by a crazed snowplow driver for unknown reasons, facing life-threatening situations and forced to outsmart his relentless pursuer alone. As the storm rages and the ferocious follower brings terror at every turn, Lee starts to realize he’s not just running from a faceless pursuer, but from the weight of his own bad choices. What starts as a very bad day, becomes the ultimate fight for survival. Starring Alexander Arnold, Liam James Collins, Arthur Sylense, Jussi Lampi, and Nadine Higgin. This is a high energy / bonkers horror trailer – worth a look.

Here’s the official trailer (+ poster) for Joey Palmroos’ horror film Delivery Run, from YouTube:

Delivery Run Trailer

Delivery Run Poster

Set in the unforgiving, icy backroads of Minnesota, Delivery Run follows Lee (starring Alexander Arnold), a delivery driver with a gambling problem and debts he can no longer dodge. After gangsters threaten him in his own home, Lee decides to try his luck at delivering food to drum up the cash he now needs urgently. On what should be a routine shift, a petty road-rage incident with a hulking snow plow, soon turns into an all-out hell ride, as Lee tries to escape the wrath of a homicidal maniac driver. What begins as a tit for tat chase soon escalates into a nightmarish journey through backroads, abandoned truck stops & over frozen rivers. Each encounter forces Lee to dig deeper into his own grit & determination – using nothing but his battered delivery car, a phone with an almost drained battery and sheer dumb luck to stay alive. Delivery Run is directed by the Finnish filmmaker Joey Palmroos, director of the film The Outlaws previously, and a few other shorts. The screenplay is written by Joey Palmroos & Anders Holmes. Produced by Pekka Ollula & Joey Palmroos. Plaion Pictures releases Joey Palmroos’ Delivery Run film in the UK on VOD starting October 6th, 2025 this fall. No US release is set yet – stay tuned for updates. Who’s curious?

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Find more posts in: Horror, Indies, To Watch, Trailer

October 1, 2025 0 comments
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Home Run: Blue Jays’ season finale a ratings hit
Celebrity News

Home Run: Blue Jays’ season finale a ratings hit

by jummy84 September 30, 2025
written by jummy84

By Gregory Strong

The Canadian Press

Posted September 30, 2025 9:44 am

1 min read

TORONTO – The Toronto Blue Jays’ regular-season finale – a 13-4 rout that clinched the division title – was a ratings home run for domestic rights-holder Sportsnet.

The network says Toronto’s victory over the Tampa Bay Rays on Sunday averaged 2.36 million viewers on television and via streaming, making it Sportsnet’s most-watched Blue Jays regular-season broadcast ever.

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Alejandro Kirk homered twice as the Blue Jays secured the American League East crown for the first time since 2015.

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The Blue Jays earned a bye to the AL Division Series with the victory. They will play the winner of the wild-card series between the Boston Red Sox and the New York Yankees.

Game 1 in the best-of-five series is scheduled for Saturday at Rogers Centre.

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Sportsnet says the average audience for the full season was 906,800 viewers per game, a jump of 51 per cent from the 2024 campaign.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Sept. 30, 2025.

&copy 2025 The Canadian Press

September 30, 2025 0 comments
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Kamala Harris Admits She Was ‘Reckless’ in Not Challenging Former President Biden’s Decision to Run for Reelection
Celebrity News

Kamala Harris Admits She Was ‘Reckless’ in Not Challenging Former President Biden’s Decision to Run for Reelection

by jummy84 September 24, 2025
written by jummy84

Joe Biden, Kamala Harris

Kamala Harris Admits She Was ‘Reckless’ in Not Challenging Former President Biden’s Decision to Run for Reelection

Former VP #KamalaHarris regrets not challenging Joe Biden’s decision to run again for reelection.

**do you think she should’ve challenged the former Presidents decision?** ABC News


September 24, 2025 0 comments
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Nita Ambani gives Bollywood divas a run for their money at Aryan Khan's Bads of Bollywood premiere, stuns in icy saree
Lifestyle

Nita Ambani gives Bollywood divas a run for their money at Aryan Khan’s Bads of Bollywood premiere, stuns in icy saree

by jummy84 September 17, 2025
written by jummy84

You know the Ambanis will outshine any Mumbai party. On Wednesday evening, the biggest names of Bollywood came together for the premiere of Aryan Khan’s debut series, Ba***ds of Bollywood. However, it was Nita Ambani who sparkled the brightest.

Mukesh and Nita Ambani at the premiere of Bads of Bollywood.

Nita Ambani shines bright

The wife of billionaire industrialist Mukesh Ambani stunned in an ice blue saree. She paired it with a matching blouse that had lace details all over. Nita also chose a statement necklace– double strings of diamonds and a large blue flower on the left collar bone. She styled her hair in thick, loose waves.

Next to her, Mukesh Ambani looked sharp in a black suit with a white shirt.

Others at the premiere included Mukesh’s son Akash, and daughters-in-law Radhika Merchant and Shloka Mehta. His daughter Isha Ambani was also part of the event.

Akash and Shloka looked stunning in matching blue ensembles as they walked the red carpet together. Radhika Merchant joined them with her usual charming smile, appearing adorable in a red outfit.

Who else was at the premiere?

Meanwhile, the premiere turned out to be a star-studded affair with several celebrities arriving to show support for Aryan Khan’s directorial debut. Among the ones present were Ajay Devgn and Kajol, Ranbir Kapoor and Alia Bhatt, Manish Malhotra, Atlee, and Ananya Panday.

Superstar Shah Rukh Khan also made a grand entry to the event, with his family taking centrestage. SRK was accompanied by Gauri Khan, Suhana Khan, AbRam, and, of course, Aryan Khan.

Written and directed by Aryan Khan, ‘The Ba***ds of Bollywood’ will be released on September 18 on Netflix.

With Lakshya and Sahher Bambba stepping in as the lead pair, the show also features Bobby Deol, Raghav Juyal, Karan Johar, Mona Singh, Manoj Pahwa, Manish Chaudhari, Anya Singh, Gautami Kapoor, Rajat Bedi, and Vijayant Kohli in prominent roles.

September 17, 2025 0 comments
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'Married to Medicine' Star Dr. Heavenly Kimes Reveals Pushback From Bravo After Announcing Run For Georgia State Rep: T'm Doing Something Unprecedented'
Celebrity News

‘Married to Medicine’ Star Dr. Heavenly Kimes Reveals Pushback From Bravo After Announcing Run For Georgia State Rep: T’m Doing Something Unprecedented’

by jummy84 September 5, 2025
written by jummy84

‘Married to Medicine’ Star Dr. Heavenly Kimes Reveals Pushback From Bravo After Announcing Run For Georgia State
Rep: T’m Doing Something
Unprecedented’

Where there’s a will, there’s a way.

In a newly released interview with Pastor #JamalBryant, Married to Medicine’s Dr. Heavenly revealed that Bravo stars are “not allowed to run for office.” The medical professional announced her candidacy in July on the Democratic ticket for Georgia State Representative in District 93.

Speaking previously with PEOPLE about her campaign, Dr. Heavenly said:

“I’m not a career politician. I’m a mom, a doctor, a business owner — and I’m not afraid to stand up for what I believe in. I’m running to serve, and I’m ready to work.”

However, her transition into politics nearly hit a roadblock. She told Pastor Bryant that she was unaware of #Bravo’s rules regarding political runs, and it took the network “eight weeks” to finalize her contract and outline the parameters for showcasing this next chapter of her life.

Clearly, nothing, and no network, can stop Dr. Heavenly from making moves!??


September 5, 2025 0 comments
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Sales So Far Out of Venice, TIFF, and Telluride
TV & Streaming

Paul McCartney Doc Man on the Run: Morgan Neville Interview

by jummy84 September 4, 2025
written by jummy84

Listening to documentarian Morgan Neville and actor Paul Mescal dive down the Paul McCartney rabbit hole at the Telluride brunch was one of my festival highlights. Both are McCartney experts at this point, as Mescal is returning to rehearsals in London to play Paul in the first of Sam Mendes’ four Beatles movies, and Neville has spent the last three years prepping “Man on the Run,” his post-Beatles portrait of McCartney as he created his solo albums and assembled the band Wings. When I was growing up in ’70s New York, I loved McCartney albums Cherry and Ram, but was never a Wings fan. Now I see how many of his catchy songs have seeped into the culture: I’m adding a bunch to my playlists.

'Wuthering Heights'

“Man on the Run” reveals an artist who must reinvent himself without the Beatles and with his great ally and love, Linda McCartney. But he never fell out of love with John Lennon.

This is a Q&A with Neville by documentary filmmaker David Wilson that took place after the film‘s second screening on September 1. (Full disclosure: My daughter works for Neville’s Tremolo Productions.)

This interview has been edited for clarity and brevity.

David Wilson: You’ve worked primarily in music films, although every time you make a film about music you’re coming at it from a different place. What role did music play in your life growing up?

Morgan Neville: A lot. We had a jukebox in my house. Lot of Beatles 45s. My dad was a music obsessive. He saw the Beatles in ’64 in Indianapolis. I started playing music. I formed my first band when I was 12. My wife and I played in a band together. I just love music. And I love the stories of music, too. And I have made a lot of music films, but to me, they’re all exploring some different thing I’m trying to find out about.

That is a through-line in your films. With all these different subjects, there’s a big idea you’re grappling with. Is that something you think about going in? Or it comes out as you make it?

It’s both for this one. When I first started thinking about it, I started reading that first interview Paul gave, which was the Q&A where he revealed that the Beatles were no more. And you see the woman handing that Q&A out to the press. And that last question: “What are you going to do next?” And he said, “My plan, my only plan, is to grow up.” And I thought, “That’s the question I want to start with. What does that mean when you’ve been a Beatle since you were 17, you’ve been a quarter of this entity that’s gone to outer space and back. And how do you be a person in the wake of that?”

Directors Scott Cooper and Morgan Neville at Telluride.
“Bruce Springsteen: Deliver Me” director Scott Cooper and Morgan Neville at the Telluride brunch. Anne Thompson

I’ve made a lot of biographical films. The films are always a form of therapy for me, and certainly for the subject. And with Paul, we could talk about that, trying to get him into a certain headspace. But the questions Paul was asking at that time were questions I was always wondering about: “How do you wrestle with your own legacy? How do you stay grounded in show business? How do you deal with being a parent and a father?” All these different questions that I grapple with all the time. So all that was resonating. So even though it’s Paul McCartney, who’s a genius to me, it was this guy who’s just an artist trying to find his way and trying to listen to his gut as much as he can. So “Mary Had a Little Lamb,” which is the flip side of “Mull of Kintyre,” they’re both crazy ideas. One turns out and one doesn’t, but it’s the same impulse, and I totally respect that fearlessness.

McCartney also talks about a quest for “personal peace.”

Yeah, and that quote at the end where Stella [McCartney] says, looking back on it, these were the happiest years of our lives? And I just sent my last child off to college 10 days ago. I get emotional even thinking about it. I don’t think anybody’s ever understood what Linda meant to Paul in all ways. And that’s what my wife means to me: having somebody who can be your wingman in every imaginable way, who has your back, is the greatest thing. That’s what you need to survive.

Had you met Paul before this project?

Paul McCartney, Ringo Starr, George Harrison, John Lennon
Paul McCartney, Ringo Starr, George Harrison, John LennonCourtesy Everett Collection

I met him once for a shoot on another documentary years ago. And then I met him again when we talked about the film, and he was, “Okay, this sounds great.” The first interview, we did in London at his office. He had a sound man in the Bates Studio in the basement. He said, “My guy will set up some mics.” So I show up, and there are two mics in this tiny love seat in his office. I’m sitting close. Okay, you have to forget it’s Paul McCartney and just go for it. And Paul’s great at helping you forget he’s Paul McCartney, because he’s been Paul McCartney for a very long time. For somebody like him, who’s been public for so long, who’s talked so much, to not do the jukebox of greatest hits, of things he says about albums or songs, and trying to really break that, was great.

I did many audio interviews, but I wanted to have conversations with him. So we started talking about ideas. We talked about painting, we talked about all different kinds of things, because I wanted to get him to be thinking and speaking in the present. That helped. He recognized in the conversations he would get carried away. We ended up having seven sessions of interviews over more than a year.

The Beatles are famously difficult interviews, right? Was there a moment with him, as you were in those sessions, where you thought, “Oh, this is something new. I’m getting a side of Paul that wasn’t there.”

I like to think so. When he would get excited about things, we were doing one interview at his house, and he’d run over to the piano and start playing, show me stuff. And then he’d go on about getting high with Fela Kuti. It was helpful to get him in a certain headspace. He hadn’t talked about Linda in any deep way in decades. I just showed the film two weeks ago. He had a little family screening with his family and all the grandchildren, and invited my wife and my son. All the grandkids are sitting in front of me. Stella’s son said, “I’ve never heard my grandmother’s voice before,” and that punched me. And then I heard another grandson say, “Grandpa went to jail?”

Was there a moment where you thought you would go all the way up to Linda’s death?

I always felt like that decade and the bookends of McCartney, one and two: leaving the Beatles and John’s passing, and running away from the Beatles and what he had done for that decade. And I definitely thought about Linda’s death and we played with it, but it just felt extraneous in a way that Linda did live on for another 17 years past this time. And when I showed Paul the film, he said, “I’m so glad that you left Linda at the end of the film like that.”

It’s something I’m piecing together from talking to Paul again just a couple weeks ago, in the beginning of the film where he said, “I thought myself as the bastard, when people blame me for all this.” He internalized it, and that period of ‘Let It Be,’ and then suing the band was so painful. And the “Get Back” project actually opened up something in him, saying it wasn’t all bad. Everybody said everything was horrible, but actually it was much more nuanced. There was love, there was tension. And that process of self-forgiveness was the reason this film happened: if that wasn’t that bad, maybe I should think about this other period that I’ve also pushed out of my head in a lot of ways. And that’s amazing that still 50 years later, that’s still going on.

The parallel love story here, obviously, is him and John. Do you think that “Get Back” experience opened up his ability to talk about him and John?

In watching ‘Get Back,’ which I devoured as soon as it came out, you see how much real love that he still has, to the point where John is in his life every day. And I’m not exaggerating. I have no doubt he thinks about John every day, if not many times a day. So it’s not something that’s distant to him. It’s something that he holds onto.

When you’re digging through an archive and trying to find something usable, and then this clip rises up to the surface, what were those clips for you?

God, there’s so many. Paul has an amazing archive. He married a photographer, so that was convenient, all of Linda’s negatives of that entire decade, which is just incredible. There are so many things in this film that have never been seen. And there’s so many tiny things from the way people talked about Paul in the press at the time. I love that little clip of the reporter going back to the Cavern Club to interview the young punk girl about the Beatles. The best thing is the home movies. Who documents themselves that much? Now, we maybe do with phones, but you see Paul filming with a 16 camera. And Linda’s taking pictures of Paul taking film of her.

There are so many great shots in this film of the actual construction of songs, where you’re in the studio, and you’re seeing them work through something. Was that something you specifically went looking for? How much did you want to have that behind the scenes?

I geek out on that stuff. And hearing the studio chatter. You can hear him orchestrating this stuff in his head in real time, which is what makes him Paul McCartney. And we have fragments of so many different songs in here. I loved the Beatles, but Wings were the band that were putting out albums when I was a kid, and that’s what I was buying. And I loved Wings. There’s so much interesting, good work through that decade that people don’t think about that much. He put out 10 records in 10 years. One of the happiest things was after I showed my son the film two weeks ago, I saw that he quietly added a whole bunch of Wings songs to his playlist on Spotify.

One of the joys was every three minutes there was hit after hit song that has been a part of the fabric of our world. Even if we didn’t identify with them the same way that we did with The Beatles.

We put that tiny snippet of “Wonderful Christmastime” in there, because in the midst of all that other stuff, that was a tiny single he threw out at the end of the year in 1979 which was a footnote, but a song that for better or worse we hear every year. It’s both the contextualizing and rediscovering of a lot of the songs we know, a deep dive, going through some of these records. And Ram is one of my favorite albums. It’s amazing how reviled that album was, again, you see the savage Rolling Stone review by Jon Landau, who went on to manage Bruce Springsteen. And now Ram is one of the top 500 Albums of All Time, according to Rolling Stone. So it’s that long game: Let’s not pay attention to what people want this week, this year. Let’s just make music that works for us.

How can people tell their friends to go see this?

Amazon/MGM bought the film and it’s not going to come out till February. Six months from now, hopefully you will hear all about it. We’re going to do a theatrical release, and then it will eventually stream. It’s coming.

September 4, 2025 0 comments
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Gunna Launches New Run Club, Set To Host Inaugural Charity Run
Celebrity News

Gunna Launches New Run Club, Set To Host Inaugural Charity Run

by jummy84 August 31, 2025
written by jummy84

Gunna Launches New Run Club, Set To Host Inaugural Charity Run

Gunna is stepping into fitness with his own Wunna Run Club and its first ever 5K this September in New York City.
————————
The WUNNA RUN 5K will take place on September 3 at Prospect Park in Brooklyn. The event is free to enter, but runners are encouraged to donate to a charity of their choice in support of Gunna’s nonprofit, Gunna’s Great Giveaway.
————————
This marks the official launch of his run club and adds to his growing focus on health and wellness. Gunna has already been sharing his fitness journey and investing in wellness brands, and now he’s bringing fans along for the ride.

Would you lace up and run Gunna’s first 5K?


August 31, 2025 0 comments
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Bruce Springsteen's Born to Run: Every Song Ranked
Music

Bruce Springsteen’s Born to Run: Every Song Ranked

by jummy84 August 25, 2025
written by jummy84

In celebration of Bruce Springsteen turning 50, we revisit Dan Caffrey’s ranking of The Boss’ classic album Born to Run. This article was originally published in 2015.

Ranking the Album is a feature in which we take an iconic or beloved record and dare to play favorites. It’s a testament to the fact that classic album or not, there are still some tracks we root for more than others to pop up in our shuffles. Today, in honor of the 50th anniversary of Bruce Springsteen’s Born to Run, we rank the iconic LP from best to greatest.

Born to Run turns 50 today. If you’re interested in the arduous making of the album — a sort of last-ditch effort for Bruce Springsteen to reach the superstar status he craved (working-class roots be damned) — or how it represented the decline of the American dream, there’s no shortage of great retrospectives out there from many other reputable publications. While these chronicles are more than worthy in their own right, I’m also not interested in how many guitar overdubs were recorded for the title track, or regurgitating the “lyrics by Dylan, sung by Orbison, and produced by Spector” line (although I guess I just did). Both of these bits of lore — and many other stories surrounding the album — are true, but that’s just what they are this late in the game: lore. The Springsteen mythology has been endlessly picked over, reassembled, torn apart, then built up again over the years, usually into a bigger, stronger, more godlike statue.

So for this installment of Ranking the Album, I’d like to put the grown-up critic in me to sleep and let my inner nine-year-old stay up past his bedtime. That’s the age when I first heard Born to Run during a road trip or two to Cocoa Beach, Florida, on my dad’s stereo while he was lifting weights, and just playing around the house whenever my family was cleaning, eating, or doing nothing at all. I’m sure I heard it all in one sitting at some point, but when you’re a kid, you can only remember one or two songs at a time. As such, I recall Born to Run slowly revealing itself across several months. That’s how I remember it, so for all intents and purposes, that’s how it happened.

And don’t worry, I didn’t write this in the tone of a precocious elementary schooler with purposely bad grammar and the verbal cadence of a propeller beanie spinning around and round on his head. I tried instead to channel those thoughts that bloom when hearing an album you love for the first time — intangible and more akin to images and pangs and colors than a refined analytical vocabulary. Some analysis, cynicism, and hindsight still crept in there, naturally, and there are several leaps and backpedals into time (I’m a 31-year-old man these days), but for the most part, it’s hard for me to not still hear this album the way I first heard it. I know “Tenth Avenue Freeze-Out” has nothing to do with the show Taxi, and “She’s the One” has little association with the film Heavyweights, but, as you’ll soon read, those connections, silly as they are, will always exist for me.

So let’s do it together. Let’s take a stab at music-lover romance as we disappear down Flamingo Lane or Thunder Road or Tenth Avenue or whatever your preferred Springsteen may be. Thanks for joining me.

– Dan Caffrey
Senior Staff Writer

8. NIGHT

Max Weinberg’s driftwood-on-oil-drum snaps are always jarring after the fading boardwalk party of “Tenth Avenue Freeze-Out”, and as a kid, this bothers you. As you get older, you learn that music critics call these sorts of dips “filler” and that they’re a necessary device. Every great album needs a a valley where you can come down from the mountain and take a breather. Born to Run just happens to be an album so anthemic that one of its valleys is a song like “Night” — still one of the fastest and most urgent tracks on the record.

As you get older yet again, you learn that great albums don’t actually have filler at all, and that “gems” or “deep cuts” are perhaps more accurate descriptors, even if The Boss did the guy-getting-off-work thing better on his next album, Darkness on the Edge of Town. Your mom and dad play this CD around the house, too, and even at nine, you could tell that the two works were markedly different, despite containing similar stories: Springsteen the idealist versus Springsteen the realist. And when it comes to getting-off-work songs, you’ll eventually prefer realism, especially once you start working yourself. For the record, this will always be at an office, not a factory.

7. SHE’S THE ONE

In 1995, a kids movie about a fat camp will come out. It’s called Heavyweights. You haven’t watched the film much since then because you remember it being great and are afraid you’ll feel otherwise if you revisit it. You remember there being a montage set to a song called “I Want Candy”. It sounds an awful lot like “She’s the One”, which, you’ll find out later, is because they both utilize the syncopated “Bo Diddley Beat”.

You don’t know any of this as a nine-year-old, so whenever you hear “She’s the One”, you have visions of chubby kids running around the woods, tying domineering counselors to trees, and pigging out on sweets they’ve stashed around their cabin. It doesn’t matter that the song has nothing to do with this. As an adult, you’ll tell fellow critics it’s one of your least favorite tracks on Born to Run because of its repetition (it’s the only song that feels long to you), and for the fact that Springsteen wasn’t yet old enough to accurately write about love (a stance you cribbed from both Robert Christgau and Pitchfork’s Mark Richardson).

But those are lies. The real reason “She’s the One” kind of irks you is because it reminds you of a camp counselor getting punched in the balls. That’s still pretty funny, but it breaks up Born to Run’s consistent imagery of muscle cars, motorcycles, factories, boardwalks, rumbles, and bank heists.

6. TENTH AVENUE FREEZE-OUT

This is the one your parents always sing along to, except for the one line sung-said by Clarence Clemons. “And kid you better get the picture,” he purrs soothingly and almost inaudibly. Out of all the songs on the album, it’s the one that reminds you most of the ’70s — Steven Van Zandt’s horned-out intro and bridge touched with just a sprinkling of desperation, aka a young Springsteen’s ceaseless quest to be a rock star, even if it means trudging through the snow to a gig after the band’s van breaks down.

That image of vehicular malfunction is a far cry from the other auto-related icon the intro and bridge remind you of: the theme from Taxi. This will become a less accurate comparison as you get older, but the footage of an automobile successfully making its way to and from New York becomes an apt metaphor for the career of Bruce Springsteen & The E Street Band following the success of Born to Run.

August 25, 2025 0 comments
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