

- OLD MEN WHO TRY TO LOOK LIKE ROCK METAL BAND STARS HUMOR FULL
- OLD MEN WHO TRY TO LOOK LIKE ROCK METAL BAND STARS HUMOR TV
sported a specially designed codpiece that shot out an 18-foot flame. Still, on a recent tour, the head W.A.S.P. It's rock 'n' roll in a pure sense, designed for people to have a good time." Lawless again: "Anyways, we only did the buzz saw on our first tour, and the buckets of blood have been replaced by buckets of sweat.
OLD MEN WHO TRY TO LOOK LIKE ROCK METAL BAND STARS HUMOR TV
And the idea that they serve as a catharsis for pent-up adolescent aggression and sexuality is refuted by the many studies that reflect that violence on TV promotes aggressive behavior in society." is promoting the myth that women enjoy brutality and forced sex. "Through their songs and stage shows, W.A.S.P. "According to Blackie Lawless, 80 percent of their audience is male adolescents," Norwood notes. The Washington-based Parents Music Resource Center, through executive director Jennifer Norwood, begs to differ. "I tell people, will you just relax? How can any grown man walking around with a 12-inch saw blade between his legs be taken that seriously?" Then there are the memories of Blackie's bad behavior on stage, things such as drinking "blood" from a human skull, tying scantily clad women to a rack and terrorizing them with the buzz saw strapped between his legs, cutting holes in the backsides of band members' pants in the hope of getting more girls to come to their shows. (Lawless calls the staff of the label's international office, which made the decision, "the sickest, most spineless wimps I've ever had the displeasure of working with in my life.") On W.A.S.P.'s new album, "Inside the Electric Circus," there's Blackie posing nude, albeit painted to look like a tiger. to a huge contract, refused to release it.
OLD MEN WHO TRY TO LOOK LIKE ROCK METAL BAND STARS HUMOR FULL
The group's first single, "Animal" (the full title is unprintable here), was so controversial that Capitol Records, which had just signed W.A.S.P. But Lawless' band, W.A.S.P., has said and done enough in the past to linger as Exhibit A in the hearts and minds of rockophobic parents everywhere.

"At the end of the day, when all has been said and done, more has been said than done." Blackie Lawless came to Washington recently.
