Stateside audiences may not be intimately acquainted with Biffy Clyro yet, but over the course of 15 years and five albums the Scottish trio have...
Real estate in Rapture must be at an all-time low. Ten years after Andrew Ryan’s empire of individualism was disrupted, a new figurehead has taken over the underwater city. With an ex-priest rallying deranged citizens to the new leader’s cause and an army of Big Sisters enforcing a rigid view of humanity, each player becomes a rogue Big Daddy who must extinguish the movement. Armed with a big fuck-off drill, superpowered plasmids that harvest the energy of the elements, and a rivet gun, your lumbering hero has the mettle to match the lightning-fast strikes of the relentless Big Sisters. Once your menacing monstrosity sets the world right, jump back in time with the BioShock 2 multiplayer, a series of death matches that take place during the fall of Rapture.
Inked Magazine sits down with Mark Malott, owner of Black Market Art Company, to talk about the clothing, the art and the artists behind the brand.
When you ask Blackheart owner Scott Sylvia what sets his studio apart from the sea of shops in the Bay Area, you are likely to hear words like “established” and “tradition” somewhere in his response. And, “We don’t suck,” he says seriously. “There are only a handful of good shops left in the area,” Sylvia says with a combination of ruefulness and pride, “and we’re one of them.” Having logged more than 14 years working in and around San Francisco, Sylvia considers himself and the members of his team to be part of an elite group of artists. “That level of experience counts for something,” Sylvia says. Opened in 2004 by Sylvia, with friends Jeff Rassier and Tom Lehi, both of whom he’s known and worked with at several locales ...
Two years had passed since Brandan Schieppati got his last tattoo-a silhouette on his side of Rocky Balboa—and Bleeding through's acerbic singer didn't have any immediate plans to get more ink. then, in early June, a phone call with his manager about the band's upcoming European tour left him rankled. At the time, Bleeding through was having trouble scraping together enough money for the plane tickets. Schieppati claims their label, Trustkill records, hadn't paid them in ages, and the release of their fourth album, Declaration, was in limbo since the company lacked funds and hadn't even paid the band's producer. Schieppati had dealt with similar frustration in the past by ...
Bikes, guns, tattoos, broken bones, best friends, and feuds. The uncensored history of the Metal Mulisha, the most badass unit in freestyle motocross.
Drop drinks are making a comeback at bars across America. Prepare your liver.