The former Spain striker David Villa is set to end his loan spell at Melbourne City next month after just four A-League matches.
Villa was loaned to the club from the fledgling MLS club New York City and it had been hoped he would play the full 10 matches allowed to a guest player under league rules.
The club confirmed on Wednesday, however, that Villa would leave Australia in early November to fulfil marketing and commercial obligations in New York. Melbourne are hopeful that Villa could return to play more matches after he has settled his family in the US.
Mannnnnn Jay Rock fell off on some Jeremy Lin shyt. Everybody thought he had next after Blood nikka and All My Life but
younger brehs today saw their older brothers/cousins/internet veterans of the last decade go nuts for genuine rap heavyweights and want their own
that combined with those same folks now in their late 20s/30s desperate for another game-changing icon means subpar or average dudes get pushed
is there any doubt whatsoever he's the best
The review of Revolution in the Guardian the other day was absolutely brutal. shyt sounds like a self-help book for recovering heroin addicts.Part of me wants to see Russell Brand run for some leadership position...just for the fukkery and the speeches. Something about a comedian running for politics succinctly sums up our political climate today.
But reading the reviews of his book he's talking about creating a leaderless society and not giving people titles like Dr. and so on. Cool story man :damngoodcoffee:
And he's still advocating not voting
But at the end if he was really about the revolutionary life a start would be releasing his book online for free, but that will never happen I reckon.
Pretty much. Everyone desperate for a really great rapper when there really aren't any, only glimpses from a few.
At one point he recounts meeting Alastair Campbell and discovering he quite likes the man, despite hating his politics. That's because he recognises a kindred spirit, a recovering addict and someone with "mental-health issues". Fair enough. But then he goes on to say that he connects with Campbell – notwithstanding the Iraq war – because he has been "liberated from the materialistic projections of anatomical humans, who I now see are a refracted projection of one supreme consciousness". If this is a joke, I don't get it. And if it's not a joke, I don't get it.
Vulgar
voting is just bourgeois affectation :smugcoop:Part of me wants to see Russell Brand run for some leadership position...just for the fukkery and the speeches. Something about a comedian running for politics succinctly sums up our political climate today.
But reading the reviews of his book he's talking about creating a leaderless society and not giving people titles like Dr. and so on. Cool story man :damngoodcoffee:
And he's still advocating not voting
But at the end if he was really about the revolutionary life a start would be releasing his book online for free, but that will never happen I reckon.
Pretty much. Everyone desperate for a really great rapper when there really aren't any, only glimpses from a few.
voting is just bourgeois affectation :smugcoop:
The review of Revolution in the Guardian the other day was absolutely brutal. shyt sounds like a self-help book for recovering heroin addicts.
http://www.theguardian.com/books/2014/oct/17/revolution-russell-brand-review-political-manifesto