The Scariest Frontman In Rock And Roll

The Scariest Frontman In Rock And Roll


December 3, 2024 | Samantha Henman

The Scariest Frontman In Rock And Roll


Ronnie Van Zant was the lead singer of the southern rock band Lynyrd Skynyrd who loved a good bar brawl—and ominously predicted his own fiery demise.


READ MORE

Dr Int
January 2, 2026 J. Clarke

When Diana Ross left The Supremes, her solo debut nearly fell apart—until Berry Gordy’s relentless drive remade her as royalty.

Leaving the most successful girl group in pop history sounds like the kind of move legends make. In reality, Diana Ross’s exit from The Supremes was filled with second-guessing, stalled momentum, and moments where even Motown’s inner circle wondered if the leap had been mistimed. The woman who helped define the sound of the 1960s suddenly had to redefine herself—and that reinvention didn’t come easily.
Intro Images
January 1, 2026 Miles Brucker

Elizabeth Short never wanted to be the Black Dahlia, moving to California to build an independent life after the Great Depression.

In 1947, Los Angeles was shaken by a tragedy so disturbing it never faded from public memory. Newspapers gave it a haunting name: The Black Dahlia case. But before the headlines, there was a real woman whose story began long before tragedy.
Lbthumb
January 1, 2026 Penelope Singh

Musicians Who Left Their Bands At The Worst Possible Moment

What would it be like to be in that band right before they became the biggest band in the world, then quit at the worst possible moment?
Csthumb
January 1, 2026 Sasha Wren

TV Shows Canceled So Fast The Cast Found Out From Social Media

Social media has become a major way fans learned TV updates in real time, and yes, occasionally actors have discovered their own cancellations from Twitter before anyone contacted them professionally.
January 1, 2026 J. Clarke

These Forgotten Female Pop Stars Deserve Much More Than They Got

Pop music loves a rocket-ship rise, but it’s far less generous about long landings. For every superstar who sticks the descent, there are dozens of women who briefly ruled radio, MTV, and TRL—only to be quietly pushed aside by trends, tabloids, or timing. These 21 forgotten—or unfairly sidelined—female pop stars didn’t just make hits. They helped define eras, moods, and sounds that modern pop is still borrowing from today.
Aaliyah Intfbog
January 1, 2026 J. Clarke

When Aaliyah’s plane went down in 2001, it ended one of the most promising careers in R&B history—and began an unforgettable myth.

Some careers burn slowly. Aaliyah’s didn’t. Hers moved fast, clean, and confidently—like she knew time was limited and refused to waste a second of it. By 22, she had reshaped R&B, crossed into film, influenced fashion, and positioned herself as the rare pop star who felt both mysterious and completely in control. Then, in August 2001, a short flight turned catastrophic. What followed wasn’t just mourning—it was the birth of a modern myth that refuses to fade.