

How much do I love this? How big of a passion do I still have in my heart do I still have to write records and how much of myself am I still willing to expose – and being sober, the answer was all of it. “Rob Zombie said it best when he said, ‘If you can’t be crazy without drugs or alcohol, you can’t be crazy.’ and so that’s really the mentality I went at it with. And it didn’t take alcohol for me to love music or to be passionate about it.” It has been therapy as well as a family member for as long as I can remember. On how sobriety played a key role in the writing process for he says, “Well to me that was the biggest part and going back to my roots and to remember that music has been the universal language for me. All the bells and whistles included and we didn’t leave any stone unturned. As a matter of fact, every song on it speaks volumes about where we’ve come. I think fans are going to really love that part of it. It just really encompasses where we are now which is the appreciation of it for me. “So it was really about going back to basics and having a new vision.

“And so I really went to the table on this one and said listen, where have we been, where are we now and where the hell are we going because this is either going to change or else we might as well just call it a day.” “There were definitely tracks that I was very proud of obviously – I Refuse, When The Seasons Change, The Pride, Sham Pain – but all in all, it just felt like we weren’t doing ourselves any justice.” We started this band over 14 years ago and for us it had gotten to a point… lets just call a spade a spade… the last couple of albums, for me, were stagnant, they were monotonous.” Speaking about what he wants people to take away from F8, Moody says, “I want them to take away from it what I put in. But some of that you expect to get from a start-up that has a product that’s not done, right? But the problem was, it never got any better.Ivan Moody from Five Finger Death Punch recently made a guest appearance on 101 WRFI’s ‘Talkin’ Rock With Meltdown’ Podcast.

Avie Tevinan, a former Apple developer who joined Theranos’ board of directors, told Nightline: “She’d prick her finger and then would put blood on something and then she put it in the machine and then sometimes she would say…’this part doesn’t work anymore,’ which I thought was a bit odd. Those who worked closely with her also began to doubt the validity of her claims. When a New York Times reporter asked her, she replied rather vaguely: “a chemistry is performed so that a chemical reaction occurs and generates a signal from the chemical interaction with the sample, which is translated into a result, which is then reviewed by a certified laboratory personnel.” Wanting to turn Theranos into the next Apple, Holmes enlisted the skills of its former employees and was, as product designer Anna Areola would go on to say, “obsessed with Steve Jobs.” She even began wearing a signature black turtleneck like Jobs and reportedly lowered her voice several octaves.Ĭracks started to show when she was unable to explain how the technology worked.
