Entertainment Weekly article - September 2000: Difference between revisions

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{{Italic title|string=Entertainment Weekly}}
{{Italic title|string=Entertainment Weekly}}
{{Template:Infobox interview
{{Template:Infobox interview
| Publication = Entertainment Weekly
| publication = Entertainment Weekly
| Interviewee = [[Patrick Wilson]]  
| interviewee = [[Patrick Wilson]]  
| Date        = September [[2000]]
| published = September [[2000]]
| Format     = Print
| format     = Print
| Interviewer = Brian M. Raftery
| interviewer = Brian M. Raftery
| Link       = [https://archive.org/details/sim_entertainment-weekly_2000-09-01_557/page/78/mode/2up Archived via Internet Archive]
| link       = [https://archive.org/details/sim_entertainment-weekly_2000-09-01_557/page/78/mode/2up Archived via Internet Archive]
| Title       = DOT-COMEBACK
| title       = DOT-COMEBACK
| References =  
| references =  
}}
}}
{{Interview headline|DOT-COMEBACK|Brian M. Raftery|Entertainment Weekly|September [[2000]]|Whither [[Weezer]]? Five years ago, the LA.-spawned rockers were the alt-nation's token nerds, thanks in part to the power-pop single "[[Buddy Holly]]" and its [[Spike Jonze]]-helmed clip. But after their [[1996]] album, ''[[Pinkerton]]'', tanked, they were written off as a one-album wonder - during which time lead singer [[Rivers Cuomo]] was still recuperating from leg surgery. Now, in an unlikely comeback story, the reformed band - minus bassist [[Matt Sharp]] - has just added five dates to their [[Summer 2000 Tour|sold-out 15-city tour]] (with online scalpers commanding up to $100 a ticket). "There was always this Internet contingent that was rabid about Weezer," says drummer [[Pat Wilson]], "but I didn't know how that would translate in the real world. It seems we're more popular than when we stopped playing." The hiatus, Wilson says, was due to the search for a new bassist (Mikey Welsh) and intraband tensions after the [[Pinkerton Tour|''Pinkerton'' tour]]: "We just hated each other." Things have cooled down enough that Weezer hope to record a [[Weezer (The Green Album)|new CD]] this fall for a spring [[2001]] release, and want to make another video with Jonze. And as for the more out-there musings about how Cuomo spent his downtime? "He definitely was showering," assures Wilson. Weez would hope so.}}
{{Interview headline|DOT-COMEBACK|Brian M. Raftery|Entertainment Weekly|September [[2000]]|Whither [[Weezer]]? Five years ago, the LA.-spawned rockers were the alt-nation's token nerds, thanks in part to the power-pop single "[[Buddy Holly]]" and its [[Spike Jonze]]-helmed clip. But after their [[1996]] album, ''[[Pinkerton]]'', tanked, they were written off as a one-album wonder - during which time lead singer [[Rivers Cuomo]] was still recuperating from leg surgery. Now, in an unlikely comeback story, the reformed band - minus bassist [[Matt Sharp]] - has just added five dates to their [[Summer 2000 Tour|sold-out 15-city tour]] (with online scalpers commanding up to $100 a ticket). "There was always this Internet contingent that was rabid about Weezer," says drummer [[Pat Wilson]], "but I didn't know how that would translate in the real world. It seems we're more popular than when we stopped playing." The hiatus, Wilson says, was due to the search for a new bassist (Mikey Welsh) and intraband tensions after the [[Pinkerton Tour|''Pinkerton'' tour]]: "We just hated each other." Things have cooled down enough that Weezer hope to record a [[Weezer (The Green Album)|new CD]] this fall for a spring [[2001]] release, and want to make another video with Jonze. And as for the more out-there musings about how Cuomo spent his downtime? "He definitely was showering," assures Wilson. Weez would hope so.}}
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