Do you belive in The Devil?


  • Total voters
    8

version

Well-known member
Do you believe in him? Is he real? That Wiley anecdote about the 'bass mixes' always gave me a little shiver:

Nah it's not "devil mix" you know? I called it that because it sounded evil to me innit. But I don't call it "devil mix" anymore because when I started calling it that I started to get lots of bad luck, if you understand. I called it that because it sounded evil but really, why didn't I call it "god mix" then? Because I don't believe in the devil. The more and the more you say his name, believe it or not, he'll come closer to you. And that is the truth, I swear I am not joking. "Bass mix" I call them now, cos it's just bass. The devil mix brought me too much luck. I was selling the devil mix of Eskimo and they were selling so fast. I bought stuff with the money, bought a car and crashed it. So it just turned me off.
 

mixed_biscuits

_________________________
I went through a phase of doing the devil horns hand sign and had a similar experience, although I can't remember exactly what now. So I stopped doing it.
 

IdleRich

IdleRich
Someone had a thread on twitter about the best cinematic depictions of the devil. They were arguing for that Danish guy (never can remember his name) in Constantine.
Edit - Peter Stormare, he's Swedish, sorry
 

kid charlemagne

Well-known member
Playboy: When you're on stage, do you feel the illusion that death can't get you?

Dylan: Death can't get you at all. Death's not here to get anybody. It's the appearance of the Devil, and the Devil is a coward, so knowledge will overcome that.

Playboy: What do you mean?

Dylan: The Devil is everything false, the Devil will go as deep as you let the Devil go. You can leave yourself open to that. If you understand what that whole scene is about, you can easily step aside. But if you want the confrontation to begin with, well, there's plenty of it. But then again, if you believe you have a purpose and a mission, and not much time to carry it out, you don't bother about those other things.
 

Murphy

cat malogen
what did you make of the tale? true crime reads can be a slog of justification or procedural

work library has a bunch think Cass Pennant was in there

in-laws are scouse and jewish, not as many villains roamed as freely in Merseyside, think once you hit a certain tier everyone’s a grass
 

thirdform

pass the sick bucket
what did you make of the tale? true crime reads can be a slog of justification or procedural

work library has a bunch think Cass Pennant was in there

in-laws are scouse and jewish, not as many villains roamed as freely in Merseyside, think once you hit a certain tier everyone’s a grass

procedural procedural procedural is about right. he loves the sound of his own voice.

Real criminals don't write books and certainly don't go on camera. Let alone drop references to the 48 laws of power every other page.

I only read it to find out if he had much contact or involvement with the Istanbul-to-north-London to libpool heroin trafficking ring with nuri yazici/hursit yavas/the vulcan and John Haase. Not really.

It was edited/ghostwritten by one of them Vice type journalists, anyway.
 

The King of Pussy Gettin

Well-known member
Playboy: When you're on stage, do you feel the illusion that death can't get you?

Dylan: Death can't get you at all. Death's not here to get anybody. It's the appearance of the Devil, and the Devil is a coward, so knowledge will overcome that.

Playboy: What do you mean?

Dylan: The Devil is everything false, the Devil will go as deep as you let the Devil go. You can leave yourself open to that. If you understand what that whole scene is about, you can easily step aside. But if you want the confrontation to begin with, well, there's plenty of it. But then again, if you believe you have a purpose and a mission, and not much time to carry it out, you don't bother about those other things.
bob.jpg
 
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