Discount

Discount may refer to:

  • Discounts and allowances, reductions to the basic prices of goods or services
  • Discounting, a financial mechanism in which a debtor obtains the right to delay payments to a creditor
  • Discount (band), a punk rock band that formed in Vero Beach, Florida, in 1995 and disbanded in 2000
  • Discount (film), a French comedy-drama film
  • See also

  • steal, refers to both a legitimate discount, and an illegal "five-finger discount" taking of property
  • Discount (band)

    Discount was an American punk rock band that formed in Vero Beach, Florida, in 1995 and disbanded in 2000. Before disbanding, the group's members relocated to Gainesville, Florida, where they performed their last show in August 2000. They released three full length albums, several EPs, and two b-side collections. Members have gone on to form The Dead Weather, The Kills, The Kitchen, Black Cougar Shock Unit, Unitas, The Routineers, The Draft, Laserhead, Stolen Parts, and Monikers.

    Discography

    Full-Length Albums

  • Ataxia's Alright Tonight (1996), Liquid Meat/Far Out Records
  • Half Fiction (1997), Kat Records
  • Crash Diagnostic (1999), New American Dream
  • EPs / 7 inches / Splits

  • Three Piece Suit (1995), 3 way split with Combination Grey and Pohgoh
  • Mom Lied To Me (1995), Parking Lot Records/self release
  • Discount/My Pal Trigger split 7" (1996), Tripucka Records
  • Discount/Flatspots/Wolfdaddys/Stizzle split 7" (1996), Boxcar Records
  • (Featuring the band's cover of The Golden Girls Theme)

  • All Too Often 7" (1996), Mighty Idy Records
  • Congo

    The term Congo may refer to two countries that border the Congo river:

  • the larger Democratic Republic of the Congo to the southeast (capital: Kinshasa), formerly known as Zaire
  • the smaller Republic of the Congo to the northwest (capital: Brazzaville)
  • The name may also refer to:

    Entertainment

    Acting

  • Kongō, one of the five schools of Noh acting
  • Film

  • Kongo (1932 film), a film starring Walter Huston, Lupe Velez, and Conrad Nagel
  • Congo (film), a 1995 film based on Michael Crichton's novel
  • Music

  • "Congo" (song), a 1997 song by Genesis from Calling All Stations
  • Kongos (band), a South African rock band
  • The Congos, a reggae vocal group from Jamaica
  • Print

  • Congo (novel), a 1980 novel by Michael Crichton
  • Television

  • Congo (BBC TV series), a 2001 BBC documentary series
  • Languages and ethnic groups

  • Kongo people or Congolese, an ethnic group in the two Congo states and Angola
  • Kongo language
  • People

  • Kongō Masahiro (born 1948), former Japanese sumo wrestler
  • John Kongos (born 1945), South African musician, leader of the band Johnny Kongos and the G-Men
  • Agkistrodon piscivorus

    Agkistrodon piscivorus is a venomous snake, a species of pit viper, found in the southeastern United States. Adults are large and capable of delivering a painful and potentially fatal bite. When antagonized, they will stand their ground by coiling their bodies and displaying their fangs. Although their aggression has been exaggerated, individuals may bite when feeling threatened or being handled. This is the world's only semiaquatic viper, usually found in or near water, particularly in slow-moving and shallow lakes, streams, and marshes. The snake is a strong swimmer and will even enter the sea. It has successfully colonized islands off both the Atlantic and Gulf coasts.

    The generic name is derived from the Greek words ancistro (hooked) and odon (tooth), and the specific name comes from the Latin piscis (fish) and voro (to eat); thus, the scientific name translates into “hooked-tooth fish-eater”. Common names include variants on water moccasin, swamp moccasin, black moccasin, cottonmouth, gapper, or simply viper. Many of the common names refer to the threat display, where this species will often stand its ground and gape at an intruder, exposing the white lining of its mouth. Three subspecies are currently recognized, including the nominate subspecies described here. Its diet consists mainly of fish and frogs but is otherwise highly varied and, uniquely, has even been reported to include carrion.

    Congo (song)

    "Congo" was the first single from the Genesis album ...Calling All Stations..., released in September 1997. The single marked the debut of Ray Wilson as the lead vocalist for the band. It was a hit across Europe.

    Details

    The song is not about the African country, but rather about two people who cannot get along with each other, leaving them to want to be rid of each other and as distant as possible. Musically, the song opens with a Caribbean drum beat while an African-style tribe is heard chanting "Congo the Congo", before the song launches into a darker guitar-driven melody. The album version features an alternative synthesizer ending that fades out, while the single version has an earlier fade-out that excludes the ending.

    Music video

    The music video, directed by Howard Greenhalgh, features industrialised imagery, with the band playing in a heavily guarded shipyard manned with slave labour. Massive water cannons are used to control uprisings, and the band is doused with water quite often throughout the video. The video was shot at the Mediterranean Film Studios in Malta.

    Podcasts:

    PLAYLIST TIME:
    ×