One of my all-time favorite type of videos is pre-fame bands playing their extremely famous songs to a tiny room of people, because they're not yet known.
A thread of some examples:
Bastille playing Pompeii in what looks like someone's living room:
MGMT playing 'Kids' to a crowd of maybe 25 people on a college quad:
Tones and I playing Dance Monkey in a parking lot before the song came out
Mumford and Sons playing 'The Cave' to a crowd of 20 people at a pizzeria
Maggie Rogers, as an unknown music student at NYU, showing her unfinished song 'Alaska' to Pharrell (who can visibly tell it's going to be a massive hit within about 15 seconds)
Nirvana announces they're going to play 'Smells Like Teen Spirit' at a local gig, and nobody in the crowd reacts at all because they've never heard of it before:
Ed Sheeran playing a solo acoustic set in a black club in LA before he was famous:
I'm in @thedispatch today, with a piece about how Renee Good is not going to be the last person ICE kills, because this wasn't a freak accident - it was the culmination of a persistent, ongoing pattern.
(gift link below)
Renee Good's death was a predictable tragedy. ICE routinely escalates to violence at the first excuse. It's an agency filled with substandard officers and given political cover from on high.
Renee Good, or someone like her, was bound to die.