• Severe Thunderstorm Watch for Trenton - Click for Details
    ...A Severe Thunderstorm Watch has been issued...
    Expires: March 09, 2026 @ 11:00pm
    LOCATIONS
    Central and northern Alabama, Extreme northwest and west central Georgia
    EFFECTIVE
    This Monday afternoon and evening from 400 PM until 1000 PM CDT.
    THREATS
    Scattered large hail and isolated very large hail events to 2 inches in diameter possible, Scattered damaging wind gusts to 70 mph possible, A tornado or two possible
    SITUATION
    Clusters of storms will spread eastward from Mississippi into Alabama through late evening, and eventually reach northwest Georgia. Storm mode will be complicated with a mix of clusters and some embedded supercells with attendant threats of occasional wind damage, large hail, and a tornado or two. The severe thunderstorm watch area is approximately along and 70 statute miles north and south of a line from 55 miles southwest of Muscle Shoals AL to 45 miles east northeast of Anniston AL. For a complete depiction of the watch see the associated watch outline update (WOUS64 KWNS WOU0).
    PRECAUTIONS
    A Severe Thunderstorm Watch means conditions are favorable for severe thunderstorms in and close to the watch area. Persons in these areas should be on the lookout for threatening weather conditions and listen for later statements and possible warnings. Severe thunderstorms can and occasionally do produce tornadoes.

The Who Prepping ‘Classic Albums’ Episode For ‘The Who Sell Out’

SHARE NOW

It was revealed on TheWho.com's official message board that the band is currently in production for a Classic Albums episode for 1967's The Who Sell Out. One of the staffers on the doc posted shots of Roger Daltrey on the set for the episode which will chronicle the Who's beloved third album. There's been no official announcement as to when the show will air.

The Who Sell Out, which was the pinacle of the group's pop art period, featured tracks interspersed with original radio spots, commercials and public service announcements in an effort to ape England's then pirate radio stations.

The Who Sell Out included the band's sole Top 10 hit — "I Can See For Miles" — along as the instant concert staple,"Tattoo," along with such fan favorites as "I Can't Reach You," "Mary Anne With The Shaky Hand," "Sunrise," "Relax," and "Our Love Was." 

In the recently released Who documentary Sensation: The Story Of 'Tommy,' Pete Townshend shed light on how he played into the interest of the burgeoning counter culture to help drive Tommy into the blockbuster it eventually became: [“We’d had a very strange time. We’d had a terrific two-year run of hit singles in the UK, and I’d kind of run out of steam, I’d just written myself out. The final song that I wrote for the Who’s single was, that was successful, was ‘I Can See For Miles,’ and after that, I felt I had nowhere to go. But I felt if we could achieve anything — If I could achieve anything — if it had a spiritual subtext, it would straddle the word of pop from which we’d come and this new hippie world, which seemed to be about new age values, and well, we all know what hippies stood for.”] SOUNDCUE (:33 OC: . . . hippies stood for)

Pete Townshend On Pre-‘Tommy’ Pop Era :

Loading advertisement…
Loading advertisement…