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Everloop is the sequel to Dr. Lavahead's Not-So-Secret Weapon. Marc O'Polo is a good man at heart, but can't seem to keep himself from being tempted by the Devil. After narrowly escaping the clutches of the law for his "strictly professional" role in Lavahead Television's attempt to take over the world. (it's a long story) Marc has now been employed by Pegleg, the world's most infamous Chinese Information Pirate. By stealing, reediting and releasing every form of media he can get his hands on before they can be shown by the networks, Pegleg plans to crash the world economy... he figures that if the advertising dollars won't go to the media networks because no one cares to watch what they have already seen and heard via his super channel, Everloop, the creative conscious will be simultaneously crushed, and the masses will become complacent as Everloop slips in subliminal mind control messages to the ever new but never changing broadcast. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.
# On Everloop This sequel deepens its predecessor's playful examination of moral compromise through an increasingly elaborate narrative architecture. The album constructs a world where technology, media, and personal ethics collide—exploring how good intentions curdle when faced with convenient rationalization. Rather than simply entertaining with its absurdist premise, it asks substantive questions about complicity and cultural manipulation. The craft lies in how seamlessly it weaves conceptual ambition with sonic invention, creating something that works both as imaginative storytelling and as a genuinely curious meditation on contemporary anxieties. The result feels neither preachy nor frivolous, but genuinely thoughtful.