
Age: 34
"Midlife Crisis" is a song by American rock band Faith No More. It was released on May 25, 1992, as the first single from their fourth album, Angel Dust. It became their only number-one hit on the US Billboard Modern Rock Tracks chart and reached number 10 on the UK Singles Chart. "Midlife Crisis" has featured on the soundtrack for the videogames Tony Hawk's Underground 2 and Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas on the fictional radio station Radio X. It is a master track song on Rock Band 3, with the fade-out ending edited for gameplay reasons. The song has been covered on industrial metal band Bile's 2002 album The Copy Machine. It was covered by American rock band Disturbed twice: the first time for a Faith No More tribute album, which was instead released through the Internet; the second time as a B-side to their fourth studio album Indestructible. This re-recorded version was released on Covered, A Revolution in Sound and remastered for a third release on their B-side compilation album The Lost Children. In 2021, ex-Korn drummer David Silveria's band Breaking in a Sequence included a cover of "Midlife Crisis" on their debut EP.

The intersection of real-world atrocities and fictional horror has created a vast ecosystem of media that explores the darkest depths of human history and mythology. Figures like Vlad the Impaler and Elizabeth Bathory serve as the genetic blueprint for vampire lore, while Mary I (Bloody Mary) is immortalised in urban legends and supernatural horror. The Haitian dictator François Duvalier (Papa Doc) as a voodoo practitioner who turned the living population of Haiti into zombies with poison by the secret police, the Tonton Macoutes (VSN). Serial killers like Ted Bundy, Jeffrey Dahmer, and John Wayne Gacy. The English singer Ozzy Osbourne who is known for his "Prince of Darkness" persona, his work—including tracks like Mr. Crowley—is steeped in occultism and horror themes, while the other band groups such as Sisters of Mercy titled "Dominion" has a gothic imagery that aligns with the "darker side of reality" often explored in horror aesthetics, including Meat Loaf which titled of the song "Rock and Roll Dreams Come Through," often utilized gothic and operatic horror elements. Authors like Stephen King and Clive Barker (creator of Hellraiser) have bridged the gap between literature and visual media.

