The Bloodhound Gang’s return from obscurity was a success last week as the band played at the Ogden Theater with a mixture of old hits and samplings from their new CD, Hefty Fines.On Oct. 14, The Bloodhound Gang started the second day of their world tour in Denver. The band took the stage amid screams of joy from a colorful audience, after the warm-up band Electric Eel Shock, a Japanese mettle band who had not yet fully mastered the English language. After enjoying the screams from the audience, the band started out with their song “Balls Out” from their new CD. After the song ended, lead singer Jimmy Pop preceded to tear off bassist Evil Jared Hasslehoff’s shirt and boxers and then threw them into the crowd. The rest of the night continued similarly, with increasingly antagonistic acts, such as Pop encouraging the audience to spit on Hasslehoff, and a noticeably drunk Hasslehoff constantly vomiting on Jimmy after drinking large amounts of Jagermeister, the tour’s sponsor. Although it was disgusting, the crowd loved it.Although the band played many of its hits from their new CD, like “Foxtrot Uniform Charlie Kilo,” “Uhn Tiss Uhn Tiss Uhn Tiss” and “Ralph Wiggum” the fans seemed delighted with older, more off-color songs such as “The Ballad of Chasey Lain,” “Along Comes Mary” and potentially the band’s most popular song, “Bad Touch.” What made the concert such a success was the fact that it was not just a band playing songs. The Bloodhound Gang constantly did funny things like singing Jay-Z in the middle of one of the songs, making fun of different audience members between songs, or throwing items band members were using, including guitars, into the air and watching the roadies try to catch them. The members of The Bloodhound Gang are excellent entertainers and proved last week that they are more than one-hit wonders.