Word: bitche
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Curry, however, did allow Gerald B. Mullin, Dayan's senior attorney, to introduce as evidence letters among top McDonald's executives referring to Dayan as a "son of a bitch" who should be removed "at all costs" from "the McDonald's system." Mullin used that correspondence to allege that McDonald's is trying to screw Dayan out of a hamburger empire which could include 166 McDonald's worth billions of dollars...
...plunging into the chilly water. Our junior senator is the man standing on the shore yelling, "Turn back." It's the fear of fast water; the fear that should the center not hold mere anarchy would be loosed upon the world, and that mere anarchy would be a bitch. It is an appeal to survival instincts, and though that may be sane it is not noble. The question is this: do we want to take the easy way out and preserve the world we know for a few more generations, or do we want to take the plunge, knowing there...
...Boston, things like that don't happen. There, the city councilors bitch and feud and sincerely hate each other, and, consequently very little gets done. "They carry a grudge, I guess," Sullivan says. "I know how to come out of a fight and forget it. The other side has respect for my decisions--they know they're made sincerely and not from politics. And I know they have their people that support them, people they represent...
...deny Scorcese's genius, but how real is Taxi Driver? Mean Streets is realistic in the sense that it's harsh and gritty, but it's a victim of its own vision. Everything has to be hard-boiled, New York is a jungle. Life is a bitch. What passes for realism is more often than not a steamy fantasy with all the grotesqueries left in. They are, in most respects, not so much real life as parodies...
...assets, and he returns home to find his enraged wife ready to kill him. This is no Mary Poppins. Furious that her husband has sunk all his assets, (half hers by California law) into a piece of celluloid, she chases him through the house. "You son of a bitch," she cries. Farmer stops, and says, "Variety headline: 'Sally Miles Swears!' Another $10 million at the box office." Edwards excels at manic scenes like these. Farmer's irrationality, portrayed to perfection by Mulligan, overcome the hopelessly commonplace performances of Larry Hagman, as one of the producers' yes men, and William Holden...