Word: blowingly
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...love connections began to form, Gahan struggled to keep up with new developments. He estimates that he had “probably 80-90 percent knowledge of what was going on.” Gahan also moonlighted as a therapist, fielding everything from general dating questions to blow-by-blow accounts of what happened the night before. Rather than passing judgment on them, Gahan was simply “glad they were amusing themselves, even if amusing themselves meant hooking up with anyone or anything in their path?...
...generalize a bit?and what are critics in Cannes for, other than to see dozens of movies and lap up the free vittles??the artier directors from Europe and the Americas are so sick of current affairs that they want to blow everything up. The Asians on the other hand, who have lived with catastrophe for so long it's like a noisy neighbor, see each day as a little test that must be passed to get to tomorrow. (It's the difference between two views of North Korea: the Bush Administration's and South Korea...
...Having Fantagraphics shuttered or even compromised would be a disastrous blow to the medium. They have consistently published America's most important comix artists including Dan Clowes ("Eightball"), Chris Ware ("Jimmy Corrigan") and Joe Sacco ("Safe Area Gorazde.") I encourage TIME.comix readers to help "the cause" by buying books at the Fantagraphics website: www.fantagraphics.com...
...really was a journalist before I became this monster," she says, "and sometimes I go on these chat shows and I'd just so much rather talk about al-Qaeda than how to cook a proper lamb." While she says she occasionally feels like a "blow-up doll," Lawson was never happier to have her food universe than when her husband John Diamond spent four years suffering from throat cancer. (He died in 2001; Lawson's current boyfriend is advertising mogul Charles Saatchi.) This explains, at least in part, her food hedonism. "People should stop demonizing fat," she says through...
There is often a bleak beauty to Marooned in Iraq's landscapes. But pictorialism aside, it is a unique experience--abrupt, jagged, almost childlike in its ever shifting tones. Driven equally by wayward and bestartling incidents that blow up and blow away, and by an old man's abiding passion, it's a film that is exotic in its rhythms yet utterly comprehensible in its humanity. You'll have to seek it out in its limited release, but no current movie is more worth the effort. --By Richard Schickel