Word: colorã
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...adding dozens of ill-fated instruments to the bonfire. This cuts back and forth with sexy singer Karen O, draped in a gold dress, fire in her eyes and dirt on her face, contorting, howling, and shaking while singing “We build a fire when the color??s getting brighter.” The setting, the visual effects, and the charisma of the players all make this a thoroughly compelling affair. It’s a shame, then, that the song to which the video is set is a disappointment. If this first single...
...next round in Hollywood. “You can tell you can sing, but it was just a power voice,” Abdul said, wishing there had been more “dynamics.” Jackson agreed, saying that he wanted to see more “color?? in Brown’s singing, but that “on the strength of [her] voice,” he would let her through. A Harvard freshman living in Mower, Rachel E. Flynn ’09, has also had an American Idol experience...
...former and no beef with the regulated latter. Without a critical eye, however, it is too easy nowadays to accept other aspects of our world as permanent as well. Widespread hunger, devastating epidemics, intolerable unemployment, savagely unequal schools that lead to the mass incarceration of people of color??all these horrors come to be seen as inevitable, or even natural. So many of us here have already abandoned our youthful idealism, have implicitly accepted the futility of imagining alternatives to the world that exists—never mind attempting to bring them to fruition. What dreams...
...seems lackluster. Though Foxx is trying hard to emulate Will Smith (with the hippest new lingo, too—on seeing Edi: “It is a bag of chips alright”) he fails to deliver the humor he once did in “In Living Color?? or even “Booty Call...
Last fall, The Crimson hired Ron Reason, a media design consultant with Garcia Media, Inc., to redesign the entire paper in preparation for the transition from black and white to color??or, BW to CMYK. But Ron left The Crimson with more than just a new style—he spread the Gospel of Visual Thinking...