Word: cosmo
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Would I be off track if I guessed that Mona Hodges, the celebrity editor, was inspired by your predecessor at Cosmo, Bonnie Fuller, who left to go to Us magazine...
...Cosmo girl changed since former editor Helen Gurley Brown's days...
...some flashy first-person ads about the Cosmopolitan Girl, who could be sexy, savvy, successful, and yet loving and interested in raising a traditional family. The formula clicked: the magazine's circulation went from fewer than 800,000 to nearly 3 million. Like the girl in the ads, Cosmo loves to burble about female athletes and politicians, addicts and feminism, but still ruminates on how to get a man in three dates. On the 20th anniversary of her transformed magazine, Brown, 63, vows that you can have it all, down to the crocheted pillow with the words to live...
...self-help book for the Shopaholic-reading, Cosmo-subscribing generation, James taps into the psyche of a demographic that has largely been ignored by the “you will never be good enough” genre. As if every advertisement wasn’t reinforcing this ominous mantra already...
Compulsive gym visits. This type of procrastination, while great for your calves, may leave you exhausted and unable to complete work later in the day. Women can typically be found procrastinating on the elliptical, pretending to multi-task by reading magazines like Glamour, Vogue, Cosmo or Teen People. Toting such high-quality publications creates a false sense of productivity, thus lessening the guilt associated with avoiding work. Even if you do poorly on finals, you’re going to be one toned mama...