Word: crapping
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...work has also inspired six movies--the first, Blade Runner (from his novel Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?), released just after his death. Total Recall (from the story "We Can Remember It for You Wholesale") followed in 1990, then the French Barjo (from Confessions of a Crap Artist) and Screamers (from "Second Variety"). This year, two more: the O.K. Impostor and now Minority Report...
...unfortunately, financially I took a huge bath. And then I got into a lot of bad habits from not working. I got into the drug thing, something I'd never done because I had been an athlete my whole life. I was into the cocaine scene, that self-destructive crap, which could've easily put me into the grave. I did a lot of things, and I hurt a lot of people because of the disease, the addiction...
...reaction, understandably, was equal parts "Holy crap!" and "Hey, wait a minute - how do we know these uncorroborated threats are on the level? What's the source?" Then, Thursday, we learned that the threats to New York (like the bank and apartment threats) came from one man: Al-Qaeda COO Abu Zubaydah, whom the feds have been sweating at an undisclosed overseas location. And so, for his role as the summoner of all our fears, Abu Zubaydah is our Person of the Week...
...artist, and Girlfriends called it one of the best places to be a lesbian. Cianci is particularly proud of a renovation that saved a Colonial Revival mansion called the Casino from demolition and restored it as a center for lavish public events. "It was a piece of crap in 1970," he says as he stands on the back veranda. "I actually toyed with making it a mayor's house, but I didn't have the balls...
Such was the climate that led to the now famous e-mails written in 1999 and 2000 by Henry Blodget and other Merrill Lynch analysts privately calling stocks "a piece of junk" or "crap" or "a dog," while advising clients to buy them. The e-mails, subpoenaed and made public last month by New York State attorney general Eliot Spitzer, have created an uproar among investors who feel they have been defrauded by brokerage firms whom they had trusted--and often paid--for honest advice. The Securities and Exchange Commission last week approved new rules meant to moderate the collaboration...