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...Mullets--about a pair of hard-rockin' idiot brothers with the eponymous short-in-front-long-in-back haircuts--got the biggest laughs of the upfronts for the title alone. And Fox had, hands down, the most intriguing series ideas: Skin, a Romeo-and-Juliet romance between the daughter of a porn czar and the son of a D.A.; The Ortegas, a sitcom about a family that produces a talk show--recorded live on tape with real celebrities--in its home; Still Life, a family drama narrated by the dead son; and Cracking Up, a dark sitcom about a psychology...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Is It A New Reality? | 5/26/2003 | See Source »

...other SARS patients in the isolation ward?the woman's elderly father and a man from Guangdong province. When asked why the other two were not part of the official statistics, one hospital worker theorized that the father wasn't counted since he was an ancillary case to his daughter and the Guangdong man didn't need to be tallied because his symptoms weren't very serious. Two weeks later, the father was finally counted as a SARS patient. He has since died. "You can hide suspected patients," says the Shanghai respiratory-disease specialist, "but it's hard to hide...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Case Study | 5/19/2003 | See Source »

...announcement. On the drama side, "Skin," from ubiquitous producer Jerry Bruckheimer, seems to have the elements one needs for success in TV, or, really, in life: love, conflict and porn. In this self-styled Romeo-and-Juliet story, the son of a district attorney falls in love with the daughter of the adult-entertainment czar his dad is prosecuting. "Wonderfalls," like CBS's "Joan of Arcadia," is about a young woman receiving mysterious messages, except that instead of having God talk to her, she chats with inanimate objects - the eagle on the back of a quarter, the tchotchkes...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Upfront Reality | 5/16/2003 | See Source »

Marjane Satrapi spent the first fourteen years of her life in Tehran, as the daughter of well-educated, middle-class, left-wing parents. At the beginning of "Persepolis," she recalls her early obsession with becoming God's new Prophet. Practically personifying her country's sacred-secular struggle, she would decree that their maid could eat at the table with them and that her father's Cadillac would be banned. While her parents demonstrated against the Shah, Satrapi would march around the backyard with her friends, pretending to be Che Guevara. Like Satrapi, I was nine when the Shah fell...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: An Iranian Girlhood | 5/16/2003 | See Source »

Jessica M. Marglin ’06, a member of SHARE and Professor Marglin’s daughter, said she was pleased by the Core Office's decision...

Author: By Yailett Fernandez, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Alternative Ec Course Wins Core Approval | 5/16/2003 | See Source »

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