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Word: dicking (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...That was Dick," he said after he calmed down a few minutes later. "We're way over budget on Air Force One-for some inexplicable reason, jet fuel costs six times what it used...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: "Hello, Mr. President. It's Al Gore Calling" | 6/2/2006 | See Source »

...information that proved faulty; it was also our state of mind. In the run-up to war, the Bush Administration repeated one message again and again: Time was running out. "We have every reason to assume the worst," declared President Bush. "Time is not on our side," insisted Dick Cheney...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Let Your Enemies Crumble | 5/29/2006 | See Source »

...start by saying it's better than the other Linklater item, Fast Food Nation, which so far has tied Richard Kelly's Southland Tales as the Festival's biggest flop. This one is an adaptation of a 1977 novel by that crucial and deeply disturbing SF visionary, Philip K. Dick. It's Dick's memoir of his addiction to painkillers and other drugs, as refracted through the sci-fi-delic prose style of his later years...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: X-Men, Keanu and Other Mutants | 5/26/2006 | See Source »

...Scanner Darkly can be synopsized... you know, I'm not going to try. The whole enterprise is too dizzyingly oneiric. I'll just say that everyone is after a drug called Substance D, for Death (and for Dick). Also that the two leading characters are a drug-addled renegade, Robert Arctor, and his pursuer, an undercover cop named Fred - and that both are the same person. See? It's complicated...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: X-Men, Keanu and Other Mutants | 5/26/2006 | See Source »

...Linklater, though, can be credited with two achievements. For one thing, he has made the first close adaptation of a Dick novel (Blade Runner had many epiphanies, but it bore only a superficial resemblance to the author's Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep). For another, he has underlined the similarities of two decades marked by governmental snooping into its citizens' business and brains: the 70s, when the Nixon White House amassed a long Enemies List and used the FBI and its own resources to get dirt on suspected troublemakers, and our own, when anyone's telephone chats and email...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: X-Men, Keanu and Other Mutants | 5/26/2006 | See Source »

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