Word: glaring
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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Essany's show and the others raise the question, What is the tipping point at which a real person becomes a persona, or vice versa? And is that transformation worth the glare of reality-show cameras? Feldman isn't sure; he's so mad at the media and the WB--which for some reason, he says, depicted him and his housemates as has-beens--that he has written a song about the matter, which he plans to put on a rerelease of his 2002 album, Former Child Actor. Then again, The Surreal Life is probably the only reason you know...
Monday night the Cambridge City Council ordered an investigation into the noise caused by the University’s Quad shuttle bus service and the glare caused by new lighting installed on Shepard Street, which runs south of Cabot House...
...that he's ambitious, that he has his eye on a bigger prize. To his (off-the-record) critics on Wall Street, his pursuit of investment banks smacks of opportunism and grandstanding, of a public official out of control. "This could have been handled more effectively away from the glare of the press," says a senior executive at one of the banks Spitzer has gone after. But if this is all a political ploy, a platform from which to run someday for, say, Governor of New York, it's certainly not in most politicians' playbooks to take on the moneymen...
...pristine surface; in a whirlwind of motion finishing off the single top-to-bottom slash of the canvas with his knife; and finally, standing by the completed work - a 1.5-m-by-1.5-m white canvas with an enormous gash in it - looking at the camera with a chilling glare of satisfaction. Though powerful, the photo series was staged. The finished work seen in the last picture had been completed several weeks earlier, and an identical canvas used in the preceding prints was never actually punctured. Fontana told Mulas the best he could do was simulate his slashing process...
...Harvard field hockey team had better get used to the glare of bright lights...