Word: goldmans
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Blue Man Group today represents a virtual supernova of the group's beginnings. Long-time friends Matt Goldman, Chris Wink and Phil Stanton began Blue Man Group in reaction to the avant-garde art scene of the late '80s. "We were critics," says Wink. "We were like Siskel and Ebert--and Zeppo". They wrote "Tubes" in 1991 and were amazed by the critical and popular success it has become. After four years, European and U.S. tours and Obie and Drama Desk awards, "Tubes" is still selling out two shows a night in New York and Boston. "To be able...
While Cochran said that he "understood" the basis behind the suit the Goldman family is filing, he was "troubled" by the suit being filed by the family of Nicole Brown Simpson on behalf of the children of O.J. Simpson and Nicole Brown Simpson...
...whole, Japanese banks have failed to divulge the extent of their bad loans. They have also failed to clear their books of huge amounts of real estate that have lost value since the property market's collapse. "It's a question of inefficiency," says David Atkinson, an analyst for Goldman Sachs in Tokyo. "The U.S. got out of its banking problems in three or four years, but in Japan this issue has been running for five years and it's not much closer to resolution than it was five years...
...VERY DISAPPOINTED BY THE REmarks of Los Angeles writer and social commentator Karen Grigsby Bates in the TIME forum of opinions on the "trial of the century." She said Fred Goldman, the father of murder victim Ron Goldman, "brought the Holocaust" into the trial. Goldman was reacting with justifiable outrage to Johnnie Cochran's likening Mark Fuhrman to Hitler. Even though Bates said Goldman has the right to be hurt by the loss of his son, she then characterized Goldman as manipulative when he "played the Holocaust card," as if this were all a game with no real issues...
...Simpson pulled out of a one-hour, no-holds-barred TV interview, the buildup for which had attracted nationwide curiosity as well as furor. The reason for Simpson's balk: his lawyers told him his answers might complicate his defense in the civil suits brought by the Brown and Goldman families. Simpson followed his NBC no-show with a phone call to the New York Times to declare, "I am an innocent man." Simpson also told the paper that he had been wrong to "get physical" with his wife in a 1989 abuse incident, that he remained "on the same...