Word: guns
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...overrun by wildlife - kind of what it was like in the 1970s. Except that now Times Square is empty of all human life except for Robert Neville (Smith), who patrols the streets with his rifle and his faithful dog Samantha. He spots a deer and is ready to gun it down, when a lioness leaps on her prey and begins devouring it, as her mate and cub watch. As we used to say about New York 30 years ago, it's a jungle out there...
...unexpected places. 1. Die Hard—Bruce Willis, in his first major action flick role, plays tough NYC cop John McLean coming to meet his family for the Holidays. A German terrorist/robber gets in the way. Choice lines: “I’ve got a machine gun now. Ho, Ho, Ho,” written on a sweatshirt in blood, and “Yippee kai- yay motherfucker.” Also has a cheery moralistic ending full of holiday cheer: Willis’ ally on the LAPD finally gets over his fear of guns (he once...
...trying to get ourselves aligned with things that have emotion. So while we still buy the big-gun stuff--you know, baseball, that's a big one here; football in Europe--we're also looking at the ones where we can have more of what I would call unique brand association. In Asia right now, we're doing fashion. Women in Asia have huge buying power. They travel a lot. Imagine having, in Japan, the Louis Vuitton card. I mean, one in six women in Japan own at least one Louis Vuitton item...
...When not stereotyping voters, the media is stereotyping Republicans as gun-toting, Bible-thumping rednecks. The CNN/YouTube debate was a prime example. CNN billed the debate as a chance for ordinary Americans to ask the candidates tough questions, but it was really a chance for ordinary Democrats to take a shot at Republicans. Besides a large number of the questioners being avowed supporters of Democratic candidates, the questions were insulting. One video showed a man from Texas brandishing a Bible asking, “Do you believe this book?” We soon learned that Giuliani thought some stories...
Vaillancourt—who is second in the country with 1.45 assists per game—has added a team-first element to her fast-paced, gun-slinging style of play. Rather than charging the net every time she touches the puck, Vaillancourt has created opportunities for her teammates—especially Harvard’s young crop of speedy scorers that includes Ryabkina and rookie Katharine Chute—while showing off remarkable selectivity when looking for her own chances to score, leading the team with a .184 shot percentage...