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...Favorite Lil’ Wayne Lines from 2007 and their Personal Pop Culture Equivalents 5. “Five karats on her finger, got her hand smitten / But everybody get a ring even Scottie Pippen / Everybody got a thing but I guess mine isn??t / What ma envisioned.” (From “Let’s Talk (We the Best)”) Personal Pop Culture Equivalent (PPCE): Greg Oden getting injured. Like Weezy getting rejected by his girl, that shit hurt. 4. “Put a mothafucka on ice like Maple Leaves / That?...
...that we have a female president, must we also have flowers in Harvard Yard? The association between gender and botany isn??t so eccentric as it first appears—Radcliffe has always had a greener thumb. Visitors from Oxford and Cambridge have often noted the lack of flower-beds in the yard, and so have those from Princeton and Yale. But why the austerity? Like any lusty mistress of knowledge, I consult the oracular geniuses. In this case, Reverend Professor Peter J. Gomes, Plummer Professor of Christian Morals, who after a learned cadenza through Harvard History said...
...Superbowl halftime show. Musicians have spent the past five years cannibalizing his oeuvre: “The Love Below” was no doubt the result of André 3000 stealing tracks from Prince’s vaults, and “Futuresex/Lovesounds” isn??t nearly as futuristic or original as JT would like you to think. Prince himself has released three decent albums during that same five-year period, but they’ve gone relatively unnoticed. No matter. Purple still reigns. Just ask Cam’ron. So don’t blame...
...these movies follow a formula. Fate sends the little guy several improbable talents and, though they may face hardships along the way, they ultimately prevail. Without revealing too much, let’s just say the movie hardly wanders from this format. The predictability of the plot isn??t the film’s only shortcoming. In one scene, the film more aggressively addresses the audience: at a debate in Oklahoma City, the reactions of the observers divide along color lines, in a way that should provide a funhouse mirror reflection of the movie-watching audience...
...films, crafts original songs for the film’s soundtrack that complement the movie’s fluid cinematography remarkably well. In the end the movie works, chiefly because of its success in highlighting the novel’s strengths. So if the Sunday Book Review isn??t your thing, it’s worth giving the cinematic version a try. —Staff writer Anjali Motgi can be reached at amotgi@fas.harvard.edu...