Word: jawsã
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Great things happened in 1970s America. We celebrated our Bicentennial, birthed both “Jaws?? and “Star Wars,” and impeached a president. By the end of the decade, we were also home to around 15,000 discothèques. Disco was a four billion dollar industry, yet my mother still has an avowed hatred the most popular musical genre of her early youth. “I was really more of a funk girl,” she would claim, turning the dial as a Gloria Gaynor tune came across...
...noises to frighten the audience, victims are graphically killed with famous 60’s guitar rock playing in the background. Their own horror is not melodramatic, but written in the confusion and shock across their faces. The killing scenes are arranged similarly to those in “Jaws??: random characters are introduced, impending doom is certain, and goosebumps shoot down the back of your neck and arms. Instead of a cello increasing in bow strokes to mark the striking moment though, Fincher’s strategy is to calm viewers with humor and the character?...
...back of this book quotes a description of one of Larson’s earlier books: “The ‘Jaws?? of hurricane yarns.” I guess that makes this the “Lake Placid” of books about boats that get hit by lightning...
Translation? Too much material that appears in lecture or section for about three milliseconds surfaces out of nowhere like Jaws?? dorsal fin to bite you in the ass on the midterm and final, while stuff that takes up multiple lectures is never heard from again. This is not “Food and Culture,” folks. Science B skipped the lecture on “Um, Cores are Supposed to Be EASY, I’m Trying to Write a THESIS Here!”, so do yourself a favor...
...blend inner tubes, Swedish fish, and a 1975 thriller. The result? The “MAC Attack,” which lured adventurous students to the MAC pool, getting them to shell out to sit in inner-tubes while watching Steven Spielberg’s “Jaws?? on a large screen. “I feel like at Harvard we are missing events that are really quirky—the kind of thing you see and you get excited about,” says Horovitz. “I think what made me realize how good...