Word: jealous
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...delicious harmonies, much of Rockwell Church’s appeal stems from the band’s relaxed stage presence and the audience’s subsequent desire to be up on stage with them. They’re having that much fun on stage, and the audience becomes jealous of their obvious bond and that extra level to the jokes that they’re missing. These are two guys who obviously still crack themselves up. After storming the stage and finishing “Lonely,” Rockwell announced that it was a good thing the audience...
...would be too easy to write off Canada as just another country jealous of the United States. Tempting, though, isn’t it? The distant northern land has tended—by necessity—to follow suit when the U.S. takes a stance on foreign affairs. Economically it acknowledges its near-total dependence on US markets. And in a famous survey a few years ago, residents chose Pamela Anderson as their country’s most distinguished citizen. None of these bodes well for Canadians’ sense of self-determination, not to mention their self-esteem...
...doesn’t sleep with her favorite one here because her mom won’t let her bring it...she does have a small wind-up penguin, baby rumpert, which she may occasionally sleep with...this makes me jealous...
...resulting in unfathomable human loss and incalculable property damage. As a nation, we simply cannot and should not ignore the fact that nearly 7,000 innocent people were killed (including many foreigners) on our soil by terrorists whose mission is to destroy our values and beliefs. They are jealous of democracy, of freedom, of success, and have perverted their own religion in order to accomplish their goals. Make no mistake: they will not stop their crusade until we stop them first...
...Keenan says he wanted to capture "the essence of the Tua-reg people." In between visits to the rock art sites, with anecdotes about jealous volcanic piles and impromptu gazelle hunts, terrifying sandstorms and quiet nights under the Sahara sky, he somehow does. Pity then that he subjects his work to treatment strangely similar to the desecration he decries. For in his book, there is beauty beneath, a vivid portrait of his embattled Sahara Man, the Tuareg. But to see it, you have to look past the marks of an outsider, the signature of one who likes...