Word: junked
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...chest can have that kind of mass cultural impact, the thinking goes, then movies, far from being just passive entertainments, can influence audiences to change their behavior in more significant ways. If a movie can doom undershirts, can't it also end war, poverty, global warming, torture, obesity, junk mail...
...memory...they don’t watch the film and compare and imitate them, it’s just a sort of collective, vague memory that they’re all sharing,” he says. “And then the fact that they recycle all the junk, the location that surrounds them, they recycle themselves in a way, and their friends.” In creating a locally-inspired style that was coherent for the film, Gondry recycled the environs of Passaic, N.J., where the movie takes place. He instructed the cast and crew to use only...
...FDR’s “fireside chats,” into a culture of passivity empowered by infotainment and a bottom-line corporate mentality. In this new culture, Jacoby says, scope is sacrificed for sales and science is increasingly drowned amidst the white noise of politicized junk-thought. Even the habit of reading appears increasingly obsolete. The strictly secular, intellectual merit of Jefferson, Paine, and Emerson that founded the country has given way to the lionization of celebrities and the perpetuation of anti-intellectual ideals (namely creationism and gender stereotyping) that most other modernized nations have long left...
...live up to its hype (or its price). The plastic pearls are distracting and the rabbit ears don’t really reach the right spot. Some friends report otherwise, however—all women’s bodies are different, and one woman’s junk is another woman’s orgasm. Be on the lookout for the most hyped sex toy of the future: The Cone, even more expensive, and it involves sitting! Vibrating Cock Ring: I think these are really fun; I definitely recommend them. It’s great to have intercourse and have...
...makes critics like me go shrill with condemnation. For movie distributors, January is garage-sale, or garbage-sale, time; reviewers' critical expectations are lower than usual. We're indulgent toward junk that deserves to go direct to DVD. We want to save our fulminations for later in the year, and unleash them on failed films with bigger budgets and higher ambitions. But Untraceable really is disgraceable. It's bad enough when a movie offers up atrocity scenes that would make the Nanking soldiers seem like Hannah Montana; it's repellent when the movie dresses up the sadism in a moral...