Word: lesbian
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...raped her friend. Styron’s relatively friendless life in her quest to become CEO is a motif that has been used before, but is artfully drawn out in this movie. These two issues juxtaposed together provide influential insight into modern womanhood. However, this significance is muddled under lesbian innuendo that takes the viewer’s mind off of the topic, bringing the movie from the level of extremely impressive to extremely unfulfilling. If Stettner can learn to focus his message as well as he focuses his action, and continues to find such strong acting talent...
...kidding. In her 23-film career?one of the rare Hong Kong actresses whose age, 31, exceeds the number of her movies?she has uglied-up, gotten disfigured, played a schizophrenic, a tomboy, a killer, a lesbian, and the plain old-fashioned bitch. In First Love: The Litter on the Breeze, she's described by one character as having "Satan's eyes." Few actresses would jump at a chance to play a female character named Turkey but she did, in Stephen Chow's God of Cookery. She tucked away her plumage to create a visually impaired, bucktoothed, kick-ass noodle...
Nathans wrote her letter in response to a letter from two gay students—Catholic Student Association Interfaith Committee Chair Christopher L. Pierce ’02 and Jeffrey P. Morgan ’02, coordinator of Cornerstone, a discussion group for Catholic bisexual, gay, lesbian and transgendered students...
...Wolf, 54, a computer programmer from Houston. "I'm not skeptical anymore." As a gay man, he was struck by a sudden sense of belonging. "There was media coverage of gay families, gay pilots and gay heroes. The Red Cross responded without blinking that it would honor gay and lesbian relationships when determining who would be provided assistance. And then to top it all off, Jerry Falwell got a public whipping. I am nearly immune to him, so when he blamed gays for the tragedy, I just rolled my eyes. I was stunned to see that mainstream America seemed...
...long ago, sperm-bank customers had no such choices, and many preferred to know as little as possible about their "mates." But as the clientele has shifted--fewer married couples, more lesbian couples and single women--the nation's 100-odd sperm banks have changed the way they do business. Many of these women want as much information as possible about their children's provenance, so they can pass it on to them later. "It's become very consumer driven and competitive in the past 10 years particularly, as women have rightfully taken over the position of selecting their donors...