Word: loing
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...have a visible collarbone, on which you can hang trinkets, like necklaces. Formerly, to my delight, Hollywood seemed immune to this phenomenon, and starlets brazenly flashed their collective implants to the world at every venue possible. Now the anti-cleavage sentiment is so strong in fashion that even L. Lo (though perfectly comfortable flashing her lower naughty bits to unsuspecting paparazzi) has covered her famous assets, usually favoring crew necks when she goes out at night. That, to me, is sad, and offends my pecuniary sensibilities. Again, this is not to say that I endorse excessive cleavage. Quite the contrary...
...have room for creativity. Remember J-Lo's pink diamond from Ben Affleck? (Remember how that turned...
...Pavement's fuzzed-out masterpiece don't stack up to the rounding errors on Nevermind, but its influence on Beck, Blur, Radiohead and countless other musicians of the '90s is incalculable. Lead singer and former Whitney Museum of Art security guard Stephen Malkmus expressed alienation with the same lo-fi guitar grit of Kurt Cobain, but his lyrics and vocals were models of cryptic passion. Somehow his word salads communicated both the ennui of a suburban smart-ass and an awareness that ennui isn't tragic...
...talked about the church, nothing. He said he was from Kansas City." Jones says he did not discover who "Art" was for "about two and a half years." Then, he says, "one time I was watching the History Channel and they were doing a show on the antichrist, and lo and behold his face popped up as an expert. I went, omigod it's Art, that's the guy I'm seeing." Jones says he decided to expose Haggard because of the alleged hypocrisy. "Here's a guy who put himself on a really high pedestal for millions and millions...
...versatility and marketability make it impossible to think of him as just a rapper; he is a jack-of-all-money-making-trades, which he shows off all over the album. Most notably, “Everything I Love,” with Nas and Cee-Lo, showcases (or maybe invents) the conscious side of Diddy, enhanced by the ever-insightful rhymes of Nas. Diddy also highlights his vulnerabilities on several tracks, such as “Last Night.” In this duet with Keyshia Cole, Diddy makes his singing debut with a tender ballad. It?...