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...becoming out-dated. McPhee writes about things that are generally as sedate as his style--tennis, Scotch whiskey, conservation--and that are diversions, not threats, for the upper-middle class, educated Easterners who make up his audience. His subject matter is often identical with the subject matter of the lush advertisements that surround his New Yorker articles. His articles are peopled with abundant heroes and few villains; his characters are proof that all over the world there are nice people who are friendly and unprepossessing and do good things. Ambition and greed and complexity and tragedy play little part...

Author: By Nicholas Lemann, | Title: A Reassuring World | 9/25/1975 | See Source »

...were often scored by individual artists and rock groups: The Graduate by Simon and Garfunkel, Easy Rider by The Band, Steppenwolf, etc. Today, directors want a more symphonic approach. The Jaws theme is played by a 75-piece orchestra. Disaster films have enhanced the value of lush orchestral work. "Imagine," says Newman, "The Towering Inferno, for instance, raging to the obbligato of a Fender bass and a wah-wah guitar...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Music: Reels of Sound | 9/8/1975 | See Source »

...dazzling advertising barrage after another, Revson kept Revlon moving upward. His 1952 campaign for "Fire and Ice," a new cosmetics line that was promoted through lush magazine ads featuring Model Dorian Leigh and then-daring teasers in the copy ("Do you close your eyes when you're kissed?"), was brilliantly successful. So, too, was his decision in 1955 to go into television in a big way by sponsoring The $64,000 Question. That helped boost sales by 54% and earnings by almost 200% in a year. Revson's promotional trademark was his practice of pairing his products with...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: ENTREPRENEURS: Merchant of Glamour | 9/8/1975 | See Source »

...nine inhabited islands of the Azores archipelago (pop. 300,000) look like a setting for a Graham Greene novel. Sheer rocky cliffs drop abruptly to the Atlantic, while the lush, subtropical countryside spreads out in a crazy quilt of farm plots separated by rock fences. Late each day, young and old alike gather under plane trees in the colorful town squares to catch a little relief from the heat and oppressive humidity, and to talk...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The World: The Azores: Unrest in a Way Station | 8/18/1975 | See Source »

...except for Gay who went out in the fields and disappeared, ducking under the stopped bank of a rock-banked rivulet) piled into Peg's overgrown, galvanized bathtub which sits smack in the middle of a lush, green rice paddy of a field like any other of the 1600 acres worth of fields on Pegleg's piece of land except it's where it is and not lost out in the real boonies of this vacant land--all of us getting all hot and drippy from the water bubbling in from the source (up 100 yards from the white bearded...

Author: By Edmond P.V. Horsey, | Title: Elsewhere in the Summer, at Pegleg Mac's | 8/12/1975 | See Source »

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