Word: maing
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...says, “not as icons.” Despite her attempts at dispelling some of the mystery surrounding the Factory, the perplexing nature of Williams’s disappearance is never resolved. After a falling out with Warhol, a bewildered, drug-addled Williams returned home to Rockport, MA for dinner, only to disappear forever later that night. Although Robinson reveals juicy tidbits about The Factory, she ultimately engages the audience through the film’s intrinsic intimacy. Excerpts from Williams’s compelling short films—which experiment with contrast and light, creating a unique...
...Denver's Westin Tabor Center during the Democratic National Convention. I'd been tagging after her for a couple of days, from one rapturous audience to another, including the crowd at a community-service event for soldiers, at which an Iraq-war veteran introduced her by announcing, "Ma'am, I know you weren't in the military, but I'd follow you anywhere." If all that hadn't quite convinced me (it was the Democratic Convention, after all), I'd guess it took roughly the first 30 seconds of our interview for me to fall for her. It happened when...
...during which Ne-Yo comforts the jilted women of the nightclub. “It don’t matter ’cause you’re here now / And the music you’re enjoying / So for the next couple minutes / Baby I’ma be your boyfriend,” he sings. What a mensch! If he only he weren’t such a lazy writer. Of course, it’s cool that he wants to make women happy and occasionally empower them; the problem is there’s none...
...will be nearly as fleshed out and central to the show as their offspring, say writer-producers Gabe Sachs and Jeff Judah. (We have to take Sachs and Judah at their word, since the CW isn't providing the press an advance peek at the show.) With Ma and Pa Wilson, played by Lori Loughlin and Rob Estes, the creators are taking a page from the engaging and glossy grownups of another successful SoCal teen soap...
...Tibet won much support from people here who increasingly see their fate tied to the booming mainland. For many, China is no longer the communist bogeyman that it once was for those living in the former British colony. "Hong Kongers are caught in the fervor of the Olympics," says Ma Ngok, a political analyst at the Chinese University of Hong Kong. "Even if they're not nationalist, they won't be inclined to be sympathetic toward Tibetans." Even Chan herself thinks self-determination for Tibetans is a "lost cause," but she intends to soldier on regardless...