Word: mattã
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...understands my album,” Marx says. “All three of us have jobs writing about music for magazines or websites, so we share that common bond as well. When I got the offer from Beekeeper, I went online and read a lot of Nick and Matt??s record reviews and realized that we have very similar taste...
Matt told me how much he loves and admires his parents and how he talks to his sister Jessica on the phone everyday. Later, Jessica emailed me a long self-proclaimed love letter about the selfless, sweet man her little brother has become. Sweet and sensitive? Thoughts of Matt??s dim wit and Harvard-standard ambitions were fast being replaced by dreams of romantic candlelit dinners followed by repeated viewings of Clueless. But I tried to restrain myself: keep it professional, I thought...
When I walked into the Winthrop Dining Hall 15 minutes late, I saw a group of people so cool that I immediately prayed to Jesus these were not Matt??s friends. Apparently Jesus doesn’t listen to Jewish girls. I was forced to take a seat right in the middle of the crowd of incredibly cool people. Luckily, I am quick on my feet. I devised a believable story about how I’d been instructed not to talk and only to observe, saving myself from the horror of normal human conversation...
...lettering on the orange posters of Matthew J. Glazer ’06 and Clay T. Capp ’06, this ticket was flip-floppier than the auburn locks of its star. The campaign’s online profile of Matt alternated serious paragraphs with personality statements about Matt??s hair and middle name. Surprisingly, on a website filled with fun facts, Capp’s council nickname—The Beer Baron—didn’t get much play...
...over who gets more credit, over whether Catcher in the Rye is a better idea, over whether to work together. The friendship’s defining moment is a talent show in high school (Cambridge’s Ringe and Latin) when Ben’s goofy dancing turns Matt??s serious Simon and Garfunkel rendition into a shtick. The incident defines the characters too, who haven’t much outlived that immaturity, and the play itself, whose humor could be likened to that of a very good TV sitcom: not brilliant, not incredibly sophisticated, but?...