Word: stuffs
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...Then Moore got drunk - his slurring, staggering, prat-falling millionaire in 1981's "Arthur" was the part of Moore's career, and also the peak. But if "Unfaithfully Yours," "Micki and Maude," "Best Defense," "Like Father, Like Son" and 1988's "Arthur 2: On the Rocks" were not the stuff of a lifetime achievement award, Moore continued to deliver what he did best - an always-funny mix of the underdog charm and comedic frustration of a little man trying to get his in a big dog's world...
...meet Jesse on my second visit to Remote. It's the following Tuesday night, when there are only about 30 people in the place. It all starts innocently enough. We talk about our work, our ages, where we live, all the usual stuff. But soon, he's asking me to "do something sexy." I tease him by uncovering a modest patch of flesh near my shoulder. When I ask him to return the favor, he starts unbuttoning. He never gets further than baring his stomach and a little chest hair before we are both laughing so hard that the striptease...
...Drudge won't finger his source, saying, with a laugh, "Birds have been singing outside my window." A few weeks ago, he raised the Jewish question. Others tried to trace that tip to Fox, but Drudge says he found it himself when he read the book "and the Jew stuff popped...
...Sept. 11 attacks. While it is difficult to quantify spending on competitive intelligence because the industry is so diffuse, membership in the Society of Competitive Intelligence Professionals (SCIP) has risen to nearly 7,000, from 1,550 in 1990, and the overall market for business intelligence--excluding mundane stuff such as security guards, cameras and fences--has been reported to be $2 billion. And just as the attacks of Sept. 11 are forcing a transformation of government intelligence, so too could they make over corporate intelligence...
Goodman is handling the pressure nicely. "You've got to think, 'Stuff it, here I go,'" he says. "It's a hugely grueling part. Bialystock drives a lot of the show, he's rarely offstage." A veteran of four American musicals, including Chicago in London, he is a champion of those Broadway belters. "If ever there was a time when people needed to laugh and relax, its now," he insists. "The Producers provides some balance to today's tensions. It's wonderfully offensive to all creeds!" He bristles at the suggestion that musicals are all fluff. "Not merely escapism. Escapism...