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Word: teens (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1990-1999
Sort By: most recent first (reverse)


Usage:

Meredith B. Osborn `02 was labelled"the feminist" in the January issue of Teen People, a magazine even stupider than Maxim...

Author: By Meredith B. Osborn, | Title: Maxim Meets Meredith: A Feminist Takes on a Macho Magazine | 4/29/1999 | See Source »

...multisyllabic "Fif-teen Min-utes" didn't stick with Harvard students and soon, most everyone called the magazine by its initials, F.M. This started to confuse the matter. "FM" smacked of radio journalism, not print. And pronounced quickly, these initials sound like shorthand for Afro-American Studies (Af-Am), "effeminate"(effeme) or "fuck them...

Author: By Aaron R. Cohen, | Title: So You Wanna Be an MTV VeeJay Too | 4/29/1999 | See Source »

...only watch helplessly as Xiu Xiu falls victim to a waning revolution and its callous participants. Director Joan Chen proves her stuff in depicting the transformation of a young girl into a desperate manipulator trying to sleep her way out of Tibet. This is not a trite teen angst movie from Hollywood, but an examination of walking the fine line of womanhood to survive. We do not feel pity, but rather, we experience a slice of the disillusionment felt by the youth of the Cultural Revolution (such as Joan Chen herself...

Author: By By SUSAN Yeh, | Title: Cinemanic | 4/23/1999 | See Source »

...premiere ofRosie: The Devil in My Head,a film from Belgium directed by Patrice Toye. We witness the story of Rosie, a 13-year-old determined to make her mother Irene happy. Irene, however, is insecure about her status as a 27-year-old mother of a teen and insists on masquerading as Rosie's older sister in public. Rosie is fully aware of the lovers who traipse in and out of her mother's life, and to make sense of the confusion at home, she turns to a devoted boyfriend named Jimi who promises he'll always be there...

Author: By Susan Yeh, | Title: CINE MANIC | 4/23/1999 | See Source »

...only watch helplessly as Xiu Xiu falls victim to a waning revolution and its callous participants. Director Joan Chen proves her stuff in depicting the transformation of a young girl into a desperate manipulator trying to sleep her way out of Tibet. This is not a trite teen angst movie from Hollywood, but an examination of walking the fine line of womanhood to survive. We do not feel pity, but rather, we experience a slice of the disillusionment felt by the youth of the Cultural Revolution (such as Joan Chen herself...

Author: By Susan Yeh, | Title: CINE MANIC | 4/23/1999 | See Source »

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