-She also wants to wear a pair of dark sunglasses. Remember that song?
Does anyone else feel the homage thing has been taken a little too far,
and we need to move a little more forward in our art direction for
photoshoots thinking? Or have all the themes and ideas been used? They
have, haven't they? *sigh*
The gorgeous Kate Beckinsale's doin' the pillbox hat/climb down the back of the convertible in Dealey Plaza thing in the new issue of
Capitol Files
magazine (oh, is that the point?). Apparently, Beckinsale's a US
citizen now since marrying director Len Wiseman because she had
something to say about the president and being able to vote. "I don't care whether [
Barack Obama]
has a cigarette or not. I think it's just so fantastic we have a
president who can finally read. I never planned on living in America
[but] if I find myself still here
in 10 or 15 years, it would be silly not to be able to vote."
-
Aaron Spelling favorite
Heather Locklear has copped to a misdemeanor reckless driving charge, but managed to avoid being prosecuted for a
DUI.
Yay! We like Heather. She makes television better. Heather got three
years probation, has to fork over a $700 fine, and has to attend a
12-hour drug education course.
Drop the dolls before you drive, Locklear.
-
Hot dad Hugh Jackman will
NOT be in Steven Soderbergh's high-ass sounding 3D musical about the life of Cleopatra called
Cleo. Why? Because it sounds like a homosexual on psychotropics came up with that idea and that never works. Actually, the band
Guided By Voices
wrote it, and people like them so maybe it will work? I don't know.
Jackman actually cited scheduling conflicts as opposed to "nah, dude,
that sounds really effed up-sounding and people already think I'm a
mary."
Cheesy says:
Just a technical thing but you don't become an American by marrying one. You just get fast-tracked if you decide to apply for citizenship, because you are married to one.
Michelle says:
I actually started singing that song as i read the header.
joseph ferguson says:
Just a note to ensure you correct the layout "error," appearing on page 112 of this issue, in subsequent issues. Writing orientation in this country is left-to-right and bottom-to-top, thus, the words American ..." in the advertisement should have been flipped; "American" should have been printed with the "A" at the bottom and the "n" at the top, and the second word similarly printed.
A small point, I admit, but one that should be consistently followed in American written work , although I will be the first to say that all too many publications (and office communications, flip charts, graph labeling, maps, etc.) follow this design rule.
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