Tag Archives: phrase

Mythbusters: Stars That Proved You Can In Fact Go Back After Going Black

You ever hear the phrase, “once you go Black, you never go back”? It’s a pretty popular saying that indicates that once you taste the sweet mocha nectar of Black love, you won’t ever want to go anywhere else. Well, it’s not always true. Here are some celebrities that dated Black but went astray.

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Mythbusters: Stars That Proved You Can In Fact Go Back After Going Black

Grand Theft Mario: Watch the Fake (and Long) Trailer for Mario Brothers Video Game

End of Line: My Love/Hate Relationship with Tron

I have a really strange relationship with Tron . I’ve always been quite fascinated with Disney’s 1982 video-game action-adventure — owning three different home-video versions of the film, keeping some of the original toys, concluding letters to my grandparents with the phrase “END OF LINE ” and, for the better part of the last three years, wallpapering my iPhone screen with its movie poster… All of which I guess is only interesting insofar as it’s such an awful movie. With the release of Tron: Legacy this weekend, however, revisionist historians are having an Internet field day with their outpourings of love for the original film. Where have these people been the last 28 years?

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End of Line: My Love/Hate Relationship with Tron

Bikes and Streetcars Under Threat As The Suburban Car Loving Politicians Fight Back

Google the phrase “war on cars” and you will find that across North America, people are using the phrase to defend the happy motorized way of life. As one blog put it : Hiding behind the veil of environmentalism and “sustainability,” a small number of activists are having a big influence on tax policy, urban planning, and government regulation with the hope of shifting our society away from the individualism and freedom afforded by the automobile. … Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Bikes and Streetcars Under Threat As The Suburban Car Loving Politicians Fight Back

‘Today’ Shows Cop-Punch 14 Times, Leaves Out Suspect Resisting Arrest

width=”250″ height=”202″> The headline sounds sensational: “Cop punches girl in face during jaywalk arrest.” That’s how the June 17 NBC “Today” show began what might appear to be an even-handed story. But a closer look at what the network aired and what it left out show a far different result. The morning segment repeatedly played a clip highlighting what Matt Lauer referred to as a “violent arrest” – a police officer punching a young woman who interfered in the arrest of the jaywalker. That clip was shown 14 times during the segment. After the first showing of the clip, Lee Cowan told viewers, “Watch again, he closes his fist, winds up and lands a hard right to her face.” Time and again, the segment returned to the video clip showing the police officer punch the 17-year-old. Here’s what they left out. (full video below the fold) The punch didn’t end the incident at all. The YouTube video of the arrest tells a far different tale. After the punch, the 19-year-old continued to wrestle and resist being handcuffed for approximately another minute and 44 seconds. The 19-year-old jaywalker was also confrontational. Prior to the punch, she used the phrase, “get the f— off me” four times. While resisting arrest the young woman used the same expression another 10 times. On “Today”, the phrase can only be heard twice prior to the punch and Cowan talked over the second time. So what really happened was a young woman resisted arrest. Her friend, roughly the same height as the police officer, interfered and shoved the officer. He then punched her to subdue her. That punch was shown by “Today” 14 times. The original woman who fended off the police officer, told him to “get the f— off me” 14 times and that was clearly audible only once during the report. The story spin didn’t end there. “Today” interviewed Don Van Blaricom, a former Bellevue, Wash., police chief who consults on police litigation. He said the punch was a reasonable force to subdue the situation. Lauer asked both Blaricom and Rev. Al Sharpton if the event had been racially motivated. Blaricom said this: “I saw no evidence of racial animus whatsoever and that’s usually signaled by racial overtones, some racial epithet. This officer was calling the crowd ‘sir.'” That clip also never appeared on the broadcast but it was clearly in the original video at 2:30 in. The man filming the incident asks the officer why he punched the young woman and the officer says, “Step back, sir.” But “Today” drove the racial point home by relying on Sharpton, a “civil rights activist,” as Lauer described him. Nowhere in the piece did it detail Sharpton’s own racial controversies. In the 1987 Tawana Brawley case, he slandered an innocent man in the course of defending an infamous “race crime” hoax. He was sued and lost a judgment for $345,000, without ever retracting or apologizing for his accusation. Like this article? Sign up for “Culture Links,” CMI’s weekly e-mail newsletter, by  clicking  here.

Real Housewives of NYC Reality Check: Money Can’t Buy You Class… But it Can Buy You Autotune

Last week on Real Housewives of New York City , Bethenny mourned her estranged father from a Cadillac Escalade en route to hell and LuAnn cruised a jittery fellow named Cort who may or may not be gay. In this week’s episode, whimsically titled “Housewives Overboard,” LuAnn went down to Chinatown with Court (not a euphemism, she actually did venture to Canal Street), Ramona found her soulmate on a Hooters yacht, and for the first time in television history, someone misused the phrase “making lemons out of lemonade.” Those goodies, as well as the truest and fakest moments of the night, after the jump.

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Real Housewives of NYC Reality Check: Money Can’t Buy You Class… But it Can Buy You Autotune

Gleebasing: Schue Empowers the Classes, Madonna-Style

Ryan Murphy must have cut last night’s hit of Glee with something wicked. How else do you explain the “Ray of Light” cheerleading routine on stilts , Kurt’s Don Knotts wardrobe and Artie’s usage of the phrase, “If you want to get all up on this.” After the jump, Movieline recounts the the highs, analyzes the low notes and determines which numbers were just bad hallucinations. And pay attention — there will be a pop quiz.

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Gleebasing: Schue Empowers the Classes, Madonna-Style

Bill Clinton Hospitalized

POLITICS BUZZ : Bill Clinton has been hospitalized in New York, according to ABC News. Clinton is apparently having some sort of heart trouble. The Best Links: Former President Bill Clinton Rushed to New York Hospital Twitter Abuzz With The Phrase “clinton hospitalized” Read

Choosing the Right Bicycle Seat

When you are picking out a new bike seat, it's a smart idea to choose a color that won't make it look like you've got a boner hanging out of your shorts.

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Choosing the Right Bicycle Seat

Senior Citizen Showdown

Two British elderly folk have an NSFW spat. If anything comes out of this, it's the addition of the phrase “pussy clart” to our everyday lexicon

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Senior Citizen Showdown