Vivica has yet to address the demise of the love we all knew she wouldn’t have forever , but that little young boy Slimm was quick to say some slick isht about it. The minute his little Facebook stunt caught the media’s attention, he had this to say: “She’s a good woman, it’s just one of those situations where in life people outgrow each other,” the Atlanta club promoter tells toofab exclusively.” I’m highly intelligent, very wise and one thing I hate is negativity and drama, I hate arguing, and I value communication no matter what the problem may be. So as in any relationship, tension can build up and I finally had to walk away. “I was only in it for love and it just didn’t work out. Even though she was older than me the age difference didn’t play a part,” Omar added. In other words, Auntie Viv was nagging you about making her a mommy and stepping your dress game up to this decade ?? Gotcha. The most Vivica has had to say bout the break up has come in the form of Twitter subliminals, like this: Auntie, you’re just gonna let him make you look crazy AGAIN?? Source
What happens if you hold a slinky at the top end, let it extend, and then drop it? Here’s a video setting up the problem: OK, so what do you think? Now watch this video to get the answer: Were you correct? I’m proud to say I figured out what would happen, and even for Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : Bad Astronomy Discovery Date : 26/09/2011 22:32 Number of articles : 2
After the freshness and deceptive simplicity of their debut, the 2007 animated feature Persepolis , Marjane Satrapi and Vincent Paronnaud’s Poulet aux Prunes — or Chicken with Plums — showing in competition here, is something of a disappointment. The cast isn’t the problem: The movie stars Mathieu Amalric as an embittered musician living in late-1950s Tehran, and Maria de Medeiros as his beleaguered but adoring wife; Chiara Mastroianni has a tiny part, and the fine Moroccan-born actor Jamel Debbouze appears in small dual roles.
Hating people is like burning down your own house to get rid of a rat. ~Henry Emerson Fosdick When you find satisfaction in seeing someone else fall, you need to pray for your own spirit. Hating only attracts negativity in YOUR life, not the person you have the problem with. When you hate, the only one who suffers is YOU.
Michael Nutter is speaking out on the most major problem in the black community: The painful images and graphic stories of repeated violent assaults and vandalism by mobs of black teenagers had gotten to be too much for Mayor Michael Nutter. As an elected official and a “proud black man” in the nation’s fifth-largest city, Nutter felt he had to go a step beyond ordering a law enforcement crackdown. So he channeled the spirit of another straight-talking Philadelphian: Bill Cosby. Nutter took to the pulpit at his church last weekend and gave an impassioned, old-fashioned talking-to directed at the swarms of teens who have been using social networks to arrange violent sprees downtown, injuring victims and damaging property. Moreover, he called out parents for not doing a better job raising their children. “You’ve damaged yourself, you’ve damaged another person, you’ve damaged your peers and, quite honestly, you’ve damaged your own race,” Nutter said at Mount Carmel Baptist Church. The 54-year-old mayor, married with a teenage daughter and a grown son, called out absentee fathers and neglectful parents. He did not mince words, saying they need to be more than just a “sperm donor” or a “human ATM.” “That’s part of the problem in our community,” Nutter told the congregation. “Let me speak plainer: That’s part of the problem in the black community. … We have too many men making too many babies they don’t want to take care of and then we end up dealing with your children.” It’s a version of the tough-love message Cosby and others have telegraphed for years. “I am a proud black man in this country,” Nutter said in an interview with The Associated Press. “It was a message that needed to be said. It needed to be said at this time. … People have had enough of this nonsense, black and white.” At a National Association for the Advancement of Colored People gathering in 2004, Cosby chided the black community in a speech commemorating the 50th anniversary of Brown v. Board of Education, the legal case that toppled segregated education. “These people marched and were hit in the face with rocks to get an education and now we’ve got these knuckleheads walking around,” Cosby said then. “I can’t even talk the way these people talk, ‘Why you ain’t,’ ‘Where you is’ … and I blamed the kid until I heard the mother talk,” the entertainer said. Nutter’s words also harkened back to a 2008 Father’s Day speech by then-presidential candidate Barack Obama. “If we are honest with ourselves, we’ll admit that what too many fathers also are is missing — missing from too many lives and too many homes,” Obama told a church in Chicago. “They have abandoned their responsibilities, acting like boys instead of men.” Source
If Lauren Ambrose — the Six Feet Under star who was officially anointed Broadway’s new Funny Girl — didn’t seem as obvious a choice for the role of Fanny Brice as Lea Michele , now you can stop second-guessing: Footage of Ambrose on Star Search has surfaced, and Ed McMahon directly endorsed her stardom. Get ready for the growliest rendition of “Dancing in the Street” you’ve ever heard. Sweet music!
What do you do when your two middle-aged alcoholic neighbors — one, a raging homophobe and the other, a flamboyant gay man — scream insults at each other all day long? If you’re Eddie Lee Sausage and Mitchell D, and encountering this problem in San Francisco in the late ’80s, you start recording. Then, thirty years later, you splice the audio together with interviews to make a Tribeca Film documentary called Shut Up Little Man! Take a look at the trailer ahead.
What do you do when your two middle-aged alcoholic neighbors — one, a raging homophobe and the other, a flamboyant gay man — scream insults at each other all day long? If you’re Eddie Lee Sausage and Mitchell D, and encountering this problem in San Francisco in the late ’80s, you start recording. Then, thirty years later, you splice the audio together with interviews to make a Tribeca Film documentary called Shut Up Little Man! Take a look at the trailer ahead.
Good stuff. He takes a pickaxe to the idea that you can raise taxes to fix this problem. “You cannot have a government that spends $1.5 trillion more than it takes in every year.” Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : The Hayride Discovery Date : 15/07/2011 01:41 Number of articles : 2