Jan 13, 2009 -
Gossip Girl star Blake Lively (in Marc Jacobs) takes the February 2009 cover of Vogue.
“The fashion is just unbelievable [on Gossip Girl],” the 21-year-old actress tells the mag. “You can watch our show on mute and be entertained.”
“Just being here [in New York City], walking around, you pick it up really quickly,” Blake explains of her evolving fashion sense.
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Jan 22, 2008 -
Blake Lively is the March 2008 cover girl for Teen Vogue. Check out some of the internet snippets:
On not wanting to act as a child: “I wanted to be an interior decorator. Baking and flower arranging have always been my favorite hobbies.
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Feb 06, 2009 -
The Gossip Girl star in VOGUE US, February 2009.
xoxo,
juicybabe
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Jan 12, 2009 -
For the ones(like me) who thougth that Anna Wintour couldn match a actress with a good cover(unlike Carine Roitfield :love:) Here is the february cover with Blake Lively in a Old-Hollywood Style and looking good. There's still too much text but what can we do?
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Nov 13, 2009 -
WASHINGTON (AP) -- Sarah Palin's new book reprises familiar claims from the 2008 presidential campaign that haven't become any truer over time. Ignoring substantial parts of her record if not the facts, she depicts herself as a frugal traveler on the taxpayer's dime, a reformer without ties to powerful interests and a politician roguishly indifferent to high ambition.
Palin goes adrift, at times, on more contemporary issues, too.
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Nov 07, 2009 -
On a balmy autumn day in Vancouver, a young man is longing for a walk outside in the sunshine, and deciding against it. Far easier for him to stay in his hotel room, cocooned in five-star luxury with a mobile phone that has run out of charge, safe at least from the girls chanting his name outside. Robert Pattinson, 23 and from Barnes in southwest London, ought still to be one of Hollywood’s beautiful dreamers, moving up the ranks of movie acting, enjoying his American adventure, his guitar, his good looks.
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Oct 22, 2009 -
I think everyone knows Omega watches,what a good day!let's take a brief but intriguing look at the history behind these luxurious watches long before they signed Hollywood A-list stars Nicole Kidman and George Clooney, as well as tennis superstar Maria Sharapova, to become their celebrity endorsers.The first watches that Mr. Brandt made were pocket watches, because back then they were the timepiece that was considered to be vogue and were highly sought after and cherished. In the mid 1800's the thought of attaching a bracelet to their time piece never even crossed a persons mind. The fashionable and preferred thing to do was to carry their beloved "Omega" watches - which, at the time were called "Bienne" watches - in their pockets.Unfortunately, Mr. Louis Brandt passed away in 1879 and he left his modest company to his sons, Louis Paul Brandt and Cesar Brandt who carried on their father's tradition of impeccable pocket watch craftsmanship.
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Oct 01, 2009 -
The cavernous photography studio in New York City is bustling with fashion assistants, hair and makeup stylists, and models chatting in white terry robes. All typical on a photo shoot, but when the robes come off, you see what's different. Kate Dillon, Ashley Graham, Amy Lemons, Lizzie Miller, Crystal Renn, Jennie Runk and Anansa Sims -- some of the top plus-size models working today -- have beautiful curves, round shoulders, belly rolls and lots of other womanly stuff many of us see when we look in the mirror.
- 80 Comments
Sep 21, 2009 -
By Robin of Berkeley
July 22, 2009
http://www.americanthinker.com/2009/07/are_men_obsolete.html
When I snapped out of my left wing trance last year, I was lost in space. I had no conservative friends and was clueless about web sites and books.
I had heard something vaguely about Talk Radio. So I scanned my AM dial and found Michael Savage. (It took several months, and a chat with a rather bemused new friend, before I even realized there were other hosts as well.)
Being a lifelong liberal, I'd never heard anybody like Savage in my life. He yelled; he called people "vermin." He was unbridled masculinity, not the touchy feeling kind I was used to. And he totally accepted himself: his moods, passion, temper.
But what shocked me the most was his saying that men have become "feminized." I'd never been so offended. "Well, what's wrong with men being more feminine?" I shouted back at my radio. "Is there something wrong with femininity?" Men being way more in touch with their yin and less with their yang sounded good to me.
- 21 Comments
Jun 24, 2009 -
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