While trying to avoid the clichés of Hollywood romantic comedies, Dylan and Jamie soon discover however that adding the act of sex to their friendship does lead to complications.
Selasa, 13 September 2011
FRIENDS WITH BENEFITS 2011 WATCH ONLINE FREE
THOR 2011 WATCH ONLINE FREE
The powerful but arrogant warrior Thor is cast out of the fantastic realm of Asgard and sent to live amongst humans on Earth, where he soon becomes one of their finest defenders.
IF THE STREAMING VIDEO STOPS PLAYING PLEASE PLAY IT FROM THE SECOND SERVER STARTING FROM THE SAME TIME
FAST AND FURIOUS 5 WATCH IT ONLINE!!!
Cast : Vin Diesel, Paul Walker, Dwayne Johnson, Jordana Brewster, Tyrese Gibson. Ludacris, Matt Schulze, Sung Kang, Elsa Pataky, Michael Irby .
Director : Justin Lin
Release Date : 2011
THA CARTER IV DELUXE grab free
"Tha Carter IV" arrives today (Aug. 29) with gargantuan expectations that Lil Wayne cannot match. How could he? The last installment in the New Orleans rapper's "Carter" series, "Tha Carter III," was a perfect storm of critical and commercial acclaim, riding well-constructed hits like "A Milli" and "Got Money" to become the top-selling album of 2008, and earning a Grammy nomination for Album of the Year along the way. Two years earlier, Lil Wayne was a lauded mixtape rapper still moving on from his Hot Boyz days; with "Tha Carter III," he became the biggest rapper in the world.
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WATCH THE THRONE See it! hear it! grab it! HERE
Watch the Throne is a collaborative studio album by American rappers Jay-Z and Kanye West, released on August 8, 2011, by Roc-A-Fella Records, Roc Nation, and Def Jam Recordings. Recording sessions for the album took place at various recording locations and began in November 2010. It was produced by West, 88 Keys, RZA, Swizz Beatz, Jeff Bhasker, and Mike Dean, among others.
Create a playlist at MixPod.com
Create a playlist at MixPod.com
Rabu, 07 September 2011
9/11 + 10
9/11 + 10
Inside Television 569
Publication Date: 9-9-11
By: Hubert O’Hearn
I was sent an interesting poetry anthology this week, as much an historical artifact as it is a piece of literature, although many of the poems are very, very good. It is a re-issue of the 2002 first edition and is called Poetry After 9/11: An Anthology of New York Poets. I’m sure you can deduce the content from the title. One poem in particular stood out when I was composing my thoughts for this column. This is an excerpt from Nikki Moustaki’s How to Write a Poem After September 11th:
Don’t compare the planes to birds. Please.
Don’t call the windows eyes. We know they saw it coming.
We know they didn’t blink. Don’t say they were sentinels.
Say: we hated them then we loved them then they were gone.
Say: we miss them. Say: there’s a gap. Then, say something
About love. It’s always good in a poem to mention love.
This weekend, you’ll be hearing all of that - the bad cliches both verbal and visual, the loss, the hate, and everyone trying to find the Meaning of All This. As for love? Well, we can hope.
One does wonder why ten years after is so much more significant an anniversary than six, or nine or fourteen. To be brutally honest with you in losing argument with human nature, I don’t think that the tenth anniversary memorial of 9/11 is at all healthy. Let’s look at the counter-arguments.
The first word people bring up is closure. ‘We build this new tower and do these events so we can have closure.’ Well, closure on what exactly? Will a somber ceremony and an undoubtedly well-delivered speech by Barack Obama shrink the day-to-day hole felt by families who to this day will open a drawer and find some thing - a note, a watch, a ticket to a baseball game - that reminds the survivors of the one who didn’t survive? Would that human emotions could be so easily flipped from grief to happiness.
It certainly won’t supply closure to the war in Afghanistan or the war in Iraq, to which by the way U.S. Defense Secretary Leon Panetta announced this week that troops would still be committed for the foreseeable future. That at least would mean that the mad rush to war triggered - quite literally - by 9/11 would be over. But that’s not going to happen.
Inside Television 569
Publication Date: 9-9-11
By: Hubert O’Hearn
I was sent an interesting poetry anthology this week, as much an historical artifact as it is a piece of literature, although many of the poems are very, very good. It is a re-issue of the 2002 first edition and is called Poetry After 9/11: An Anthology of New York Poets. I’m sure you can deduce the content from the title. One poem in particular stood out when I was composing my thoughts for this column. This is an excerpt from Nikki Moustaki’s How to Write a Poem After September 11th:
Don’t compare the planes to birds. Please.
Don’t call the windows eyes. We know they saw it coming.
We know they didn’t blink. Don’t say they were sentinels.
Say: we hated them then we loved them then they were gone.
Say: we miss them. Say: there’s a gap. Then, say something
About love. It’s always good in a poem to mention love.
This weekend, you’ll be hearing all of that - the bad cliches both verbal and visual, the loss, the hate, and everyone trying to find the Meaning of All This. As for love? Well, we can hope.
One does wonder why ten years after is so much more significant an anniversary than six, or nine or fourteen. To be brutally honest with you in losing argument with human nature, I don’t think that the tenth anniversary memorial of 9/11 is at all healthy. Let’s look at the counter-arguments.
The first word people bring up is closure. ‘We build this new tower and do these events so we can have closure.’ Well, closure on what exactly? Will a somber ceremony and an undoubtedly well-delivered speech by Barack Obama shrink the day-to-day hole felt by families who to this day will open a drawer and find some thing - a note, a watch, a ticket to a baseball game - that reminds the survivors of the one who didn’t survive? Would that human emotions could be so easily flipped from grief to happiness.
It certainly won’t supply closure to the war in Afghanistan or the war in Iraq, to which by the way U.S. Defense Secretary Leon Panetta announced this week that troops would still be committed for the foreseeable future. That at least would mean that the mad rush to war triggered - quite literally - by 9/11 would be over. But that’s not going to happen.
For the defense contractor, this shadow war against terrorism is the perfect war. No capitol to be seized, no generalissimo to sign the treaty, and a supply of enemies that will exist as long as there are those who demand and those who refuse, those who need and those with greed, those who are mad and those who are mad and those who are mad. It will never end until all the Allies have gone home and the U.S. Treasury is bankrupt.
You won’t be hearing much of that this weekend, unless you seek out the few journalists like Keith Olbermann who don’t mind telling the truth. No, you’ll see the ceremonies and the ten year old video and people will say noble things without the slightest intent of performing noble actions.
Am I being too cynical? I think it’s impossible frankly. Last week, the Mayor of New York, Michael Bloomberg who I had thought of as one of the more progressive politicians in the U.S. announced that firefighters would not be able to attend the memorial service at Ground Zero. Not enough room. I see. Those guys who died ten years ago? They were heroes. You lot? Know your role and shut your mouth.
I’ll try and write you something happy next week. This week? No chance, in hell. Be seeing you.
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