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Sopranos
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http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmp...and_the_city_2 |
Sopranos
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2) I think the waitier brutaility was in there to remind us not to feel that these guys are mean brutes and not sympathetic. If they dont throw that in every now and then, we might think Christopher is a nice underling who is getting scrwed by Paulie Walnuts when he is really an evil fuck. And his nose doesnt look as gigantic as it used to. Was the end snipped? 3) I agree it wasnt that great and if I never saw Peter Bogdanovich or whatever his perverted ass name is, I could live. |
Continuing the makeup thread...
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I wear either Stila's tinted moisturizer or Vincent Longo Water Canvas liquid or creme to powder, depending on what the event is, how long I expect to be out, if I will be outdoors, etc. The best products block pollution damage and protect from the sun, while giving you a sheer fresh, but not too dewy, glow. No matter how good your skin care regimen (and you know how seriously I take skin care), skin loses the underlying markers of youth as we age. The right foundation gives you back that hint of evenness and glow you had at 25. As for mascara, I have switched to Remy Adversity. No flaking, caking, or other weirdness. It doesn't do anything special, but it goes on like a dream and stays put. I am still using a stila gel eye-liner. It doesn't migrate after five hours of dancing. |
Continuing the makeup thread...
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Powder doesn't give very good coverage, unless you put enough of it on to cake. And matte doesn't generally look natural. And it greys out. And it emphasizes any lines. And clogs pores, no matter what the packaging says. Powder is good for removing shine (if you want to remove shine - a big "if" given the current fashions), and some of the new mattifiers are better for that, but it is less effective and gives less satisfactory results if you are actually using it for color and/or coverage. And powder looks worse and worse the darker your underlying skin tones. I agree that making the effort to have good skin in the first place is the best answer, but that often doesn't solve uneven skin tone problems (including congenital discolorations, veins showing through thinner areas, etc.). But I generally agree that foundation should generally be viewed as a necessary evil and avoided except to the extent necessary. I note, for the record, that I wore it for several weeks this winter which I usually don't (a streak of 16 hour days led me to just paint over my face to keep from frightening children on the street), and was really quite shocked at the number of people who out of the blue commented on how wonderful and healthy I looked - they didn't realize I was wearing makeup for a change. |
Average Joe 2 twist redux
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and now I am taking my password back from str8 |
Average Joe 2 twist redux
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Continuing the makeup thread...
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and eyeliner? and mascara? and powerd and foundatino? and I awssume lipstick and lipliner? you must look very different thatn you do when you wake up inthe morning. I have one eyeliner I bought five years ago that I only wear when I am sick of my face. Just cannot be bothered. A litle mascara, a little blush on cheeks and lips with a lip balm, and some under eye shit, and I am good to go. I assume men prefer that look to the makeup look. and my current mascara that I love is from T LeClerc. I have fine, lightcolored lashes and the violet really makes them thick and a great color. |
hair
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People often ask me where I get my hair colored. I am always nonplussed by this question, as if I were to get my hair colored, it wouldn't be the color it is! (Uh, yes -- I put these random gray ones in on purpose! Isn't is trendy?!?) But I have to say, I can't think of a color that would look normal on me other than my own. |
Sopranos
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hair
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I feel exactly the same way. |
hair
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TM |
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NCAA Hoops Pool
Anyone interested in joining the LawTalkers NCAA Hoops bracket contest, see here.
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Continuing the makeup thread...
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INFOMERCIAL TIME Then randomly, a friend asked me to meet her at the "Awake" counter at a department store, and when I got there, of course, they suckered me into sitting down and going through their skin-care products and makeup. The skin-care stuff is excellent. The foundation is awesome. It's this stuff that you use with a wet sponge -- so it's not really heavy -- when you apply it with the wet sponge, it goes on very light and you don't need that much of it -- and it works great. It also has SPF 18 (a good reason to use it). A little bit of loose powder over that, and voila!! (or wa-la, as my 5-year-old says...) perfect skin! I don't need to use cover-up anymore, because my skin looks pretty decent after using their skin-care stuff. I get the occasional blemish (I know, hard to believe, right?), and then I'll use the cover-up stuff, but rarely. After I started wearing makeup, I can't tell you how many people commented on how much better I looked (which, actually, was kind of discouraging), but whatever. |
Somewhere, Atticus is silently weeping . . .
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The bow tie is vastly easier to tie than just about any other type of tie knot. People just don't learn it. Out of sheer laziness. It is slightly more difficult than shoelaces because the tie has width, but you hardly need a degree in mathematics to figure out the topographical issues. Any gentleman on the board who would like to learn is welcome to pm me, though it is easier to demonstrate in person - it should take 1 minute and two practice tries to get it right every time. (It will also greatly improve your gift-wrapping abilities.) I, however, am not as horrified by the four-in-hand being worn with a dinner jacket as I feel, on some level, that I should be. So long as it is still, in fact, a black tie, not colored, not silver, not ... whatever. Dunno why - probably because I still cling inflexibly to the idea of black tie as informal wear. I agree with the statement that "more fashionable = less traditional." Fashion is, in fact, the antithesis of tradition (uh, sort of by definition). However, formal wear is about tradition, not stylishness or fashion. I have no problem with anyone wearing whatever they feel like wearing in the evening, so long as they don't pretend it's formal when its not. What, pray tell, is supposed to be wrong with dressing up for a non-formal evening out, anyway? (More on that below.) Favorite complete nonsequitor: "A lot of people who see themselves as the guardians of what people should be wearing are horrified," he said, "But everyone makes these suits now — Calvin Klein, Hugo Boss." OK - so what? Matters of etiquette are not subject to change by majority rule - or even to change by edict of multinationals and/or the media. "Everyone" fails to respond to invitations in a timely fashion or send thank you letters, too - and the people who care about what people should do are still horrified, and entirely justifiably so. Funniest example of the article writer and his sources actually being really unfamiliar with the subject they are addressing: "Among them were Jude Law in a three-piece midnight-blue tuxedo by Dunhill... But these turbo-charged tuxedos also play into the dinner-suit trend, said Marshal Cohen, chief analyst for the NPD Group, a market research company." NB: midnight blue dinner jackets are every bit as traditional as black, and in fact have long been considered the mark of a true, finicky traditionalist. Reason? Midnight blue actually appears darker than black under the artificial light necessary at evening parties (including candle light). (And Law looked amazing, by the by.) Gritting teeth to avoid outburst... "There is the pleated, ruffled or bibbed shirt, ... and dress shoes" : Best belly laugh: "The dinner suit, as seen on the Oscars' red carpet, designer runways and countless formal wear Web sites..." Yeah, 'cause THAT's where you want to be getting your clothing tips. hee, hee, heehee heeheehee. Stating the obvious: "Most often, it is a notch-lapel black or dark blue suit jacket and pants, worn with a dressy solid-color shirt and a lustrous solid necktie (or no tie, in true Tom Ford style). In its dark, graphic simplicity, the dinner suit — some with a grosgrain lapel, some made of velvet —" That sounds just fine as something a guy might wear other than a business suit when going out at night. In fact, in general I approve entirely - people have gotten out of the habit of dressing differently for business and social events, and have gotten out of the lovely habit of going home and changing before going out, which is nice because it marks the time spent out as something special and worth making an effort for. But it isn't formal attire. There is nothing wrong with that - why try to shoehorn fun nightime party clothes into the "formal" category? Just don't wear formal clothing (or go to formal events, or call events formal when you don't actually mean formal). This doesn't seem hard, conceptually. I, for one, would be extremely happy to see men, in particular, take more to dressing like popinjays. Bring in colored, brocated waistcoats! Bring back colorful 3 - piece suit combinations where each piece is a different, but complimentary, color or patten! Why not? But there is no reason to pretend one is reinventing formal-wear to do so. Stating an idiocy (cont. from above): "-- distinguishes itself from the business suit without the bother of a tux." Exactly how is that less bother than proper black tie? At least with proper black tie you don't need to think about whether the colors & fabrics work together. Just as the article itself acknowledges later: "The upshot is no great savings. One of the assets of the tuxedo is that a man needs only one. With open-ended dinner dress, the options are endless. " Uh, people, that was why strict rules of formal wear emerged in the first place - you could just follow them and know you were dressed properly, without the potential of fucking it up through the expected use of imagination or creativity. Witness the Joan Rivers phenomenon with the women's dresses. Do guys really think subjecting themselves to that is the way to go? BR(working my way backwards to prove I read forward first)C |
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