November 20, 2008
· Filed under flower tattoos
Three suspects are still at-large in a jewelry heist Friday night at the Richmond Mall. Police were called to Samuel s Jewelry around 8:30 p.m. to investigate the theft of $50,000 worth of merchandise. Store employees told officers that two black
Movie review: Synecdoche, New York - Katu.com
One has this disturbing sense - sitting through its arduous navel-gazing at our flawed human condition, marveling at its flashes of brilliance and utter weirdness - that there’s something really special about Charlie Kaufman’s first directorial
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November 16, 2008
· Filed under flower tattoos
Three suspects are still at-large in a jewelry heist Friday night at the Richmond Mall. Police were called to Samuel s Jewelry around 8:30 p.m. to investigate the theft of $50,000 worth of merchandise. Store employees told officers that two black
Source: www.richmondregister.com
Movie review: Synecdoche, New York - Katu.com
One has this disturbing sense - sitting through its arduous navel-gazing at our flawed human condition, marveling at its flashes of brilliance and utter weirdness - that there’s something really special about Charlie Kaufman’s first directorial
Source: www.katu.com
Why DO women have these tramp stamps? - Daily Mail
They criss-cross the nation’s women, rendering their victims permanently scarred. They peep out of shirt collars, above the waists of jeans or between the straps of a pair of sandals. They wink at you as someone passes the sugar across a table. They
Source: www.dailymail.co.uk
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November 9, 2008
· Filed under flower tattoos
They criss-cross the nation’s women, rendering their victims permanently scarred. They peep out of shirt collars, above the waists of jeans or between the straps of a pair of sandals. They wink at you as someone passes the sugar across a table. They
Movie review and filmmaker interview: Synecdoche, New York - Katu.com
One has this disturbing sense - sitting through its arduous navel-gazing at our flawed human condition, marveling at its flashes of brilliance and utter weirdness - that there’s something really special about Charlie Kaufman’s first directorial
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