SUPERNATURAL Season 4 gag reel / bloopers

July 1st, 2010

season official gag reel / bloopes *No copyright infringement intended*

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Over There

June 28th, 2010

Over There : From the balcony you look down upon massed and variegated tree- tops as though you were looking down upon a valley forest from a mountain height. Those trees, whose hidden trunks make alleys and squares, are rooted in the history of France.
Over There

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Has Society Popularised Plastic Surgery?

June 28th, 2010


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Plastic surgery has been around for a very long time, but it only really started to develop for treatment for a wider range of people in the 19th Century. Even then, the techniques used were nowhere near the standard that we expect nowadays. The methods of plastic surgery have advanced a great deal over the past few decades, and as people have in developed nations have a acquired more and more wealth, the plastic surgery industry has grown accordingly.

As it has become more widely available, the techniques used have also become cheaper, as more cost effective procedures and associated materials have been developed, so more and more people are willing to part with their hard earned cash. But what is it that has made so many people desire plastic surgery? The phenomena has become much less of a phenomena and more commonplace in recent years.

The pressure on people to look beautiful is now greater than ever, and what are considered imperfections are frowned upon a lot more, arguably, than they used to be. Of course, the image of the perfect face and body is one that is peddled by a plethora of magazines and television stations. If someone is famous at all for anything other than business or politics, then they are likely to be very attractive.

As well as general imperfections such as noses that are considered too large, people may decide to turn to cosmetic surgery in order to reduce the perceived ill effects of age. This is often focussed on loose facial skin around the chin – the solution to which might be described by some as a ‘tuck’. There may also be a desire to use cosmetic surgery to reduce the appearance of fine lines on the forehead and around the eyes. Popular TV shows such as Nip/Tuck have arguably contributed to the glamorisation of plastic surgery.

To conclude, many people would agree that the ideal face and body surrounds us all the time in the form of bill boards, magazines, TV and cinema. This, combined with a dramatic increase in personal wealth of the average person, has lead to a steadily increasing number of people who have decided to take advantage of the more affordable cosmetic surgery options available; these procedures have now become far less risky than they used to be, which is why people are more and more willing to pay for the face they always wanted.

See Also : http://ethelneal.cjmac.com/how-i-use-itunes-to-keep-my-archos-xs202-updated/ Bang http://ritaorlando.paidtoblog.com/

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Kinds of Doctors and What They Do

June 28th, 2010


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There are almost countless amounts of different types of doctors in the country and literally hundreds of different specialty areas in which each of them practice and use their doctorate degree. Many times patients, although they should probably know anyway since they have to make appointments to get there, can tell what kind of doctors office they are in, just by the designs on the walls and all over the place. For example, dental office design is typically somewhat drab, although if the dentist was a member of the Greek system in college they may have something from the pi kappa alpha shop. There are always other types of clues to tell what kind of doctor’s office one is in and in the following paragraphs many different kinds of doctors will be talked about, along with what exactly they do for their many patients.

One doctor, as mentioned in the previous paragraph, is the dentist. For those who do not know, dentists work on their patients’ teeth. Among the different tasks that dentists perform is checking for cavities. Also, dentists are sometimes charged with the pleasant task of scraping the excess plaque and tartar off of a patient’s mouth. However, with good oral hygiene such as regular brushing and flossing of the teeth, the scraping and cavity filling operations can be avoided which of course, saves the patient lots of money in fees.

Another type of doctor, who generally works specifically with kids, is called a pediatrician. Pediatricians work with kids to make sure that their patients maintain a good pattern of growth, are at an appropriate weight, and also protect children with proper inoculations and making suggestions for a healthy life in the future. Also, they provide treatment for common illnesses such as pneumonia, secondary infections from the common cold and other ailments children may have, almost exactly like an internist does for an adult.

Lastly, another and increasingly more popular type of doctor is the plastic surgeon. Plastic surgeons work with people, generally for a very large fee, to improve their appearance. Many different procedures are offered from the slightly superficial and purely cosmetic such as the “tummy tuck” or breast enhancement to more imperative procedures like helping victims of car crashes or burn victims. Plastic surgery has become such a popular thing that there are many shows about doctors who do plastic surgery, from the horribly overdramatic and fictional Nip Tuck on edgy channel FX to the nonfiction and (of course) less dramatic Dr. 90210 on the E!, a cable network. However, plastic surgery can often times be a risky thing and there are many different high profile and otherwise cases where surgery has gone wrong and caused people to either look worse than before or in some cases, die.

Doctors can have many different functions and specialties despite the fact that most of them earn the same degree after undergraduate college. Through this variation in the types of medicine practiced, America has developed an excellent healthcare system in which almost any malady can be treated or improved through the work of the doctors.

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Home Remedies For Zits

June 19th, 2010


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Ever been in a situation where you have this massive zit on your nose? And you always seem to get them when you have something important coming up. They always appear like a day before you have a date, or a job interview, or before you go to visit your parents to tell them the important news about your sexuality. All they do is ruin your apperance at the most cruical times. And the night before you’re like maybe I should pop it, and it may fade by tomorrow, but NO all this does is make it worse – we never learn!

Luckily I’ve put together some Home Remedies For Zits That Work Overnight, so you’ll never have to go through those important situations with a big whoppin’ zit on the end of your nose.

#1: First of all you probably all know the common method of toothpaste, which apprently gets rid of the redness and takes the swelling off the zit. Personally this has never worked for me, but I’m recommending it because I hear people use have used this home remedy and have had good success with it.

#2: Using fruit is an really effective method that I’ve used it in the past and it works wonders. You can squeeze some orange or lemon juice onto a cotton pad and apply to the zit, and it should minimize the zit by the next day. You can try grating some orange zest into a mix with tea tree oil and then apply that to the zit.

#3: Fresh garlic is a home remedy that I personally recommend, and I have used a lot of times! You simple rub fresh garlic on to your zit 4 times a day. It works amazing in the long term, but it helps in the short term aswell, its just not as effective – but it’s definatly worth a try!

#4: Dice up some cucumber and mix that with a small amount of tea tree oil and then apply that to the zit. Cucumber is known to help skin conditions, and it helps a lot towards the treatments for zits.

#5: A good diet with a lot of fruit and water can help. I followed the diet plan outlined in Chris Gibons “Acne Free In 3 Days” Book after seeing his book on CNN, and wow, it acutally worked for me. I didn’t realise you get get rid of zits in just a short amount of times, it consists of eating 10 apples a day, and drinking 8 glasses of water a day, for just 3 days!

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Series of Unfortunate Events 04. The Miserable Mill

June 18th, 2010

Series of Unfortunate Events 04. The Miserable Mill Shirley, you must be joking? – bernie – Arlington, Texas
Once again the Baudelaire orphans are transplanted in what will turn out to be a “Series of Unfortunate Events.” Their newest home is the Lucky Smells Lumbermill dormitory.
Here once again Lemony tells the meaning of many words (usually with words that need the meaning explained.) We are treated to the difference of literally and figurative among other such concepts.
Naturally they think everyone is Olaf. And of course they are correct. A mystery has to be solved and to do this Violet must learn Klaus’s skills of reading apprehension. Then there are lives to be saved and Klaus must learn Violets’ inventive skills. Sunny stays En garde.

TOO CUTE FOR WORDS – –
I really disliked this book intensely and find it hard to believe that any but the most sophisticated child would ever pick it up or read it on his or her own. This is an adult book for adults.
: “The Baudelaire orphans looked out the grimy window of the train and gazed at the gloomy blackness of the Finite Forest, wondering if their lives would ever get better,” begins The Miserable Mill. If you have been introduced to the three Baudelaire orphans in any of Lemony Snicket’s previous novels, you know that not only will their lives not get better, they will get much worse. In the fourth installment in the “Series of Unfortunate Events,” the sorrowful siblings, having once again narrowly escaped the clutches of the evil Count Olaf, are escorted by the kindly but ineffectual Mr. Poe to their newest “home” at the Lucky Smells Lumbermill. Much to their horror (if not surprise), their dormitory at the mill is crowded and damp, they are forced to work with spinning saw blades, they are fed only one meal a day (not counting the chewing gum they get for lunch), and worst of all, Count Olaf lurks in a dreadful disguise as Shirley the receptionist just down the street. Not even the clever wordplay and ludicrous plot twists could keep this story buoyant–reading about the mean-spirited foreman, the deadly blades, poor Klaus (hypnotized and “reprogrammed”), and the relentless hopelessness of the children’s situation only made us feel gloomy. Fans of these wickedly funny, suspenseful adventures won’t want to miss out on a single one, but we’re hoping the next tales have the delicate balance of delight and disaster we’ve come to expect from this exciting series. (Ages 9 to 12) Series of Unfortunate Events 04. The Miserable Mill

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The Legend of James Dean

June 18th, 2010


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James Dean, strange you know the name before the man. Indeed many film buffs have never even seen the movies he made and many are startled on discovering that he only starred in three movies. Yet, everyone knows James Dean, his ubiquitous image charms us every angle, you would have to live on the moon to not recognise his face, and indeed it appears that to know him is to be seduced by him. However, the enigma of James Dean is still something of a riddle, how can one man, no matter how attractive he is and no matter how impressive his duds, how can he capture the imagination of people born decades after his death who have never seen any of his movies?

The 1950s in America were an era of unprecedented growth, people were beginning to have extra cash to spend on luxuries, people were beginning to realise that they could enjoy life, it was the beginning of a lifestyle that would make America the envy of the world. This was a golden era for an America that was reeling from the deprivations of the 1930s and the horrors of the 1940s. The children of the fifties were a blessed bunch or at least they were supposed to be, that was what was preached to them. They had everything that their parents had not, times were good, children could stay in school, unbelievably some could even drive there, they had countless options, college was on the horizon and everyone was beaming. Except perhaps their parents and well, also their children, so in fact does that mean that nobody was beaming at all? Why not? Life is not that simple, the consciousness of the country would not allow everybody to move on, there existed a shared memory of the brutality and inhumanity of the Second World War and the humiliation and constant yearning of the decade before that. Those who had lived through it were not going to be overjoyed that their children had the keys to the kingdom in their back pocket. Of course there was envy involved but more importantly there was an overriding fear that addled their minds. It had been drilled into their heads that life was not supposed to be easy and so they maintained a heavy feeling of dread, drifting around like harbingers of doom.

Obviously, to their children’s bright eyes and light hearts, their parents were gloom merchants who refused to enjoy in the frivolity that was life, there was going to be friction, there was going to be a lot of friction. The older generations knew the dangers of the world and therefore did their utmost to maintain the most moderate course possible, anything extreme was stamped out immediately. There were still lingering dangers in the world like the Korean War, Castro’s Cuba and the Suez Crisis to ensure that they remained vigilant. Cinema was to mirror this mass paranoia, this mass holding back; the ravages of the past had taken hold and the country was scarred. Bette Davis starred as an ageing Broadway star in Joseph Mankiewicz’s All About Eve (1950), Gloria Swanson was a troubling symbol of living in a faded past in Billy Wilder’s Sunset Boulevard (1950) and old Bogie never looked so wracked in John Huston’s The African Queen (1951). The great stars were aging, and Hollywood was up to other tricks – scaremongering the already suspicious populace with the brazenly analogous The Day the Earth Stood Still (1951) or the desperate escapism that Gene Kelly was peddling in Singin’ in the Rain (1952).

James Dean grew up in the midst of this overbearing conservatism, or rather existed through it as he put it, on his uncle’s farm in Fairmount, Indiana. He landed in the eye of the storm, California in 1949, studying drama in UCLA and it appeared to all intensive purposes grasping for the American Dream. And it seemed like he would gain it, he starred in a Pepsi-Cola television commercial, landed a few walk on parts in movies and got to say a few lines in Sailor Beware (1952) starring Jerry Lewis and Dean Martin. On moving to New York he gained admission to America’s most prestigious acting school, the Actors Studio to study Method Acting under the legendary Lee Strasberg. The world was opening up for the young Dean, he caught the eye of Elia Kazan who wished to cast him in his adaptation of Steinbeck’s East of Eden. Kazan sent Dean to see Steinbeck, the novelist viewed him as something of an upstart, he and Kazan were sold, Dean would be perfect for the main role of Cal Trask. Indeed, the character was pure Dean – disaffected Cal railing against the stuffy conventions that attempt to bind him, exposing the unholy truths that lie beneath the charade of modern living and of course looking mighty fine and attracting all the girls. And it wasn’t all straight forward, it’s muddy and confused, hard to tell exactly whether Cal is good or bad, Dean had arrived and he keeps us guessing to this day. It got him the Oscar but tragically he wouldn’t be around to receive it. The guessing game would become all the more compelling in Rebel Without a Cause (1955), in which he played the rebellious teenager Jim Stark. In retrospect it’s a strange portrayal, Dean like an overgrown teenager, a little man in the Edwardian style of the word. Impossible to understand, just like adolescence. Shot in little over a month, the movie would change everything at the time, Dean was a megastar, no doubt. Giant (1956) was tragically to be Dean‘s final movie, it’s so alluring, unnervingly offering us glimpses of an aged Dean – a washed up drunkard with busted ego, lonely and wretched. Dean was dead before the film was edited, pointedly he would not live to even see himself old on screen. The ultimate young rebel would remain forever young, and the hordes lapped it up, raising him to messianic proportions. Each year that passes, Dean becomes younger than us, trapped in teen angst forever, unattainable forever.

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Nip/Tuck: The Complete Third Season (Miami Skyline)

June 16th, 2010

Nip/Tuck: The Complete Third Season (Miami Skyline) WARNER HOME VIDEO: He — or is it she? — slices, they stitch. He maims, they heal. Plastic surgeons Sean McNamara and Christian Troy have vowed to make whole the victims of the elusive, mysterious serial slasher called the Carver. But mending the rifts in their own families and careers will require much more than their famed technical skills. Dylan Walsh and Julian McMahon return for a sensational Season 3 filled with eroticism, suspense and medical challenges ranging from a daring facial transplant to a 650-pound woman whose skin has fused with her sofa. There’s a new doctor on staff, too: Dr. Quentin Costa, a tango expert and perhaps an expert at dissecting the practice for his own ends. Plus: Julia launches a new career, troubled Matt falls in with skinheads and the Carver turns out to be…. Sorry, our lips are sealed. Watch and find out.

DVD Features:
Deleted Scenes
Documentary
Featurette
Gag Reel

Nip/Tuck: The Complete Third Season (Miami Skyline)

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Haunted By A Series of Unfortunate Events

June 15th, 2010

Evanescence’s “Haunted” put to the trailer of Lemony Snicket’s “A Series of Unfortunate Events.” Disclaimers: Haunted, Written and Performed by Evanescence, Wind-Up Records. Lemony Snicket’s A Series of Unfortunate Events, DreamWorks Pictures and Paramount Pictures Based on the books written by Lemony Snicket. This is just a fan movie. Evanescence and Lemony Snicket are neither affiliated either with me, nor with one another.

See Also : Beth Trapp Sharon Rosales http://dennisspaldingblog.moviesbysmsblogs.com/ http://rebeccamcdermott.prohost.es/ http://shaunbahl.luso-blogs.net/

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Nip Tuck – Signed 8×10 By Dylan Walsh and Julian McMahon

June 13th, 2010

Nip Tuck – Signed 8×10 By Dylan Walsh and Julian McMahon Powers Collectibles: Signed 8×10 By Dylan Walsh and Julian McMahon comes with powers collectibles coa and matching holograms.
Nip Tuck – Signed 8×10 By Dylan Walsh and Julian McMahon

Thanks To : Julia Owens Michele Hillman Monica Little http://pruebas.nuevosvitrales.com/elsieoneil/

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