full-color version of the show's finale. Both are known mostly for introducing the world to Russell, who had done a few background spots on TV but hadn't gotten much attention until his starring role on "Jaimie McPheeters." However, it turns out that filming with Bronson had a surprisi...
by Brent Hartinger The Backlot Morning Meme: Chelsea Handler Attacks Angelina Jolie, Bristol Palin Gay Baits, and What Is Matthew Mitcham Wearing? It’s just gay rights everywhere these days. Last week it wasSenator John McCainchipping away at his legacy and reputation with his undignified treatme...
You’ll also receive an exclusive VIP Introduction to Marketing Celebrities – My Partners valued at $2,000. This component is similar to an “old boys network” in the internet marketing world, where your connections are just as important as your knowledge. With this package, you’ll gain a...
Russell Brunson The Underground Playbook for Growing Your Company Online with Sales Funnels 17 min 4.8 Stop Checking Your Likes Susie Moore Shake Off the Need for Approval and Live an Incredible Life 17 min 4.4 The Score Takes Care of Itself Bill Walsh My Philosophy of Leadership 16 min 3.9...
If SportVU cameras and GPS trackers have proved anything about on-court behavior, it is that basketball time is hardly created equal. A minute of Thunder guardRussell Westbrook, who starts and stops like a Lamborghini in the open floor, is nothing like a minute of centerKendrick Perkin...
Russell’s words, “enlarge our conception of what is possible” – in philosophy –“enrich our intellectual imagination and diminish … dogmatic assurance.” This brings us back to Williams’s distinction between history of ideas and history of philosophy, or, as I prefer to call it, ...
Russell Says: July 25th, 2013 at 8:08 pm What Alexander experienced could have been a hallucination, but it could also be real. You can’t really prove it either way. You certainly can’t disprove the existence of God, since you can’t prove a negative. I believe in God, but als...
Victorian celebrities, from the ultimate client from hell, Queen Victoria, who demands the machine be used for fighting crime, to novelist George Eliot, who finds herself lost in its maze-like interior. “It really is very much about my own experiences in the labyrinth of computing,” says ...
Such is Humphrys’ range that a few weeks later he was interrogating Sir Michael Lyons, the chairman of the BBC Trust, about Russell Brand’s naughty phone call to Andrew Sachs. Was the answer, he asked satirically, more “compliance procedures”? It surely must have been, for the corpora...