noiresque
Noiresque
noiresque

To be honest, I had dick vibes from Matt Damon since he complained that Obama had no balls and that supporters from his 2008 campaign were roaming the streets, without leadership, confused by the lack of hope and change.

Aw, Cute-ye!

I find Jay Z to be a generally uninspired lyricist. Take Watch The Throne. The emotional complexity in a conflagration of bravado/grief/tenderness/ambition/weakness/lust/shame/rage came from Kanye West. Jay provided the same old, same old.

“Prick” - great title.

Aw, that sucks. I find it quite peculiar that Mindy Kaling would shut down over a softball question that. When promoting work, entertainment people are asked the same questions over and over again. You were respectful to her and it’s a question that will elicit a positive view both for her and the audience.

Cooked egg yolk for me. So mayo is fine, but hollandaise, frittata, fancy ice-cream made with custard an even omelettes are out of the question. Which in Australia, where the “chef” at a local suburban greasy spoon (or maybe chef without inverted commas in which case apologies for the sarcasm) pitches an audible fit

THIS. So true.

I read (ok, skimmed) the Bible at uni. A further reminder that the only parts of the Old Testament I liked were Ecclesiastes and some of the Writings, and the Gospels in the New Testament. Paul can take his evangelism with him as far as I'm concerned!

Malala and her father are inspirational - they epitomise the best of ground roots social campaigns; It's awesome how much like a normal teen she seems - her embarrassment at the cheering was sweet.

Me too. Malala is the hero here. Good for Angelina for presenting this video, but she's jumping on the emotion bandwagon.

I have actually bought the men's board shorts in a small size and altered them on my sewing machine. OK, I didn't alter it myself, I got my mum to do it.

Having it last on his list emphasises his point - it's a punchline, and he's making a joke.

Speaking for myself, I'm just interested in the hotties.

Exactly. If there was a notably(/unusually) sexy male in question, I can totally imagine Obama (and the press) making a similar joke. It would have more of a bromantic vibe.

They were totally shooting the shit. Jack was playing "Jack", Jennifer was playing "Jennifer". Her response cracked me up! She has this sassy Southern broad thing going. And when Jack slipped on the sunglasses to reply "I'll be waiting!" she was just dying of the bizarreness of the situation.

It's more cultural. None of the Pakistani friends I grew up with wore hijab at school (though there were a couple in different grades who did), and none of them do now, and they remain faithful in adulthood.

This has happened to me in Israel, Italy, Cuba, Thailand, India, Morocco, the USA and my own home of Australia. I feel it has to do with a certain kind of patriarchal attitude, which takes different forms in each place. I will say that in women in Cuba, India and Australia sprang to my defense (little old ladies

I find it annoying because of the element of "branding" in her personal life (That is because I have a huge issue with selling an image of myself altogether). It's tied into the celebration of pride and ego and narcissism that Beyonce and her husband explore in their music, and this seems another way to promote