A toast to 40 years
Jokes were shared, tears shed, white wine toasted and egos boosted. But most miraculous of all is that Sunday night during the three-hour broadcast celebrating 40 years of “Saturday Night Live,” the show rose from ?the dead.
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Jokes were shared, tears shed, white wine toasted and egos boosted. But most miraculous of all is that Sunday night during the three-hour broadcast celebrating 40 years of “Saturday Night Live,” the show rose from ?the dead.
Stalker. Controlling. Jealous. Arrogant. Scary. ?Threatening.
His eyes stare blankly into the abyss of flashing lights and cheering fans.
Think of the color nude. It’s a soft, delicate shade that blends rather than yells, like those robust reds and ?obnoxious oranges.
We all know the saying, “history repeats itself.”
Sophia Grace Brownlee is back, and she’s bringing more than “Super Bass.”
Before you can even settle down to digest the mountain of food you ate during Thanksgiving break, the winter holidays are upon you.
As classes end, dorms close and snow falls, students head back home with a few goals in mind: see friends, visit with family and stuff their faces.
Who can resist a trip back down memory lane to a place of rebellion, acne and teen angst?
If you ever want to get heated about “The Man,” businesses that profit from artists are a suitable start.
There’s more to November than not shaving and stuffing your face with turkey (although, those are two extremely important aspects).
As a kid, I was always checking out the maximum number of books from my school library. The few times I ventured to my county library, I was met with a lack of selection and books that smelled of something ?rotting.
Instead of a scary movie, pick up a horror novel to experience real fright.
There’s more to Halloween season than B-rated horror movies, candy that rots your teeth and costumes that in the simplest terms are ?offensive.
Fall comes with trends that never fail to be the topic of conversation.
Though the world of fiction can take a reader to places outside the real world, sometimes a dose of reality is just what one needs.
Think about it: we’re part of the last generation that remembers what it was like ?before e-readers.
We’ve all been there at some point in a high school literature class where we’re assigned to read and analyze a book written well before this century.
After finishing a novel, the new task becomes finding the next read.
We’ve all heard it before: books are better than their movies.