Free Republic 2nd Qtr 2024 Fundraising Target: $81,000 Receipts & Pledges to-date: $23,006
28%  
Woo hoo!! And we're now over 28%!! Thank you all very much!! God bless.

Keyword: longestyard

Brevity: Headers | « Text »
  • Former Raiders first-round pick convicted of three murders

    11/05/2015 6:04:05 PM PST · by ConservativeStatement · 19 replies
    Yahoo ^ | November 5, 2015 | Frank Schwab
    Former Los Angeles and Oakland Raiders defensive end Anthony Smith was accused of murdering four men over the course of a decade, and he was convicted Thursday for three of those killings.
  • A question of taste:Hollywood awards season is useful gauge of what industry thinks is important

    02/10/2006 12:58:07 PM PST · by Caleb1411 · 10 replies · 619+ views
    WORLD ^ | February 18, 2006 | Andrew Coffin
    Hollywood's problems at the box office last year may come down not so much to quality (or the lack thereof), as many have supposed, but to taste. There are plenty of talented craftsman in Hollywood, but—and this will come as no surprise—the prevailing tastes in Hollywood may not match those of the general movie-going public. Just look at the films that people actually went to see last year, and compare that list to what Hollywood is now recognizing as 2005's best. The 15 top-grossing films released in 2005, in descending order, were: Star Wars: Episode III—Revenge of the Sith; Harry...
  • Burt Reynolds/ Adam Sandler Pic Stuns Star Wars, Dreamwork's 'Madagascar' (Friday Night BO)

    05/28/2005 9:49:26 AM PDT · by gopwinsin04 · 114 replies · 2,959+ views
    1. The Longest Yard 15.7 Million 2. Star Wars: Episode 3 15.5 Million 3. Madagascar 14.4 Million 4. Monster in Law (Jane Fonda) 2.2 Million 5. Crash 1.3 Million, Kicking and Screaming 1.3 Million
  • A Nation Apart [Possibly The Longest Article Posted]

    11/18/2003 4:16:07 AM PST · by William McKinley · 60 replies · 7,297+ views
    The Economist ^ | 11/6/03 | John Parker
    AT NINE o'clock on the morning of September 11th 2001, President George Bush sat in an elementary school in Sarasota, Florida, listening to seven-year-olds read stories about goats. “Night fell on a different world,” he said of that day. And on a different America. At first, America and the world seemed to change together. “We are all New Yorkers now,” ran an e-mail from Berlin that day, mirroring John F. Kennedy's declaration 40 years earlier, “Ich bin ein Berliner”, and predicting Le Monde's headline the next day, “Nous sommes tous Américains”. And America, for its part, seemed to become more...