It was amazing to
talk to the woman whose work has inspired me so much.
He would have given anything to
talk to the woman whose relation just had his leg amputated.
Not exact matches
She calls out Chanel,
whose creative director Karl Lagerfeld once told a French
talk show «nobody wants
to see curvy
women on the runway.»
I learned this not from a class in feminist studies, but from Jesus — who was brought into the world by a
woman whose obedience changed everything; who revealed his identity
to a scorned
woman at a well; who defended Mary of Bethany as his true disciple, even though
women were prohibited from studying under rabbis at the time; who obeyed his mother; who refused
to condemn the
woman caught in adultery
to death; who looked
to women for financial and moral support, even after the male disciples abandoned him; who said of the
woman who anointed his feet with perfume that «wherever this gospel is preached throughout the world, what she has done will also be told, in memory of her»; who bantered with a Syrophoenician
woman,
talked theology with a Samaritan
woman, and healed a bleeding
woman; who appeared first before
women after his resurrection, despite the fact that their culture deemed them unreliable witnesses; who charged Mary Magdalene with the great responsibility of announcing the start of a new creation, of becoming the Apostle
to the Apostles.
Our upcoming main stage event in Los Angeles on October 28th features a
talk on the evolution of the LA food scene by renowned restaurant critic, Jonathan Gold; a
talk on building a kind coffee empire by Todd Carmichael, TV host and the founder and CEO of La Colombe; insights into how vegetables have become a trend by the
woman whose company has been responsible for introducing kiwis and other fruits
to the American market, Karen Caplan of Frieda's and other
talks on the science of flavor, the convergence of sci - fi and food, leaving a popular band
to become a chef, and much more.
One day in the grocery store I was
talking to anyone who would listen about this, when a
woman relayed the story of a friend
whose baby boy wouldn't sleep — until the mom eliminated dairy from her diet.
We chatted sewing, we chatted knitting, they told me all about the
woman whose fabric I was buying (perhaps more than I wanted
to know, actually... oh, scandal), and I smiled as they chastised the men (who couldn't hear them anyway)
to «take the sports
talk outside and get out of the way!».
And this whole idea that a
woman needs peace and tranquility in order
to labor successfully... Aside from all of the
women who've given birth in the exact opposite circumstances, I'm really curious as
to whether we're supposed
to be «Birth Warriors» or wilting lilies
whose labor could stop if somebody
talks too loudly, as if the baby is a souffle that could fall if a door is slammed.
Gov. Andrew Cuomo,
whose own opponent Rob Astorino is firmly opposed
to abortion, is reviving
talk of the
women's agenda this year after first proposing it in 2013.
With Tron: Legacy «s Garret Hedlund in final
talks to star as Kaneda, the gang leader, and Kristen Stewart offered the role of Ky Reed, a
woman who is part of an underground movement
to expose the government for turning orphans into living weapons (she also may possess some abilities herself), the big question now is who will play Tetsuo, the young man
whose latent powers will release the powerful being known as Akira?
, and
talks to the family of a young
woman whose death in an auto accident led
to trolls posting gruesome photographs of the crash.
We just mentioned The Girl on the Train earlier today when
talking about the Liam Neeson movie The Commuter — Girl is based on the novel of the same name by Paula Hawkins, and follows a
woman whose problems haunt her after she is pulled into a mystery involving a couple that she imagines
to enjoy the perfect marriage.
For all the deserved
talk about the dearth of meaningful roles for
women in Hollywood, horror has actually done its part
to correct that imbalance, earning accolades for actresses starting with The Bad Seed and Psycho and continuing with 1976's adaptation of Stephen King's Carrie,
whose sole nominations were for Best Actress (Sissy Spacek) and Best Supporting Actress (Piper Laurie).
Maria's enviable career comes full circle when she is
talked into making the ultimate encore: She will return
to the play that spurred her success 20 years before, though this time she will star as the older
women whose life is falling apart.
and those of Algee Smith as an aspiring singer
whose life is changed forever after the Algiers and of Hannah Murray as fJulie, the feisty, open - minded young
woman who dares
to talk back
to the racist cops.
At the center: a
woman who calls herself Bride,
whose stunning blue - black skin is only one element of her beauty, her boldness and confidence, her success in life; but which caused her light - skinned mother
to deny her even the simplest forms of love until she told a lie that ruined the life of an innocent
woman, a lie
whose reverberations refuse
to diminish... Booker, the man Bride loves and loses,
whose core of anger was born in the wake of the childhood murder of his beloved brother... Rain, the mysterious white child, who finds in Bride the only person she can
talk to about the abuse she's suffered at the hands of her prostitute mother... and Sweetness, Bride's mother, who takes a lifetime
to understand that «what you do
to children matters.
When they teach the Trojan War, they
talk about a beautiful
woman whose face was enough for an armada
to be launched and a large wooden horse that defeated an impregnable city.
Hsu then told the
women over the telephone that he had a father
whose medical condition («prostate cancer») «required constant sex
to stay alive,» and he was able
to sweet -
talk them into «doing what was necessary
to save him.»
You may know me as someone
whose idea of a perfect workplace is the first 20 minutes of «Wonder
Woman,» but in my spare time I
talk tech, and you're listening
to Recode Decode, a podcast about tech and media's key players, big ideas and how they're changing the world we live in.
That said, all the
talk about Aniston — whether single, engaged, married or divorced — sounds all too familiar: she's miserable, alone, frustrated, sad or forlorn without a man; a
woman whose desperation led her
to tie the knot too soon; a
woman whose dreams have «been shattered» after being «dumped;» because obviously, all she wants is a man — or maybe babies.
I remember
talking with a young
woman in her 20s
whose mother had died and who was now trying
to care for a younger brother.