Not exact matches
The writers obviously understood
very little and many of the
subjects made themselves the god
favorite.
Today is all about one of my
very favorite beauty
subjects: nail polish.
The soundtrack — which could be the game - changer given the
subject matter — is by T - Bone Burnett (who won the Original Song Oscar alongside Ryan Bingham for «The Weary Kind» — one of my
favorite original songs in the last decade) and Marcus Mumford (of Mumford and Sons), so at the
very least I'm expecting the best soundtrack of the year.
I wouldn't say this is one of my
favorites, but it was definitely shocking — a
very challenging film and a
very delicate
subject.
When one does actual research on the
subject, it is revealed that pit bulls were never
very popular in the past: http://www.animalpeoplenews.org/06/03/howpopularwerepitBulls03.06.htm Here's an article written in 1911 by a pit bull breeder urging people to see the pit bull as more than killing machines: http://books.google.com/books?id=T57mAAAAMAAJ&vq=%22A%20Good%20Word%20for%20the%20Pit%20Dog%22&pg=RA3-PA13#v=onepage&q&f=false Why would «America's
favorite dog» need such articles written about it?
It's the home of not only kangaroos and koalas, but also stunning natural wonders like Uluru and the Great Barrier Reef, not to mention the
subject of one of my
very favorite travel books, In a Sunburned Country, by the always funny and entertaining Bill Bryson.
Also, putting out lots of 1000 word comments on your
favorite subject is an indicator that you either can't write
very well — or that you don't really know your
subject and are just wandering in the wilderness.
Your house, on the other hand, still enjoys
very strong fourth - amendment protections: One of my
favorite U.S. Supreme Court cases on the
subject is Florida v. Jardines, in which SCOTUS ruled that even approaching the front door with a drug - sniffing dog without a warrant constituted an illegal search.