Big And Busty Superstars 1997

Big And Busty Superstars 1997




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Big And Busty Superstars 1997




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制片国家/地区: 美国
语言: 英语
上映日期: 1997
片长: 60 分钟

IMDb: tt0176549









 
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Big and Busty Superstars
(1997 Video)




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Kim Basinger, Jenny McCarthy and Sharon Stone are just a few of the actresses who posed for the men’s magazine
We look back at some of the stars who appeared nude in the late Hugh Hefner's iconic magazine Playboy.
The legendary star appeared nude in the first issue of Hefner's magazine.
The "Charlie's Angels" star made waves with her cover.
Hot off her 1979 R-rated hit "10," Bo Derek appeared the following year -- without the cornrows.
Basinger did her famous Playboy shoot in 1981 but it appeared two years later around the time of her stint as a Bond girl in "Never Say Never Again."
Just as the Material Girl was taking off in her film debut "Desperately Seeking Susan," Playboy published nude pics from 1978 when she was a struggling artist in NYC.
Stone appeared around the time she starred in "Total Recall."
The "Baywatch" star also graced the cover of the magazine's "final" nude issue in 2016.
The model was paid $20,000 to pose for Playboy -- and parlayed that into a lucrative career on TV.
The actress unsuccessfully sued Playboy when it published nude shots from her early days as a model.
The former Bond girl ("The World Is Not Enough") posed just five months after giving birth.
Lindsay Lohan - January/February 2012 
The former child star did a pictorial in 2012 inspired by Marilyn Monroe's shoot for the first issue.
But Bill Maher also dings some progressives for being too down about the country during the latest ”New Rules“
Bill Maher, host of HBO's "Real Time With Bill Maher"
On Friday’s “Real Time,” Bill Maher ended the show with an edition of “New Rules” that laid into politicians, especially Republicans, who seem to hate everything about America and half the people in it. He also dinged certain people on the left for views he thinks are also far too negative about the country.
“Because honestly, I don’t know why the people who are fighting for this country so hard even want it anymore,” he said.
“Republicans: I’ll start with you, because I really want to know, what do you like about America? It’s not democracy,” Maher continued. “You stand with a president who tried to pull a coup. And a dozen Republican nominees for Senate and governor in this year’s mid terms say they absolutely will not commit to accepting the results.”
“Elections only count when we win them? That’s what America is to you now? That shows more disrespect for the flag than any football player ever could,” Maher said. He then noted Senator Mike Lee of Utah, one of several Republicans who have said “we’re not a democracy.” “No, not the way you want to run things.”
“This year at least 27 states have introduced or enacted laws that restrict voting. If you say you love America, don’t you also have to love the idea of everyone getting to vote? Don’t you have to love the peaceful transfer of power?” Maher added.
“Republicans remind me of the trophy hunters who say they love wildlife. Yeah, then why do you shoot it? Republicans used to be the rule of law people, and lionize the officers who upheld it. But when rioters stormed the citadel and symbol of America on Jan. 6, most Republicans took their side. And not the side of the police, over a hundred of which were wounded. F— the police, that is the clarion call of the Republican Party now?” Maher posited.
“When did the GOP become NWA,” Maher joked.
“And then there’s the FBI. Steve Bannon says that they’re the Gestapo. Marjorie Taylor Greene says that they should be defunded. Congressman Paul Gosar says ‘we must destroy the FBI.’ What? The FBI is not America now,” Maher discoursed.
Maher then took a detour to dunk a little on the FBI: “FBI agents are so square that they yell ‘fore’ when they ejaculate They think matching windbreakers are cool. Their flag pins have flag pins.”
“And the military,” Maher noted, returning to the point. “They used to be the same category. The bedrock of the super patriot crowd. But Trump began his first campaign by doing something that up to then was unthinkable: He mocked and derided a war hero, a Republican war hero, who’d been shot down, imprisoned and tortured.”
“And it was not a bridge too far for Republicans. They shrugged and walked across it. As they did when Trump called the Joint Chiefs ‘losers.’ And our soldiers who died in World War 1 ‘losers,'” Maher reminded viewers.
“Ted Cruz calls today’s troops pansies, and Republican Senate nominee Blake Masters says that our generals are ‘left wing corporate bozos.’ That’s the patriotic view of our military brass?” Maher asked. “Maybe that’s why Trump said that he wished they acted more like the Nazi generals we fought in World War II. Yeah, we won that one, by the way.”
“So,” Maher uttered as he started to bring the thing to a point,” I ask again. If you don’t like democracy, voting, the FBI, military and cops, what about America do you like? Oh, I know, the constitution. That’s right, the grand old– what’s that? Congresswoman Lauren Boebert says what? She says, ‘I’m tired of this separation of church and state junk that’s not in the constitution.”
“But it is in the constitution,” Maher correctly pointed out, “and it’s another one of those pillars of this country that, if you don’t believe in it, it makes me wonder why you’re fighting so hard for this place at all.”
Maher explained that this stuff “is what is so odd about this time that we’re living in. For all the talk about ‘fighting for the soul of America,’ nobody seems to like it all that much. Too many liberals give the impression that to them, America is just a big ugh. The red, white and ew. The country that started out bad and will always be bad. Founded on an unrelenting history of sucking. And unable to change.”
“But,” he countered, ” we have changed. A lot.” Maher then describe how Missouri congresswoman Cori Bush tweeted “This land is stolen land and Black people still aren’t free” on July 4, 2021.
“Not that I give a s— about the fourth of July, I’ve never been a rah-rah guy. But I am a perspective guy. And that’s what too much of the left has lost: Perspective.” Maher noted a recent poll showing that 72% of young Black people are much more optimistic about America than that. He also joked that “we could change the name of Captain America to Captain Stolen Land.”
Maher then suggested that people who participate in what is known as land acknowledgement , where they note the people who lived in a given place prior to European colonization, need to “either give it back, or shut the f— up.” He also took issue with a statement by Jamaal Bowman bowman criticizing capitalism, which he said is “kind of synonymous with America. If you don’t like it, I don’t know how you can say that you love this country.”
“You know who loves this country? You know how’s not constantly complaining about what happened 200 years ago, and who’s not obsessed with seeing America through s–t-colored glasses, and shaking off the stench of what privileged and irredeemable a–holes we all are? Immigrants,” Maher opined as he approached the end of the bit.
“Ask any of them why they came here, and they’ll tell you the same thing: Ron DeSantis put me on a plane,” Maher quipped. “But they will also tell that America, for all that’s so s—-y about it right now, is still the last, best hope, and those people asking for our votes to take it over, should remember that.
Re-imagining created by Stephen Dunn debuted in June
Devin Way as Brodie, Jesse James Keitel as Ruthie in "Queer as Folk" (Peacock)
The “Queer as Folk” reboot won’t be getting a second season. The show, which debuted on Peacock in June, has been canceled, creator Stephen Dunn announced in a statement on Instagram.
“It’s a rare gift in these times, and in this country, to be able to make a show as fearless and unapologetic as ‘Queer As Folk’. This experience changed our lives forever and we’re so grateful to have found this incredible new family. But today we received the disappointing news that we’re not getting a second season. We know how much it’s meant to the fans and while we’re heartbroken we won’t get to make more episodes, we wanna thank everyone for watching and falling in love with Brodie, Mingus, Ruthie, Noah, Shar, Julian, Daddius, Bussey, Marvin, Judy and Brenda. We’re so grateful for the chance to honor our community and are so proud of this show. #QueerAsFamily,” Dunn said .
Alongside Dunn, the show was executive produced by Lee Eisenberg, Emily Brecht, Russell T. Davies, Nicola Shindler and Louise Pedersen for All3 Media International. Brian Dannelly served as executive producer/director. The Studio is UCP, a division of Universal Studio Group.
The Peacock series was actually the third iteration of “Queer as Folk.” The original British series ran for just 10 episodes in 1999 and 2000. Showtime produced an American adaptation that ran for 5 seasons and 83 episodes from 2000-2005.
The TV personality told Megyn Kelly Friday that her 2020 pink slip appeared instead of a script moments before she was due on air
Melissa Francis at Fox Business Network in 2015 (Getty Images)
Former Fox News and Fox Business Network commentator Melissa Francis learned she had been fired in October 2020 after reading “you’ve been canceled” on her Teleprompter moments before her show was to go live, she told Megyn Kelly on Friday.
Francis, who was working from a studio the network had set up at her house during the COVID lockdown, was preparing to do an upcoming newscast when she read on the Teleprompter that she wasn’t needed anymore, she said on the SiriusXM radio program, “The Megyn Kelly Show.”
At the time, she was a co-host of one of Fox’s biggest daytime shows, “Outnumbered,” and had been negotiating for a raise to match the salaries of her male counterparts.
Fox claimed that her sudden disappearance from the airwaves was due to “program changes” related to the election, but her camp reportedly thought otherwise. She and her lawyer, Kevin Mintzer, wouldn’t confirm at the time that she had filed a gender-based pay discrimination claim against the network, as the LA Times reported in 2020.
Francis confessed that she and Fox hadn’t wrapped things up “amicably,” explaining to Kelly the sordid details: While preparing to do her 4 p.m. show on what ended up being her final day, Francis was notified by Mintzer that the network was letting her go.
“He got a call and he said that my services were no longer needed on the air and I said, ‘Well, they can’t mean the show in 10 minutes because we all know you can’t get an anchor in the chair that quickly.’ You know, I’m gonna just go over and sit in my living room for my second show. And then if they want me not on tomorrow, whatever it is, that’s fine,” she told Kelly.
Her at-home studio, she explained, was controlled remotely by Fox, so she was startled when the Teleprompter delivered the message, “You’ve been canceled,” instead of her script.
“And all of a sudden, everything went dead in my living room, just lights out, everything dead. And I was like, ‘Wow, OK. This is, this is how we’re doing this. Huh? Wow,’” she recalled. “I talked to the show staff afterward and they were like, ‘We weren’t told anything. We have no idea what happened.’ And they were left scrambling. I mean, all of a sudden this poor show team had no idea and they just yanked the electricity on their anchor,” Francis said.
Her lawyer stated that the abrupt cancellation was “100%” due to her pay dispute. “Those claims in my view, 100% led to her being taken off the air… without question,” he told Kelly.
Francis took the issue to the New York Department of Labor, who announced in December of 2021 that they would pursue an investigation “over [her] gender discrimination and retaliation complaints.” While Francis did not confirm the settlement herself, the Washington Post reported in June that she and Fox had reached a $15 million settlement .
A spokesperson for Fox News issued the following statement on the issue at the time . “We parted ways with Melissa Francis over a year and a half ago and her allegations were entirely without merit. We have also fully cooperated with the New York State Department of Labor’s investigation and look forward to the completion of this matter.”
”On the surface, it will look like everything is fine,“ co-director Michelle Major told TheWrap
MSNBC’s “Model America” exposes the myth that Teaneck, NJ was a post racial utopian society for Teaneck, NJ by delving into the horrific shooting of Phillip Pannel in 1990.
Growing up in Teaneck, New Jersey, co-director Dani Goffstein first learned about Phillip Pannel, a 16-year-old Black man killed by a white police officer, when his father pointed out a yellow house as they walked home from synagogue. The story of injustice in what many label as a model community of America stayed with him into adulthood when the 2014 killing of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri prompted Goffstein to examine the similarities of the cases.
“There were two different narratives of what what happened there,” Goffstein told TheWrap. “There was the one from the cop saying that this guy was trying to like shoot him or assault him and the witnesses saying he had his hands up saying ‘don’t shoot.'”
The first episode of the four-part docuseries, which will air Saturday, Sept. 24 at 10 p.m. in advance of episode 2 airing on Sunday, Sept. 25 at 10 p.m., lays the groundwork for the devastating story by investigating how Teaneck came to be labeled as such as model community.
Teaneck’s legacy as a model American community began when it was selected by the federal government to be showcased in Japan and East Germany as an example of what democracy should look like on the local level. This reputation continued when the community became the first town in the nation to voluntarily desegregate their school system and was used as an example for Berkeley, CA for integration.
“I always thought growing up in Teaneck that that meant that we were a model to be, you know, to be looked upon by the rest of the country as something to aspire to,” Goffstein said.
For co-director Michelle Major, who grew up in Harlem, NYC, Teaneck has an “international arms open feeling,” as seen by the wide range of shops and restaurants on its main street. While great mixture of culture is a fact of the town, Major says the myth is that “there are n
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