Tag: Thinks
Pamela Anderson Thinks Tommy Lee’s Wife Will Find Her Memoir ‘Annoying’—How She Feels About Her Ex-Husband’s New Spouse
As a half of one of the most infamous couples in Hollywood history, it’s understandable why fans want to know more about Tommy Lee’s wife now and who he’s married to after his divorce from Pamela Anderson.
Tommy, a drummer and founding member of the band Mötley Crüe, has been married four times to four wives. His first marriage was to model Elaine Stsrchuk from 1986 to 1985. His second marriage was to actress Heather Locklear from 1986 to 1993. … Read more
Bobby Brown Thinks Whitney Houston Would ‘Still Be Here’ if They Didn’t Divorce—Where He Is Now After Their Death
If you followed their relationship for the past three decades, you may be wondering where Bobby Brown is now and what happened to Whitney Houston’s husband after her death.
Brown, whose full name is Robert Barisford Brown, is a singer and a member of the band New Edition, a six-member R&B group who was known for hits like “Candy Girl”, “Cool It Now” and “Mr. Telephone Man.” Along with New Edition, Brown also had a successful solo career, with songs … Read more
Do Humans Owe Animals Equal Rights? Martha Nussbaum Thinks So.
Over the course of her long career, the distinguished and highly decorated philosopher Martha C. Nussbaum has written key books about foundational human subjects: sex and gender, ethics, politics and justice, to name a few. With her upcoming book, though, she has fully turned her formidable attention to the nonhuman as well. In “Justice for Animals: Our Collective Responsibility,” which will be published on Jan. 3, Nussbaum, who is 75, argues for, among other things, increased legal standing for animals
Elizabeth Banks Thinks This Interview Is Dangerous for Her
In Elizabeth Banks’s upcoming movie, “Call Jane,” which is in theaters on Oct. 28, she plays a conservative housewife who winds up working for the Jane Collective, the underground organization that helped women procure safe abortions in the years before Roe v. Wade was decided in 1973. The film is, at moments, wrenching; it’s also a gas, with a groovy period soundtrack and an uplifting narrative arc. The way “Call Jane” balances political ideas and entertainment value makes it a
Andrew Yang Thinks Three Parties Aren’t Nearly Enough
Andrew Yang—an entrepreneur, a policy celebrity, and a proud nerd—recently co-founded Forward, America’s newest political party. During Yang’s gadfly bids for the 2020 Democratic presidential nomination and last year’s Democratic mayoral nomination in New York City, his advocacy for a universal basic income gained him a cult following. His nascent third party is focused on democratic reform: restructuring American electoral processes so that elected representatives better capture the public will.
Yang insists that he’s concentrating on building up Forward and
What Washington thinks about the next Queen Liz
That represents a branding problem in Washington for Truss, who needs support from both parties to have any chance of securing a long-sought bilateral trade deal with the United States.
Working most obviously in her favor is simply that she is not Boris Johnson. The White House shed few tears over the political undoing of the outgoing prime minister. But that doesn’t mean Truss will be embraced.
While close advisers prefer to call her “values-driven” and “pragmatic,” colleagues in London
Huawei MatePad Paper review: A Kindle killer that thinks it’s a tablet
Huawei MatePad Paper
MSRP $550.00
“The Huawei MatePad Paper is an excellent big-screen eReader and comes with the tactile M Pencil stylus for helpful note-taking, but the high price hinders it from being a true Kindle competitor.”
Pros
- M Pencil and Folio Cover included
- Text and voice note-taking is excellent
- Thin and comfortable to hold
- Large screen adds versatility
Cons
- No water resistance
- Sparse choice in the Bookstore
- High price
Is the Huawei MatePad Paper an e-reader, a productivity tool,
Thomas Piketty Thinks America Is Primed for Wealth Redistribution
In 2013, the French economist Thomas Piketty, in his best seller “Capital in the Twenty-First Century,” a book eagerly received in the wake of the 2008 economic collapse, put forth the notion that returns on capital historically outstrip economic growth (his famous r>g formula). The upshot? The rich get richer, while the rest of us stay stuck in the mud. Now, nearly a decade later, Piketty is set to publish “A Brief History of Equality,” in which he argues that
Cannabis to Help You Diet? One Edibles Company Thinks So
The Fit gummies look like standard marijuana edibles: orange squares with a sugar coat, sold in packaging that’s a cross between the bright colors of a bag of candy and the sterility of a bottle of pain relievers.
These edibles, however, promise something different: They won’t make you high, but they will help you diet. Or, as the company that makes them puts it, they will “help disrupt unhelpful eating habits and put you back in control of your diet.”
How Philip Yancey Thinks About Life, Death, and Grace
On a Sunday in late February 2007, Philip Yancey was driving on a remote highway near Alamosa, Colorado. As he came around an icy curve, his Ford Explorer began to fishtail; the tire slipped off the asphalt and the Explorer tumbled down a hillside. The windows were blown out; skis, boots, luggage, and a laptop computer were strewn over the snow.
Yancey suffered minor cuts and bruises on his face and limbs and a persistent nosebleed, but he also