comparemela.com

Latest Breaking News On - பிரையன் ரெட்ஹெட் - Page 1 : comparemela.com

Boozy lunches and sober sandwiches: how the Guardian film critic s job has changed | Membership

Boozy lunches and sober sandwiches: how the Guardian film critic s job has changed | Membership
theguardian.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from theguardian.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Every woman knows: a good old gossip is medicine for the soul

Judith Woods12:05, Apr 30 2021 OPINION: Gossip is good for you. Who knew? Apart from every woman on the planet. Except we consider it, far less pejoratively, to be a crucial line of communication; of facts and fictions, opinion and mood. Gossip, you see, is about people rather than things, which makes it the most valuable of social currencies. To paraphrase Churchill; a scurrilous rumour will get halfway around the world before the snoring, boring truth has had time to put on its boots. It’s why the lurid details of Boris Johnson and Carrie Symond’s boudoir wallpaper (solid gold, so they say!) is infinitely more fascinating than the Electoral Commission’s launch of a formal blah blah blah.

Jonathan Fryer obituary

A good old gossip is medicine for the soul

A good old gossip is medicine for the soul After a year of lockdowns, what the nation needs is a bracing chinwag 28 April 2021 • 6:00pm Gossip is good for you. Who knew? Apart from every woman on the planet. Except we consider it, far less pejoratively, to be a crucial line of communication; of facts and fictions, opinion and mood. Gossip, you see, is about people rather than things, which makes it the most valuable of social currencies. To paraphrase Churchill; a scurrilous rumour will get halfway around the world before the snoring, boring truth has had time to put on its boots.

Pressing the prince: how the duke did his first TV interview in the North-East

PRINCE PHILIP was the first royal to embrace television, submitting to the first TV interview in 1961 with Richard Dimbleby. It was all about the Commonwealth Technical Training Week and the questioning didn’t deviate, and then in 1969, he was the driving force behind the first royal documentary, the Royal Family, which showed him barbecuing sausages. It was watched by 350m people, but hasn’t been seen since 1972. Inbetween those TV firsts, the duke flew north for 80 minutes in an aeroplane for another first: his first network TV interview. The Duke of Edinburgh arrives at Tyne Tees TV s studios in Newcastle to Face the Press in 1968 - his first network TV interview. He s looking directly at a lovely old lady who is waving her handkerchief at him - was she overcome by the emotion of the moment, or did she just have a heavy cold?

© 2024 Vimarsana

vimarsana © 2020. All Rights Reserved.