We've all been there. Had such a good time, your mind shut itself down from overload. Happy fun times, but not without punishment. The hangover. Here's a tip - it gets worse the older you get. Or maybe it's just me. Today, I'm nursing a work-hangover from way too much going wrong even after the best-laid plans of man and Systems Administrators.
(then again, any excuse to post Bradley "YumYum" Cooper with his pants down...)
~xxx~
Sunday, July 22, 2012
Sunday, July 8, 2012
Suit Up Sunday - Morning Paper
Nothing like getting up Sunday morning and reading the paper. I can't find my reading glasses, so I may just have to get a little closer.... Much, much closer.
~xxx~
~xxx~
Sunday, July 1, 2012
Suit Up Sunday - A Treat
My friend Poppy asked "So what about you? Did any of your teenage crushes influence the type of man you find attractive today? "
I'll admit it: Treat Williams has been a life-long crush of mine. Tall, dark, handsome, and damn, that smile. Slayed for life.
Most of you probably know him as Dr. Brown on Everwood, but let's travel in the Wayback Machine and visit a time when he marked himself indelibly on my psyche.
My first real awareness came from his part as Stretch, a Corporeal who has severe disdain for eggs, in Steven Spielberg's 1941. What can I say? That jawline in a uniform? Yowza! for this then-ten-year-old.
The same year, he was the free spirited Berger, who underwent a makeover for his friend, in the movie version of Hair.
Just. Damn.
Yes, he was in the awful Billy Zane version of The Phantom, but he rocked the hell out of the 1940s look.
And he played Jack Dempsey and Stanley Kowalski.
Good guy?
Bad boy?
Misunderstood miscreant?
Yes, please!
I'll keep my other two lifelong crushes under my hat for now. Maybe next time? :)
~xxx~
I'll admit it: Treat Williams has been a life-long crush of mine. Tall, dark, handsome, and damn, that smile. Slayed for life.
Most of you probably know him as Dr. Brown on Everwood, but let's travel in the Wayback Machine and visit a time when he marked himself indelibly on my psyche.
My first real awareness came from his part as Stretch, a Corporeal who has severe disdain for eggs, in Steven Spielberg's 1941. What can I say? That jawline in a uniform? Yowza! for this then-ten-year-old.
The same year, he was the free spirited Berger, who underwent a makeover for his friend, in the movie version of Hair.
Just. Damn.
Yes, he was in the awful Billy Zane version of The Phantom, but he rocked the hell out of the 1940s look.
And he played Jack Dempsey and Stanley Kowalski.
Good guy?
Bad boy?
Misunderstood miscreant?
Yes, please!
I'll keep my other two lifelong crushes under my hat for now. Maybe next time? :)
~xxx~
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