- LinkedIn as an Advertising Medium
- What were your worst books of the decade?
- Unemployment Could Overshadow Economic Stimulus
- Should Eyebrow Threaders Need a License?
- Mousses vs. Soufflés: Do You Hunger to Know the Difference?
- Google releases Chrome beta for Mac
- 16 Tips for Parking Lot Etiquette. Pass it on!
- Does Natalie Portman’s Beauty Eclipse Her Talent As an Actress?
- Sephora Launches Kiosks at JCPenney
- Zac Efron Totally Looks Like Jared Leto
- Prostitutes Offer Free Sex at Climate Summit in Copenhagen
- The 10 best Sci-Fi movies of the past decade
- Google’s Favorite Places get window barcodes for mobile customers
- ‘Hulu for Magazines’ to Be Announced Tomorrow [Publishing]
- eBeam interactive whiteboard now with Send To Kindle feature
- AT&T offers app so you can report crappy service. Huh?
- If Frank Lloyd Wright Built Gingerbread Houses [Design]
- WordPress 2.9 To Be Released Before The End of 2009?
- Indian Conglomerate Leaps Into 3-D Movies
- How Arts Criticism Has Changed
December 8, 2009
December 8, 2009
December 8, 2009
December 8, 2009
December 8, 2009 – oui
December 8, 2009
December 7, 2009 – No one’s going to remember these rules. haha
December 7, 2009
December 7, 2009
December 7, 2009 – No way. Jared Leto is HOT
December 7, 2009
December 7, 2009
December 7, 2009
December 7, 2009
December 7, 2009
December 7, 2009
December 7, 2009
December 7, 2009
December 6, 2009
December 6, 2009 – A critic’s duty, in the second half of the 20th century, was to uphold classical standards against the fripperies of fashion and to convey an ideal of enlightenment to commuters who glanced at a newspaper on their way to and from work. Times change. It is easy to deprecate today’s critics as unworthy of giants’ shoes, but the challenges of the 21st century are of a different order from anything the arts have known since Gutenberg made the quill obsolete.



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