When bad fashion attacks: starring Amanda Bynes
By Brock Seng | Mar. 20, 2013Let us all take a moment of silence for Amanda Bynes.
Let us all take a moment of silence for Amanda Bynes.
After they took their seats at the bar and said hello to one of the owners, Rob Hatker and his father, Ed, ordered their food.
It has been seven years, four “Saturday Night Live” hosting gigs, a handful of feature films and a holy matrimony to Jessica Biel since Justin Timberlake released new music.
Gay marriage is more than just a moral issue: It might be a health matter.
Quaide Tranter’s Facebook likes include his uncle’s law firm and his stepdad’s business.
Timeless Disney tales were likely staples of your youth: on VHS, in books and the theme of your birthday party.
You might mistakenly call it a blanket, a bedspread or a cover. You might even correctly call it a quilt. For the Quilters of Alachua County Day Guild, a quilt is more than that: It’s a piece of art.
In Aisle 1, you’ll find frozen pizza. In Aisle 7, Gatorade. And if you’re lucky, you’ll find love in Aisle 13.
Being funny is just another day in the life of Trevor Moore.
If you’re a fan of snowy mountain panoramas, frosty bearded men and the treacherous Siberian wilderness, then you need to see “Happy People: A Year in the Taiga,” now showing at the Hippodrome.
As if the rock ‘n’ roll documentary wasn’t enough, Dave Grohl’s “Sound City” players banded together to make an accompanying record the old-fashioned way.
March 14 is Pi Day — The wonderful time of year when we pretend to celebrate math by eating pastry.
The sixteenth season cast of “Dancing with the Stars” was announced last week, and middle-aged women everywhere picked their early favorites.
The Academy Awards. The Oscars. The biggest, longest, most glamorous night in motion pictures. This was a varied year in cinema, and the industry’s most celebrated evening had no shortage of stars and surprises.
On the road to the Oscars red carpet, many films are set on earning nominations for the year’s top honor in motion pictures. A select nine are vying for the title of the year’s Best Picture.
Singing at the top of their lungs “Oops! ... I Did It Again,” “Material Girl” and “What Makes You Beautiful,” six girls stood — microphones in hand — belting, laughing and dancing the night away.
Unless you’re Taylor Swift, you’ve probably been single on Valentine’s Day. But it shouldn’t be a letdown this year.
Arthur Miller’s classic, ”Death of a Salesman,” opened on the High Springs Community Theater stage Friday night.
Mimicking the movements of One Direction, The Wanted — a popular boy band in the United Kingdom — crossed the Atlantic in hopes of achieving success in America. And boy, are they glad they came.
Before you read this album review, I should explain something: I am a huge Matt Pond fan. I discovered Matt Pond about six years ago in my years between high school and college.