
If you are on the lookout for intelligent and witty reviews on the latest entertainment buzz, be sure to check out the New Yorker magazine. Since the showbiz periodical has gone online, I don't see much of the copies lying around the floors of the house anymore. When the magazine went online, it became easier to peruse the archives for the smart discussions on art, dance, photography, music, film, and everything that involves culture.
One of their latest entries is a discussion on a theater masterpiece called The
Pajama Game. This is an opera set in the mid-fifties boom. In Dancing, Joan Acocella discusses about Flamenco, its fabled popularity, and its commerciality. You could also visit the online magazine's archive for the less
popular film reviews written by the masterful New Yorker critics. There's a place for Facts and Fiction, and you could eavesdrop on The Talk of the Town.
The New Yorker is an entertainment and culture magazine that tackles everything of high culture, even of gourmet
food and restaurants. If you are curious about the Goings on About Town in the city that never sleeps, flip through the pages and become a New York lover yourself. New Yorker, is after all, a top magazine that tackles New York City inside and out.
I guess it'll be safe to say that everybody enjoyed watching Willy Wonka. It doesn't matter what version you were able to watch. Needless to say, both movies were really good. Children, especially, loved the said movie. Who wouldn't? Anyway, here is one d
Tracked: Jun 11, 07:17
I don't normally buy expensive cheese. Not at Thanksgiving, and neither on Christmas Eve. It sounds rather funky that I come across some kind of soppy Portuguese (not the crappy soap opera) cheese - a recommendation I truly found timely, thanks to Time Ou
Tracked: Oct 01, 12:29