Arthur Keller for sure.
I would look forward to seeing those two films soon. I think the Jim Carrey one may be released independently. Sounds like a good one
--- On Sat, 12/11/10, Jake <jakewest_tn@yahoo.com> wrote:
From: Jake <jakewest_tn@yahoo.com> Subject: [Peckers_Pics] Model Wars; Dec 12, 2010; Safe PICS For All Ages, Rated G To: Peckers_Pics@yahoogroups.com Date: Saturday, December 11, 2010, 9:14 PM
Model Wars; Dec 12, 2010 Safe PICS For All Ages, Rated G Diet & Fitness: Reminder: Did you complete your Diet Journal today? Get it done! Did you do any physical activity? If not, make a point of it by tomorrow! Own a bike? Ride it to lunch, work, park, lake! It is our hope that our male fitness photos shall inspire you!
Today's Health - Wellness / Exercise / Reflections: Cut Lean Abs With Scissor Kicks Your ab muscles haven't been worked all season, despite your resolution to build a sexy six-pack. No need to hang your head in shame: TV-watching and binge eating seduces even the most motivated fitness buffs. But today it's time to renew your promise to trim that sagging torso. Let's re-start your game plan with these easy, fast-moving scissor kicks:
Step 1: Lie on your back with your legs extended. Place your hands flat on the ground with palms down, wedging them under your butt slightly to create leverage.
Step 2: Raise your feet about a foot off the ground. Kick your feet back and forth from side-to-side, imitating the movement of scissors. Focus on your lower abdominal region as you complete 12-15 reps. (Be sure to breathe steadily throughout the workout.)
Step 3: Rest for 15-30 seconds.
Step 4: Repeat the set three times.
Consider joining: Take Action: And Now, Model Wars! This group is called "Peckers Pics." The English - slang definition of "pecker" is to pluck at the truth. Therefore, we peck at items such as Gay Men's Health, Male Fitness, Gay (LGBT) Politics & Issues. In this section you may peck at each photo in order to decide the winner of the "war of the fittest!" Whereas, who is the model that may inspire you to exercise and "get fit?" Warning: This may stoke you!
Remember your participation in discussion of health and news articles in this message is greatly appreciated!
You can practically hear the cash registers clanging rhythmically all across Hollywood: a raucous new film starring Jim Carrey as an unrepentant con man dodging the law in the name of love. And yet, when the film, "I Love You Phillip Morris," premiered at Sundance in 2009 to positive reviews, the studio response was tepid at best. "I think if you've got a Jim Carrey comedy that's got good reviews, and it's incredibly cheap, you got him for nothing," says the film's co-writer and co-director Glenn Ficarra. "Why wouldn't they buy that movie? They had to be terrified of the subject matter." Ah yes, the subject matter. For "Phillip Morris," which opened in the Boston area on Friday, is a gay love story, with Ewan McGregor costarring as the object of Carrey's affections. And the occasional shadowed kiss notwithstanding, it's surprisingly explicit in its same-sex physicality. All of which would be well and good -- Hollywood famously prides itself these days on its tolerance -- if it weren't for that pesky other thing: The film is a comedy, too. "I think if it was a gay message movie they would have jumped all over it," says co-writer and co-director John Requa. "But because we were so matter of fact about the gayness, it didn't really fit any kind of set label." Ficarra, 44, and Requa, 41, met as undergraduates at the Pratt Institute in Brooklyn, where they quickly realized their shared tastes. "We were in a Filmmaking 101 class, and they went around the room and asked everybody what their favorite movie was, and absolutely everybody said 'Empire Strikes Back,' besides me and Glenn, who said 'Return of the Jedi,' " Requa jokes. "I [actually] said 'Lawrence of Arabia,' and Glenn said 'A Clockwork Orange.' " Having worked with the likes of Richard Linklater ("Bad News Bears") and Terry Zwigoff ("Bad Santa") on the films they'd written, Ficarra and Requa were well prepared for the switch to directing. "When you're a director, it's a reductive process," Requa says. "You're just making choices -- like no, I don't want that; I don't want that; that looks good. That's your entire job, all day, every day. And when you're writing, you need to express yourself. It's additive." Having finished "Phillip Morris," and the upcoming Steve Carell comedy "Crazy, Stupid, Love," which they directed but did not write, Ficarra and Requa are ready to return full time to screenwriting. "We're going to take a year off, and we're just going to write, so our wives don't divorce us," says Requa. "The life of a writer is a really great job. . . . You basically work 9 to 5, or in our case, usually 10 to 4."
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