- Dan: Aren't I about the last person you want helping you?
- Blair: You love Serena, don't you? So. We have something in common. So what do you say we find the bitch and get us some frontier justice.
November 2010
55 posts
- Old students are re-enrolling again.
- New students who have just ended their contract are re-enrolling.
- I want to have more students on MWF.
- My schedule for Tuesday and Thursday is already good, no need to add more students. :P
- I want to take the morning shift after this contract to give way to my TV internship.
- I’m loving my co-workers more nowadays.
- I am excited for the company Christmas party.
Being a fashion icon isn’t all red carpets and cover shoots. There’s time and effort involved, sweat and tears, etc. Blake Lively — Vogue’s “Best Dressed” cover girl who famously claimed she doesn’t have a stylist — spent over four hours at Christian Louboutin’s invite-only sample sale in New York last week looking through the inventory. She tried on all sorts of shoes and boots “while surrounded by towers of shoeboxes,” a detail which befits Lively somehow.
But while the experience of navigating through a crowded retail space and trying lots of stuff on may sound familiar, that sort of nightmare, for us non-Livelys, typically results in the purchase of one, maybe two, items. Or you text a picture of the shirt in question to your friend and you get a text back that says “Eh :-/” and you decide not to get anything.
But things are different when you’re Blake Lively. The “Gossip Girl” star emerged from the sale four hours later (probably looking effortlessly fresh and smelling like cotton candy) with more than 40 pairs of Louboutins, which could have cost up to $2,000 a pair. Forty. (Which as a recent Vogue Best Dressed Special Edition cover girl, she might have been able to get for free.)
“I have sisters, so I’m getting gifts for them and for friends,” she explained. “Of course, I got quite a few for myself, too.”
This is the difference between Blake Lively and the world’s mortals. She can snare 40 shoes without a second thought. We wouldn’t even be able to fit half that many in our one-bedroom apartment.
Batibot’s mascots with new hosts Kakki Teodoro and Abner Delina
Premiering in the early ’80s as “Sesame,” the Filipino version of “Sesame Street,” “Batibot” left the television screens in 2002, after 18 years on local television. During its almost-two-decade run, the show was aired by almost all the major local channels in the country including ABS-CBN and GMA.
“Filipino children need a companion and a guide. (“Batibot” is) something like vitamins that help them in their lives. For some children, it’s probably basic nutrition,” said the show’s executive producer, Feny de los Angeles. She also added that “Batibot” will also discuss serious contemporary issues such as one-parent families and HIV/AIDS, among others, but in a children-friendly manner. “We have to (discuss those issues). It’s our responsibility. It’s our job.”
(via nfctd)
