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...except more of the same. Which leaves a huge opening for Kerry to argue, as he (finally) did about two weeks ago, that “a president must be able to do both: defend America and fight for the middle class.” And Kerry offers an array of concrete proposals on lowering health care costs, tightening homeland security and improving education that the voters can anticipate, as I do, with unrestrained glee...
...budget shopper, Dorothy’s selection of costumes is eclectic and amusing. Besides boasting a wide stock of “sexy costumes” (nurse, Little Bo Beep, Dorothy) and many movie outfits (Harry Potter, Lord of the Rings), Dorothy’s also offers a large array of accessories. Fangs, wigs, boas and hats are but a small sampling of the offerings that make Dorothy’s an essential stop for costume refinement. And that chinchilla tucked into a corner of your room need not miss out—Dorothy’s has costumes...
Hidden Sweets on Brattle Street sells an array of Bush bashing T-shirts featuring slogans such as “A Village in Texas Has Lost Its Idiot,” “Don’t Act Stupid, We Have World Leaders for That,” “Banana Republican,” and the provocative “Lick Bush 2004.” If mocking only the President doesn’t satisfy you, Hidden Sweets also sells a t-shirt with the faces of both Bush Senior and Junior, and the catchphrase...
Both Campaigns offer official gear on their campaign websites. For the Northeastern urban hipster contingent, the John Kerry Online Store offers an array of vintage gear. In addition, they sell a variety of dog tags including a Gay Lesbian Bisexual Transgender Rainbow Kerry-Edwards Dog Tag. For those who want to wallow in past democratic defeats, the online store also sells historic campaign buttons, including Gore-Lieberman, Mondale, and Stevenson for President. For those nostalgic Democrats, Hidden Sweets also sells a t-shirt that reads “Carter in ’80: ‘He?...
Although not up to the sublime level of a typical South Park episode, the film has a fine array of raunchy gags, from a volcano of vomiting to the already notorious sex scene comprising many positions and much anatomically incomplete nudity. Parker, Stone and their marionettes also have fun at their own expense, detailing things puppets can't do (shoot pool, dance, plausibly engage in martial arts). The real kick, however, is in the grandeur and detail of the production design, by Jim Dultz and David Rockwell. Paris, Cairo, the Panama Canal, the inside of Mount Rushmore and a terrorist...