Word: debutanted
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...group's debut CD starts off with Farrell's screech, "I got the devil in me," and ends with a song in which he gives a woman her first-ever orgasm: "Sit back/ And get yourself relaxed," he soothes. The group's name comes from a fireworks ad that Farrell spotted in a dirty magazine; on the album, the phrase porno for pyros is also used as a lyrical description of last year's L.A. uprising. That kind of juxtaposition -- psychedelic sexuality matched with social commentary -- is the strength of the album. The wild abandon of the imagination is connected...
...items on Clinton's lengthy wish list of proposals work their way through Congress, other legislators will enjoy their moments in the spotlight. Republican John Chafee of Rhode Island, for example, will play a major role when the Administration's much discussed health-care reform package finally makes its debut later this summer. And on any number of issues, Senator Bob Kerrey, one of Clinton's opponents for the Democratic nomination last year, is busy establishing himself as the newest Democrat...
...wanted the movie blessed by a medicine man. That's just the way I am." -- STEVEN SEAGAL, EXPLAINING TO TIME WHY RELIGIOUS RITES WERE CONDUCTED BEFORE HE STARTED FILMING HIS DIRECTORIAL DEBUT, ON DEADLY GROUND
Financed by the Providence Journal Co., TV Food plans to debut in November and hopes to attract a portion of the $40 billion annual advertising budget of food and packaged-goods companies. Vice chairman Reese Schonfeld insists that programming will be a piece of cake. "There's almost nothing you can do on television that you can't do with a food angle," he says. A dozen years ago, Schonfeld cooked up a little channel called CNN, so he at least knows his way around the kitchen...
Cheers too struggled when it first went on the air in 1982: in its debut season it ranked dead last out of 75 prime-time shows. Yet, encouraged by critical acclaim and a slew of Emmys, NBC stuck with it. The show would probably still be going strong if it weren't for star Ted Danson's decision to leave at the end of this season. "Our thinking was, we rolled the dice twice, when we replaced Nick Colasanto ((with Woody Harrelson)) and Shelley Long ((with Kirstie Alley)), and we won," says James Burrows, who created the show with Glen...