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"dishy" Definitions
  1. (of a person) physically attractive

117 Sentences With "dishy"

How to use dishy in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "dishy" and check conjugation/comparative form for "dishy". Mastering all the usages of "dishy" from sentence examples published by news publications.

I love great, dishy biographies and deep, long character-based fiction.
Our dishy vicar Sidney, meanwhile, looks for love in new places.
It's dishy to read, but not always a delight to listen to.
"She has to find him attractive, sort of dishy," Mr. Macfadyen said.
But Paris Can Wait isn't primarily some kind of dishy tell-all.
These are dishy, but more interesting is Ms. Jett's rock 'n' roll heart.
But a Style profile, however dishy and vivid, is never just a profile.
This eagerly dishy book's main draw is its march of stars and styles.
The memoir is at times a dishy tale of Mr. Volcker's years in Washington.
Fire and Fury is full of dishy gossip, although its veracity is often unclear.
In a dishy interview with Forbes, he spoke of similar tensions with Mr. Zuckerberg.
The book is dishy on a personal level but damaging on a political level.
Not sexy or dishy or hunky or any of those insufficiently two-dimensional teeny-bopper adjectives.
Georgia "Toff" Toffolo, this year's winner of "I'm a Celebrity…Get Me Out of Here!" has declared him "dishy".
In a dishy and absorbing new profile by Caity Weaver for GQ, Haddish tells the world that somebody bit Beyoncé.
The dishy 30-year-old Bollywood star, Ali Fazal, who plays Abdul Karim, has come to dinner with Ms. Dench.
Sure, the documentary was fond, but it was also dishy and, with Mr. Nichols both feisty and frail, immensely moving.
Large, white and rather dishy, NASA's latest spacecraft-tracking antenna unveiled on Thursday has an important job ahead of it.
The details are compelling, but the narrative feels more like a dishy tell-all than an investigative or literary work.
Russell Wilson and Ciara are in the UK for the Royal Ascot horse races ... and, man, do they look dishy!!
As Vicky Ward reports in a dishy Huffington Post piece, Priebus blocked Scaramucci from getting an administration job back in January.
The even more conceited Albrecht Dürer, in 1500, went so far as to paint himself as a dishy, smoldering Jesus Christ.
It all goes south, but along the way it's hilarious, with great performances, dishy details, and a lot of thoughtfulness too.
Unlike Linden Hills, there is very little unsettling darkness in Bling, Erica Kennedy's dishy novel set in the early 2000s music scene.
Over at Politico, Edward-Isaac Dovere and Gabriel Debenedetti have a dishy look inside the last days of the Bernie Sanders campaign.
The no-drama-Obama White House offered less intrigue, and the books emerging from it seem neither as momentous nor as dishy.
The season 2 finale kicks off in Scotland circa 1968, where a now-grown (and rather dishy) Roger Wakefield is hosting Reverend Wakefield's funeral.
Her critique of intimacy remains intimate, however, owning its own biases while rejecting the dishy humble-brag, the brave over-share, and over-generalized neuroscience.
A dishy new book purports to reveal the inner secrets of the Trump White House — and has already provoked President Donald Trump to a furious response.
When he made his first splash in the 2000 book Kitchen Confidential, he gave us a dishy, insidery picture of the restaurant industry's very own boys club.
We last premiered the NYC band's Richard Kern-directed video "Boys (I Dated in High School)," which was deliciously tongue-in-cheek and featured some dishy boys.
While Ms. Zirinsky gathered thoughts from colleagues in March and April, the tabloids turned out dishy articles on who would stay and who would get the boot.
Instead, she produces a dishy, readable account, full of fashionable doubt and just-so anecdotes, that mostly reiterates the well-established buffooneries and blindspots of Valley culture.
Chris Pratt stars alongside his real wife, Anna Faris, as Nick, a dishy riding instructor Christy decides to pursue even though he has been declared off limits.
When the high stuff was very, very good, and you have people like Simon Sharma writing for it, but then the dishy stuff was also really fun.
In Bloomberg Businessweek, Eric Newcomer and Brad Stone have a dishy inside look at how Travis Kalanick, Uber's co-founder and former hard-charging C.E.O., fell from grace.
Philip smokes and his family isn't much to speak of, but he's played by Doctor Who's Matt Smith, and is therefore dishy in a sort of crinkly forehead way.
Still, one can't help wishing for more, and wondering if their absence has more to do with their stories being less dishy than those of their louche male counterparts.
"We went for the timeless, understated elegance building," said David Dishy, a partner at L & M Development Partners, which is building the project with the J & R Music family.
Unlike most people, Brown published hers: The Vanity Fair Diaries: 1983 - 1992 is a dishy account of her years at the helm of Vanity Fair magazine, filled with drama, glamour, and intrigue.
There's something telling about the fact that "Our Man," George Packer's hefty, dishy biography of the American diplomat Richard Holbrooke, clocks in at more than 500 pages without the courtesy of an index.
The new book contains dishy insights into Latouche's drinking habits and prickly behavior with such cultural eminences as Kelly and the poet John Ashbery, both of whom have died since they were interviewed.
We also have a review of "Boom" by Michael Shnayerson, a dishy look at the art world's most powerful gallerists — including Larry Gagosian, Mr. Koons's dealer — about how artworks became multimillion-dollar commodities.
Maiden blends the crew's deliciously dishy present-day interviews with actual footage from their voyage — there's a sequence during their tumultuous South Sea passage that might tempt you to stay land-bound forever.
I felt how exciting it would be to have the tabloid flavor of energy, but designed in a way that was kind of glamorous, and yet also was very intelligent and had ... Dishy.
A dishy book that touched off the final breakup between the president and his onetime strategist Steve Bannon dominated the headlines for much of the week, but a lot of actual policymaking happened too.
She wants to wind up her sister, Claire (Sian Clifford); she wants to outflank her awful godmother (Olivia Colman); and in the new season, she toys with defrocking a dishy Catholic priest (Andrew Scott).
A marble portrait head — possibly a Roman copy of an original bronze by his court artist, Lysippos — likely reflects what the ruler looked like: generically dishy with a designer haircut, Justin Bieber with gravitas.
"Big Little Lies" is based on a novel by Liane Moriarty, one of many recent dishy dark comedies about liberal moms chafing in their marriages, reduced to competing for spots in the school parking lot.
The novel offers a dishy but acutely observed insider's view of the goings-on behind the scenes at a temple of fine dining, one Ms. Danler freely acknowledges is modeled on the estimable Union Square Cafe.
I prefer forensics, and so was enthralled by the excavations of "Bachelor Nation," a zippy and dishy book whose true focus is the gaps between the actual, manufactured and represented behaviors and feelings on the show.
The show Mr. Halperin and Mr. Heilemann developed for Bloomberg, "With All Due Respect," was a dishy and sometimes whimsical political talk show that failed to attract a wide viewership; it ended after Mr. Trump's victory.
Since most of the drama on Becca Kufrin's season of The Bachelorette actually occurred after the show aired, tonight's The Bachelorette: Men Tell All episode will finally give us some of the dishy confrontations we've been craving.
BEIJING — A Chinese internet company that serves up homemade break-dancing videos, dishy news bites and goofy hashtag challenges has become one of the planet's most richly valued start-ups, with a roughly $6 billion price tag.
This dishy account from Queen Elizabeth's longtime dresser "turns out to be a surprisingly subversive sort of memoir, one flirting with the form of a tell-all: about clothes, sure, and little gossipy tidbits," Vanessa Friedman wrote.
Trump's team has already successfully slow walked the release of dishy details at the center of Robert Mueller's Russia probe, as well as the president's tax returns, turning once hot-button issues into protracted, arcane legal fights.
As a new ambassador, Sondland quickly "garnered a reputation for his truculent manner and fondness for the trappings of privilege," according to a dishy report by the Washington Post's Greg Miller, Paul Sonne, Greg Jaffe, and Michael Birnbaum.
But part of what made Center Stage so fun was its dishy (albeit overdramatized) look at just how the tulle-covered sausage gets made, thanks to the attention it paid to backstage drama going on at the ABC.
An engrossing book assembles hundreds of covers from independent cinema publications — some as ambitious as Cahiers du Cinéma but most as dishy as Confidential — that emerged in movie-loving China between the 1920s and the first years of Communism.
Kushner has the best legal team of anyone in Trumpworld, led by former Clinton administration Deputy Attorney General Jamie Gorelick, and he appears to run a savvy PR strategy based on deploying dishy anonymous leaks to garner good coverage for himself.
Starring a young Gwyneth Paltrow, a devilishly dishy Jude Law as trust-fund baby Dickie Greenleaf, and a sinisterly messed-up Matt Damon as the sociopathic Tom Ripley, the movie is a chilling journey through Italy's Ischia with a murder-mystery plot.
But it's also witnessed some very unusual spectacles, including both the president of the United States and his press secretary telling baldfaced lies about crowd size, a senior adviser coining the term "alternative facts," and an unusually harsh wave of dishy insider leaks.
The CNN anchor tells PEOPLE at the premiere of his HBO documentary, Nothing Left Unsaid: Gloria Vanderbilt and Anderson Cooper, that pals including Kathy Griffin have developed relationships with his 92-year-old mom, Gloria Vanderbilt – and things can get pretty dishy.
His abrasive former manager, Herbert Breslin, wrote in "The King and I," his dishy memoir written with Anne Midgette, that Mr. Pavarotti — whose weight swung between 28 and 213 — had to have gained and lost about 22012,19993 pounds during their years together.
The article outlined speculation that the first lady has returned to New York City, is cooperating with special prosector Robert Mueller, is recuperating from cosmetic surgery, and even that she is spending time with the Obamas to write a dishy book about her husband.
And lately his Twitter threats about having a bigger and more powerful "nuclear button" than the North Korean regime, and Michael Wolff's dishy new book depicting him as erratic and impulsive, have renewed the push to do something about a seemingly out-of-control president.
Not to be outdone, Maybelline has found its own It boy in Manny Gutierrez, a YouTube and Instagram beauty star known as Manny Mua, who posts exhilarating makeup hauls, snappy tutorials and dishy monologues about his journey from Mormon boy to man in makeup.
Its pages have featured the combative essays of Christopher Hitchens, the dishy features of Dominick Dunne and the high-production portraits of Annie Leibovitz — but the magazine has also remained a holdout as its publisher looks to become leaner and less tied to its print titles.
But Hillary Clinton's surprise turn at the Grammy Awards on Sunday night, narrating some of the dishy gossip about President Trump in the best seller "Fire and Fury," set off a roiling political debate about how far glitzy awards shows should go in needling Democrats' favorite target.
"Crazy Rich Asians," a busy, fizzy movie winnowed from Kevin Kwan's sprawling, dishy novel, sets up a series of clashes — between tradition and individualism, between the heart's desire and familial duty, between insane wealth and prudent upward mobility — that are resolved with more laughter than tears.
Bosworth's command of detail—the butterflies on her wedding dress, the caramel she spoons out during a waitressing gig, Diane Arbus's habit of wearing clothes until they're in shreds, a workshop scene with a randy Steve McQueen—makes the book more than merely a dishy showbiz memoir.
And a new book out next week, "Born Trump," by Vanity Fair scribe Emily Jane Fox, which is being teased as a "dishy, deeply reported, and richly detailed look" at the Trump children and Kushner, has the family on high-alert for a stream of unflattering news cycles.
Trump has idly threatened Michael Wolff with a civil lawsuit to block the publication of his dishy exposé of the Trump White House's first year, but actually has not thus far matched either the George W. Bush or Barack Obama administrations in terms of concrete legal action against journalists.
While Padma Lakshmi's dishy new memoir Love, Loss, And What We Ate excerpted in this week's PEOPLE, includes many surprising revelations, one of the most heartbreaking is the story of how she did not see her father for over twenty years after her parents divorced when she was two years old.
Last June, the Beijing bureau of the Cyberspace Administration of China ordered around a dozen accounts on the app shut down, calling on Toutiao and other news portals to "actively promote socialist core values" and create a "healthy, uplifting environment for mainstream opinion" by eschewing dishy coverage of celebrity scandals.
Mr. Bobrick and Mr. Clark collaborated on three more Broadway plays: "No Hard Feelings" (1973), which starred Eddie Albert, Stockard Channing and Nanette Fabray; "Murder at the Howard Johnson's" (1979), with Bob Dishy and Joyce Van Patten; and "Wally's Cafe" (1981), with James Coco, Rita Moreno and Sally Struthers, in her Broadway debut.
Most behind-the-scenes documentaries have their share of dishy anecdotes — Mr. Sakamoto recalls how, on "The Sheltering Sky," Mr. Bertolucci made him rewrite a section of the score on the fly while a 40-member orchestra waited — but part of what's exciting about "Coda" is that it increases your appreciation for Mr. Sakamoto's influences, too.
Fawning blurbs from Elizabeth Gilbert ("a literary masterpiece"), Caitlin Moran ("the In Cold Blood of women's sexuality"), Dave Eggers (one of the "most important" books of the year), and, of all people, Gwyneth Paltrow ("I literally could not put it down") have helped catapult Three Women into that sweet spot between flashpoint of feminist discourse and dishy summer beach read.
Here, BritBox presents several of Mr. Fassbender's earliest appearances in television projects, including "Hearts and Bones," as the hunky, motorcycle-riding Hermann the German; "Holby City," as a patient having his spleen removed; "William and Mary," as a dishy Latvian chef; and "Sherlock Holmes and the Case of the Silk Stocking," as a serial killer with a fatal foot fetish.
The storyline was a cipher of the reporting and discussion around Weinstein's alleged abuses, translated to the world of a dishy medical drama: complicit executives enabling further abuse, entire companies threatened by the exposure of said abuse, and an industry forced to reckon with the actions of an abuser who also happened to be the man they'd all been vying for career validation from.
Speaking out, Part II: George Conway, Republican attorney and husband of Trump White House counselor Kellyanne ConwayKellyanne Elizabeth ConwayThe Hill's Morning Report - Trump searches for backstops amid recession worries Florida first lady to miss Women for Trump event due to planned execution Trump adopts familiar mantra on possible recession: fake news MORE, can't stand her boss and makes no bones about it, The Washington Post reports from its dishy at-home interviews with the couple.
In October 2001 a nervous real-estate broker (Laila Robins) takes a ride with an over- enunciating cab driver (Bob Dishy).
I Wonder Who's Killing Her Now? (original USA theatrical name Kill My Wife, Please) is a 1975 black comedy movie directed by Steven Hilliard Stern, and starring Bob Dishy and Joanna Barnes. Originally Peter Sellers was to be cast as the lead but he had another heart attack and insurance couldn't be got on him so Dishy was his replacement at the last moment. It was directed by Steven Hilliard Stern, from a screenplay by Mickey Rose.
2009\. Williamstown Theatre Festival in Massachusetts. Directed by Nicholas Martin. With Brooks Ashmanskas (Melvin), Peter Dinklage (Chester), Bob Dishy (Raymond), Rightor Doyle (Steve), Annie Parisse (Tara), Susan Pourfar (Pauline), and Reg Rogers (Jerry). Sets by Alexander Dodge.
This production had new material by Fred Ebb. Directed by Christopher Hewett with choreography and musical staging by Ellen Ray, Bob Dishy headed the cast. An original cast recording was released of this production, reissued in CD on September 11, 2007, by DRG.
And I loved it." She goes onto say it was, "a healthy dose of reality as soap dishy as it was." Woerner praised the character development of Lt. Johansen stating that, "we watched TJ, a normally calm and cool character, unravel for obvious reasons. Then we the audience got to weigh all the possible options with her.
Writers reintroduced "dishy doctor" Joshua Bowers (Gareth David- Lloyd) as a love interest for Marty. When he takes Robyn's daughter Charlotte to the hospital creche, Marty meets Joshua, who assumes that Marty is Charlotte's father. He decides not to correct him, so he can get closer to Joshua. They continue to grow closer and go on dates involving Charlotte and Joshua's daughter.
However, he praised Cherry's writing as well as the acting, declaring, "There are almost too many things to love in 'Desperate Housewives.'" In his review of the episode, Matthew Gilbert of The Boston Globe commended the episode for its "marvelous tonal elasticity, as it stretches from sharp satire to dishy soap opera to tragique tribute and back again."Gilbert, Matthew (October 2, 2004).
The main character, Hyacinth Bucket, gets into a telephone argument with a bakery employee. When the employee abruptly hangs up in frustration, Hyacinth disparagingly refers to him as "hoi polloi". This is in keeping with her character; she looks down upon those she considers to be of lesser social standing, including working-class people.Keeping Up Appearances 02 - Welcoming The Dishy Vicar Divxmoviesenglishsubtitles.
After several more movies, she headed back to Broadway for Something Different, a play written and directed by Carl Reiner, and starring Bob Dishy and Linda Lavin. When that play closed, she returned to Los Angeles to marry producer/creator Aaron Ruben. Her performance as Miss Adelaide in the Los Angeles Civic Light Opera revival of Guys and Dolls brought her a Drama Critics' Best Performance Award.
Told in a series of vignettes, the film opens on the morning of the second day of school. Principal Arthur Gold (Bob Dishy) is married to Alice (Madeline Kahn), although interaction between them immediately hints that the union is unhappy. Alice babbles frequently, much to Arthur’s chagrin. Their son David (Aaron Harnick), who is thirty, is depressed after a failed attempt at being a Hollywood filmmaker.
"Michelangelo's David Is Damaged", New York Times, 1991-09-15. Retrieved on 2008-05-23. Cannata was restrained as he was in the process of damaging the toes of the left foot.Rossella Lorenzi, Art lovers go nuts over dishy David, ABC Science, Monday, 21 November 2005 On 12 November 2010, a fiberglass replica of David was installed on the roofline of Florence Cathedral, for one day only.
Hall singled out the performance of "Magic's In The Make-up", an album track from Return of Saturn, as the highlight of the DVD. She praised the live footage as "resplendent in near-perfection", describing the "wide range of dishy, fancy close-ups and pausing effects" and calling the sound "precision-balanced, distinct and clear". She gave the DVD 4 stars out of 5.
Her film credits include: A Broken Sole, which was theatrically released in 2007 and directed by Antony Marsellis, starred Danny Aiello, Margaret Colin, Bob Dishy, Judith Light, Laila Robins, and John Shea. Come On, premiered at the Hamptons International Film Festival in 2000. Love Divided By (based on her play) with original music by Philip Glass, was chosen to open MoMA's Titus II theatre.
Shot in Toronto at the studios of CFTO-TV, the show was set in New York City and featured a newlywed couple. Tracy Young (Diane Nyland) was the dishy wife to Doug Young (Steve Weston), a young advertising executive and exasperated husband. Other regular characters were Doug's hippie brother-in- law Paul (Franz Russell), who was constantly asking Doug for money, and Tracy's nagging mother, Mrs. Sherwood (Sylvia Lennick).
Stuart is a locum cardiothoracic consultant who first appears in the series ten episode titled "The Apprentice", which was broadcast on 6 November 2007. The BBC had approached Mullen with the offer of playing the role of Stuart. The actor is often hired to assume the "bad guy" role. Holby City's series producer Diana Kyle described Stuart as "dishy", "sexy" and a "good-looking" new addition to the show.
Gareth David-Lloyd appears as Jade's boss, Joshua Bowers, in episode 12. The character, billed as a "dishy doctor", returns from episode 15 as a love interest for Marty, but leaves in episode 20. Actor Paul Barber joined the recurring cast in episode 13 as Ernest Maxwell, a homeless man involved in a storyline with Louise. The character is killed-off in episode 23 as the storyline continues, emotionally impacting Louise.
He hits the fly, but also Langston (Bob Dishy), his hot- tempered boss, who collapses asleep on the trading floor. Michael returns to Lipo-Lipo to see his son and ex-wife, bringing the Kempster family with him for a vacation. Karen and Mimi are reunited, and it is suggested that Michael and Patricia also resume their relationship. As the credits start rolling, Michael undergoes the rite of passage as Mimi did earlier.
Ant Mitchell of The Michigan Daily wrote "Secrets of Aspen never pretends to be anything but what it is - trash". John Griffiths of Us Weekly called the show "dishy and fast-paced fun". In January, the show averaged 535,000 viewers while the season finale was watched by 487,000 viewers. Local residents complained about the show to Aspen City Hall and on the Facebook page Aspen Against VH-1's 'Secrets of Aspen'.
Murder at the Howard Johnson's is a 1979 play in two acts by American playwrights Ron Clark and Sam Bobrick. The production officially opened on Broadway at the John Golden Theatre after 10 preview performances on May 17, 1979; closing just three days later after only four more performances. The production was directed by Marshall W. Mason and starred Bob Dishy as Paul Miller, Tony Roberts as Mitchell Lovell, and Joyce Van Patten as Arlene Miller.
Charley Stone went on to play in a number of bands, most notably Gay Dad. Rob Wakeman released a few Tech House and Techno singles between 1999 and 2002, including Legs With Wings on City Rockers (2002). Wakeman, together with Jo Addison, formed the band Lapwing in 1999 and appeared on various compilation albums from record labels including Mind Horizon Recordings and Dishy. In 2016, Van der Vlugt and Kennedy began performing Salad songs acoustically as Salad Undressed.
Scott was succeeded by Robert Preston. According to his biography at tcm.com, Jackie Gleason was touring in the lead role of Sly Fox in 1978 when he suffered a heart attack and had to permanently leave the show, undergoing a triple bypass. The play was revived on April 1, 2004 at the Ethel Barrymore Theatre, again directed by Arthur Penn, featuring Richard Dreyfuss, Bob Dishy, Eric Stoltz, René Auberjonois, Professor Irwin Corey, Elizabeth Berkley, Rachel York, Peter Scolari, and Bronson Pinchot.
Truckle, for the same promise of riches; Merrilee Fancy, the most popular harlot in the bay town, finds herself in the family way and hopes to marry Sly for his wealth. None of them realize the trick, and even Able, Sly’s closest confidant and student, is unable to outfox the master of deception. It premiered on Broadway December 14, 1976 at the Broadhurst Theatre. Directed by Arthur Penn, the play featured George C. Scott, Bob Dishy, Hector Elizondo, Jack Gilford, Gretchen Wyler, and Sandra Seacat.
Profiles of other costars--like David Spade, who "was only on the show so he could sleep with models"—are just dishy enough to leave the reader wanting more. Despite stiff prose, an engagingly honest look at the crossroads of comedy and dysfunction." Kliatt gave the Audiobook, read by Mohr, an A: "Mohr's experiences make one wonder how the show ever gets on the air. He dishes unflattering portraits of some of the cast and some guest hosts while speaking most fondly of Phil Hartman and Chris Farley.
Others sometimes cross over to make a new career in London, but inevitably upset the balance between the worlds. Tankerton sends Edna to check out unusual events and places that may be the results of people crossing over. Edna, however, cannot resist letting the dishy Grant (Tim Key) from Undone stay in her London, piling up problems for the final episode, while Edna's mother descends from their home in Towcester to visit Edna and her old friend Carlo, in Undone. In the first series finale, weirdness threatens to flood London while mundaneness threatens Undone.
Peter Paterson from the Daily Mail said "Art Malik has made an immediate impact on Holby City, coming in as anaesthetist Professor Zubin Khan, a model of arrogance who even seems to make chief surgeon Tom Campbell- Gore, played by Denis Lawson, feel inferior." A writer for the BBC website "Pure Soap" said that Malik was one of the "reliable actors" who help keep Holby City strong. Judith Woods from The Daily Telegraph branded Zubin "a dishy consultant anaesthetist with a maverick streak". The Daily Mirror's Leask branded the character as a "handsome, brooding anaesthetist".
She rejects his proposal to move in together, telling him that he would be better off going back to Lisa. Back home, Reuben tries talking to Polly, but to no avail. He eventually invites Lisa to Sandy's opening show, where he learns that Polly is leaving New York in a few hours. After a speech given by his father, Irving (Bob Dishy), to Sandy about not living in the past, Reuben realizes he wants to be with Polly and not Lisa, and he rushes to her apartment to stop her from leaving.
Miller's first work since The Price five years earlier, Creation stumbled along during rehearsals. Original director Harold Clurman and most of the cast, including Barbara Harris and Hal Holbrook, were replaced, and the playwright rewrote most of the material. After 21 previews, the Broadway production, directed by Gerald Freedman, opened on November 30, 1972 at the Shubert Theatre, where it ran for 20 performances. The cast included Stephen Elliott as God, Bob Dishy as Adam, Zoe Caldwell as Eve, George Grizzard as Lucifer, and Mark Lamos as Abel.
Oliver with two of his assassins Jordan Oliver (Dishy) is caught embezzling $250,000 from his employer but, as he is the boss' son-in-law, is given a chance to pay it back. Meanwhile, his wealthy wife Clarice (Barnes) is about to divorce him. He can only get the money by having his wife murdered for $1 million life insurance. He hires a hitman Bobo (Bill Dana) to kill his wife; Bobo subcontracts the job out to another hitman, who in turn subcontracts it out and so on until an actor is the hitman for just $6.95.
Despite the fact her character is married, Rouass expressed her desire for Sahira to have a romantic relationship with an on-screen character. She hoped that Sahira would become involved in a love triangle as she found many of the male cast members "really dishy", and noted that being married has "never stopped anyone." She assessed that Sahira has "plenty of chemistry" with her colleague Greg Douglas, which she was looking forward to depicting. In June 2011, Craig-Brown stated that a central focus of series thirteen had been establishing Sahira's character and developing a triangle between herself, Greg and Hanssen.
Critical reception for Haters has been mostly positive, with Teenreads calling it a "charming, dishy chick lit with a side of supernatural".Teenreads: Haters Teenreads Booklist wrote that Haters was "shopworn" with "heavy contrivances", but that readers would be won over by the "hilarious, likable, resilient Paski".Booklist Review: Haters Booklist The School Library Journal stated that "Paski's first-person narrative is lively and honest".Haters School Library Journal Kirkus Reviews wrote that the book "has the potential to reach a wide audience, although its length will discourage many reluctant readers who might otherwise enjoy it".
Archie Bunker (Carroll O'Connor) and his wife Edith (Jean Stapleton) prepare to visit Edith's cousin Maude Findlay (Beatrice Arthur) in Westchester County, New York to celebrate the wedding of her daughter, though Archie is less than thrilled about the trip. Maude's daughter Carol (Marcia Rodd) is equally annoyed to learn of Archie's invitation, predicting that he will make offensive comments about her Jewish fiancé, David Green (Robert Dishy). Maude assures her that David will handle Archie with grace, as it is "a trait of theirs," and Carol points out her mother's own shortsighted views. She grumbles about the "archaic ritual" of marriage, but Maude points out that weddings come with gifts.
Speaking positively of Sarah, a writer from Virgin Media stated "She was the sole reason teenage boys tuned into Neighbours each night between 1996 and 1999. And after Sarah Beaumont had that affair with dishy doc, Karl Kennedy, she quickly became the hot topic around the water coolers nationwide..." In 2007, a reporter from the Herald Sun placed Karl and Sarah's affair at number eight on their list of Neighbours Top Ten moments. They said "In one of the most shocking storylines, no one could believe that the perfect Dr Karl, played by Alan Fletcher, could cheat on his wife of many years, Susan, played by Jackie Woodburne. But, that's exactly what happened when he couldn't resist his receptionist Sarah Beaumont played by the vampy Nicola Charles".
" The Sydney Morning Herald's Lenny Ann Low also praised the cast and their performances, stating "Lush with straining bosoms, knowing looks and segments bringing Morland's wild dreams and fantasies to life, Northanger Abbey is well cast. Felicity Jones catches Morland's mix of youthful naivety, heart-whole feelings and mindful beliefs perfectly and J.J. Feild, as the dishy but sensible Tilney, grows in appeal as this feature-length drama builds to a climax." Low's colleague, Joyce Morgan later selected Northanger Abbey as one of the week's best television programmes. However, Ruth Ritchie, writing for the same newspaper, stated that the makers of the adaptation tried "desperately to create an air of mystery about the dastardly deeds at Northanger Abbey," but the audience knew it was about as scary as "a ninja turtle.
That year, Mantle participated in a charity trek of the Annapurna circuit in the Himalayas and to Everest Base Camp, reaching 18,420 ft in aid of Hope and Homes for Children. In 2002, Mantle appeared in an episode of Heartbeat. In 2003, Mantle played Maynard in Ben Bolt's TV movie, Second Nature, which starred Alec Baldwin in the leading role, and appeared in the first episode of the series Fortysomething. He portrayed Percy, described as a "big, bashful Northern mill-worker who lives with his mum", in Patrick Sanford's stage production of Rattle of a Simple Man at the Clwyd Theatr Cymru in Mold, Flintshire. Gail Cooper of the Western Mail praised his performance and said: > Mantle, better known as dishy and confident consultant Mike Barrett in > Casualty, is cast completely against type as Percy, the 42-year-old virgin > who admits to being only 35.
He first arrived in the parish in "The New Vicar", after being a prison chaplain for an unspecified amount of time.In Picnic for Daddy the Vicar's wife says "I liked it better when you were chaplain of a prison" He is called "that dishy vicar" by Rose, who often pursues him, much to the anger of his jealous wife, who dislikes the fact that the majority of Michael's congregation are women who make a fuss of him. The vicar being caught in compromising positions (which in context are quite innocent) with Rose or other women is a recurring gag in the series, as is the Vicar damaging whatever he's holding/using whenever Hyacinth's name is mentioned. However, despite his dislike, he feels it his duty to be sympathetic to Hyacinth most of the time, trying to rescue her from the Commodore's amorous advances in "The Commodore" and agreeing to help her with her kitchen dilemma in "Angel Gabriel Blue".
Among Musto's first journalistic jobs were assignments covering culture for Circus magazine, SoHo Weekly News, and After Dark magazine, as well as becoming the music critic for Us magazine in the 1980s. In 1982, he began writing for Details, then a downtown style-and- nightlife magazine, and in 1984, Musto began his Village Voice column, after having already written features for the publication. Musto's breathlessly dishy and opinionated first-person column celebrated nightlife and LGBT personalities, described outlandish New York club fetes, and gave vital early coverage to up-and-coming performers like John Sex, RuPaul, Kiki and Herb, Bridget Everett, Jackie Hoffman, Bianca Del Rio and Peppermint. A 1989 appearance in Slaves of New York—based on Tama Janowitz's book centered on the New York nightlife scene—was called the film's only moment of credibility by critic J. Hoberman of The Village Voice. Other cameos through the years were made in Garbo Talks (1984), Day of the Dead (1985), Jeffrey (1995), Death of a Dynasty (2003), The Big Gay Musical (2009), and Violet Tendencies (2010). Musto was great personal friend with the Videographer, Nelson Sullivan who filmed much of the footage we have today of the “Club Kids”.

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