Wednesday, December 30, 2009

Taylor Swift Celebrities Galleries

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Miley Cyrus Populer American Singer

Miley Ray Cyrus (born Destiny Hope Cyrus on November 23, 1992)
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Miley Cyrus is one of the famous American celebrities in the world. He is an artist, singer and songwriter. Miley Cyrus was born in Nashville, Tennessee, and he began to artists in the world of acting was when I was 9 years old.

Tuesday, December 29, 2009

Five Easy Questions with Kelly MacFarland

This month, WICF interviews our 2009 headliner Kelly MacFarland.



What did you learn or take away from being on Comedy Central’s Premium Blend?

I truly felt like I had arrived when I landed a spot on Premium Blend. I had a blast and the experience was amazing, but in the end it was just me and a microphone. I had to be funny or it wouldn't have meant anything. I try to give each show 100% and this show wasn't any different. The next week I was playing an Elks Club. Every show is important.

Of your many other TV credits, from Tyra to the View to The Biggest Loser, which one did you most enjoy and why?

I really enjoyed my time on Biggest Loser, but I would have to say my favorite experience was a few years later on a reunion episode. I got to meet a bunch of peeps from other seasons and we all just kind of dished about it. Felt nice to talk with people who had been through the same thing as you. A close second would probably be my appearance on Larry King. He's like a puppet up close. Very animated.

Other than years of doing stand up, how did you hone your comedic voice? Any specific person, book, other thing that inspires you?

Like a lot of other little girls, I watched hours and hours of I Love Lucy and the Carol Burnett show. I used to be a horrible stand up in the beginning, but then a wise man (Tony V) told me to just be me on stage. Tell the stories the way I tell them off stage. My whole world changed. There's a fine line between stand up Kelly and the Kelly you get every day. At least I'm never confused!

You do a lot of crowd work onstage. Have you always done this, or did it take lots of practice to become comfortable with communicating on the spot with the crowd?What projects and/or shows are coming up for you that all your fans should know about

I like the crowd. We wouldn't have a show without them. I talk to the crowd because I want them to feel like they're part of the experience. It works for me and the audience seems to enjoy it. I'm currently working on a book project, touring colleges throughout the US and working the clubs. I'm having a blast. Come out and see me. We'll laugh, hug and fall in love. www.kellymacfarland.com

Jenna Jameson Sensational Celebrities

Jenna Jameson (born Jenna Marie Massoli on April 9, 1974)
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Angelina Jolie Popular American Actress

Angelina Jolie (born Angelina Jolie Voight; June 4, 1975)
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Vanessa Hudgens Top Celebrities

Vanessa Anne Hudgens (born December 14, 1988)
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Anjelah Johnson Top Comedian Actress

Anjelah Nicole Johnson (Born May 14, 1982)
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Tuesday, December 22, 2009

Megan Fox Top American Actress

(born May 16, 1986)
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Megan Fox is one of the artists and celebrities famous in america this century. Megan Fox is a model who entered the ranks of the world famous model.

Tara Reid Celebrities Women Galleries

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Zoe Saldana Popular American Celebrities

born Zoe Yadira Zaldaña Nazario; June 19, 1978
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Zoë Saldaña is one of American celebrities who are popular today. He has a lot involved in the world per fileman. Some films ever in his starring are: Pirates of the Caribbean and Avatar which recently played in movie theaters.

Brittany Murphy Legend Celebrities Women

November 10, 1977 – December 20, 2009
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in Memmorian Brittany Murphyin Memmorian Brittany Murphy
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Monday, December 21, 2009

Kate Bosworth Hairstyles

Here we see Kate Bosworth with a clean, stylish short bob haircut. It isn't fussy with curls or waves, but takes advantage of straight hair. Bosworth is wearing a gorgeous short style in this photo in classic bob. It incorporates style with a top side part. This part serves to add depth to a short style, which Kate is pulling off well.

Saturday, December 19, 2009

Justin Timberlake Short Hairstyle

Justin Timberlake was just a small blip on the radar until he shaved his head and then -- BAM! Superstar. His former curly, highlighted hairstyle was replaced with a tight buzzcut and he became a sex symbol overnight. Sometimes cutting it off is the best option. Justin's not afraid to change it up, from a tight buzz with a shaved part to a highly textured faux hawk. He always manages to look great.

Justin Timberlake is definitely well known for not only his smile, but his hair. Most often we see him donning his naturally curly tresses. Timberlake will fluctuate in styles, but remains true to his curls. Here we see him in a Curly Short Crop Haircut. This cut leaves just enough height for Justin to incorporate his classic look.

I want a girl who laughs for no one else.

This festival has reminded me of this conversation, which, sort of creepily, happened exactly 2 years ago:

Overheard at Anna's Taqueria

Dude: "I mean, you want a funny girl, I guess."
Guy: "Well, yeah. Like, she has to think I'm funny. She has to get my jokes. Have a sense of humor."
Dude: "Right, yeah, totally."
Guy: "But, like, you don't want a hilarious girl. She can't be super funny or anything."
Dude: "Oh, God, no. No no no. No one wants that."
Guy: "You know, like that Weezer song"
Dude: "Exactly."

~RvdS

Friday, December 18, 2009

Guess Who's the Face of the NC Comedy Arts Festival?

Hey-yo! Our very own WICF Co-Director Maria Ciampa makes an appearance on the front page of the NC Comedy Arts Festival site - and what an appearance!

Maria's stand-up has been getting her noticed for awhile now - she's already beloved north and south of the Mason-Dixon! Ladies in comedy, unite!


Click through for the bigger picture.

WICF Co-Director Maria Ciampa, her stand-up routine, and her glorious hair.

Wednesday, December 16, 2009

All In The Family

December 14th's ImprovBoston Fun-Raiser brought together Boston comedy alumni from near and far.



WICF Co-Director Maria Ciampa with Kate Flannery of The Office.

The 2009 ImprovBoston Fun-Raiser at the Estate Nightclub in downtown Boston featured live performances from great women and men in comedy. Even Kate Flannery spent time in Boston performing in The Real Live Brady Bunch. Kate is not only known to millions as Meredith on NBC's mega-hit The Office, but is also a wonderful sketch and improv comedienne. Kate performed live with longtime friend and creative collaborator (and Real Live Brady Bunch Musical Director) Faith Soloway. If you live in LA, you can see Kate perform live on a regular basis  in her hit show The Lampshades. If you live in Boston, check out  one of Faith Soloway's many great projects, like Jesus Has Two Mommies. Check for her latest on her official website.

Jonathan Katz (Comedy Central's Dr. Katz), Adam Felber (Wait Wait Don't Tell Me), ImprovBoston's Harry Gordon, "The Roast Master", Shane Mauss (Comedy Central, Late Night with Conan O'Brien), Myq Kaplan (Comedy Central, Late Night with Conan O'Brien), MC Mr. Napkins (Voted Boston's Best Standup of 2009 in the Boston Phoenix annual reader's poll) and ImprovBoston's Alumni team also performed live.

Special video performances from Wendy Liebman and Janeane Garofalo premiered at the benefit.

Below is a clip from Janeane Garofalo's video with ImprovBoston's Bobby Smithney awkwardly explaining the celebrity crush rule he shares with his wife. Guess who's his celebrity crush?

Tuesday, December 15, 2009

Witty Banter: Rachel Dratch interviewing Amy Poehler

The first in the "Witty Banter" blog series by Sheila Moeschen

This month’s BUST magazine’s cover girl is comic virtuoso and New England native Amy Poehler.  In an inspired and pretty damn funny interview with friend and former SNL-copal, Rachel Dratch, Poehler shares an interesting insight regarding the thread-worn “work/life balance” issue.  In response to Dratch’s question about her best and least favorite parts of motherhood, Poehler responds:

“My least favorite part is when women ask me how I do it. Recently a person was asking me about my schedule and, like, working mothers everywhere…and was like ‘Oh my God, How do you do it?’ And I realized that really means ‘How could you do it?’ Isn’t that interesting? I was like, ‘I want to punch you fucking right in the mouth.’ (both laugh)."

Poehler’s response poses some interesting questions: Do women involved in the comedic arts have to make different lifestyle/personal relationship choices than women working in other fields? Given that the performing arts often require erratic hours along with tiny bits of your soul now and again, how does this impact the working comedienne when it comes to family and relationships?  Are women in the comedic arts held to different standards or do they receive different treatment for their lifestyle choices? Have you every experienced a situation similar to Amy Poehler's, and did you wish she were there to get your back in the all out girl fight that ensued? Discuss.



Amy Poehler has been making the interview rounds as of late, so below is more of the delightful Ms. Poehler, again being interviewed by a fellow comic. Enjoy!




Amy Poehler on Jimmy Kimmel Live, talking about her baby, her husband, and Parks and Recreation
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Woman in comedy Sheila Moeschen has a PhD in Theatre & Drama from Northwestern University with a Minor in Gender Studies. She puts theory into practice as an improv and sketch comedienne in Boston, MA.

Wednesday, December 9, 2009

Jude Law's Hair Styles

Jude is wearing a medium length men's hair style with slightly longer hair in the crown area. He has used some hair care products to bring the hair in the crown area together in sort of a spiked look.

Photos to the right show slight variations to his hair. The top photo shows the style with a slightly lighter, cooler hair color and the bottom photo shows the hair style completely slicked back.

Drawing inspiration from the hair style trends of our favorite stars and celebrities has become a national past time. One such star whose hairstyle is a must have look for young men is English actor Jude Law. His boyish good looks, ruffled hair style and blue bed room eyes make Jude Law irresistible to girls who are drawn to the sensitive, creative types.

TO GET THE LOOK: Are you watching your hairline fading away and feel that there’s nothing you can do about it, short of a hair transplant? Before you give up, try Jude Law’s stylish sun bleached tousled hair style on for size and put your base ball cap away. To get the look, let’s take it one step at a time; starting with a style cut and shaping.

LET’S SHAPE IT: For Jude’s style cut, start with a contoured shaping with tapered sides and neckline stylishly over the collar. The crown is cut short for a full look and combed forward with a few “love locks” tumbling across the forehead to fill-in a receding hairline. If you’re looking for a stylish no
fuss style, this head turning finger combed do’ almost styles itself. With a few adjustments (trims) as it grows you can easily find the ideal length and shape for your style.

Tuesday, December 8, 2009

Pretty cute for a funny girl.

So, it's Tuesday. Which means I'm watching The Biggest Loser again. And I've been thinking.

I'm a fat girl. That's not meant to be an insult, or self-deprecating, or whatever. It's the truth. But we all agree that shouldn't be the thing that defines who I am as a person, right? And yet, there are things that are expected of me as a person based on the size of my jeans. Because I'm big, I'm supposed to be friendly, and warm, and soft, and funny. Fat = funny. Lucky for me, I happen to fit this particular stereotype. (Well, the funny part, anyway. I'm kind of a bitch most of the time.) But I know plenty of hilarious women who are model-thin. And we're all gorgeous. I'm serious. We are amazingly hot ladies and you men (or other ladies, if that's our thing) are lucky we even speak to you.

So where did this stereotype come from? The idea that funny women aren't pretty, and pretty women aren't funny? I guess it's easy to blame the patriarchy, and say that men can't handle women with power, and to make someone laugh is to have power over them. So they try to take away our power in other areas by telling us that we're ugly or fat or shameful in some other way so we'll hide and not use our powers. It seems like it's been working for a long time. I don't have any answers as to how this mindset became so deeply ingrained in the group mind. If you do, please enlighten me in the comments. Seriously, I'm curious.

But I guess in the long run, it doesn't matter why we think this way, it only matters that we do. And that we realize that we do, so that we can stop this outdated line of thinking and stop putting expectations on people based on their external appearance.

Because, frankly, I'm not as funny as my weight would lead you to believe. I just really like eating and sitting still.
~RvdS

Jessica Simpson Hairstyles

Jessica Simpson started her career as a teenage pop singer in the late '90s and moved successfully into television and movie roles.

Jessica Simpson is one of the top hair models for girls, not only because she's so famous, but also because she has a top celebrity hairstylist in Ken Paves who is always using her to try out new hair designs.

Jessica Simpson's Full, Sexy Hair:


* Comb freshly washed hair with a wide-toothed comb to remove any tangles. Partially blow-dry your hair to get rid of excess moisture.
* Spray a volumising tonic on your hair, or a handful of mousse spread from tips to ends for extra oomph.
* Pin hair up and take out small sections at a time to blow-dry. Hold the dryer in one hand and a styling brush in the other.
* Place the brush underneath the first section of hair and position it at the roots. Keep the tension on the hair (without tugging too hard) and move the brush down towards the ends, while directing the air flow down the hair, following the movement of the brush.
* Blow-dry using a large, round brush with a metal core. Wind hair completely up the brush, focusing on creating lift at the roots. Gently blast hair with a hair-dryer until dry.
* Curl the brush under at the ends to achieve a slight bend. Continue until the back sections are completely dry and then repeat on the top sections of hair.
* Finish with a light, flexible hairspray.

Sunday, December 6, 2009

Girls Behaving Badly: Burlesque

The first in the "Girls Behaving Badly" blog series by Sheila Moeschen

A vintage burlesque poster
Burlesque. It’s a term that conjures up images of blue-lit cabaret stages where women adorned in sequins and pasties, pranced, danced, teased, and tantalized boozy execs (think Mad Men’s Roger Sterling, wearing that maddening, boyish smirk as he swirls his scotch and gazes on the shimmying hips and legs before him.)  Burlesque is sexual revolution! It’s counter-culture! It’s comedy! What now?
Before Burlesque became parlance for strip-tease light, it was a distinctive comic form, largely driven by women.  Burlesque arrived in America in the 1860s via a sassy English lassie named Lydia Thompson along with her troupe of fair-haired female performers known as the British Blondes.   The girls performed wearing *gasp * short skirts, similar to those worn by ballerinas.


Lydia Thompson

But the British Blondes were no statuesque, elegantly limbed ballerinas pretending to look bored and uninterested holding poses that defy the muscular logic of the human body. They were, as one critic put it, “clog dancing creatures,” who wore “nude” or flesh-colored tights, padded to emphasize their legs and curves.  They were proud of their “yellow” hair, dyed to call attention to their artificiality, and heavily rouged faces. (Yeah. How original are you now, Lady Gaga, hm?)  And yes, the British Blondes danced, pranced, teased, and, most importantly, made audiences laugh with their bawdy, bold humor.

In its purest form, Burlesque involves parody and satire.  It can take the form of songs, speeches, or entire plays.  Burlesque typically inverts, distorts, and exaggerates form and content, possibly to critique social or political ideas, but most certainly to make people laugh.  Flash-forward to a gangly, wide-eyed comedienne from the 1970s named Carol Burnett, trying to sashay gracefully down a winding staircase wearing drapes complete with curtain rod and gaudy tassels.  Her brilliant parody of the legendary film, Gone with the Wind, in a sketch titled “Went With the Wind,” skewers this beloved classic and the reverence fans and critics hold for it in the matter of several minutes of hilarious physical comedy.  














One hundred years prior, Thompson and countless other female troupes were laying the ground work for a style of comedy that put women at the visual and verbal center of some of the funniest, sassiest, and most inventive Burlesques written.  Think all-female casts performing Romeo and Juliet, only Romeo is the son of a Governor who sings a song about wanting to sell his coffee plantation and strike down the Townsend Tariff.  Trust me, in the 1860s this would have brought the house down with its hilarity and hip satirical wit.


Nineteenth-century Burlesque ushered in a comic revolution for women who, prior to this time period, were not viewed as comic performers.  Popular opinion held that women, due to their delicate natures (this is the same sex equipped to go through child birth, delicate my ass!) were unequipped to understand comedy.

Burlesque marshaled in a new way for women to gain visibility and economic empowerment on the stage. It also caused quite a stir, dividing male critics who, essentially, didn’t want their wives to find out how much they enjoyed watching Thompson riff on popular culture in tights and with *gasp again! * her shoulders exposed.  Many critics published articles in the news about how Burlesque meant the erosion of common decency and morals for “serious” (i.e. women forced into dramatic roles because dickhead theatre managers thought they had their sense of humor lobotomized) actresses.  Others saw Burlesque as the end to legitimate drama itself.  There was a lot of What Would Shakespeare Think type of self-righteous finger wagging in these articles.  However, the nature of such a vitriolic response, combined with the popularity and lucrative nature of Burlesque highlights what has remained common throughout much of America’s history: women who claim their rightful places in the world of men make the culture nervous.  This is why Burlesque and its traditions of parody and satire have been and remain so crucial to our legions of funny women.  It enables Tina Fey to expose Sarah Palin for the homespun cliché that she is or for Tracy Ullman to take down the Hollywood cult of beauty and self-important posturing in her satirical homage to Renee Zellwegger.  Or for Gilda Radner to celebrate and take apart the female punk rocker icon with her hilarious and fierce Candy Slice character. 




For more than a century, Burlesque’s legacy has given comediennes a seat at the political and social tables, helping them to hone their comic shops and use their voices.  Of course, pasties don’t hurt either.
...
Woman in comedy Sheila Moeschen has a PhD in Theatre & Drama from Northwestern University with a Minor in Gender Studies. She puts theory into practice as an improv and sketch comedienne in Boston, MA.

Saturday, December 5, 2009

Jessica Alba Hairstyle

Jessica Alba is an actress who is caring for her hair so her hair is very nice and shiny all people would argue that the model of the artist's hair must be good because the super-luxurious treat and if you want to see how the models hair from Jessica Alba, please see here ok ...



Thursday, December 3, 2009

Jennifer Aniston HairStyle

Jennifer Aniston has great hair. The mid long length and layers of the Jennifer Aniston Hair Style looks great and really matches her face. Some refer to the Jennifer Aniston Hairstyle as a Sedu Hair Style. The Sedu Hair Style is created by using a Sedu Flat Iron to straighten the hair. The combination of the straight hair and layers in the Jennifer Aniston Hair Style makes this a sharp look for any occasion. There are several pictures of the Jennifer Aniston Hair Style you may want to view. Each picture shows a different look at the Jennifer Aniston Hair Style.