What are your reasons for writing Lust, Jokes, Religion?
I wanted to share the many unique quests I have experienced on the pages of Lust, Joke, Religion. My main desire was to entertain my readers and take them into worlds and situation they might not care to ventures, should I say alone. I crave the chance to make my readers laugh, cry and whatever emotion comes in the middle. I hope they share tears and cheers, diving into the unpredictable twist and turns of Lust, Jokes, Religion.
Who is your target audience?
My target audience is anyone who likes adventure and to be introduced to different characters throughout my life walk. Old, young, man, woman it does not matter. I would say my style is like Hunter S Thompson meets Kerouac with a New Jersey accent.
Book Inside
What are you prior honors?
I published a story Cuba for a signatory of Mensa Calliope. It was the first sports story that Calliope had ever published. I was humbled to be accepted to that literary sector. I also had two books published, Exodus From the Rivertown and Toxic Candy along with many stories published in varies literary magazines and blogs.
Why are you a writer?
Iām a story person. I love to tell stories and one way I do that is through writing. I have been writing ever since I was a young boy. Writing brings me a freedom and helps me escape the everyday stretches and yawns we all may experience from time to time.
Future Protects?
I have two more books, Eternal Adolescents and *Dead, two more anthologies of the Pocket Gossip series. I have completed my first novel Bixby Boys which I am editing at this very moment. I also do a podcast called the Wash a collective for multi-tier story telling. So if you like the books. You will defiantly like the podcast.
Three New York-area ticket resellers have been fined by the FTC under the BOTS Act, as Engadget reports. It is the first case to be brought under the Obama-era anti-scalping legislation that was passed in 2016. Three companiesāJust in Time Tickets, Inc., Cartisim Corp., and Concert Specials, Inc.āand their principalsāEvan Kohanian, Simon Ebrani, and Steven Braniāare alleged to have used ticket bots to purchase tickets to flip on the resale market. They were handed a civil penalty judgment totaling $3.7 million.Ā
āThe three ticket brokers will be subject to a judgment of more than $31 million in civil penalties for violating the Better Online Ticket Sales (BOTS) Act, under a proposed settlement reached with the FTC,ā reads the case summary. āDue to their inability to pay, the judgment will be partially suspended, requiring them to pay $3.7 million.ā
āThe Actās bipartisan sponsors sought to crack down on the abuses that unscrupulous actors inflict on consumers whose typing fingers were no match for algorithms in attempting to secure tickets online,ā reads a statement from FTC Acting Chairwoman Rebecca Kelly Slaughter, who worked on the BOTS Act during her time working under Senator Chuck Schumer. āThe settlements our staff negotiated with these alleged BOTS Act violators make clear that serious consequences will befall those who cheat fans out of a fair shot to secure tickets to live events.ā
Eminem premiered his āHigherā video on Saturday, ahead of theĀ UFC 257: Poirier vs. McGregor 2 event. The black-and-white clip shows Shady preparing to fight his demons (literally), and is interspersed with real UFC footage.Ā ESPNās Michael Eaves and UFC chief Dana White make cameos midway through, during a mock interview with the rapper ahead of his battle.
āHigherā is featured on Eminemās latest album,Ā Music To Be Murdered By ā Side B, which dropped last month. Watch the video below.
Eminem made the cut on several of our 35th Anniversary lists: he was named our 25th most influential artist of the past 35 years andĀ The Marshall Mathers LP, which turned 20 last year, came in at No. 21 on our list of the 35 Best Albums of the Last 35 Years.
Sarah Jessica Parker and her spaghetti. Illustration: Ryan Inzana
āI wanted to be here, be home as much as possible,ā says Sarah Jessica Parker of the past year in New York. It was here that she got her start as a young actress, and she has tried to pay Broadway back during the pandemic, raising money with her husband Matthew Broderick for the Actors Fund. Itās not just the actors struggling, she points out, but the whole ecosystem around the theaters: the chorus members, musicians, costume cleaners, and restaurants like Joe Allenās. āItās just absolutely devastating,āshe says, āand the theater will be the last place that comes back.ā Parker is also working on her entrepreneurial projects including her SJP boutiques and a wine collaboration called Invivo X, SJP. And, last week, HBO announced that Parker would be returning to her iconic role as Carrie Bradshaw in Sex and the City. But for now, sheās cooking a lot of her favorite matzo ball soup and letting her husband indulge his bean obsession.
Thursday, January 14Ā There is not typically a lot of regularity to my days. This is an unusual time because I feel like I actually have a conventional schedule, something Iāve almost never had for my entire life. Nobody is working in the theater. Iām not shooting anything yet. So I have time in a very different way.
I was at my store on 54th Street. My business partner, George Malkemus, always gives me hard-boiled eggs. He has a farm, Arethusa, which is an amazing farm. They make ice cream and cheese.
Lunch was a spicy-tuna sandwich and a Power Shake from Joe & the Juice. I would never have known about this place if it wasnāt for all the younger women who work at the store, because they know about apps and things. I still do not know how to order anything on an app.
We used to order lunch from Astro, a place that we loved. Iād been going there for years because I did so many plays at Manhattan Theatre Club, but it closed ā temporarily, hopefully ā in December. Itās awful. So I asked the ladies, āWhere do you eat?ā Theyāre all supersmart consumers. I learned about Joe & the Juice from them, and that sandwich is incredible.
Dinner was homemade, from-scratch chicken. I used a recipe from Julia Moskin, and I made soup with Joan Nathanās matzo-ball recipe. I love both of those writers; I love their whole history. They are people I go to all of the time for recipes. I have my Fannie Farmer Cookbook, which Iāve had since I was 18. Itās super-old-fashioned. Itās probably superāout of style, but I love it because itās what Iāve known.
Served it all together in a bowl with some fresh ginger and dill. We make chicken stock all the time here. We freeze it, and we like to use it in our rice. I wanted to make the Julia Moskin recipe because it seemed really simple and doable. It was absolutely beautiful. I was so proud of that broth.
We save everything here. Matthew saves every Parmesan rind. If we have shrimp, we always try to make a stock with the shells, because itās so good and smells incredible. We always save the bacon grease. We have fat from a Spanish ham that Matthew bought for my son for Christmas, which we saved for cooking. Iām like, Okay, we have a whole section of our fridge dominated by fats. Weāll be like, āMatthew, do we know when this is from?ā And heāll reply, āDoesnāt matter, doesnāt matter.ā
Itās a weird thing to talk about food right now. Iām not blind to how many people would love to be able to make matzo-ball soup. I canāt quite figure out how to talk about it. Iām one of eight kids. I grew up very poor. Going to the grocery store with my mom was this huge thing. She was like splitting atoms when she bought groceries. When I see food lines in Texas that are all 12 hours long for a box of food, Iām just gutted by it.
From the time I was 18 and I was on my own, I was like, I canāt believe I can go to the grocery store and buy what I want. So Iāve always had this thing about food meaning success. I can pay my bills; I can help people outside of my family who need it. I go to the grocery store and this, Oh, this is success. Food had this weird place in my life, but we also love food in this house.
Friday, January 15 I have weird eating habits. I donāt usually eat breakfast unless Iām shooting, and when Iām shooting, I have a full, massive, crazy breakfast. When Iām home and going to work on my own, Iāll get up really early and just have coffee.
Dinner was grilled lamb chops seasoned with butter, salt, and pepper. We had that with cabbage, petite peas, and mashed sweet potatoes with butter. One-hundred percent, eating food I love feels like a luxury. In our house, weāre constantly paying attention to the level of enjoyment at the table. Matthew will be like, āOh, the chops arenāt moving ā the chops arenāt moving fast enough.ā Everyone is like, āWe like them. Hold on.ā I donāt want to suggest our entire conversation at dinner is grading the meal, but we definitely are consciously enjoying it.
I drank Invivo X, SJP Sauvignon blanc, my own wine. We drink wine, but I still love a cocktail. To be honest, I really do love a Cosmopolitan. I donāt know how to make them well, but I genuinely love them. Strangely enough, it didnāt happen until long after I stopped shooting the show and the movies. I would be served them at restaurants, or people sent them over, and I was always very grateful. But I didnāt really drink the cocktail until after we finished the show.Ā I went to some place and had an exquisite one and then it started.
Saturday, January 16 Bagels from our favorite local neighborhood spot, Bagel Buffet. It used to be next to LifeThyme Natural Market, but then they moved. Now theyāre up between 13th and 14th Street. We go there for our bagels. We still believe in it.
Got mine toasted with Kerrygold butter wall to wall, and I added Grey Poupon mustard and four slices of Boarās Head salami. My son, husband, and I love salami. Love salami.
Also had a banana and a cup of coffee. I havenāt bought a cup of coffee outside the home since I did Once Upon a Mattress. Wait, thatās not true! On set, Iāll maybe have a coffee from Starbucks, but itās extremely rare. I just donāt understand how people get out of the house without having coffee in order to go buy coffee.
Even though I make the coffee at home, we do miss going out. We havenāt been eating anywhere except places that are super-close to home. Before the pandemic, we had started going to Chinatown more often with our children because we didnāt want them to miss out on an entire region that we think has some of the greatest cooking in the world. We miss it so much.
My entire courtship with Matthew took place in Chinatown. That was everything to us. Even before I moved to New York, my real father is from here, so we would come and always, always eat in Chinatown. That was it. We would go to Hong Fat and then Daveās Luncheonette for an egg cream. My mom had been going to those two places since she worked for Procter & Gamble as a salesgirl and would fly to New York. Sheād save her money to go to Chinatown because she probably read about it in New York Magazine or The New Yorker or somewhere.
With everything going on, talking about this feels inconsequential, but, to me, one of the greatest gifts in New York is the discovery of everywhere else. I used to make it my mission to get on the train for an hour and a half to get Georgian food. Fifteen, 20 train stops. My husband would be like, āHow many train stops?ā Only 22 more!
To me, being on the subway with a book, heading toward a meal, I honestly canāt think of anything better, with the exception of sitting in the theater or watching the New York City Ballet. Itās a vacation ā you are literally transported ā and I miss it so much it hurts. Itās not just our love for those places but everything that surrounds it: all those servers ā all their families who are counting on them to send money home. It goes on and on and on.
My husband soaks beans three nights a week. For real. He orders beans online. He gets massive bags of dried beans sent to our house. He makes very complicated, beautiful bean recipes. There are always beans in the house.
Matthew is not afraid of Diana Henryās recipes. There are chefs who share recipes that feel more doable to me, but her stuff is more complicated. I bought that book for him; he loves it and uses it all the time. I donāt look at recipes nearly as much as he does, and heās not daunted by a lot of steps. Heās very still; he doesnāt run around the kitchen like I do. Heās enormously patient, heās tranquil, and he loves it. Heās a fantastic cook. I cook all the time too, but I donāt read recipes nearly as much.
Sunday, January 17 I worked on Sunday because I knew I wasnāt going to work during the inauguration later in the week. Breakfast was a soft-boiled egg with a little salt and pepper, a mango, an avocado, and some cottage cheese.
I love cottage cheese with sliced tomatoes, or really good cherry tomatoes, and I love Breakstoneās 2-percent-fat cottage cheese. Love. I donāt like nonfat, because I think, Whatās the point? It breaks my heart.
Matthew made Bolognese sauce with spaghetti, served with romaine salad and sliced baby cucumber and a homemade dressing with red-wine vinegar, olive oil, shallots, and a bit of kosher salt and fresh ground pepper. More of the Sauvignon blanc.
Matthew makes Bolognese once a week; everybody goes crazy for it.
Heās determined to find the best recipe. Weāre all quizzed about it. Weāre all basically given a report card: What do you like about this one? Itās like heās looking for the holy grail in Bolognese.
Monday, January 18 I was thinking about the inauguration all day long and also what weād be having for dinner onĀ Tuesday. We have a pod of two friends. Because of their work, they get tested a lot, and our kids have to get tested. We planned to have them over for dinner, and I still hadnāt sorted out what weād get. Our dream was to have a big party, like everybody. But we couldnāt do that, obviously. Instead I made stock and matzo-ball soup and tried to figure out two nights of dinner.
Lemon potatoes are what I do. Thatās me looking for the holy grail. When you have them in Greece, or you have them in Astoria, they taste a certain way. Itās almost like they were maybe boiled and then baked, because thereās a smoothness inside to the potato. Itās not that you want it crisp, necessarily, because true Greek lemon potatoes have the skin on the exterior thatās not the actual jacket of the potato. Itās a very specific thing. And then: Are you going to use oregano? Thyme? What herb wonāt eclipse that strong lemon flavor? But then you donāt want too much lemon flavor, either. Lemon potatoes are me trying to get to Greece. Itās all so ⦠ahhh.
Top 10 Hollywood Movies Based On True Story l In Hindi
Top 10 Hollywood Movies Based On True Story l In Hindi
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Vice President Kamala Harris and Second Gentleman Doug Emhoff have announced plans to reside at Blair House, the presidential guesthouse, while repairs are completed at the Naval Observatory, the official VP residence.
Harris’ office said the vice presidential residence would be delayed Wednesday because of household maintenance and repairs to the chimney, Politico reports. It had been unclear where Harris would stay during the repairs..
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Harris purchased a condo in a luxury high-rise just north of Washington Circle, however, the heightened security caused added inconveniences for residents in the building, Politico writes.
Blair House, comprising 120 rooms, is a complex of four connected 19th-century townhouses located across Pennsylvania Ave. from the Eisenhower Executive Office Building and just steps away from the White House. It serves as the presidentās guest house for visiting dignitaries and elected officials.
The home is where President Joe Biden spent the night before his inauguration. Former President Harry Truman lived at Blair House while the White House underwent renovations post-World War II.