Sexy! Jessica Simpson Wears *No Pants* For Date Night With Husband Eric Johnson - OK Magazine |
- Sexy! Jessica Simpson Wears *No Pants* For Date Night With Husband Eric Johnson - OK Magazine
- Dodgers' Walker Buehler Suffocates Legs In Super Tight Pants, What's the Deal?! - TMZ
- Annotated by the Author: ‘Pants on Fire’ - The New York Times
| Sexy! Jessica Simpson Wears *No Pants* For Date Night With Husband Eric Johnson - OK Magazine Posted: 14 Oct 2020 11:14 AM PDT ![]() Ooh la la! Jessica Simpson stripped down for her husband, Eric Johnson, and let's just say the 40-year-old has still got it. "Pandemic date nights look a little different these days," the "With You" songstress captioned a photo of herself in a black sweater, where she showed off her sexy legs and zebra pumps. "No pants required." Of course, people couldn't help but comment on her seductive post. "John Mayer is prob secretly drooling over this," one person said, referring to her ex. A second user added, "What the heck are you doing to look so freakin' fantastic?" UNFILTERED: CHELSEA HANDLER'S MOST OUTRAGEOUS NUDE PHOTOS Even though the blonde beauty — who shares Maxwell, 8, Ace, 7, and Birdie, 19 months, with Johnson, 41 — has been spending a lot of time with her man, she still took a moment to give him a shout-out in honor of his birthday on September 15. "Oh how I love you!!! When I was in my mommy's belly God formed me and placed you in my heart," she began. "It took me 29 years to discover my soulmate and colliding with your heart was our spiritual destiny. You are the human that all should aspire to be. A force of transformative inspiration to all that know and love you and are lucky enough to have you love them back. I am so excited to see all that you have been working on so beautifully to be introduced into the world this year! "Thank God ERIC JOHNSON was born this day 41 years ago! Happy birthday hubba hubba hubby of mine!!!" she added. DEMI LOVATO'S MOST NAKED LOOKS REVEALED IN 15 CLICKS Recently, the book author has been showing off her lean figure on social media. On September 28, she posted a photo of herself in gym apparel, writing, "Starting the week with a warrior mindset aligned with the beauty of the sunset." Prior to that, Simpson revealed that she was still able to fit into a pair of jeans right before she celebrated her big day. "I have kept these throwback True Religion jeans in my closet for 14 yrs (I'm not exaggerating!)," the mom of three wrote. "I figured that since I'm in the final hours of my 30's I'd give them another try, and hello 40, so nice to meet you." Clearly, Simpson is ~feeling herself~! |
| Dodgers' Walker Buehler Suffocates Legs In Super Tight Pants, What's the Deal?! - TMZ Posted: 13 Oct 2020 06:54 AM PDT ![]() Breaking News How did Walker Buehler fit into those super tight pants?!!? Seriously -- the Dodgers pitcher's pants were so tight during Monday's playoff game against the Braves, it was trending on social media!! Was it a fashion statement? Did someone misplace your usual pants? Was it uncomfortable? Growth spurt? SO MANY QUESTIONS!! The problem ... the Dodgers ended up losing the game 5 to 1 and Walker was in a pretty bad mood afterward. So, when a reporter asked Walker for a tight-pants explanation -- the pitcher shut the guy down and ended his press conference! "Not the time or place Michael," 26-year-old Walker said while shaking his head condescendingly.
Sure, tough question to answer after a heartbreaking loss -- but those pants were skinny as hell!! In fact, reporters were so desperate for answers -- they even asked Braves starting pitcher Max Fried if he had any insight! Sadly, he did not.
As for his performance, Buehler pitched his face off despite some almost-certain circulation issues ... striking out 7 and allowing just 3 hits in the loss. |
| Annotated by the Author: ‘Pants on Fire’ - The New York Times Posted: 14 Oct 2020 08:30 AM PDT ![]() We began our "Annotated by the Author" series, a feature of our Mentor Texts column, by inviting New York Times journalists to annotate their own articles to help demystify the research and writing process. Now, we're asking past winners of our student contests to comment on their winning work. To start, in honor of our Second Annual Personal Narrative Contest which began Oct. 13, we're featuring three winning narratives from last year's challenge, annotated by the students who wrote them. Varya Kluev, now a senior at Tenafly High School in Tenafly, N.J., guides us through the process of writing her winning personal narrative, "Pants on Fire," about her experience with lying as a fourth-grader. Why did she decide to write about this moment in her life? She told us:
In her comments, Varya explains how she set a "tone of confession" from the very first paragraph, why she loves metaphor and word play, and how she uses all five senses to draw readers into the world of her narrative. You might start by listening to Varya read her piece, following along in her original published essay (PDF). Listen to 'Pants on Fire' by Varya KluevVarya reads her winning personal narrative about her experience with lying.Then, explore Varya's annotations below, picking out the "writer's moves" she makes that you would like to try in your own writing. The paragraphs from her original narrative appear in bold, reproduced exactly as they were published, followed by her comments on them. I never kissed the boy I liked behind the schoolyard fence that one March morning. I never had dinner with Katy Perry or lived in Kiev for two months either, but I still told my entire fourth-grade class I did.
The words slipped through my teeth effortlessly. With one flick of my tongue, I was, for all anybody knew, twenty-third in line for the throne of Monaco. "Actually?" the girls on the swings beside me would ask, wide eyes blinking with a childlike naivety. I nodded as they whispered under their breath how incredible my fable was. So incredible they bought into it without a second thought.
I lied purely for the ecstasy of it. It was narcotic. With my fabrications, I became the captain of the ship, not just a wistful passer-by, breath fogging the pane of glass that stood between me and the girls I venerated. No longer could I only see, not touch; a lie was a bullet, and the barrier shattered. My mere presence demanded attention — after all, I was the one who got a valentine from Jason, not them.
This way I became more than just the tomboyish band geek who finished her multiplication tables embarrassingly fast. My name tumbled out of their mouths and I manifested in the center of their linoleum lunch table. I became, at least temporarily, the fulcrum their world revolved around.
Not only did I lie religiously and unabashedly — I was good at it. The tedium of my everyday life vanished; I instead marched through the gates of my alcazar, strode up the steps of my concepts, and resided in my throne of deceit. I believed if I took off my fraudulent robe, I would become plebeian. The same aristocracy that finally held me in high regard would boot me out of my palace. To strip naked and exclaim, "Here's the real me, take a look!" would lead my new circle to redraw their lines — they would take back their compliments, sit at the table with six seats instead of eight, giggle in the back of the class when I asked a question. I therefore adjusted my counterfeit diadem and continued to praise a Broadway show I had never seen.
Yet finally lounging in a lavender bedroom one long-sought-after day, after absently digesting chatter about shows I didn't watch and boys I didn't know, I started processing the floating conversations. One girl, who I had idolized for always having her heavy hair perfectly curled, casually shared how her parents couldn't afford to go on their yearly trip the coming summer. I drew in an expectant breath, but nobody scoffed. Nobody exchanged a secret criticizing glance. Instead, another girl took her spoon of vanilla frosting out of her cheek and with the same air of indifference revealed how her family wasn't traveling either. Promptly, my spun stories about swimming in crystal pools under Moroccan sun seemed to be in vain.
The following Monday, the girls on the bus to school still shared handfuls of chocolate-coated sunflower seeds with her. At lunch, she wasn't shunned, wasn't compelled to sit at a forgotten corner table. For that hour, instead of weaving incessant fantasies, I listened. I listened to the girls nonchalantly talk about yesterday's soccer game where they couldn't score a single goal. Listened about their parent's layoff they couldn't yet understand the significance of. I listened and I watched them listen, accepting and uncritical of one another no matter how relatively vapid their story. I then too began to talk, beginning by admitting that I wasn't actually related to Britney Spears.
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