January 2, 2010
· Filed under Manhattan adult entertainment
According to a 2008 telephone poll of 1,025 adults by USA Today/Gallup, one in three Americans would forgive their spouse for infidelity, while nearly two-thirds say they would divorce their spouse.
“The obvious deal-breaker should be that you can’t forgive something until it has stopped. And then whatever the issues are have to be treated, so it doesn’t happen again,’’ says Terry Real, a family therapist and founder of the Relational Life Institute in Arlington.
What’s forgivable and what’s not depends on the circumstances, says Real, who has written several books on marriage. At one end of the spectrum is the sex addict who has multiple partners, including unprotected sex with prostitutes and then has unprotected sex with his wife. On the other end, says Real, “is a guy who has a one-night stand on the road during a 35-year marriage 25 years ago’’ and the wife just found out.
See the full article from “Boston Globe”
January 2, 2010
· Filed under Manhattan strip clubs
In 1951, at 22 a stage veteran, he co-founded Totem Theatre with Stuart Baker as an outdoor summer stock company in West Vancouver’s Ambleside Park. The Gold Dust Twins, as they became known, soon had a permanent venue in a downtown union hall at Dunsmuir and Beatty streets, where they produced plays ranging from Charley’s Aunt to No Exit.
Arngrim was a natural promoter — he knew it mattered that Totem Theatre patrons could have a drink at the Beatty Street theatre’s adjoining Press Club and that a stunt involving a stripper’s horse arriving in the theatre as a ticketed patron would get everybody talking. Arngrim once rented an elephant to promote a production of The Man Who Came To Dinner, but the effort ran into difficulty when the elephant’s owner insisted that it do tricks, while Arngrim, who left town before he’d paid for the elephant’s services, wanted the animal to simply stand outside the theatre.
See the full article from “Kelowna.com”
January 2, 2010
· Filed under Manhattan strip clubs
In 1951, at 22 a stage veteran, he co-founded Totem Theatre with Stuart Baker as an outdoor summer stock company in West Vancouver’s Ambleside Park. The Gold Dust Twins, as they became known, soon had a permanent venue in a downtown union hall at Dunsmuir and Beatty streets, where they produced plays ranging from Charley’s Aunt to No Exit.
Arngrim was a natural promoter — he knew it mattered that Totem Theatre patrons could have a drink at the Beatty Street theatre’s adjoining Press Club and that a stunt involving a stripper’s horse arriving in the theatre as a ticketed patron would get everybody talking. Arngrim once rented an elephant to promote a production of The Man Who Came To Dinner, but the effort ran into difficulty when the elephant’s owner insisted that it do tricks, while Arngrim, who left town before he’d paid for the elephant’s services, wanted the animal to simply stand outside the theatre.
See the full article from “Kelowna.com”
January 2, 2010
· Filed under Manhattan strip clubs
Meanwhile, there is more fallout from alleged mistress Jamie Jungers’ profanity-laced radio interview Monday. On Tuesday, a Radar Online reporter was interviewed on the same show and said Jungers is lying about not having nude photos of Woods and is lying about her ex-fiancee being the cause of her relationship with Woods being made public. Click here for more details.
In a profanity-laced interview on San Francisco station KNEW and Los Angeles-based KFI radio, Jamie Jungers angrily denied that she has naked photos of Tiger Woods. Details here and listen to interview in audio link here.
The New York Post reports that Woods was a regular at a New York City strip club but always acted like a strip club “virgin,” like he had never been in a strip club before. The Post and the New York Daily News are also reporting that the Stanford alum was surrounded by a group of assistants who covered for him but also tried to warn him of the risks he took with image. Details here.
See the full article from “Examiner.com”