“Our legendary personalities are evergreen ‘brands’ with the benefit of worldwide recognition,” reads a message on the Richman agency’s website. Guardian UK Article *vomits* Where is the line drawn between “public figure” and “celebrity”? How can a dead person have an agent, particulary where there are no specific works concerned other than a sense of character? It’s one thing to insist that Duck Soup is a work that should be protected (which any more simply means controlled by whomever has the most buX0rs), but shouldn’t personalities and such pass into the public domain as well? ( boingboing : Bill Gates 0wns Einstein, Groucho , Freud, Asimov, Fuller, et al )
Naturally. That's because face-punch cancels out Capoeria.
ReplyDeleteUnless the enemy has studied his Agrippa... which that guy hadn't.
I'm not left-handed.
ReplyDeleteThat's from a movie called "Never Back Down" which I happened to watch last night. Sort of a modern day Karate Kid and not a bad movie at all.
ReplyDeleteDarn it! From the lack of editing, poor lighting, and weird angle, I assumed it was footage from a street fight event.
ReplyDelete