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It’s the most unlikely holiday movie of the year, but releasing The Road on pre-Thanksgiving Wednesday makes sense on at least one level. Full Article at Wired
Viggo Mortensen isn't just a celebrity, as you're probably aware. He isn't even just a fine actor. He's also a painter, a poet and a photographer, and he makes records, too, often in collaboration with Buckethead, the masked wizard guitarist. Full Article at VH1
Thomas L. Friedman, NY Times columnist and Pulitzer Prize winning author, gives a speech during the Swiss Economic Forum (SEF), in Thun, Switzerland, Thursday, May 14, 2009. View Photo »
Music Director Robert Spano will lead the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra in the World Premiere of Pulitzer Prize-winning composer-musician Wynton Marsalis’s new symphonic work, Blues Symphony. The new work celebrates the blues through the prism of different moments in American history, and will be the first...
IF Michael Parks, a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist and former editor of the Los Angles Times, were editing a Shanghai newspaper today, he reckons he would have six to eight reporters overseas in cities that matter to Shanghai. Full Article at Shanghai Daily
Viggo Mortensen isn't your average Hollywood leading man. He speaks no fewer than five languages, writes poetry, paints, plays music and was once a truck driver in Denmark. Full Article at OH NO THEY DIDN'T
One of journalism's well-documented occupational hazards is a tendency to dwell too long on the negative. Golf journalism is no different, especially in a year that has been as challenging to the game as this one. Full Article at Golf Digest
Thomas L. Friedman, NY Times columnist and Pulitzer Prize winning author, gives a speech during the Swiss Economic Forum (SEF), in Thun, Switzerland, Thursday, May 14, 2009. View Photo »
I was in a miserable time emotionally — my marriage breaking up, my mother dying of Alzheimer's. But I was cocky professionally; I had won the Pulitzer Prize, I had a book coming out. I thought I could do a huge job that was beyond me.
This Thanksgiving weekend you’ll probably find yourself in line for The Road, the cinematic adaptation of Cormac McCarthy’s Pulitzer Prize-winning novel. In many ways, it’s seemingly everything one could want in a holiday movie. Full Article at Flavorwire
The Road, a sobering film adaptation of the Pulitzer Prize-winning novel by Cormac McCarthy, author of No Country for Old Men and All The Pretty Horses, is a national Thanksgiving holiday theatrical release opening Wednesday. Full Article at Huffington Post
The Pulitzer Prize, pronounced /ˈpʊlɨtsɚ/ PULL-it-sər, is an American award regarded as the highest national honor in print journalism, literary achievements and musical composition. It is administered by Columbia University in New York City. Full Article
U.S. author Marilynne Robinson smiles during an interview with Reuters in central London June 4, 2009. Robinson won the Orange Prize for Fiction on Wednesday for "Home", the companion piece to her acclaimed "Gilead".
View Photo »U.S. author Marilynne Robinson smiles during an interview with Reuters in central London June 4, 2009. Robinson won the Orange Prize for Fiction on Wednesday for "Home", the companion piece to her acclaimed "Gilead".
View Photo »U.S. author Marilynne Robinson smiles during an interview with Reuters in central London June 4, 2009. Robinson won the Orange Prize for Fiction on Wednesday for "Home", the companion piece to her acclaimed "Gilead".
View Photo »FILE - In this Feb. 11, 2007 file photo, historian David Herbert Donald speaks after President Bush awarded him with the 2007 Ford's Theatre Lincoln Medal during a ceremony at the White House in Washington.
View Photo »FILE - In this May 10, 2005 file photo, historian David Herbert Donald, who has written and edited about 30 books on President Lincoln, poses in the library of his home in Lincoln, Mass.
View Photo »John Filo, the photographer who captured the aftermath of the May 4, 1970, shootings of students by Ohio National Guardsmen on the campus of Kent State University, hugs Mary Ann Vecchio, the young woman featured in his Pulitzer Prize-winning photograph, during commemoration events Monda...
View Photo »FILE - In this Sunday, March 8, 2009 file photo, US writer Alice Walker is seen during a visit in Beit Hanoun in the northern Gaza Strip.
View Photo »Alice Walker speaks while touring her archives at Emory University, Thursday, April 23, 2009, in Atlanta. Emory University is unveiling the literary archives of Pulitzer Prize-winning author Alice Walker for the first time since she donated the collection to the Atlanta school a year ago.
View Photo »Alice Walker stands in front of a picture of herself from 1974 as she tours her archives at Emory University, Thursday, April 23, 2009, in Atlanta.
View Photo »Alice Walker stands in front of a picture of herself from 1974 as she tours her archives at Emory University, Thursday, April 23, 2009, in Atlanta.
View Photo »Alice Walker looks at a display with her archives at Emory University, Thursday, April 23, 2009, in Atlanta.
View Photo »In this November 2008 photo provided by the New York Times, American soldiers prepare for a possible Taliban attack at a small castle at their base, Combat Outpost Lowell, in Kamu, Afghanistan, near the border with Pakistan and a frequent target of attacks.
View Photo »Four-year-old Venecia Lonis, now 16 pounds after two weeks of care, shown Nov. 21, 2008, was so malnourished when she first reached a clinic in Martissant, Haiti, that her mother was planning her funeral.
View Photo »Writer Lynn Nottage, author of the play "Ruined", celebrates winning the 2009 Pulitzer Prize for Drama in New York April 20, 2009.
View Photo »Writer Lynn Nottage (C), author of the play "Ruined", celebrates winning the 2009 Pulitzer Prize for Drama in New York April 20, 2009.
View Photo »Writer Lynn Nottage, author of the play "Ruined", celebrates winning the 2009 Pulitzer Prize for Drama in New York April 20, 2009.
View Photo »Writer Lynn Nottage, author of the play "Ruined", celebrates winning the 2009 Pulitzer Prize for Drama in New York April 20, 2009.
View Photo »Miami Herald photographer Patrick Farrell (2nd L) celebrates winning the 2009 Pulitzer Prize Award for Breaking News Photography, for his series of coverage of Haiti after Hurricane Ike, inside the Herald newsroom in Miami, Florida, April 20, 2009.
View Photo »Reporter Joe Brown embraces reporter Alexandra Berzon as she returns to the newsroom to learn of the Las Vegas Sun's win of the Pulitzer Prize for public service for exposing a high death rate among construction workers on the Las Vegas Strip, at the Las Vegas Sun offices in Henderson,...
View Photo »The newsroom greets reporter Alexandra Berzon upon learning of the Las Vegas Sun's win of the Pulitzer Prize for public service for exposing a high death rate among construction workers on the Las Vegas Strip, at the Las Vegas Sun offices in Henderson, Nevada, April 20, 2009.
View Photo »Reporter Alexandra Berzon calls her parents to share news of the Las Vegas Sun's win of the Pulitzer Prize for public service for exposing a high death rate among construction workers on the Las Vegas Strip, at the Las Vegas Sun offices in Henderson, Nevada, April 20, 2009.
View Photo »Assistant managing editor Patrick McDonnell (L) celebrates with editorial writer Matt Hufman upon learning of the Las Vegas Sun's win of the Pulitzer Prize for public service for exposing a high death rate among construction workers on the Las Vegas Strip, at the Las Vegas Sun offices i...
View Photo »Reporter Emily Richmond (L) embraces reporter Alexandra Berzon as she learns of the Las Vegas Sun's win of the Pulitzer Prize for public service for exposing a high death rate among construction workers on the Las Vegas Strip, at the Las Vegas Sun offices in Henderson, Nevada, April 20,...
View Photo »Reporter Liz Benston (L) and deputy managing editor Drex Heikes (R) congratulate reporter Alexandra Berzon as Berzon learns of the Las Vegas Sun's win of the Pulitzer Prize for public service for exposing a high death rate among construction workers on the Las Vegas Strip, at the Las Ve...
View Photo »Deputy managing editor Drex Heikes (L) congratulates editorial page writer Michael Campbell upon learning of the Las Vegas Sun's win of the Pulitzer Prize for public service for exposing a high death rate among construction workers on the Las Vegas Strip, at the Las Vegas Sun offices in...
View Photo »U.S. author Marilynne Robinson smiles during an interview with Reuters in central London June 4, 2009. Robinson won the Orange Prize for Fiction on Wednesday for "Home", the companion piece to her acclaimed "Gilead".
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- missykimmy
13 hours ago
- surfindolphin7
13 hours ago
They say heartbreak helps you write better. I should have a Pulitzer prize winning novel by now.
- WriteinBK 14 hours ago
i wish i wrote down half of the stuff i think cuz id have a pulitzer prize by now
- millbrook_king 14 hours ago