Interests
T.V.
SUNDAY
Cold Case
Brothers & Sisters
The Tudors
Brotherhood
In Plain Sight
Gene Simmons Family Jewels
MONDAY
DWTS
The Closer
Saving Grace
Raising the Bar
TUESDAY
Reaper
WorkOut
Janice Dickinson Modeling Agency
Flipping Out
The Mentalist
Without A Trace
WEDNESDAY
Shear Genious
Damages
THURSDAY
Ugly Betty
Supernatural
Burn Notice
Kathy Griffin- My Life On The D-List
FRIDAY
Numb3rs
Psych
Real Time with Bill Maher
MISCELLANEOUS
Cash In The Attic
Nancy Grace
The Graham Norton Effect
T.V. Classics
COMEDY:
All In The Family
Maude
Roseanne
Kate & Allie
The Cosby Show
DRAMA:
Dallas
Knots Landing
ER
Falcon Crest
Ironside
Muder She Wrote
Music
Favorite Music:
Levi Kreis
kd lang
Ari Gold
Enigma
R.E.M.
Patti LuPone
Josh Groban
Michael Buble
The Mamas & The Papas
The Doors
Bruce Springsteen
Simon & Garfunkel
Ella
The Carpenters
Maroon 5
Miss Tina Turner
Telling on Trixie
Rufus Wainwright
Movies
John Grisham:
The Firm
The Pelican Brief
The Client
The Chamber
A Time to Kill
The Rainmaker
Runaway Jury
The Gingerbread Man
Christmas with the Kranks
Drama:
12 Angry Men
All About Eve
And The Band Played On
The Best Years of our Lives
Eoropa, Europa
I Could Go On Singing
Inherit The Wind
The Joy Luck Club
Judgement at Nuremburg
Kundun
Little Buddha
Loggerheads
The Rose Garden
Comedy:
The Adventures of Priscilla Queen of the Dessert
Adams Rib
The Philadelphia Story
Action/Adventure:
Star Wars Series
Harry Potter Series
The Lord of The Rings Trilogy
The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion The Witch and The Wardrobe
Eragon
Documentry:
Bowling For Columbine
Farenheit 911
Sicko
Hacking Democracy
This Film Is Not Yet Rated
Idols
Levi Kreis: Born into a Southern Baptist Family he was a born again christian who was gay. His family sent him to Exodus a "we will turn you straight again" program, he also attended a christian bapist college where when his gayness was revealed he was kicked out. He moved to L.A. where as a musician he was offered a label contract, but when told to hide his true self he turned it down. He is still kicking
Robert F. Kennedy: (1925-1968), A champion for the underclasses, enviroment, and for peace
Bayard Rustin: 1910-1987), American civil rights activist. Born in Westchester, Pennsylvania, Rustin was active in civil rights and pacifism movements in the early 1940s. He worked for the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE), a civil rights organization, and the Fellowship of Reconciliation, a pacifist group. In 1953 he became executive secretary of another pacifist organization, the War Resisters’ League.
Rustin worked as an assistant to Martin Luther King, Jr., from 1955 to 1960 during the civil rights movement. He was also a close associate of A. Philip Randolph, a black labor leader. Rustin was a chief organizer of the March on Washington in 1963. He was one of the first people to declare publicly that blacks needed to work toward economic equality as well as civil equality. In 1965 Rustin founded the A. Philip Randolph Institute to promote educational, labor, and civil rights reforms. He continued this worwork until his death in 1987.
Clarence Darrow (1857-1938), American lawyer, best known for his defense (1925) of John Scopes, a Tennessee high school teacher charged with teaching the theory of evolution. The play and movie Inherit the Wind were based on this famous trial.
Clarence Seward Darrow was born in Kinsman, Ohio. He was admitted to the bar in 1878; from 1888 until his retirement in 1927, he practiced law in Chicago, acting as defense counsel in some of the most widely publicized cases of his time. His defense of the American labor organizer Eugene V. Debs in the American Railway Union case (1894) first brought him to national attention. Although criminal cases remained one of his chief sources of income, he participated in various cases involving labor disputes or social issues, championing the cause of the underprivileged. Among the famous trials in which he served as counsel for the defense were the trial of two brothers charged with dynamiting the Los Angeles Times building and the trial of college students Nathan Leopold and Richard Loeb, charged with the motiveless killing of schoolboy Bobby Franks. Darrow opposed capital punishment, and no client he defended was sentenced to death. After retirement, he devoted himself to lecturing and writing. His works include Crime, Its Cause and Treatment (1925) and The Story of My Life (1932).