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Han Solo VS Indiana Jones

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Post
#254287
Topic
10 Sexy Jobs Brought to you by MSN
Time

10 Sexy Jobs

By Candace Corner, CareerBuilder.com writer

Money, power, fame and glamour are just some of the elements that take a career choice from tedious to tantalizing, but there's a little more to it than that. In the same way that physical beauty is in the eye of the beholder, the definition of what qualifies as a "sexy" is a matter of what you find most attractive about a job's responsibilities.

Firefighters are sexy because their role requires bravery, and doctors have sexy jobs because they have commitment and credentials. Danger and intrigue can also factor in to what we find alluring.

If there's one other thing sexy jobs share with the perceptions of physical beauty, it's that society, for the most part, creates a general guideline for what makes a job hot. We find interest in the rich and famous and the jobs that seem to have the best perks.

Here are some examples of jobs that sizzle:

1. Showgirl
Why it's sexy: Their job involves performing dances in elaborate, revealing costumes onstage.
Where you'll find them: For the most part, it's Vegas, baby. They're onstage, in the dressing room or working out.
The pros: They're in the spotlight, in peak shape, and always look amazing.
The cons: It's harder than it looks, and involves constant exercise and a lot of practicing. Costume headpieces are heavy and people often confuse showgirls with being part of the sex industry.

2. Couture Salesperson
Why it's sexy: The rich and famous often shop high-end. The right store and location means there is a likely chance of working with A-list celebrities and other beautiful people.
Where you'll find them: Mostly in New York, L.A., London, Paris and Milan, but basically anywhere where wearing the latest trend is more important than the price tag.
The pros: It opens up opportunities for meeting the right people to launch a future position in fashion or as a personal assistant. And you can't beat the employee discount.
The cons: Retail is still retail, so expect to continue folding sweaters, re-organizing racks and assisting crabby customers.

3. Fashion Journalist
Why it's sexy: These people know the industry inside and out, attend all of the fashion shows and schmooze with designers and other influential people.
Where you'll find them: In the press seats by the runway and on location for interviews. While it's not mandatory, there are more people working in the major fashion capitals.
The pros: Amazing samples and the opportunity to meet some of the biggest names in the business.
The cons: Finding work can be difficult. Writing reviews in this industry means a lot of working hours and dealing with city expenses and difficult people.

4. Runway Model
Why it's sexy: They showcase the latest fashion and their job is to be beautiful.
Where you'll find them: On the runway and at fashion shoots, largely at the fashion capitals, but also anywhere there are designers looking to show the public their newest creations.
The pros: They have a reputation for being hot and they get paid for it.
The cons: Competition is fierce. The model look that's in-demand at the moment may not be what designers are looking for next season.

5. Hotel Concierge
Why it's sexy: They're smooth operators and know all the right people and places in the area.
Where you'll find them: At upscale hotel locations and around the grounds making sure everyone's happy.
The pros: Area businesses are more likely to treat you right, since you recommend new business.
The cons: Long hours and the not-so-glamorous duty of dealing regularly with difficult personalities.

6. Makeup Artist
Why it's sexy: They transform and enhance people's looks to be their best or most interesting.
Where you'll find them: At counters, on film sets, in dressing rooms and anyplace else where someone is going to be televised, photographed or doing a big appearance.
The pros: There is an amazing chance for advancement from counter rep to launching a signature beauty line or garnering celeb clientele once a reputation is established.
The cons: A client with a good experience will say a lot, but so will those with bad experiences. Word-of-mouth creates the biggest buzz, so this could work against a makeup artist.

7. Stunt Double
Why it's sexy: Stunt men and women defeat the odds while they leaping off buildings, cruising through fires and conquering car crashes. The thrill and the danger create a high.
Where you'll find them: Somewhere dangerous or somewhere relatively safe and doing something dangerous.
The pros: They get the reputation of surviving some of the most death-defying acts humanly possible.
The cons: Stunts don't always get the recognition they deserve in the public eye.

8. Magazine Photographer
Why it's sexy: They are paid to capture images of beautiful and interesting people and locations.
Where you'll find them: At photo shoots and in dark rooms. The majority of the work is in New York and Los Angeles.
The pros: Their creative vision pays off, literally.
The cons: Expensive and heavy equipment, finding the right frame and needing to talk your subjects into your ideas.

9. Club Owner
Why it's sexy: They are their own bosses and they create the atmosphere where people go to party.
Where you'll find them: Working the room and overseeing the scene.
The pros: As the owners of the area hotspots, everyone wants to know them. Reputation makes the business.
The cons: Trends come and go, and if club owners can't keep it interesting, patrons will party elsewhere.

10. Professional Investigator
Why it's sexy: Their job is all about uncovering confidential information, whether it's insurance fraud or cheating spouses.
Where you'll find them: Doing research, testifying in court or on location for surveillance.
The pros: Uncovering infidelities and getting justice for the romantically wronged is their bread and butter.
The cons: Serving subpoenas and other court-related work is the unglamorous side of their business. The work can also be sometimes perceived as seedy by the general public.


Candace Corner is a writer for CareerBuilder.com.


What a world we live in...
Post
#254071
Topic
BatMan - The Dark Knight
Time
Originally posted by: s7en
More tabloid hackism I'm afraid.

That's not Heath Ledger, they've just used a picture of Conrad Veidt from The Man Who Laughs - an oft used fan favourite Joker picture. Not to mention Bob Kane's inspiration for the the Joker himself.

Just google for Conrad Veidt Joker


You have to admit, Bob Kane chose wisely when he chose Conrad Veidt from The Man Who Laughs.
Post
#254039
Topic
The Lord of the Rings (Films vs. the Books)
Time
Originally posted by: Darth_Evil
Originally posted by: Han Solo VS Indiana Jones
I wouldn't wish Rick McCallum on my worse enemy.

If my worst enemy was madly homosexual and had no self esteem and needed to be lifted up by hearing how great he was 24/7, I might wish him on my worst enemy.


That sounds a lot like Bryan Singer.


I wish he'd just do a Hobbit movie. That'd be great...

Agreed.
Post
#254038
Topic
Comics Fans
Time
Anyone here ever read the comic books based on the Alien(s) series?

How about the original Dark Horse "The Mask" comic books that inspired the film anyone read them? I never read them myself, but from what I've read on the net, the original Mask comic books were very different from the film. The comics were originally of a much darker and more macabre nature, albeit dark/macabre with a sense of humor, as the Mask drove whoever wore it insane with absurdly comically violent results. In the first few issues, the Stanley Ipkiss character (played by Jim Carrey in the film) is presented as a neurotic loser who buys the mask from a store as a birthday present for his girlfriend, Kathy; when he tries the mask on, it turns him into the familiar green headed character and he goes on a killing spree, massacring various people for petty grudges, such as the garage owners who constantly overcharge him. The news people in the Mask series actually call him "Big Head". After a while, the Mask starts to take an emotional toll on Stanley; he begins verbally abusing Kathy, and she kicks him out of their home; he breaks in to steal the mask and she shoots him in the back, after realizing that he was "Big Head". Kathy then took the Mask to policeman Lt. Kellaway and told him what happened to Stanley, but he doesn't believe he story and tries the mask on as a gag, and in turn he becomes "Big Head"; Kellaway initially means to use the mask to fight evil, but eventually realizes that he can't control the mask and he buries it with Stanely Ipkiss's corpse. However, the Mask would resurface and the main theme of the mask comics after that was the mask being passed around various locations, worn by different people and resulting in lots of chaos and mayhem.

When the Mask film was being made in 1994, the original idea was to do it as a more of a horror movie, albeit one with a sense of humor, but when Jim Carrey was asked to play Stanley Ipkiss, the film was rewritten to be a comedy vehicle suited to his particular schtick.
Post
#253645
Topic
The Lord of the Rings (Films vs. the Books)
Time
Originally posted by: Tiptup
Originally posted by: Han Solo VS Indiana Jones

One of the few things I disliked about Batman Begins - I couldn't tell who was hitting who and where in some of those fights.


I know! I hated that. The movie was fairly perfect otherwise. I heard they didn't want to show batman fighting and looking silly like he had in the other movies, but I'm sure that even a silly approach would have been preferable to the totally-zoomed shots of nothing but shaky camera work. That can hardly be called art since there's actually nothing to see.


I didn't think Batman looked all that silly in the fights from the other films, but that's just me.
Post
#253533
Topic
The Lord of the Rings (Films vs. the Books)
Time
Originally posted by: Tiptup
Originally posted by: Han Solo VS Indiana Jones

Enya is ALWAYS good.

Yeah, I agree there. I own some of her albums and like listening to them. Some of the songs might be a bit dull at times but never anything bad as far as I know.

I've never heard bad Enya.

Originally posted by: Han Solo VS Indiana Jones

Don't virtually all films today have this problem?


Hmm, now that i think about it, the prequel Star Wars films were able to film combat pretty well. You could always see what was happening (if the Jedi weren't moving too fast) and the combat was always fun.

Fair enough.

But, yes, most other, modern films seem to have that problem.

One of the few things I disliked about Batman Begins - I couldn't tell who was hitting who and where in some of those fights.
Post
#253513
Topic
The Lord of the Rings (Films vs. the Books)
Time
Originally posted by: Tiptup

Enya is pretty good if you ask me,

Enya is ALWAYS good.


but I agree about the overdramatization. Too many of the scenes lacked all sense of subtlety in the way movement was portrayed or in the way emotional reactions like pain or worry were portrayed. It's as if Jackson believes his audience is too stupid to recognize anything that isn't as obvious as he can make it (the Star Wars prequels were also this way).

So the virus is spreading then?


And I hate much of the combat filmwork. What's so spectacular about seeing nothing but a soldier's chest as the camera twists and we pretend he's being hurt by Sauron's giant mace?

Don't virtually all films today have this problem?
Post
#253498
Topic
The Lord of the Rings (Films vs. the Books)
Time
I'm still working my way through the Lord of the Ring books, actually.

Speaking about the films just as films, I was annoyed with the 2nd one when the dwarf was constantly tripping over himself, falling behind when they're running, being told to lower his axe, falling off his horse, unable to get his armor to fit properly, saying "Toss me..." because Aragorn's holding out to make him say it, etc. I felt a lot of this stuff was really over the top and generally served no real purpose other than to make the dwarf look bad and make Aragorn and the elf look good by comparison. It also threw off the drama and tension of certain scenes.

A couple of the weepier speeches by Sam could have been left out. The scene in the Extended Edition of Two Towers where Eowyn gives Aragorn the crappy stew made her look bad.
Post
#252910
Topic
Comics Fans
Time
Originally posted by: Darth Chaltab
A lot of people were wanting Caveziel to play Superman, though I thought that might make the guy's head too big, playing both Jesus and Superman.
.
Anyway, I am of course looking forward to the Iron Man movie, though not as much as I am Spiderman 3 and The Dark Knight.

I was one of the many fans who wanted Caviezel to be Superman, and figured if he couldn't be Superman, maybe he could at least get in on a lesser hero. I know Caviezel would have made a better Superman than Brandon Routh. If you're gonna try to pass Superman off as a pop Jesus, who better to cast than a guy who played Jesus? Besides that, Superman should have been played by an older guy since he was missing for like 5 years and should have looked old enough to have prior experience as Superman.

Don't know if Iron Man stands a chance against Spider-Man 3 and Dark Knight, but I'll be there in the front row to see it.

Post
#252820
Topic
Comics Fans
Time
Originally posted by: Nanner Split
Originally posted by: JediSage
Originally posted by: Han Solo VS Indiana Jones
Don't know if there are any Iron Man fans here, or anyone who would care in general, but I heard Robert Downey Jr. got cast as Tony Stark/Iron Man in the upcoming film adaptation of Marvel's Iron Man comic character.


Yes, I head this and was shocked.


First Nick Cage as ghost rider, and now this?

I'm thinking there's a casting director or two out there that needs to get laid off.


I was kinda hoping Jim Caviezel would get cast as Iron Man/Tony Stark, simply because he looks like Stark (tall, dark haired, just needs a mustache/goatee) but oh well.
Post
#252464
Topic
Whoes The Better Director Romero Or Lucas?
Time
Originally posted by: sean wookie
Originally posted by: eros
Originally posted by: Lord_Of_The_Sith
Diary of the Dead sounds pretty cool ill have to check it out when you get it completed. Everyone has there own opinoins and i saw Land Of The Dead at the theaters and i thought it was the best out of them all. I cant wait until the Night Of The Living Dead 3D movie comes out November 10th! There also remaking Day Of The Dead and its suppost to be coming out some time in 2007. The remakes of Romeros films seem to be better than the original just take a look at the Night Of The Living Dead 1990 Remake it was in color and it was so much better than the original.


another idiot trying to bait people with stupid fucking statements, PISS OFF!


It's amazing what kind of shit the OT has degenerated to where you can't even have your own opinions.


Indeed.