rpeura
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Post by rpeura on Jul 13, 2014 6:29:13 GMT -5
Hate to sink the ship but Rufus doesn't play for Adam's team... But they are cute. :-) I think that Rufus is a little taller than Adam. But look - Adam's shoulders!
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JazzRocks
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The Crazy Train is Ready to Roll!
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Post by JazzRocks on Jul 13, 2014 7:14:13 GMT -5
feral @feraltwirler 4h GETCHAOWN!!!! #Spicey #Unf #mine pic.twitter.com/2vVcWIQ4s8 SO CUTE!!!!
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Kamar
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Post by Kamar on Jul 13, 2014 7:39:59 GMT -5
OMG WHAT THE HELL AT FIRST SIGHT I WASN'T SURE IT WAS ADAM OMG THAT BOY IS GETTING PERFECTER THAN HE ALREADY WAS I CAN'T GUYS WHOAH WHERE THE FUCK DID MY PANTIES GO ?? JUST LOOK AT THAT ARM !!! *GASP* YOU . ME. BED. NOW !!!
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Post by rihannsu on Jul 13, 2014 7:49:47 GMT -5
I've been wondering for a while whenever I see people talk about Adam being "stiff" on stage or "hesitant" as some of the skeptics call it, if it isn't his posture that gives that impression at first. We are so used to his incredible posture that we think nothing of it but for people new to Adam they don't realize that he is ALWAYS like that. It is so incredibly rare (at least in America) to see someone tall who has such perfect posture even casually walking down the street. I mean look at the pics of him an Rufus. Even though the difference is not huge it is somehow striking. Rufus is not exactly slouching but his shoulders are rounded forward a bit and his head and neck are angled forward whereas Adam's head and neck are perfectly upright and his shoulders stay back giving him a regal air.
The more I think about it the more I think that people have to get used to seeing that posture and that's why they think he is "stiff" at first and then "loosens up". He isn't doing anything different but they are adjusting to seeing him.
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abriton
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Post by abriton on Jul 13, 2014 7:58:16 GMT -5
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Post by Deleted on Jul 13, 2014 8:09:52 GMT -5
His belt is definitely on the last hole:)
Rufus is so tall:) I'm glad they're friends.
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Post by Deleted on Jul 13, 2014 8:18:05 GMT -5
For anyone who doesn't watch orange is the new vpblack and therefore doesn't understand the dandelion nickname.....that is the nickname crazy eyes gave piper the first time she saw her.
piper is the main character sent to prison for a crime she committed ten years prior when she carried drugs one time for her then girlfriend (who turned her in to get a better deal for herself). Crazy eyes is this hysterical character who gets a crush on piper, hence the name dandelion because piper is blond.
The show is fantastic. So funny with strong women and it has Laverne cox, she just became the first transgender actor/actress ever nominated for an Emmy!
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taumbu
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Post by taumbu on Jul 13, 2014 8:40:53 GMT -5
I've been wondering for a while whenever I see people talk about Adam being "stiff" on stage or "hesitant" as some of the skeptics call it, if it isn't his posture that gives that impression at first. We are so used to his incredible posture that we think nothing of it but for people new to Adam they don't realize that he is ALWAYS like that. It is so incredibly rare (at least in America) to see someone tall who has such perfect posture even casually walking down the street. I mean look at the pics of him an Rufus. Even though the difference is not huge it is somehow striking. Rufus is not exactly slouching but his shoulders are rounded forward a bit and his head and neck are angled forward whereas Adam's head and neck are perfectly upright and his shoulders stay back giving him a regal air. The more I think about it the more I think that people have to get used to seeing that posture and that's why they think he is "stiff" at first and then "loosens up". He isn't doing anything different but they are adjusting to seeing him. That might come from his dance/movement training. His upper body looks so strong.
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Post by houselady on Jul 13, 2014 8:59:51 GMT -5
Queen + Adam Lambert at The Palace of Auburn Hillswww.theoaklandpress.com/arts-and-entertainment/20140713/concert-review-queen-adam-lambert-brings-magic-to-the-palaceby Gary Graff, The Oakland Press POSTED: 07/13/14, 9:04 AM EDT Adam Lambert and Brian May of Queen perform together at The Palace of Auburn Hills on Saturday, July 12, 2014. Photo by Ken Settle AUBURN HILLS >> Queen once asked the musical question “Who wants to live forever?” but the veteran British band is doing a pretty good job at that — and an even better job these days with “American Idol” finalist Adam Lambert in tow. Co-founders Brian May and Roger Taylor had a good run with Paul Rodgers between 2004-09, but it was hardly the vintage Queen experience, substituting Rogers’ hard rock grit for the pomp and bombast that was the group’s stock in trade with its late original frontman Freddie Mercury. Lambert demonstrated during the band’s show Saturday night, July 12, at The Palace that he’s cut from the same cloth as Mercury and more comfortable with the theatrics and camp — not to mention flamboyant costumes, black nail polish and eyeliner — than Rodgers, a prototypical jeans and T-shirt rocker, could ever be. The result was an unquestionably entertaining two-hour and 20-minute re-creation of a classic kind of Queen show, from the song ordering to the instrumental transitions in between. Queen + Adam Lambert mined Queen’s repertoire for the must-play hits and crucial album tracks, playing the music in the present-tense but also aware that it was a tribute show — which even included Mercury singing parts of “Love of My Life” and “Bohemian Rhapsody” via video and a warm montage of vintage Queen footage during the Taylor-sung “Days of Our Lives.” “On a night like this, I feel like (Mercury’s) here,” May told The Palace crowd. “I feel like he’s here, he’s very much with us.” Lambert hardly shirked under the imposing specter of Mercury in particular and Queen in general, however. He demonstrated a confident presence from the get-go of “Now I’m Here,” “Stone Cold Crazy,” “Another One Bites the Dust” and “Fat Bottomed Girls,” an impressive opening salvo that could have shown any number of chinks in his armor. But with five costume changes, impressive vocal gymnastics and plenty of cheek — he sang “Seven Seas of Rhye” and “Killer Queen” while chaise-lounging and chugging champagne at the end of a ramp extending from the stage — Lambert neutralized any doubts about whether he was the right man for the job. May, meanwhile, reminded the packed Palace just how important his guitar heroics are to the Queen sound, with plenty of extended solos — although his lengthy late-show feature before “Tie Your Mother Down” was a momentum-stopper. Taylor’s solo spot, a drum duel with son Rufus, was kept to a more tasteful length, while the Queen elder also provided a vocal foil for Lambert on “Under Pressure.” The troupe’s nod to now was a revised version of “Love Kills,” Mercury’s disco track from Giorgio Moroder’s 1984 soundtrack for the silent film “Metropolis.” But the past ruled throughout the night as “Radio Gaga,” “Crazy Little Thing Called Love,” “The Show Must Go On” and “Bohemian Rhapsody” — with the operatic section delivered via video — finished off the main show and the encore pairing of “We Will Rock You” and “We Are the Champions,” with May sporting a Made In Detroit T-Shirt, brought the concert to a triumphant conclusion. “I think tonight there is a lot of magic in the air,” the guitarist mused at one point. That may indeed by reason enough for Queen to live forever — or at least until it can come through with Lambert once again. MORE PHOTOS IN OUR MEDIA CENTER media.theoaklandpress.com/2014/07/13/queen-adam-lambert-at-the-palace-of-auburn-hills/#1ALSO posted in the concert thread.
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Post by houselady on Jul 13, 2014 9:41:39 GMT -5
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