Spanning fifty years in the career of celebrity photographer Terry O'Neill, this dramatic collection showcases two hundred of his finest portrait images, including those of Clint Eastwood, Brigitte Bardot, Tina Turner, Mel Gibson, Harrison Ford, Peter O'Toole, David Bowie, Paul Newman, Tom Cruise, and Robert DeNiro.
Conspiracy Theories in American History. ABC–Clio, p. 642. Lee, J., 2009. Celebrity, Pedophilia, and Ideology in American Culture. New York: Cambria. McCaffery, R., 2014. BBC Films' interview Linda Blair. BBC Films, 10 December 2010.
Based on the unique ways celebrities are treated, the book shares techniques you can use to treat your customers to a red-carpet experience, guaranteeing repeat business and stellar word of mouth.
Likewise, when Justin Timberlake released his album 20/20 in March 2013 the marketing focus was expressly on Timberlake “giving his fans the impression of direct contact and feeding them a steady stream of topics to amplify through ...
At the star-studded party celebrating the premiere of a movie based on one of her cases, Lieutenant Eve Dallas discovers the actress who played Peabody drowned in the lap pool and investigates. Reprint.
Starstruck brings together extensive statistical research and analysis, along with interviews with top agents and publicists, YouTube executives, major art dealers and gallery directors, Bollywood players, and sports experts.
From Brad Pitt and Daniel Craig to Jennifer Lawrence and Angelina Jolie, the hottest celebrities are ready for you to add color to their lives. Includes mazes, spot-the-differences, and other puzzles.
"Against the maelstrom of opinion and scholarship on what journalism is, was, and might be, this book considers how journalism and celebrity work together towards social, cultural, and political control.
If you enjoy reading about entertainment, business, entrepreneurship, and/or personal finance - you'll love CELEBRITY, INC. It's got all that - and more - in there.
This book explores the effect of celebrity on Americans' public and private lives. It examines how celebrities bring about change, intentionally and unintentionally, and how those changes affect the public that loves and follows them.
Yet, technology insider Alice Marwick contends in this insightful book, “Web 2.0” only encouraged a preoccupation with status and attention.