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"loudmouthed" Definitions
  1. loud, gossipy, or indiscreet; vociferous.
"loudmouthed" Synonyms

96 Sentences With "loudmouthed"

How to use loudmouthed in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "loudmouthed" and check conjugation/comparative form for "loudmouthed". Mastering all the usages of "loudmouthed" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Imagine the most awful loudmouthed bully in your high school.
"I'm a loudmouthed lesbian, which means mainstream invisible," she said.
He's a loudmouthed jerk from the Northeast, just like Trump.
"He scares me because he's a loudmouthed bully," Mr. Shank said.
This is not a great moment for the loudmouthed desk jockey.
MIAMI BEACH — Incredibly, the loudmouthed, bragging, insulting youngster had been telling the truth all along.
Back in 2013, residents interviewed in Daku described the colonel as hot tempered and loudmouthed.
Ahead, we ask a group of experts how to handle a loudmouthed bully on the job.
After four seasons of playing the loudmouthed and obnoxious Erlich Bachman, Miller exited Silicon Valley in 2017.
Honestly, there was so much loudmouthed soothsaying that it was hard to tell who was saying what.
A place where Cleveland played against Lonzo Ball and put up with his loudmouthed old man LaVar Ball.
Thank goodness Senator Collins spoke out for Mr. Kavanaugh, not allowing the loudmouthed mob to get its way.
"In the age of Trump, I don't think it helped that it was another loudmouthed American," he added.
Fire sign Sagittarius is the boisterous, loudmouthed know-it-all-of the zodiac—the sign of more, more, more!
Trump is who he is, a loudmouthed, unfiltered rage machine who trashes anyone and anything that gets in his way.
He's teamed up with the loudmouthed Chris (Alexis Manenti) and the comparatively laid-back Gwada (the preposterously handsome Djibril Zonga).
Camille discovers her mother's crimes by talking to Jackie, the loudmouthed family friend who knew about Adora's poisonings all along.
That being the case, loudmouthed, isolationist trumpery may just be a sideshow, an American exercise in après-moi-le-déluge escapism.
Another pair, Terry and Cherry (Danny Bernardy and Cristina Pitter), are garish, loudmouthed superfans, which is not even the right caricature.
People who do not watch Bourdain's show still tend to think of him as a savagely honest loudmouthed New York chef.
I am furious that a few loudmouthed interest groups force the rest of us to raise generations of children in fear.
It's a potentially meaningful relationship that explains why Gaston blankly tolerates LeFou's creepy handsiness, and why LeFou sticks with a loudmouthed bully.
Her only worldly comforts: a black and white cat, Fat Louie, and her equally unpopular, loudmouthed sidekick and best friend, Lilly Moscovitz.
I've always been fascinated by women who are loudmouthed, who have something to say, and how that's been a problem in history.
Katy Sullivan, a bilateral above-the-knee amputee since birth, portrays the loudmouthed Ani, who loses her legs in a car accident.
What's more, Loudmouthed white guys threatened by change aren't unusual TV protagonists, either for comedies set in the '70s or for animated sitcoms.
In the story — such as it is — a loudmouthed general orders one of his underlings to keep people from crossing the book's gutter.
The United States, attacked and wounded, tried managed decline, and at last, in wild frustration, elected a loudmouthed con man to its highest office.
The candidates took their cues from the chaos, as they diverted from substantive discussions to talking over one another, often egged on by the loudmouthed Mr. Dietl.
After portraying a killer in the director's 1994 film, Dance Me Outside, McDonald cast Dillon as Joe Dick, the loudmouthed vocalist of the titular has-been punk band.
Now Christopher Bonanos's " Flash: The Making of Weegee the Famous " (Holt) has displaced a host of fragmentary recollections and the loudmouthed, unreliable memoir, " Weegee by Weegee ," published in 1961.
Indeed, he is so respected that, as his loudmouthed friend Ralph (Charlie Day) points out, he could "literally hand the network a pile of shit" and get a green light.
There are the scores of Lakeview and Wicker Park–based Twitter eggs swiftly self-immolating over every late lead lost only to be reborn, like loudmouthed phoenix, for each fresh disappointment.
Out on the street, he has recorded dozens of videos in which he plays, basically, capitalism's hype man — a loudmouthed white dude-bro who is perpetually awed by advertising and luxury goods.
Her date is Lois Shadley: a loudmouthed, four-Splendas-in-her-iced-tea literary agent who is pushing Diana to write a memoir, one that wouldn't just be about the do-gooder stuff.
Fred's editor at the Advocate cautions him that he can be "a little too much," and the same goes for Rogen, who, as usual, both appeals and aggravates with his froggy, loudmouthed shtick.
These people—the loudmouthed pub bores of club culture, all cider-breath and fag-ash beards—are the people who'll snidely tell you that the things you enjoy aren't good like you think.
Mr. Dietl has made himself the loudmouthed class clown of the mayoral campaign, labeling the mayor, who is nearly 6 feet 6 inches tall, "Big Bird" and heckling him at some of his events.
Doesn't matter if a heckler hurled the n-word, pro athletes like Leonard Fournette need to WALK AWAY from trash talkers ... 'cause if they actually fight, a pro could literally KILL a loudmouthed normie.
My fellow Tea Partiers were a gallimaufry of Christian fundamentalists, libertarians, small-business owners (particularly accountants), Ayn Rand fans in "I am John Galt" T-shirts, with a modest sprinkling of loudmouthed racial bigots.
Meanwhile, just one of May's 26-strong cabinet, home secretary Sajid Javid, is non-white, the average age is 51, and a majority are loudmouthed egotists for whom the departed Johnson was merely a figurehead.
The same might be said of Vanessa Aspillaga's lovably overbearing Kathy, the loudmouthed but big-hearted Italian nurse, who is tending to Amy in the Queens, N.Y., institution where Maggie and Jacob come to visit.
Earlier that morning, another Republican governor — also once thought to be an obvious front-runner who has since been drowned out by the other loudmouthed candidate from New England, Trump — spoke at a cramped pizza shop.
My light bulb moment was the day in high school when my loudmouthed friend Kim pointed out the bloody vein protruding from the chicken leg I was eating, and I almost threw up on her Trapper Keeper.
"The similarity is that they are both loudmouthed New Yorkers who insult people, but otherwise they are not that similar," said Jerry Skurnik, who said he was the first paid employee on Mr. Koch's 1977 campaign for mayor.
Well before Carlson launched his career as a TV pundit, Fox's efforts to promote straight news with a conservative angle largely failed to gain market share on anything like the scale that its most loudmouthed opinion shows did.
Bateman was best known as the head of a TV network; now, one of his stars, the loudmouthed, archconservative news anchor Bill Cunningham, sees a chance to profit from the tragedy and goes on the offensive, spouting his opinion as "news," demanding answers.
In 238, the character was spun off into his own series, "Gomer Pyle, U.S.M.C.," in which Gomer, still bumbling but well meaning, joined the Marines and, on a weekly basis, tried the patience of his loudmouthed drill sergeant, Vince Carter (Frank Sutton).
Back in 2006, when he was a loudmouthed skinny jeans-wearing teenager, Antoine Reed would often be harassed and, on occasion, even bloodied up by the local gang members in Matteson, the poverty-stricken, south-suburban Chicago neighborhood where he was raised.
The New York-born playwright Stephen Adly Guirgis writes in tender, funny strokes about the loudmouthed and the down-and-out, from Rikers Island inmates ("Jesus Hopped the 'A' Train") to a retired cop (the Pulitzer Prize-winning "Between Riverside and Crazy").
If we're not careful, our fixation on him could have the unintended side effect of reaffirming a longstanding American myth: that the face of racism is a red-faced, loudmouthed, hate-driven bully who says in plain language that people who aren't white are bad.
The commercially savvy Mr. Ide has cast this book well: It features a hugely famous but scaredy-cat rapper; IQ's sidekick, a petty crook named Dodson; Dodson's loudmouthed girlfriend; and IQ's dead older brother, who serves as his conscience and really, really loved Motown.
" Greenblatt goes for the jugular with this particular parallel: "Drawing on an indifference to the truth, shamelessness and hyperinflated self-confidence, the loudmouthed demagogue is entering into a fantasyland — 'When I am king, as king I will be' — and he invites his listeners to enter the same magical space with him.
Because that's the last thing they want, is some loudmouthed kid with a lot of money who frankly is gonna build whatever he wants to build and enough, I'm not saying I have a lot, but enough credibility to get enough critical people to get it past that existential product market-fit phase, which we are.
I'll premiere some things, share some Bandcamp links to new releases, talk about older albums I like or that I've just discovered, and generally bring my Twitter feed to life (with less of an outright focus on politics—though, of course, if you give a loudmouthed anarchist feminist a column anywhere, things are bound to get a little political).
The "advice" she offered the Vixen was just a stone's throw away from the notorious language once espoused by Bill Cosby, or Charles Barkley, or Ronald Reagan — exhortations to black personal responsibility and rules of behavioral comportment; it implied that the Vixen, in her loudmouthed navigation of the world and her insistence on addressing racism, is lacking in self-discipline and respectability.
"Pretty Green Eyes" sounds like that magic moment six VKs and three pints in when your tie metaphorically loosens and you feel yourself on the verge of a kind of personal metamorphosis from downtrodden drone to loudmouthed free spirit, before reigning it in because you might cause a scene and causing a scene is the worst thing one can do.
When I was a kid, this kind of humor was very much in vogue: "All in the Family," whose main character was a grouchy, loudmouthed bigot, was the highest-rated show on American TV; Mel Brooks's "Blazing Saddles," a crazed fable about a black sheriff in a frontier town, was one of a handful of films in history to gross over $100 million.
It plays by the rules of C.K.'s previous work, in making his clueless dolt of a character the butt of nearly every joke and surrounding him with wiser women who know what's up — especially when compared to the various male characters in the film, who range from men in their 60s who lust for teenagers to a loudmouthed comedy star who mimes masturbation when his friend is talking to an attractive woman on the phone.
Merman played Mrs. Marcus, the loudmouthed, battle-axe mother in-law of Milton Berle. The film was a major box office success earning $60 million off a budget of $9.4 million, becoming the 3rd highest-grossing film of 1963. The film received 6 Academy Award nominations and 1 win.
His personality is hotheaded and loudmouthed, often causing his teammates exasperation because of his stupidity. He has a rivalry/friendship with Furuya Satoru, a fellow first-year pitcher. Because his middle school team was so weak, he is extremely level-headed in critical times. :The main balls are "numbers".
Marie Falco is Theresa's younger daughter, and Angie's younger sister. She works nights at a day care center, and doesn't like it. She is kind of a klutz, but she is well-meaning. Diedre "DiDi" Malloy is Angie's loudmouthed best friend and co-worker at the Liberty Coffee Shop.
FBI agent Sarah Ashburn is an expert investigator in New York City. She is disliked by other agents for her uptight and arrogant personality. Her supervisor, who is considering her for promotion, assigns her to a mission in Boston. She meets Boston Police Department detective Shannon Mullins, who is skilled but loudmouthed and hot-headed.
GFOTY has been characterised as "the most obviously political" act on the PC Music label. Her persona is animated and loudmouthed, as a lampoon of club culture. GFOTY's comments regarding race have been criticised, with Noisey removing some of her remarks from its site. She has likened herself to a female version of The Game: Penetrating the Secret Society of Pickup Artists.
No longer using his ghostly appearance and mannerisms, he became loudmouthed and shrill. Around mid-1997, Paul Bearer coerced Undertaker (WWF Champion at the time) into being his protégé again with the ultimatum of revealing a deep, dark secret from the past. During this time, Bearer made references to "the fires of hell." Feeling he had no choice, The Undertaker accepted after several weeks of resistance.
Side one closes with "The Container Drivers", which Al Spicer described as "[shattering] the stereotype of the noble trucker, depicting a world of loudmouthed ignorance and bowel-rotting gluttony". The second side opens with "Impression of J. Temperance", a "stark, mud-stained tale of cloning gone horribly wrong". "In the Park" deals with outdoor sex. "W.M.C. – Blob 59" combines lo-fi tape recordings of rehearsals and conversations.
She helps Fliss discover and kill the vampire lurking in Room 13. Ellie-May Sunderland: A girl in second year who begins acting strangely David "Trot" Trotter: A loudmouthed boy Gary Bazzard: One of Trot's friends Mr. Hepworth: A teacher Mrs. Marriott: A loud military style teacher. Sall Haggerlythe: An elderly woman who sits in the bus shelter near the children's hotel, and is widely believed to be insane.
Voiced by Vishal Roney Golden Joe is a loudmouthed (literally; all he does is shout) rapping wizard who has the ability to "come and go" as he pleases through teleportation. Shark refers to him as "All disappeary and shut." Joe places a lot of importance on the ability to rhyme. His voice is distorted by a reverb effect and he has a single gold tooth that has a dollar sign on it.
Her most constant opponent was a loudmouthed girl named "Crybaby" Boobie, who joined the strip in 1978. "Crybaby" had a tendency to cry and complain about absolutely everything. This trait, as well as the car horn honking antics of her stage-door mother, always tended to drive Molley crazy. Tired of always losing while playing doubles with Snoopy, she eventually refused to be his doubles partner and then she disappeared from the strip.
Ajay Bakshi (Shahrukh Khan) is a successful loudmouthed reporter, working for a reputed news channel. The rival news channel ropes in Ria Banerjee (Juhi Chawla) to bring him down. Ria is the antithesis of Ajay and uses her intelligence, charm and wits to get her work done. Pappu Junior alias Choti (Johnny Lever) is a don who is to be ousted from his own gang, owing to his inability to make it big in the crime world.
Following a five- year hiatus in acting, Rock was cast, without audition, in the two part Closure episode of Lynda La Plante's Trial & Retribution series for ITV in 2007. The following year, Plante cast her in another of her TV productions: The Commander. In 2006, Rock took on the role of loudmouthed hotel manageress Janey York in ITV's sitcom Benidorm. In 2012, Rock filmed "The Air That I Breath", based on the 1970s TV series Hazell.
Don't! It's only a people cub!' Well after the misunderstanding is cleared up, the Bears share their meal with her and set about trying to find out more about her. Papa Bear's best friend the Bobcat (named for the swing band headed up by his younger brother in the 1930s and 1940s and who was supposed to play the part, but couldn't due to other commitments) is a loudmouthed and bigoted braggart who has no trouble telling his decidedly unpopular opinions to anyone who would listen.
Peter Cook played the manager of the fictional ballroom where the show was supposedly taking place, and frequently made disparaging remarks about the acts appearing. Chris Hill played the "king of the kids", a loudmouthed character whose role was to stir up the live audience. Birmingham DJ Les Ross ran a hamburger stand while sharing rock trivia and hosting the Revolver Reviver spot. Revolver was recorded in front of a live audience in Birmingham, UK. Artists featured that subsequently became more famous were: Ian Dury & The Blockheads, The Jam, Elvis Costello and David Coverdale/Whitesnake.
Sapp contributed by creating an outrageous public persona, nicknamed "The Beast", under which he played an unhinged, loudmouthed, yet also humorous version of himself. Sapp's characteristical fighting style, based on aggression and strength. Sapp's second Pride match was against two-time RINGS Openweight Champion Kiyoshi Tamura. Though Tamura was a highly respected fighter who held wins over the likes of Pat Miletich, Jeremy Horn and Renzo Gracie, he was giving up 150 lbs to his foe and was quickly overwhelmed by the much larger American, succumbing to strikes just 11 seconds into the bout.
Christy eventually goes back to school and pursues her dream of becoming a lawyer, while Bonnie develops a romantic relationship with a retired stuntman named Adam Janikowski (William Fichtner), whom she eventually marries. Through it all, Christy and Bonnie rely on their support system from AA, including the wise Marjorie (Mimi Kennedy), the wealthy and materialistic Jill (Jaime Pressly), the submissive and sometimes overly- emotional Wendy (Beth Hall), and the loudmouthed but sweet Tammy (Kristen Johnston). Collectively, they help each other stay sober in the face of the conflicts they face in each episode.
Gimme Gimme Gimme centres on loudmouthed Londoner Linda La Hughes (played by comedian and director Kathy Burke) and her gay flatmate, actor Tom Farrell (played by James Dreyfus). A modern twist on the traditional "odd couple" format, much of Gimme Gimme Gimme's humour springs from its lubricious innuendo subplot, which comes from the mouths of both Tom and Linda. Linda is characterised by her red perm, white glasses, and plump, lycra-clad figure. Boorish, unattractive Linda is convinced she is a "stunner"; in series three she is finally diagnosed with reversed body dysmorphic disorder.
She takes a part-time job at a business college to buy a typewriter for John-Boy when the owner sees her answering and assisting callers at the unattended front desk. She is allowed to work her way through the business school and later becomes the executive seceretary to Mr. Pringle, and then personnel manager to loudmouthed businessman J.D. Pickett, a defense plant owner during the war. Later, she becomes the plant's assistant manager. Almost all of Erin's romances are ill-fated: the object of her affections either dies or proves to have poor character.
As well as working and performing in bands in London, including being an original member of the Industrial/Experimental band Test Dept and performing onstage with them at their debut gig (then leaving soon afterwards). Reeves also joined the alternative comedy circuit under many different guises. These included a loudmouthed American called Jim Bell, a beat poet called Mister Mystery and, eventually, "The North-East's Top Light Entertainer"—Vic Reeves. His stage show Vic Reeves Big Night Out began life as a regular Thursday night gig at Goldsmith's Tavern, New Cross (now the New Cross House).
Susie MacNamara (Sothern) is a former stage actress, a WAC veteran of World War II and single woman who works as the private secretary for theatrical agent Peter Sands (Porter) at the fictional New York theatrical agency, International Artists Inc. Susie's honest, good-natured attempts to help Mr. Sands, especially in romantic matters, always leads to comedic complications. Susie is usually assisted by her best friend, Violet "Vi" Praskins (Ann Tyrrell), the office's nervous and bumbling receptionist. In guest appearances, Jesse White played Mickey "Cagey" Calhoun, a chief competitor and loudmouthed agent business rival to Susie's boss.
Richard (Richie) Tozier was born on March 7, 1946 (novel), 1950 (miniseries), or 1976 (films) and is the son of Maggie and Wentworth Tozier. Richie is known for his loudmouthed and sarcastic personality, which led to him being called "Richie 'Trashmouth' Tozier" by his peers. Richie is good friends with Bill Denbrough and the other members of The Losers Club Stanley Uris, Eddie Kaspbrak, Ben Hanscom, Beverly Marsh, and Mike Hanlon. After Bill's younger brother Georgie is killed by Pennywise the Dancing Clown, Richie and his friends each have individual encounters with Pennywise before facing It collectively at Neibolt Street.
In January 1950, he was resident comedian of the BBC North Country variety feature, 'Variety Fanfare.' The radio series Club Night was launched in the BBC Home Service north region on 7 November 1950 where it ran for 52 editions until 6 June 1955. The programme was set in a fictitious workingmen's club 'oop north.' With his trademark cigar, straw hat and glasses, Dave Morris was the somewhat loudmouthed 'know all' club treasurer, ably assisted by comedy actor Joe Gladwin as Cedric and by Liverpool comedian Fred Ferris as 'The Wacker' whose primary ambition seemed to be to scrounge a drink.
Besser had substituted for Lou Costello on radio, opposite Bud Abbott, and by the 1950s he was firmly established as one of the Abbott and Costello regulars. When the duo filmed The Abbott and Costello Show for television, they hired Joe Besser to play Oswald "Stinky" Davis, a bratty, loudmouthed child dressed in an oversized Little Lord Fauntleroy outfit, shorts, and a flat top hat with overhanging brim. He appeared during the first season of The Abbott and Costello Show. Besser was cast for the role of Yonkel, a chariot man in the low-budget biblical film Sins of Jezebel (1953) which starred Paulette Goddard as the titular wicked queen.
201 Within three months, Skelton was back on the air. On December 4, 1945, The New Raleigh Cigarette Program premiered with the same sponsor, Sir Walter Raleigh Pipe Tobacco cigarettes, the same timeslot, Tuesdays at 10:30, and on the same network, NBC. The program also received the same high ratings and fan base of its predecessor. Upon returning to radio, Skelton brought with him many new characters that were added to his repertoire: Bolivar Shagnasty, described as a "loudmouthed braggart"; Cauliflower McPugg, a boxer; Deadeye, a cowboy; Willie Lump-Lump, a fellow who drank too much; and San Fernando Red, a conman with political aspirations.
It is later revealed that Horohoro's real name is , a name he refuses to call himself out of the guilt he feels for indirectly causing the death of Tamiko Kurobe, a girl nicknamed Damuko who became his close friend. Good-natured and cheerful, Horohoro forces himself to appear as a hot-headed and loudmouthed. He is highly secretive of his past, not even willing to tell his friends about it because of his feelings toward Tamiko Kurobe and her death. He is heavily burdened with the creed that his father taught him - that "the strong feed on the weak" - but finds resolve in his own tenacity and understanding that that same creed does not mean he should give up.
Irving was familiar to television audiences of the 1970s as a result of his memorable guest-starring appearance on All in the Family as Russ DeKuyper, the loudmouthed husband of Edith Bunker's cousin Amelia. He was also a regular in the cast of the short-lived 1976 sitcom The Dumplings. Irving also did some work in commercials for White Owl Cigars in the early 1970s. He appeared as a memorable Baron Mirko Zeta in the New York City Opera production of Franz Lehar's The Merry Widow, broadcast live in 1996 from the New York State Theater at Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts; during the intermission he talked about the operetta's history and historical inspiration.
Blood Hound, also known as Vampire Host, is a manga by Kaori Yuki. Appearing as a serial in the Japanese manga magazines Hana to Yume and Bessatsu Hana to Yume, the chapters of Blood Hound were compiled into a bound volume and published by Hakusensha in June 2004. Two more chapters followed in the January 2005 and August 2010 issues of Bessatsu Hana to Yume, as did a re- release in August 2010. It focuses on a naive, loudmouthed teenager named Rion, who investigates a host club full of vampires when she suspects they must be related to the disappearance of a lot of people in the neighborhood, including her best friend.
Ice Age is a 2002 American computer-animated comedy film directed by Chris Wedge and co-directed by Carlos Saldanha from a story by Michael J. Wilson. Produced by Blue Sky Studios as its first feature film, it was released by 20th Century Fox on March 15, 2002. The film features the voices of Ray Romano, John Leguizamo, and Denis Leary. Set during the days of the ice age, the film centers around three main characters - Manny (Romano), a no-nonsense woolly mammoth; Sid (Leguizamo), a loudmouthed ground sloth; and Diego (Leary), a sardonic saber-tooth tiger - who come across a human baby and work together to return it to its tribe.
The film follows the experiences of a promising athlete named Steve and his friends who live in a small southern California town. Steve's three friends, Duff, Seb, and T, all come from wealthy families and spend most of their time getting high, drinking at parties, and harassing Ahkmed, a convenience store clerk. After finding a gun in a girl's house, Duff starts violently pursuing a life of crime with T, the loudmouthed instigator with a Napoleon complex, at his side. After Duff kills a kid who volunteers at the police department, the story fades away and we come back to find Steve returning home from college a year later just after being successful in college baseball.
Physically, Foghorn Leghorn is depicted as a tall, overweight rooster with a Southern accent; he is easily the tallest of all the regular Looney Tunes characters. He has a bombastic and somewhat unrefined personality, added to which he shows a penchant for mischief. Aside from the Senator Claghorn reference, his first name "Foghorn" is indicative of his loudmouthed personality, while his surname "Leghorn" refers to a particular Italian breed of chicken. Foghorn often fancied himself a mentor figure to the smaller and younger characters he encountered, particularly Henery Hawk, tossing off bits of self-styled sagacity interjected with phrases like "Pay attention, son", or "Look at me when I'm talkin' to ya, boy", both of which borrowed heavily from Senator Claghorn's vernacular.
As the continuation of Mobile Suit Zeta Gundam, this series once again follows the story of the Anti Earth Union Group (AEUG) battleship Argama after Mobile Suit Zeta Gundams final episode. To fight off the Axis Zeon, now called the Neo Zeon, Captain Bright Noa recruits a group of teenage junk collectors led by the loudmouthed but powerful Newtype Judau Ashta to pilot the Argamas mobile suits. Now sporting a line-up of the behemoth ZZ Gundam and the returning Zeta Gundam, Gundam Mk-II and the Hyaku Shiki, the group is nicknamed the Gundam Team. As such, this became the first of a number of Gundam series where a team of Gundam mobile suits fight alongside each other regularly.
The shoe breakdown begins with elements from the first Tinker Hatfield years, Mars Blackmon; Lee's loudmouthed character first appeared alongside Michael Jordan for the release of the Air Jordan III, a sneaker whose immediately recognizable elephant print bookends the Jordan Son of Mars, with sectioning on the back end and towards the toe. Next the Air Jordan IV, which is pretty conspicuous in this hybrid release, shows up only in the form of the netting running below the laces. The sole construction is all Air Jordan V, as the coveted icy treatment splashes across the bottom and the angular 'teeth' of the midsole rear up towards the toe. The V actually extends its reach to the top end too, with the textured Jumpman tongue bursting out from the familiar see-through lacelocks.
No one from any of the neighboring communities ever ventures near Jerusalem's Lot, save a loudmouthed trucker who derides it all as nonsense in a fit of drunken bravado one night and goes into the area, only to never be seen again. Three years after the events of Salem's Lot, Booth and his friend, bar owner Herb "Tookey" Tooklander, attempt to rescue the family of a motorist named Gerard Lumley, whose vehicle had become stranded in a ferocious blizzard at night. At first, mildly contemptuous of Lumley for driving in such weather, both men are horrified when they realize that Lumley's vehicle is stranded in Jerusalem's Lot, and reluctantly drive out in an International Scout in an attempt to save his family. Instead, they barely manage to save themselves from Lumley's wife and daughter, who have been turned into vampires.
Richard Tozier is a fictional character created by Stephen King and one of the main characters of his 1986 novel It. The character is a member of "The Loser's Club" and is seen to be the comic relief of the group; however, his loudmouthed antics often get him in trouble, leading to him being called "Richie 'Trashmouth' Tozier" and his friends often using the phrase "Beep Beep Richie" when they want him to be quiet. He was portrayed by Seth Green as a child and Harry Anderson as an adult in the 1990 miniseries adaptation of the novel, and by Ankur Javeri as a child and Nasirr Khan as an adult in the novel's 1998 television series adaptation. He was later portrayed by Finn Wolfhard as a child and Bill Hader as an adult in the 2017 remake and its 2019 sequel.
Upon returning to radio, Skelton brought with him many new characters that were added to his repertoire: Bolivar Shagnasty, described as a "loudmouthed braggart"; Cauliflower McPugg, a boxer; Deadeye, a cowboy; Willie Lump-Lump, a fellow who drank too much; and San Fernando Red, a conman with political aspirations. By 1947, Skelton's musical conductor was David Rose, who would go on to television with him; he had worked with Rose during his time in the army and wanted Rose to join him on the radio show when it went back on the air. On April 22, 1947, Skelton was censored by NBC two minutes into his radio show. When he and his announcer Rod O'Connor began talking about Fred Allen being censored the previous week, they were silenced for 15 seconds; comedian Bob Hope was given the same treatment once he began referring to the censoring of Allen.
Gina Norris (Queen Latifah) is a widowed hairstylist who has moved from Chicago to Atlanta so her daughter Vanessa (Paige Hurd) can attend a private music school. She's made a name for herself as a stylist, but after her self-centered and domineering boss, Jorge (Kevin Bacon), criticizes her decisions, she leaves and sets up her own shop, purchasing a run-down salon with the help of a loan officer. Upon buying the salon, she runs into instant barriers: loudmouthed young stylists, older clients who are fixed in their habits, an energetic young boy named Willie (Lil' JJ) who constantly flirts with women (including Vanessa) while filming for his next music video, people wary of her ability as a hairdresser, and the constant trouble her rebellious sister-in-law, Darnelle (Keshia Knight Pulliam), finds herself in. Gina issues an ultimatum with Darnelle to clean up her act and start paying her back or she will be evicted.
Fritz Feld, Ralph Sanford, Philip Van Zandt, Fred Kelsey, and Leo White made frequent appearances; semi-regulars were Clifton Young and later Del Moore as Joe's loudmouthed pal Homer, Rodney Bell as dumb- bell "helper" Marvin, and Ted Stanhope as an all-purpose authority figure (desk clerk, salesman, businessman, etc.). Many of the shorts are domestic comedies, with "the original hard-luck kid" McDoakes insisting on carrying a project through, with often disastrous consequences. So You Want to Build a Model Railroad has Joe so engrossed in the hobby that it overruns his entire apartment; So You Want to Be a Cowboy has Joe going to a movie, and creating a disturbance when he envisions himself as a cowboy hero; So You're Going on a Vacation has Joe struggling with a camping outfit. Warner contract player Jane Harker co-starred as Joe's wife, Alice, in eight comedies, beginning with So You Want to Play the Horses in 1946 and ending with So You Want to Build a House in 1948.

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