The target audience
Just browsing, I’m always just browsing—at least I used to be. I tend to panic a little when a retail clerk pops out from behind a rack of clothes and inquires: “Can I help you look for anything?”
Just browsing, I’m always just browsing—at least I used to be. I tend to panic a little when a retail clerk pops out from behind a rack of clothes and inquires: “Can I help you look for anything?”
Brands such as Urban Decay and Mac, with their fancy, colourful palettes, have upped the ante when it comes to eyeshadow.
If you’re like me, you’ve probably often spent your free time contemplating what it would be like to replace or enhance your squishy human flesh with robotic parts.
Leftovers are the bane of anyone’s holiday season. New Years Eve, Christmas—it all works out to being one big mess of food that you’ll probably have to eat and/or freeze before it goes bad and you’re stuck with a lengthy bill and a pile of garbage.
What’s a new year without resolutions? Personally, I never make them, mostly because my determination is only as strong as my ability to remember what my resolutions were, which in case you haven’t guessed, is pretty terrible.
Many of us create goals every year—resolutions to improve our lives and ourselves.
When images of the new Thor hit the Internet, everyone was in a tizzy—not because the much beloved character would be getting a new series, but because Thor was now miraculously a woman.
Aside from improvements in graphics quality, the current console generation—PS4, Wii U, Xbox One—hasn’t seen any technological innovation in comparison to the last generation.
Based on a true story, Joy shows Joy Mangano’s (Jennifer Lawrence) journey from flight attendant to inventor of the Miracle Mop. Along the way, she has disputes with her product manufacturer about the costs of making the Miracle Mop and her patent, she tries to get the word out about her product on QVC with the help of Neil Walker (Bradley Cooper), and she spends time with her father, Rudy (Robert De Niro).
When I first stumbled across the Oh…Sir! video game, I immediately wanted to try it on my brother. The concept is quite simple: you get a friend or family member to come join you and then you insult each other.