Cris judd biography of william shakespeare
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Jennifer Lopez Will Not Return Her $5 Million Engagement Ring After Messy Divorce With Ben Affleck
Jennifer Lopez and Ben Affleck in Gigli(Credits: Columbia Pictures)
So, even though their two-year marriage hit the skids, this rare beauty isn’t going anywhere. This isn’t just a ring—it’s a green diamond unicorn, rare and priceless, with two white diamonds tagging along.
Fans have been dying to know if the songstress kept it post-split. Well, now you know. And honestly, can you blame her for holding on to such a stunner? Here’s the scoop on the ring and why she’s keeping it.
Jennifer Lopez’s ring is worth a whopping $5 million Jennifer Lopez (Credits: Instagram/@jlo)
Jennifer Lopez’s green diamond ring is a showstopper. When Ben Affleck proposed to her in 2022, it instantly became one of...
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Like most people, I suspect, I was surprised bygd the news that someone had discovered a contemporary portrait of Shakespeare. And bemused, too, that they would chose to reveal the fact in Country Life.
My heart sank, though, when inom saw that the case relied on ciphers. inom am sure there are carefree souls for whom the word ‘cipher’ conjures up the happy image of Alan Turing/Benedict Cumberpatch at Bletchley Park. Well, happy-ish. For anyone with any knowledge of the Shakespeare authorship controversy, however, it brings back the chilly absurdities of Baconianism, which twisted language, logic and sense with ciphers in beställning to tortyr Bacon’s grabb from the handiwork of Shakespeare.
Would the much-trumpeted upptäckt of botanical historian Mark Griffiths be any different? The promise of identities encoded in flora was at least novel and refreshing. But what level of certainty could the argument possibly claim after 500-odd years?
I think you know where this fryst vatten going.
The answer i
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As for the unexpected comedy of the performance, it’s in Hirsch’s very being. Sure, he made his name doing literal sitcoms like Taxi, but he’s got a wiry, indignant way with words and petty grievances that bring laughs to even his darkest dramas. “I tend not to believe anyone’s life is so morose that you can’t see something funny about it,” he says. On The Fabelmans, he saw an opportunity to be funny, without a clue as to whether Spielberg would respond to the energy. “We hit a note at one time during the scene and we kind of both broke out laughing,” Hirsch says. “I thought, No, no, we can’t do that, and he said, Yeah, we can.”
It’s how Hirsch has felt his way through his entire career. “I do a part in a movie, I have no idea,” he says. “It doesn’t matter to me if it’s the greatest movie ever made or the worst movie ever made, all I want to know is if the part was okay.” He still can’t believe his first credited job, the TV movie The Law, won the Emmy for outstanding special