![]() ![]() ![]() The chorus encourages people to keep smiling through the rainy days, to keep trying to wash away the pain, and to have faith that the sun will shine again. Throughout the song, there is a recurring theme of smiles, which represent finding joy and hope in the face of adversity. He hopes to see the sun again and asks for strength to keep believing in the face of hardship. Ja Rule adds his perspective in the song, acknowledging that sometimes he does not mind the rain, and that it can feel like drowning in the Lord's pain. Blige sings about the crazy and sexy life we all live and how we begin to love it, despite the heartache and pain we witness around us. The lyrics describe how people try to wash away the rain and forget the pain, but the reality is that difficult times linger for a lifetime. The metaphor of rain signifies the pain and heartache associated with difficult times, while the sun represents the hope and happiness of better days to come. Blige and Ja Rule is a song about facing the hardships and challenges in life, specifically during the rainy days. © 2023 NYP Holdings, Inc."Rainy Dayz" by Mary J. These two ditzes are so annoying but worse, think we’re such fools that we’re going to believe that they bring these products on TV to sell without rehearsing first. The whole premise of this show - which is thinner than the women themselves - is that the “girls” want to sell more than high-end jewelry on DSN and try to convince their boss and his awful, unpleasant son to allow them to bring in new and quirky products (which are always a giant bust). The next loser on tonight’s lineup is TLC’s fairly awful “ Good Buy Girls,” about two ex-pageant queens - Brook Roberts and Tara Gray - who sell stuff on the DSN shopping network. The owner of the Dina Collection is Yossi Dina, who thinks he’s the second coming of James Bond and flaunts his sexuality at all the ridiculously dressed women who work for him, as well as all the female customers, who seem to comprise the majority of Dina’s clientele. While Obscura might deal with crumbling death masks, skulls and scary medical kits from the 1800s, the Dina Collection store on “Beverly Hills Pawn” deals in obscenely high-end goods to and from hideously shallow people so plasticized they make the Obscura death masks look appealing. Where “Pawn Stars” features a real Las Vegas pawn shop with real-life characters with senses of humor and soul - and “Oddities” is about Obscura, a shop run by two real, lovable NYC characters who deal with bizarre and insane customers who come in to buy and sell the hideous, fascinating and repulsive - “BHP” is about a high-end boutique “pawn shop” on Rodeo Drive manned by an oily Israeli ex-pat and his three cocktail-dress-wearing sales women. ![]() The first, “ Beverly Hills Pawn” on Reelz, is the hideous morphing of History’s “ Pawn Stars” and Science Channel’s “ Oddities,” a terrifically fascinating show. Take the two truly terrible shows premiering tonight, which ironically enough are about selling stuff during the TV season where you aren’t supposed to be able to push much of anything. Even so, new series premieres in June, July and August remain the hospice of TV: there’s no hope but maybe people will visit before the last gasp. Since then, people got air conditioning and actually do watch TV in the summer. Hey, here’s a great idea: Let’s put all the stuff that nobody wants to watch on in the summer because, well, it’s hot and nobody’s watching TV anyway. TWICE BITTEN: The women of “Good Buy Girls” (left) and Yossi Dina and his “Bevery Hills Pawn” crew. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |