Friday, November 28, 2008

Hottie Friday: Carmen Electra



Say what you want about Carmen Electra but there's one thing that cannot be denied; Carmen Electra is smoking hot! If she walks by and the wind so much as lifts her dress even just an inch upwards, I know I'd be hitting the pavement immediately after.






Electra deserves her spot on my list of hotties for Fridays. She made a brief appearance on T's Hottie List but that was among other hotties. Carmen Electra deserves a Friday all her own; all by her sizzling lonesome. She is definitely worthy!






Tara Leigh Patrick is most widely known as a glamour model and sex symbol. She is also a television personality, entertainer and more recently an actress. She also tried her hand at singing after meeting Prince back in 1994. He is the one who suggested that her name be changed and helped her to record an album. Bar none, Carmen Electra has got to be most famous for her appearances in Playboy magazine.








Very likely you may also recognize Electra as being one of the gorgeous bodacious Baywatch babes where she played the role of Lani McKenzie in 22 episodes from 1997-1998. She reunited with the cast of Baywatch in 2003 to film the movie Baywatch: Hawaiian Wedding. Other claims to fame include Singled Out (MTV's game show) as well as a few performances where she danced with the Pussycat Dolls. Electra is the current spokes model for Ritz Camera Centers.








If you haven't caught any of her films, I do recommend them. They are not great movies but her performances in these parodies are worth watching. They may not cause you to laugh so much that your ribs hurt but they are certainly entertaining. Go and catch her in Scary Movie, Scary Movie 4, Date Movie, Cheaper by the Dozen 2, Epic Movie, Meet the Spartans and Disaster Movie. She does a hell of a job in all of them.






I quite enjoyed her performances. And to be totally honest with you, any woman - especially a gorgeous bombshell such as Electra - who is never hesitant to take on comedic roles and is not afraid to readily make a fool of herself gets super points in my book.






If, like me, you look at Electra and think to yourself that there's just something about her looks, her features; just something about her that you can't quite place. Here's what it is. She is of Irish, German and Cherokee ancestry. Yes, I know, aah that's it (there goes that little light bulb).







Electra is a staunch supporter of Heat to Hollywood which is a non-profit organization that supports brain tumor survivors. Her mom died of a brain tumor in 1998. She also supports Elevate Hop which assists abandoned and abused children as well as Holirod Foundation which provides support to those who suffer from Parkinson's Disease and other debilitating complications.






So as you can see, she's not just all about the glitz and glamour. She participates in work and fundraisers in an effort to help others who are less fortunate and in need. She's all in all a commendable woman. There's definitely more to her than meets the eye.








I like Electra. I have always liked her. Even when the press and other media made fun of her or said not-so-nice things, there was just something (and no, it's not just because the woman is remarkably hot) about her that I admired.






It's been quite a rough week for me and it gives me great pleasure to finish it off with this blond hottie. Carmen Electra rocks! Carmen Electra takes the edge off. Carmen Electra makes it better.






Is it just me or did it get extremely hot in here all of a sudden?


Thursday, November 27, 2008

Timeless Thursday: Coretta Scott King



Coretta Scott King, where do I begin? I am so filled with emotions when I think of you; it is truly difficult for me to get them all out. I feel pride; so much pride it's almost overwhelming. So many things I want to say and fit in but I know that's not possible. Certainly not in this blog and definitely not in any one blog.






You were so many things. You did so many things. You believed in and fought for so many things. Which ones do I highlight? Which ones do I put out? I'm almost tempted to just give up on it all. I feel as if I will not say enough, that I won't say it the way I'd like to, the way it should be said. I will do my best though, it's the least and most that I can do.






Coretta Scott King was the widow of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr, she was the mother of their four kids, she was an author and she was an activist. She fought for civil rights, women's rights, GLBT rights, human rights and most of all equal rights, economic issues, world peace, HIV/AIDS prevention and against apartheid among other things.




After Dr. King's assassination in 1968 took on role of leader of the African-American Civil Rights Movement and carried on the work her husband started until her death on January 30, 2006 at the age of 78.






In 1945 she graduated valedictorian of Lincoln High School and enrolled at Antioch College in Ohio. She later studied music with Walter Anderson and in 1954 she completed her degree in voice and violin at the New England Conservatory.




One of Coretta's most noted accomplishments was the work she did to pass the 1964 Civil Rights Act. She founded the Martin Luther King, Jr. Center for Nonviolent Social Change in Atlanta, Georgia in her husband's honor. She published her memoirs, My Life with Martin Luther King, Jr., in 1969. And in 1986 after advocating for it since the death of her husband, she was finally successful in establishing the anniversary of her husband's death as a federal holiday.




On April 1, 1998 King called on fellow civil rights groups and activists to join the fight against homophobia and anti-gay bias. "Homophobia is like racism and anti-Semitism and other forms of bigotry in that it seeks to dehumanize a large group of people, to deny their humanity, their dignity and personhood", was a part of her speech to these groups.




In another speech in November 2003 King made another appeal when she linked the Civil Rights Movement to the LGBT agenda, "I still hear people say that I should not be talking about the rights of lesbian and gay people. ... But I hasten to remind them that Martin Luther King Jr. said, 'Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere.' I appeal to everyone who believes in Martin Luther King Jr.’s dream, to make room at the table of brotherhood and sisterhood for lesbian and gay people."




On March 23, 2004 King is quoted as saying "Gay and lesbian people have families, and their families should have legal protection, whether by marriage or civil union. A constitutional amendment banning same-sex marriages is a form of gay bashing and it would do nothing at all to protect traditional marriage."




She founded the Martin Luther King, Jr. Center for Nonviolent Social Change in Atlanta, Georgia and published her memoirs, My Life with Martin Luther King, Jr., in 1969.




Rest Coretta. Rest. Your journey was long, hard, taxing, tiring, painful and I'm sure at times unbearable.




You came, you saw, you believed, you fought, you CONQUERED. My life is better because of you, the USA and the world at large is a better place because of you. I am honored, privileged, fortunate and profoundly appreciative that I shared the same time on earth (at least some of it) at the same time that you did.




I never met you personally but if I had the opportunity, I would have. It would have been a great honor; an honor of a lifetime.




You bore each fight, each struggle and each obstacle with such great countenance and reserve. You are an icon, a legend, a beacon and a tower of strength; these are attributes that not even death can change or take away.






So it is quite fitting that I give thanks to and for you, Coretta Scott King, on this the day set aside to give thanks.