Fun Friday Fluff: Which Huxtable Are You?
New blog Awesome and Fablous! asked the question today, "Which Huxtable are you?"
This came up in conversation between the bloggers Soraya and Veronica when discussing how folks are more or less saying Michelle Obama is a 2008 version of Claire Huxtable.
I don't know who I'd be, but I'll say always wanted to be Denise - she seemed so free-spirited and unique. (And cool as hell, not to mention.)
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Olivia, because she was just awesome.
umm i'd say a cross between denise and rudy :)
I'd like to be Claire, the lawyer who never has to go to work. How is it that the husband is a doctor who rarely works, even thogh his office is conveniently in the basement of their house, while the wife is a lawyer who worked like once in about 8 years?
I wanna be Russell, for no other reason than he seemingly knew all the jazz musicians in the world.
Oh god, I love the Cosby Show. I'm probably Denise as I have a tendency to start things without finishing them, but I have a feeling that in 20 years or so I'll turn into Cliff.
Denise
I want to be Theo. He was the funniest. "But DA-ad!"
I want to be Theo. He was the funniest. "But DA-ad!"
Shops are turned into stage sets, installations and artworks, such as the Future Systems Selfridges store in Birmingham that looks like a reflective bubble, or Koolhaas’ Prada stores in Las Vegas and New York. The latter cost US$40 million for just 23,000 square feet of retail space. The ground floor has little merchandise.
The majority is in the basement. It feels cramped and lacks appropriate lighting. Bars are becoming less like your local, which you could rely on being the same for years on end. Their design can change as fast as an art gallery. These trends are shaking the foundations of museums, libraries, science centres, art galleries, shopping malls, cultural centres as well as virtually every aspect of the business world.
Design, multimedia, theatrics and soundscapes increasingly move centre-stage. Given that we are subject to the vagaries of fashion, ‘beyond the experience economy’ is already being discussed, in which a transformation economy where people will pay for a life-changing series of experiences is upon us. And then towards the ‘dream economy’?