I have a hard time believing you just naturally write like this. Why the long sentences? Are you trying to rewrite Moby Dick? Or are you trying to make your opening sentence as intelligent sounding as possible. Having an unquenchable thirst for irony and the justice it affords to clay-footed idols who are hoisted from their own petards, I was propelled into full “I told you so” mode last weekend when a boy won honors in two girls’ events at the Alaskan State Track and Field Championships. Our chef Glenn Fairman hasn’t got an original bone in his body. If you’re looking for fresh arguments against trans people, unique viewpoints and maybe some intelligence, I wouldn’t bother with “Sauce for Gender”. No flavor, tastes like regurgitated canned sauce that you get at Wallmart for 3 dollars. When I saw that I’ll finally have some delicious sauce to go with my fresh gender I got excited. So I found “Sauce for the Gender” by checking my favorite circa-2004 website, The American Thinker. And it goes over nicely with some good genders. ![]() It’s unique, I highly doubt you’ve ever had it before. I’ve been in contact with the author of this stunning opinion piece, I’ve been dressing up as a girl and doing interviews, and I’ve been struggling to keep some plants alive (they’re not gonna live much longer). I was too lazy to find articles and couldn’t be bothered to do a write anything.Īnyway, in the past few weeks I’ve been somewhat busy. The virtual gala was co-chaired by Kiki Smith and Margaret Rose Vendryes, with special appearances by glass artist Beth Lipman, philanthropist and long-time friend of Tober, Leslie Jackson Chihuly, and Urban Glass trustee Cynthia Manocherian.I haven’t been active lately because I’ve been lazy. You can’t see my pants!” Billy then bent over to reveal underpants emblazoned with the charity’s logo. The event also featured performance artist Grace Whiteside as a drag king emcee called “Billy” who joked, “On Zoom you’re waist up. We believe she’s correct, though we sheltered Page Six reporters are quite sure we don’t know exactly what it means either.Īpparently these glass blowers are something of a racy bunch because it wasn’t the evening’s only risqué moment. Tober responded, “I believe there’s a sexual meaning to that as well.” Netflix’s “Blown Away” winner Deborah Czeresko and philanthropist Barbara Tober. When Tober asked, “Why do they call them ‘glory holes’?” Deborah cheerfully replied, “Because glorious things come out of them!” ![]() We’re told that Tober appeared a touch surprised when Czeresko announced, “And now we go back into the glory hole.”Īpparently a “glory hole” is - in the glass-blowing world, at least - a powerful furnace used to soften glass. A glass blower works with the “glory hole” at Urban Glass. Page Six is told that at a virtual gala for glass art charity Urban Glass, glass-blower and winner of Netflix’s “Blown Away,” Deborah Czeresko, gave octogenarian philanthropist Barbara Tober a Zoom tour of her workshop. After a year of the pandemic things are getting a little wild, even at uptown art galas, it seems.įor example, there was a bit of confusion over the so-called glory hole at a fête for the city’s elite glass-blowers last week.
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