Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
American singer Mariah Carey is often described as an "ultimate diva" by the media for her musical ability as well as her demanding persona. [1] [2] [3] [4]Diva (/ ˈ d iː v ə /, Italian:) is the Latin word for a goddess.
Diva is the debut solo studio album by Scottish singer Annie Lennox, released on 6 April 1992 by RCA Records.The album entered the UK Albums Chart at number one and has since sold over 1.2 million copies in the UK alone, being certified quadruple platinum. [1]
State Fair is a 1962 American musical film directed by José Ferrer and starring Pat Boone, Bobby Darin, Ann-Margret, Tom Ewell, Pamela Tiffin and Alice Faye.A remake of the 1933 film State Fair and the 1945 film State Fair, it was considered to be a financially and critically unsuccessful film.
Daytime Divas is an American satirical comedy-drama television series developed by Amy and Wendy Engelberg for VH1. [1] It is based on the 2011 book Satan's Sisters by former co-host of The View Star Jones. [2] The show stars Vanessa Williams, Chloe Bridges, Camille Guaty, Fiona Gubelmann, and McKinley Freeman. [3]
Ketchup: Cats Who Cook (ケチャップ, Kechappu) is an animated series broadcast between October 5, 1998, and April 2, 1999, on NHK in Japan. It was a co-production primarily with Southern Star of Australia, and secondarily with NHK (Japan Broadcasting Corporation), Think Tank Productions, and Shanghai Yilimie Animation Co. of China.
This was a lumberjill match where the Women's Championship was unified with the Divas Championship. The title subsequently became defended on both the Raw and SmackDown brands and was briefly referred to as the Unified WWE Divas Championship, keeping the lineage of the Divas Championship while the Women's Championship was retired.
The Quiet Man is an action-adventure beat 'em up video game developed by Human Head Studios and published by Square Enix for Microsoft Windows and PlayStation 4. The game's story is told through lengthy full motion video sequences, some of which feature live-action actors, inserted between the gameplay sequences.
Lolicon is a Japanese abbreviation of "Lolita complex" (ロリータ・コンプレックス, rorīta konpurekkusu), [5] an English-language phrase derived from Vladimir Nabokov's novel Lolita (1955) and introduced to Japan in Russell Trainer's The Lolita Complex (1966, translated 1969), [6] a work of pop psychology in which it is used to denote attraction to pubescent and pre-pubescent girls. [7]