World-of-Celebrities - Your source for information on Celebrities
Table of Content - Submit Your Site - Link to us - Add to favorites
World-of-Celebrities - Your source for information on Celebrities

Search for:
Hilights

Listen to Music Online with 900,000+ Songs at your fingertips with RealRhapsody. 14 day free trial
Browse by Name


Save up to 40% by Renting DVD's Online - get unlimited DVD rentals without any late fees or due dates
Pamela Anderson

Pamela Anderson

Pamela Anderson Newsletter

Sign-up to receive daily news on Pamela Anderson by email.
Your email:


Newave will never sell or share your email address and you can of-course unsubscribe at anytime.
 

Pamela Anderson Filmography

Source: Theiapolis
 

Pamela Anderson Resources

 
 

Pamela Anderson Music:



Coal Miner's Daughter
Sissy Spacek, Tommy Lee Jones, Levon Helm, Phyllis Boyens, Bill Anderson Jr., Foister Dickerson, Malla McCown, Pamela McCown, Kevin Salvilla and William Sanderson

EDITION:  Audio CD
MANUFACTURER:  Mca
RELEASE DATE:  08 February, 2000
The Boy from Oz (2003 Original Broadway Cast)
Peter Allen, Hugh Jackman, Jarrod Emick, Beth Fowler and Isabel Keating

EDITION:  Audio CD
MANUFACTURER:  Decca Broadway
RELEASE DATE:  18 November, 2003
The Ave Maria Album
Charles Gounod, Percy B. Kahn, Pietro Mascagni, Franz Schubert, Giuseppe Verdi, Arthur Fiedler, Constantine Callinicos, Francesco Molinari-Pradelli, George Stoll and Gianandrea Gavazzeni

EDITION:  Audio CD
MANUFACTURER:  RCA
RELEASE DATE:  11 August, 1998
Ferngully: The Last Rainforest - Original Motion Picture Soundtrack
Various Artists, Samantha Mathis, Christian Slater, Jonathan Ward, Robin Williams, Grace Zabriskie, Geoffrey Blake, Robert Pastorelli, Cheech Marin and Tommy Chong

EDITION:  Audio CD
MANUFACTURER:  Mca
RELEASE DATE:  31 March, 1992
Haydn: The Complete Mass Edition
Stephen Varcoe, Franz Joseph Haydn, Richard Hickox, Catherine Denley, Louise Winter, Pamela Helen Stephen, Collegium Musicum 90, Ian Watson, Janice Watson and Lorna Anderson

EDITION:  Audio CD
MANUFACTURER:  Chandos
RELEASE DATE:  13 February, 2007
Proof of Life: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack (2000 Film)
Danny Elfman, Russell Crowe, David Morse, Pamela Reed, David Caruso, Anthony Heald, Stanley Anderson, Gottfried John, Alun Armstrong and Michael Kitchen

EDITION:  Audio CD
MANUFACTURER:  Varese Sarabande
RELEASE DATE:  19 December, 2000
Kapsberger & Zipoli: The Jesuit Operas
Giovanni Girolamo (Johann Hieronymus) Kapsberger, Domenico Zipoli, James David Christie, Ensemble Abendmusik, Michael Collver and Anne Harley

EDITION:  Audio CD
MANUFACTURER:  Dorian Recordings
RELEASE DATE:  28 January, 2003
Summer and Smoke
Laurence Harvey, Geraldine Page, Rita Moreno, Una Merkel, John McIntire, Thomas Gomez, Pamela Tiffin, Malcolm Atterbury, Lee Patrick and Max Showalter

EDITION:  Audio CD
MANUFACTURER:  RCA Fs Imports
RELEASE DATE:  16 November, 2004
Haydn: Heiligmesse & Nikolaimesse
Stephen Varcoe, Franz Joseph Haydn, Richard Hickox, Collegium Musicum 90, Pamela Helen Stephen, Lorna Anderson and Mark Padmore

EDITION:  Audio CD
MANUFACTURER:  Chandos
RELEASE DATE:  30 November, 1999
KNIGHT RIDER-Film Music of Don Peake Vol #1
David Hasselhoff, Edward Mulhare, Phyllis Davis, Pamela Susan Shoop, Lance LeGault, Charles Napier, Noel Conlon, John Quade, Bert Rosario and Michael D. Roberts

EDITION:  Audio CD
MANUFACTURER:  HITCHCOCK MEDIA
RELEASE DATE:  01 June, 2005


Latest Film News





Latest news on Pamela Anderson



Internet

Bon Appe-TV


I watch an awful lot of Food Network. I'm not sure how the obsession developed, exactly. (Though I suspect the FDA should classify Alton Brown as a 'gateway chef'. A couple of hours a day watching him, and you'll spiral down into the hard stuff. You think I'm kidding. Just wait until you're sitting on your couch at 2:30 in the morning, watching crap involving some spiky-haired surf punk driving around the country looking for chili dogs to shove down his goateed gob. Then you'll know you're 'on point'. Not so much.) In spite of my curious epicurean affliction, I'm no good in the kitchen. Couldn't cook my way out of a paper cupcake liner. My notion of 'blanching' food involves taking it to see 'A Streetcar Named Desire'. If the recipe doesn't begin with 'Microwave for...' and end less than four words later, I've got no business reading it. And frankly, I'm okay with that. (In fact, the very pinnacle of my questionable culinary career to date was managing to make scones a few months back which were neither immediately poisonous nor required a jackhammer to pry open. Not that I made them from scratch, mind you. From a bag. Even that was touch and go. And met with considerable skepticism, as you might imagine.) My wife, bless her little whisk, can't reconcile this apparent paradox. How can I enjoy watching shows about food, and the preparation thereof, but display absolutely zero ability, interest or initiative in throwing my own spatula into the ring to learn? It's simple, I tell her. Cooking shows -- the good ones, anyway -- aren't actually about cooking, per se. They're entertainment. I can watch 24 without wanting to become a ruthless, reckless, occasionally-dead counter-terrorism agent. I can sit through Family Guy and successfully quash the urge to have three kids, gain sixty pounds and move to Rhode Island. I can catch a rerun of Three's Company and still have no desire to live near the beach in sunny California with two young single women and... well, okay, fine. Bad example. (Oh, who am I kidding? I don't tan well, California's too damned hot, and I don't have the looks to fit in or the wardrobe to convince Mr. Roper I might be gay. Also, within a week they'd find Suzanne Somers gagged and tied up in the storage locker. That grating blonde shtick of hers made Pamela Anderson look like Niels frickin' Bohr.) "Is there some contractual obligation that says I can't TiVo Iron Chef, unless I run immediately to the kitchen afterward to try my hand at their sardine smoothie? Lord, I hope not." So why can't 'food TV' be pure entertainment, too? Can't I just watch Everyday Italian already, and forget about learning to make the Fettucine alla Whatsamattayou? Isn't it enough to simply enjoy Good Eats, without storming off to find a snarky Asian lady to sell me a waffle maker? Is there some contractual obligation that says I can't TiVo Iron Chef, unless I run immediately to the kitchen afterward to try my hand at their sardine smoothie? Lord, I hope not. My wife sees it differently, of course. She makes the point that these shows are meant to get viewers interested in cooking, to make us more self-sufficient, and to unfold for us the wonders of exotic flavors and aromas made possible with a few culinary skills. Right. If I want 'exotic flavors and aromas', I'll suck a big strawful of that unholy fishshake up there. No, thanks. I'm just trying to kill an hour or so in front of the tube. And Baywatch isn't on right now. (Hey, I said Pam Anderson was dumb. I never said I couldn't watch her with the sound turned down. Fair's fair.) So I decided to prove to my wife that sometimes cooking shows are meant to be emulated, and sometimes they're just pretty pictures and 'Bam!' noises you use to pass the time. To really get the point across, I've tried to think of other examples of cooking-as-just-entertainment. It hasn't gone well. First, I appealed to her visual sensibilities. I choreographed a little number, worked up a costume and showed her my impression of making pasta. As an interpretive dance. Sadly, just when I got to the crescendo where the water boils, I slipped on the placemats I was using to represent lasagna and went down in a heap. I think I sprained a fusilli. (My wife did report that she found the show 'highly entertaining'. But probably not in the way she was supposed to.) Next, I tried to convince her using a more traditional art form. I gathered a few of the vegetables we had in the pantry, set up a camera, and took pictures of myself slicing, peeling and chopping them. Black and white shots, very artistic and classy. Or so I thought. Until I got a call from the local cops, after the guy at the Photo Hut called them about some 'disturbing' images he'd developed. Finally, I was able to sort everything out. ("No, officer, that's just a carrot. Yes, I'm certain. No, I had no idea a zucchini would look that way in grayscale. Sorry for the trouble. And I hope you catch that 'Mad Grater' sex offender some day, but I'm afraid I can't help you." If I had it to do over again, I'd probably use less suggestive veggies. And color film. And I'd opt against the 'tasteful nudes'.) That's when I stopped appealing to my wife's visual sensibilities. This carrot knows when he's julienned. As a last resort, I turned to cooking as poetry. Surely, a flowery description of food preparation could be seen as pure art, without any need to get the kitchen involved. Just what I needed to prove my point once and for all. Sadly, the only material I had for inspiration were my past experiences in attempting to cook. Which were rarely successful, often dangerous, and universally regrettable. Also, about the only poetic form I know is the limerick. So the results of my 'artistic' stabs at food prep poetry turned out something like this: "The secret to pudding, they say, Is getting lumps out of the way. So I pressed mine out thin With my best rolling pin, But most of it slithered away." Or worse: "I once made a tomato soup, With a cup of salt instead of a scoop. Dry like the Sahara, Chunky as marinara, It pretty much tasted like poop." Don't even ask about the rhyme involving 'crispy duck'. Just don't. I give up. I just couldn't back up my claim that cooking shows have nothing to do with cooking. So the next time I sit down to watch a nice Unwrapped or Molto Mario, I'm just going to sigh and silently hand my wife this last attempt at artistry, my concession haiku: Convinced by your words, I shall now provide food; hope You like Papa John's. A large loaded pizza, with garlic sauce for the crusts? Made by someone else and delivered to our door? Now that's art I can watch all night long.
Published: Sat, 22 Nov 2008 15:58:29 GMT - Source: Wherethehellwasi.Com - Read the article

Europe

Question time: Pamela Anderson on why she is backing Barack Obama


Hannah Pool: Pamela Anderson on why she is backing Barack Obama and hires a therapist who yells at her
Published: Thu, 02 Oct 2008 00:11:34 GMT - Source: Guardian.Co.Uk - Read the article

RSS: Pamela AndersonRSS: Pamela Anderson Atom: Pamela AndersonAtom: Pamela Anderson Add to My Yahoo! Add to My MSN

Sign-up to receive daily news on Pamela Anderson by email.
Your email:


Newave will never sell or share your email address and you can of-course unsubscribe at anytime.

See Also:



Marcus SchenkenbergHoward SternLinda McCartney
Marcus SchenkenbergHoward SternLinda McCartney

 

Webring




  
Link to us - Submit your Site - About - Terms of Use - Privacy Policy

This page includes information from a Wikipedia article.

World-of-Celebrities.com ©1997-2008. All rights reserved.