Paula Abdul
- Filed under: Celebrities
- Date: Apr 30,2008
Paula Julie Abdul is an American, multi-platinum selling, Grammy Award-winning singer, dancer, television personality, jewelry designer, actress, and Emmy Award-winning choreographer. Married to Emilio Estevez between 1992-1994, she is the former daughter-in-law of actor Martin Sheen. During her “Hey Paula” TV series, the original theme song for the series (Paula’s first #1 single “Straight Up”), was replaced on the 4th episode with a new song called “Karma” recorded by Paula herself, hinting at a possible comeback.
On January 14, 2008, Fox announced that they will air a pre-taped performance of Abdul’s new song, the first single off of Randy Jackson’s “Randy Jackson’s Music Club, Vol. 1″ called “Dance Like There’s No Tomorrow” during the Super Bowl XLII pregame. Abdul also recorded the new music video for the song, in which the American Idol cast appears. On January 16, 2008, “TMZ” confirmed that Abdul had started rehearsals for a Super Bowl performance.
The Music video of Dance Like There’s No Tomorrow was officially premiered on American Idol on February 21, 2008. The single has since returned Abdul to Billboard’s Hot 100 chart for the first time since Crazy Cool, over 12 years earlier.
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American poet and critic, often called “the poet’s poet” because his profound influence on 20th century writing in English. Pound believed that poetry is the highest of arts. A rebel par excellence, he challenged many of the common views of his time and spent 12 years in an American mental hospital. Pound’s major work was the Cantos, which was published in ten sections between 1925 and 1969, and then as a one-volume collected edition, THE CANTOS OF EZRA POUND I-CXVII (1970). Ezra Pound is generally considered the poet most responsible for defining and promoting a modernist aesthetic in poetry. In the early teens of the twentieth century, he opened a seminal exchange of work and ideas between British and American writers, and was famous for the generosity with which he advanced the work of such major contemporaries as W. B. Yeats, Robert Frost, William Carlos Williams, Marianne Moore, H. D., James Joyce, Ernest Hemingway, and especially T. S. Eliot. His own significant contributions to poetry begin with his promulgation of Imagism, a movement in poetry which derived its technique from classical Chinese and Japanese poetry–stressing clarity, precision, and economy of language, and foregoing traditional rhyme and meter in order to, in Pound’s words, “compose in the sequence of the musical phrase, not in the sequence of the metronome.” His later work, for nearly fifty years, focused on the encyclopedic epic poem he entitled The Cantos. Ezra Weston Loomis Pound (Hailey, Idaho Territory, United States, October 30, 1885 – Venice, Italy, November 1, 1972) was an American expatriate poet, critic and intellectual who was a major figure of the Modernist movement in early-to-mid 20th century poetry.







