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Lee wrote "Going Under" about "coming out of a bad relationship". She described the feeling as, "when you're at the end of your rope, when you're at the point where you realize something has to change, that you can't go on living in the situation that you're in." [1] Lee later said that after completing the songs in Fallen that came out of an abusive relationship, she was listening to her ...
Lee designs many of her own clothes, including those worn in the music video for "Going Under", the dress worn for the cover of The Open Door and the dress she wore to the Nobel Peace Prize Concert in 2011. After she designed the dress she wore at the 2004 Grammy Awards, she chose Japanese designer H. Naoto to make it for her. [248]
Going Under is a 2004 drama film about a married man and a partnered dominatrix who form a personal relationship and begin seeing each other outside her workplace. The film stars Geno Lechner and Roger Rees and was co-written and directed by psychotherapist Eric Werthman .
Hugh Nanton Romney Jr. (born May 15, 1936), known as Wavy Gravy, is an American entertainer and peace activist best known for his role at Woodstock, as well as for his hippie persona and countercultural beliefs.
Going Under, a comedy film starring Bill Pullman and Dean Cain; Going Under, a drama film starring Geno Lechner and Roger Rees; Going Under working title of Once Upon a Time in Venice, 2016 comedy film starring Bruce Willis, Jason Momoa, and John Goodman "Going Under" (Prison Break), a season four episode of Prison Break
Stewart, 82, shared that “just in case” she “wants to go swimming,” she always wears a bikini under her clothes. “Bathing suits are my underwear,” she told Page Six at the 25th Old ...
The last surviving recording space in Woodstock is carrying on a musical tradition, in the hands of drummer and chief engineer Pete Caigan. ... The best under-$50 clothing items to buy at Amazon ...
The Woodstock Music & Art Fair was a music festival held on a 600-acre (2.4-km 2) dairy farm in the rural town of Bethel, New York, from August 15 to August 18, 1969. Thirty-two acts performed during the sometimes rainy weekend in front of nearly half a million concertgoers.