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Q: Have you ever seen someone walk into a room that you can tell has it all together, is happy with what they wear, how they look and their personality? They may not be perfect, but they are okay with how they are. I am not that person. I hate my body, I don't think I am funny and I never know what to say in groups. I always feel like the clothes I wear don't fit in with the clothes my co-workers wear. I know it sounds silly and immature, but I have self-confidence issues and I don't know how to fix them. A: I don't think it sounds silly and immature at all. I think a lot of people are dealing with the exact same feeling and I think that everyone deals with those feelings at some point
Costume Crawl III The Costume Crawl is Back!!! Get your All-Hallows-Eve Pre-Party on Tuesday, October 26th, 2010. Come enjoy a FREE menu of Monster Munchies and Ghoulish Grubs, as well as discounted Spooky Spirits. Wear or bring your costume to work/school or change in our private dressing room at our first GrubCrawl venue...this is the (not so dry run) chance for you to see how good you look as a sexy (or scary) firefighter/pirate/character from GLEE (or Dispicable Me!?) You'll have a spook-tacular time with the freakiest fun crowd on the planet, as we haunt for the hottest place to party…all for great price per person! We'll start our Monster March at VIVE Cocina Mexicana & Ultra Loun
It's hard to describe the sensory overload: Cologne, body odor, marijuana. Flashing lights, minor skirmishes barely contained by dozens of bouncers. Not unsafe, but too much "swagger" and body heat. Why would Grammy-nominated rapper Fabolous want to perform at a nightclub instead of a larger venue for his first visit to Sacramento? Why would hundreds hang out in a less-than-savory atmosphere until after midnight to welcome Fabolous? It's hard to recall why much of Thursday night, or early Friday was unique, but it's clear that when Brooklyn rapper Fabolous talks, it makes you want to party. "F-a-b-o-l-o-u-s," as he refers to himself, rocked a mostly-drunk dance party at Azukar, performin
Colorstruck looks at "idiotic behavior." That's how stand-up comedian Donald E. Lacy Jr. sums up his one-man show. He looks at why people put emphasis on the color or texture of someone's hair or skin in this society, he says. "If I had to break it down, I would say it's 55 to 60 percent stand-up, and 25 to 30 percent theater, and the rest is music, movement and visuals," Lacy said of the show, playing at Sacramento's Guild Theater through June 21. Sacramento's reaction to the production since its debut on May 29 has affected Lacy himself. "They have not only received the material well, but some of the discussions (after the show) have been very stimulating and invigorating for me," Lac