Every day should be Valentine's Day, according to famed sex and relationship expert Dr. Ruth Westheimer - especially in the bedroom. But for the special day coming up on Saturday, she suggests spicing it up even more. "You want to make sure the bedroom doesn't become boring," Dr. Ruth, 86, tells People. "Try something new." Her new tip, which she is offering through Clorox, is that even doing laundry with your partner can turn the both of you on. "Up until recently, most men didn't do the laundry," she says. "But women really like the gesture. They find it sexy." You...
- 2/12/2015
- by Caitlin Keating, @caitkeating
- PEOPLE.com
Sunday, they say, is the "Lord's day." But perhaps Philip and Elizabeth should have taken a page out of "Clark" and Martha's marriage playbook and opted for a "lazy morning" instead of going to church mere hours after infiltrating a contra training camp. Elizabeth, as cold-blooded and atheistic as ever, scoffs at the longhaired pastor's proclamations of God's love. Philip, on the other hand, is still reeling over the latest batch of innocent lives claimed during the raid. He may not have been raised to believe in hell, but he's...
- 4/24/2014
- Rollingstone.com
A review of tonight's "The Americans" coming up just as soon as I wake up up to clean the fridge... "I'm not here to be saved." -Philip The driving question of "The Americans" season 1 was "How real is this marriage?" And at different points in the season, Philip and Elizabeth would have each given you very different answers. That tension hasn't entirely gone away in season 2 — witness the mess caused when Elizabeth hears about Clark and Martha's sex life — but for now they are treating each other as a genuine spouse, and instead the question they keep asking themselves is an even harder one: "What kind of a person am I becoming?" It's not that they are questioning the mission itself. Elizabeth never has, and when Philip has at times, it's been more about wanting to protect his family than about believing they are on the wrong side of things.
- 4/24/2014
- by Alan Sepinwall
- Hitfix
Who says it’s not easy being green? Well, Kermit the Frog did actually, but if you’re literal high-flyer Elphaba in the musical Wicked, it’s pretty darn boss, especially give that the teen-adored Stephen Schwartz musical (which received mixed reviews upon opening in 2003) just celebrated 10 years on Broadway this week. (EW just featured leads Kristin Chenoweth and Idina Menzel on our annual Reunions cover). And unless Halloween rendered you deaf from overzealous trick-or-treaters, Broadway became all abuzz with the debuts of real-life, smoldering couple Daniel Craig and Rachel Weisz in a revival of Harold Pinter’s Betrayal, but...
- 11/2/2013
- by Jason Clark
- EW.com - PopWatch
The Sopranos actress Lorraine Bracco has been given an award by the American Psycho-Analytical Association for her portrayal of a psychiatrist in the hit show. The association feel her character Doctor Jennifer Melfi, who attends to the mental needs of the show's star, Mafia boss Tony Soprano, has improved the image of psychotherapy - despite having an ambiguous relationship with her patient. Sex therapist Ruth Westheimer feels Soprano's unrequited lust for his doctor will surely come to fruition, but Bracco hopes the plot- line remains unresolved, saying, "I hope it doesn't happen. Let him dream on, let her dream on." However, in real life James Gandolfini, who plays Tony, has paid tribute to Bracco's physical attributes, which she shows off in short skirts on the award-winning drama, by sending her flowers with a note reading, "I miss your legs."...
- 1/2/2002
- WENN
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