LYCOS RETRIEVER
In Good Company: Ultimate Homes
built 656 days ago
"In Good Company" is not so much plot-centric as full of themes and observations on its work place subject matter. This gives the film a lightweight, unhurried feel, lacking in a driving force but enjoyable all the same because of the main performances. By comparison, some of the supporting players, such as Marg Helgenberger (TV's "CSI: Crime Scene Investigation") and Zena Grey (2004's "Stateside") as Dan's pregnant wife and 16-year-old daughter, Jana, and an otherwise very effective Selma Blair (2004's "A Dirty Shame") as Carter's soon-to-be-ex-wife, are negligibly handled. "In Good Company" loses its way on several occasions as it goes off on unneeded tangents, but where it ultimately leads and how Carter, in particular, finds himself there, makes the film a satisfying, hard-to-dislike choice for older viewers who prefer dialogue and realism over CGI effects and random explosions.
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Donald Trump's mansion in Florida is in good company -- the state has the third highest number -- 174 -- of Ultimate Homes on the market. California takes the second spot with 183 Ultimate Homes, and Colorado rounds out the top four with 92. Which state has the most Ultimate Homes? New York with 333 -- mostly located in Manhattan and the Hamptons.
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Dennis Howlett brings up a good point. Do US visa requirements for journalists cover bloggers? Foreign journalists visiting the US, even from friendly countries, have to obtain a special "I visa". This is a rule from 1952 (according to Slate) which hadn't been enforced until the Department of Homeland Security took over INS in March 2003. According to the same Slate article, "at least 15 journalists from friendly countries have been forcibly detained, interrogated, fingerprinted, and held in cells overnight—with most denied access to phones, pens, lawyers, or their consular officials."
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