Like the Rubik’s cube, swing-dance-revival revivals, and the swimsuit portion of the presidential debates, celebrity news can provide hours of entertainment for average Americans. Keep up with Hollywood's finest with today's Groupon: for $30, you get 52 issues of Us Weekly (a $67 value).
Since 1977, Us Weekly has reported on the most glamorous aspects of celebrity culture and Hollywood lifestyles, enticing readers with exclusive photos and insight into the lives of movie, music, and television stars. After taking a vow of silence for 4–6 weeks before the first issue to arrive, readers can gasp, comment, and pore over the magazine's long-standing features such as Just Like Us, which documents celebrities performing everyday tasks in their natural habitat. Catch up on the latest parties and premiers with the glossy photos in The Red Carpet section. Hot Stuff relays riveting Hollywood news, and Who Wore it Best? encourages readers to vote on which stars can most successfully don modern fashion. With cheerfully absorbing articles on Hollywood starlets and up-and-coming musicians, Us Weekly delivers the ideal gift for everyone from budding pop-culture fans to veteran celebrity-trackers.
Groupon Says
The Groupon Guide to: What Makes a TV?
Enjoying television is as patriotic as knitting an apple pie or eating American flags. Here's a look at some of the components that make up these high-tech picture boxes:
• Glass: A high-end TV has a glass screen that when turned off (not recommended) will reflect your image. When turned on, it will reflect how awesome TV is.
• Cathode Ray Tube: No longer needed for modern TVs to work, but manufacturers still put one in every set just for old times' sake.
• Gold: TV signals, like men's hearts, are lustily attracted to gold, causing them to fly out of the sky into the gold brick in the back of every TV.
• A Couple of Horse Bones: 'Cause why not, right?
• Wires: They hook up to the wired helmets that all the actors wear to beam their acting into your TV.
• An Eternal Flame: To honor the former TV stars who have died.
• Tiny Fire Extinguisher: In case the eternal flame gets out of control.
• IBM PetaFlop SuperComputer: Guesses when you want to change the channel, lower the volume, etc., all to cover up the fact that the remote control doesn't do anything.
• Martin Sheen: He's gotta live somewhere.
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