Lenny Kravitz has joined the ever-growing legion of celebs to harness the power of TikTok.
On Saturday, Sept. 23, Kravitz issued his first-ever TikTok post, celebrating the arrival of autumn.
In the video, Kravitz is seen wearing the ridiculously huge scarf that became a viral meme more than a decade ago.
Read More: Lenny Kravitz Reflects On How His Mom ‘Never Judged’ Him For His Eccentric Style
“Grab your big scarf,” Kravitz says as he walks toward the camera, wearing that scarf. “It’s the first day of fall.”
@lennykravitz
It’s the first day of fall. #autumn #scarves #LennyKravitz
♬ original sound – Lenny Kravitz
During a 2018 appearance on “The Tonight Show “, Kravitz discussed his big scarf.
“I cannot escape this,” Kravitz said with a laugh. “I live in the Bahamas, I’m used to hot weather and I had to go to the store, I was buying some groceries and I...
On Saturday, Sept. 23, Kravitz issued his first-ever TikTok post, celebrating the arrival of autumn.
In the video, Kravitz is seen wearing the ridiculously huge scarf that became a viral meme more than a decade ago.
Read More: Lenny Kravitz Reflects On How His Mom ‘Never Judged’ Him For His Eccentric Style
“Grab your big scarf,” Kravitz says as he walks toward the camera, wearing that scarf. “It’s the first day of fall.”
@lennykravitz
It’s the first day of fall. #autumn #scarves #LennyKravitz
♬ original sound – Lenny Kravitz
During a 2018 appearance on “The Tonight Show “, Kravitz discussed his big scarf.
“I cannot escape this,” Kravitz said with a laugh. “I live in the Bahamas, I’m used to hot weather and I had to go to the store, I was buying some groceries and I...
- 9/24/2023
- by Brent Furdyk
- ET Canada
Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
In the wake of Richard Ayoade’s excellent teen drama, Submarine, it seems fitting to revisit one of the greatest coming-of-age films of all time with a new digital restoration of Peter Bogdanovich’s 1971 classic The Last Picture Show that screens at the BFI on re-release from today, before moving across arthouse cinema’s across the country. Bogdanovich along with the likes of Martin Scorcese, Francis Ford Coppola, Brian de Palma and William Friedkin made up the new wave of counterculture Hollywood film makers in the early 1970s, although unlike his illustrious company, Bogdanovich’s career dwindled to almost nothing as a filmmaker with one critical and commercial failure after another, before eventually becoming a biographer on other great’s careers (such as Orson Welles).
Yet his one masterpiece alongside their many, will forever keep it’s place in cinematic history.
The year is 1951 in a tiny backwater Texas town.
In the wake of Richard Ayoade’s excellent teen drama, Submarine, it seems fitting to revisit one of the greatest coming-of-age films of all time with a new digital restoration of Peter Bogdanovich’s 1971 classic The Last Picture Show that screens at the BFI on re-release from today, before moving across arthouse cinema’s across the country. Bogdanovich along with the likes of Martin Scorcese, Francis Ford Coppola, Brian de Palma and William Friedkin made up the new wave of counterculture Hollywood film makers in the early 1970s, although unlike his illustrious company, Bogdanovich’s career dwindled to almost nothing as a filmmaker with one critical and commercial failure after another, before eventually becoming a biographer on other great’s careers (such as Orson Welles).
Yet his one masterpiece alongside their many, will forever keep it’s place in cinematic history.
The year is 1951 in a tiny backwater Texas town.
- 4/16/2011
- by Matt Conn
- Obsessed with Film
You can be 6 or 60 and still have a hilarious, poignant and gripping two hours riding along with Toy Story 3!
The gang from Andy’s room is back and facing their own midlife crisis as their beloved boy playmate grows up and gets ready to head off to college. Only his chief Bff cowboy Woody (Tom Hanks) is supposed to make the college journey, too. For the rest of Andy’s not-quite-as-precious toys, their fate is to be boxed up in the attic — a fate almost worse than death for a bunch of toys who live to be played with.
Luckily Jesse (Joan Cusack) the plucky cowgirl, Buzz “Heroic” Lightgear (Tim Allen), devoted old love birds Mr. and Mrs. Potato Head (Don Rickles and Estelle Harris), Rex the unferocious Tyrannosaurus rex (Wallace Shawn), Slinky Dog and more, manage to get themselves donated to a local daycare center — except, Omg! All is Not as it seems.
The gang from Andy’s room is back and facing their own midlife crisis as their beloved boy playmate grows up and gets ready to head off to college. Only his chief Bff cowboy Woody (Tom Hanks) is supposed to make the college journey, too. For the rest of Andy’s not-quite-as-precious toys, their fate is to be boxed up in the attic — a fate almost worse than death for a bunch of toys who live to be played with.
Luckily Jesse (Joan Cusack) the plucky cowgirl, Buzz “Heroic” Lightgear (Tim Allen), devoted old love birds Mr. and Mrs. Potato Head (Don Rickles and Estelle Harris), Rex the unferocious Tyrannosaurus rex (Wallace Shawn), Slinky Dog and more, manage to get themselves donated to a local daycare center — except, Omg! All is Not as it seems.
- 6/18/2010
- by Christina
- HollywoodLife
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