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Added on the 22/08/2017 18:34:07 - Copyright : Panasonic
While general elections in the United States may seem highly regulated and bureaucratized, it wasn't always that way. Bustle reports that during the first election in 1789, only white men who owned property could vote. That rule excluded a whopping 94 percent of the population. The Constitution didn't define a specific Election Day, either. In fact, in the early 1800s, people could vote anywhere from April to December. Elections are only held on Tuesdays because people had to travel by buggy to vote. Sunday church couldn't be disrupted, and Wednesday was market day. Until 1804, presidential nominees didn't name a running mate. Instead, the candidate who got the second most number of votes became the vice president. Dozens of states used to have laws restricting buying alcohol on Election Day, to prevent people from buying or selling votes. South Carolina was the last state to do away with their laws, in 2014.
In this video, learn how to recreate Amal Clooney’s full eyebrows – including tips like brushing the eyebrow hairs up and adding highlighter under the brow line for lift
Celebrity doctors and a stylst reveal tricks and tips some men use to maintain movie star looks. Alicia Powell reports.
Sporting bold shapes and undeniable style that would be as at home in a sneakerhead's collection as in their driveway, Nissan today unboxed the all-new 2025 Kicks with an interactive experience in Brooklyn, at the opening rounds of the 2024 NCAA Men's Basketball Tournament at Barclays Center.Designed to energize the compact crossover segment and thoughtfully enhance every drive, the new Kicks makes its virtual debut outside Barclays Center, where fans will spot a larger-than-life, digital 3D "shoebox" featuring the new model. Inside the Barclays Center, game attendees can visit the Kicks Unboxing booth, see the car for the first time, and enjoy live music from Kicks Beats DJs, a Kicks Lacing Station with giveaways and much more to thrill basketball fans.
At the end of the recent Marvel Studios movie "The Marvels," Monica Rambeau (Teyonah Parris) sacrificed herself to close a rift between universes. She left herself on the other side, and when she woke up, she ran into someone she believed to be her mother, Maria (Lashana Lynch)... and Beast, a core member of the mutant team The X-Men. The excitement at seeing Beast on screen again was a lot. And, it was the Kelsey Grammer version of the mutant, an iteration we hadn’t seen since the 2006 film "X-Men: The Last Stand." That was many moons ago, and in a continuity that occurred long before the MCU even existed. Now that we know Grammer is willing to return to the X-Men universe, our managing editor has a question about something he said… and thinks it can be answered in the upcoming Marvel Studios movie "Deadpool & Wolverine." #xmen#deadpool #deadpool3 #deadpoolwolverine #fantheories #mcu #superhero
US President Joe Biden mixes up the current President of France Emmanuel Macron with former French leader Francois Mitterrand who died in 1996. Speaking at a campaign rally in Las Vegas on Sunday, Biden recalled a discussion with other heads of state at the G7 summit held in Cornwall in June 2021, a few months after his inauguration: "I said, 'America is back'". 81 years old Biden then remembers how it elicited a reply from "Mitterrand from Germany" before correcting himself : " I mean, from France". Francois Mitterrand was President of France from 1981 to 1995, serving a record two seven-years terms. SOUNDBITE