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I've mentioned before how much I hate the overused word "edgy, " and "The Muse" contains a couple of references to Brooks' character (a family man named Steven Phillips) losing his edge.
CNN: Review: 'The Muse' uninspiring
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As I've mentioned before, the global ancient game of golf will be better off with a ban.
WSJ: Don't Make Golf Too Easy | Golf Journal by John Paul Newport
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That is why, as I've mentioned before, it is pointless looking at Libor and euribor interest rates for signs of banking stress, because they are semi-irrelevant markets these days.
BBC: Where to find bank stress
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Through an independent outfit I've mentioned before, the Atlas Economic Research Foundation, the Templeton Freedom Awards are bestowed annually on often-pinched intellectual shops at the far reaches of liberalization worldwide.
FORBES: Blue-Chip Investment
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As I've mentioned before, the "Selective Auto Completion" option - which means you don't have to touch out - that Transport for London (TfL) can use when there are large crowds also has flaws.
BBC: Next generation Oyster cards could stop overcharging
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Sadly it is impossible to prove whether her contention is correct: as I've mentioned before, depending on the time of day, investors and creditors seem by turns more frightened by the Scylla of unsustainable debt and then petrified by the Charybdis of possible recession.
BBC: Growth vs debt reduction
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There is no question, as I've mentioned before, that the cooperation that we have had from Pakistan has contributed to some of the successes that we have had in taking the fight to al Qaeda, in eliminating senior al Qaeda leadership from -- removing senior al Qaeda leadership from the battlefield.
WHITEHOUSE: Press Briefing
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I've mentioned Stella McCartney before with regard to sports and I'm mentioning her again here because she is probably the only designer out there properly considering how women want to look on the course.
WSJ: Tina Gaudoin on Style: Golf Fashion
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There was massive inflation in asset prices, especially in commercial and residential property, and a hideous and dangerous explosion of the accumulation of debt: an analysis by McKinsey, which I've mentioned here many times before, shows that the aggregate of household, business, government and bank debt increased from less than 200% of GDP in 1987 to a record 500% of GDP in 2008, and hasn't really fallen since.
BBC: Can the Bank of England hit any target?