Other People is a novel by British writer Martin Amis, published in 1981.
Mary, an amnesiac young woman, wakes in a hospital and cannot remember who she is, what has happened to her, or even simple things such as how to blow her nose or what clouds are. She leaves the hospital and takes the name "Mary Lamb" after overhearing a nursery rhyme. Mary befriends a woman named Sharon, an alcoholic who seems well-meaning to the naïve Mary until she prostitutes her for money. After enduring painful sex, Mary smashes the man's mouth in once he passes out. She flees, coming into contact with a policeman named Prince, who knows about Mary's past. Mary lives for a while with Sharon's parents, also alcoholics, but eventually she moves into a shelter for "fallen women." She receives a letter from Prince that includes a newspaper clipping concerning her before she lost her memory. Mary learns that her real name is Amy Hide and that her past was quite dark, a fact which causes Mary a great deal of distress. During her stay at the shelter, she gets a job as a waitress in a seedy café. With one exception, all of the male employees sexually harass her, but she does not understand the significance of their actions. The exception is Alan, a meek and highly insecure man who is deeply infatuated with Mary but does nothing to ward off the attentions of others. Mary meets Prince again, and she learns that Amy had asked someone to kill her. According to Prince, the failed killing was what had caused her amnesia. The man who did it is behind bars but due to be released.
Other People is a 2016 American dramedy film written and directed by Chris Kelly and stars Jesse Plemons, Molly Shannon, Bradley Whitford, and Maude Apatow. The film was produced by Adam Scott, Naomi Scott, and Sam Bisbee. The executive producers were Lance Acord, Jackie Kelman Bisbee, Cathleen Ihasz, Nicole Ihasz, David Ryan, Hunter Ryan, Richard J. Bosner, and Stephanie Apt.
The film had its world premiere at the 2016 Sundance Film Festival on January 21, 2016.
The film is a dramedy about a 29-year-old gay man who moves home to Sacramento to take care of his mother, who’s in the advanced stages of leiomyosarcoma. Being home is further complicated by his conservatively religious family and his Dad's refusal to accept his sexuality (ten years after he came out). Shannon's character struggles through chemo, decides to quit treatment and starts to decline, each of the family members deal with the inevitable loss in their own way.
Take It is an album by The Wallets. It sold 6,825 vinyl albums and 3,041 cassettes. This project makes up 10 songs of the "17 Songs" album.
Fantasy Ride is the third studio album by American recording artist Ciara, first released on May 3, 2009, by RCA Records and LaFace Records. The album was recorded between 2007 and 2009. Ciara was executive producer on the album along with co-executive Mark Pittsand, Ciara worked with several record producers, including Blac Elvis, Benny Blanco, Blade, Jasper Cameron, The Clutch, Darkchild, Danja, Dr. Luke, Jason Nevins, Jim Beanz, Los da Maestro, Ne-Yo, Osinachi Nwaneri, Polow da Don, The-Dream, Tricky Stewart, Justin Timberlake, T-Pain. The album featured several guest vocalists, including Justin Timberlake, Ludacris, Chris Brown, Young Jeezy, The-Dream, Missy Elliott.
The album combines R&B and hip hop sounds from her previous albums along with a new pop and dance direction. Fantasy Ride received generally mixed reviews from music critics, who complimented its slow jams and the club tracks, and Ciara's vocal performances, with some critics calling it "a consistently sexy listen" with other critics calling it "Ciara's smoothest ride ever". However, some critics found the album to be a "dud" and others saying "Ciara seems to go almost unnoticed". The album debuted at number three on US Billboard 200, with sales of 81,000. Fantasy Ride became Ciara's third consecutive album to debut within the top three on that chart, making her only the fourth female artist to do so during that decade.
sung by Jim
She could take my time and that's okay
You got to get right down and show me what's the way
I got what she gives me and that's okay
Shake up baby and wake up to what is real
Stand up tall to shout out what she feels
What she don't she don't have time to steal
I got what she gives me and that's okay
She gives me what I need and that's okay