Saturday night is full of debauchery — the fake ID gets her drinks at the restaurant. The drinks get the crude words flowing with his friends. His drunken alter-ego gives him confidence to hit on the girl at the bar and take her home. They wake up with a hangover, maybe even still drunk, but two hours later, they are on the fifth row of the Sunday service.

CVS shoppers will have to get their smokes elsewhere because the U.S. pharmacy recently announced it would phase out the sale of cigarettes by Oct. 1. The company’s move is bold and brave.

I think pretty much anything and everything there is to be said about the topic of marriage and the LGBT community has been said. My opinion probably carries much less credibility than many others’ opinions do. I’ll quote Forrest Gump: “I don’t know much about anything.”

Millions of anxious viewers tuned in last week to watch the scales lighten up for their favorite contestant in the season finale of “The Biggest Loser,” a reality show featuring an ensemble of obese people in sweaty pursuit to drop the most pounds for a huge cash prize.

As intensive as the campaigns of 2012 were, it never seemed as if we got to know the real Mitt Romney.

A new documentary, however, fills in those holes and gives us a moving description of the man who almost became president. Some might say, why focus on Romney now? His time has come and gone. He’s old news, damaged goods.

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