

"A lot of people say we're living on love, like it's a bad thing," Jones said in the commercial. But as she went about trimming a client's hair with one eye on the broadcast, she soon realized that she was the sole member of this particular commercial's target demographic. Jones had told her that he'd be portraying some sort of superhero in a commercial. On Thursday, Horton and her co-workers at a Medina, Ohio hair salon tuned in to the midday newscast on Cleveland's WJW-TV.

And that's just what David Jones-a Cleveland-based video producer, conveniently enough-did yesterday to in a successful bid for the hand of his girlfriend, Dee Horton.
#BABY FEATHERS BABYDOW TV#
So how does a lovestruck beau make his offer really stand out? Why, he asks his lady to marry him in a TV commercial, of course. In the media-saturated American scene, you see proposals turning up in newspaper ads, skywriting appeals and-of course-the venerable stadium Jumbotron. ~to all my single sistas in Christ, hold on, your Boaz is out there!!! Click the link for a AWESOME SINGLES MINISTRY: NEWS STORY ARTICLE: It's getting harder out there for a guy who wants to raise big public fanfare around his marriage proposal.


"They're not fragile the bones are very robust, the joints are mobile and it looks like they were well-muscled," Schwabacher said. rex model are even smaller than they've been portrayed in the past, Norell said. And based on the few fossil arms that paleontologists have recently discovered, the puny arms on the exhibit's adult T. rex has long been known to have dramatically undersized "arms" for its body size, few of this species' front limbs have been recovered from the fossil record, Norell told Live Science. (3 kg) per day for 13 years, said paleontologist Mark Norell, curator of both the exhibit and the Division of Paleontology at the AMNH. Finnin)ĭuring their rapid growth, juveniles would gain about 6 lbs.
