Elvis, Ali photos tell stories of 2 icons
DOYLESTOWN, Pa. - In a culture saturated with celebrity magazines, paparazzi and red carpets, it's hard to imagine capturing an image of a young Elvis Presley alone on the sidewalk in New York. Or a picture of Muhammad Ali at play with neighborhood kids in a parking lot.
Do People Love Lady Gaga More Than Elvis Presley
Lady Gaga is certainly a very famous artist, no doubt about that, but "Fame" is a very relative term. She has done many interviews where she has talked about the "Decay" of famous people and how people today like to see people fail. She speaks of how we now live in a time where we crave for drama. Like it's not enough to just worship the famous, we need our famous people to fall off their perch and die disgracefully, drunk, drugged, or falling out of nightclubs vomiting all over the place then choking to death on it sometime through the night, as many previous famous people have done.
The Grit And Glory Of Being An Elvis Lookalike
Elvis Presley has been dead for 30 years. Yet his legacy lives on in the form of the thriving phenomenon of Elvis impersonators. An Elvis impersonator or lookalike is an artist who copies or imitates the iconic American musician in looks and mannerisms. Elvis impersonation constitutes imitating his visual image by wearing an Elvis wig with the trademark sideburns and quaffed hair, putting on a rhinestone-studded jumpsuit and assorted jewelry. The artist also impersonates Elvis by singing and talking just like him.
First Black President, Meet The First Black World Champion Elvis
Three days before the first African-American ever to take the oath office of the President of the United States, the first African-American ever to take the crown of World Champion Elvis Impersonator will appear at the 9th annual Elvis Birthday Bash. He's black, he's Elvis, and he is good. Really good! He's Robert Washington, World Champion Elvis Impersonator.