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Eiffel is founder of OS Internationale, an organization for those who develop significant relationships with inanimate objects. [13] She claims that her object relationship with Lance, her competition bow, helped her to become a world-class archer. [14] She encountered the Eiffel Tower in 2004, and said that she felt an immediate attraction. [1]
Agnieszka Piotrowska (born 1967) is a Polish-born author, academic and award-winning filmmaker, best known for her documentary Married to the Eiffel Tower (2008), [1] [2] about women who fall in love with objects." [3]
In 1979, a Swedish woman married the Berlin Wall. [9] In 2007, Erika Eiffel married the Eiffel Tower. [10] [6] In 2010, Woman's Day magazine listed ten romances between people and things, including the Berlin Wall, a fairground ride, a dakimakura, a Volkswagen Beetle, the World Trade Center, a steam locomotive, an iBook, and a metal processing ...
"It was a fantastic, amazing and romantic vacation all up to the point when my partner suggested we ask a stranger to take a picture of us in a 'fake proposal' in front of the Eiffel Tower," she ...
Dressed in an elegant, beaded fringe gown courtesy of Dior and accompanied by a piano player below the Eiffel Tower, Dion performed a stunning rendition of Edith Piaf’s “L’Hymne à L’amour.”
On Wednesday night's episode of TLC's "My Strange Addiction," a Florida woman says she's not in an addictive or an obsessive relationship. She's apparently with her soulmate. Which just so happens ...
They imagine various scenarios for his screenplay, The Girl Who Stole the Eiffel Tower, which is based on their unfolding romance as Gabrielle goes back and forth between thinking Richard is a good man and her budding attraction to him, and her hesitancy when considering he described himself as a "liar and a thief" for taking Meyerheim's money ...
The list has been criticized for excluding the name of Sophie Germain, a noted French mathematician whose work on the theory of elasticity was used in the construction of the tower itself. [3] In 1913, John Augustine Zahm suggested that Germain was excluded because she was a woman.