Advertisement
Advertisement
Pillsbury
[ pilz-ber-ee, -buh-ree ]
noun
- Charles Alfred, 1842–99, U.S. businessman.
Example Sentences
Born Tucker Pillsbury, the in-demand musician was about two-thirds of the way through his tour’s North American leg.
While talking about his sophomore album, “Kansas Anymore,” Pillsbury suddenly lost his train of thought and, through his phone’s camera, a panicked smile takes over his typically sarcastic composure.
He landed on “The Longest Goodbye,” the revised final track, where Pillsbury still leaves the heartbreak album open-ended — singing, “I don’t think I love you anymore / But I don’t think I’ll ever be so sure,” as his last words.
“If I were to go therapy mode on myself, I think I just don’t like firm endings in life, like hard nos or hard yeses. I don’t like the black and white of certain things. Goodbyes are very hard for me and I think happy endings aren’t always realistic. It’s better to leave things open-ended,” said Pillsbury.
“I will say I miss Maine every single day. I mean, especially being in Tampa,“ says Pillsbury, as he looks out the window, describing a grim, rainy day in Florida.
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Browse