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Willie Eyeglasses

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Introduction



Willie Garson Eyeglasses

The cool man is Willie Garson whose name is Mozzie in Sex and the City. He wears the Western-style clothes with a pair of fashion eyeglasses. His eyeglasses are suitable for the men who are in fashion. If you are an amusing person, you also can make attempts to wear the Willie’s black eyeglasses in your everyday life! You can bring more joyous things for your families by wearing the eyewear. Hurry up! let's check them out at Firmoo.com, where you can find lots of celebs' eyeglasses of stylish shapes and chic styles at very low prices.

Willie Hernandez Eyeglasses

Willie Hernandez wears the black lined framed eyeglasses. To be specific, the black lined frame is made up of alloy and the lucid lenses are made up of resin. Moreover, the oblong frame is suitable for people with small eyes. If you want to look like a scholar, a pair of black frame eyeglasses must be useful. Speaking of where to buy cheap black frame glasses, what’s the first thing entering into your mind? Definitely, Firmoo can help you to find the answer. Besides, you can find plenty of glasses for sale just like Willie Hernandez’s style, and then you can realize your dream to a large extent!

More info about Willie Garson

Willie Garson is an American character actor. He has appeared in over 50 movies, usually playing minor roles. He is known for playing Stanford Blatch on the HBO series Sex and the City and in the related films Sex and the City and Sex and the City 2, and for his current role as Mozzie, in the USA Network series White Collar.

Garson had a recurring role as Henry Coffield on NYPD Blue and as Stanford Blatch on Sex and the City. His other TV appearances include Mr. Belvedere, My Two Dads, Quantum Leap, Monk, Boy Meets World, Ally McBeal, Party of Five, Star Trek: Voyager, Special Unit 2, Buffy The Vampire Slayer, Friends, The X-Files, Yes, Dear, CSI: Crime Scene Investigation, Pushing Daisies, Stargate SG-1, Wizards of Waverly Place, CSI: Miami, Mental, Spin City, and Taken. He made a cameo in the end credits of Jackass Number Two, with the full context of the cameo being explained in Jackass 2.5. He co-starred in the 2007 HBO series John from Cincinnati.

Since 2009, he has portrayed Mozzie in the USA Network series White Collar.

Garson has also appeared in three movies from the Farrelly brothers—Kingpin, There's Something About Mary, and Fever Pitch. His other film credits include Groundhog Day, Just Like Heaven, The Rock, Being John Malkovich, Freaky Friday, Labor Pains, and Out Cold.

More info about Willie Hernandez

Guillermo "Willie" Hernández Villanueva is a former relief pitcher for the Chicago Cubs, Philadelphia Phillies, and the Detroit Tigers. He threw and batted left-handed.

Hernández signed with the Philadelphia Phillies as an amateur free agent in 1973. He was selected by the Chicago Cubs from the Phillies in the 1976 Rule V Draft. In his first two years in the majors, Hernandez went 16-9 with a 3.03 ERA in '77 and a 3.77 ERA in '78. The Cubs gave him a try as a starter in 1980, but he went 1-9 that year in 7 starts and 53 games pitched.

From 1979-1982, Hernández was 9-19 and gave up 128 earned runs in that time. After being traded to the Phillies for Bill Johnson and Dick Ruthven, he went 8-4 with 3.29 ERA and 7 saves. The Phillies made the World Series that year, losing to the Baltimore Orioles in 5 games.

Prior to the 1984 season, Hernández was traded to the Detroit Tigers with Dave Bergman for Glenn Wilson and John Wockenfuss. He had a 9-3 record, 32 saves and a 1.92 ERA in 140 innings pitched, while recording 112 strikeouts. In the entire season, Hernandez gave up only 6 home runs, 30 runs, 36 base on balls, and 96 hits. His 32 saves came in 33 opportunities.

Hernández won the 1984 American League Cy Young Award, beating out Dan Quisenberry. He also became one of the few relievers to ever win the Most Valuable Player Award, edging out Kent Hrbek. The Tigers finished 104-58 that season, and went on to sweep the Kansas City Royals in the American League Championship Series and defeat the San Diego Padres in the 1984 World Series, four games to one. Hernandez pitched five innings in the series, had two saves, and gave up only one run.

His overall postseason stats include a 2-2 record and a 1.32 ERA in 10 games, 13 innings pitched. He walked 2, and struck out 7.

Hernández never had those numbers again, but was a solid reliever for the Tigers in his final years - when he became known by his given name Guillermo Hernández. In 1988, his second-to-last year, he went 6-5 with a 3.06 ERA and 10 saves in 67 innings pitched. Hernández's last MLB game was on August 18, 1989, before being released by Detroit. He attempted comebacks with the Triple-A Syracuse Chiefs of the Toronto Blue Jays organization in 1991 and Columbus Clippers of the New York Yankees organization in 1995.