• Over the years, its louche and lively collection of eccentrics and exiles included W. H.

    NEWYORKER: The Gang��s All Here

  • CDOs a useful way to get the higher yields on semi-louche corporate bonds while respecting requirements to hold investment-grade paper.

    ECONOMIST: Credit markets

  • The ideal chic party hotel is a place that effortlessly blends fashion and fun, luxury and a certain louche decadence.

    MSN: America��s best party hotels

  • Before the war it was a magnet for pre-war debauchery and high jinks - evidence of which can be found in the delightfully louche photos on the walls.

    BBC: Prague��s historic coffeehouses

  • This second group is repelled by the louche behaviour of the show's cast, and at the way some aspects of Persian culture are being lampooned on the small screen.

    ECONOMIST: Time for a revolution?

  • Rich, pardoned by President Clinton on his last days in office, a louche act, is long gone from the company whose current principals are great success stories, collectively worth tens of billions.

    FORBES: Grandiosity Is A No-No

  • These self-styled bohemians argue passionately that the Cross is a state of mind rather than a mere postcode, a place where the louche and laconic charm of this convict-established city has always been evident, and where creativity can flourish.

    BBC: Sydney��s bohemian heartland

  • Fifteen years after his death, Serge Gainsbourg remains legendary as the louche bard of sixties Europop, not to mention the inebriated Frenchman who once propositioned a teenaged Whitney Houston on live television (a moment now enshrined forever on YouTube).

    NPR: Dirty and Bored: Serge Gainsbourg Revisited

  • The musicians who were part of the 2010 revival of "La Cage Aux Folles" were positioned in boxes on either side of the stage, where they both played the score and served as the house band of the louche club that's a key setting in the show.

    WSJ: On Broadway, Musicians Are Rising Out of the Pits | By Joanne Kaufman

  • Some argued that the vote reflected a cultural divide between the pious northern Socialists who wanted to stand up against corruption (30 Germans, two Austrians, three Brits, a Belgian and a Swede) and those louche southerners (the Italians, French, Spaniards, Greeks and others) who would turn a blind eye.

    ECONOMIST: Europe��s political parties

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