#Arlene Lott
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hootsewers · 2 years ago
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I'm learning Python and I found this little random name generator on github as a learning tool for which it has been very helpful but some of the names it spits out are fucking hilarious.
Click here to visit the github page if you wanna play with it and also to just credit the creator for giving me several hearty giggles this afternoon
anyways some choice selections:
Cissy Oza
Hoopes Register
Canon Nichole
Shanks Blanka
Son Taggart
Kawasaki Hose
Rod Manus
Nill Marchal
Demb Daudin
Pulling Grabowski
Sharyl Terrill
Eglanteen Jea
Scammon Lipps
Seaman Vevina
Virgin Gerge
Rock Early
Hazlip Carptentier
Bunni Lamb
Montana Boos
Dunkin Barrier
Champagne Stringer
Goodman Emeric
Cressy DMS
Paradies Fuqua
Vowel Oliver
Krissie Cookie
Freud Rudd
Dollar Moriah
Wood Flanders
Lilyan Couchman
Meade Boy
Grimbal Chud
Inman Weiner
Bright Con
Smallman Lagarde
Banks Millan
Brittan Dolphin
Stucker Center
Mooney Kohut
Dust Davies
Morehouse DiPasquale
Inness Holland
Krock Presson
Mayne Moth
Schargel O'Toole
Pond Gene
Prussian Slotnick
Grubb Ayoup
Happ Dorion
Yokum Franny
Ignatius Craghead
Charlotte Lott
Hung Edgar
Didar CSR
Evey Duyck
Zed Gib
Waiter Corpening
Grobe Betsy
Ajay PKDCD
Dona Prissy
Saltman Starbuck
Cato Page
Rann Reporting
Ungley Arlene
Grethel Hurleigh
Botsford Dockendorff
Missagh Hew
Yule Willin
Volpe Twelve
I guess these are free NPC names. Or tag yourself tbh im Pond Gene
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jaitlin · 4 years ago
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The Degrassi Palooza reunion documentary “Narbo’s Guide to Being a BroomHead” has just been released by Pat Mastroianni to stream!
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jennyjammm · 6 years ago
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The Old School Degrassi Tour was honestly one of the greatest experiences of my life!!
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broomheadz · 6 years ago
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Nancy Notion (Nancy Kramer Fashion) DH S1E12: Natural Attraction Aired: 1989
LOL, Nancy is talking to Liz. Well, they are probably talking about Erica’s abortion. Anyway, Nancy has veered away from the peach color today but my eyes keep trying to project peach onto this oatmeal-colored sweater. Sorry it’s blurry, this was mid-camera-pan.
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rapidteszt · 3 years ago
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OG Degrassi actor now making Toronto's most intricate pies
OG Degrassi actor now making Toronto’s most intricate pies
Some of Toronto’s most intricate pies are being made by someone who used to not-so-secretly act on degrassi back in the day. Arlene Lott played Nancy Kramer on Degrassi High from 1987 to 1991, which everyone knows was filmed in Toronto. While her work still involves television, she now often takes more of a behind-the-scenes role, though the pies she’s become known for on social media are as…
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derekfoxwit · 3 years ago
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Animation Figures that I Think Should Be Considered for a Winsor McCay Award
Exactly what it says on the title. For those who don���t know, it’s a lifetime award given by the Annie Awards, which are high-honor accolades dedicated to celebrating excellence in animation. In case of this, the award is for an individual’s lifetime / career contributions to the medium of animation. I’ll be listing those who are yet to get said award, but I feel could or should be considered. They will be categorized in different positions, but several of those will be more loose than anything else. 
Here’s a list of those who already got it: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Winsor_McCay_Award
With that clarity, here’s my list.
Producers / Showrunners
Hideaki Anno (Neon Genesis Evangelion)
Shinichiro Watanabe (Cowboy BeBop; Samurai Champloo; Space Dandy)
Pendleton Ward (Adventure Time; Bravest Warriors; Midnight Gospel)
Arlene Klasky & Gabor Csupo (Founded Klasky Csupo, who worked on early Simpsons episodes and made Rugrats, which was basically the 90s SpongeBob in terms of success)
Fred Seibert
What a Cartoon -> Dexter’s Lab; Powerpuff Girls; Johnny Bravo; Family Guy, technically
Oh Yeah! Cartoons - > Fairly Oddparents; My Life as a Teenage Robot
Random! Cartoons -> Adventure Time
Arthur Rankin Jr. (posthumous) & Jules Bass (Their stop-motion specials)
Joe Ruby & Ken Spears (posthumous) (co-creators of Scooby-Doo)
Toshio Suzuki (Producer of Studio Ghibli films, which he was the president of)
Craig McCraken (Powrpuff Girls; Foster’s Home; Wander Over Yonder)
Sam Register (President of Warner Bros. Animation & Cartoon Network, making him executive producer of numerous projects made by both)
Travis Knight (Lead animator and producer for Laika Studios)
Mike Lazzo (Former executive vice president for Adult Swim, which he served as the producer of numerous of their shows, including many of its’ most renowned cartoons)
Peter Lord (Co-founder and producer of Aardman)
Will Vinton (posthumous) (Developer of claymation)
Ted Turner (Basically started Cartoon Network)
Lou Scheimer (posthumous) (Producer of Filmation’s cartoons, including He-Man)
Masao Maruyama (Founded and produced for anime studio Madhouse, which made Satoshi Kon’s directorial work)
Bonnie Arnold (Toy Story 1; How to Train Your Dragon)
Directors
Don Hertzfeldt (Rejected; It’s Such a Beautiful Day; World of Tomorrow)
Jan Svankmajer (Indie director of several stop-motion films, several of which were combined with live-action)
Masaaki Yuasa (Mind Game; Ping Pong the Anime; The Tatami Galaxy; Devilman: Crybaby [Adventure Episode “Food Chain”])
Kirk Wise & Gary Trousdale (Beauty and the Beast; Hunchback of Notre Dame)
Lotte Reiniger (posthumous) (Pioneered silhouette animation [uses cardboard cut-outs that are only seen as silhouettes, sort of a stop-motion style], developed an older version of the multiplane camera for this style of animation, directed the oldest surviving animated film, The Adventures of Prince Achmed)
Rene Laloux (posthumous) (French director; made Fantastic Planet)
Tomm Moore (Cartoon Saloon co-founder; Secret of Kells, Song of the Sea, Wolfwalkers)
Rob Renzetti (Link to make this easier - https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0719952/?ref_=nv_sr_srsg_0)
Lee Unkrich (frequent Pixar co-director [main director on Coco]; Pixar film editor as well)
Andrew Adamson (Shrek)
Voice Actors (here, you’re just better off looking thru their Behind The Voice Actors or IMDB pages)
Frank Welker
Tom Kenny (mainly here for SpongeBob and Ice King)
Tara Strong
Jim Cummings
Rob Paulsen
Nancy Cartwright (mainly here for Bart Simpson)
Dan Castellaneta (mainly here for Homer Simpson)
Steve Blum
For Japanese VAs
Megumi Hayashibara
Kotono Mitsuishi (Mainly here for Sailor Moon)
Masako Nozawa (mainly here for Goku)
Writers
Aaron Ehaz (head writer for Avatar: The Last Airbender)
Chris Sanders (Lilo & Stitch; How to Train Your Dragon, several co-writing credits for 90s Disney films such as Mulan, Beauty and the Beast and The Lion King; also frequent character designer)
Pete Docter (Pixar Director and Writer [Monsters, Inc.; Up; Inside Out])
Tom Ruegger (The Spielberg TV cartoons [Animaniacs; Tiny Toon Adventures; Pinky & the Brain; Freakazoid!])
Derek Drymon (Writer and Producer - SpongeBob and Adventure Time)
Larry Leker
(Storyboard artist - Don Bluth films; The Little Mermaid; Spirit: Scallion of the Cimarron) 
[Co-writer for Aladdin & The Lion King]
Akira Toriyama (Creator of the Dragon Ball franchise)
Phil Lord & Chris Miller (Clone High; LEGO Movie; Spider-Verse)
Dan Povenmire & Jeff “Swampy” Marsh (Created Phineas & Ferb; worked on the animation on Simpsons and co-wrote for Rocko’s Modern Life episodes)
Povenmire (https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0693933/?ref_=nv_sr_srsg_0)
Marsh (https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0550578/?ref_=nv_sr_srsg_0)
Lauren Faust (In addition to ponies) - https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0269260/?ref_=nv_sr_srsg_0)
Adam Van Wyk (Storyboard Artist, working from Batman Beyond to Harley Quinn 2019)
David X. Cohen (Head writer for Futurama, also worked with Groening on Simpsons)
Leiji Matsumoto (Space Battleship Yamato)
Brenda Chapman - Story Supervisor - The Lion King; Director - The Prince of Egypt; Story - Beauty and the Beast; Hunchback of Notre Dame
Andrew Stanton (Pixar Man, directed Finding Nemo and Wall-E)
Composers / Songwriters
Alan Menken (Disney Renaissance film composer and songwriter [Little Mermaid; Beauty & the Beast; Aladdin)
Joe Hisaishi (Studio Ghibli films)
Yoko Kanno (Cowboy BeBop; GitS: Stand Alone Complex)
John Powell (How to Train Your Dragon; Kung Fu Panda; Shrek; Chicken Run [some of these done alongside Harry Gregson-Williams)
Michael Giacchino (Frequent Pixar composer [The Incredibles; Ratatouille; Up; Inside Out])
Hans Zimmer (The Lion King, several DreamWorks films, served as music producer for several animated films he wasn’t a direct composer for [i.e. the score Thomas Newman composed for Finding Nemo])
Animators
Masashi Ando - Animation director / Supervising Animator (Princess Mononoke; Spirited Away; Paprika; Tokyo Godfathers; Your Name; Weathering with You)
Makiko Futali (posthumous) - Key animator (Arika; Angel’s Egg; Majority of Ghibli’s films)
Kitaro Kosaka (Akira; Several Ghibli films)
Jin Kim - https://www.imdb.com/name/nm1088420/?ref_=nv_sr_srsg_1
Sergio Pablos (Directed Klaus) also conceptualized Despicable Me but let’s ignore that
Animator
Frollo (The Hunchback of Notre Dame)
Hades (Hercules)
Superviser Animator
Tantor (Tarzan)
Doctor Doppler (Treasure Planet)
Tony Fucile
Character designer (Hunchback of Notre Dame; The Iron Giant; The Incredibles; Ratatouille; Soul)
Bud Luckey (posthumous) - https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0524726/?ref_=nv_sr_srsg_0
The Brothers Quay (Stephen and Timothy) - Indie stop-motion animators. Look their work up
Michiyo Yasuda (Posthumous) (color designer) - Spirited Away; Grave of the Fireflies (color key); Castle in the Sky; My Neighbor Totoro (cel painter)
Misc.
Takeshi Seyama (Film editor) - Ghibli films; Paprika; Tokyo Godfathers; Akira
Edwin Catmull (Pixar co-founder)
Kelly Asbury (posthumous)
Story Artist - Frozen; Kung Fu Panda; Toy Story; Shrek; Wreck-It Ralph
Artistic supervisor (story) - Prince of Egypt
Visual Development - The Little Mermaid; Beauty and the Beast 
Director - Shrek 2
Bob Singer (Character Designer & Layout / Storyboard Artist; Hanna-Barbera)
Randy Thom (Sound designer) - The Iron Giant; Coraline; Ratatouille; The Incredibles (won him an Oscar); How to Train Your Dragon; several other misc. animated films
Michael Chang (Storyboard Artist / TV episode director, from Teen Titans to TMNT 2012 to Kipo and the Age of Wonderbeasts)
Nizo Yamamoto (Background artist and Art Director, being the latter for Grave of the Fireflies)
Darren T. Holmes (Editor) - The Iron Giant; Lilo & Stitch; Ratatouille; How to Train Your Dragon; Wolfwalkers
Assistant Editor - The Lion King
William Reeves (technical director and supervisor; Pixar man)
Bob Camp (Character Designer & Storyboard Artist Also cucks John K.’s writing and directing “abilities”)
Bob Peterson (Pixay Guy)
Vicky Jenson (co-directed Shrek), Here’s the rest of her work: https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0421776/?ref_=fn_nm_nm_23
Storyboard artist / Story artist (ain’t sure of the difference) - Road to El Dorado; Chicken Run; The original She-Ra; The original He-Man
Misc. animation work
Production Designer - Road to El Dorado
Background artist - Ren & Stimpy; He-Man; Original Smurfs cartoon)
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starfleet-louvelune · 7 years ago
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LOOK AT THIS CAKE
“ Cake: The Final Frontier. My friends over at Star Trek Discovery are celebrating the start of Season 2, so they asked me to make them something exciting to mark the occasion. #StarTrekDiscovery #StarTrek #Cake #torontofood” - by Arlene Lott
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 LOOK AT IT. HAVE YOU SEEN IT!!!! *0*
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fotopadova · 3 years ago
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Un minuto di New York: street photography, 1920–1950
da https://www.clevelandart.org (trad. G.Millozzi)
 -- La fotografia di strada, immagini spontanee della vita quotidiana catturate in luoghi pubblici, è esplosa a New York durante la prima metà del XX secolo.
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- Family in Front of Synagogue, Pitt St., Lower East Side, NY, 1938 (printed later)  © Walter Rosenblum (American, 1919-2006) 
Questo giovane genere di fotografia era l'erede della tradizione leggermente precedente del realismo urbano nella pittura e nella stampa, come si vede nella mostra complementare Ashcan School Prints and the American City, 1900-1940, in mostra nella James and Hanna Bartlett Prints and Drawings Gallery dal 17 luglio al 26 dicembre 2021. Entrambi i movimenti si sono rivolti alle rappresentazioni delle attività quotidiane degli abitanti delle città per esplorare i radicali cambiamenti demografici, sociali ed economici che stanno trasformando la città.
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- Group in Front of Fence, Pitt Street, Lower East Side, NY,1938 (printed later) © Walter Rosenblum (American, 1919-2006) 
Gli intrattenimenti abbondavano sotto forma di film, teatri, luna-park e le attrazioni di Coney Island. Le vetrine dei negozi e le locandine dei film offrivano allettanti visioni di abbondanza e di eleganza sofisticata. Ma quelli erano sogni piuttosto che realtà per la maggior parte dei residenti, in particolare gli immigrati dall'Europa, da Porto Rico e dai paesi dell'America Latina e dai neri americani che erano stati attori della Grande Migrazione. Affollate in minuscoli appartamenti, le famiglie hanno trasformato verande, marciapiedi, parchi e spiagge nei loro soggiorni.
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 - Subway Portrait 1938-1941 © Walker Evans (American, 1903-1975) 
I fotografi di strada erano guardoni, catturando momenti privati ​​che si verificano negli spazi pubblici. Alcuni avevano motivi nobili. Le immagini dei membri della Photo League, che includevano Walter Rosenblum, Lisette Model e Leon Levinstein, testimoniano i divertimenti e le lotte dell'uomo e della donna comuni. Walker Evans e Helen Levitt hanno realizzato le loro immagini esposte in questa mostra come opere d'arte personali. Louis Faurer e Lloyd Ullberg hanno lavorato per delle riviste. In questa mostra, ci sono diversi esempi di lavoro di fotografi come James Van Der Zee, Roy DeCarava, Arnold Genthe e Ralph Steiner che hanno eseguito dei ritratti dei quali ancor oggi si riconosce la validità.
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- Fashion Show, Hotel Pierre, New York City, 1940 © Lisette Model (American, 1901-1983) 
Che siano create per un incarico, come espressione personale o per sostenere il cambiamento della società, le immagini di questa mostra, tratte interamente dalla collezione del museo, forniscono una macchina del tempo che ci permette di vivere uno spaccato di vita a New York di un secolo fa.
Tutte le mostre al Cleveland Museum of Art sono patrocinate dal CMA Fund for Exhibitions. Il principale sostegno annuale è fornito da Bill e Joyce Litzler, con generosi finanziamenti annuali da Mr. e Mrs. Walter R. Chapman Jr., del Jeffery Wallace Ellis Trust in memoria di Lloyd H. Ellis Jr., Janice Hammond e Edward Hemmelgarn, Ms. Arlene Monroe Holden, Eva e Rudolf Linnebach, William S. e Margaret F. Lipscomb, Tim O'Brien e Breck Platner, dal Womens Council del Cleveland Museum of Art e da Claudia Woods e David Osage.
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- Three Children on Swings, Pitt Street, New York 1950 © Walter Rosenblum  (American, 1919-2006) 
Il Cleveland Museum of Art è finanziato in parte dai residenti della contea di Cuyahoga attraverso una sovvenzione pubblica di Cuyahoga Arts & Culture. Questa mostra è stata sostenuta in parte dall'Ohio Arts Council, che riceve il sostegno dello Stato dell'Ohio e del National Endowment for the Arts.
---per altre immagini: link
-------------------------
Dal 10 luglio al 7 novembre 2021
Cleveleland Museum of Art
Galleria fotografica di Mark Schwartz e Bettina Katz, Galleria 230
11150 East Boulevard Cleveland, Ohio 44106
216-421-7350888-cma-0033
 Ingresso generale gratuito – le mostre speciali possono essere a pagamento
Orari: martedì, giovedì, sabato e domenica 10.00-17.00; mercoledì e venerdì 10.00-21.00; chiuso il lunedì.
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redazionefotopadova · 3 years ago
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Un minuto di New York: street photography, 1920–1950
da https://www.clevelandart.org (trad. G.Millozzi)
  -- La fotografia di strada, immagini spontanee della vita quotidiana catturate in luoghi pubblici, è esplosa a New York durante la prima metà del XX secolo.
Tumblr media
-Family in Front of Synagogue, Pitt St., Lower East Side, NY, 1938 (printed later) - © Walter Rosenblum (American, 1919-2006)
Questo giovane genere di fotografia era l'erede della tradizione leggermente precedente del realismo urbano nella pittura e nella stampa, come si vede nella mostra complementare Ashcan School Prints and the American City, 1900-1940, in mostra nella James and Hanna Bartlett Prints and Drawings Gallery dal 17 luglio al 26 dicembre 2021. Entrambi i movimenti si sono rivolti alle rappresentazioni delle attività quotidiane degli abitanti delle città per esplorare i radicali cambiamenti demografici, sociali ed economici che stavano trasformando la città.
Tumblr media
 - Group in Front of Fence, Pitt Street, Lower East Side, NY,1938 (printed later)  © Walter Rosenblum (American, 1919-2006)
Gli intrattenimenti abbondavano sotto forma di film, teatri, luna-park e le attrazioni di Coney Island. Le vetrine dei negozi e le locandine dei film offrivano allettanti visioni di abbondanza e di eleganza sofisticata. Ma quelli erano sogni piuttosto che realtà per la maggior parte dei residenti, in particolare per gli immigrati dall'Europa, da Porto Rico e dai paesi dell'America Latina e dai neri americani che erano stati attori della Grande Migrazione. Affollate in minuscoli appartamenti, le loro famiglie hanno trasformato verande, marciapiedi, parchi e spiagge nei loro soggiorni.
Tumblr media
 - Subway Portrait 1938-1941 © Walker Evans (American, 1903-1975)
I fotografi di strada erano guardoni, catturando momenti privati ​​che si verificavano negli spazi pubblici. Alcuni avevano motivi nobili. Le immagini dei membri della Photo League, che includevano Walter Rosenblum, Lisette Model e Leon Levinstein, testimoniano i divertimenti e le lotte dell'uomo e della donna comuni. Walker Evans e Helen Levitt hanno realizzato le loro immagini esposte in questa mostra come opere d'arte personali. Louis Faurer e Lloyd Ullberg hanno lavorato per delle riviste. In questa mostra, ci sono diversi esempi di lavoro di fotografi come James Van Der Zee, Roy DeCarava, Arnold Genthe e Ralph Steiner che hanno ritratti dei quali ancor oggi si riconosce la validità.
Tumblr media
- Fashion Show, Hotel Pierre, New York City, 1940  © Lisette Model (American, 1901-1983)
Che siano create per un incarico, come espressione personale o per sostenere il cambiamento della società, le immagini di questa mostra, tratte interamente dalla collezione del museo, forniscono una macchina del tempo che ci permette di vivere uno spaccato di vita a New York  di un secolo fa.
Tutte le mostre al Cleveland Museum of Art sono patrocinate dal CMA Fund for Exhibitions. Il principale sostegno annuale è fornito da Bill e Joyce Litzler, con generosi finanziamenti annuali da Mr. e Mrs. Walter R. Chapman Jr., del Jeffery Wallace Ellis Trust in memoria di Lloyd H. Ellis Jr., Janice Hammond e Edward Hemmelgarn, Ms. Arlene Monroe Holden, Eva e Rudolf Linnebach, William S. e Margaret F. Lipscomb, Tim O'Brien e Breck Platner, dal Womens Council del Cleveland Museum of Art e da Claudia Woods e David Osage.
Tumblr media
- Three Children on Swings, Pitt Street, New York 1950  © Walter Rosenblum  (American, 1919-2006)
Il Cleveland Museum of Art è finanziato in parte dai residenti della contea di Cuyahoga attraverso una sovvenzione pubblica di Cuyahoga Arts & Culture.
Questa mostra è stata sostenuta in parte dall'Ohio Arts Council, che riceve il sostegno dello Stato dell'Ohio e del National Endowment for the Arts.
---per altre immagini: link
-------------------------
Dal 10 luglio al 7 novembre 2021
Cleveleland Museum of Art
Galleria fotografica di Mark Schwartz e Bettina Katz, Galleria 230
11150 East Boulevard Cleveland, Ohio 44106
216-421-7350888-cma-0033
 Ingresso generale gratuito – le mostre speciali possono essere a pagamento
Orari: martedì, giovedì, sabato e domenica 10.00-17.00; mercoledì e venerdì 10.00-21.00; chiuso il lunedì.
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ercdouken · 7 years ago
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Did the FE sorter thingy again. Link: http://fesorter.tumblr.com/
Full List:
1 Catria 2 Cherche 3 Silque 4 Mia 5 Oboro 6 Marcia 7 Setsuna 8 Volke 9 Lucina 10 Jill 11 Nephenee 12 Rebecca 13 Tate 14 Miledy 15 Palla 16 Erinys 17 Ayra 18 Tailtiu 19 Minerva 20 Linde 21 Saber 22 Mae 23 Haar 24 Ogma 25 Marth 26 Flora 27 Felicia 28 Kaze 29 Clair 30 Stefan 31 Beruka 32 Noire 33 Cordelia 34 Lute 35 Ishtar 36 Caeda 37 Tibarn 38 Farina 39 Nino 40 Lyn 41 Titania 42 Barst 43 Camus 44 Cain 45 Tana 46 Gerik 47 Brigid 48 Joshua 49 Karin 50 Lon'qu 51 Sonya 52 Fir 53 Dieck 54 Lewyn 55 Finn 56 Sigurd 57 Kamui 58 Elincia 59 Sumia 60 Anna 61 Miriel 62 Cynthia 63 Fee 64 Larcei 65 Altena 66 Orsin 67 Merric 68 Tiki 69 Owain 70 Celica 71 Mathilda 72 Ilyana 73 Sain 74 Nanna 75 Athena 76 Nolan 77 Fiora 78 Priscilla 79 Canas 80 Oswin 81 Gray 82 Cecille 83 Hardin 84 Zihark 85 Ced 86 Leila 87 Laura 88 Ethlyn 89 Legion 90 Lena 91 Julian 92 Azura 93 Lissa 94 Robin 95 Marisa 96 Pent 97 Vanessa 98 Ninian 99 Florina 100 Calill 101 Astrid 102 Gatrie 103 Kieran 104 Marisha 105 Shanna 106 Navarre 107 Frey 108 Phina 109 Norne 110 Delthea 111 Lukas 112 Keaton 113 Lucia 114 Kagero 115 Tanith 116 Gregor 117 Heather 118 Tatiana 119 Genny 120 Lilina 121 Sue 122 Echidna 123 Lex 124 Luthier 125 Jeorge 126 Sheena 127 Julia 128 Shanan 129 Tinny 130 Arthur 131 Naesala 132 Perceval 133 Hector 134 Matthew 135 L'Arachel 136 Shinon 137 Oscar 138 Micaiah 139 Katarina 140 Hinoka 141 Takumi 142 Saizo 143 Scarlet 144 Leo 145 Ryoma 146 Ike 147 Boyd 148 Mist 149 Reyson 150 Clarine 151 Abel 152 Est 153 Klein 154 Geese 155 Ellen 156 Rutger 157 Allen 158 Lance 159 Ares 160 Seliph 161 Alvis 162 Mordecai 163 Zelgius 164 Eliwood 165 Kaden 166 Wendell 167 Xane 168 Rinea 169 Clarisse 170 Quan 171 Olwen 172 Mareeta 173 Sara 174 Bastian 175 Chrom 176 Isadora 177 Louise 178 Natasha 179 Cecilia 180 Leif 181 Eldigan 182 Tanya 183 Safy 184 Lara 185 Machyua 186 Linoan 187 Shiva 188 Lachesis 189 Corrin 190 Tharja 191 Olivia 192 Frederick 193 Edain 194 Deirdre 195 Chulainn 196 Valbar 197 Jagen 198 Alm 199 Mycen 200 Geoffrey 201 Kent 202 Draug 203 Guy 204 Mozu 205 Sedgar 206 Wolf 207 Forsyth 208 Boey 209 Conrad 210 Ophelia 211 Midori 212 Velouria 213 Sakura 214 Arthur 215 Effie 216 Benny 217 Lloyd 218 Stahl 219 Maribelle 220 Myrrh 221 Cormag 222 Henry 223 Muarim 224 Aran 225 Volug 226 Seth 227 Neimi 228 Eirika 229 Amelia 230 Charlotte 231 Astram 232 Samson 233 Colm 234 Moulder 235 Tormod 236 Lyon 237 Saleh 238 Roshea 239 Sylvia 240 Jamke 241 Leon 242 Kliff 243 Castor 244 Sophie 245 Gunter 246 Reina 247 Brom 248 Nailah 249 Ephraim 250 Duessel 251 Innes 252 Laurent 253 Hana 254 Camilla 255 Elise 256 Xander 257 Forde 258 Ursula 259 Carrion 260 Tina 261 Halvan 262 Bartre 263 Raigh 264 Fae 265 Karel 266 Oifey 267 Igrene 268 Patty 269 Reinhardt 270 Marcus 271 Orochi 272 Caineghis 273 Say'ri 274 Lucius 275 Basilio 276 Ulki 277 Janaff 278 Greil 279 Largo 280 Vaike 281 Virion 282 Nasir 283 Brady 284 Lugh 285 Roy 286 Ulster 287 Lana 288 Asbel 289 Fergus 290 Lifis 291 Brunya 292 Sigrun 293 Leanne 294 Serra 295 Idoun 296 Syrene 297 Morgan 298 Zephiel 299 Valter 300 Inigo 301 Selena 302 Brighton 303 Lalum 304 Elphin 305 Wrys 306 Malice 307 Nagi 308 Jake 309 Lorenz 310 Ranulf 311 Tauroneo 312 Kyle 313 Karla 314 Chad 315 Noah 316 Gonzales 317 Severa 318 Izana 319 Shura 320 Rinkah 321 Raven 322 Harken 323 Jaffar 324 Legault 325 Hinata 326 Jakob 327 Dorcas 328 Rath 329 Erk 330 Pelleas 331 Libra 332 Gaius 333 Danved 334 Gilliam 335 Geitz 336 Heath 337 Walhart 338 Aversa 339 Ashnard 340 Sanaki 341 Skrimir 342 Rhys 343 Lethe 344 Rennac 345 Garcia 346 Hawkeye 347 Dart 348 Dozla 349 Tethys 350 Gangrel 351 Silas 352 Flavia 353 Panne 354 Giffca 355 Renning 356 Dheginsea 357 Sephiran 358 Kurthnaga 359 Ena 360 Petrine 361 Kellam 362 Sully 363 Ismaire 364 Wil 365 Lowen 366 Knoll 367 Hayato 368 Subaki 369 Selkie 370 Caeldori 371 Soleil 372 Nina 373 Nah 374 Shiro 375 Siegbert 376 Forrest 377 Fuga 378 Niles 379 Nyx 380 Perne 381 Diarmuid 382 Michalis 383 Roger 384 Arlen 385 Gotoh 386 Febail 387 Lester 388 Faye 389 Etzel 390 Horace 391 Shin 392 Galzus 393 Miranda 394 Shigure 395 Misha 396 Homer 397 Eda 398 Dean 399 Selfina 400 Dagdar 401 Darros 402 Beck 403 Ymir 404 Midayle 405 Azel 406 Deen 407 Julius 408 Areone 409 Guinevere 410 Hugh 411 Dayan 412 Python 413 Tobin 414 Mila 415 Juno 416 Atlas 417 Jesse 418 Berkut 419 Midia 420 Radd 421 Caesar 422 Gordin 423 Luke 424 Roderick 425 Lene 426 Vika 427 Ross 428 Athos 429 Franz 430 Nils 431 Gwendolyn 432 Ogier 433 Cath 434 Sophia 435 Hicks 436 Dalsin 437 Beowolf 438 Dew 439 Rudolf 440 Wallace 441 Artur 442 Linus 443 Fargus 444 Renault 445 Nergal 446 Limstella 447 Sonia 448 Nowi 449 Priam 450 Gareth 451 Percy 452 Dwyer 453 Kana 454 Ignatius 455 Dice 456 Frost 457 Dolph 458 Bantu 459 Warren 460 Cord 461 Samto 462 Niime 463 Douglas 464 Zeiss 465 Gale 466 Narcian 467 Eyrios 468 Salem 469 Bors 470 Astore 471 Saul 472 Hannibal 473 Merlinus 474 Travant 475 Asugi 476 Mitama 477 Rhajat 478 Sothe 479 Edward 480 Leonardo 481 Bord 482 Nomah 483 Yodel 484 Saias 485 Amalda 486 Xavier 487 Alec 488 Noish 489 Gharnef 490 Medeus 491 Maria 492 Nyna 493 Ryan 494 Arran 495 Shanam 496 Wolt 497 Murdock 498 Vaida 499 Jahn 500 Lyre 501 Rafiel 502 Nealuchi 503 Zelot 504 Wade 505 Lott 506 Garret 507 Manfroy 508 Johan 509 Johalva 510 Clive 511 Elice 512 Ralph 513 Arden 514 Rolf 515 Fiona 516 Almedha 517 Claud 518 Fred 519 Robert 520 Kein 521 Alva 522 Treck 523 Kris 524 Yumina 525 Reiden 526 Belf 527 Roberto 528 Macellan 529 Vyland 530 Tomas 531 Jedah 532 Barthe 533 Marty 534 Ronan 535 Sleuf 536 Glade 537 Dorothy 538 Coirpre 539 Soren 540 Ricken 541 Donnel 542 Emmeryn 543 Gerome 544 Kjelle 545 Glen 546 Caellach 547 Hisame 548 Kiragi 549 Yarne 550 Kyza 551 Ashera 552 Yen'fay 553 Validar 554 Peri 555 Riev 556 Ewan 557 Raydrik 558 Blume 559 Troude 560 Meg 561 Rickard 562 Oliver 563 Yubello 564 Boah 565 Makalov 566 Matthis 567 Azama 568 Garon 569 Mikoto 570 Yukimura 571 Orson 572 Conomore 573 Dorias 574 August 575 Veld 576 Brendan 577 Hilda 578 Izuka
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jacquelynlowenthal · 5 years ago
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Nancy Notion (Nancy Kramer Fashion) DH S1E4: Dream On Aired: 1989
Nancy is just being Nancy in an expected peachy tee, khakis, and white Keds.
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thisdaynews · 5 years ago
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How the Democratic Netroots Died
New Post has been published on https://thebiafrastar.com/how-the-democratic-netroots-died/
How the Democratic Netroots Died
Liberal blogger’s like Markos Moulitsas used to have major sway in presidential politics. | Alberto E. Rodriguez/Getty Images
2020
Only 15 years ago, liberal bloggers like Markos Moulitsas were a powerful force in presidential politics. What happened?
Twelve years ago, progressive political bloggers were so influential that nearly every 2008 Democratic presidential candidate attended the Yearly Kos convention—a gathering of liberal online activists named after Markos Moulitsas’ popular Daily Kos website.
This year, that same event, now called Netroots Nation, attracted a measly four of the 24 Democratic candidates. Only one of them, Elizabeth Warren, even polls in double digits. Rather than attend the event,the Bernie Sanders campaign engaged in a Twitter spat with Moulitsas.
Story Continued Below
What happened? Not all that long ago, liberal bloggers had genuine achievements to point to: Only a year before the 2007 Yearly Kos, Ned Lamont, a wealthy but little known Connecticut businessman, beat Joe Lieberman—the incumbent and a former vice presidential nominee of the Democratic Party—in a U.S. Senate primary by embracing the “blogosphere,” a ridiculous word for a not-ridiculous force: progressive online activists who could drive discourse, cultivate small donors and legitimize outsider politicians. Lamont made common cause with bloggers to punish Lieberman for his vote to authorize the Iraq War. Thirteen years later, now-Governor Lamont has endorsed the only presidential candidate who cast the same vote: Joe Biden.
Moultisas chalked up the lack of presidential attendance at this year’s forum to “fear.” But the opposite appears to be true. Democrats do not fear offending the blogger stars of yore because the attempt to turn armchair pontificating into organized political power has failed.
Antipathy toward President George W. Bush and the Iraq War sparked a chemical reaction with internet technology to create powerful force in politics, but social and technological shifts have since depleted that power. The decline of blogger influence stems in part from the rise of Facebook and Twitter, which have fundamentally altered how Americans do politics on the internet. No longer do we hop from blog to blog by clicking blogrolls, and most of the earliest political bloggers have shut down their websites and begun posting their commentaries on their social media accounts instead.
But it’s not just the rise of social media. The political ties that unified progressive bloggers during the George W. Bush presidency have frayed, too. The netroots’ fragmentation and weakened power in 2020 is as much a story of the end of a coalition as it is of changing technology.
In the first decade of the 2000s, the scrappy lefty blogger crew steeled Democrats to block Bush’s plans to partially privatize Social Security, ousted Trent Lott asSenate majority leader after he praised the 1948 segregationist presidential candidacy of Strom Thurmond, and transformed a small-state governor named Howard Dean into a presidential contender and chairman of the Democratic National Committee. I had my own little blogger success stories while tapping away at LiberalOasis.com, where I conducted the first formal blogger interview with a presidential candidate, Dean, and broke the news of a misleading attack from Lieberman against Lamont.
The founding members of the progressive blogosphere envisioned a movement distinct from the left-wing activists of yesterday—aggressive, but not beholden to ideological purity. As described by Moulitsas and Jerome Armstrong in their 2006 bookCrashing The Gate, netroots activists wanted progressives, and their favored politicians, to be “fiercely partisan” but not “ideological” because “there is actually very little, issue-wise, that unites most modern party activists except, perhaps, opposition to the Iraq War.” They wanted not litmus tests on policy but a style, an attitude: a tougher Democratic Party that could better beat Republicans.
That politically welcoming perspective was put into electoral practice. Progressive bloggers championed a 2005 long-shot House special election bid from Paul Hackett, an Iraq veteran from Ohio who supported gun rights and “limited government,” but did not hesitate to call President George W. Bush a “chickenhawk.” Some bloggers were angered when Hackett was pressured by Democratic Party leaders to drop out of the 2006 Senate race to make room for Sherrod Brown, even though Brown was more liberal than Hackett. Bloggers also recruited Jim Webb, a former Reagan administration official and Iraq War opponent, to run for the Senate in Virginia in 2006, and they didn’t flinch when a 1979 essay surfaced in which Webb argued “Women Can’t Fight” in the military. Webb apologized for it.
Ari Melber, writing for theNation, concluded that bloggers’ love for Webb showed a preference for “political pragmatism” over “ideological purity”: “If netroots Democrats care about one thing more than aggressive partisanship, it’s winning.”
But the 2008 presidential primary put an end to the netroots’ unity. In his 2009 bookBloggers on the Bus, Eric Boehlert captured how the election drove wedges through the once-harmonious band of online activists. As Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton slugged it out, some bloggers took sides and others felt caught in the crossfire.
In March 2008, a group of Daily Kos diarists who backed Clinton staged a virtual walkout in protest of the site’s tilt toward Obama. Moulitsas shot back that Clinton’s refusal to drop out showed she was “eager to split the party apart in her mad pursuit of power.” HisCrashing the Gateco-author, Armstrong, saw the race differently; in his view, Clinton “showed signs of being accountable to the netroots movement” while Obama “didn’t need the netroots” and “was basically an identity-politics cult” leader. Armstrong later quit blogging and worked for Libertarian presidential candidate Gary Johnson in 2012.
The New York Times’ Paul Krugman, a blog aficionado, told Boehlert he was dismayed at how he felt Obama’s online supporters had treated Clinton: “I don’t think people, myself, are ever going to look at Daily Kos the same way.” In the 2016 primary eight years later, Daily Kos was accused of favoring Clinton over Bernie Sanders, as Moulitsas banned “malicious attacks” targeting Clinton, “our presumptive presidential nominee,” before the primary process was completed.
After Obama won the primary, and the presidency, ideological purity began to rise in importance among the most prominent bloggers. For an activist movement to set aside small differences to fight a common political enemy, only to form a circular firing squad once the enemy is defeated, is an old political story. The progressive blogosphere wasn’t all that different from its forebears, after all.
In July 2008, Obama provoked several leading bloggers when he supported legal immunity for telecommunication companies that abetted warrantless wiretapping by the second Bush administration. In the 2008 primary against Clinton, Obama, then a U.S. senator, promised to filibuster any bill that gave the companies retroactive immunity; but he stood down after winning the Democratic presidential nomination and voted for compromise legislation that included it. That helped him avoid being tagged as soft on terrorism, but Glenn Greenwald charged Obama with supporting “a full-scale assault on our Constitution.” Duncan Black, who stills blogs—and tweets, naturally—under the handle Atrios, dubbed Obama his “Wanker of the Day.” Moulitsas, ahead of the switch, fretted, “We may worry that he’s just another one of these spineless Democrats” and fail to give Obama the full “intensity of support.”
Obama’s willingness to ignore the bloggers’ demands foreshadowed the difficulties the netroots would encounter once Democrats began wielding power. Obama’s groundbreaking campaign tapped the power of the internet, but it did so largely without the help of progressive blogosphere leaders. Matt Stoller, an early blogger who is now a fellow at the Open Markets Institute, gave Boehlert a clear-eyed assessment of the Obama campaign’s posture toward the blogosphere: “They don’t care what we think. … Their logistical operations are remarkable, their campaign structure is phenomenal, and we’re not a part of it.”
Once Obama won without the “intensity” of the blogosphere, the relationship between the online left and the Democratic establishment reverted to fractiousness, with the purist outsiders taking potshots at the compromising insiders. In December 2009, as it became clear that a public health insurance option would not be part of Obama’s Affordable Care Act, Moulitsas lambasted the legislation as “a turd of a ‘reform’ package, potentially worse than the status quo.” When Obama tried to boost morale for the slowly recovering economy and credited his stimulus package, Atrios scoffed at the calls by Democrats to “clap louder you stupid hippies.”
When the Obama administration persuaded Sen. Arlen Specter to switch parties in 2009, helping Democrats briefly hold a 60-vote Senate supermajority, blogger-activists who could not forgive Specter’s conservative past helped Rep. Joe Sestak defeat Specter in the 2010 primary. Specter’s willingness to participate in a Netroots Nation primary debate proved insufficient for the blogosphere. The victory was pyrrhic, as Sestak then lost the general election to a Republican.
As the Bush-era blog leaders struggled, the decentralized nature of the online political world gave oxygen to newer factions, including a robust democratic socialist left that viewed the founding members of the blogosphere as insufficiently progressive. “Once Obama took office, Kos went soft” wrote the “Chapo Trap House” podcasters in their best-selling book, based on Moulitsas’ negativity toward Sanders in 2016 (and ignoring his many attempts to boost primary challenges against establishment officeholders.) Oversimplifying the community of Bush-era bloggers, the “Chapo” gang dismissed the netroots as “a league of pathetic, repulsive morons who mastered a technology every child knows how to use” and “piloted journalism into a newer, even more idiotic frontier of toxic hackery.”
One person’s toxic hackery is another person’s call for revolution. Which was exactly the problem for the blogosphere: Its decentralized nature rendered it fairly useless for accumulating organized power. InCrashing the Gate, Moultisas and Armstrong saw decentralization as a strength: “That’s why this movement is so effective—and so threatening to established powers. It is leaderless. It cannot be harnessed, controlled, or co-opted.” Well, yeah.
Boehlert, who now writes for Daily Kos, rejects the conclusion that the attempt at an organized netroots has foundered. He points to the sprawling anti-Trump “resistance” as based on “the model that the blogosphere created 15 years ago” in shaping dialogue that’s “very aggressive, factual and passionate.”
Nearly two decades after the birth of the blogosphere, there’s no question that the ability of the internet to make anyone a publisher—or, in the age of podcasting and YouTube, a broadcaster—has altered the political landscape, brought new people into the process, and made the ground under the Washington establishment shakier. But the vision of a powerful, progressive “netroots” that was at once aggressively partisan, progressively principled, organizationally leaderless and politically potent was not sustainable. It couldn’t go on forever and so, to paraphrase Herbert Stein, it didn’t.
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