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#Brinkley Davies
cherusque · 10 months
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Brinkley Davies 🇦🇺 (📷 Carly Brown)
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citizenscreen · 11 months
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Sammy Davis Jr. eating spaghetti in his backstage dressing room while watching The Huntley-Brinkley Report news show in 1964. Photographer Leonard McCombe for LIFE.
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thislovintime · 2 years
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Peter Tork with Russian poet Yevgeny Yevtushenko, Toby and Bob Rafelson and others in Honolulu, December 1966; Davy Jones, Micky Dolenz, and Peter onstage in Honolulu on December 3, 1966. Photos by KRLA Beat, Jerry Y. Chong for the Honolulu Advertiser, unnamed (including a screenshot from Peter’s My Generation interview), Honolulu Star-Advertiser.
“The Honolulu International Center Arena was jammed when The Monkees took the stage. Even Russian poet Yevgeny Yevutshenko was there to see what the Monkees could do. The Monkees — David Jones, Mike Nesmith, Peter Tork and Micky Dolenz — are an ingenious combination of music and mirth. They sing fairly well — when you can hear them between the screams — but what they lack in vocal finesse, they make up in stage presence. Talk about energy! […] Micky’s take-off […] on James Brown — and remember those gaudy aloha shirts that were used? — featured some fancy footwork and from-the-heart wailing. It, easily, was the evening’s highlight. Perhaps the favorite Monkee was David who, with puppy-dog eyes and long, flowing hair, was the best-overall performer. His Broadway stage experience — he was in Oliver — was very much in evidence when he belted out ‘The Joker’ and ‘I Wanna Be Free.’ Peter, too, was a sensation when he plucked his banjo (he’s usually on guitar) and chanted a folk tune. He had a Ringo-like naivete, and looked like the Dutch Boy on the cleanser. Mike, unfortunately, gets into the act too infrequently. He has the makings of a real charmer — he’s a funny fellow — but he lets his buddies take the spotlight. […] The Monkees were dynamite.” - Wayne Harada, The Honolulu Advertiser, December 5, 1966
“Mike also does a very funny imitation of L.B.J. and during the hour and a half takeover of KPOI by the Monkees, he demonstrated this in what has to be the funniest newscast ever, anywhere. ‘Peter Tork, Honolulu, and Mike Nesmith, Honolulu,’ did a Huntley-Brinkley five minutes that proved their ad lib and improvisational ability. Mike reported, ‘President Johnson called the United Nations today and asked U Thant if he might be a little more familiar with him and call him “U.”’ Peter chimes in, ‘And he replied, “Nu.”’ [Micky] Dolenz was having such a ball playing disc jockey [(]’Hi there everybody, this is the [Micky] the D show on KPOI’) that he begged for permission to come back and do the all night show. […] During their hectic airport arrival last week, the Monkees were mobbed when several hundred screaming teenaged girls broke through a restraining rope. Their limousine was surrounded, but all the boys got inside except Peter Tork who was forced to climb on top [of] the car in the rush. One of the show’s promoters saw the car start to pull away and leaped on the trunk to try to keep Peter form falling. As the car sped down the runway, a safe distance away from the mob of girls still chasing after it, Peter turned to the passenger clinging to the trunk and said calmly, ‘Tom Moffatt, I presume?’ He was right! During the ride in from the airport, some enterprising fan pulled alongside the Monkees’ car and handed a wool hat to Mike Nesmith, who still clutched it as they checked into the Royal Hawaiian Hotel. As they rested in their rooms on arrival, devouring fresh pineapple as if they hadn’t eaten in weeks and listening to the radio, Mike said in his Texas drawl, ‘How come it’s so low?’ Although it seemed a normal level to me, he walked over and turned it louder than radio has ever been in the Royal. The Monkees clown among themselves just as much as they do before an audience. The Saturday night show was sold out even before the group arrived Thursday afternoon.
The Monkees demonstrated that they were actors, performers and showmen, and in live performances, that is what’s important, what with all the screaming that inevitably goes on.” - Dave Donnelly, Honolulu Star-Bulletin, December 7, 1966
“[W]e went to Hawaii and then we did our first hour long show. [...] We started off with just the four of us and then we broke down and solo turns with the backup band, the opening act band came out and backed us up for solo turns — and then they left and we finished the hour, just the four of us. We did an hour that way. It was nerve-wracking because we’d never played an hour in front of people before and we had a few ideas and we tried them and they didn’t work very well. But it was an out-of-town tryout. We were in Hawaii (laughs) and word was not gonna get back if we were really, really terrible. (laughs)” - Peter Tork, Rock Cellar Magazine, 2016
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deadpresidents · 1 year
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Is there a good book (or books) you'd recommend that cover the presidency from a broader or institutional perspective? I'm interested in learning about more than just one president, and I'd like to better understand how the powers of the office have transformed during the last century. Thanks in advance, if you have the time to respond!
There are scores of books that analyze and explain the institution of the Presidency itself, but I'll just list a few that immediately came to mind when reading your question:
•Presidential Power and the Modern Presidents: The Politics of Leadership from Roosevelt to Reagan by Richard E. Neustadt. Neustadt was arguably the preeminent political scientist when it came to studying the institution of the Presidency. You can't go wrong with anything that he wrote.
•The American Presidency: Origins and Development, 1776-2021 [BOOK | KINDLE] by Sidney M. Milkis and Michael Nelson This is the ninth edition of this book and I think the title pretty well explains what it's about. If you're looking to really get into the weeds about the Presidency, this book (or its previous editions) will take you there.
•The American Presidency by Alan Brinkley and Davis Dyer (Editors) Again, the title is pretty self-explanatory.
•The Modern American Presidency [BOOK | KINDLE] by Lewis L. Gould Like Richard Neustadt, Lewis L. Gould is one of the top-notch experts on the study of the Presidency.
•The Imperial Presidency [BOOK | KINDLE] by Arthur M. Schlesinger, Jr. This is probably the most well-known of the books that I'm listing. Schlesinger's study of the Presidency begins with the very creation of the position by the Founders and continues with the gradual expansion of Presidential power and growth of the Executive Branch. This book is also much more readable than some of the others I've mentioned, so it might be a good one to start with.
•The Impossible Presidency: The Rise and Fall of America's Highest Office [BOOK | KINDLE] by Jeremi Suri Published in 2017, this book focuses on many of the same aspects of the institution as others I've mentioned, but also brings the Presidency into the 21st Century and explains how top-heavy and unwieldy the position and the institution has become in the world today.
•The Hardest Job in the World: The American Presidency [BOOK | KINDLE] by John Dickerson Another recently published book (2020), Dickerson's book also looks at how the Presidency has expanded and how difficult the job is and the burden that many Presidents have felt once they took the oath of office. Dickerson also focuses on some of the personalities who have tried to shape the Presidency, how some succeeded in the job, and how others were trampled by the immense powers and responsibilities of the office.
Again, these are just a handful of books that match what you seem to be looking for, but there are many more that focus on pretty much any aspect of the Presidency or the Executive Branch that you might be interested in.
I'd also suggest checking out two websites that have a lot of material that might help with what you're looking for and have the added bonus of not costing you anything to explore: •The American Presidency Project at the UC Santa Barbara hosts tens of thousands of Presidential documents, speeches, a media archive, and commentary regarding the Presidency.
•The University of Virginia's Miller Center for Presidential History has many of the same resources as UCSB's American Presidency Project, but even more essays and analyses about the Presidency, specific Presidents, and Presidential policy. Their oral history archives are full of fascinating material and there is a ton of content all over their website. I've found the Miller Center's website to be a priceless source of material when doing research, or just checking out some of the featured content like audio from White House Tapes.
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njadastonearm · 2 years
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2022 in books! All in all my best year for reading in a while -- I beat last year by 22 books and ~6500 pages. Thank you, audiobooks!
Full list below the cut. Favorites are bolded and marked with an asterisk.
Conjure Women by Afia Atakora
The Sun Also Rises by Ernest Hemingway
King Richard by Michael Dobbs
When Women Invented Television by Jennifer Keishin Armstrong
Destiny of the Republic by Candice Millard *
Uncommon Sense Teaching by Barbara Oakley, Beth Rogowsky, and Terrence J. Sejnowski
The Lost Founding Father by William J. Cooper
The Fossil Hunter by Shelley Emling
Velvet Was the Night by Silvia Moreno Garcia
If I Understood You, Would I Have This Look On My Face? by Alan Alda *
Coolidge by Amity Shlaes
Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen *
My Heart Is a Chainsaw by Stephen Graham Jones *
The Quartet by Joseph J. Ellis
The Woman They Could Not Silence by Kate Moore *
The Bully Pulpit by Doris Kearns Goodwin
The Man From the Train by Bill James
How the Multiverse Got Its Revenge by K. Eason
I'll Be Gone In the Dark by Michelle McNamara
The Devil in the White City by Erik Larson
How to Write a Lot by Paul J. Silvia
The Truffle Underground by Ryan Jacobs
The Awakening by Kate Chopin *
Lovecraft Country by Matt Ruff *
Entangled Life by Merlin Sheldrake
The Dark Descent of Elizabeth Frankenstein by Kiersten White
While Justice Sleeps by Stacey Abrams
What Lives in the Woods by Lindsay Currie
Time Is a Mother by Ocean Vuong *
Why Fish Don't Exist by Lulu Miller *
Arsenic and Adobo by Mia P. Manansala
The Chalk Man by C. J. Tudor
His Hideous Heart edited by Dahlia Adler
The Woman In the Library by Sulari Gentill
Persuasion by Jane Austen *
Misery by Stephen King *
The Book Woman of Troublesome Creek by Kim Michele Richardson
The Book Woman's Daughter by Kim Michele Richardson
Grant by Ron Chernow *
The Disappearing Spoon by Sam Kean
American Moonshot by Douglas Brinkley
The Axeman of New Orleans by Miriam C. Davis
Bridge to Terabithia by Katherine Paterson *
Sisters by Daisy Johnson *
A Woman Is No Man by Etaf Rum *
The Alchemist by Paulo Coelho
Mr. Penumbra's 24-Hour Bookstore by Robin Sloane
Gilead by Marilynne Robinson
The Motion of Puppets by Keith Donohue
Sherlock Holmes (Audiobook collection: The Adventure of the Empty House/The Adventure of the Devil's Foot/The Adventure of the Abbey Grange) by Arthur Conan Doyle
The Chocolate War by Robert Cormier
The Wonderful Wizard of Oz by L. Frank Baum *
Catch-22 by Joseph Heller *
The Marvelous Land of Oz by L. Frank Baum
Sea of Tranquility by Emily St. John Mandel
Three Pianos by Andrew McMahon
Call Us What We Carry by Amanda Gorman
Water for Elephants by Sara Gruen
Ozma of Oz by L. Frank Baum
Dorothy and the Wizard In Oz by L. Frank Baum
I Hope This Finds You Well by Kate Baer
The Zealot and the Emancipator by H. W. Brands
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veale2006-blog · 18 days
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Executive Order 13818 — Blocking the Property of Persons Involved in Serious Human Rights Abuse or Corruption.
You are witnessing the death of the Pedo Elites and their twisted lifestyles. The false idols of the world are falling. It’s finally happening.
Celebrity homes for sale:
Ellen Degeneres, Johnny Depp, Mathew Perry, Eli Manning, Kat Von D, Shia Lebeouf, The Hemsworth brothers, John Legend and Chrissy Teigen, Brittany Snow, Beyoncé, Jay-Z, Cindy Crawford and Rand Gerber, Gene Simmons, Bella Thorne, Tom Cruise, George Strait, Emily Blunt, Alonzo Mourning, Jemima Kirke, Kevin Jonas, Chelsea Handler, John McEnroe, Tommy Lee, Jason Derulo, Alicia Keys, Frankie Muniz, Keith Richards, Lil Wayne, Peter Thiel, Pharrell Williams, Loris Loughlin and Mossimo Giannulli, Rosie O’Donnell, Kellie Clarkson, Cheryl Tieg, Joe Pesci, Suzanne Somers, Adam Lambert, Meghan Markle, Sean Diddy Combs, Billy Joel, Gary Levinsohn, Dr Phil, Barry Manilow, Mel Gibson, Diane Keaton, 50 Cent, Heidi Klum, Ryan Seacrest, Zsa Zsa Gabor, Jennifer Aniston, Katharine Hepburn, Christie Brinkley, Nicholas Cage, Ricky Martin, Angelica Huston, Charlie Sheen, Burt Reynolds, Emilia Clarke, J.Lo & Alex Rodriguez, Simon Cowell, Kris Jenner, Jeffree Star, Gordon Ramsay, Jason Aldean, Pamela Anderson, Jerry Seinfeld, Jimmy Fallon, Dave Ramsey, Jon Bon Jovi, LeBron James, Matt Damon, J.J. Abrams, Sugar Ray Leonard, Ellen Degeneres, Sylvester Stallone, David Bowie, Clay Mathews, Michelle Pfiefer, David E Kelley, Shonda Rhimes, Rihanna, Pete Townshend, Britney Spears, Joe Jonas, Sophie Turner, Robert Redford, Steve McQueen, Shaquille ONeil, Glen Frey, Sammy Hagar, Stockard Channing, Michael Chiklis, Tom Petty, Serena Williams, Bill Russell, Kathryn Bigelow, Don Rickles, Bruce Kovner, Adam Neumann, Leonardo DiCaprio, Barb Ellison, Alicia Keys & Swizz Beatz, Kate Beckinsale, Robert Herjavic, Josh and Heather Altman , Soleil Moon Frye, Jim Harbaugh, Anthony Kiedis, Fredrik Eklund, Meghan Trainor, Gideon Yu, Hellen Miren, Taylor Hackford, Bette Midler, Todd Phillips, Mitt Romney, Dianne Feinstein, Miley Cyrus, Kelly Clarkson, A-Rod, Bobby Patton-LA dodgers co owner, Dwyane Wade & Gabrielle Union, Michael Amini, B-52 Kate Pierson, Bill Guthy, Victoria Jackson, Will Arnett, Zac Efron, Wayne Gretzky, Katy Perry, Derek Jeter, Mike Piazza, Shane Smith, Bryon Cranston, DJ Khaled, Leonard Ross, Ted Sarandos- Netflix co Ceo, Dustin Johnson, John Fogerty, Melissa Rivers, Jamie Lynn Sigler, Lena Dunham, Lyndsey Vonn, PK Subban, Robyne Moore
Cara and Poppy Delevingne, Big Sean, Steph Curry, Chris Bosh, Phil Collins, Liam Payne, Bryan Singer, Tom Ford, Robby Naish, Tom Brady & Giselle Bundchen, Anthony Davis, Emilia Clarke, Clare Bronfmsn-Seagrams heiress with ties to Nxivm, Jane Fonda, Carmen Electra, Morgan Moses, Bobby Cox, Danny Masterson, Evander Kane, Kate Winslet, Mark Teixeira, Jonah Hill, Judd Hirsch, Carlos Santana, Kennet Chesney, Brooke Shields.
G. Serpent symbolism is all over the catholic religion. In St. Peter’s Basilica in the vatican the pope literally sits in the mouth of a serpent as the tongue and preaches deception.The Druze bloodline of Jesus are the descendants of “Jethro” ,The Priest of Midian in The Bible & “Torah” (Exodus 2:18).
The 16th President Of The United States of America “Abraham Lincoln” descend from The Kahlooni family.
To Governments around the world, WE THE PEOPLE have a message for you;
For too long you have kept us at bay, indoctrinated and asleep, silenced and used but those times are over!
You have used our labor to enrich yourselves at our expense.
You have lied to us constantly through MSM to further ur personal agenda of global dominance.
You have sacrificed us in wars to for personal gain.
You have poisoned us to keep us dependent upon Big pharma
You have thrusted satanic idolatry to affect our future generations
You have played with innocent lives for too long, that ends now!
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thegospelhighways2020 · 7 months
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Good morning this morning we are going to use for an subject about Suicide And those who Lost their lives through it through Bullying they been through hard times in their lives #makaylalynnbrewster and I can name a few that been Bullied And took their life #gabriellagreen #moabjörk #rosalieavila #ashawntydavis #aubreighwyatt #amandatodd #phoebeprince #seminahalliwell #cayleemastin Caylee Marie Mastin, #katelyndavis Katelyn Nicole Davis, #rinapalenkova #adrianakuch #ashleylovelace #rebeccasedwick #carolineflack #avicii #clayadler #sydneyaiello Jennifer Lynn “Jenn” Albrewczynski, Albert C Abbott, Mareesa E. Abrahamson, Katelyn Nicole “Dolly” Davis, Jennifer Marie Andrade, Arlyn Maria Beal,Myranda Michelle Becton,Darla Ann Blanton,Shannon Nicole Brinkley,Kristina Arielle Calco,Dorothy May Paull McAdam,Tabatha Gayle “Tabby” Anderson,Lindsay “My sister” Armstrong,Kathleen Angela Rose Beardy,Teresa Marie “Terry” Cutshaw,PVT Tony Paul “Dynamite” Duran,Felicia Alma Garcia,Brittany Nicole Palumbo,Ashley Anne Pease,Caitlyn Mackenzie Rhynes,Patulla Ebony “Patti” Rohrbaugh,Jasmine Marie Sanchez,Tiffany Lane “T” Williams,Madalyn Hope “Maddie” Yates, Aloisia Baca, Leelah Alcorn, Jenny Lee Aurness, Sarah/Nati, Jessica Marie Laney, Chris Benoit, Amy Elizabeth Morley, Jana Marie Nance, Paige Marie Nilson, Terry Lynn Nelson, those names that I mentioned Lost Their lives and we're all praying for Them in heaven Bullying needs to stop I remembered where one Friday night I was told to stfu but I didn't get over it but in times I heard some evil people say go kys or bad hateful things hatred and Bullying ain't getting you to Heaven it ain't getting you nowhere so Bullying needs to end it needs to stop Bad Gun Violence can stop Bad Kidnappings can stop as well go to Church and get rid of the evil sins Jesus will help you out we wanna thank you for tuning in this morning and may God continue to bless you
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brookstonalmanac · 8 months
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Birthdays 2.2
Beer Birthdays
Frank Senn (1838)
Anton Schwarz (1839)
Luke Nicholas (1971)
Jamie Floyd (1972)
Five Favorite Birthdays
Christie Brinkley; model (1954)
Blake Clark; comedian, actor (1946)
Donald Driver; Green Bay Packers WR (1975)
Stan Getz; jazz saxophonist (1927)
James Joyce; Irish writer (1882)
Famous Birthdays
Eva Cassidy; singer (1963)
Data; android on Star Trek: Next Generation (2338)
Andrew Davis; orchestra conductor (1944)
James Dickey; writer, poet (1923)
Barry Diller; television executive (1942)
Havelock Ellis; writer (1859)
Farrah Fawcett; actor (1947)
Pebbles Flintstone; cartoon character (1963)
John Glover; chemist (1817)
Gale Gordon; actor (1906)
Solomon R. Guggenheim; philanthropist (1861)
Nell Gwyn; actor, royal mistress (1650)
George Halas; Chicago Bears founder (1895)
Jascha Heifetz; violinist (1901)
Bo Hopkins; actor (1942)
Holly Hunter; actor (1958)
Howard Johnson; hotelier (1897)
Fritz Kreisler; composer (1875)
Burton Lane; songwriter (1912)
Orlando "Cachaito" Lopez; Cuban bassist (1933)
Arthur Lyman; jazz vibraphonist (1932)
Robert Mandan; actor, "Soap" (1932)
Louis Marchand; composer (1669)
Graham Nash; rock musician (1942)
Ayn Rand; writer (1905)
Shakira; singer (1977)
Liz Smith; gossip columnist (1923)
Tom Smothers; comedian (1937)
Brent Spiner; actor (1955)
Brandy Talore; porn actress (1982)
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bestsurfpodcasts · 8 months
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Brinkley Davies Unleashes Ocean Insights: Surfing, Freediving, and Mother
🌟🏄‍♀️ "Riding the Waves of Wisdom: Brinkley Davies on Surf Splendor Episode 478"
Surf Splendor takes you on a surf talk adventure with marine biologist Brinkley Davies. Explore her insights on social media activism, environmental charity work, and the unexpected joys of motherhood after a unique kangaroo encounter. Dive into the beauty of surf culture and ocean tales. 🌊🤙
Shop: https://surfsplendorpodcast.com/shop/
📷 Follow SurfSplendor Surf Podcast:
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/surfsplendor/ TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@surfsplendorpodcast
Twitter: https://twitter.com/SurfSplendor
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/SurfSplendor
#SurfNewsPodcast
#BestSurfingPodcast
#SurfIndustryNews
#SurfNewsInterview
#SurfPodcast
#SurfSplendor
#SurfTalk
#SurferInterviews
#SurfingPodcast
#surflegends
#surfingdiscussions
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maccamaniac1 · 8 months
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The Beatles On Ed Sullivan February 9, 1964
The Beatles make their first appearance on The Ed Sullivan Show. It was watched by 73.7 million people.
Also appearing on that show was future Monkees' member Davy Jones, who was appearing as part of the cast of the play Oliver!, in which he was playing the Artful Dodger. Jones said of the experience, "I watched the Beatles from the side of the stage, I saw the girls going crazy, and I said to myself, this is it, I want a piece of that."
The Beatles had made their first appearance on U.S. TV on a segment of The Huntley-Brinkley Report the previous November.
(CBS / NY Daily News )
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cherusque · 1 year
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Brinkley Davies 🇦🇺
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girlflapper · 7 years
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1920 ca Marion Davies - -Drawing by Nell Brinkley
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<strong>1920 ca Marion Davies - -Drawing by Nell Brinkley <a href="https://www.flickr.com/photos/carlylehold/">by carlylehold</a></strong>
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byneddiedingo · 2 years
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Hope Davis, Liev Schreiber, and Parker Posey in The Daytrippers (Greg Mottola, 1996) Cast: Hope Davis, Anne Meara, Parker Posey, Liev Schreiber, Pat McNamara, Stanley Tucci, Campbell Scott, Stephanie Venditto, Marc Grapey, Douglas McGrath, Marcia Gay Harden. Screenplay: Greg Mottola. Cinematography: John Inwood. Production design: Bonnie J. Brinkley. Film editing: Anne McCabe. Music: Richard Martinez. The Daytrippers is a mashup of subgenres: It's a road movie, a marital dramedy, a midlife crisis fable, and even an extended mother-in-law joke. No wonder it took so long to find a distributor: How do you market a movie like this? But it's also a wonderful sleeper find, if you just happen to come across it on the Criterion Channel, as I did. First of all, it's a terrific ensemble of skilled actors, some of them cast against type, like Marcia Gay Harden as a ditz in an extended cameo. The premise is this: Louis and Eliza D'Amico (Stanley Tucci and Hope Davis) are apparently happily married, but when he leaves their Long Island home one day for his editorial job in the city, she finds a note that suggests he may be having an affair with someone named Sandy. When she tells her mother (Anne Meara) about this, Mom insists that her husband (Pat McNamara) drive everyone into Manhattan to confront Louis and uncover the identity of Sandy. "Everyone" includes Eliza's sister, Jo (Parker Posey), and her boyfriend, Carl (Liev Schreiber), who happen to be visiting for the Thanksgiving holiday. This is not exactly your close-knit family, as it's held together loosely by the domineering mother, kept just this side of caricature by Meara's shrewdly calculated performance. The rest is a series of misadventures, as the family follows a series of clues and false leads, winding up in often hilarious but also poignant little side trips. It's the lack of go-ahead story that I think tripped up some of the movie's initial critics, like Roger Ebert, who found the movie, especially Meara's character, annoying. But there's so much about The Daytrippers that's closely observed and skillfully performed that I found myself wanting to see it again just to watch the way some brilliant performances -- Schreiber is especially wonderful in a role that's a 180 from tough guy Ray Donovan -- mesh into a true ensemble.
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Brinkley Davis
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topgoprovideos-blog · 5 years
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Featured Photographer + Hello! I’m Brinkley Davies, a marine biologist + mas… #GoPro Featured Photographer + #GoProGirl @brinkleydavies Good day! I am Brinkley Davies, a marine biologist + grasp diver, from #Australia!
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brookstonalmanac · 2 years
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Birthdays 2.2
Beer Birthdays
Frank Senn (1838)
Anton Schwarz (1839)
Luke Nicholas (1971)
Jamie Floyd (1972)
Five Favorite Birthdays
Christie Brinkley; model (1954)
Blake Clark; comedian, actor (1946)
Donald Driver; Green Bay Packers WR (1975)
Stan Getz; jazz saxophonist (1927)
James Joyce; Irish writer (1882)
Famous Birthdays
Eva Cassidy; singer (1963)
Data; android on Star Trek: Next Generation (2338)
Andrew Davis; orchestra conductor (1944)
James Dickey; writer, poet (1923)
Barry Diller; television executive (1942)
Havelock Ellis; writer (1859)
Farrah Fawcett; actor (1947)
Pebbles Flintstone; cartoon character (1963)
John Glover; chemist (1817)
Gale Gordon; actor (1906)
Solomon R. Guggenheim; philanthropist (1861)
Nell Gwyn; actor, royal mistress (1650)
George Halas; Chicago Bears founder (1895)
Jascha Heifetz; violinist (1901)
Bo Hopkins; actor (1942)
Holly Hunter; actor (1958)
Howard Johnson; hotelier (1897)
Fritz Kreisler; composer (1875)
Burton Lane; songwriter (1912)
Orlando "Cachaito" Lopez; Cuban bassist (1933)
Arthur Lyman; jazz vibraphonist (1932)
Robert Mandan; actor, "Soap" (1932)
Louis Marchand; composer (1669)
Graham Nash; rock musician (1942)
Ayn Rand; writer (1905)
Shakira; singer (1977)
Liz Smith; gossip columnist (1923)
Tom Smothers; comedian (1937)
Brent Spiner; actor (1955)
Brandy Talore; porn actress (1982)
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