#ColinFord
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THE HILL (2023) Movie Trailer: Dennis Quaid & Colin Ford star in Jeff Celentano's Inspiring Baseball Biopic https://film-book.com/the-hill-2023-movie-trailer-dennis-quaid-colin-ford-star-in-jeff-celentanos-inspiring-baseball-biopic/?feed_id=72926&_unique_id=6479507dcb3c3
#MoviePoster#MovieTrailer#BonnieBedelia#BriarcliffEntertainment#ColinFord#DennisQuaid#JeffCelentano#JoelleCarter#RandyHouser#ScottGlenn#TheHill#filmbook
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While KJ and Meredith met in school, you couldn’t pay them to go back there now. And yet, that’s what Sam and Dean are doing this week, so we’re bringing our guest Frances along for the ride and hoping for the best. KJ revels in some Sam comment, but admits that having Sam content at the expense of Dean’s character assassination might be too high a cost. KJ and Meredith try pitifully to identify the contents of geometry set. CW Episode Description: Sam and Dean go undercover to investigate a string of murders at their old high school. The case causes them to flashback to their time there recalling how Sam was picked on by the school bully while Dean was Mr. Popular. Episode recorded on October 22, 2023. Linktree including sign up sheet to be on the podcast and our Discord server: https://linktr.ee/SupernaturalOpinionsPodcast Guest social medias: Meredith (tiktok, instagram and Tumblr): shaedsofdeianeira Frances: Destiel1993 on Twitter, Tiktok: letitbelove_93
#afterschoolspecial#brockkelly#cainanweibe#candiceking#caseydubois#chadwillet#colinford#deanwinchester#jaredpadalecki#jensenackles#samwinchester#supernatural#supernaturalopinions
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Cine: Every Day (2018)
Rhiannon (Angourie Rice) pasa una inimaginablemente bella cita con su novio, Justin (Justice Smith). Al día siguiente, éste parece tratarla con su acostumbrada frialdad y sin recordar la memorable jornada. Incrédula por el cambio, la joven es abordada por Amy (Jeni Ross), una compañera que le explica la peculiar situación: todos los días, desde la medianoche, despierta en un cuerpo ajeno. Siempre en chicos de su edad, jamás dos veces en la misma persona.
El espíritu (o lo que sea) en cuestión, que se hace llamar "A", logra una conexión profunda con Rhiannon, a punto de buscarla de forma constante, independientemente del género del cuerpo en el que cae. Una situación imposible de explicar (la película no se detiene demasiado en ello) que no sigue más lógica que la del afecto sincero entre dos seres que no debieron haberse encontrado.
Lo fantástico y lo romántico se aúnan en un filme amable y curioso, en el que el director Michael Sucsy adapta el libro de David Levithan, especialista en textos hoy conocidos cono "jóvenes adultos" con temática LGBTQ, poblado de personajes memorables como Jolene (Debby Ryan) y Lindsey (María Bello), hermana y madre de la protagonista, y otras encarnaciones de A como Nathan (Lucas Jade Zuman), Alexander (Owen Teague), Xavier (Colin Ford), el transexual Vic (Ian Alexander), George (Sean Jones), Michael (Jake Sim) o James (Jacob Batalon, compañero de Rice en las películas del Spider Man del UCM), entre otros talentos.
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#cine#EveryDay#2018#adolescencia#EstadosUnidos#gay#BasadoEnUnLibro#AngourieRice#JusticeSmith#JeniRoss#MichaelSucsy#DavidLevithan#DebbyRyan#MariaBello#LucasJadeZuman#OwenTeague#ColinFord#IanAlexander#JakeSim#JacobBatalon#SeanJones#Youtube
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Colin Ford #colinford #spnmemes #spn #spnfamily #spnedit #spnedits #spnfandom #spnfans #spnfanart #samwinchester #samwinchesteredit #samwinchesteredits #colinford #deanwinchester #dean #deanwinchesteredit #destiel #destieledit #destielfanart #destieltrash #destielsmut #castiel #castieledit #castielnovak #cas #supernatural #supernaturaledits #supernaturaledit https://www.instagram.com/p/CniqP4ssRiB/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
#colinford#spnmemes#spn#spnfamily#spnedit#spnedits#spnfandom#spnfans#spnfanart#samwinchester#samwinchesteredit#samwinchesteredits#deanwinchester#dean#deanwinchesteredit#destiel#destieledit#destielfanart#destieltrash#destielsmut#castiel#castieledit#castielnovak#cas#supernatural#supernaturaledits#supernaturaledit
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@colinford @quellstak otp in so i can boop you!!❤️❤️
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@princevincejr Such a great experience working on @thecwwalker as Sam Turner. 🎬💪🏼Shoutout to the guys @colinford @asher.guevara @officialdavidbmeadows @zkfight @fish.outta.water_ for making this fun and memorable. Can’t wait to see what we all accomplish next 🎬🔥 #walker #cw
All the guys did a great job on Walker!
#vincent acevedo jr#walker#walker bts#walker spoilers#walker 3.11#colin ford#asher guevara#david b meadows
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NEW YORK — Colinford Mattis’ trajectory from a working-class upbringing in East New York to the Ivy League and corporate law abruptly ended at about 1 a.m. May 30, 2020, when a Molotov cocktail ignited the center console of an empty police car during a Black Lives Matter protest.
On Thursday afternoon, Judge Brian Cogan of U.S. District Court in Brooklyn sentenced Mattis, one of two young lawyers who burned the vehicle during the protests days after the murder of George Floyd, to 12 months and a day in prison and a year of post-release supervision.
Mattis, 35, has lost his law license, having pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit arson and having acknowledged he had broken the law he had sworn to uphold. Now he may lose much more: the guardianship and planned adoption of three foster children. The oldest is 14.
On Thursday evening, the Brooklyn courtroom was crowded with Mattis’ friends and family.
“I’m deeply sorry and embarrassed about the things I did and said in May 2020,” Mattis told the judge. He said he recently reread his text messages from that day. “I am more than horrified at the words I used,” he said.
“I am sorry that I hurt my three children that my mother had entrusted to me,” he added.
The judge told Mattis that the country needed attorneys to bolster faith in the rule of law and to reassure Americans that the legal system would hold Floyd’s killers to account. He told Mattis that his hard work had changed his station in life.
“You’re not one of the oppressed,” Cogan said. “You’re one of the privileged.”
Spectators in the gallery gasped at the judge’s words. “To make that comment, you’re not seeing the same things that I’m seeing,” said Taaj Reeves, a friend of Mattis’, after the hearing.
In November, the judge had sentenced Urooj Rahman, Mattis’ friend and a fellow lawyer, to 15 months in prison and two years of supervised release for the same crime. She was the primary caretaker of her aging mother. Cogan called the sentence one of the most difficult he ever had to impose. After a lifetime of hard work and conscientiousness, he said, Rahman’s conduct was a violent aberration.
“You are a remarkable person who did a terrible thing on one night,” the judge told her.
Cogan said Thursday that Mattis got a lighter punishment because he had not been the main instigator of the attack.
The sentences close a case that stunned the city, devastated two families and exposed deep fissures between the police and the community. They reflect a long negotiation with the U.S. attorney’s office in Brooklyn, which at first sought steep charges and had pushed to deny bail to Rahman and Mattis, both first-time offenders.
Rahman and Mattis had been high achievers, children of immigrant families who were raised in New York. Rahman pursued public interest law, co-authoring a paper on police reform in 2014 and working at Bronx Legal Services. Mattis followed a more lucrative corporate path. But he was already teetering in his career and personal life when the protests occurred.
The events that led to their downfall began in an unsettled spring.
Mattis had been furloughed in March from his job as an associate at the law firm Pryor Cashman, and the pandemic had cut him off from outside support as he took care of the children, his lawyer wrote.
Then, on May 25, video of Floyd, a 46-year-old Black man who died in Minneapolis after his neck was pinned to the ground by Derek Chauvin, a white police officer, ignited protests. There were demonstrations in at least 140 cities across the United States.
In New York, peaceful protests turned into confrontations with police. Throughout the weekend, demonstrators clashed with officers in Union Square in Manhattan and outside the Barclays Center in Brooklyn, resulting in injuries and hundreds of arrests.
On May 29, according to court documents, Mattis had been drinking throughout the day as he exchanged despairing messages over the murder of Floyd with friends, including Rahman, who were mobilizing to join a protest. That evening, Rahman, who was 31 at the time, met Mattis after he made stops to buy supplies, including gasoline, and joined a swell of protesters in Brooklyn.
Shortly after midnight, with Mattis at the wheel, according to court filings, they drove in a tan minivan to a police precinct in Clinton Hill. After trying to persuade a bystander to throw a bottle that she was holding, Rahman got out of the van herself, walked toward an empty police patrol car that had already been damaged by protesters and threw the Molotov cocktail through its broken window before fleeing.
She and Mattis were arrested shortly afterward and held in jail for several days before they were released to home confinement.
It was a politically fraught moment after New York police officers had arrested hundreds of people during the protests, many on charges of disorderly conduct, resisting arrest and unlawful assembly. District attorneys said they would not prosecute many of the nonviolent cases.
Brooklyn federal prosecutors, then part of the Trump Justice Department, appealed twice to keep them behind bars, saying that the two lawyers had tried to incite others to similar attacks. But more than 50 former federal prosecutors signed a public letter urging the appeals court to reject the U.S. attorney’s office’s argument for detention, saying it contradicted settled bail law.
In June 2020, a grand jury returned an indictment against Mattis and Rahman that included seven counts, including arson, use of explosives and civil disorder.
In November 2021, after President Joe Biden had taken office and new leadership had taken over in the Department of Justice, Rahman and Mattis each pleaded guilty to one count of possessing and making an incendiary device. Last June, those charges were dismissed as part of a deal with prosecutors, and both pleaded guilty to a count of conspiracy to commit arson.
At Rahman’s sentencing, she faced up to five years under federal guidelines, and the government had asked for 18 months to two years. Her lawyer, Peter Baldwin, asked the court to impose only supervised release, saying his client had experienced “a dangerous and reprehensible lapse of judgment.”
“Urooj’s emotions — her anger, her despair, her rage — got the better of her,” he told the judge. Since the incident, Rahman had been in therapy and Alcoholics Anonymous, Baldwin said.
Rahman was born in Pakistan and grew up in Bay Ridge, Brooklyn; she graduated from Fordham Law School and had always been drawn to public interest work, a commitment for which Cogan praised her.
When she addressed the court, Rahman cried as she spoke about her mother’s grief. “I don’t think there are enough words to express my sorrow and regret,” she told the court. “My sole intention was to lend my voice to other New Yorkers in the pursuit of justice. I completely lost my way in the emotions of the night.”
She is to report to federal prison in Connecticut on Tuesday.
Mattis has already spent nearly a month in jail, has taken a leadership role in his Alcoholics Anonymous chapter and is at no risk of reoffending, his lawyers said in the memorandum to the judge.
Sabrina Shroff, his defense attorney, told Cogan in a presentencing letter how Mattis, the son of immigrants from Jamaica and St. Vincent, grew up in a chaotic home. Although early on he struggled academically, he went on to graduate from boarding school, then attended Princeton University and New York University’s law school.
When he was in his second year of law school, his father, Kingcolinford Mattis, was stabbed to death during a robbery in St. Vincent. His son used alcohol to dull his pain, Shroff wrote.
After law school, when he took a job at a law firm in 2016, he was often late or absent, court documents said. His yearslong dependency on alcohol worsened. He was asked to leave the firm just as his mother was diagnosed with uterine cancer, and he became her primary caregiver until her death in 2019, even as he worked at another firm.
After she died, Mattis took over her role as the foster parent for the three children he is now in the process of trying to adopt. He is also the primary caretaker for his 15-year-old nephew.
Shortly after the pandemic hit in March 2020 and Mattis was furloughed, his drinking increased, according to court filings.
On May 29, 2020, hours before he joined the protests, Mattis watched the video of Floyd’s murder for the first time and began to cry.
Within hours, court records said, Mattis was driving the minivan quickly away from the burning police sedan with open bottles of Bud Light, a funnel, a half-full red gas can and rolls of toilet paper.
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colinford in my therookie? more likely than you'd think
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Urooj Rahman: Fordham alumni was sentenced to 15 months in connection with a night of protest
A lawyer and Fordham University alumni was sentenced to 15 months in connection with a night of protest for the May 29, 2020 firebombing near a Police Precinct station house in Fort Greene, Brooklyn.
It was related to a night of protest that followed the release of a video of George Floyd, a 46-year-old Black man who died in Minneapolis after his neck was pinned to the ground by a white police officer which ignited protests in at least 140 cities across the United States. (https://www.yahoo.com/news/during-george-floyd-protests-2-125843097.html)
According to court filings, she and Colinford Mattis, a friend and fellow attorney, drove in a tan minivan to a police precinct in Clinton Hill. After trying to persuade a bystander to throw a bottle that she was holding, Rahman got out of the van herself, walked toward an empty police patrol car that had already been damaged by protesters and threw the Molotov cocktail through its broken window before fleeing.(New York Times, Hurubie Meko and Rebecca Davis O'Brien, January 27, 2023)
At a hearing in 2021, prosecutors read a series of text messages exchanged between Rahman and Mattis, who recently pleaded guilty to similar charges from actions that night: At one point the pair joked about burning down police headquarters and courts over nearly a 24-hour period. “I hope they burn everything down,” Rahman told Mattis in a message hours before protests formed. “Need to burn all the police stations down… probably all the courts too.(https://nypost.com/2022/11/18/molotov-cocktail-tossing-urooj-rahman-gets-15-months-for-torching-nypd-car/)
When Rahman joined protesters that night, she wrote to Mattis: “Throwing bottles and tear gas … lit some fires but were put out … fireworks goin and Molotovs rollin.”
Judge Brian Cogan of U.S. District Court in Brooklyn, sentenced Rahman to 15 months in prison and two years of supervised release for the same crime. She was the primary caretaker of her aging mother. Cogan called the sentence one of the most difficult he ever had to impose.
“You are a remarkable person who did a terrible thing on one night,” the judge told her.(New York Times, Hurubie Meko and Rebecca Davis O'Brien, January 27, 2023)
Rahman and her attorneys argued Friday she led an exemplary life prior to that night, which brought her from Pakistan to the United States and later to Fordham Law School, where she earned her degree. Rahman traveled to various troubled areas around the globe during law school, including Northern Ireland and South Africa, to study and aid marginalized people.(https://nypost.com/2022/11/18/molotov-cocktail-tossing-urooj-rahman-gets-15-months-for-torching-nypd-car/)
Urooj Rahman, seen in booking photo below, received a B.A. in 2011 from FCLC with a major in Political Science. She continued her education at Fordham Law where she received her Juris Doctor in 2015. (Forever Fordham Alumni Directory-tinyurl.com/ya22yzed)
Video of an interview she did addressing the night of protest in New York City (Courtesy of New York Post): https://nypost.com/2022/11/18/molotov-cocktail-tossing-urooj-rahman-gets-15-months-for-torching-nypd-car/
#Fordhamlawschool#GeorgeFloyd#ColinfordMattis#JudgeBrianCogan#USDistrictCourtBrooklyn#NYTIMES#NYPost#newyorkcity
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Second lawyer who participated in Molotov cocktail attack during George Floyd protests sentenced to over a year in prison | CNN : Inside US
CNN — A second former New York lawyer has been sentenced to one year and one day in prison for participating in a Molotov cocktail attack during a New York City protest in 2020 following the death of George Floyd in Minneapolis. Colinford Mattis, 35, pleaded guilty to carrying out the attack on an empty New York Police Department police patrol car in late May 2020. He will also have to pay…
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I don’t agree with the judge in saying not oppressed and privileged. everything said was good until that point. the judge is ignoring the greater circumstances and forgetting that justice was not going to prevail and that the system had already failed despite of civilian video footages. the system was protecting the police from being held accountable for murdering floyd.
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The BLM Terrorists Group are an unfortunate part of the BLM Movement that makes two steps forward go 3 steps backwards:
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Attorney who helped firebomb NYPD car during BLM protests sentenced to prison
Colinford Mattis arrives at federal court in Brooklyn on Thursday. Mattis and Urooj Rahman were arrested on May 30, 2020, as demonstrations and protests raged over the killing of George Floyd at the hands of police in Minneapolis. (Mary Altaffer/AP) BROOKLYN — In a dramatic hearing on Thursday, a federal judge in Brooklyn sentenced a corporate attorney who firebombed a police car during the 2020…
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Tagging some folks for signal boost: @togetherkru, @pendragaryen, @okmcintyre, @immortalpramheda, @heartbellamy, @bellamysgriffin, @kris-lulu, @bellaarke, @oswinian, @izloveshorses, @carrieeve, @natassakar, @nathanmillers, @b4bethsstuff, @doortotomorrow, @colinford
Bellamy Blake Appreciation week 2023
Hey, folks! As usually this time of the year, we're organizing Bellamy Blake appreciation week!
This time it'll take place from December 11th-December 17th!
You can tag your creations with #bbaw23 and we'll make sure to reblog them!
Here are the prompts for each day! Of course, you're free to create anything you like if you don't feel like a certain prompt works for you!
Day 1: Favorite season-last year we tried favorite episode but we thought this year you could pick the saeson where you loved Bellamy the most! Of course you can pick more than one or all of them if you just feel like it!
Day 2: Favorite character trait-we all know our boy had amazing character traits, whether it's bravery, selflessness, hero-complex, being a hothead and so on, so pick whichever one you love the most!
Day 3: Favorite sibling moment-here, the focus is obviously on the Blake's relationship because we think it's worth to create more about it. Pick a favorite moment between Octavia and Bellamy and if you're not feeling that, you're free to choose another Bellamy + the delunquents dynamic. He was after all a big brother to them all in a way!
Day 4: Favorite comfort/soft moment- We all know Bellamy was good at helping others, talking them through hard moments and being there for them but we thought we'd turn this around. Who comforted Bellamy the best? What was your favorite moment when he leaned on someone else and talked about his feelings or what he was going through? Doesn't have to be a full scene, could just be a soft moment you found lovely.
Day 5: Favorite Rebel!Bellamy-of course this is tribute to season 1 Rebel!Bell phase but it doesn't have to be just about that. He had plenty of moments where he disagreed passionately with the other characters in the rest of the seasons too.
Day 6: Favorite Head!Bellamy moment-we've done favorite heart!Bellamy but we decided to spruce things up a bit this year and challenge you to find your favorite moment where he used his head! That doesn't mean residing only to season 5 or 6. Bellamy has always been smart and using his head even in earlier seasons, so chose whatever you feel like it!
Day 7: Free day-You can make a lyrics gif, favorite relationship gif, underrated moment or just a perfect shot of Bellamy that you think more people should have to watch on a loop on your perfect gifs and enjoy! Once again, anything you feel like doing!
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❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️
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