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#Forrest Olson
bandcampsnoop · 17 days
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9/3/24.
Following up on The Ladybug Transistor post was easy. Frequent Gary Olson collaborator, Phil Sutton, is releasing "another "Blue" by Love, Burns (Queens, New York). This band sound remarkably like Pale Lights, but the lineup is sort of an all-star one: Kyle Forrester (Crystal Stilts), Hampus Öhman-Frölund (drummed with many including Jens Lekman) and the aforementioned Gary Olson.
There have been many Love, Burns/Pale Lights posts over the years but I will repeat my RIYL: Felt, Lloyd Cole, Edwyn Collins, and many many more.
This is being co-released by Kleine Untergrund Schallplatte (KUS) and Jigsaw Records.
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high-potential · 1 month
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New promotional pictures for ABC's High Potential starring Kaitlin Olson, Daniel Sunjata, Judy Reyes, Deniz Akdeniz, Javicia Leslie, Amirah J, Matthew Lamb
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shoshiwrites · 2 years
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The lovely @mercurygray is running Blind Dates again this year and I wanted to make it three for three! I took probably the most amount of liberties this time but also, I had fun. Meet Christina!
sidera
Sometimes she wished she were here alone. 
Not…alone alone, she thought. But free. Separate from school and her father’s name, Professor Treadwell and all of it, here on her own merits. Maybe it would mean spending less time typing up reports and getting coffee. She might as well have stayed in New York, if that was all she was going to do here in Europe.
How, she wondered. Not without Radcliffe and Girl’s Latin, certainly. And certainly not without being Frederick Church’s daughter and Forrest Church’s granddaughter. It was a fact Christina was comfortable acknowledging most days, but here it felt particularly pronounced. 
She’d managed to wheedle her way into moving east with Professor Treadwell and a small delegation while her father stayed in Paris, though it hadn’t taken much convincing. In fact, Clarence was more than happy to have her along, and had even thrown in a box of drawing pencils to sweeten the pot. The rumors about the two of them didn’t bother her as much anymore; if she could offer some kind of protection simply by being there she would, by being young and reasonably pretty, someone to fall back on. It bothered her more that he was still exactly like the rest of them, finding her more a traveling secretary than a graduate student prepared to work, and the fact that he thought she could be won over with a few Blackwing 602s and a new sketchpad.
She tapped the eraser against her lips, squinting into the sun. She wished she had colors to play with, or her camera. Her sunglasses might have also been a good choice, tucked away in her jacket pocket back at the house they were installed in. 
It wasn’t quite warm enough yet to be sunning yourself by the lake, but down the beach she could just make out a few swimmers, heads bobbing like little dots. By the time the weekend came she was sure there’d be plenty of GIs out to play with the local girls. As it stood now they were mostly around town on official business, orders Christina was unaware of, walking and marching and driving around in Jeeps with their boots up on the dashboard. These were the boys gone from New York and Boston, the trains and the highways. They’d earned this rest, and hadn’t taken too kindly to a group of professors nosing around telling them they couldn’t take souvenirs. 
She raised her shoulders and stretched, remembering her roommate’s constant entreaties about good posture. Augustine Bailey didn’t suffer fools or slouched shoulders. Well, she was Mrs. John Olson now, off and moved to Minneapolis. Christina wondered if she would appreciate a postcard.
“Penny for your thoughts?” said a voice behind her.
It took her a moment to register the face, one of the soldiers who’d been on some kind of detail a few days prior, while she’d been trailing around her group assessing statuary in Berchtesgaden. 
“It’s awfully sunny,” she said. Maybe it sounded a little more like a complaint than how she meant it, but his mouth twitched with something like a smile. 
“Not used to it?”
She thought of cold and cloudy Boston, and rainy New York. All of the sun she remembered was the golden end-of-day kind, slanting in through high windows and catching dust, the kind that you caught for five or ten minutes leaving the museum before it got dark.  “Now that you mention it, no.” 
He had no qualms about sitting himself down next to her, on the wall, his boots touching the sand where her feet barely met it. But he kept a distance. That was new, unlike many of his compatriots, the ones who got too close for comfort in the name of homesickness, who called out to her from across the cobbled streets. She peered over at him, his hands reaching into a pocket of his jacket for a small book and an even smaller pencil. A sketchbook.
He noticed her expression, and shrugged a little. “Nice spot.”
She took in again the vibrant blue-green of the water, the mountains sloping down to meet it, the cloudless sky. The half-timbered huts and houses, the windowboxes of geraniums. “It’s very picturesque.”
He laughed a little at that. “You sound disappointed.”
“Some clouds might help.”
He closed his eyes to the sun, ignoring the sunglasses attached to his front pocket, taking in the warmth. “Don’t say that.”
It was hard to make a photograph with nothing in the sky, much less a drawing. He looked to be struggling mightily with the pencil in his hand, whittled down to almost nothing. “Here,” she said, offering him hers. He stopped a second, looking at it. Her eyes fell across his hands, the few freckles dotting along the line of his thumb, across her own bare knee. 
“I can’t take that.”
“I have more,” she said, wincing a little at how it sounded. “And I’m supposed to be filing reports right now, so you’d really be doing me a favor.”
He pondered her offer. “On second thought,” he said, plucking the pencil from her hand, appraising it. “I can take that.” He looked back over at her. “But you should stay.” He held her gaze, his pause indicating a question.
“Christina,” she said. 
“Pat.”
Free of her instrument, she leaned back on her elbows on the grass, watching as he worked. Down near her feet Pat made a noise of approval. “This thing’s great.”
Maybe if she knew him better she’d make a joke about college girls, if they were students together back home. “They’re good for linework.” 
He’s curled over it, his little book, the lip of his helmet and his downcast eyes and his shoulders all in the same direction. She wants her pencil back but she’d hardly ask for it now, not to draw him so brazenly. She thinks of her textbooks and the slides her professors would show of archaeological sites in Italy and Greece, the newspaper photographs of a smoldering Berlin. She misses Manhattan, the rain-slicked streets and the Met and the Chrysler building. Like a child, she thinks. She wonders if there are still any spots open at her friend Victor’s gallery show. If her father would come. That maybe she’d be all right if she never had to think about the ancient Romans or ruinenwert ever again.
He was shading something in now, with the side of the pencil. She sat upright and peered at the paper, doing what she always hated whenever anyone did it to her. After a second he met her eyes, blue-green under light lashes. Like spruce, like the trees reflected in the lake. There was a bit of those trees in the corner, a little house. But most of the page was blades of grass and the heel of her foot, her trousers rolled up, the beginnings of her silver anklet with the little lozenge shape and chain. 
Something in her cheeks burned faintly at the sight of it; she couldn’t meet his eyes again. She continued surveying the sweep of beach, the houses across the lake. He sounded like he was trying to clear his throat, trying to act unembarrassed. “You’ll ruin your eyes like that.”
“You sound like my mother.” It was a scold Christina hadn’t heard in years, not since she was fourteen and her parents still lived in the same house. Dolores Church hadn’t held her daughter’s hobbies in any sort of esteem, much less her husband’s work. 
“Where’s she,” Pat asked. Where’s home, he meant. 
“New York.”
She wanted to return the question, but he had another. “The city?”
Some house with big windows along the Upper Hudson and all her souvenirs. Not the family brownstone, that was for sure. Christina knew her mother’s address was somewhere on a letter or a Christmas card. She just didn’t know what it was. 
“No.”
“Take these,” he said, reaching for his sunglasses. 
“I couldn’t.” 
“You could. I took your pencil, anyhow.”
“I have more pencils.”
“And I’ll find another pair of sunglasses.” He was shielding the drawing with his hand now, like he wanted to hide it. His helmet bobbed up and down minutely as he spoke. 
“That’s hardly supporting our boys overseas.” She took the pair from him, the metal cool against her hands. “Are you sure the Army won’t hunt me down for appropriating precious resources?”
He snorted a little, sunlight catching  the freckles along his jaw. Her sketchbook might have something to say about that jaw if she had her pencil back. So might Michaelangelo’s. “Listen, if you’re worried, mail ‘em back to me.”
She was smiling now too, a little, like she was pretending to mind the attention. “Sneaky.”
“And I’ll mail back your pencil.”
“Please don’t.”
“Right, you’ve got boxes. Does your old man work for the company?”
She chewed the inside of her lip. “No.” She had a lot of short answers, didn’t she? “He’s a professor.” 
“Art?”
“Ancient civilizations.”
Pat let out a whistle, like somehow that explained everything. Maybe it did.
“I’d still like to write to you,” he said after a moment. “If you’ll let me.”
“I’d like that.”
She took the pencil and paper from him as he let go, writing her name and address in the corner in her careful capitalized hand. The kind that belonged on museum tags and in manuscript margins. H.C. Church. He whistled again at the address. “What’s the H stand for?”
“Hespera.” At his face, she snorted. “I told you my parents were academics.” She hadn’t mentioned both of them, not technically.
“You weren’t kidding.”
“And if you ever call me that you won’t hear from me again,” she said placidly, handing him back his book. She wanted badly to flip through it, to see what else he’d captured, but it felt wrong here.
“I’ll be careful.” 
When she started to stand he hopped up, helping her to her feet. “If you’re ever in New York,” she started, smoothing the front of her trousers and straightening the line of buttons on her blouse. He was even taller than she was, by a few inches at least, as steady as an oak. 
“Sure there’s room for a mud-crusted GI on Central Park West?” he asked. She knew it was a joke, but there was something else in his eyes. Asking if she really meant it. She did. And god, she hoped she’d be moved out by then, in her own apartment, something tiny and hers. He’d have to duck his head in the doorway. 
She nodded, as sure of it as anything. “You’ll have to come and get your sunglasses.” 
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artisticlegshake · 2 years
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24SEVEN PROVO RESULTS 2023
MINI SOLOS:
1st Brooklyn Ward - CSPAS STC!
2nd Stella Brinkerhoff - CSPAS STC!
2nd Kate Barker - CSPAS STC!
2nd Tabitha Nan - CSPAS STC!
3rd Navy Forrest - CLUB STC!
3rd Ivy McEwan - CSPAS STC!
3rd Aaliyah Kirk - CSPAS STC!
4th Cambrie O’Haver - CLUB STC!
4th Elliot Smith - CLUB STC!
5th Penelope Pranger - CSPAS STC!
6th Coco Gonzales - CSPAS STC!
6th Nixie Vance - CLUB STC!
6th Emory Gilliam - CSPAS STC!
6th Hadlie Scott - CLUB STC!
6th Kynzlie Plote - CLUB STC!
7th Avery Olson - OCPAA
8th Skylar DeLoach - CSPAS
8th Naomi Harper - CSPAS
8th Brooklyn Brown - CSPAS
8th Lily Nerdin - CAA
9th Skylee Sitterud - CSPAS
9th Navie Mees - CSPAS
9th Miya Slade - THE WINNER SCHOOL
9th Finnli Waever - ARTISTIC DANCE PROJECT
9th Peyton Dickerson - CAA
9th Khloe Douros - CSPAS
9th Hazel Senneff - CSPAS
10th Jaxon Adamson - CLUB
10th Haddie Midget - CSPAS
10th Kota Brailsford - HONOLULU DANCE
10th Sailor Dye - DYE’N 2 DANCE
10th Lulu Collaku - ARTISTIC DANCE PROJECT
10th Olivia Foote - CSPAS
10th Lennyn Condie - CSPAS
10th Coco Tenorio - CSPAS
10th Ruby Stagg - THE WINNER SCHOOL
10th Cambry Bergeron - ARTISTIC DANCE PROJECT
MINI DUO/TRIOS:
1st The Giving Tree - CSPAS STC!
2nd Little Birds - CSPAS STC!
2nd Shining - CSPAS STC!
3rd A Deal With Chaos - ARTISTIC DANCE PROJECT
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goalhofer · 5 months
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2024 Atlanta Braves Players By Nationality
American: 21 (Aaron Bummer, Jesse Chavez, Travis d'Arnaud, Adam Duvall, Max Fried, Luis Guillorme, Michael Harris; Jr., Joe Jiménez, Pierce Johnson, Jarred Kelenic, Dylan Lee, Tyler Matzek, A.J. Minter, Charlie Morton IV, Matt Olson, Michael Riley; Jr., Chris Sale, Spencer Strider, Forrest Wall & Allan Winans) Dominican: 3 (Reynaldo López, Marcell Ozuna & Ángel Perdomo) Venezuelan: 2 (Ronald Acuña; Jr. & Orlando Arcia) Aruban: 1 (Chadwick Tromp) Cuban: 1 (Raisel Iglesias) Curaçaoan: 1 (Ozie Albies) Puerto Rican: 1 (Joe Jiménez)
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twins2994 · 6 months
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Minnesota Twins @ Atlanta Braves 3.25.24
Minnesota Twins Lineup Atlanta Braves Lineup
1.) Byron Buxton CF 1.) Ozzie Albies 2B
2.) Carlos Santana 1B 2.) Austin Riley 3B
3.) Kyle Farmer 2B 3.) Adam Duvall LF
4.) Willi Castro SS 4.) Matt Olson 1B
5.) Christian Vazquez C 5.) Marcell Ozuna DH
6.) Max Kepler RF 6.) Travis d'Arnaud C
7.) Manny Margot LF 7.) Jarred Kelenic CF
8.) Alex Kirilloff DH 8.) Orlando Arcia SS
9.) Mike Helman 3B 9.) Forrest Wall RF
SP Bailey Ober RHP SP Chris Sale LHP
(1-1) 4.50 ERA (0-2) 3.86 ERA
(2024 Spring Training Stats)
-Chris Kreibich-
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diarioelpepazo · 1 year
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JESÚS DAVID CASTELLANO Orlando Arcia dio luz el domingo sobre lo que ha sido su buen andar esta temporada, empujando tres de las ocho carreras con las que los Bravos de Atlanta superaron 8-5 a los Nacionales de Washington en el segundo de la doble cartelera en Nationals Park. Sin embargo, fueron los ‘Nats’ los que picaron adelante con doble del venezolano Keibert Ruiz que impulsó dos carreras. Seguidamente el dominicano Luis García pegó sencillo que envió al plato al propio Ruiz con la tercera rayita de los capitalinos. Los Bravos dieron vuelta en el capítulo siguiente con dobles de Matt Olson y Orlando Arcia que fletaron una cada uno y jonrón de dos anotaciones de Kevin Pillar, para poner las acciones 4-3. Posteriormente, los Bravos agregaron dos más con el primer estacazo de Forrest Wall en su carrera, que mandó a la goma a Orlando Arcia. Washington descontó en la baja de ese inning con tablazo de Luis García, poniendo la pizarra 6-4 aún a favor de la visita. Mientras tanto, Arcia apareció nuevamente con un imparable productor de dos rayitas, para cerrar el grifo de anotaciones del conjunto de Georgia en el partido. Lane Thomas; por su parte, despachó tablazo solitario, para maquillar lo que fue la victoria número 100 de la campaña para los Bravos, siendo los primeros en arribar a esa cifra este año. El triunfo fue para Spencer Strider (19-5) y el derrotado Joan Adom (2-4). Entretanto, Orlando Arcia concluyó la jornada de 4-2 con dos anotadas y tres impulsadas. Y Matt Olson ligó de 5-3 con producida y tres anotadas. Asimismo, Keibert Ruiz también conectó tres hits por la causa capitalina, con registrada y remolcada en cinco visitas al plato. Cabe destacar que en este encuentro, Ronald Acuña Jr. recibió descanso, luego de irse 4-1 en el primero de la doble tanda. Para recibir en tu celular esta y otras informaciones, únete a nuestras redes sociales, síguenos en Instagram, Twitter y Facebook como @DiarioElPepazo El Pepazo/Líder
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madmen-ao3feed · 1 year
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I Have An Idea... Part 5
read it on the AO3 at https://ift.tt/QYATXGy
by CreativeLiterature
Oneshots of various couples, some intimate moments, mostly implied sex, a few graphic.
Each chapter name mentions which characters are involved.
Words: 6337, Chapters: 15/20, Language: English
Series: Part 5 of I Have An Idea...
Fandoms: Tales of the City (TV), Mad Men, Yellowstone (TV 2018), American Pie (Movies), Veep (TV), Gilmore Girls (TV 2000), The OC (TV), Tekken (Video Games), Mortal Kombat (Video Games), The Americans (TV 2013), Entourage (TV), Real Person Fiction, Game of Thrones (TV), A Song of Ice and Fire - George R. R. Martin, Mean Girls (2004), Critical Role (Web Series) RPF
Rating: Explicit
Warnings: No Archive Warnings Apply
Characters: Ben Marshall (Tales of the City), Michael "Mouse" Tolliver, Peggy Olson, Stan Rizzo, Joan Holloway (Mad Men), Joey Baird, Rip Wheeler, Beth Dutton, Matt Stifler, Elyse (American Pie), Roger Furlong, Rory Gilmore, Lorelai Gilmore, Dean Forester, Logan Huntzberger, Jess Mariano, Ryan Atwood, Marissa Cooper, Anna Williams, Erron Black, Kano (Mortal Kombat), Johnny Cage, Elizabeth Jennings, Philip Jennings | Clark Westerfeld, Johnny "Drama" Chase, Anna Wintour, Harry Connick Jr., Craig Marduk, Jon Snow, Dacey Mormont, Regina George, Shane Oman, Aaron Samuels, Travis Willingham, Laura Bailey, Grace Coddington
Relationships: Ben Marshall/Michael "Mouse" Tolliver, Peggy Olson/Stan Rizzo, Joan Holloway/Joey Baird, Beth Dutton/Rip Wheeler, Matt Stifler/Elyse, Rory Gilmore/Dean Forrester/Logan Huntzberger/Jess Mariano, Ryan Atwood/Marissa Cooper, Anna Williams/Erron Black, Kano (Mortal Kombat)/Anna Williams, Anna Williams/Craig Marduk, Anna Williams/Johnny Cage, Elizabeth Jennings/Philip Jennings | Clark Westerfeld, Anna Wintour/Harry Connick Jr, Dacey Mormont/Jon Snow, Regina George/Shane Oman, Laura Bailey/Travis Willingham
Additional Tags: Screenplay/Script Format
read it on the AO3 at https://ift.tt/QYATXGy
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Village People “Happiest Time Of The Year” for your Holiday
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Village People is one of the most iconic music groups in the world. Their music has become part of the international songbook. The group’s hits are featured in dozens of major motion pictures, on Broadway, in commercials and in “Village People Party” slot machines. Of course, Y.M.C.A (along with its dance) is played at almost every party, wedding, bar mitzvah, and sporting event in the universe. It began in 1977 when producer Jacques Morali and his partner Henri Belolo, known collectively as Can’t Stop Productions, were recording a new album for their hit group the Ritchie Family, called African Queen and needed background singers. Horace Ott, the arranger/conductor who was working with them, suggested Victor Willis, a singer he was recording who also was performing in the Broadway musical The Wiz. After Willis completed background on the album, Morali approached him about another musical project he and Belolo were planning which turned out to be Village People. “I had a dream that you sang lead vocals on an album I produced, and it went very, very big,” Morali told Willis. “I have four tracks. I can’t pay you much right now but if you agree, I’ll make you a star.” Willis agreed and the rest is history. Those initial four tracks, San Francisco (You’ve Got Me), In Hollywood (Everyone’s a Star), Fire Island, and Village People were recorded by Willis with professional background singers and released as the debut album Village People in 1977. The album quickly climbed to the top of the dance charts and became an international hit. Demand for the “Village People” to appear in concert and on television shows like American Bandstand and Merv Griffin was great. The only problem… “Village People” was Victor Willis! So Morali, Belolo and Willis had to put together an actual group… and quick. Morali and Belolo had already met Felipe Rose who dressed as a Native American. They recruited him. Willis brought in Alex Briley, who he’d previously worked with in a musical. The quickly assembled original lineup appeared with Victor on American Bandstand was Mark Mussler (Construction Worker), David Forrest (Cowboy), Lee Mouton (Leatherman) and Peter Whitehead (nondescript). After that appearance, an ad was placed in a trade paper for ‘permanent’ members which read: Macho Types Wanted for World-Famous Disco Group — Must Dance and Have a Moustache. Randy Jones, Glenn Hughes and David Hodo answered the call. Casablanca Records and Filmworks, the group’s label, got behind their second album Macho Man with full promotion and marketing. Village People became an international phenomenon and quickly followed with their third album, the double-platinum Cruisin (which featured the blockbuster Y.M.C.A.). They embarked on a worldwide tour in 1979 to coincide with the release of their fourth album, Go West. The group has received many honors and awards, including the American Music Award for Favorite Musical Group, a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, and was featured on the cover of Rolling Stone. After Willis exited in late 1979, several singers took over as lead singer of the group, including Ray Stephens, Miles Jaye and Raymond Simpson (who served the longest). The group went on to star in the 1980 movie Can’t Stop the Music. Over the years, various renditions of the group have consistently toured the world along with original members Felipe Rose and Alex Briley including Ray Simpson, Jeff Olson (cowboy), Eric Anzalone (Biker), Mark Lee (Construction Worker), Bill Whitefield (Construction Worker), and James Newman (Cowboy). With hits like San Francisco/In Hollywood, Macho Man, Y.M.C.A., In the Navy and Go West, the group has sold more than 100 million records worldwide and continues to break records. In 2004 BMI recognized Y.M.C.A. as exceeding one million airplays. In 2017, Y.M.C.A. made UK’s Official Millionaires Chart – songs that have reached 1 million in combined sales/streams. For the 40th anniversary of the group, Victor Willis is back at the helm. Backed by a live band, Village People continues to thrill concert-goers around the world — as they did back in the day. Village People is: Victor Willis (Cop/Admiral), Angel Morales (Native American), James Kwong (Construction Worker), Chad Freeman (Cowboy), James Lee (G.I.), and James J.J. Lippold (Leatherman). Village People. The greatest disco group in the world. Magical Christmas is their first full length Christmas album. Now available. Additional Artist/Song Information: Artist Name: Village People Song Title: Happiest Time Of The Year Publishing: Ceres Music Group Publishing Affiliation: BMI Publishing Affiliation 2: BMI Album Title: Magical Christmas Record Label: Ceres Music Group Radio Promotion: Loggins Promotion Paul Loggins 310-325-2800 Contact Loggins Promotion Publicity/PR: Loggins Promotion Paul Loggins 310-325-2800 Contact Loggins Promotion Read the full article
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georgetownartattack · 7 years
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New Post has been published on Georgetown Art Attack
New Post has been published on http://georgetownartattack.com/wordpress/2017/11/28/festive-holiday-georgetown-art-attack-december-9/
Festive Holiday Georgetown Art Attack December 9!
Join us on December 9 as we light the winter night with the festive holiday edition of the Georgetown Art Attack. featuring the best of regional and national works. Be sure to hop aboard the FREE Art Ride tour to visit many remote studio/gallery locations, including studio e, and Equinox Studios!
Fantagraphics Bookstore & Gallery Celebrate the 11th Anniversary of Fantagraphics Bookstore & Gallery with comix, music and more featuring DAME DARCY, CHARLES FORSMAN and FRANK YOUNG    Saturday, December 9, 6 – 9 PM
All City Coffee “Day & Night” a collection of Minimalist-Pop Surrealism with new work by artist John Tingley (tnglr) This exhibit examining growth and change will be up thru December.
Rainier Glass Studio Become part of the glass art experience, browse the gallery of NW artists unique blown glass art and stay for live demonstrations at 7pm during Art Attack.
Bridge Productions  This December we’re delighted to present Julie Alpert and Andy Arkley‘s immersive installation, Desert Daze, at Bridge Productions. Desert Daze is a collaborative installation and other, smaller works created by Julie Alpert and Andy Arkley during yearlong residency at the Roswell Artist in Residence Program. Both artists are well-known for their large-scale installations which reference colorful, graphic imagery and contemporary pop culture. In these installations, they construct a brilliantly executed three-dimensional painting out of color, shape, and pattern; inviting us to to step into the composition as participants in an up-close and abundantly sensory experience.
Interstitial presents “Who’s the Daddy,” a solo exhibition by Wong Ping. Flashing, pop-like imagery; visual and auditory narrations that explicitly touch upon sex, politics and social relations; vibrant installations that extend into three dimensions the artist’s fantastical animation world – these are but cornerstones of Wong Ping’s (b. 1984, Hong Kong) practice that combines the crass and the colourful to mount a discourse around repressed sexuality, personal sentiments and political limitations. Hong Kong born and raised, Wong Ping discusses his observations of society, from teenage to adulthood, using a visual language that sits on the border of shocking and amusing.November 11 – December 23, 2017.
Oxbow  Seattle-based artist, Barbara Robertson has created a site-specific installation, titled “Architectonic,” composed of three projected animations which use the expansive Oxbow space as an integral part of the image. This project is an on-going work in progress, and Ms. Robertson will continue to add new elements to the installation during November and December, through the end of the exhibition.
HOEDEMAKER PFEIFFER– 6113 13th Ave. S. presents KAT LARSON   In Kat Larson’s latest series of photographs and video, she continues the story of a being from another planet who crash lands on Earth, which serves as a parable to the power of connection, perseverance, and strength of the spirit. Produced by Hoedemaker Pfeiffer, curated by Bridge Productions.
HOEDEMAKER PFEIFFER GALLERY – 6109 13th Ave, S. hosts group show,ADJUNCT APPENDAGES – Kim Van Someren and Ellen Zeigler in which artists use drawing, intaglio, and collage to question the arbitrary functions of bodies, structures, machinery, and limbs.  ALGOPLEX II Spacefiller – Alex Miller and Alex Nagy. Spacefiller, a collaborative duo formed by Alex Miller and Alex Nagy present an interactive video and digital installation. Produced by Hoedemaker Pfeiffer, curated by Bridge Productions.
Krab Jab Studios Presents “Master and Neophyte”, featuring renowned painters Brigid Marlin and Brom and up-and-comers Miguel Tio and Kyle Abernethy. This show of imaginative realism explores the careers of two “masters” and the impression they left on their two students, both masterful in their own right.  Show runs through January 7th, 2018.
Illumination Studio# 305  presents Rostad and Ferrell. presenting Rostad,Dari Stolzoff and Ferrell. Rostad, explores the inner beauty of our neurological system through vibrant color and Ferrell explores spatial and color field through abstraction. Also Dari Stolzoffas abstract expression in in bright color and light. Music by “DJ” Luscious Leopard Lips, who brings background music with a Theremin synthesizer and keyboards. With new work up, you’ll be glad you came by.
studio e  Brian Beck: rot. Beck’s latest work questions the stability of a single meaning conventionally granted to a familiar object. Departing from what appear to be wooden children’s toys, the art pieces are composed from carefully handcrafted and tenuously related elements, abstracted to their basic shapes and color. Beck’s category-defying display of three-dimensional collages mounted on white walls breaks the boundaries between daily objects, sculpture, painting, and conceptual art. Open Friday & Saturday from 1-6pm and always during GEORGETOWN ART ATTACK
The Georgetown Liquor Co will have an encore of Dave Ryan‘s latest work (Manticore Stencil Art) for the month December! Pop art on records, celebrity stencil portraits, nerdy naturescapes, and more!
Praxis Arts Explore a year-long journey of daily oil paintings made by a local Georgetown artist, Forrest Olson, whom spent over 3,000 hours in 2016 crafting a mountain of tiny art pieces. Please visit Praxis Arts during December 9th Art Attack and experience this one-time preview of all 366 paintings before the reception on December 16th. Claim your favorite piece in time for the holidays!
Equinox Studios is a growing arts community in West Georgetown, home to over 100 artists working in an inspiring array of mediums, including dance, blacksmithing, welding, woodworking, cycle fabrication, sculpture, painting, film, glass and art performances monthly. Equinox Studios welcomes the public to their annual holiday event “Very Open House.”
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gatutor · 3 years
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Steve Forrest-Jane Wyman-Walter Coy-Nancy Olson "Trigo y esmeralda" (So big) 1953, de Robert Wise.
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high-potential · 8 hours
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High Potential | 1x02 Dancers in the Dark Episode Stills
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bandcampsnoop · 4 years
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10/25/20.
Just got back from a quick trip to Southern California.  I missed Record Store Day...really wanted that Captured Tracks “Strum and Thrum” compilation.
Speaking of jangle, Phil Sutton (member Pale Lights, and Cinema Red and Blue, and once of Comet Gain) has a new band - Love, Burns.  Really this sounds like Pale Lights and it should.  Gary Olson is behind the boards.  Kyle Forrester (Crystal Stilts) and Hampus Öhman-Frölund is behind the kit (go to his website to view his discography).
Sutton is based in Brooklyn.  This is a co-release between Sutton’s Calico Cat Records and Germany’s Kleine Untergrund Schallplatte
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doubleattitude · 4 years
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NUVO Dance Convention, Houston, TX: RESULTS
High Scores by Age:
NUbie Solo
1st: Navy Forrest-’Imagine’
2nd: Harper Schwalb-’Do What I Do’
3rd: Haddie Templet-’Do What I Do’
4th: Rose Ramirez-’Into the Unknown’
4th: Lucia Ruiz-’Popular’
5th: Anika Argueta-’Hallelujah’
6th: Alegria Jilpas-’Pure Imagination’
7th: Sloane Harris-’Never Enough’
8th: Maria Rosales-’Despacito’
8th: MJ Mackey-’I Don’t Want To Show Off’
9th: Mackenzie Griffin-’Small World’
Mini Solo
1st: Alexis Alvarez-’Welcome Home’
2nd: Landry Silas-’Cheek to Cheek’
2nd: Winter Eberts-’Dreamlike’
2nd: Diana Kouznetsova-’It’s In His Kiss’
3rd: Kylie Lawrence-’Breathe In’
3rd: Naiya Abalos-’Forces’
3rd: Tessa Ohran-’Knock 1-2-3′
3rd: Ava Grace Olson-’Tides of Time’
3rd: Isabella Kouznetsova-’Trouble’
4th: Claire Hansen-’By The Roses’
4th: Joli Vernon-’Joy’
5th: Ava Morford-’17 Hours’
5th: Faith Crain-’Notes of the Nymph’
5th: Harper Hammes-’Tu Quieres Volver’
5th: Justin Nguyen-’You Caused It’
6th: Lyla Terry-’Rescue’
6th: Jenesis Jackson-’Single Ladies’
7th: Rory Frye-’Amen’
7th: Brynlee Fitzgerald-’Can’t Get It Out’
7th: Hadlee Heriford-’Unbroken’
8th: Camille Foreman-’Boogie Woogie’
8th: London Smith-’Feel My Love’
9th: Natalie Gerami-’Evil Twin’
9th: Neve Colyn-?
10th: Hadley Richard-’Applause’
10th: Ella Williamson-’Experience’
10th: Khloe Kramer-’Giants’
Junior Solo
1st: Colby Rich-’I Lie’
2nd: Maya Ordonez-’For All That’s Lost’
2nd: Nyah Jackson-’Slow Meadows’
2nd: Kynadi Crain-’So Close, So Far’
3rd: Brooke Toro-’As The Dust Settles’
3rd: Brooke Vorst-’Girl From Ipanema’
3rd: Kinley Bertrand-’Rock With You’
3rd: Stella Vince-’Steep Turn’
4th: Taylor Harrison-’Dawn Chorus’
4th: Beyli Shah-’Heavy Hand’
4th: Anya Inger-’Quiet Thoughts’
4th: Bella Fernandez-’She Was Running’
5th: Brooke Dubbs-’I Know’
5th: Kara Yuan-’Petite Fleur’
5th: Elyse Tompkins-’Power of Love’
5th: Ellie Randolph-’Swan Song’
5th: Baileigh McKenzie-’Take Me’
5th: Emma Fontenot-’The Gate’
6th: Jaelynn Gatchett-’A Place of Peace’
6th: Haiden Neuville-’Before You Go’
6th: Campbell Thurow-’Can’t Touch This’
6th: Elyse Armstrong-’Hard to Love’
7th: Lena Hirsch-’Forsaken’
7th: Jocelyn Nguyen-’I Am Not Myself’
8th: Maegan Abadie-’Infinite’
8th: Juliana Reyes-’She Leads’
8th: Ava Grace Craig-’Sophie’s Choice’
8th: Madelyn McCauley-’Weightless’
9th: Julia Jacob-’Emotional Conclusions’
9th: Keira Kingsmore-’Medora Variation’
9th: Ansley Harris-’The Absence of Time’
9th: Jisselle Garza-’Waiting Game’
10th: Va’Shira Newborne-’Heat’
10th: Ava Grace Gallagher-’The Greatest’
Teen Solo
1st: Mariella Saunders-’Until We Break’
2nd: Chloe Slone-’As The Dust Settles’
2nd: Kate Abernathy-’Doomed’
2nd: Gianna Garwacki-’Epiphany’
2nd: Brecklyn Brown-’Fall On Me’
2nd: Cambry Bethke-’Sacred Space’
3rd: Hudson Pletcher-’Forged Imitation’
3rd: Madison Morita-’Lily of the Valley’
3rd: Paroma Pillay-’You’re Gonna Be Okay’
4th: Sarah Linn-’Under the Skin’
4th: Audrey Berg-’Schim’
4th: Ellie Tostenrude-’Mirror of the Mind’
4th: Grace Lundbom-’Filter’
4th: Hallie Hanes-’Escalate’
5th: William Huguet-’Sinister Heart’
5th: Sofia Ulloa-’Rainy Days and Mondays’
5th: Trista Brackin-’Marathon’
5th: Laila McGuire-’Albatross’
6th: Isabella Ferrara-’The Choir’
6th: Kieran Holmes-’Hear The Bells’
6th: Camille Reynolds-’Breakout’
7th: Nicole Larson-’Absence of Light’
7th: Fayeth Tippett-’Initiate’
7th: Gracie Booth-’Nature of Life’
7th: Jenna Laurent-’Regenerative’
8th: Arden Peterson-’To This Day’
8th: Avery Pesson-’Make My Cry’
8th: Rylie Rios-’Lost Without You’
8th: Rhylan Robicheaux-’An Evening I Will Not Forget’
9th: Kendall Wenmohs-’Carry You’
9th: Braden Ward-’Drilling An Ocean’
9th: Tessa Horsley-’Reflections’
9th: Reagan Wright-’Unearth’
10th: Libby Jo Parsons-’Free’
10th: Mason Ward-’Stones’
10th: Trent Grappe-’White’
Senior Solo
1st: Sarah Bratby-’Paracosm’
1st: Onye Stevenson-’Sleep’
2nd: Sophia Seymour-’Broken’
2nd: Elizabeth Perry-’Still Standing’
2nd: Damaris Salazar-’Unraveling’
3rd: Charlee Fagan-’Veils’
3rd: Selena Hamilton-’Keep An Eye Out’
3rd: Morgan Manning-’Change Gonna Come’
4th: Natalie Wong-’Tributary’
4th: Jaycee Mya Piper-’Happiness’
4th: Madi Autry-’A Face I Used to Know’
5th: Olivia Abadie-’Drawn To You’
5th: Alexa Williams-’Lost’
5th: Lainey Myers-’You Are The Reason’
6th: Camry Blackhurst-’Airstrike’
6th: Amelia Bradford-’Weightless’
7th: Carissa Dowling-’Lonely’
7th: Kaylie Wood-’The Shift’
8th: Camryn Guarino-’Shout’
8th: Presley Gouge-’Shadow Self’
8th: Isabel Ulloa-’Rose In Flames’
8th: Nyla Staes-’Let Go’
9th: Taelynn Ritchie-’If You Could Do It Again’
9th: Hayden Folse-’Particles’
9th: Sarah Hladky-’Swim’
9th: McKenzie Shaffer-’Whispers’
10th: Caroline Cottrell-’Let Him Go’
10th: Sophia Burns-’Rewind’
10th: Madison Morris-’She Used To Be Mine’
NUbie Duo/Trio
1st: Main Street Dance-’Glow’
Mini Duo/Trio
1st: Project 21-’I Am The Cute One’
2nd: Machita Dance Company-’Let’s Do It’
3rd: The Dance Kollective-’Reflection’
Junior Duo/Trio
1st: The Dance Kollective-’Both of Us’
2nd: Jean Leigh Academy of Dance-’Pace of Change’
3rd: Modern Conceptions of Dance-’Deuterium’
3rd: Artistic Dance Project-’Spies’
Teen Duo/Trio
1st: Jean Leigh Academy of Dance-’At Least For Now’
1st: Dance Institute-’Comme Les Anges Volent’
2nd: Main Street Dance-’Destinations’
2nd: The Dance Kollective-’Alter Ego’
3rd: The Dance Kollective-’Ascending’
3rd: Dance Du Coeur-’Hiding Place’
Senior Duo/Trio
1st: The Dance Kollective-’Exhumed’
1st: Artistic Soul Dance Company-’Sunder’
2nd: The Dance Kollective-’I Don’t Believe In Us’
3rd: The Movement Dance Academy-’Wild Love’
NUbie Group
1st: Machita Dance Company-’Land of 1000 Dances’
2nd: Dance Graphics-’Boogie Fever’
3rd: Main Street Dance-’Mom’
Mini Group
1st: Prodigy Dance and Performing Arts Centre-’We Love to Bebop’
2nd: Lancaster Dance Academy-’Want You Back’
3rd: Lancaster Dance Academy-’A Children’s Dream’
Junior Group
1st: The Dance Kollective-’Dreaming’
1st: Jean Leigh Academy of Dance-’Give Me More’
2nd: The Dance Kollective-’Like Lovers Do’
2nd: Dance Du Coeur-’Scapegoat’
3rd: Dance Du Coeur-’Wind It Up!’
Teen Group
1st: The Dance Kollective-’Tap Is Life’
2nd: The Dance Kollective-’Killing Me Softly’
2nd: The Dance Kollective-’The Heaven Complex’
2nd: Dance Du Coeur-’Truth’
3rd: Jean Leigh Academy of Dance-’Hymne a l’amour’
Senior Group
1st: The Dance Kollective-’Before I Go’
2nd: Artistic Dance Project-’Letting Go’
3rd: The Dance Kollective-’Give Me Love’
NUbie Line
1st: The Movement Dance Academy-’Crazy In Love’
2nd: Rios Dance-’Anaconda’
Mini Line
1st: Machita Dance Company-’In The Convent’
2nd: Dance Graphics-’Cover Girl’
3rd: Dance Graphics-’Like Jesus’
Junior Line
1st: The Dance Kollective-’Handful of Keys’
2nd: Artistic Dance Project-’Bright Horses’
2nd: Dance Du Coeur-’Small Hours’
3rd: The Movement Dance Academy-’War Child’
Teen Line
1st: Artistic Dance Project-’Greed’
2nd: Dance Du Coeur-’Leave Me My Name’
2nd: The Dance Kollective-’Sing It Back’
2nd: Dance Du Coeur-’Somewhere’
3rd: The Movement Dance Academy-’Trust Me Again’
NUbie Extended Line
1st: The Movement Dance Academy-’Strut’
Mini Extended Line
1st: Jean Leigh Academy of Dance-’Blow, Gabriel, Blow’
2nd: Main Street Dance-’Bom Bom Bom’
Junior Extended Line
1st: Jean Leigh Academy of Dance-’Reasonable Doubt’
2nd: Jean Leigh Academy of Dance-’Knock On Wood’
3rd: The Movement Dance Academy-’Mean Girls’
Teen Extended Line
1st: Artistic Dance Project-’Can’t Pretend’
2nd: Dance De Coeur-’Takeoff’
3rd: The Dance Kollective-’Goliath’
3rd: Tari’s School of Dance-’The Hive’
Senior Extended Line
1st: Artistic Dance Project-’Knocking On Heavens Door’
2nd: Artistic Dance Project-’GO!’
Teen Production
1st: Dance Institute-’Valse Romantique’
2nd: Dance Graphics-’What’s Poppin’
3rd: Main Street Dance-’Work Me Down’
High Scores by Performance Division:
NUbie Jazz
1st: Machita Dance Company-’Land of 1000 Dances’ 2nd: The Movement Dance Academy-’Crazy In Love’ 2nd: Dance Graphics-’Boogie Fever’ 3rd: Main Street Dance-’Mom’
NUbie Hip-Hop
1st: The Movement Dance Academy-’Strut’ 2nd: Rios Dance-’Anaconda’
NUbie Lyrical
1st: Modern Conceptions of Dance-’Ashes’
Mini Jazz
1st: Lancaster Dance Academy-’Want You Back’ 2nd: Machita Dance Company-’Shake; 3rd: Dance Graphics-’Glamorous Life’
Mini Hip-Hop
1st: Avant Dance LLC-’Bad to the Bone’ 2nd: Main Street Dance-’Cruising Cuties’
Mini Tap
1st: Prodigy Dance and Performing Arts Centre-’We Love to Bebop’ 2nd: Jean Leigh Academy of Dance-’Blow, Gabriel, Blow’ 3rd: Main Street Dance-’All Aboard’
Mini Contemporary
1st: Lancaster Dance Academy-’A Children’s Dream’ 2nd: Avant Dance LLC-’La Vie En Rose’ 3rd: Dance Institute-’And So It Begins’
Mini Lyrical
1st: Center Stage Performing Arts Studio-’Happiness’ 2nd: Lancaster Dance Academy-’Sparrow’ 3rd: Dance Graphics-’Salvation’
Mini Musical Theatre
1st: Machita Dance Company-’In The Convent’ 2nd: Dance Graphics-’It’s Party Time’ 3rd: Dance Graphics-’Stupid Cupid’
Junior Jazz
1st: Dance Du Coeur-’Wind It Up!’ 2nd: Jean Leigh Academy of Dance-’Knock On Wood’ 3rd: Dance Graphics-’Tip Toe’
Junior Ballet
1st: Collective Dance Artistry-’Promenade’ 2nd: Artistic Dance Project-’Marco Polo’
Junior Tap
1st: The Dance Kollective-’Handful of Keys’ 2nd: Artistic Dance Project-’Finesse’ 3rd: Avant Dance LLC-’Seville’
Junior Contemporary
1st: Jean Leigh Academy of Dance-’Give Me More’ 1st: The Dance Kollective-’Dreaming’ 2nd: Dance Du Coeur-’Scapegoat’ 3rd: The Movement Dance Academy-’Unraveling’
Junior Lyrical
1st: Artistic Dance Project-’Bright Horses’ 1st: Dance Du Coeur-’Small Hours’ 2nd: The Movement Dance Academy-’War Child’ 3rd: Dance Graphics-’The Light That Never Fails’
Junior Musical Theatre
1st: Jean Leigh Academy of Dance-’Reasonable Doubt’ 2nd: The Movement Dance Academy-’Mean Girls’
Junior Specialty
1st: The Dance Kollective-’Like Lovers Do’ 2nd: Main Street Dance-’1977′ 3rd: Paloma Limas & Company-’My Way’
Teen Jazz
1st: Dance Du Coeur-’Last Dance’ 2nd: The Dance Kollective-’Bringing It Back’ 3rd: The Movement Dance Academy-’Vibeology’
Teen Ballet
1st: Dance Institute-’Valse Romantique’ 2nd: Dance Institute-’Amore Argentine’ 3rd: Collective Dance Artistry-’Sylvia’
Teen Hip-Hop
1st: Dance Graphics-’What’s Poppin’ 2nd: Tari’s School of Dance-’Fame and Fortune’ 3rd: Main Street Dance-’Pinky Ring’
Teen Tap
1st: The Dance Kollective-’Tap Is Life’ 2nd: The Dance Kollective-’Killing Me Softly’ 3rd: Palm Valley Gymnastics and Dance-’Juice’
Teen Contemporary
1st: Dance Du Coeur-’Truth’ 1st: Dance Du Coeur-’Leave Me My Name’ 2nd: Jean Leigh Academy of Dance-’Hymne a l’amour’ 3rd: Jean Leigh Academy of Dance-’The Path’
Teen Lyrical
1st: Dance Du Coeur-’Somewhere’ 2nd: The Dance Kollective-’Remember Her’ 3rd: Creative Dance Studio-’Memory’ 3rd: Artistic Dance Project-’Journey’
Teen Musical Theatre
1st: Modern Conceptions of Dance-’Don’t Rain On My Parade’ 2nd: Avant Dance LLC-’C’mon Everybody’
Teen Ballroom
1st: The Dance Kollective-’Boss’ 2nd: Rios Dance-’Azucar’
Teen Specialty
1st: Artistic Dance Project-’Greed’ 2nd: The Dance Kollective-’The Heaven Complex’ 2nd: The Dance Kollective-’Sing It Back’ 3rd: Collective Dance Artistry-’The One Who Goes Astray’
Senior Jazz
1st: Lancaster Dance Academy-’Gimmie Dat’ 2nd: Pivotal Academy of Dance-’Born This Way’
Senior Hip-Hop
1st: Artistic Dance Project-’GO!’
Senior Tap
1st: Artistic Dance Project-’I Wanna Dance’
Senior Contemporary
1st: The Dance Kollective-’Before I Go’ 2nd: Artistic Dance Project-’Mother’ 3rd: Main Street Dance-’9 Crimes’
Senior Lyrical
1st: Artistic Dance Project-’Letting Go’ 2nd: The Dance Kollective-’Give Me Love’ 3rd: Dance Graphics-’Let You Know’
Senior Specialty
1st: Artistic Dance Project-’Knocking On Heavens Door’ 2nd: Texas Academy of Dance Arts-’You Always Hurt The One You Love’
Best NU Groups:
NUbie
The Movement Dance Academy-’Crazy In Love’
Machita Dance Company-’Land of 1000 Dances’
Dance Graphics-’Boogie Fever’
Mini
Dance Graphics-’Salvation’
Jean Leigh Academy of Dance-’Blow, Gabriel, Blow’
Machita Dance Company-’In The Convent’
Center Stage Performing Arts Studio-’Happiness’
Lancaster Dance Academy-’Want You Back’
Prodigy Dance and Performing Arts Centre-’We Love to Bebop’
Junior
Dance Du Coeur-’Scapegoat’
Jean Leigh Academy of Dance-’Give Me More’
The Dance Kollective-’Dreaming’
Artistic Dance Project-’Bright Horses’
The Movement Dance Academy-’Unraveling’
Dance Du Coeur-’Small Hours’
Teen
Jean Leigh Academy of Dance-’Hymne a l’amour’
Artistic Dance Project-’Greed’
The Dance Kollective-’Tap Is Life’
Modern Conceptions of Dance-’Distortion’
Collective Dance Artistry-’The One Who Goes Astray’
Dance Du Coeur-’Somewhere’
Machita Dance Company-’Holding On’
Creative Dance Studio-’Memory’
Main Street Dance-’Crash Test Dummies’
Tari’s School of Dance-’The Hive’
Dance Institute-’Valse Romantique’
The Movement Dance Academy-’Trust Me Again’
Dance Graphics-’What’s Poppin’
Senior
Lancaster Dance Academy-’Humanity’
Texas Academy of Dance Arts-’Love Lost’
Main Street Dance-’9 Crimes’
The Dance Kollective-’Before I Go’
Artistic Dance Project-’Letting Go’
Studio Pick:
Dance Graphics-’What’s Poppin’
Lancaster Dance Academy-’Humanity’
Dance Institute-’Valse Romantique’
Artistic Dance Project-’Greed’
Collective Dance Artistry-’The One Who Goes Astray’
Avant Dance LLC-’Clap, Clap’
Modern Conceptions of Dance-’Distortion’
Dance Du Coeur-’Somewhere’
West Austin Dance Academy-’Missionary Man’
The Movement Dance Academy-’Trust Me Again’
The Dance Kollective-’Tap Is Life’
Main Street Dance-’Crash Test Dummies’
Machita Dance Company-’Holding On’
23 notes · View notes
goalhofer · 5 months
Text
2024 Atlanta Braves Roster
Pitchers
#26 Raisel Iglesias (Isla De La Juventud, Cuba)
#33 A.J. Minter (Bullard, Texas)
#38 Pierce Johnson (Arvada, Colorado)
#40 Reynaldo López (San Pedro De Macorís, Dominican Republic)*
#49 Aaron Bummer (Peoria, Arizona)*
#50 Charlie Morton IV (Trumbull, Connecticut)
#51 Chris Sale (Lakeland, Florida)*
#52 Dylan Lee (Dinuba, California)
#54 Max Fried (Santa Monica, California)
#59 Allan Winans (Bakersfield, California)
#60 Jesse Chavez (Fontana, California)
#67 Ángel Perdomo (San Cristóbal, Dominican Republic)
#68 Tyler Matzek (Mission Viejo, California)
#77 Joe Jiménez (San Juan, Puerto Rico)
#99 Spencer Strider (Knoxville, Tennessee)
Catchers
#12 Sean Murphy (Centerville, Ohio)
#16 Travis d'Arnaud (Lakewood, California)
#45 Chadwick Tromp (Oranjestad, Aruba)
Infielders
#1 Ozie Albies (Willemstad, Curaçao)
#11 Orlando Arcia (Anaco, Venezuela)
#15 Luis Guillorme (Davie, Florida)*
#27 Michael Riley; Jr. (Southaven, Mississippi)
#28 Matt Olson (Lilburn, Georgia)
Outfielders
#13 Ronald Acuña; Jr. (La Guaira, Venezuela)
#14 Adam Duvall (Louisville, Kentucky)*
#20 Marcell Ozuna (Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic)
#23 Michael Harris; Jr. (Stockbridge, Georgia)
#24 Jarred Kelenic (Waukesha, Wisconsin)*
#37 Forrest Wall (Maitland, Florida)
Coaches
Manager Brian Snitker (Macon, Illinois)
Bench coach Walter Weiss (Tuxedo, New York)
Hitting coach Kevin Seitzer (Springfield, Illinois)
Assistant hitting coach Larry Jones; Jr. (Pierson, Florida)
Assistant hitting coach Bobby Magallanes (Bell, California)
Pitching coach Rick Kranitz (Glendale, Arizona)
Batting practice pitcher Tomás Pérez (Barquisimeto, Venezuela)
Bullpen coach Erick Abreu (Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic)
Bullpen catcher Jimmy Leo (Boca Raton, Florida)
Bullpen catcher José Yépez (Carora, Venezuela)
Catching coach Sal Fasano (Schaumburg Township, Illinois)
1B coach Tom Goodwin (Fresno, California)
3B coach Matt Tuiasosopo (Woodinville, Washington)
Assistant coach Eddie Pérez (Atlanta, Georgia)
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twins2994 · 1 year
Text
Braves Bats Shine In Win.
Twins 4 Braves 9 W-Fried (4-0) L-Sanchez (0-4) 
The Minnesota Twins played their last split-squad of the spring. Half of the Twins and Braves played in games in North Port and Fort Myers. The Twins were ready from the start at Cool Today Park. Donovan Solano reached on a pop up to second base that Hoy Park couldn’t catch. With two outs, Kyle Garlick smoked a Max Fried offering out to left for a two-run blast. The Twins had a two-run lead before the Braves grabbed a bat. The Braves bounced back in the second as Michael Harris looped a single to center. Ryan LaMarre inexplicably threw behind him as he went to second. Ozzie Albies lined a single to right and Forrest Wall hit a run-scoring single to left to put Atlanta on the board. The Braves got back to work in the third when Ronald Acuna led-off with a triple to left-center. Matt Olson hit an RBI groundout to even the game at two all. Austin Riley kept the chain moving with a walk and Sean Murphy singled to right. Michael Harris lined a run-scoring single to right to put the Braves on top. Forrest Wall plated a pair with a double to right-center as the Braves led 5-2 after three frames. The Twins would jump ahead in the fourth wihen Tony Wolters and Ryan LaMarre walked. Mark Contreras hit an RBI groundout to inch the Twins within two. Hoy Park led-off the fourth with a walk and Ronald Acuna smoked an Aaron Sanchez fastball out to left for a two-run homer. The Twins loaded the bases quickly in the sixth and Mark Contreras hit a sac fly to left. The Braves kept adding on in the seventh as Joe Hudson led-off with a single and Ozzie Albies tripled him home. Forrest Wall hit an RBI groundout to put Atlanta up 9-4. Ty Tice threw up a zero in the eighth and Matt Swarmer struck out two in the ninth as the Braves picked up two wins against the Twins today. 
-Final Thoughts- Aaron Sanchez had another horrible outing this spring. He gave up seven runs on eight hits with two strikeouts over three innings. Matt Mullenbach had a 1-2-3 fourth, Danny Coulombe fanned two over two scoreless innings, and Brock Stewart gave up two runs in the seventh. Derek Molina put up a zero in the eighth. Kyle Garlick homered off Max Fried and had two hits. Mark Contreras had two hits as well. The Twins hit 1-for-9 with runners in scoring position and left seven men on base. The Twins will head over to JetBlue Park tomorrow to play the Red Sox. Sonny Gray will face Chris Sale tomorrow afternoon.
-Chris Kreibich-
0 notes