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#Helene Heigh
1-800-cr33py · 5 months
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I'm not sure if you write for anymore but can I please ask for Bloody Painter with a size kink 👀
CW:None, wrote this before going to bed
Tall!Helen
Helen Otis isn’t ‘big’ per se, but he’s tall. Standing 6’2 without his usual boots, it’s clear that he towers over most of his victims. No different with you. Helen doesn’t care what size you are, truly, but he adores the height difference between the two of you. He finds it so much easier to persuade you into letting him pose you like a good little muse. He loves how his height gives him some kind of authority over you (at least in his mind). Helen obsesses over it, the difference in heigh plaguing his sketchbooks page by page. It drives him up the wall when you crane your neck to look at him.
Tall!Reader
He loves studying you, it’s not often he finds people taller than he is, so when you came along it was like some kind of sick prayer was finally answered. Helen dedicates entire sketchbooks to just you. From pen sketch of you making food to water color paintings of you sunbathing. Helen adores you and the size difference you both have
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byneddiedingo · 2 years
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Charles Chaplin and Martha Raye in Monsieur Verdoux (Charles Chaplin, 1947)
Cast: Charles Chaplin, Mady Correll, Allison Roddan, Robert Lewis, Audrey Betz, Martha Raye, Ada May, Isobel Elsom, Marjorie Bennett, Helene Heigh, Margaret Huffman, Marilyn Nash, Irving Bacon. Screenplay: Charles Chaplin, based on an Idea by Orson Welles. Cinematography: Roland Totheroh. Art direction: John Beckman. Film editing: Willard Nico. Music: Charles Chaplin. At the end of Monsieur Verdoux, Charles Chaplin, in the title role, walks away toward his execution by guillotine, just as his Little Tramp character used to walk away toward the horizon in his earlier films. It's a richly ironic moment, not just because Chaplin is parodying the endings of his other movies, but also because it would come to symbolize the beginning of the end of his career. He would make three more films, only one of which, Limelight (1952), would attract an audience (mainly in Europe) and earn some critical respect. Of the other two, A King in New York (1957) was not even released in the United States until 1973, and although The Countess From Hong Kong (1967) did get American distribution, it was generally panned even by critics inclined to favor Chaplin and was a major box office flop. Monsieur Verdoux is a key work in its revelation of Chaplin's strengths and weaknesses. His strengths are still there: He was, when he wanted to be, a very funny actor, and there is one scene -- Verdoux and Annabella (Martha Raye) in a rowboat -- that is among the most hilarious sequences ever filmed. His weaknesses stemmed from his desire to be more than funny: to make statements about the way he saw the world. The ending of The Great Dictator (1940) was marred when he shifted from satire to sermon, and the rather muzzy anticapitalism expressed by Verdoux in the final scenes strikes us today as banal. Unfortunately, in 1947 it struck many as worse than that. In the increasingly heated anticommunist fervor of the day it was at least heresy, at worst treason. Monsieur Verdoux was picketed and banned and eventually withdrawn from circulation in the United States, not to be seen here until 1964. It confused most of the critics in 1947 with its shifts in tone and its rather old-fashioned mise-en-scène and cutting, but it had its defenders, chief among them James Agee, who wrote a long, impassioned multipart essay for The Nation defending the film. "I love and revere the film as deeply as any I have ever seen," Agee wrote, "and believe that it is high among the great works of this century." Not many people would go that far today. Monsieur Verdoux has its longueurs and its unfortunate wanderings into Chaplin's particular brand of sentimentality, especially the wheelchair-bound wife and adorable child. It betrays Chaplin's perennial weakness for the pretty girl in his casting of the wooden Marilyn Nash in what seems to have been intended as a key role but which fizzles because it's awkwardly written and performed. Even the title role is inconsistently written and performed: Chaplin's dapper Verdoux suddenly turns into a slapstick clown and just as suddenly back into the suave and sinister serial killer, undercutting the high-minded pseudo-Shavian irony of his final apologia: "As for being a mass killer, does not the world encourage it? Is it not building weapons of destruction for the sole purpose of mass killing? Has it not blown unsuspecting women and little children to pieces? And done it very scientifically? As a mass killer, I am an amateur by comparison." Monsieur Verdoux feels something like a scene from Act IV in the tragicomedy that was Chaplin's life. If the first three acts were about his rise to success, despite controversy over his personal life and his politics, the fourth act finds his artistic instincts failing him and the controversies forcing him into exile. Only in the fifth act does the adulation that once surrounded him revive.
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milliondollarbaby87 · 4 years
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9 to 5 (1980) Review
9 to 5 (1980) Review
Three female employees Judy Bernly, Violet Newstead and Doralee Rhodes have become truly sick of working for Franklin Hart Jr who is sexist, egotistical, liar and hypocritical bigot that they manage to turn the tables on him, even if it begins as an accident! ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ Continue reading
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thebiscuiteternal · 5 years
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Scary Music Masterpost
Season’s Creepings, all you lovely listeners; this is your DJ of darkness over at the Symphony of Death. Once again, it’s the time of year to update the Masterpost!Now you won’t find the classic Halloween haunts here, since those scares can be had anywhere, but maybe you’ll find a new favorite. Pull out your cauldron, brew up something nice, and kick back with me!
Masters of Horror
John Carpenter
Better Check the Kids - Halloween / Put Them in the Ground (with Jim Lang) - Body Bags / Main Theme - The Fog (1980) / All Out of Bubble Gum (with Alan Howarth) - They Live! / Hell Breaks Loose (with Alan Howarth) - Prince of Darkness / Regeneration - Christine / Just A Bedtime Story (with Jim Lang) - In the Mouth of Madness
Marco Beltrami
River’s Edge - My Soul to Take / Tea for Three Plus One - The Woman in Black / Return to Blackwood - Don’t Be Afraid of the Dark / The Concert - The Eye / Love Theme - Cursed / Priest Dies - Mimic / 1m2 (Production Note) - The Substitute / Return to Blackwood - Don’t Be Afraid of the Dark / Pulled Down Deep - The Shallows / The End of Fur - Cursed (II) / Carillon My Wayward Son - The Snowman
Charlie Clouser
American Horror Story Theme (with Cesar Davila-Irizarry) / Out of the Fire - The Collection /Hello, Zepp - Saw / Theme - Dead Silence
Bernard Herrmann
Teddy Bear Wired - Cape Fear / Theme - Vertigo / Theme - Psycho / The Tomb-Sandra - Obsession / Theme - Twisted Nerve / The Kidnapping - Obsession / Marketplace Murder - The Man Who Knew Too Much
Christopher Young
Twilight Mercy - Urban Legend / The Lament Configuration - Hellraiser / Sinister - Sinister /Concerto to Hell - Drag Me to Hell / The Devourer of Souls - Deliver Us from Evil / Butchers and Bakers - Copycat / Six Demons - The Exorcism of Emily Rose / Cryptomnesia - The Gift / The Sacrifice - The Dorm that Dripped Blood / Death After Life After Death - Untraceable / Reversing Colors - The Hider in the House / Church Isn’t Church - Pet Sematary (2019)
Video Games
Room of Angel - Akira Yamaoka & Mary Elizabeth McGlynn (Silent Hill: The Room) Mandus - Jessica Curry (Amnesia: A Machine For Pigs) The Drunken Whaler - Daniel Licht (Dishonored) Chill and Rigor - Shinji Hosoe (9 Persons 9 Hours 9 Doors) I’m Not Edible! - Chris Vrenna (American McGhee’s Alice) Ring Around the Rosie - Jason Graves (Dead Space 2) Soul of Steel - Mao Hamamoto (Corpse Party) P.T. Silent Hills Ambience Weekly Despair Magazine - Masafumi Takada (Dangan Ronpa) Close to Evil - Mikko Tarmia (Penumbra) In this Wretched Place - Eipix Studios (Phantasmat) The Nameless Game (Requiem) - Masayoshi Soken (Nanashi no Game) Last Day - Koji Kondo & Toru Minegishi (Legend of Zelda: Majora’s Mask) Welcome to Rapture - Garry Schyman (Bioshock) Theme - Yoan Landau (Nightmare House) Plague Blossom - Ndemic Creations (Plague Inc) Gore Nest - Mick Gordon (DOOM) Creepy Forest - Jason Garner & Vince Di Vera (Don’t Starve) A Nightmare Reborn - Ramin Djawadi (Gears of War) Before the Mirror - Maribeth Solomon & Brent Barkman (Fallen London) Broken Vessel - Christopher Larkin (Hollow Knight) Letter From A Friend - Carlos Viola (The Last Door) Rata Novus - Maclaine Diemer (Guild Wars 2: Heart of Thorns) The Hole at the Center of Everything - Alec Holowka (Night in the Woods) Bury Her - Ivan Zanotti (imscared) Devil’s Crossing - Steve Pardo (Grim Dawn)
Movies
Close to You (Carpenters Cover) - Josefine Cronholm (Mirrormask) The Void - Stephen Price (Gravity) Intro to Horror - Harry Manfredini (Friday the 13th) The Supper - Bruno Coulais (Coraline) Tubular Bells (Exorcist Cut) - Mike Oldfield (The Exorcist) Main Theme - Shiro Sato (Ju-On : The Grudge) Main Title - Wendy Carlos & Rachel Elkind (The Shining) Dark Earth - Jack Trombey (Dawn of the Dead) The Ringtone (Chakushin Ari) A New Swan Queen  - Clint Mansell (Black Swan) Audition - Koji Endoh (Audition) Roar! - Michael Giacchino (Cloverfield) It Was Always You, Helen - Philip Glass (Candyman) Finale / End Titles - Howard Shore (Silence of the Lambs) A Discordant Split - Kenji Kawai (Ringu) Funeral in Carpathia - James Bernard (Dracula: Prince of Darkness) Name Your Poison - Christopher Lee (The Return of Captain Invincible) The Carousel After Dark - James Horner (Something Wicked This Way Comes) The Game Begins - Masamichi Amano (Battle Royale) The Event Horizon - Michael Kamen & Orbital (Event Horizon) Poison - Herman Kopp (Der Todesking) Samara’s Song - Daveigh Chase (The Ring) Brainerd, Minnesota - Carter Burwell (Fargo) Number One Fan - Marc Shaiman (Misery) Graveyard Theme - Vince Guaraldi (It’s the Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown) We are the 1% - Darren Baker (The Conspiracy) Call to Worship - Sons of Perdition (The Backwater Gospel) Longest Night - Thomas Newman (The Shawshank Redemption) The Auction - Michael Abels (Get Out)
Anime
Youran - Kayo Konishi & Yukio Konda (Elfen Lied) Aya - Mari Fukuhara (Amatsuki) I was waiting for this moment - Yuki Kajiura (Puella Magi Madoka Magica: Rebellion) Go DA DA - Yoko Kanno (Ghost in the Shell: SAC) A Last Flower - Asa-Chang & Junray (Aku no Hana) White Hill (Maromi’s Theme) - Susumu Hirasawa (Paranoia Agent) 24 Hours OPEN - Yoko Kanno (Cowboy Bebop) Nui Harime’s Theme - Hiroyuki Sawano (Kill La Kill) Daughter - Ichirou Imai & Kazuhisa Yamaguchi (Petshop of Horrors) Monster - Susumu Hirasawa (Berserk) Ake ni Somaru - Yasuharu Takanachi (Jigoku Shoujo) Sanctus - Hikaru Nanase (Angel Sanctuary) March of the Moving Dolls - Akira Senju (Fullmetal Alchemist: Brotherhood)
Other
Stay Awake (Mary Poppins cover) - Suzanne Vega Heigh Ho (Snow White cover) - Tom Waits Come Little Children - Kate Covington I, Witchfinder - Electric Wizard Brennistein - Sigur Ros Psychobabble - Frou Frou Sirens - SingerSen Lose Your Soul - Dead Man’s Bones Grisly Reminder  - Midnight Syndicate An Echo, A Stain - Bjork Elaine - ABBA (trust me) Welcome Home (Instrumental) - Coheed and Cambria The Greatest Show Unearthed - Creature Feature Something Wicked (That Way Went) - Vernian Process Black Water - Timber Timbre God’s Away on Business - Tom Waits The Wicked - Blues Saraceno The Gravedigger - The Pine Box Boys Lake Ponchartrain - Ludo The Smiler - IMA Score (Alton Towers Amusement Park) DOA - Bloodrock Breathing Water - Inhale Chupacabra Cha Cha - The Swingtips Confrontation - Anthony Warlow (Broadway’s Jekyll and Hyde) No Death - Mirel Wagner Thick as Thieves - Natalie Merchant Say Goodnight - Skeleton Key The Sad Mafioso - Godspeed You! Black Emperor What’s So Amazing About Grace? - The Paper Chase Blood on the Blue Grass - Legendary Shack Shakers In A Lonely Place - Joy Division Walpurgis - Black Sabbath
Television
Are You Afraid of the Dark? - Jeff Fisher Theme to Unsolved Mysteries - Michael Boyd & Gary Remal Malkin The Red Room - Angelo Badalamenti & David Lynch (Twin Peaks) Suite from “The Mark of the Rani” - Jonathan Gibbs (Doctor Who) Norma Doesn’t Approve - Chris Bacon (Bates Motel) The Cordyceps - George Fenton (Planet Earth) Dark Harvest Chase - Kevin Manthei (Invader Zim) Main Theme - Robert Lydecker & Brian Tyler (Sleepy Hollow) Blood Theme - Daniel Licht (Dexter) Arkham Asylum - Shirley Walker & Todd Hayen (Batman the Animated Series) The Old Mill - The Blasting Company (Over the Garden Wall) Sleep Deprivation - Trent Reznor & Atticus Ross (Bird Box) Turn on the Lights - Kyle Dixon & Michael Stein (Stranger Things)
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sea-time · 7 years
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Twelve months slipped by at a pace this year. Thinking about it at first I was convinced that 2014 had been worryingly barren for me culturally, due to the restrictions of work and life and a new-found affection for sleeping. On reflection it seems I did manage to get out of the house on occasion, listen to the odd record and take in a show or two. Here’s what I liked, or what I can remember liking in no particular order….
‘Salad Days’ by Mac Demarco made a big impression on me. I am a sucker for melody in music and this kid (he is only a kid, twenty-three or something) can’t help but write songs with an instant hook. He also has a gorgeously dry sense of humour, plays a mean guitar and is Canadian. I like Canadian people. The album speaks very simply but with great fluency about love, the fear of losing that love, and what it means to be alive today. It is beautifully and simply produced and puts a smile on my face every time I listen to the album. I managed to catch Mac play in Manchester in may, a brilliantly ramshackle gig which climaxed with the whole venue on our knees singing along to ‘Unknown Legend’ and giving thanks to Neil Young.
I love the new Blake Mills album ‘Heigh Ho’. Another great guitar player, with a tone very reminiscent of George Harrison, it’s a definite grower but one worth waiting for.
The new Caribou album deserves all the plaudits its earning. Such a great record – designed to make you dance.
A Winged Victory for the Sullen very slowly prised the roof off the Barbican in October with genuinely affecting and moving music. An amazing show and an amazing group of musicians.
I also caught Damon Albarn live in Manchester at the 6music festival – thank God for BBC 6 music! I am very impressed by Damon Albarn as a man and musician. This is a highly personal record, filled to the brim with gorgeous melodies and revealing lyrics, my high point being ‘Heavy Seas Of Love’ a duet with Brian Eno.
Ok I did see a lot of gigs in Manchester, I was working there for a stretch, they are coming back to me now……. with maybe the highlight being Prince. I’ve wanted to see him play live for ever and the man did not disappoint. It was a three and a half hour gig, during which he jumped effortlessly between hits and space-funk jams with his all female backing band. It’s a nice feeling when a legend lives up to their legendary status. Finally, I managed to catch Tame Impala in L.A. Love this band, such confident musicians, they completely filled the auditorium with blissed out fuzz-drenched tunes. Their support act Delicate Steve I also highly recommend, a very unusual guitar player, his music is of the joyous instrumental kind you want to listen to walking around feeling warm inside while everybody else looks worried.
The Richard Ford trilogy of ‘The Sportswriter’, ‘Independence Day’ and ‘The Lay Of The Land’ rank high amongst my favorite all-time novels, and this year Ford re-introduced us to Frank Bascombe (protagonist of all three novels) in his latest novel ‘Let Me Be Frank With You’. Frank is now in his late sixties but as compelling a character as ever. It’s a brief book, written as a series of short stories but is as incisive and acerbic an investigation of the American dream as I have read.
‘The Dog’ by Joseph O’Neill is also a joy, a book that is as tragic as it is funny.
For some reason I recently decided to re-read some books that I had read in my teens to check if they were still the masterpieces I had first ostentatiously judged them to be. ‘The Book Of Evidence’ by John Banville certainly remains one. Such an extraordinary tour-de-force. If you haven’t read it recently please do. It will inhabit you. I also re-visited some Salinger. Those early short stories still must be unmatchable in terms of heartache and droll musings on American youth and life.
After the sad passing of Dermot Healy this year the only fitting tribute I could think of was to read ‘A Goats Song’ once more. I fell in love with it all over again, sad and mournful and touching – part of this Island’s history.
I’ll finish up now as I realise writing these things can cause quickening anxiety about leaving some wonderful book or poem or song out without a mention.
Before I go I must write briefly about some visual art I saw. Mark Garry’s show – at the Model in Sligo town, “A Winter’s Light” – was a thing of beauty, delicate and life-affirming. I recently saw Douglas Gordon’s show ‘Tears become Streams’ at the Armoury in NYC. It featured concert pianist Helene Grimaud play a series of pieces inspired by water while the extraordinarily vast space was slowly flooded by water creating a lake on which she seemed to hover and also turning the space upside down in reflection. Breathtaking.
So that is it……. I appear to have completely left out any mention of film and theatre. So be it. They will have to wait until next year.
—Cillian Murphy
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susanetalks · 6 years
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ABOUT TRIP TO YORK
York has been hailed as Britain’s most beautiful city, and the place where most people want to live in the UK. It certainly is a special city – its small, but crammed full of beautiful buildings, and more boutique shops, restaurants and cafes than you can shake a stick at. History seeps from every brick, wood beam and cobblestone, and it’s hard not to imagine legions of Romans or hordes of Vikings roaming the streets. York just amazed me and you can feel the atmosphere of the city through my pictures and who knows…maybe this post might make you want to visit York too :)
York patří mezi nejkrásnější britská města, kde je krásné žít. Je to naprosto boží město, o kterém jsem snila navštívit už na střední, kde jsme se o něm učili. Je to malinkaté, za to neustále pulzující město, plné krásných středověkých uliček, domečků, malých kaváren a butiků. Historie sálá z každé stavební kostky, dřevěných okenic, dlažebních kostek a je dost těžké nepředstavovat si římské legionáře nebo Vikingy, kteří se prohán��li ulicemi Yorku v dobách jeho rozkvětu.
York mě naprosto uchvátil a doufám, že na vás přenesu atmosféru města alespoň skrze fotky, které můžete zhlédnout spolu s krátkým povídáním o městě,které jsem nenavštívila naposledy a kdo ví…třeba vás nakonec přesvědčím zajet do Yorku také :)
We went 27th December, took a train MCR-YORK and in one and half hour we appeared in magical York. The way from train station to the city centre to our first stop: YORK Minster, takes 10 minutes along the York’s City Walls and Gardens. These York City Walls were built in 13th century all around the city, It takes around 2 hours to walk around the compete route. It’s for free and opened daily from 8am to dusk.
My do Yorku vyrazili těsně po vánočních svátcích, 27.prosince. Jeli jsme vlakem Manchester - York, s malým přestupem a zpožděním v Leeds. Za hodinku a půl jsme dorazili do Yorku a objevování mohlo začít. Cesta od vlakového nádraží do centra trvá necelých 10 minut a naší první zastávkou byla známá katedrála. Podél cesty k ní můžete vidět York City Walls, středověké hradby, postaveny ve 13.století a linou se okolo celého města. Procházka po hradbách trvá 2 hodinky, vstupné je zdarma a otevírací doba je každý den od osmi od rána do setmění, poté se brány na hradby zamykají.
York lays on the Ouse and the Foss River. In the morning we could see a few rowing enthusiasts.
York leží na dvou řekách Ouse a Foss a my tak mohli na naší cestě do města vidět nadšence, kteří v dopoledních hodinách při 4°C veslovali v tričkách.
Our way: From Railway Station along the way Station Road, War Memorial Gardens, York Minster + Dean’s Park, Goodramgate street, Kings Square, Shambles, Pavement, Coppergate, Jorvik centre, Castle gate, Cliffords Tower, walk by the river, Ghost Walk point, Coney street, Market Street, Parliament Street, Shambles Market, Roman Bathhouse, Stonegate, Helen’s Square,
Naše cesta: Z Railway Station po Station Road, War Memorial Gardens, York Minster + Dean’s Park, Goodramgate street, Kings Square, Shambles, Pavement, Coppergate, Jorvik centre, Castle gate, Cliffords Tower, walk by the river, Ghost Walk point, Coney street, Market Street, Parliament Street, Shambles Market, Roman Bathhouse, Stonegate, Helen’s Square,
In the city centre are 4 mediavel gates connected with walls all-around the York.
V centru města jsou hradby propojeny 4 středověkými branami, které připomínají historickou stránku města.
York Minster is the largest gothic cathedral in northern Europe, and it’s definitely worth going inside just to see how impressive it really is. Next time we’ll have to climb up the central tower; it has the best view in York. We had to miss out this time because tower trips are only at certain set times and it’s not free. You don’t need to be into architecture or religion to enjoy this one.
Katedrála v Yorku je největší gotickou katedrálou v Severní Evropě svého druhu. Opravdu stojí za to se jít podívat i dovnitř a vidět, jak obrovská stavba to je nejen zvenčí, ale i uvnitř. Příště až pojedu i s Honzou mám v plánu jít i nahoru na hlavní věž a vychutnat si pohled na město z nejvyššího bodu celého Yorku. Tentokrát jsme to vynechali, jelikož jsou tam dané časy prohlídek a vybírá se vstupné okolo 11 liber.
We learnt also about the sweeter side of the city’s history. Rowntree´s and Terry’s chocolate brands were founded in York. Chocolate has been made in the city for over 300 years. A visit to York’s Chocolate Story is essential for any chocoholic.
Dále jsme se dozvěděli, že York byl domovem čokolády. Vznikly zde značky Rowntree´s a Terry´s, které zde vyráběly čokoládu celých 300 let a York je tak městem, kde vznikla například tyčinka KitKat, kterou všichni moc dobře známe. Pokud jste zaslíbení čokoholici, nesmíte vynechat návštěvu Chocolate Story na Kings Square, kde jsou prohlídky s ochutnávkami a také souvenir shop s různými druhy čokoládiček a pralinek
Clifford’s Tower - this medieval tower is the largest remaining part of York Castle. Definitely worth a visit if you are into heighs - you will enjoy the views from the top. Entrance is £5,40.
Clifford’s Tower je středověká věž, která připomíná hlavní část hradu Yorku. Rozhodně stojí za návštěvu, pokud se nebojíte výšek a poskytne vám nádherný výhled na město zase jiné perspektivy. Vstup je £5,40 za dospělého.
Probably the most famous place in York, the Shambles is one of the best preserved medieval streets in the entire world. Many quirky independent shops, cafés and pubs have taken up residence in the buildings, most of which used to be butchers when they were first built dating back to the 14th and 15th century.
Nejznámější ulice v celém Yorku, hlavně tedy díky filmům Harry Potter je rozhodně ulice The Shambles. Ulice je nejzachovalejší středověká ulice na celém světě a skýtá krásné křivé domečky, kde naleznete různé kavárničky, obchůdky, čajovny, hospůdky a samozřejmě souvenir shopy s tématikou Harryho Pottera. Původně byly tyto domy masné krámy a první nájemci zde byli již ve 14. století.
There’s nothing better than sinking down into a comfortable chair, pouring a cup of tea and nibbling on a scone while admiring your beautiful surroundings. For a quintessentially British experience, we couldn’t miss Betty’s tea rooms on St. Helen’s Square. This tea room has been here since 1936, offering traditional afternoon teas alongside a variety of cakes and pastries.
Není nic lepšího, než si po dlouhém chození dopřát šálek dobrého čaje, usadit se do pohodlného křesla a zakousnout se do vláčného dortíku. Pokud už zavítáte do Yorku, nesmíte opomenout místní Betty’s tea house, který zde funguje již od roku 1936 a vyznačuje se svou precizností, nabídkou tradičních afternoon tea, vyhlášenými dortíky a pečivem. Tento skvost pro milovníky čaje najdete na St Helen´s Square.
Trip to York wasn’t my last one. I plan to go there again with Johnny in February. I’d like to book Airbnb and stay over night, wake up early in the morning and go to shoot abandoned Shambles and take a few pics of the cathedral from the Walls when the sun goes up.
I’m gonna post everything on my stories and also I’ll write another post with pictures and other tips for exploring :) Let me know if you like to travel and discover, and I’m curious if visit of York is on your Bucket list :)
Love,
Susane
For more information visit: https://www.visityork.org/
Návštěva Yorku rozhodně nebyla moje poslední a už v únoru se tam chystám vzít i Honzu. V plánu je si booknout Airbnb a být přes noc, ráno brzy vstát, protože chci nafotit The Shambles bez lidí a nasbírat pár vydařených snímků i z hradeb s výhledem na katedrálu, jak se probouzí do nového dne. Tak se můžete těšit na další tipy, co navštívit, jelikož mám už teď spousty dalších nápadů. Dejte mi vědět, zda rádi objevujete a jestli cesta do Yorku je na vašem bucket listu :)
S láskou,
Susane
Více informací o Yorku zde: https://www.visityork.org/
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crazybunchfamily · 7 years
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I got tagged by my sister
@dangitwebsite12321 tagged me in this post so enjoy a clusterfuck
Name: Helen
Nickname: Hell kidding you can’t really shorten my name and nobody calls me anything interesting
Zodiac sign: Capricorn
Hogwarts House: Gryffindor; I know cheesy but it’s what I got when I quizzed that or Hufflepuff
Height: 5′6
Sexual Orientation: Straight
Favorite season: Fall
Favorite book series: I love All for the Game, Six of Crows, and The Raven Boys hard to chose a fav
Favorite book character: If you want one from a published book it’s definitely Andrew Minyard from All for the Game by Nora Sakavic
BUUUUUUUUT my favorite book character, in general, is either one I created from my WIP named Keiko Matia or Haley Reynolds from @crazybunchwriter ‘s WIP
Favorite flower: Orchids
Favorite scent: It’s called Sheer Cotton and Lemonade by Bath and Body Works
Favorite Color: I love purples and blues
Favorite Animal: Lions and tigers and bears, oh my!
Favorite Band: is it cheesy to say my favorite band is One Direction? Well them or Imagine Dragons
Coffee, Tea, or Hot Chocolate: I drink all three but coffee is a guarantee caffeine kick
Average hours of sleep: All I know is that it’s never enough
Number of Blankets: Three blankets
Dream Trip: I’d say my dream trip is to either Paris or Italy
Last thing I googled: Clinical social work for a class I have
Number of blogs I follow: I follow 204 blogs
Number of followers: I have 97 but it fluctuates fairly regularly
What do I usually post about: oh geez... This is my fandom blog so really anything fandom related that I get into, big ones are;
Harry Potter, Voltron, Shadowhunters, All for the Game, Six of Crows, Percy Jackson, Supernatural, Marvel, Disney, Skam, Stranger Things, Star Wars, Miraculous Ladybug, OMG Check Please, Yuri on Ice, Merlin, Chronicles of Narnia, and I’m certain I'm missing stuff
Do I get asks often: No, but I’m always open!
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heritagehub · 7 years
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27 September 1917 diary of Dr J S Muir of Selkirk
Heigh-ho the wind & the rain. The rain it raineth every day!* Raining till 10: fair till 5 & rain again. River in high flood. Saw 12 cases walking & in the afternoon cycled to ashybank. Letter from Helen who has returned to Chorley. Graham writes that he may be here on Saturday. I wrote to Castle Douglas for a room next week. Got photographed for a card I intend sending to those who congratulated me on my Jubilee. I discovered that Jean had lost her Kodak in the train & I ordered another for her. * Feste’s song from ‘Twelfth Night’, “When that I was and a little tiny boy, With hey, ho, the wind and the rain, A foolish thing was but a toy, For the rain it raineth every day.”
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myshowzip · 10 years
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Female on the Beach
Female on the Beach
Watch Female on the Beach
Female on the Beach: Lynn Markham moves into her late husband s beach house…the morning after former tenant Eloise Crandall fell (or was pushed) from the cliff. To her annoyance, Lynn finds both her real estate agent and Drummond Hall, her muscular beachcomber neighbor, making themselves quite at home. Lynn soon has no doubts of what her scheming neighbors are up to, but…
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aooeoc-blog · 13 years
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Download Movie Mass Appeal Hd
Mass Appeal movie download
Actors:
Louise Latham Jack Lemmon Helene Heigh Zeljko Ivanek Alice Hirson Sharee Gregory Charles Durning
Download Mass Appeal
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