#Hugh Haynes
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The opening of the museum on Ylum with some special guests.
(Nexus Volume 2 #80)
#nexus#the badger#Norbert sykes#Dave#space ghost#elvis presley#museum opening#last issue#space opera#ylum#the future#mike baron#Hugh haynes#first comics#dark horse comics#comics#90s comics
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Mars Attacks High School
by Dwight Jon Zimmerman (W) and Hugh Haynes (Pencils)
Topps
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Hugh Haynes "Comics Arena" #1 (Avatar Press 1992) featuring Punisher.
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Punisher G Force #1 (January 1992) by Marvel Comics
Written by Mike Baron, drawn by Hugh Haynes and Jimmy Palmiotti.
#Punisher#Punisher G Force#G Force#Marvel Comics#1992#Etsy#Vintage Comics#Comic Books#Comics#Mike Baron#Hugh Haynes#JImmy Palmiotti#Frank Castle#Space#Outer Space
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#Chris Evans#alan ritchson#ian bohen#chris hemsworth#liam hemsworth#tyler hoechlin#robbie amell#colton haynes#chris wood#brenton thwaites#Chris pine#hugh jackman#celebrity slaves#celebrity dolls#reprogramming#mind control#hypnosis
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This is my attempt at finding the perfect cast for All for the game characters
I've spent like 3 days searching for actors that could resemble them as much as possible (at least for how I imagined them to be) and I think I finally came up with something??
It's not perfect and I'm open to suggestions but I had a feeling that this fandom needed an "official" cast
Let me know what you think
Neil Josten: Nicholas Alexander Chavez
Andrew Minyard: Freddie Fox
Aaron Minyard: Freddie Fox
Katelyn Mackenzie: Kristine Froseth
Nicholas Hemmick: Nathaniel Dass
Kevin Day: Zack Nelson
Renee Walker: Teagan Croft
Allison Reynolds: Margot Robbie
Seth Gordon: Colton Haynes
Danielle Wilds: Zoë Kravitz
Matthew Boyd: Regé-Jean Page
David Wymack: Hugh Jackman
Abigail Winfield: Blake Lively
Betsy Dobson: Regina Hall
Jean-Yves Moreau: Matthew Daddario
Jeremy Knox: Gavin Casalegno
Catalina Alvarez: Hailee Steinfeld
Laila Dermott: Madelyn Renee Cline
((let's imagine nicholas and freddie exchange eyes so neil and andrew would actually have the right colour :)
Also not too sure about catalina and laila but i really like hailee as cat soo maybe it could work))
#aftg#all for the game#neil josten#andreil#fancast#the foxhole court#the raven king#the kings men#andrew minyard#aaron minyard#nicholas hemmick#kevin day#renee walker#allison reynolds#seth gordon#dan wilds#matt boyd#david wymack#abby winfield#jeremy knox#jean moreau#katelyn mackenzie#the sunshine court#catalina alvarez#laila dermott
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An audience with... John Paul Jones
(from Uncut, April 2010 - link)
You’re stuck on a deserted island, you have one instrument you can bring. It is: a) piano, b) bass or c) mandolin? (Gary Attersley, Ontario, Canada)
Oh… that’s horrible! I’ll probably get Hugh Manson – the guy who builds all my bass guitars – to build me some monstrous instrument that encapsulated all three! Hugh and his brother Andy Manson once actually designed me a triple-necked guitar with 12-string guitar, six-string guitar and mandolin on it! Andy also designed a triple-necked mandolin. But I guess if it really came down to it on a desert island, it would have to be the piano, because you can do so much on it. You’re a whole band. The bass is not much fun on your own.
John, it’s so good to see you so engaged with today. Any advice for old farts who can’t move on? (Andrew Loog Oldham)
Who are you calling an old fart? I dunno, Andy, you tell me! Ha ha. He’s done a good job of staying up to date. Andrew, of course, gave me the name John Paul Jones. I was John Baldwin, until Andrew saw a poster for the French film version of John Paul Jones. I thought it ’d look great in CinemaScope, as I wanted to do music for films. I imagined it saying “Music By John Paul Jones”, over the whole screen. I never realised then that he was the Horatio Nelson of America!
I know that you’ve been getting heavily into bluegrass lately – who are some of your favourite bluegrass artists of all time? (Ryan Godek, Wilmington, Delaware)
Apart from Bill Monroe, you mean? Oh, there’s loads. I’m friends with the Del McCoury band, I love that style of classic bluegrass. I love Sam Bush’s Newgrass stuff. And of course there’s Nickel Creek, Chris Feely, Mike Marshall. I love it all, really. One thing I like about bluegrass is that you don’t require amplifiers, drums and trucks. You can pull an instrument out of a box and get on with some instant music making. I carry a mandolin around wherever I go. I also like the fact bluegrass musicians play more than one instrument. There’s a tradition of them swapping instruments. In bluegrass bands I swap between double bass, fiddle and banjo.
One Butthole Surfers anecdote, please? (Dave Grohl)
Ha! I was brought in to produce the Butthole Surfers’ 1993 album, Independent Worm Saloon. I guess it was to give it a heavy rock vibe, but it didn’t work like that. They were actually incredibly hard-working in the studio, but I do recall running up a phenomenal bar-bill at the San Rafael studio. And then there was Gibby [Haynes, Butthole Surfers’ frontman] and his… eccentric studio behaviour. Gibby did one vocal take shouting into his guitar. He held it out in front of his face and screamed at it. Ha! He was trying to find out if it picked up through the pick-ups, which it kind of did. And that was pretty good.
How’s the violin coming along? (Sean, Berkshire)
I started about three years ago. With the guitar, or the piano, you can sound OK quite quickly. With the violin, it takes much longer. Once you get past the first six months of scraping, of muttering to yourself, “What is this fucking horrible noise on my shoulder?” you get the odd musical bit, and you think, ‘Oh, this is starting to get good.’ And you continue with it for a while. I’m getting into country fiddle playing, Celtic folk songs, a bit of swing. Basic stuff, but very satisfying.
Why not record a second ‘Automatic For The People’ with REM? (Franz Greul, Austria)
They haven’t asked me! But doing the string arrangements for that album was a great experience, actually. They sent me the demos of their songs, and we went into a studio in Atlanta, with members of the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra. They were great songs, something you can really get your teeth into as an arranger. And I’ve been good friends with them ever since.
How did you first meet Josh Homme? And is he still a notorious party monster? (Rob Hirst, Kippax, Leeds)
Well, I think we’ve all calmed down rather a lot. Dave introduced me to Josh at his 40th birthday party. It was a ridiculous themed place where they have jousting with knights. As Dave said, it was like somewhere you’d have your 14th birthday party. Or maybe even your 4th. Anyway, Dave sat Josh and I together for a blind date. Which was reasonably embarrassing for both of us, surrounded by people going “prithee this” and challenging each other to duels. But we survived the trauma and went into the studio the next day, and just started jamming. And I knew immediately it was going to be something special.
If Them Crooked Vultures had Spice Girls-like nicknames what would they be? (Paul Jones, Liverpool)
Dave would be Smiley Vulture. He can’t stop grinning. Josh would be Slinky Vulture. He’s a slinky kinda guy. And I’d be Speedy, I guess. Or Jumpy. So there you go. Smiley, Slinky and Speedy. Or does that sound more like the dwarfs?
I remember you being a pretty funky bass genius back in the day! What memories do you have of those sessions? (Donovan)
The sessions with Don and Mickie Most were great, because we were given a free hand. I usually got leeway, because I was the sort of Motown/Stax specialist, so producers in the mid ’60s would get me in for cover versions of American records, and none of them could write bass parts convincingly enough, so I was London’s answer to James Jamerson, I guess! And I was certainly encouraged to get kinda… funky when I worked with Donovan.
How did it feel to see Jimmy Page and Robert Plant venture off in their own project in the ‘90s without mentioning a word of it to you? (Danny Luscombe, Hull)
Oh yeah, I was pissed off about it. The surprise was in not being told. It’s ancient history now, but it was a bit annoying to find out about it while reading the papers. It came just after Robert and I had been discussing the idea of doing an Unplugged project. Then I’m on tour in Germany with Diamanda Galás, I turn on the TV and see Robert and Jimmy doing it, with someone else playing all my parts! I was pissed off at the time. You would be, woudn’t you? But… it’s all in the past, isn’t it?
Did you listen to much work by Josh Homme or Dave Grohl before you were contacted in relation to joining Them Crooked Vultures, and if so, how did you honestly rate it? (Ralph Ryan, Lisronagh, County Tipperary)
I did like the Foo Fighters and Queens Of The Stone Age, before I’d met either of them. There’s a tendency for people – especially musicians from my generation – to say that there has been this terrible decline in musicianship, that today’s bands haven’t got the chops, blah blah blah. But that’s not true at all. There’s always some people for whom technique on an instrument isn’t necessary. They can get their ideas across without being able to have the chops. But Josh really does have the chops, he just doesn’t feel the need to flash them about all the time. In fact, there were a few riffs he gave me that I had to simplify, because they were bloody difficult to play. I really had to work at it, where he could just flick it off. He is an astonishing musician.
Were you serious when you told Peter Grant that you wanted to jack it in to become choirmaster at Winchester Cathedral? (Brian Fisher, Manchester)
Ha! That was a tongue-in-cheek joke, although I was serious about leaving Led Zeppelin in 1973 unless things changed. But Peter did sort things out pretty quickly. What kind of choirmaster would I have made? A bloody good one! Listen, any way that they’ll pay you for making music is just the best situation in the world. I’d do it for nothing. I don’t care what music it is. I just love it all. The rubbing of notes together. I love it all. I would be very passionate about whatever I decided to do.
What was the worst session you ever did as a jobbing session player? (Adam Burns, Castleford, West Yorkshire)
I generally have fun memories of that time. I’d criss-cross London playing two or three sessions a day, going between Trident and Olympic and Abbey Road and Philips in Marble Arch, you know. You’d be backing Shirley Bassey, Cat Stevens, Lulu, whoever was paying you. The worst experience was a Muzak session. With Muzak sessions, the music was deliberately boring. I distinctly remember one session where I embellished the bass part a little bit, just so that it wasn’t so boring for me to play. They said, “No, you can’t do that. Any interest in the music will distract people’s attention from when they’re meant to be eating.” Or standing in a fucking lift. For fuck’s sake! So I was like, “OK, thanks, bye!”
#john paul jones#jonesy#led zeppelin#robert plant#planty#jimmy page#pagey#john bonham#bonzo#60s#70s#70s rock#70s music#rock music#ourshadowstallerthanoursoul
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Patsy Cline - Crazy (Stereo) (1961) Willie Nelson from: "Showcase" (Stereo LP) "Crazy" / "Who Can I Count On?" (Single)
Country | Ballad | The Nashville Sound
JukeHostUK (left click = play) (320kbps)
Personnel: Patsy Cline: Lead Vocals
Studio Musicians: Nashville's A-Team: Floyd Cramer: Piano Owen Bradley: Organ Walter Haynes: Steel Guitar Randy Hughes: Acoustic Guitar Grady Martin: Electric Guitar Harold Bradley: 6-String Electric Bass Bob Moore: Acoustic Bass Buddy Harman: Drums
The Jordanaires: Backing Vocals
Produced by Owen Bradley
Recorded: @ The Bradley Film and Recording Studio in Nashville, Tennessee USA on August 21, 1961
Released: on October 16, 1961 Decca Records
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top 5 antebellum politicians, not including presidents
For the sake of not making this response boring, Im going to personally remove all three of the triumvirs from the running. All three of them are now in Spot 0. Benton and Hayne can be there too.
Which leaves five spots for...
John Randolph of Roanoke literally the MOST fascinating guy. Hes wilder than a herd of horses hoarse on meth. literally created a slur. he brought dogs into congress and stripped in the house of reps and got into verbal and physical fights. he dueled everyone to the point where his contemporaries commented that he should be in a straightjacket. he asked the cousin of the person he was dueling with to be his second in the same duel. he was a dramatic bitch who ordered a european badge of honor to be made for him in honor of that duel. he bemoaned that no one would care about him when he died. when he was near death he painstakingly made his way to the us congress gallery to hear henry clays beautiful voice one last time. whenever the wife of a congressmen he was insulting was in the gallery he doubled down on his insults. when he died he freed the people he enslaved but he did a piss poor job so everything just fell apart. he has tuberculosis but it was contained solely to his dick and so he suffered an inferiority complex and an inability to progress past puberty because of it. and also maybe he had klinefelter syndrome bc of a imbalance either ways, my name on discord is john randolph hrt not because i GENUINELY think he would support hrt, but because the fact that there is a CHANCE he would is still higher than the rest of his colleagues.
Henry Wise also the most insane guy of the time period. like jror, got into fights, but this was way more about slavery. he picked fights with jqa all throughout the gag war. surprisingly woke on several topics including thanksgiving and the rights of native americans. he says some of the funniest things ever sometimes. he thinks abolitionist is a slur. he became a general in the confederate army but got kicked out for being a bitch. somehow flip flopped between every. single. political. party. of his era. including almost becoming a republican near the end of his life. his irreverence for law and order is astounding. he bullied john tyler and literally everyone in congress. the fact that he was drinking buddies with franklin pierce and got him elected but also got pierces friend killed in the cilley graves duel is insane. the fact that in order to try and get henry clay the presidential nomination he literally bent his knee at hugh lawson white and did the equivalent of the uwu face is insane. the fact he more or less murdered john brown is insane. the fact that ralph waldo emerson said that if brown and wise were in a different life, they could have been friends is even more insane. like damn ralph waldo emerson now is NOT the time to be shipping abolitionist john brown and the slavery supporting secessionist governor of virginia who murdered him together. also not going to lie the fact that he never sought a pardon after his involvement in the confederacy is actually a breath of fresh air for this time period. go girl acknowledge that you are undeserving of a pardon or forgiveness for your crimes. i honestly cant do this guy justice without just telling you gto look at my #the field of blood tag. this guy. also i will not lie i did not actually understand his violent tendancies (which to his credit he wasnt like a maniac or anything ) until i saw his photograph. and uh yeah. shaking hands meme between jror and henry wise and the connecting factor is looking feminine and having a serious complex because of it.
Hugh Lawson White his hair. the way hes the only antebellum politician whos wikipedia page actually says what his personality and style was like. fascinating.
Charles Sumner hes such a loser. he deserved so much better. once he fell of a train. he was called his great impotency. he got caned one time and thats all everyone ever remembers about him. his main biographer did him SO DIRTY. he might be ace he might be gay. the hermaphrodite by julia ward howe is probably about the love triangle between julia him and samuel howe, julias husband. he has incredibly modern beliefs about things! hes funny and he has a three way benign rivalry betwen himself seward and douglas. he waxed poetic about daniel websters head and then felt betrayed by him. he once stroked his own head glumly. his eyebags. he got hit with a brick once. his handsomeness is the work of legends. hes awkward and gentlemanly and depressing and optimistic and so many many things its beautiful and he was beautiful and i love him so much! i love his friendship with mary todd lincoln and the way he was basically looming in abraham lincolns window every other night throughout the civil war.
William Plumer Jr. LITERALLY my guy!! his anecdotes are all so fascinating. the time he had a very dramatic meeting with daniel webster about Fate and Destiny. his involvement with preserving american history from the very beginning. just lovely and wonderful and i basically yassify him whenever i imagine him in my head. just wonderful. and these are basically all of them i think, though i like a lot of congressmen of this era.
Bonus, have a drawing of henry wise, a calhouny hugh lawson white for some reason, and fem plumer!
#biddle was never a politician so he isnt here#bbf would be here but he was never a politician lmao#god there are just so many good Background Congressmen TM in this era#need an slice of life with the antebellum us congress#john dawson. joshua giddings. the washburnes#teh triumvirs too but they dont need that muchscreen time#just so much...#fanart#my art#henry wise#john randolph#hugh white#charles sumner#william plumer#william plumer jr#misc#the congressional incubator#asks#thanks for asking!!
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It’s part of my total approach to fitness.
(Nexus Volume 2 #76)
#nexus#horatio hellpop#sundra Peale#workout#fitness#sweaty#the future#space opera#dat rack#mike baron#Hugh Haynes#first comics#dark horse comics#comics#90s comics
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"Coffy" (1973) is an action film written and directed by Jack Hill and stars Pam Grier in her breakout movie, which helped pioneer her career through the blaxploitation genre. The film was a success at the box office, grossing $4 million on a $500k budget. Black women in leading action roles became a popular trend in the 70s. For example, films such as "Cleopatra Jones," "T.N.T Jackson," and "Sugar Hill" were films with strong female leads. It was a far cry from previous roles where Black women primarily earned parts as servants or homemakers in prior decades. Roy Ayers produced the soundtrack to "Coffy," a mixture of jazz and funk. It reached #31 on Billboard Jazz LPs.
Director: Jack Hill Writers: Jack Hill, Pam Grier (uncredited)
Starring Pam Grier, Booker Bradshaw, Robert DoQui, William Elliott, Allan Arbus, Sid Haig, Barry Cahill, Lee de Broux, Ruben Moreno, Lisa Farringer, Carol Locatell, Linda Haynes, John Perak, Mwako Cumbuka, Morris Buchanan, Peaches Jones, Jan-Minika Hughes, Leslie McRay, Ray Young, Bob Minor
Storyline As a nurse, Coffy (Pam Grier) has seen the ill effects of drugs up close, but it isn't until her little sister becomes addicted to heroin that she finally decides to wage a one-woman battle. Disguised as a prostitute, Coffy goes on a killing rampage, at first going after street dealers and pimps such as sleazy King George (Robert DoQui), then gradually working her way up to bigger honchos. She's shocked, however, when she discovers that her politician boyfriend (Booker Bradshaw) is involved.
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Aries: Tarantino, F. F. Coppola, Andrea Arnold, Eric Rohmer, Edgar Wright, Ruben Östlund, Josh Safdie, David Lean, Andrei Tarkovsky, Michael Haneke, Martin McDonagh
Taurus: Wes Anderson, Orson Welles, Sofia Coppola, Lars von Trier, Terry Zwigoff, George Lucas, Robert Zemeckis, John Waters, Frank Capra
Gemini: Fassbinder, Hideaki Anno, Makhmalbaf, Agnès Varda, Alex Garland, Clint Eastwood, Yorgos Lanthimos, Aaron Sorkin, Ken Loach, Alexander Sokurov, Giuseppe Tornatore
Cancer: Abbas Kiarostami, Wong Kar-wai, P. T. Anderson, Mike White, Ari Aster, Ingmar Bergman, Krzysztof Kieślowski, Paul Verhoeven, Robert Eggers, Béla Tarr, Mel Brooks, Ken Russell, Sidney Lumet, Kinji Fukasaku
Leo: Alfred Hitchcock, Greta Gerwig, Alain Robbe-grillet, Kubrick, Wes Craven, Taika Waititi, Luca Guadagnino, Christopher Nolan, Polanski, Sam Mendes, Richard Linklater, Nicolas Roeg, James Cameron, Pablo Larraín, M. Night Shyamalan, Iñárritu, Gus Van Sant, Peter Weir, Wim Wenders, Maurice Pialat
Virgo: Tom Ford, Joe Wright, Paul Feig, Dario Argento, David Fincher, Brian De Palma, Baz Luhrmann, Tim Burton, Friedkin, Takashe Miike, Noah Baumbach, Werner Herzog, Elia Kazan, E. Coen
Libra: Julie Dash, Almodóvar, Jacques Tati, Ang Lee, Michelangelo Antonioni, Ti West, Walerian Borowczyk, Nicolas Winding Refn, Satoshi Kon, Kenneth Lonergan, Michael Powell, Jacques Tati, Steve McQueen, Denis Villeneuve
Scorpio: Mike Nichols, Barry Jenkins, Charlie Kaufman, Céline Sciamma, Tsai Ming-liang, Jean Rollin, Scorsese, Louis Malle, Luchino Visconti, François Ozon, Julia Ducournau
Sagittarius: Sion Sono, Cassavetes, Raj Kapoor, Steven Spielberg, Eliza Hittman, Terrence Malick, Ozu, Alfonso Cuarón, Gregg Araki, Larry Charles, Judd Apatow, Kathryn Bigelow, Lenny Abrahamson, J. Coen, Jean Luc Godard, Diane Kurys, Ridley Scott, Lynne Ramsay, Woody Allen, Fritz Lang
Capricorn: Larry Clark, David Lynch, Harmony Korine, Damien Chazelle, David Lowery, Mary Harron, Sergio Leone, Todd Haynes, Pedro Costa, Gaspar, Noe, Fellini, Joseph Losey, Miyazaki, John Carpenter, Steven Soderbergh, Michael Curtiz, John Singleton, Vertov
Aquarius: Jim Jarmusch, John Hughes, Darren Aronofsky, Jodorowski, Michael Mann, Derek Cianfrance, Alex Payne, Truffau, Eisenstein, Tone Hooper
Pisces: Pasolini, Sean Baker, Paul Schrader, Bernardo Bertolucci, Benny Safdie, Jacques Rivette, Bunuel, Luc Besson, David Cronenberg, Spike Lee, Rob Reiner, Mike Mills, Sebastián Lelio, Jordan Peele, Ron Howard, Robert Altman
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80 years ago - 30th-31st March 1944. On a clear, moonlit night, over 700 aircraft of Bomber Command took off to attack Nuremberg. 95 would be shot down, while more crashed on returning to base; over 500 aircrew were killed. The city itself was covered with cloud and suffered only minor damage.
See this great talk by @jamesjhistory for more information👇
access.historyhit.com/videos/nurembu…
Pictured:
(L) ‘Long Leg To Nuremberg’ by Hendrik Aviation Art. Hauptmann Martin Drewes in his Bf 110 attacks the first Lancaster (LM425 BQ-N of 550 Squadron) to be shot down by fighters that night.
📷 cdnb.artstation.com
(R) Crew of Lancaster DV276 SR-R of 101 Squadron, Ludford Magna. All were killed when their aircraft was shot down and crashed at Röthenbach, near Nuremberg.
Pilot: P/O. 'Batt' John Batten-Smith DFC, 22
Fl/Eng: Sgt. Robert Armstrong, 20
Nav: P/O. Graham Harries Williams
Spec/Op: P/O. Howard Ernest Beer, 21
W/OP/Air/Gnr: Sgt. Robert Russell Roberts, 23
Air/Bmr: Fl/Sgt. Allan Henry Ross, 22
Air/Gnr: Sgt. Hugh Fleming McClenaghan, 19
Air/Gnr: Fl/Sgt. Arthur Haynes, 21
Theirs was one of seven 101 Squadron aircraft lost that night, most with no survivors.
📷 aircrewremembered.com
@JamieMctrusty via X
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Part 2
#hugh jackman#ben affleck#ian bohen#john krasinski#jensen ackles#ryan reynolds#sebastian stan#liam hemsworth#colton haynes#brenton thwaites#hypnotized guys#celebrity slaves
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Johnny's #art exhibition #private showing with close #friends and family #September 30, 2024 #NYC #Manhattan #jdabunchofstuff #abunchofstuff #attendees
#gibby haynes #nathan holmes #allen hughes #Jonathan Shaw
#Johnny's art#art exhibition#manhattan#nyc#private showing#friends & family#attendees#september 2024#jdabunchofstuff#abunchofstuff
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