#Istanbul 1985
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exdeputysonso · 2 years ago
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Brad Dourif as Martin Klamski | Istanbul (1985)
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first-class-feral · 4 months ago
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Slow day... dropping this Brad Dourif chaos compilation back in the Enclosure
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YouTube poster Abbi, you are a legend. Recently rediscovered this and lost my shit all over again
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old-man-hell · 1 year ago
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need a big coat like the ones that turned brad dourif evil in the 80s.
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roboraindrop-draws · 1 year ago
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Sigh. He’s so pretty. Such a good muse (:
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d0urifz · 2 years ago
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thinking about this scene and how there is no heterosexual explanation for it /j
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rroaddkill · 9 months ago
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I said I'm gonna draw, which.. I am. But I'm also watching Istanbul. My attention to my art is very limited
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jimbo-png · 2 years ago
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i will not let ‘there is a light that never goes out’ by the smiths make me emotional about istanbul (1985). i will not let ‘there is a light that never goes out’ by the smiths make me emotional about istanbul (1985). i will not let ‘there is a light that never goes out’ by the smiths make me emotional about istanbul (1985). i will n
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godzillawillsaveus · 7 months ago
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Brad Dourif in 1985, Istanbul interview
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mightyflamethrower · 1 year ago
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MARYAM LAMEI HARVANI (born 1985 in Iran now based in Istanbul, Turkey)
Redemption
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talkativeobserver · 23 days ago
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Istanbul, Desaparecido (1985), Litfiba.
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Istambul
by Guler Ara
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exdeputysonso · 2 years ago
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Brad Dourif as Martin Klamski | Istanbul (1985) - pt. 2
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victusinveritas · 5 months ago
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Aylin Zaptçıoğlu (German, b. 1985, Hamburg, Germany, based İstanbul, Turkey) - Untitled, 2015, Paintings: Oil on Canvas
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pettirosso1959 · 5 months ago
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Leggo il solito italiano di turno e furbo: "E' inutile costruire il Ponte sullo Stretto, è una struttura nel deserto ed in una zona sismica".
Rispondo al poverino che ama parlare e solo parlare...
Impregilo oggi WeBuild, Astaldi, Antonio Badoni, i ponti in Turchia sul Bosforo parlano tutti chiaramente italiano. Sono tutti ponti strategici per le comunicazioni e lo sviluppo della Turchia, sia verso l'Asia che verso l'Europa. Sono ponti costruiti prima ancora che venissero pronte le rispettive arterie autostradali, quindi hanno permesso lo sviluppo infrastrutturale e commerciale della Turchia.
E la Turchia è terra altamente sismica, lo dimostrano le continue tragedie nel tempo, solo nel 2023 i morti furono 57700, eppure i ponti rimasero sempre intatti e non richiesero alcuna opera di verifica particolare. Non solo ponti, la Turchia è anche reattori nucleari, con le 4 unità VVER-1200 costruite dalla Russia in collaborazione con le principali industrie turche.
Il ponte Fatih Sultan Mehmet, il secondo ponte sul Bosforo, realizzato dal gruppo Salini Impregilo (oggi WeBuild) tra il 1985 e il 1988, è ancora oggi una infrastruttura essenziale per il processo di modernizzazione economica della capitale turca e dell’intera regione, oltre ad essere una grande opera con caratteristiche uniche rispetto al momento storico in cui è stata realizzata.
Il ponte Fatih Sultan Mehmet e l’arteria autostradale che collega l’Europa all’Asia. Perché i grandi ponti non sono solo strumenti per accorciare le due sponde di una città, ma arterie di scorrimento che collegano regioni lontane. L’opera realizzata da Salini Impregilo (oggi WeBuild) non si limita infatti al Fatih Sultan Mehmet Bridge: il ponte è collegato a un’autostrada lunga 247 chilometri che unisce la città di Kinali, in Europa, con quella di Kazanci, in Asia, caratteristica che lo trasforma in una grande infrastruttura di collegamento capace, negli anni, di contribuire in modo determinante allo sviluppo della capitale turca.
Il Ponte dei Martiri del 15 luglio è uno dei tre ponti di Istanbul che attraversano lo stretto del Bosforo e che permettono di collegare l'Europa con l'Asia.
Il ponte si trova tra Ortaköy (sul lato europeo) e Beylerbeyi (nella parte asiatica). Si tratta di un classico ponte sospeso a cavi parabolici e impalcato sottile di tipo aerodinamico, con piloni in acciaio e pendini di sospensione inclinati che formano maglie triangolari. La sua lunghezza complessiva è di 1.510 metri per 39 m di larghezza. La distanza tra le torri (campata principale) è 1.074 m e la loro altezza sul livello della strada è di 105 m. Il ponte sul Bosforo era il quarto ponte sospeso al mondo per la lunghezza della campata, quando fu completato nel 1973 era il più lungo al di fuori degli Stati Uniti. Fu realizzato dagli ingegneri Roberts e Brown con la collaborazione dell'italiano Almerico Meomartini. Uno dei due piloni in acciaio è stato realizzato dalla ditta Antonio Badoni Lecco.
Il ponte di Yavuz Sultan Selim, chiamato anche il "terzo ponte sul Bosforo", è uno dei tre ponti di Istanbul, in Turchia che attraversano lo stretto del Bosforo e che permettono di collegare l'Europa con l'Asia. É il ponte stradale e ferroviario a campata unica più lunga del mondo. È stato inaugurato il 26 agosto 2016[2]. Il ponte si trova tra Poyrazköy (sulla sponda asiatica) e Garipçe (sulla sponda europea). È stato costruito da un consorzio denominato ICA composto dall'impresa italiana Astaldi, che ha il 33,33%[5], e dalla turca Içtas.
Fernando Arnò.
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TAG NINE PEOPLE YOU WANT TO GET TO KNOW BETTER!
Tagged by @midnighterapollo, @redfurrycat (as @fangirling-tussisque-noncaelatur ), @itshoneywhatever and @seresuns, thanks to everyone for the tag! 💘💘💘 And I wish you all the time, energy and inspiration you need, for the fics you're working on! 🤞🏻
Favorite colors: Blue, turquoise, teal, pink and magenta
Currently reading:
- Books: I just finished Last Train to Istanbul by Ayşe Kulin and now I've started The Death of Achilles by Boris Akunin and Macerie Prime by Zerocalcare
- Fanfictions: currently reading Speak Softly, Love by @renai-chan
As regards some of the last fics I've read, I'd like to rec:
~ Keep Your Friends Close (But I'll Keep You Closer) by @renai-chan and Chillibeam (very very hot 🔥 their dynamic is amazing!!)
~ Lost Boy by @yikes-00 (great AU 🏴‍☠️)
~ Rivalry on a Learning Curve by @saint--claire (i'm such a sucker for jealous Bradley 🥵)
~ Three little seashells all pearly new. by @pollyna (soft! 💖)
Last song: Tutto Questo Sei Tu by Ultimo
Last series: Last series I've finished: Questo Mondo Non Mi Renderà Cattivo (2023), by Zerocalcare. Currently watching Golden Girls (1985-1992) and Jujutsu Kaisen (2020-present)
Last movie: Barbie (2023), directed by Greta Gerwig
Sweet/Spicy/Savory: Sweet and savory
Currently working on: i have an excessive amount of WIPs, all about Hangster...+ I'm working on the last chapter of a collection of hurt/comfort Ereri moments set in the canonverse. The main Hangster fics i'm working on at the moment are: a smutty fic with ""hate"" s3x, set in the canonverse; a hurt/comfort fic with a panic attack; a fic set before Hangster wedding where Mav is helping Bradley prepare; an omegaverse smutty fic I'd like to gift to a friend.
I'm late to the party and I don't know who has already done this...No pressure tags (but wishing a great weekend to all of you! ✨🌷) : @yikes-00 @emseebeans @pollyna @onearmedlegend @awildewit @agreatandhonorablesoldier @beccaanne814 /@lieutenantsereshaw @merryandrewsworld
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rroaddkill · 11 months ago
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Istanbul 1985 but it's normal. About two silly men going traveling and nothing else
What abou-
NOTHING ELSE.
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brookstonalmanac · 1 year ago
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Events 9.6 (after 1940)
1943 – The Monterrey Institute of Technology is founded in Monterrey, Mexico as one of the largest and most influential private universities in Latin America. 1943 – Pennsylvania Railroad's premier train derails at Frankford Junction in Philadelphia, killing 79 people and injuring 117 others. 1944 – World War II: The city of Ypres, Belgium is liberated by Allied forces. 1944 – World War II: Soviet forces capture the city of Tartu, Estonia. 1946 – United States Secretary of State James F. Byrnes announces that the U.S. will follow a policy of economic reconstruction in postwar Germany. 1952 – A prototype aircraft crashes at the Farnborough Airshow in Hampshire, England, killing 29 spectators and the two on board. 1955 – Istanbul's Greek, Jewish, and Armenian minorities are the target of a government-sponsored pogrom; dozens are killed in ensuing riots. 1962 – The United States government begins the Exercise Spade Fork nuclear readiness drill. 1962 – Archaeologist Peter Marsden discovers the first of the Blackfriars Ships dating back to the second century AD in the Blackfriars area of the banks of the River Thames in London. 1965 – India retaliates following Pakistan's Operation Grand Slam which results in the Indo-Pakistani War of 1965 that ends in a stalemate followed by the signing of the Tashkent Declaration. 1966 – Prime Minister Hendrik Verwoerd, the architect of apartheid, is stabbed to death in Cape Town, South Africa during a parliamentary meeting. 1968 – Swaziland becomes independent. 1970 – Two passenger jets bound from Europe to New York are simultaneously hijacked by Palestinian terrorist members of the PFLP and taken to Dawson's Field, Jordan. 1971 – Paninternational Flight 112 crashes on the Bundesautobahn 7 highway near Hamburg Airport, in Hamburg, Germany, killing 22. 1972 – Munich massacre: Nine Israeli athletes die (along with a German policeman) at the hands of the Palestinian "Black September" terrorist group after being taken hostage at the Munich Olympic Games. Two other Israeli athletes were slain in the initial attack the previous day. 1976 – Cold War: Soviet Air Defence Forces pilot Viktor Belenko lands a Mikoyan-Gurevich MiG-25 jet fighter at Hakodate in Japan and requests political asylum in the United States; his request is granted. 1983 – The Soviet Union admits to shooting down Korean Air Lines Flight 007, stating that its operatives did not know that it was a civilian aircraft when it reportedly violated Soviet airspace. 1985 – Midwest Express Airlines Flight 105 crashes near Milwaukee Mitchell International Airport in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, killing all 31 people on board. 1991 – The Soviet Union recognizes the independence of the Baltic states Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania. 1991 – The Russian parliament approves the name change of Leningrad back to Saint Petersburg. The change is effective October 1. 1995 – Cal Ripken Jr. of the Baltimore Orioles plays in his 2,131st consecutive game, breaking a record that had stood for 56 years. 1997 – The Funeral of Diana, Princess of Wales takes place in London. Well over a million people lined the streets and 21⁄2 billion watched around the world on television. 2003 – Mahmoud Abbas resigns from his position of Palestinian Prime Minister. 2007 – Israel executes the air strike Operation Orchard to destroy a nuclear reactor in Syria. 2013 – Forty-one elephants are poisoned with cyanide in salt pans, by poachers in Hwange National Park. 2018 – Supreme Court of India decriminalised all consensual sex among adults in private, making homosexuality legal on the Indian lands. 2022 – Boris Johnson resigns as Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, and is replaced by Liz Truss. Their meetings with Queen Elizabeth II at Balmoral Castle were the Queen's final official duties before her death two days later. 2022 – Russo-Ukrainian War: Ukraine begins its Kharkiv counteroffensive, surprising Russian forces and retaking over 3,000 square kilometers of land, recapturing the entire Kharkiv Oblast west of the Oskil River, within the next week.
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