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New Video: Kris Cari Shares Breakneck Banger "No Pasa Na"
New Video: Kris Cari Shares Breakneck Banger "No Pasa Na" @1kriscari @1FaceMusic @DesignedbyMaico @DorianPerron @romainpalmieri @HeyGroover
Carlos Luis Arroyo Cruz is a Juana Diaz, Puerto Rico-based singer/songwriter and Latin Pop artist, best known as Kris Cari. HIs work simultaneously reflects his Puerto Rican heritage and a diverse range of influences, from Miles Davis to Bad Bunny. Back in 2020, Cruz began working with the production crew at 1Face Music, which paved the way for his debut EP, 2022’s Platinum Waves, an effort that…

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#1Face Music#Juana Diaz Puerto Rico#Kris Cari#Kris Cari No Pasa Na#Kris Cari Ojos Tristes#Kris Cari Platinum Waves EP#Kris Cari Un Verano Mas#Kris Cari Una Carta Pa Ti#Latin music#Maico Jiminez#music#music video#New Video#singer/songwriter#video#Video Review: Kris Cari No Pasa Na#Video Review: No Pasa Na
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Brazilian genderneutral names
List of names to inspire your genderneutral Brazilian characters. These are not necessarily Portuguese names, but they sound like or are quite common in Brazil due to the country's rich cultural diversity. Some are even considered common nicknames for certain gendered names (source).
More names!
Letter A
Adri
Aimé / Aimée / Aim��
Alcione / Alcíone
Alen
Alex / Alexi
Angeli / Angely / Angelic / Angelyc
Araci
Ariel
Aruanê
Letter B
Bardô
Bruné
Letter C
Cacá / Kaká
Calí / Kalí
Cari / Cary / Kari / Kary
Claude / Claudê
Cris / Chris / Kris
Letter D
Dane / Dani / Dany
Darci / Darcy
Dominique
Duda
Letter E
Elenir
Eli / Eri
Letter F
Félicité
Letter G
Gabi / Gabe / Gabeh
Gal
Giu / Gio
Letter H
Hikaru / Icaru
Letter I
Inaê / Inauê
Iraci / Iracir
Iuri / Yuri
Ivani / Ivanir
Letter J
Jaci
Jani / Jany / Janir
Jessé / Jessí
Josimar
Letter K
Kauane / Kauanê
Letter L
Leoni / Leonir
Lenir
Levi / Levy
Lin / Lyn
Luca / Luka / Lucca / Lukka
Lucimar
Letter M
Mica / Micah
Letter N
Nadir
Nair
Naomi / Naomir
Nelly / Neli / Nelí
Nick / Nikki
Letter P
Paule
Letter Q
Querubim
Quinua / Kinua
Letter R
Rafa / Rafah / Rapha
Raoní / Raony
Remy / Remi
Renê / René
Rosimar
Rozir / Rosir
Letter S
Sidney / Sídnei / Sidinei
Letter T
Tainã
Tarcil
Tauane / Tauanê
Tiê
Letter U
Ubirani
Uri
Urias
Letter V
Valdeci / Valdecir
Valderes
Letter Y
Yudê / Yude / Yudi
Letter Z
Zani / Zanir
Zeli / Zelir
Zuri
#brazilian names#brazilian genderneutral names#writeblr#names#names list#brazilcore#genderneutral names#character building#character development#writing ideas#writing inspiration#creative writing#writing community#writing tips#mine
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2024 Movie Odyssey for-fun awards
I haven't done this in six years. Though the 2024 Movie Odyssey is complete and the 2025 Movie Odyssey is underway, I am currently working through all of the categories for the 2024 Movie Odyssey Awards (which I am aiming to post on Sunday, January 12).
Given the fact I haven't done the for-fun awards in six years, I might be a bit rusty. But here goes - honors and dishonors that don't quite fit the Movie Odyssey Awards. A reminder that each of these films were movies that I saw for the first time in their entirety last calendar year!
Best conversation: Caleb Sykes (Jamie Campbell Bower) and Hayes Ellison (Kevin Costner)’s conversation filled with veiled threats while walking up a hill, Horizon: An American Saga – Chapter 1 (2024)
No, Horizon wasn’t that great. Yes, it’s a vanity project. Yes, the 181-minute runtime while awaiting a potential three other sequels is killer. But the extended time allows you to fill in your movie with a scene where two men are ostensibly having a friendly conversation, but beneath those niceties are threats that simmer just underneath their words. Yes, Horizon is an indulgence. But there are more than a few instances of brilliant filmmaking within.
Best moment: “I Could Use a Boost”, The Wild Robot (2024)
For those of you who have seen the film, you know exactly what scene I’m talking about here. A major assist here from Kris Bowers’ spectacular score – one that I’d argue is the best for any movie released in 2024. This scene felt like an early ending for the film, didn’t it?
Best movie father: George Rose (Cary Grant), Room for One More (1952)
Grant – alongside his actual wife at the time, Betsy Drake – stars in one of the better family movies from ‘50s Hollywood. That sound you heard were a few of my tumblr followers, whose celebrity crush is Cary Grant, screaming with delight.
Best movie mother: Roz (voiced by Lupita Nyong’o), The Wild Robot (2024)
Okay, it’s won two of the first four awards. But that’s it. Keep going!
Best on-screen friendship: Grace (voiced by Sarah Snook) and Pinky (voiced by Jacki Weaver), Memoir of a Snail (2024)
The least transactional friendship I saw on screen this year. Genuine love for the other, brought to you by Adam Elliot – whose characters find a way to persevere despite their tragic backgrounds. Bugger!
Best quote: “I'm gonna give you a break. I'm gonna fix it, so you don't hear the bullets.” – Mr. Brown (Richard Conte) speaking to Joe McClure (Brian Donlevy) in The Big Combo (1955)
This quote makes far more sense and becomes far more menacing in context. Trust me. Without spoiling too much, Conte here is granting Donlevy (who devout worshippers at the church of film noir will know is a quintessential noir character actor, but is in an unusually meeker role here) what he believes to be a mercy. This scene was also shot spectacularly.
Best theatrical experience (as an audience member): The Frida Cinema’s repertory screening of The Lord of the Rings (1972)
It had been too long since I saw Ralph Bakshi’s take on LOTR (a movie I rate higher than most, but would only conditionally recommend). And in that time, I forgot how unintentionally funny the whole damn thing was. Having a sellout crowd on hand only made things that much more enjoyable.
Best theatrical experience (in my capacity as Viet Film Fest Artistic Director): High school students’ day screenings
For those not in the know, Viet Film Fest always begins its in-person screenings every year with a handful of screenings intended for high school students in the Little Saigon area in Orange County who are taking Vietnamese language courses. It’s a field trip for them, and you feel the energy pulsing through the theater on that opening morning.
Also, I almost never sit down and watch a full film/short film set through as Artistic Director. Too many things to do.
Best title (feature): Children of a Lesser God (1986)
Thanks should go to Tennyson.
Best title (short): Mom, Dad… I Want to Be a Porn Star (2024)
I mean, come on! With compliments to director Corey Cao Nguyen and his team!
Best worldbuilding: Mars Express (2023, France)
The filmmakers knew exactly what sort of world they wanted their characters to inhabit right from the get-go. And for a ninety-minute cyberpunk movie not based on any previously published material at all, their background storytelling achievement is stunning stuff.
Biggest disappointment: Perfect Days (2023, Japan)
Wim Wenders serving up a sampling of Diet Ozu! Still rated this a 7.5/10, but the Criterion-heads, Letterboxd users, and other cinephiles who are online far too much had me believe this might have been better than sliced bread (or, at the very least, could hold its own against the post-War live-action cinema that is one of my specialties). I don’t think so.
Biggest (pleasant) surprise: The ending to The Wedding Banquet (1993)
In an era where happy endings for LGBTQ+ folks were elusive, perhaps the rather balanced, believable ending to The Wedding Banquet is what we should have expected. One of the finest Asian American movies ever made, overshadowed by The Joy Luck Club (released the same year).
Biggest (unpleasant) surprise: The out-of-nowhere stabbing attack in The After (2023 short)
Well, that was some way to start the Oscar-nominated Live Action shorts last year. The murder was horrifically staged, to make things worse. David Oyelowo, despite being the lead actor, is not the reason why this movie was as terrible as it was.
Do not watch on an empty stomach: The Taste of Things (2023, France)
As was the joke shared among VFF staff through much of this year! Seriously, though, make sure to have a snack on hand or eat beforehand.
Greatest discovery (actor… and director too!): Raj Kapoor
Some of you folks will be glad to know that I sought this classic Bollywood actor out by myself this time, without anybody directly recommending him (or 1951’s Awaara).
Greatest discovery (actress): Mikey Madison
I had seen Madison on-screen before, but she was in a bit role then. She is excellent in Anora (2024), however you feel about the title character.
In most need of an IRB review (TIE): Murders in the Rue Morgue (1932) and X: The Man with the X-Ray Eyes (1963)
For those who don't know, an IRB review – broadly speaking – is an ethics review that is required when you are conducting a study involving humans.
Murders: Based on the Edgar Allan Poe short story of the same name, Bela Lugosi sports one of the most unconvincing unibrow I’ve seen in movies but gives a standout performance as a mad scientist trying to mix the blood of… actually, go watch this movie and read the short story. Ideal Halloween viewing. Lugosi making a frigging meal of his performance and his lines.
X: Dr. James Xavier’s (Ray Milland) research in this movie has bigger implications for humanity in this movie. Sure, he does all of the things you would imagine you would do if you suddenly had X-ray vision – I don’t have to spell this out to you – but good lord man where is your sense of ethics? Obligatory thank you to the now-late producer/director Roger Corman – who gave so many directors and actors their start in the ‘60s and ‘70s through his films at American International Pictures (AIP).
Honorable mention: The too-reckless dentistry on King Kong in Godzilla x Kong and whatever the hell else was going on in that movie
Kick-ass moment: Bruce Lee destroys the “No dogs or Chinese allowed” sign in Fist of Fury (1972, Hong Kong)
Apologies for the hilariously bad brownface and the bad English dub (I can’t find the original online)!
Least deserving of its praise: The Zone of Interest (2023, United Kingdom)
Jonathan Glazer’s film (which I wrote about here) utterly failed on one of the two things he set out to accomplish. First was to immerse us in the psychologies of the Auschwitz commandant, his wife, and other Nazis. Check, I think. Second was to take out as much cinematic artifice as possible in his film. That cinematography? That “score”? On this latter point, I thought Glazer utterly failed. Most folks didn’t see it that way.
Least likely to deserve my negative rating 10 years from now: Deadpool & Wolverine (2024)
I didn’t write on this film, but I gave it a 6/10 – which, on the blog, is right on the boundary between “fresh” and “rotten” (to use Rotten Tomatoes parlance). It was a more negative 6/10 from me. I’ve mentally checked out of the MCU years ago, and I personally don’t have much use for constant mean-spirited humor. But I don’t think the MCU has scraped the bottom of the barrel yet.
Least likely to deserve my positive rating 10 years from now: The Caine Mutiny Court-Martial (2023)
Though it debuted in America as TV movie, it was originally released at a film festival. So it counts. William Friedkin’s final movie is filled with fantastic performances. But the staging itself… just a tad too simple, isn’t it?
Moment in which I most wanted to look away from the screen: The crash scene, Society of the Snow (2023, Spain)
La sociedad de la nieve is about the disaster and recovery of the survivors who were on Uruguay Air Force Flight 571 (1972) – the flight was chartered by a Uruguayan rugby team. This scene, which has been cited by experts as among the most realistic airplane crash scenes ever put to film, is harrowing to watch. A technically outstanding movie, but more importantly honors the humanity of those who went through the ordeal.
Most beautiful use of nature: Sequoia National Park at the end of The Big Trail (1930)
For my non-Californian friends, just know that California is far more than deserts and beaches. The state has so much more, naturally, to offer. The ending of The Big Trail – not recommended for Western novices – takes place as the settlers end up in a valley, but the scene is set among enormous Sequoia trees I’ve had the privilege of seeing a few times in my life. The Big Trail was a rare ‘30s movie shot in widescreen (in 70mm, no less!), and the black-and-white photography of the groves of Sequoias is magnificent to behold. The light peeking through the canopies? Breathtaking.
Most inspirational water sports movie: Young Woman and the Sea (2024)
Technically, there were two films eligible here: The Boys in the Boat (2023; about the University of Washington rowing team that represented Team USA for Berlin 1936) and Young Woman and the Sea (about Gertrude “Trudy” Ederle – 1x gold, 2x bronze at Paris 1924, but the film concentrates on her becoming the first woman to swim the English Channel).
Having neglected to watch one of the official Olympic documentaries before last year’s 2024 Summer Olympics (oops), these two movies did okay to fill that void.
Most memorable delivery of a line: “That’s politicssssssss.” – Denzel Washington, Gladiator II (2024)
There was absolutely no need to hold onto that “s” for so long. But Denzel Washington, in a movie in which all of the principal actors seem to be acting in different movies each, decides to go for the overdramatic Shakespeare route. And as villain, it’s a fantastic choice.
Most memorable quote: “And you think that one year of medical school entitles you to plow through the riches of my Emersonian mind?” – Adam Driver, Megalopolis (2024)
First things first… I didn’t say “best quote”, you know! Second, I’m of the opinion that Megalopolis defies any judgment of “good” or “bad”. I appreciated this movie for its bold artistic swings that violate so many rules and the film was one of the best experiences I had in a theater all year.
Oh yeah, this comes from the same nutty scene where we get “go back to the cluuuub”. Folks, if someone says a line like this to you unironically, run away. Run far away.
Most overrated: Poor Things (2023)
This is a movie I never connected at all to. I thought Lanthimos’ film was very male gaze-y and its depiction of sex work extremely sanitized. Oh? One of the lessons is that Victorian times were extremely sexually repressed? What a revelation! Welcome to the twenty-first century! I gave Poor Things a 6/10.
Pixar’s Elemental (2023), which I gave a 5.5/10, was the other movie I considered for this because of how audiences (as opposed to critics) have reacted to this.
Most shocking moment: The coffee scene, The Big Heat (1953)
If you have never seen this movie, please DO NOT look this up. I audibly gasped in the theater when this happened (this was a repertory screening at the Frida Cinema in Santa Ana, CA), and I wasn’t the only one.
Most underrated: On Borrowed Time (1939)
I’ve got some bad news for the high fantasy lovers out there. Classic Hollywood largely didn’t bother with high fantasy. On Borrowed Time is a low fantasy based on a play of the same name. This is a fable regarding the inevitability of death. I found this film better-acted and better-written than your average classic film fan. Lionel Barrymore’s performance goes a long, long way here for me.
Most underseen: Ferdinand the Bull (1938 short)
I could list a litany of Viet Film Fest movies here. But to make things simpler, I won’t. Ferdinand the Bull is one of the most charming Disney animated shorts of its era and, at a time where the studio hadn’t animated too many humans yet, this is one of those shorts that sets an in-house style that lasts for a long, long time.
Never learns: Andy Hardy (Mickey Rooney) in Andy Hardy’s Private Secretary (1941), Life Begins for Andy Hardy (1941), and The Courtship of Andy Hardy (1942)
I’ve only seen 5/16 Andy Hardy movies (1937-1958). I’m not the biggest fan, but the movies are a fascinating time capsule into what an idealized America was imagined to be and what teenaged behavior was sort of like during the ‘30s and ‘40s. But…
Andy Andy Andy. Always spurting out some variant of “I’m a big man now, pop. I’ve seen a lot of things, and I have the wisdom to do better,” and then turning around and doing stupid shit. His over-extroversion, chasing girls, getting into trouble, getting into trouble that involves chasing girls? Oh my goodness. If the Andy Hardy series is any indication of what America is really like, it’s that America is run like a high school ASB. Appropriate, as Andy is his senior class president!
Go to college! Or actually stay together with Betsy Booth (Judy Garland) for crying out loud! With apologies to those who are #teampollybenedict (Ann Rutherford).
No femme, all fatale: Vera (Ann Savage) in Detour (1945)
I’m not saying anything about the plot to this film noir that is NOT recommended for anyone who is a noir novice. But Ann Savage – with that incredibly appropriate surname – might have played the meanest leading lady in a film noir. And she plays the part shockingly well.
Resulted in me losing my mind in a theater (in a good way): The long uncut shot in Inside the Yellow Cocoon Shell (2023, Vietnam)
In a film filled with extremely long, uncut shots, that 20+-minute uncut shot of our main character having a few conversations, hopping on a motorbike to get to the other side of town, and the camera coming in through the window during the final conversation left me astounded. I could scarcely believe what I was seeing.
This actor should have done more movies like this: Tom Hanks, News of the World (2020)
For an actor who has long been compared to Jimmy Stewart for much of his career, it was half-surprising to me that Tom Hanks had never starred in an American Western like his predecessor before. News of the World neither fully embraces the classical Western nor the revisionist Western, and an older Hanks is very well-suited to the role here. Okay, perhaps a youthful Hanks (‘80s-‘90s) would have been unsuitable for Westerns. But he’s damn well suitable now.
Way too much body hair: Chuck Norris, The Way of the Dragon (1972, Hong Kong)
What just happened?: Megalopolis
The whole thing. The audience member speaking live to Adam Driver’s character two-thirds of the way through wasn’t even in my top five weirdest things about this movie. The IMAX theater didn’t have much folks there, but the experience was amazing!
Worst moment: THAT needle drop in War Is Over! Inspired by the Music of John and Yoko (2023 short)
Yet another Beatles or Beatles-adjacent song ruined for me! I was simultaneously embarrassed for the filmmakers (who won a fucking Oscar for this anyways, largely due to heavy lobbying from Peter Jackson, Sean Ono Lennon, and many other big names) and furious. If you had a camera capturing my reaction in-theater, you would have seen my brain melt in real time.
Worst use of music: Oh, come on. You know what it is! See above!
Worst title: Godzilla x Kong: The New Empire (2024)
It’s not a good movie, but I admit to liking it. I know Warners would like to tell you that you pronounce this “Godzilla Kong”, but that sounds like two first names lumped together (thanks, Rachel). Should it be “Godzilla times Kong”? “Godzilla ex Kong” as if us kaiju fans are shipping them? To this day, that frigging “x” bothers me, alongside that generic-as-hell subtitle!
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⏤ 𝐧𝐨𝐰𝚜𝚝𝚛𝚎𝚊𝚖𝚒𝚗𝚐 . . . ain't no grave. ( #𝐛𝐞𝐚𝐫𝐭𝐚𝐬𝐤. )
shine by dolly parton / ain't no love in oklahoma by luke combs / the last pale light in the west by ben nichols / in hell i'll be in good company by the death south / what kind of man by florence and the machine / you rascal you by hanni el khatib / lead me home by jaime n commons / all the gold in california by larry gatlin / i'm a ramblin man by waylon jennings / help me make it through night by kris kristofferson / oklahoma smokeshow by zach bryan / no horse to ride by luke grimes / hell's comin' with me by poor man's poison / personal jesus by johnny cash / hell's bells by cary ann hearst / o death by rihannon giddens / take me home , country roads by john denver / the first time i ever i saw your face by roberta flack / ain't no grave by crooked still
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Oh Cary Grant...
So long before Madonna became the queen of reinvention...there was a boy from Bristol who grew up in poverty and lack, with no one that really cared if he lived or died. That boy used his sad circumstances as a spring board to become maybe the most iconic movie star of his time. Definitely one of the highest paid and in demand.
That boy was Archie Leach and he created a character named Cary Grant.
Upon learning about the biopic about him...I paid the $9 BritBox subscription fee and fired up the snacks for a full on binge.
Totally.
Worth.
It.
Wow.
No, I'm not that old but I do have an old soul and hey--even though he's gone, he was really handsome.
***Jason Isaacs plays Cary Grant and he is fantastic. Truly. Buuuuut...it's still a little hard to side with Lucius Malfoy. Which is actually a huge compliment that he created such an iconic character. I think I would have just really like to have seen someone that maybe naturally looked a little more like him. They did a great job making Isaacs look like him, he's just got that gaze sometimes that makes me feel the way I did all those years ago sitting in that theater watching him terrify the shoes off of me in Harry Potter. Cary Grant was charming and winning and lovable and gorgeous and charismatic--among other things...so feeling fear at anything about him was surely not meant.
I could go on and on but the jist of why I'm writing about this today is this:
Cary Grant toward the end of his life started doing one man shows, a sort of q and a sesh about his life.
When asked about how he created his characters, he responded that he did it just like he created his most successful character...Cary Grant.
Cary Grant is a lie.
Cary Grant is fiction.
He was the alter ego of Archie Leach, a boy from Bristol that was abused, unwanted and mistreated.
Archie assigned all the things he could dream of onto Cary...even the name. And he manifested them all.
That got me thinking.
I can help anyone but myself. Seriously.
The worst friend can text me that they have a headache and I trip over myself to make them tea and suggest things that might help, come over and nurse them yet my life is in shambles and I do nothing.
Archie Leach was the origin story of the star, the success, the amazing avatar...Cary Grant.
Wow.
Could this sad pathetic Juls be the origin story for the amazing XXX (whatever my Cary Grant name is)?
Maybe I need an avatar.
Screw what everyone around here thinks. Screw every single person that doesn't agree. I'm so effing sick of caring about everyone else's opinion.
It's never too late.
Always keep in mind that Kris Jenner was nearly broke at 50.
Seriously.
She had to move out of her home because they couldn't pay the mortgage...now...she's just the most successful thing in existence.
Let's put a nail in the shitty origin story.
Let's create an avatar today.
Let's assign all the good things we can think of to it.
Let's be the happiest version of ourselves possible.
#self love#reinvention#reinvent yourself#manifesting#cary grant#archie leach#hollywood#how to become rich
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Tuesday, March 18, 2025 Canadian TV Listings (Times Eastern)
WHERE CAN I FIND THOSE PREMIERES? THE THUNDERMANS: UNDERCOVER (Paramount + Canada) HOUSE OF KNIVES (Food Network Canada) 9:00pm
NEW TO AMAZON PRIME CANADA/CBC GEM/CRAVE TV/DISNEY + STAR/NETFLIX CANADA:
AMAZON PRIME CANADA ANORA HELLBOY: THE CROOKED MAN THE PROGRAM PWHL: MONTREAL VS BOSTON
NETFLIX CANADA ATOMIC BLONDE BERT KREISCHER: LUCKY POINT BREAK (2015)
MLB BASEBALL (SN) 6:00am: Dodgers vs. Cubs (SN1) 1:00pm: Red Sox vs. Yankees
WORLD WOMEN’S CURLING CHAMPIONSHIP (TSN2) 2:00pm: Canada vs. Turkey (TSN) 8:00pm: Korea vs. Canada
TGL GOLF (SN) 7:00pm: Semifinal 2 - Atlanta Drive GC vs. The Bay Golf Club
NHL HOCKEY (SNWest) 7:00pm: Flames vs. Rangers (SN360) 7:00pm: Red Wings vs. Capitals (TSN2/TSN5) 7:00pm: Sens vs. Habs (SN1) 9:00pm: Utah vs. Oilers (TSN3/SNPacific) 10:00pm: Jets vs. Canucks
NBA BASKETBALL (TSN4) 7:30pm: Nets vs. Celtics (SN360) 10:00pm: Bucks vs. Warriors
THIS HOUR HAS 22 MINUTES (CBC) 8:00pm
CANADA’S GOT TALENT (City TV) 8:00pm (SEASON PREMIERE): Talented amateur performers, singers, dancers, magicians, comedians and more, appear before celebrity judges and compete to win a life-changing prize, as well as millions of viewers' hearts.
THE EDIFY SHOW: HEARTIES TUESDAY (Super Channel Heart & Home) 8:00pm
SON OF A CRITCH (CBC) 8:30pm: Mark joins the Peace A Chord concert but takes the spotlight; the Fox family struggles with Susanne's engagement; Mary seeks support while Ritche struggles to earn his father's approval.
SMALL ACHIEVABLE GOALS (CBC) 9:00pm: While Julie's libido flatlines, Kris is hit with a wave of perimenopausal horniness and can't focus on anything but sex, leading them to visit a sex shop for research.
HIGHWAY THRU HELL (USA Network Canada) 9:00pm: Jamie works a semi recovery off the highway without his go-to heavy wreckers; Sim races to finish a recovery when he learns his inlaw has been in a nearby crash; Cary feels the pressure of safely traversing the Coquihalla.
HALIFAX COMEDY FESTIVAL (CBC) 9:30pm: Performances by Louis Ramey, Chuck Byrn, Todd Graham, Hoodo Hersi, Graham Kay, Ava Val, Landry, Vicky Mullaley and Charles Haycock.
#cdntv#cancon#canadian tv#canadian tv listings#this hour has 22 minutes#canada's got talent#son of a critch#small achievable goals#highway thru hell#halifax comedy festival#mlb baseball#curling#golf#nhl hockey#nba basketball
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An Observation - Women's Liberation, Proverbs 31 Style
IRVIN STAPF <[email protected]>
Jan 6, 2025, 10:12 AM
to IRVIN, Ray, Angie, Ashley, B.G., Meryl, bjgladhill, Doug, [email protected], [email protected], Matt, Carilee, carolynashriver, Carrie, Frank, Terry, Curtis, Jennifer, John, Daniel, Dean, Art, [email protected], [email protected], Tom, [email protected], Connie, Helen, Bruce, Roland, Zach, Grace, Al, John, Kris, Jonathan, JOSEPH, Jude, Merv, Brian, Cary, Laura, Matt, Deborah, Debbie, Mimiy, Jennifer, Paul, Bob, Connie, Thiel, Rebekah, [email protected], Larry, Stephen, [email protected], me, Michael, Terry
Let me tell you of some Proverbs 31 women. This chapter in the Book of Proverbs speaks of the virtue, abilities, talents, and beauty that women can possess. The whole issue of men's and women's rolls in scripture is often discussed, and at time railed against by the women's liberation movement. But this advice by the mother of King Lemuel sets things in the right order and truly elevates the image of a Godly woman.
First, King Lemuel is mentioned nowhere else in scripture. However, Strong's Concordance points our that Lemuel is a Hebrew word that is related to words that mean "belonging to God" and is a symbolic name of Solomon. Further, Jewish legend identifies him as Solomon, taking advise from his mother Bathsheba, though there is no clear evidence for this. Solomon is the author of the book of Proverbs, and it seems to me that both parts of this 31st chapter should be included as one. Verses 1 to 9 are not separated from verses 10 through 31. They all become a description of God's intended rolls for men and women.
Let me deal with a couple of side issues, though sometimes prominent, that can get in the way. If Lemuel is identified as Solomon, which seems likely to me, Solomon is said to have had many wives and concubines. Also, Solomon's mother was Bathsheba who was a married woman take in adultery by Solomon's father, David after he murdered Bathsheba's husband. Quite a mess, and not one out of which we would expect any good and Godly advice. It is important to understand that these things happened with God continuing to use people involved does not indicate our Lord's approval for their life's choices, They were clearly sinful. David recognized this and repented. This is the context of David's Psalm 51 as he cries out to the Lord for mercy. Further, Solomon's love poem in the book Song of Songs, or Song of Solomon, speaks to one particular woman, the Shulammite, to whom he is devoted. This love poem has also been taken as Christ's love for the Church.
There is great hope for us in this. For all have sinned an fall sort of the Glory of God as St. Paul says in Romans Chapter three ....21 But now the righteousness of God apart from the law is revealed, being witnessed by the Law and the Prophets, 22 even the righteousness of God, through faith in Jesus Christ, to all [f]and on all who believe. For there is no difference; 23 for all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God, 24 being justified freely by His grace through the redemption that is in Christ Jesus, 25 whom God set forth as a propitiation by His blood, through faith, to demonstrate His righteousness, because in His forbearance God had passed over the sins that were previously committed, 26 to demonstrate at the present time His righteousness, that He might be just and the justifier of the one who has faith in Jesus. (NKJV) In their repentance God was able to continue using them to do His will, and they ultimately became forbearers of our Lord Jesus.
Ah! But now let me get back to the Proverbs 31 advice. Of this wise and energetic woman it says that "Her husband is known in the gates as he sits among the elders of the land."(vs.23) He seems to be having a good time with his friends while his wife does all the works! But the gates of the city were a place of leadership, protection, and order. This was his task. He was not just sharing a drink with his buddies. This is what the King's mother cautions him about in verses 3 to 5. His heart and all of his strength is given to being sure that his wife and family was properly guided, protected, and free to carry on her duties. His love is always with her. (vs.28)
Look at all she is doing! Verse 10 begins with a commendation; "an excellent wife.... her worth is far above jewels. The heart of her husband trust her. She does him good... all the days of her life."(vss.10-12) Then her activities: she seek out materials to work with her hands; she brings her food from afar providing for her household and those under her; she is able to judge values and purchase property to plant a vineyard; she is wise, strong and generous; and has a sense of security. She is a lovely woman and along with all her attributes strength and dignity are her clothing. Her speech is wise and she oversee all that is involved with her household. This is a tremendous commendation for the abilities of a godly woman. There is no lack of dignity, ability or beauty in this description of a woman. There is nothing lacking that a woman's liberation movement could add. The only distinction is that her life and her joy is established for the good of her husband, her children, her household and the community around her. She isn't seeking to make a name for herself but to honor the Lord in all she does.
In Genesis chapter one God created the man and the woman. He established the monogamous marriage bond, essentiality creating the home and family. That is the natural structure intended for our life and growth on earth. [That doesn't mean that a life of singleness is wrong either for a man or woman, but that is a whole other topic.] The point here that is carried through both Testaments is that of proper order. This gets to the terms the modern world has confused and rejected, headship and submission. But this also is part of the image of God given to man and woman in their creation. There is headship and submission within the Holy Trinity. We confess for example, in the Apostle's Creed that the "Holy Spirit proceeds from the Father and Son and with the Father and Son is worshipped and glorified". Further, Jesus is clear about His relationship with the Father explaining to the Jewish leaders in John 5:19 and following that He only does what He sees the Father doing. The Holy Trinity is truly one, co-equal, and co-eternal. The three are one true God, but the principle of headship and submission still function among them. There is no sense of one being more important than the others, or more value or dignity than the others. So it is intended to be reflected in marriage.
So, while there are far fewer verses about the man's virtues in Proverbs 31 his task is established and important. I wrote earlier that his sitting with the elders in the gates of the city was a place of leadership, protection, and order. I would also include something I consider of utmost importance, as it has always been but is especially in our times. That is of solid Biblical values and understanding. The man is responsible for sharing God's truth and correction with his family. This principle is supported throughout scripture. It is why God first gave the command not to eat of the tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil to Adam who later conveyed it to Eve. What this means is that the Father is responsible for studying scripture, praying for his family, and deepening his own relationship with his Heavenly Father, to whom he is called to submit.
This Biblical order for man, woman, and family is the best and most joy-filled plan for living. It is difficult! Keep in mind the rebellion of our first parents which we inherited and are all by nature sinful and unclean. Too often we act and react out of that nature. We are also ignorant of the full satisfaction that our proper place can bring. Thus, we are called to repent before God, depending on the cleansing blood of our Saviour, Jesus the Christ. We should also, when needed, be willing to humble ourselves before our mate or children asking their forgiveness. It is in this that we can grow more firmly as one in the image of God.
I am old, which allows me the perspective of many years. Also, my share of failures needing to ask forgiveness and to forgive. But I wanted to share what I've seen in my family and church congregation. Particularly about the Proverbs 31 woman.
First, let me mention the names of Mildred who gave me a solid start while providing a portion of the family income and caring for an Alzheimers stricken husband for the last 15 years of his life, and Ruth who gave me my dear wife after raising her three other children, getting her college degrees, and supporting herself and family, all after her husband was killed on duty with the Baltimore City police force. I will go on to name Audrey, Helen, Janice, Jeane, Carolyn, Jan, Meryl, Carol, Jane, and I apologize if my memory has failed to bring up any others. These are strong capable women who are the back bone of our fellowship. They are spiritually grounded prayer warriors. They have already given a start to the next generation of Proverbs 31 women who have take their place in the fellowship. And they are praying for the third and fourth generations of their offspring. To these could be added dozens upon dozens of other women in our larger church body and the churches we are affiliated with. There is nothing that women's liberation could add to them.
While the scriptural order of headship and submission is essential we never indicate that one is greater or lesser than the other. Nothing is demeaning or of lesser value in God's order. All is of God's perfect plan. It is our part to continually seek and find.
“Many daughters have done well, But you excel them all.” (Prov. 31:29 - NKJV)
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Planet of the Apes (Tim Burton, 2001)
Cast: Mark Wahlberg, Helen Bonham Carter, Tim Roth, Michael Clarke Duncan, Paul Giamatti, Estella Warren, Cary-Hiroyuki Tagawa, David Warner, Kris Kristofferson. Screenplay: William Broyles Jr., Lawrnece Konner, Mark Rosenthal, based on a novel by Pierre Boulle. Cinematography: Philippe Rousselot. Production design: Rick Heinrichs. Film editing: Chris Lebenzon. Music: Danny Elfman.
I almost stopped watching Tim Burton's remake of Franklin J. Schaffner's 1968 classic Planet of the Apes when one character called another "the Homo sapien." Can we all get it into our heads that the taxonomic phrase "Homo sapiens" is singular? (If there were a plural it would be something like "Homines sapientes" -- Latinists may correct me if I'm wrong.) But pet peeves aside, I found Burton's version entertaining enough, with its sly references to the original film: One of the apes reverses a line spoken by Charlton Heston in the first film, saying "Get your stinking hands off me, you damn dirty human!" And Heston himself has an unbilled cameo as the dying father of Thade (Tim Roth), in which he reprises in a different context his line, "Damn them! Damn them all to hell!" The apes in the remake are more simian, with better ape-like behavior and movements. And the satiric edge feels sharper in an era in which government-sanctioned discrimination seems to be on the rise. But the narrative is a bit of a mess, especially the fudged-up ending, which could never have the impact of the revelation at the end of the 1968 film. It got a Razzie as the worst remake of the year and probably deserved it, but it's not unwatchable, thanks to some good performances, especially by Helena Bonham Carter, Michael Clarke Duncan, and Paul Giamatti, who never let the makeup do the acting for them.
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Décembre MMXXIV
Films
Le Sourire de Mona Lisa (Mona Lisa Smile) (2003) de Mike Newell avec Julia Roberts, Kirsten Dunst, Julia Stiles, Maggie Gyllenhaal, Ginnifer Goodwin, Dominic West, Juliet Stevenson, Marcia Gay Harden et John Slattery
Le Corbeau (1943) de Henri-Georges Clouzot avec Pierre Fresnay, Ginette Leclerc, Pierre Larquey, Micheline Francey, Héléna Manson, Noël Roquevert, Liliane Maigné et Pierre Bertin
Conversation secrète (The Conversation) (1974) de Francis Ford Coppola avec Gene Hackman, John Cazale, Allen Garfield, Frederic Forrest, Cindy Williams, Michael Higgins et Elizabeth MacRae
La Cuisine des anges (We're No Angels) (1955) de Michael Curtiz avec Humphrey Bogart, Peter Ustinov, Aldo Ray, Joan Bennett, Basil Rathbone, Leo G. Carroll et Gloria Talbott
Le Fils du Français (1999) de Gérard Lauzier avec Josiane Balasko, Fanny Ardant, Thierry Frémont, David-Alexandre Parquier, Florian Robin, Luca Barbareschi, George Aguilar et Fanny Valette
Ne m'envoyez pas de fleurs (Send Me No Flowers) (1964) de Norman Jewison avec Rock Hudson, Doris Day, Tony Randall, Paul Lynde, Hal March, Edward Andrews et Patricia Barry
Boulevard du rhum (1971) de Robert Enrico avec Lino Ventura, Brigitte Bardot, Bill Travers, Clive Revill, Jess Hahn, Antonio Casas, Andréas Voutsinas, Guy Marchand et Jack Betts
Le Seigneur des Anneaux : La Guerre des Rohirrim (The Lord of the Rings: The War of the Rohirrim) (2024) de Kenji Kamiyama avec Gérard Darier, Marion Gress, Augustin Bonhomme, Barbara Tissier, Vanina Pradier, Daniel Njo Lobé et Cyril Descours
La Main au collet (To Catch a Thief) (1955) d'Alfred Hitchcock avec Cary Grant, Grace Kelly, Jessie Royce Landis, John Williams, Charles Vanel, Brigitte Auber, Jean Martinelli et Georgette Anys
Maman, j'ai raté l'avion ! (Home Alone) (1990) de Chris Columbus avec Macaulay Culkin, Joe Pesci, Daniel Stern, John Heard, Catherine O'Hara, Roberts Blossom, Gerry Bamman et Terrie Snell
Fais pas ci, fais pas ça : On va marcher sur la Lune (2024) de Alexandre Castagnetti avec Valérie Bonneton, Guillaume De Tonquédec, Isabelle Gélinas, Bruno Salomone, Yaniss Lespert, Tiphaine Haas, Canelle Carré-Cassaigne, Timothée Kempen-Hamel, François Vincentelli et Alice Dufour
La Cité disparue (Legend of the Lost) (1957) de Henry Hathaway avec John Wayne, Sophia Loren, Rossano Brazzi, Kurt Kasznar, Sonia Moser et Angela Portaluri
Le Calendrier secret de Noël (Christmas in Evergreen: Tidings of Joy) (2019) de Sean McNamara avec Maggie Lawson, Paul Greene, Rukiya Bernard, Holly Robinson Peete, Barbara Niven, Jill Wagner, Ashley Williams, Patty McCormack et Colin Lawrence
Serenity (2005) de Joss Whedon avec Nathan Fillion, Gina Torres, Alan Tudyk, Sean Maher, Summer Glau, Morena Baccarin, Adam Baldwin, Jewel Staite, Ron Glass et Chiwetel Ejiofor
Les Aventures d'Arsène Lupin (1957) de Jacques Becker avec Robert Lamoureux, Otto E. Hasse, Liselotte Pulver, Paul Muller, Daniel Ceccaldi, Huguette Hue, Georges Chamarat, Renaud Mary et Henri Rollan
Love Actually (2003) de Richard Curtis avec Hugh Grant, Liam Neeson, Emma Thompson, Laura Linney, Alan Rickman, Martine McCutcheon, Bill Nighy, Colin Firth, Andrew Lincoln, Keira Knightley, Chiwetel Ejiofor, Rowan Atkinson, Kris Marshall et Martin Freeman
Danger planétaire (The Blob) (1958) de Irvin S. Yeaworth Jr. et Russell S. Doughten Jr. avec Steve McQueen, Aneta Corsaut, Earl Rowe, Olin Howland, Elbert Smith, Hugh Graham, Anthony Franke et George Karas
La vie est belle (It's a Wonderful Life) (1946) de Frank Capra avec James Stewart, Donna Reed, Lionel Barrymore, Thomas Mitchell, Henry Travers, Frank Faylen, Ward Bond et Gloria Grahame
La Dame de Noël (1958) de Marcel Bluwal avec Jean Marc Bory, Nicole Courcel, Roger Coggio, Maurice Chevit et Guy Decomble
Père Noël et Fils (1983) d'André Flédérick avec Jean-Claude Brialy, Dominique Davray, Annie Girardot, Sébastien Privat, Jean-Marie Proslier, Popeck, Yvonne Clech, Hélène Duc, Marthe Villalonga, Hubert Deschamps et Johnny Hallyday
Ulysse (Ulisse) (1954) de Mario Camerini avec Kirk Douglas, Silvana Mangano, Anthony Quinn, Rossana Podestà, Jacques Dumesnil, Sylvie, Daniel Ivernel, Franco Interlenghi, Elena Zareschi et Evi Maltagliati
Maman, j'ai encore raté l'avion ! (Home Alone 2: Lost in New York) (1992) de Chris Columbus avec Macaulay Culkin, Joe Pesci, Daniel Stern, John Heard, Catherine O'Hara, Brenda Fricker, Eddie Bracken, Tim Curry et Rob Schneider
Le Pôle express (The Polar Express) (2004) de Robert Zemeckis avec Maxime Baudouin, Camille Donda, Jean-Philippe Puymartin, Lola Krellenstein, Céline Monsarrat et Laurent Lévy
Anastasia (1956) d'Anatole Litvak avec Ingrid Bergman, Yul Brynner, Akim Tamiroff, Sacha Pitoeff, Helen Hayes, Martita Hunt, Ivan Desny et Felix Aylmer
Dix Petits Nègres (Ten Little Indians) (1974) de Peter Collinson avec Oliver Reed, Elke Sommer, Richard Attenborough, Stephane Audran, Gert Froebe, Herbert Lom, Maria Rohm, Adolfo Celi, Alberto de Mendoza et Charles Aznavour
La Classe américaine : Le Grand Détournement (1993) de Michel Hazanavicius et Dominique Mézerette avec Christine Delaroche, Evelyne Grandjean, Marc Cassot, Patrick Guillemin, Raymond Loyer, Joël Martineau, Jean-Claude Montalban et Roger Rudel
Séries
Columbo Saison 10, 11, 12
Criminologie appliquée - À chacun son heure - Un seul suffira
Les Enquêtes Ceméléon
Une Affaire de famille - Attention à la peinture
Firefly
Serenity - L'Attaque du train - Pilleurs d'épave - Le Duel - Sains et Saufs - La Femme du commandant - De la boue et des hommes - La Panne - Intrusion - Histoires anciennes - Déchet précieux - Le Message - Mission secours - Objet volant identifié
Psych Saison 5, 6, 7
Mort de frousse - Dual Spires - Premiers de la classe - Espèce menacée - Grosse Bêtise - Yin, Suite et Fin - Immunité problématique - Carrément mordus ! - Very Bad nuit - Super héros - Tous au stade - Shawn au-dessus d'un nid de coucou - Complètement babas - Mon père cet escroc - Enfin seuls ! - Indiana Shawn et le Trésor perdu - À mourir de peur - Les Prétendants - À chœur et à cris - Un crime peut en cacher un autre - Juste Cause - Santa Barbara, ton univers impitoyable - Santa Barbara 2, l'arme fatale 5 - Un site de rencontre mortel - Le Projet BigFoot
Friends Saison 5, 6, 7
Celui qui prenait de bonnes résolutions - Celui qui riait différemment - Celui qui avait un sac - Celui qui découvre tout - Celui qui prenait des coups - Celui qui enviait ses amis - Celui qui ne savait pas se repérer - Celui qui se sacrifiait - Celui qui ne savait pas flirter - Celui qui sauvait des vies - Celui qui jouait à la balle - Celui qui devait casser la baraque - Celui qui était à Las Vegas : première partie - Celui qui était à Las Vegas ; deuxième partie - Ceux qui revenaient de Las Vegas - Celui qui console Rachel - Celui qui était de mauvaise foi - Celui qui perdait sa belle assurance - Celui qui avait une belle bagnole - Ceux qui passaient leur dernière nuit - Celui qui avait une jolie colocataire - Celui qui avait les dents blanches - Celui qui s'était drogué - Celui qui souhaitait la bonne année - Celui qui avait le derrière entre deux chaises - Celui qui inventait des histoires - Celui qui sortait avec la sœur - Celui qui ne pouvait pas pleurer - Ce qui aurait pu se passer : première partie - Ce qui aurait pu se passer : deuxième partie - Celui qui avait l'Unagi - Celui qui sortait avec une étudiante - Celui qui avait des problèmes de frigo - Celui qui avait une audition - Celui qui rencontrait le père - Celui qui se la jouait grave - Celui qui achetait la bague - Celui qui faisait sa demande : première partie - Celui qui faisait sa demande : deuxième partie - Celui qui croyait faire jeune - Celui qui réglait le mariage - Celui qui s'était mal assis
Affaires sensibles
Le Corbeau : La légende noire d’Henri-Georges Clouzot - La Bête qui mange le monde : Gévaudan, 1764 - Les enfants otages de Loyada : la France sous pression - Dissolution de 1997 : les coulisses d'un fiasco - Mirapolis, la chute d’un géant - "Sept morts sur ordonnance" : quand la littérature et le cinéma s’emparent d’un fait divers - La présidentielle américaine de 2016 et l’improbable victoire de Donald Trump - Présidentielle 2012 : Hollande l’inattendu - L'aérotrain, l’ex-train du futur - La famille Sackler, les opioïdes et la mort - Charlie Chaplin banni des États-Unis - Un bateau pour le Vietnam : quand la France découvrait les boat-peoples
Astrid et Raphaëlle Saison 2
L'Étourneau - Irezumi - Le Paradoxe de Fermi - Point d'orgue - Circé - Golem - Le Livre - En garde à vue
Cat's Eyes Saison 1
Durrieux - Heinz
Alexandra Ehle Saison 5
Un message pour l'éternité - La femme bleue
Commissaire Dupin
La croix d'Emma
Zorro Saison 1
Episode 1 - Episode 2
Meurtres au paradis
Qui veut tuer le Père Noël
Doctor Who
Joy to the World
Spectacles
Eric Clapton : Live at Montreux (1986) avec Nathan East, Phil Collins et Greg Phillinganes
Michael Bublé : at the BBC (2016)
Kool & the Gang : Live from House of Blues (2001)
Etienne Daho Show (2023)
Stephan Eicher : Eldorado Trio Live (2008)
Claude Nougaro : Embarquement immédiat (2001) au Théâtre des Champs Elysées
Michael Bublé: Home for the Holidays (2012) avec Michael Bublé, Kevin Clash, Carly Rae Jepsen, Blake Shelton et Rod Stewart
Christmas in Rockefeller Center (2011) avec Tony Bennett, Big Time Rush, Michael Bublé, Javier Colon, Neil Diamond, Megan Hilty Megan Hilty, Carole King, Katharine McPhee et The Radio City Rockettes
Cartoons in concert (2022) par le DR Symphony Orchestra
Le professeur Rollin se re-rebiffe (2017)
Raiders of the Symphony (2023) par le DR Symphony Orchestra
Livres
Deux tueurs (suivi de) Mickey Mickey de Michel Pirus, Véronique Dorey et Mezzo
Une enquête du commissaire Dupin : Enquête troublante à Concarneau de Jean-Luc Bannalec
Batman : Amère victoire de Jeph Loeb et Tim Sale
J'ai peur des mouches de Frédéric Dard
Le Spirit : Intégrale, tome 1 de Will Eisner
La vengeance de Zorro de Johnston McCulley
Le Spirit : Intégrale, tome 2 de Will Eisner
Strange N°146
Strange N°171
Captain America, tome 13 : Le Faucon et la Vipère de Steve Englehart, Steve Gerber et Sal Buscema
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REVIEW PARTY: Un coffee per due di Len McCabe & Kris Hamlet
Cari Sognatori, Lily ha letto il romance scritto da Len McCabe & Kris Hamlet !!! GENERE: Romance DATA D’USCITA: 18 Novembre 2024 EBOOK-KU / CARTACEO Affiliati Amazon Sono Grace Wells, anonima impiegata. Il mio capo ha deciso che sono pronta per un incarico più impegnativo con tanto di promozione finale. Dal mio punto di vista, ho finalmente la possibilità di liberarmi della pressione…
#BOOK BLOGER#BOOK BLOGGER#BOOK CLUB#BOOK REVIEWS#BOOK ROMANCE#consigliato#Kris Hamlet#Len McCabe#libri#proposta#recensione#review party#ROMANCE BOOKS
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De la Melancolía Navideña al Rock Intenso y Vibrante - https://wp.me/p4pCgM-6az
Soulganic, Kris Cari, Dean Cooper y Ronan Furlong nos sorprenden con sencillos que abarcan desde la intensidad del enamoramiento y la nostalgia navideña hasta la fuerza del hard rock y el toque celta en el rock moderno. Cada uno de estos lanzamientos muestra la versatilidad de sus artistas y promete conectar con las emociones y recuerdos de sus oyentes.
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The UKI Spotify Playlist Update 10 October 2023
The UKI Spotify playlist has been updated with Ani + The Cranes, Melanie Gillott, Heather Hawkins, The Heroic Enthusiasts, Basson Laas, sis.p.s, Invictus HiFi, BELLA DEER, Free Harmony, Dame Zina, Benoît Métral, Michael Ellery Media, Birds Are Better, Dino Dini Music, Kris Cari, Lucas Carpenter, Thomas Charlie Pedersen - music, Jeán et Joie, and many more!
#radio#uk#independentmusic#independentartist#ukindependent#indieartists#unsigned#ukindie#spotify#independent#Spotify
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the entire article on the 1st annual australian international jazz festival from wikipedia + american forenames BUT ending with "is"
Aacyclis Aarris Adavis Aderiquis Aftois Agarlesis Alandris Aldraquis Aldris Alenris Alis Allaredis Allettis Allis Allois Althris Alvis Amberris Ameris Ancis Anclis Andaris Andris Anis Annorecis Anouis Appeatris Appeavis Apperris Ardarcis Aris Arlis Aromis Arris Artis Asmis Athis Auris Bannouis Baris Befforis Beillis Beliseris Benris Berbaris Berennis Bergencis Beris Bermaris Berris Bertris Bettis Beturis Beulis Beunicis Billis Bilteris Bobbilis Bougelvis Bouis Brallis Bris Brolis Byrolois Callis Caluis Caris Carjois Carris Casselis Cassis Caturis Chanis Channis Checolvis Chelillis Chelis Cheris Chis Chrianis Clarlowis Clenjacis Clis Cluis Coliannis Comolis Comptis Conis Cotheris Couis Craquis Cris Crogeris Custerris Dais Daiseanis Danis Danistis Daris Deanis Debonis Dedis Deris Dertiolis Dicaris Dinestis Ditis Dixis Dooris Dormarris Dortis Douis Dremaxis Dris Duadris Ducis Duris Dusabris Dwillais Dwis Eanis Ebecis Elilvis Elis Elvis Emarviris Enniquis Eris Ernouis Erris Evanis Everis Evis Exis Fais Feris Ferlois Filillis Flois Folvis Foris Frais Freenris Frenis Frennis Gaberis Gannelis Garis Garlais Gelis Gerais Gerenewis Geris Glais Gorethris Goris Graquis Grenris Grephis Grevis Guanis Gwenris Haelixis Haelois Hangenris Hanis Hannis Haris Harrewis Harris Heillis Helanis Helis Hellbouis Henris Herinaris Heris Herris Hillis Hiris Hisonatis Holicis Homis Houris Imonevis Iressis Irivis Ividalis Jachricis Jacoris Jacquis Jais Jannis Jarris Javicelis Javis Jeacis Jealillis Jearis Jeavis Jefolgais Jenatris Jentoris Jerberris Jestophis Joaris Jodoris Joelis Johnnis Jointis Jois Joisertis Jonis Jorais Jorempris Joris Jormaudis Jorris Joselicis Juathris Judelis Julannis Juliamis Julis Junis Karennis Karis Karleoris Karmarris Karris Katis Katois Kelbecis Kelis Kellis Kellois Kelmatis Kennis Kentis Kris Kuris Kurtis Lais Lanoris Laris Larris Laulis Lernis Lixis Localis Loctoris Lodis Lodoris Loperis Loris Lormaxis Lorossis Lotheoris Louistris Lowillis Lowis Lucis Ludianis Lulis Luzannis Lyntonnis Mamberis Mamindis Mancilis Manicis Maninalis Manis Mannis Mantoris Marairis Marcuris Mardrecis Maressis Maris Marris Martis Martris Maurenris Maxis Mayedris Mcdalis Melis Melvis Menis Mennis Mertris Micis Milais Milvis Minis Miricis Monalis Monis Morannis Mortis Mosheavis Muelivis Musis Nielis Nienteris Niewis Nifforis Niteris Noris Nornis Norris Nouis Olais Olestis Olis Ollis Ophis Oris Ostonis Ostoris Ouis Ovis Owarricis Palis Palmaris Pamaxis Papris Patethris Patheris Pathis Patis Patris Paudennis Paudicis Paulicis Pauris Peanis Pederis Pedonnis Percis Perephis Peris Pernis Phapris Phis Piandris Pricis Pris Progais Promicis Prostis Quelis Quelvis Quis Raquis Recis Reckiris Reheris Remis Renris Rephis Riamelis Rianis Riquis Rivalis Roaris Roberris Rolis Romicis Romis Ronis Rottedis Sabobelis Sabonnis Sabris Salis Sandris Sanis Saturis Scis Setwellis Sharis Sheavis Sherris Shis Shouis Shuris Shurthris Sillynnis Sittis Sonis Sophis Staleoris Stemis Sticis Stis Stris Swighadis Swis Talis Taris Tarris Tenris Teris Teristis Thearis Thelais Theris This Thlis Thris Timpris Tois Tollannis Tolynnis Tonis Toris Tramis Triquis Tris Turis Twencis Twestis Tworis Uniquis Unis Vauris Viellis Vincis Vindis Vinnis Violgais Vistis Wannis Waris Warlis Warsis Warvis Whis Whouis Willeitis Willis Woristis Zabenris
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Tuesday, February 25, 2025 Canadian TV Listings (Times Eastern)
WHERE CAN I FIND THOSE PREMIERES? BLAZE AND THE MONSTER MACHINES (new episode block) (Paramount + Canada) THE SMURFS (Paramount+ Canada) THE SMURFS 2 (Paramount + Canada) EYES ON THE PRIZE III: WE WHO BELIEVE IN FREEDOM CANNOT REST (HBO Canada) 9:00pm BIG FAMILY, BIG CITY (TLC Canada) 10:00pm
NEW TO AMAZON PRIME CANADA/CBC GEM/CRAVE TV/DISNEY + STAR/NETFLIX CANADA:
AMAZON PRIME CANADA THE BUILDOUT
CBC GEM I SHALL NOT HATE
CRAVE TV DOPE GIRLS (premiere) EYES ON THE PRIZE III: WE WHO BELIEVE IN FREEDOM CANNOT REST (series premiere)
NETFLIX CANADA FULL SWING (Season 3) GOOSEBUMPS 2: HAUNTED HALLOWEEN
MLB BASEBALL (SN) 1:00pm: Cardinals vs. Jays
NHL HOCKEY (SNWest) 7:00pm: Flames vs. Capitals (TSN2) 7:00pm: Hurricanes vs. Habs (TSN4) 7:00pm: Leafs vs. Bruins (SN1/SNPacific) 7:30pm: Oilers vs. Rays
NBA BASKETBALL (TSN/TSN3/TSN5) 7:00pm: Celtics vs. Raptors (SN Now) 7:30pm: Cavaliers vs. Magic (TSN3/TSN5) 10:00pm: Mavericks vs. Lakers
ONE DISH, ONE SPOON (APTN) 7:00pm: Chef Tawnya explores Old Fort Erie, a War of 1812 British outpost, learning how her Mohawk ancestors provided fresh game and fish for soldiers; she recreates an 1812-inspired meal, taking us on a 210-year journey into Canada's past.
THIS HOUR HAS 22 MINUTES (CBC) 8:00pm
HUDSON & REX (City TV) 8:00pm: Jesse and Stella's band gig goes sour when they become the victims of a mass poisoning, becoming key witnesses in piecing together a deadly night at the pub.
FIND MY COUNTRY HOUSE: CANADA (CTV Life) 8:00pm/8:30pm: Christine and Marcel want a quaint property in Armstrong; they hope to find a home with character and a welcoming feel. In Episode Two, Vince and April are drawn to Fort Macleod's historic charm; they're searching for a home that blends history with modern convenience.
THE EDIFY SHOW: HEARTIES TUESDAY (Super Channel Heart & Home) 8:00pm
FINALLY CAUGHT (Super Channel Fuse) 8:05pm/9:00pm/10:00pm: Ford: Officer David Ford's life seemed perfect until his shocking death. Suspicion falls close to home, revealing secrets that challenge appearances. In Episode Two, Tokes: Reagan Tokes, a student, disappears, prompting an investigation; her case raises questions about parole and criminal justice. In Episode Three, Oxley: Ben Oxley's murder appears calculated, but the truth reveals an unexpected betrayal.
SON OF A CRITCH (CBC) 8:30pm: Mark invites Fox to a party with his grown-up theatre troupe where he frustrates her by acting like an adult; Dick is upset to find Mike Jr. dating his daughter.
TGL GOLF (SN360/SNEast/SNOntario) 7:00pm: The Bay Golf Club vs. Jupiter Links
SMALL ACHIEVABLE GOALS (CBC) 9:00pm (SEASON PREMIERE): Julie gets passed over for a promotion and discovers she's in menopause; Kris's first day at The Podcast Folx is complicated by an unexpected period, a new co-host, and a hostile new producer: Julie.
HIGHWAY THRU HELL (USA Network Canada) 9:00pm: Rob and Kyle navigate tight spaces around a tractor-trailer on Highway 97; Cary uses his late grandfather's old wrecker to rescue a trail worker's equipment; Jamie is impressed by his twin daughter's skills while recovering a car on a snowy backroad.
OUTRAGEOUS HOMES (Home Network) 9:00pm (SERIES PREMIERE): Laurence Llewelyn-Bowen visits properties across the UK with wild, wonderful and outrageous domestic decor to discover why these homeowners dare to be different with their designs and how they did it.
HALIFAX COMEDY FESTIVAL (CBC) 9:30pm (SEASON PREMIERE): Performances by Orny Adams, Graham Kay, Charles Haycock, Joze Piranian, Ava Val, Rob Pue, Vicky Mullaley, Ashwyn Singh, and Andrew Packer.
#cdntv#cancon#canadian tv#canadian tv listings#one dish one spoon#this hour has 22 minutes#hudson & rex#find my country house canada#son of a critch#small achievable goals#highway thru hell#halifax comedy festival#mlb baseball#nba basketball#nhl hockey#golf
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TOUCH OF PINK (2004) dir. Ian Iqbal Rashid Alim is an Indo-Canadian man currently living in London in order to get away from his muslim widowed mother Nuru's critical eye. In his new home, Alim is free to live openly as a homosexual, of which his mother is not aware, and is in a loving relationship with his live-in British boyfriend, Giles. To navigate through his complicated life, Alim uses the 'spirit of Cary Grant' as his confidante and advisor. Feeling like her life is missing a daughter-in-law as her sister prepares for her son's "perfect" wedding, Nuru decides to reconnect with Alim in London. Not yet ready to tell his mother of either his boyfriend or his gayness, Alim, with Giles' support, hides any aspect of this fact for Nuru's visit, but as Giles is tested one turn after another during Nuru's visit, both Alim and Nuru begin to understand what is truly important in their lives. (link in title)
#lgbt cinema#gay cinema#touch of pink#canadian cinema#kyle maclachlan#lgbt#gay#canada#lgbt movie#gay movies#canadian movies#lgbt film#gay film#canadian film#lgbt media#gay media#queer cinema#cary grant#jimi mistry#kris holden-ried#suleka mathew#2000s#00s#2004#00s movies#00s film#2000s cinema#2000s films
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Planet of the Apes (2001)
In today's review, I wont to make a monkey out of you! As I attempt a #positive review of the 2001 remake of the 60s classic Planet of the Apes #MarkWahlberg #TimRoth #HelenaBonhamCarter #MichaelClarkeDuncan #KrisKristofferson #EstellaWarren #PaulGiamatti
It is said that as a species we are devolving into a more ignorant, violent, and generally worse version than our forbears. Even the hit music group, Devo, made it their defining mission statement for their band, and the world of cinema has certainly played with the idea. In 1968, a film shocked audiences by showing this devolution on a planetary scale, and In 2001, Tim Burton took to adapting…

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#2001#Cary-Hiroyuki Tagawa#Erick Avari#Estella Warren#Evan Parke#film#films#Glenn Shadix#Helena Bonham Carter#Kris Kristofferson#Lisa Marie#Luke Eberl#Mark Wahlberg#Michael Clarke Duncan#Movies#Paul Giamatti#positive#review#Sci-Fi#Tim Roth
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