Florence Nightingale, first practicing nurse epidemiologist. Developed the first organized program for training nurses, the Nightingale Training School for Nurses (St. Thomas' Hospital, London). Established the first health-maintenance-and-restoration-based nursing philosophy. Known as the "lady with the lamp" during the Crimean War (1853) where she volunteered, traveling the battlefield hospitals nightly to treat the wounded.
Clara Barton, founder of the American Red Cross (1881). She risked her life provided self-taught nursing aid to wounded soldiers on the battlefields during The Civil War (1860-1965), and became referred to as the "Angel of the Battlefield". One of the first women to work for the federal government, she made the Office of Missing Soldiers to aid in the reunion of more than 20,000 soldiers with their families. While providing aid during the Franco-Prussian War (1869), the Red Cross movement was first brought to her attention, inspiring her to bring the movement to America.
Dorothea Lynde Dix, an advocate of indigenous people and the mentally ill. She visited multiple mental institution, reporting her findings and advocated for better managed institutions, eventually establishing asylums of her own. During The Civil War (1860-1865), she aided the Union army by recruiting more than 3,000 nurses and was designated as the Superintendent of Army Nurses. She was known and respected for providing aid to the wounded soldiers from both Confederate and Union sides.
Mary Ann Ball, aka Mother Bickerdyke. She was a hospital administrator for the Union soldiers during The Civil War (1860-1865), regulating supplies and provision for the troops. Referred to as one of the best "generals" during the war for her efforts and organizations of military hospitals, following the war she remained an advocate for veterans - becoming an attorney for those who faced legal issues. 300 hospitals were built to aid the wounded over 19 different battlefields from her involvement.
Harriet Tubman, provided safe passage for slaves during the Underground Railroad movement. Known as the "Moses" of her people, her actions resulted in more than 300 slaves being lead to freedom. She provided nursing aide to the Union forces during The Civil War (1862-1865). Following the war, she played in active role in causes including the Womens Suffrage, and created the "Harriet Tubman Home for Indigent Aged Negroes" where orphans and the elderly could be taken in and care for.
Mary Mahoney, brought awareness to the cultural and racial diversity in nursing, emphasizing respect and the inclusion of all in the profession. The first African-American to receive an official education for the nursing profession (New England Hospital for Women and Children, Boston - 1874). She became the first African-American member of what is now referred to as the American Nurses Association, and helped start up the National Association for Colored Graduate Nurses in 1908.
Isabel Hampton Robb, a large influence in the advancement of the nursing social status in society. She influenced the system of nursing education by implementing a grading policy in the program to improve the quality of the students graduating from the program. She authored the comprehensive and foundational text, Nursing: Its Principles and Practice (1893), and helped to standardize the nursing education all around. She served as president of both the National League for Nursing Education and what is now referred to as the American Nurses Association.
Lillian Wald, opened the Henry Street Settlement (1893) with her fellow nurse graduate, Mary Maud Brewster. Addressed the health needs of poor immigrant families residing in tenements of New York City's Lower East Side. Coined the term "public health nurse", she fought for public health care, women's rights, and children's rights. Her and Mary Brewster started the Visiting Nursing Service of New York. During her work at the Henry Street Settlement, she established one of the earlier playgrounds and aided in paying salary to the first Public School Nurses in NYC. She had a hand in starting up the United States Children's Bureau, the National Child Labor Committee, and the National Women's Trade Union League.
Mary Adelaide Nuting, known for becoming the first nursing professor in 1906 (Columbia Teachers College), and assisted in getting nursing education in Universities across the states. She attended the first nursing training following Florence Nightingale's inflence (John Hopkins Hospital Training School - 1889). Throughout her advancement in the nursing profession working at the school, she assisted in advancing the program - brought in scholarships and on-the-field experience; her work influencing other Universities create and better their own nursing programs. Founder of the American Journal of Nursing (1900), she also became the first registered nurse in the state of Maryland. Several of her authored and coauthored books are still implemented today in nursing programs throughout the nation.
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For the imaginary fic meme...These Foolish Things (Remind Me of You) + dealer's choice for the pairing? Please and thank you <3
from the inexplicable Prohibition AU for Customs & Duties that I'll never let die:
It wasn’t fair, how she was turning traitor on herself – as subtle as Mary had been at sixteen, thinking her stockinged feet after midnight couldn’t be heard on the stair, Nellie Treat’s thoughts were sneaking out. She noticed the green-and-orange packages of Lucky Strikes where she never had before, half-turned in the street when she heard a voice without the familiar Boston ways of speaking, felt – something – in the half-moment between realizing Aunt B had visitors and meeting Maude Colville or Ginny Brewster or any other friend. It was almost never him.
It was a new kind of disappointment: a spark that had no purpose, a jab about the weather without an audience, she’d even begun smiling to think it was –
Well. She didn’t like it.
Send me a character/a pairing and a title to get five lines of an imaginary fic!
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Here's the list of the characters I used :
- Queen Victoria (Victoria)
-Princess Jasmine (Aladdin)
- Isabella I of Castille (Isabel)
- Elizabeth of York (TWP)
- Elizabeth I (Elizabeth; Mary, Queen of Scots; Elizabeth: The Golden Age; Reign)
- Ankhesenamun (Tut)
- Anne of Austria (The Musketeers)
- Mary, Queen of Scots (Reign; Mary Queen of Scots)
- Lagertha (Vikings) - Isabella of Valois (The Hollow Crown)
- Elizabeth Woodville (TWQ)
- Mary I of England (The Tudors)
- Catherine of Aragon (The Spanish Princess)
- Æthelflæd, Lady of the Mercians (The Last Kingdom)
- Morgana Pendragon (Merlin)
- Daenerys Targaryen (GOT) - Anne Boleyn (The Tudors)
- Gisla (Vikings) - Empress Maud (Pillars of the Earth)
- Kösem Sultan (Magnificent Century: Kösem)
- Catarina de Lurton (Dsor) - Empress Ki (Empress Ki)
- Queen Ravenna (Snow White & The Huntsman: Winter’s War; Snow White & the Huntsman)
- Elizabeth II (The Crown)
- Hürrem Sultan (Magnificent Century)
- Caroline Matilda of Great Britain (A Royal Affair)
- Marie Antoinette (Marie Antoinette)
- Georgiana Cavendish (The Duchess)
- Catherine the Great (Ekaterina)
- Cersei Lannister (GOT)
- Zhen Huan (Empresses in the Palace)
- Queen Gwen (Merlin)
- Sansa Stark (GOT)
- Mary II of England (Anna Brewster from Versailles)
- Isabella of France (World Without End)
- Marie de Guise (Elizabeth)
- Dido Elizabeth Belle (Belle)
- Anne Neville (TWQ)
- Wu Zetian (The Empress of China)
---------------------------------------------------------------
Song: Dynasty
Artist: Rina Sawayama
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#multiqueens #rinasawayama #dynasty #pop #music #fanvidfeed #viddingisart #multifandom
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A Second Decade of Movies
Ten years ago on Facebook, I compiled a list of every movie I watched, in order, from the first decade of the network’s existence. Now, here’s part two, covering the years 2010-2019. There are 754 titles below, though some are repeat viewings. The movie I watched the most? Harold Lloyd in “The Freshman.” My favorite movie from the last decade? “The Tree of Life.”
But I began the 2010s with James Cameron’s mega-hit “Avatar.” I’ll go on record saying the movie is still enjoyable ten years later, as I watched it again in 2019 with my kids to prep for visiting the World of Pandora at Disney’s Animal Kingdom. But--I also agree with those who say there’s little remembered from the film in the culture today. Can you name the stars? Recount the plot in detail? Mostly what we remember from the film is the spectacle of it all, game-changing when it was released in 2009.
At any rate, enjoy the list below! If a title is hotlinked, it will take you to an essay, interview, or related coverage on the film by yours truly.
1. Avatar
2. I Walked With A Zombie
3. The Paradine Case
4. Whip It
5. The Body Snatcher
6. Coraline
7. Everybody’s Fine
8. The Blind Side
9. The Hurt Locker
10. Citizen Architect
11. Fantastic Mr. Fox
12. Dance With the One
13. The Happy Poet
14. When I Rise
15. Mr. Nice
16. Lemmy
17. Haynesville
18. Rashomon
19. Cabin in the Sky
20. Toy Story 2
21. Being There
22. Modern Times
23. Iron Monkey
24. Kiki’s Delivery Service
25. Alice In Wonderland
26. WALL·E
27. Goldfinger
28. A Fistful of Dollars
29. The Red Shoes
30. M. Hulot’s Holiday
31. When In Rome
32. Toy Story 3
33. The Godfather
34. White Heat
35. The Girl on the Train
36. Mary Poppins
37. Kapò
38. Dr. Strangelove
39. White Dog
40. Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home
41. Scoop
42. Katyn
43. Metropolis
44. Days of Heaven
45. Shane
46. Ramona and Beezus
47. Duck Soup
48. Pillow Talk
49. Monte Carlo
50. Persona
51. The Powderkids
52. Machete
53. THX 1138
54. Ran
55. Fantasia 2000
56. Contempt
57. The Big Red One
58. Mid-August Lunch
59. McCabe & Mrs. Miller
60. Casablanca
61. The Last Song
62. Close Encounters of the Third Kind
63. Sherlock, Jr.
64. The Thin Red Line
65. Modern Times
66. Fantasia
67. Mon Oncle
68. Stagecoach
69. Hallelujah
70. Mademoiselle Chambon
71. Double Take
72. Black Swan
73. Tangled
74. The King’s Speech
75. TRON: Legacy
76. A Safe Place
77. The King of Marvin Gardens
78. Wings of Desire
79. Head
80. The Social Network
81. Drive, He Said
82. The Fighter
83. Gold Diggers in Paris
84. The Gay Divorcee
85. The Love Parade
86. 127 Hours
87. Never Let Me Go
88. Forrest Gump
89. A Film Unfinished
90. How To Train Your Dragon
91. Modern Times
92. Malcolm X
93. When I Rise
94. Inception
95. The Kids Are All Right
96. A Time For Drunken Horses
97. Our Hospitality
98. The Ghost and Mrs. Muir
99. The Mikado
100. Something Ventured
101. Five Time Champion
102. Natural Selection
103. Kumare
104. F#$k My Life
105. Hesher
106. Small, Beautifully Moving Parts
107. Win Win
108. Beats of Freedom
109. Topsy-Turvy
110. Taken By Storm
111. I Am a Fugitive From a Chain Gang
112. Army of Shadows
113. The Life of Emile Zola
114. Rio
115. East of Eden
116. The Drummond Will
117. Cooper
118. Marriage Italian Style
119. Yesterday, Today and Tomorrow
120. Sunflower
121. Salt of This Sea
122. Casablanca
123. The Happy Thieves
124. The Art of Getting By
125. Patty Hearst
126. Breathless
127. The Tree of Life
128. Nora’s Will
129. Mr. Popper’s Penguins
130. My Man Godfrey
131. The Muppet Movie
132. Back to the Future
133. Back to the Future Part II
134. Back to the Future Part III
135. Rear Window
136. Q: The Winged Serpent
137. Cars 2
138. The Godfather Part II
139. Super 8
140. Dazed and Confused
141. All Night Long
142. The Tree of Life
143. Winnie the Pooh
144. M. Hulot’s Holiday
145. Snow Flower and the Secret Fan
146. A Thousand Clowns
147. Tokyo Story
148. The Smurfs
149. The League of Gentlemen
150. Malcolm X (1972)
151. Late Spring
152. Ladies & Gentlemen the Rolling Stones
153. The Princess Bride
154. Hud
155. The Boys
156. Poetry
157. Waking Sleeping Beauty
158. Martha Marcy May Marlene
159. Seduced and Abandoned
160. The Nightmare Before Christmas
161. The Third Man
162. Dressed To Kill
163. Echotone
164. Straw Dogs (1971)
165. Sapphire
166. Broken Embraces
167. The Wild One
168. La Belle et la Bête
169. The Tree of Life
170. Beauty and the Beast
171. Killer’s Kiss
172. The Producers
173. Camille (1921)
174. She’s Gotta Have It
175. La Belle et la Bête
176. The Descendants
177. Hugo
178. The Muppets
179. Another Earth
180. Rise of the Planet of the Apes
181. Alvin & the Chipmunks: Chipwrecked
182. The Artist
183. Arthur Christmas
184. The Curious Case of Benjamin Button
185. Midnight in Paris
186. War Horse
187. The Whistleblower
188. The Great Waltz
189. Manhattan
190. Annie Hall
191. The Help
192. Moneyball
193. Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close
194. Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, Part 2
195. The Lorax
196. Kid-Thing
197. Zodiac
198. Hunky Dory
199. Wolf
200. Tchoupitoulas
201. 21 Jump Street
202. Crulic: The Path to Beyond
203. The Imposter
204. The Descendants
205. Victim
206. Revenge of the Electric Car
207. We Bought a Zoo
208. Titanic (3D)
209. Shame
210. The Jazz Singer
211. For Greater Glory
212. Lola Versus
213. The Avengers
214. Prometheus
215. Citizen Kane
216. Brave
217. Rio Bravo
218. The Black Hole
219. Thunder Soul
220. The Gold Rush
221. Children of Paradise
222. The Natural
223. An American in Paris
224. North By Northwest
225. Harold and Maude
226. Killer Joe
227. Gilda
228. Miss Bala
229. Bride of Frankenstein
230. The Graduate
231. Madagascar 3
232. Close Encounters of the Third Kind
233. Star Trek VI: The Final Frontier
234. TRON: Legacy
235. Rise of the Guardians
236. Lincoln
237. Finding Nemo
238. Hitchcock
239. The Illusionist
240. Les Misérables
241. A Christmas Story
242. Kit Kittredge: An American Girl
243. Silver Linings Playbook
244. The Apple Dumpling Gang
245. Zero Dark Thirty
246. Wreck-It Ralph
247. On the Waterfront
248. The Life of Pi
249. Argo
250. Bag It
251. Loves Her Gun
252. Good Night
253. Mud
254. Museum Hours
255. This Is Where We Live
256. Unreal Dream: The Michael Morton Story
257. Sake-Bomb
258. The Girl
259. Alice Doesn’t Live Here Anymore
260. Return to the Hiding Place
261. The Purple Rose of Cairo
262. To The Wonder
263. Epic
264. There Will Be Blood
265. Star Trek Into Darkness
266. Lawrence of Arabia
267. The Birds
268. Star Trek: First Contact
269. Barry Lyndon
270. Star Wars: A New Hope
271. Saboteur
272. Hell’s House
273. Of Human Bondage
274. The Flowers of St. Francis
275. Monsters University
276. Old Joy
277. Out of Africa
278. Safety Last!
279. The Killing
280. A Night To Remember
281. Singin’ in the Rain
282. Sherlock, Jr.
283. The Smurfs 2
284. Planes
285. Sicko
286. Brief Encounter
287. Meek’s Cutoff
288. Wendy and Lucy
289. Side By Side
290. A.I. Artificial Intelligence
291. Cloudy With A Chance of Meatballs 2
292. Powaqqatsi
293. Machete Kills
294. Star Wars: The Empire Strikes Back
295. The Royal Tenenbaums
296. Moonrise Kingdom
297. Bottle Rocket
298. The Life Aquatic With Steve Zissou
299. The Exorcist
300. The Darjeeling Limited
301. Dreamgirls
302. Dallas Buyers Club
303. Brewster McCloud
304. Cruising
305. City Lights
306. Saving Mr. Banks
307. Frozen
308. Lili
309. The Gold Rush
310. Ninotchka
311. 12 Angry Men
312. Lone Survivor
313. Her
314. The Nut Job
315. Cool It
316. American Hustle
317. Money and Medicine
318. Life Itself
319. The X From Outer Space
320. Captain Phillips
321. A Cat in Paris
322. Le Ciel est à Vous
323. Las Marthas
324. Rezeta
325.�� La Jaola de Oro
326. Willie Wonka and the Chocolate Factory
327. Clue
328. Gravity
329. Nebraska
330. The Lego Movie
331. Up
332. Liv & Ingmar
333. Before Midnight
334. Two Weeks in Another Town
335. Rio 2
336. All Is Lost
337. The Great Mouse Detective
338. The Adventures of Robin Hood
339. Stephen Tobolowsky’s Birthday Party
340. Belle
341. Bottled Up: The Battle Over Dublin Dr Pepper
342. My Dinner With Andre
343. Harry Dean Stanton Partly Fiction
344. The Lego Movie
345. Bears
346. The Nightmare Before Christmas
347. Contempt
348. How To Train Your Dragon 2
349. Vertigo
350. Gojira
351. The Wizard of Oz
352. 12 Angry Men
353. A Hard Day’s Night
354. Network
355. Picnic At Hanging Rock
356. Get On Up
357. E.T. The Extra-Terrestrial
358. The Drop
359. The Match Factory Girl
360. Dawn of the Planet of the Apes
361. Superman
362. Horse Feathers
363. I Married A Witch
364. The Grand Budapest Hotel
365. Il Sorpasso
366. Conde Drácula
367. Boyhood
368. Fun and Fancy Free
369. The Freshman (1925)
370. Intimidation
371. I Am Love
372. Fantastic Mr. Fox
373. The Freshman (1925)
374. The Freshman (1925)
375. Safe
376. Invitation to the Dance
377. Captain America: The Winter Soldier
378. Bicycle Thieves
379. Sherlock, Jr.
380. Whiplash
381. Ida
382. Tron
383. Return of the Jedi
384. Petting Zoo
385. Western
386. Cinderella (2015)
387. Lamb
388. Babysitter
389. The Thin Blue Line
390. Vernon, Florida
391. Gates of Heaven
392. Purple Rain
393. Sullivan’s Travels
394. Star Wars: Episode I
395. Safety Last!
396. Jesus Christ Superstar
397. Anatomy of a Murder
398. Mary Poppins
399. Inside Out
400. Love & Mercy
401. A Star Is Born (1954)
402. The Princess and the Frog
403. The Freshman (1925)
404. Zazie dans la Métro
405. The Treasure of the Sierra Madre
406. Lilo & Stitch
407. Monkey Kingdom
408. Foreign Correspondent
409. The Princess Bride
410. Tomorrowland
411. Rome: Open City
412. A Hard Day’s Night
413. Star Trek: Generations
414. The Roaring Twenties
415. Following the Ninth
416. Samantha: An American Girl Holiday
417. He Named Me Malala
418. Wings of Life
419. Singin’ in the Rain
420. The Peanuts Movie
421. Spotlight
422. The Good Dinosaur
423. Fantasia 2000
424. Reel Injun
425. It Happened One Night
426. Star Wars: The Force Awakens
427. Star Wars: Episode II
428. Concussion
429. One Hour With You
430. Enchanted
431. A Room With A View
432. The Hateful Eight
433. Speedy
434. Time Out of Mind
435. Cinderella (2015)
436. The Lady Vanishes
437. Naqoyqatsi
438. Suzanne’s Career
439. Bear Country
440. The 100 Year-Old Man Who Climbed Out the Window…
441. Bandidas
442. Star Wars: The Force Awakens
443. Virtuosity
444. The Big Short
445. Two Days, One Night
446. The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, The Witch and the Wardrobe
447. Bridge of Spies
448. Brooklyn
449. Michael Jackson From Motown To Off The Wall
450. Tower
451. Transpecos
452. Last Night at the Alamo
453. Claire In Motion
454. Zootopia
455. Bodyguard
456. W.
457. The Adventures of Pepper and Paula
458. The Jungle Book (2016)
459. Star Wars: The Force Awakens
460. Captain America: Civil War
461. What About Bob?
462. Love & Friendship
463. Dial M For Murder
464. Garfield
465. Ben-Hur
466. To Kill A Mockingbird
467. Citizenfour
468. Finding Dory
469. Ant-Man
470. The Quiet Man
471. The Peanuts Movie
472. The BFG
473. My Dinner With Andre
474. Children of Men
475. The Last Temptation of Christ
476. The Secret Life of Pets
477. Chimes At Midnight
478. Brewed in the 210
479. Saturday Night Fever
480. The New World
481. Who Framed Roger Rabbit
482. Walt & El Grupo
483. Saludos Amigos
484. The Jungle Book (2016)
485. The Last Picture Show
486. Beetlejuice
487. The King and I
488. Ride in the Whirlwind
489. Dracula
490. The Angry Birds Movie
491. The Sword in the Stone
492. Queen of Katwe
493. The Adventures of Ichabod and Mr. Toad
494. Beetlejuice
495. Dracula
496. Arrival
497. Tron: Legacy
498. Akira Kurosawa’s Dreams
499. Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them
500. Boomerang (1947)
501. Safety Last!
502. South of the Border
503. Honey, I Shrunk The Kids
504. Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them
505. Jiro Dreams of Sushi
506. Rogue One
507. Moana
508. Once
509. Redes
510. Max Dugan Returns
511. Amadeus
512. The New World
513. 13th
514. Star Trek III: The Search for Spock
515. Yarn
516. Paddington
517. Hidden Figures
518. Doctor Strange
519. The Lego Batman Movie
520. Clue
521. The Honor Farm
522. Mr. Roosevelt
523. La Barracuda
524. The Ballad of Lefty Brown
525. Beauty and the Beast (2017)
526. Cat People
527. The Adventures of Tintin
528. The Freshman (1925)
529. The Artist
530. Day for Night
531. Stranger on the Third Floor
532. Twentieth Century
533. Modern Times
534. Alien: Covenant
535. Diary of a Wimpy Kid: The Long Haul
536. Norman
537. Casablanca
538. Captain Underpants: The First Epic Movie
539. Alvin & the Chipmunks: Road Chip
540. The Man Who Knew Too Much
541. Cars 3
542. The Sugarland Express
543. Redes
544. School of Rock
545. Duck Soup
546. Cat People
547. Tower
548. War for the Planet of the Apes
549. Pete’s Dragon (2016)
550. Richard Linklater: Dream Is Destiny
551. The Double Life of Veronique
552. Dunkirk
553. The Adventures of Robin Hood
554. Something Wicked This Way Comes
555. Young Frankenstein
556. Duck Soup
557. Tampopo
558. Beggars of Life
559. Tender Mercies
560. The Princess and the Frog
561. Rogue One
562. Steve Jobs
563. Despicable Me 3
564. Close Encounters of the Third Kind
565. Koyaanisqatsi
566. Honeysuckle Rose
567. Wonder Woman
568. Creed
569. North By Northwest
570. Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets
571. The Nightmare Before Christmas
572. Altered States
573. Dealt
574. Star Wars: The Force Awakens
575. My Cousin Rachel (2017)
576. Get Out
577. Planet of the Apes (1968)
578. Tomorrowland
579. Justice League
580. The Disaster Artist
581. Thor: Ragnarok
582. Beneath the Planet of the Apes
583. Twin Peaks: Fire Walk With Me
584. The Philadelphia Story
585. Escape From the Planet of the Apes
586. Ferdinand
587. Star Wars: The Last Jedi
588. Darkest Hour
589. Coco
590. Dunkirk
591. Phantom Thread
592. Paddington 2
593. Arrival
594. Spider-Man: Homecoming
595. Conquest of the Planet of the Apes
596. Our Souls at Night
597. Mudbound
598. The Post
599. Germany Year Zero
600. Trading Places
601. The Shape of Water
602. Black Panther
603. Logan
604. The Simpsons Movie
605. Wings
606. Miss Congeniality
607. Never Cry Wolf
608. Something Wicked This Way Comes
609. Pride and Prejudice (2005)
610. Moana
611. Ready Player One
612. Viva Max
613. Red River
614. Bridget Jones’s Baby
615. Avengers: Infinity War
616. The Sugarland Express
617. Selena
618. Peaceful Warrior
619. Spider-Man 2
620. Stagecoach
621. The Godfather, Part III
622. Solo: A Star Wars Story
623. Jaws
624. Peter Pan
625. The Day the Earth Stood Still
626. Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs
627. Won’t You Be My Neighbor?
628. Daughters of the Dust
629. Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan
630. Time Bandits
631. Incredibles 2
632. Avatar
633. On the Waterfront
634. Forks Over Knives
635. It Happened One Night
636. Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl
637. Ant-Man and the Wasp
638. A Quiet Place
639. Full Metal Jacket
640. The Thin Blue Line
641. The Ballad of Gregorio Cortez
642. Teen Titans Go! To The Movies
643. The Reluctant Dragon
644. Tokyo Story
645. The Karate Kid (1984)
646. Blazing Saddles
647. The Black Cauldron
648. Back to the Future
649. 2001: A Space Odyssey
650. Blaze
651. In Old Arizona
652. Crazy Rich Asians
653. Ocean’s 8
654. Star Wars: A New Hope
655. The Tree of Life (Extended Cut)
656. First Man
657. Food, Inc.
658. Napoleon Dynamite
659. Halloween (2018)
660. Christopher Robin
661. Battle for the Planet of the Apes
662. Paris, Je t’aime
663. Breakfast at Tiffany’s
664. Fantastic Beasts: The Crimes of Grindelwald
665. Back to the Future, Part II
666. Koyaanisqatsi
667. Creed II
668. True Stories
669. Ralph Breaks the Internet
670. Spider-Man Into the Spider-Verse
671. The Last Command
672. Mary Poppins Returns
673. The Primary Instinct
674. Rise of the Planet of the Apes
675. An Inconvenient Truth
676. A Christmas Story
677. BlacKkKlansman
678. Annihilation
679. A Star Is Born (2018)
680. That’s Entertainment, Part 2
681. Close Encounters of the Third Kind
682. Teen Titans Go! To The Movies
683. Back to the Future, Part III
684. Stranger Than Paradise
685. On the Basis of Sex
686. Bohemian Rhapsody
687. The Favourite
688. First Reformed
689. Dawn of the Planet of the Apes
690. Cold War
691. They Shall Not Grow Old
692. The Iron Orchard
693. Free Solo
694. Captain Marvel
695. The Little Mermaid
696. Pirates of the Caribbean: At World’s End
697. �� Wasted! The Story of Food Waste
698. Green Book
699. La Bamba
700. Running for Good
701. Us
702. War for the Planet of the Apes
703. I, Tonya
704. Avengers: Endgame
705. Amazing Grace (2019)
706. Shazam!
707. Testament
708. Vice
709. Raiders of the Lost Ark
710. The Umbrellas of Cherbourg
711. Planet of the Apes (2001)
712. Aladdin (2019)
713. The Ballad of Gregorio Cortez
714. Detour
715. The Hitch-Hiker
716. The Border
717. Toy Story 4
718. Flight
719. Do the Right Thing
720. Midnight Cowboy
721. Spider Man: Far From Home
722. Some Like It Hot
723. Strangers on a Train
724. Red Hook Summer
725. All That Heaven Allows
726. Cowspiracy
727. Once Upon a Time… in Hollywood
728. Zodiac
729. Wings of Desire
730. The Blues Brothers
731. The Farewell
732. Super Size Me
733. Safety Last!
734. Hustlers
735. Raiders of the Lost Ark
736. The Game Changers
737. Downton Abbey
738. The Body Snatcher
739. The Lion King (2019)
740. Ad Astra
741. The Terminator
742. The Irishman
743. Frozen II
744. Our Dancing Daughters
745. The Castaway Cowboy
746. The Thin Man
747. Linda Ronstadt: The Sound of My Voice
748. Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker
749. Doctor Sleep
750. A Hidden Life
751. Bombshell
752. Fed Up
753. Miracle on 34th Street
754. Brittany Runs a Marathon
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Neve Campbell Biography, age, weight, height, movies, husband, body measurement, net worth
Neve Campbell Biography, age, weight, height, movies, husband, body measurement, net worth. Neve Campbell is a Canadian actress. She was born in Guelph, Ontario, Canada on October 3, 1973. She is known for her her role as Sidney Prescott in the horror film series Scream. She appeared in Canadian Televisions including, Catwalk (1992), before she played Julia Salinger in the American drama series Party of Five (1994–2000).
Neve Campbell Biography, age, weight, height, movies, husband, body measurement, net worth
Birthday: October 3, 1973
Nationality: Canadian
Famous: Actresses Canadian Women
Also Known As: Neve Adrianne Campbel
Sun Sign: Libra
Age: 44 Years
Born In: Guelph, Ontario, Canada
Famous As: Actress
Height: 1.70 M
Spouse/Ex-: Jeff Colt (M. 1995–1998), John Light (M. 2007–2011)
Father: Gerry Campbell
Mother: Marnie Campbell
Siblings: Christian Campbell
Children: Caspian Feild
Religion: Catholicism
Neve Campbell Body Measurement
Neve Campbell weight: 125 lbs (56.7 kg)
Neve Campbell height: 5' 5½" (166 cm)
Neve Campbell body measurements: 34B-26-35 in
Neve Campbell bra size / breast size: 34B
Neve Campbell Movies
Year
Title
Role
Notes
1993
The Dark
Officer Jesse Donovan
1994
Paint Cans
Tristesse
1994
The Passion of John Ruskin
Effie Gray
Short film
1996
Love Child
Deidre
1996
The Craft
Bonnie Harper
1996
Scream
Sidney Prescott
1997
Scream 2
Sidney Prescott
1998
Wild Things
Suzie Marie Toller
1998
54
Julie Black
1998
Hairshirt
Renée Weber
1998
The Lion King II: Simba's Pride
Kiara (voice)
Direct-to-video
1999
Three to Tango
Amy Post
2000
Drowning Mona
Ellen Rash
2000
Panic
Sarah Cassidy
2000
Scream 3
Sidney Prescott
2002
Investigating Sex
Alice
2003
Lost Junction
Missy Lofton
2003
The Company
Loretta "Ry" Ryan
2003
Blind Horizon
Chloe Richards
2004
When Will I Be Loved
Vera Barrie
2004
Churchill: The Hollywood Years
Princess Elizabeth
2006
Relative Strangers
Ellen Minola
2007
Partition
Margaret Stilwell
2007
I Really Hate My Job
Abi
2007
Closing the Ring
Marie
2008
Agent Crush
Cassie (voice)
2011
Scream 4
Sidney Prescott
2011
The Glass Man
Julie Pyrite
2015
Walter
Allie
2018
Skyscraper
Sarah Sawyer
2018
Hot Air
Valerie Gannon
Neve Campbell Televisions
Year
Title
Role
Notes
1991
My Secret Identity
Student
Uncredited
Episode: "Pirate Radio"
1992
The Kids in the Hall
Laura Capelli
Episode: #3.13
1992
Catwalk
Daisy McKenzie
4 episodes
1994
I Know My Son is Alive
Beth
Television film
1994
The Forget-Me-Not Murders
Jess Foy
Television film
1994
Are You Afraid of the Dark?
Nonnie Walker
Episode: "Tale of the Dangerous Soup"
1994
Kung Fu: The Legend Continues
Trish Collins
Episode: "Kundela"
1994
Aventures dans le Grand Nord
Nepeese
Episode: "Bari"
1994–2000
Party of Five
Julia Salinger
142 episodes
1995
MADtv
Julia Salinger
Episode: #1.6
1996
The Canterville Ghost
Virginia "Ginny" Otis
Television film
1997
Saturday Night Live
Host
Episode: "Neve Campbell/David Bowie"
2002
Last Call
Frances Kroll
Television film
2005
Reefer Madness
Miss Poppy
Television film
2007
Medium
Debra
3 episodes
2008
Burn Up
Holly
2 episodes
2009
The Philanthropist
Olivia Maidstone
8 episodes
2009
Sea Wolf
Maud Brewster
Miniseries
2009
The Simpsons
Cassandra (voice)
Episode: "Rednecks and Broomsticks"
2012
Titanic: Blood and Steel
Joanna
6 episodes
2012
Grey's Anatomy
Dr. Lizzie Shepherd
2 episodes
2013
An Amish Murder
Kate Burkholder
Television film
2014
Mad Men
Lee Cabot
Episode: "Time Zones"
2015
Welcome to Sweden
Diane
4 episodes
2015
Manhattan
Kitty Oppenheimer
2 episodes
2016–2017
House Of Cards
LeAnn Harvey
26 episodes
Read the full article
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#SitcomAPie
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Who’s The Bos..ton Cream Pie? Angelar! It’s #SitcomAPie on this week’s joke game! Here are some of the best on @HashtagRoundUp powered by @TheHashtagGame. Play our comedy hashtag twitter games every Wednesday at 11 am EST.
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#SitcomAPie was originally published on Weekly Humorist
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The Books That Made Me Who I Am
New Post has been published on https://kidsviral.info/the-books-that-made-me-who-i-am/
The Books That Made Me Who I Am
I am the product of endless books.
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Chris Ritter / BuzzFeed
Nearly every day, a friend or acquaintance tags me on Facebook, asking me to share a list of 10 books that have influenced me. Nearly every day, I read such lists from the same circle of friends and acquaintances. I understand the tidy pleasures provided by such an exercise, but in truth, I am not merely influenced by books. I could not limit a list of important books to a number or a neatly organized list. The list, whatever it might look like, would always be changing because I too am always changing. I am not influenced by books. Instead, I am shaped by them. I am made of flesh and bone and blood. I am also made of books.
The sweetest, most wide-eyed parts of me are made from the Little House on the Prairie books by Laura Ingalls Wilder. They were some of the first books I read, and as a young girl in Nebraska, I loved knowing there were interesting stories to be told about life on the plains. This is also where my imagination began to swell. I imagined making candy with snow and maple syrup. I could hear the timbre of Pa’s voice as he teased Half-Pint. I envied Mary’s grace under pressure. I loved Almanzo Wilder. I loved him fiercely, that country boy. When he began courting Laura, I imagined what it would be like to ride in his sleigh with him, my face chilled against the brisk winter air, the rest of me warmed beneath heavy blankets and the rushing blood of Almanzo next to me, the thrill of his hand in mine.
The sweetest, most wide-eyed parts of me are made from Anne of Green Gables and Anne of Avonlea, Lucy Maude Montgomery and Little Women, Louisa May Alcott.
I was a shy girl, but when I read, I was adventurous. Books made me bolder. I read stories, the titles of which I can no longer remember, about young girls embarking on thrilling adventures on wagon trains and fending for themselves, panning for gold. The Chronicles of Narnia made me believe I could slip into a wardrobe and emerge in a completely different world. Madeleine L’Engle’s A Wrinkle in Time helped me embrace my intelligence, showed me how I was not merely bound to this world, not at all. Charlie and the Chocolate Factory made me believe anything was possible if I allowed myself to believe.
With Forever and Are You There God? It’s Me, Margaret, Judy Blume held my hand as my body changed and my heart changed and I began to feel less like a girl and more like a young woman.
My yearning was stoked by Sweet Valley High. My yearning was stoked by the lives of Elizabeth and Jessica Wakefield, their seemingly perfect lives, how everyone loved them and wanted to be them. I was nothing like them, but I wanted to be them or I wanted to be in their golden circle. Through these stories, I understood, intimately, what it meant to be on the outside looking in, utterly unable to look away. I understood what it meant to be enthralled.
As I realized I would never be like those girls, I read The Outsiders and learned there was fierceness in not fitting in.
Boarding school intrigued me, so I read about The Girls of Canby Hall, all 33 books, and then I went to boarding school and it was nothing like The Girls of Canby Hall — but I was a girl from Nebraska, and Shelly Hyde, one of the main characters from the books, was a girl from Iowa. Even though I was a stranger in a strange land, something about boarding school was familiar. As has always been the case, I was not alone because I had so many stories making the inside of me.
Something terrible happened to me so I began to read voraciously about terrible things that happened to other women. This is where I learned gratitude when I did not think it would be possible. This is how I taught myself to believe I was lucky. In Perfect Victim, a young woman is kidnapped by a couple and held prisoner in a box beneath a bed for seven years. What she endures is unfathomable. I took no pleasure in reading this book but I found comfort in knowing our bodies and minds are built to endure. I read this book so often the spine is now white and softened, the pages yellowed with age and the ministrations of my tear-stained fingers.
Something terrible happened so I read Maya Angelou’s I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings. I learned that there was strength inside me if I could just hold on, if I could just find my way to reach my strongest place. I learned how to write what I could not speak, and how even if I could not use my voice, it was still there, waiting, waiting, waiting.
Something terrible happened and I needed a different way of being in my body. I read Stone Butch Blues by Leslie Feinberg and for a while, I was able to live in my own skin on my own terms. In the stories of Macho Sluts by Pat Califia I found swagger. I turned to ink and marked myself with a new skin. I was able to live in my own skin on my own terms.
Lo-li-ta. Lolita. Vladimir Nabokov. From a novel about a pedophile and his unnatural lust for a young girl, I stared down the ugliest parts of what people do to one another and saw the faint, unbearably compelling glimmer of humanity in that hideousness.
The sharpness of my tongue was keened by Edith Wharton and the wit of The Age of Innocence and The House of Mirth — novels about social graces and the burdens of class and caged hearts, how passion stifled only deepens.
I found irreverence and quiet anger and the ability to laugh at the unfairness of the world in How to Make Love to a Negro Without Getting Tired by Dany Laferrière, a writer with whom I share Haitian blood.
The most romantic parts of my heart flourished among the pages of Pride and Prejudice and A Room With a View. Zora Neale Hurston opened mine own eyes through Their Eyes Were Watching God, showing me love in a voice unlike any I had ever known.
My understanding of desire rose out of The Lover, Marguerite Duras, lush and sensual prose, the words thickly wanton. I closed my eyes and wished for the narrator’s prescient arrogance. I closed my eyes and lamented these lovers who could never truly be together, their impossible passion, sweaty bodies coming together in the salt and sweltering heat of Indochina. And in those words there was a line that has always, always stayed with me. “My memory of men is never lit up and illuminated like my memory of women.” My reading and writing have long been illuminated by the stories of women. I carry these stories with me.
Or my desire rises out of The Story of O by Pauline Réage, a novel about darkness and submission, of allowing yourself to be entirely subsumed by the want and will of another. In this book I learned how submission is terrifying and freeing, how submission allows you to be on the outside looking in on yourself until you lose yourself. The Story of O made me want to get lost in myself or someone else or both.
My empathy grew when I began to understand how vastly the world extended beyond what I thought I knew. I read Once Were Warriors, by Alan Duff — a novel about a Maori family in New Zealand struggling through violence and addiction and loving one another too hard. I read Rohinton Mistry’s A Fine Balance and understood the resilience of even the most abandoned among us. I read The House on Mango Street by Sandra Cisneros and The Women of Brewster Place by Gloria Naylor and Love Medicine by Louise Erdrich and Krik? Krak! by Edwidge Danticat and For Colored Girls Who Have Considered Suicide When The Rainbow is Enuf by Ntozake Shange and Passing by Nella Larsen and Giovanni’s Room by James Baldwin and this is a list that could not possibly end.
My writing ambition was sharpened by Margaret Atwood, The Handmaid’s Tale, an unapologetically political novel that reminds us of what it costs to be a woman in this world or the next. My ambition, that toward which I aspire to write, has long been guided by Toni Morrison, Beloved, and through her words, seeing how a novel can be mysterious and true, mythical and raw, how a novel can honor memory even when we want to look away or forget. My ambition has long been sharpened by Alice Walker, willing to tell the stories of black women without apology, willing to write politically without apology — Possessing the Secret of Joy, a haunting, gorgeous novel about female genital mutilation that keeps me transfixed and heartbroken and helpless each time I read it, because sometimes the only way to tell the truth is to tell a story.
Today my writing ambition, my heart, and my mind are expanded by my peers who are writing the books I read with breathless anticipation and envy: Normally Special by xTx, Silver Sparrow by Tayari Jones, The Empathy Exams by Leslie Jamison, Prelude to Bruise by Saeed Jones, The Book of Unknown Americans by Cristina Henriquez, Ugly Girls by Lindsay Hunter, Love Me Back by Merritt Tierce, Salsa Nocturna by Daniel José Older, A Map of Home by Randa Jarrar, Forgotten Country by Catherine Chung, Birds of a Lesser Paradise by Megan Mayhew Bergman. I take in these stories and become more of myself.
In all these books and in so many more, I find the most essential parts of myself. I become more myself. I learn what to hold most necessary when using my voice. I learn and continue to learn how to use my voice.
I am made of flesh and bone and blood. I am made of books. A list could not contain me.
***
Roxane Gay‘s writing has appeared or is forthcoming in Best American Mystery Stories 2014, Best American Short Stories 2012, Best Sex Writing 2012, A Public Space, McSweeney’s, Tin House, Oxford American, American Short Fiction, West Branch, Virginia Quarterly Review, NOON, the New York Times Book Review, Bookforum, Time, the Los Angeles Times, The Nation, The Rumpus, Salon, and many others. She is the co-editor of PANK. She is also the author of the books Ayiti, An Untamed State, Bad Feminist, and Hunger, forthcoming from Harper in 2016.
Read more: http://www.buzzfeed.com/roxanegay/i-am-made-of-books
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