#Peder Lund
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Terry Winters - Clocks and Clouds (12). 2012
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Eurovision 2004 - Number 4 - Autolove - "Bulletproof Heart"
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With a song from Melodifestivalen that seems to be as well remembered as this one, you'd expect me to have more biography and information about the band and their long career. Yet this is a one-off and even then, there appears to be some debate as to who exactly who Autolove were. However, I think in this case there is some resolution.
Starting with the song, Bulletproof Heart is a new wave/synthwave throw-back/throw-forward both harkening back to the early 1980s as well as anticipating bands like LaRoux by a clear half decade. It stands out by a mile amidst all the other Melfest entries. It's a pounding beat with sci-fi retrofuture synth noodling. The lyrics follow the conventions for any song with the word bulletproof in the title. Metaphors involving love and guns are de rigueur. The whole song is so to congruent with my musical palate I knew from the first time I heard it, it was going to be top ten.
There are two things against it. First is the pole-dancing, cabaret aesthetic - which I can understand but it needs way more choreography and connection to the song. Second is the lead-singer's voice. It is a little thin, airy, and lacks some power. Maybe this was illness, but who knows. Not only did Autolove not try again, but they never released another piece of music. This is their one and only outing.
The band are actually three people, two of who are not on stage. The two non-appearing members are song-writers and synth-programmers Gustave Lund and Peder Enrerot, both from the Ur-Swedish hip-hop group Just D from the early 90s. They were possibly Sweden's first rap group and used samples exclusively from Swedish music for their first two albums. Following on from introducing Swedish to hip hop, they took a bit of back seat in the mid-1990s, they'd both been involved in a few other projects such as Sverige, occasionally adopting noms de plume.
For their 2004 Melfest outing, they linked up with singer Ann Winsborn . She was having a big year in 2004, she was releasing her first singles under her own name, one of which became Poland's biggest hits of 2004. In her native Sweden though, she had not made an impact. Joining up with the Autolove project would appear to have been an attempt to break her home market.
There is a small amount of debate about whether the singer is Ann Winsborn though. She'd dyed her blonde hair black for this performance to fit with the aesthetic, and her live voice sound distinctly different to her recorded voice, which is all air-high and sugar-coated. This may have been her first performance live on Swedish TV in which case this might be a case of nerves. I'm fairly confident that this is her though as the next year, she released her second album and Bulletproof Heart was one of the tracks.
In reality, this failed to make it through the heat, ending up sixth of the eight songs. For Melfest fans it's one of those that stuck in the memory and does keep being brought up as a lost Melfest gem, in the 'what-could-have-been' file.
After this, all those involved seem to have left the music industry for a few years after 2005, but more recently all three of them have had another go. Just D reformed in 2015 and released more music. Ann made a short-lived comeback in 2020. For those who like to compare live with studio, here's the Ann Winsborn version of the song from her second album Pink Collar Crime.
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#esc#esc 2004#eurovision#eurovision song contest#istanbul#istanbul 2004#Youtube#national finals#Sweden#Melodifestivalen 2004#Autolove#Ann Winsborn#Just D#Gustave Lund#Peder Enrerot
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A dream dreamt, in a dreaming world is not really a dream... but a dream not dreamt is, Roni Horn, Peder Lund, Oslo
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Ok I hope you are ready for this mammoth. I am going to start off by telling you some cafes to visit. Eckers in Frogner is a really pretty and does nice coffee and food. Pust, which is just across the road from Majorstuen station is another cafe with a very cool atmsophere. As I have already said before if you are looking for a chain coffee shop I would pick Kaffebrenneriet. My favorite is the one by Nationaltheatre but you will probably want to go to the one from Skam which is on Skovveien. They do the best reasonably priced coffee and you must try the pastries. It is good to know you are staying in Gamle because then I will recommend a tiny brunch place called Kumi. It has the most beautiful interior and vegetarian food but I warn you it is on the pricier side. You absolutley must go to Hotel Bristol to get hot chocolate. Inside is absolutely breathtaking and has major dark academia vibes. This is quite popular so I would recommend booking a table in advance on their website. Do not let them fool you into getting two pots of hot chocolate, one is enough for two people to have two cups each. For places to eat, I would first recommend a burrito bar called Freddy Fuego. They have a vegetarian option and lots of options which are all delicious and not badly priced. For pizza go to Villa Paradiso, there are a few of these over the city. If you want a more general Italian restaurant I would try Olivia by the fjord. Great food but more expensive. If you like Japanese food I can tell you about a tiny, tucked away restaurant called Izakaya on Olavs Plass. If you just want to buy snacks or something to cook at your airbnb I can tell you again the cheapest supermarket by far is Kiwi. Now for the thrift shops! Oslo has some amazing thrift stores and Grünnerløkka is the place you want to be. You absoltuely have to go to Robot! This is the coolest thrift shop of all in my opinion. Lots of good finds and a huge shelf of second hand sunglasses. There's also Velouria and Good Vibes Vintage. UFF is worth a look in Løkka but they have a much bigger, I think better store across the city in Prinsens Gate you should check out. The best budget friendly thrift store is Fretex. They are linked with the Salvation Army and you can get items as low as 50nok, which I looked up is about the equivilant of 7 aussie dollars. Next I've got a list of other things nice things you might like to do if you have the time. I saw you like art from your blog so I thought I'd recommend you some galleries. I mentioned before the National Gallery and Museum are free on Thursdays and the Munch Museum is free on Wednesdays from 6pm to 9pm. Astrup Fearnley is the only one without a free day. But I also have some smaller, lesser known galleries for you. It is worth checking out whether Peder Lund, Galleri Riis or Galleri Golsa have any exhibitons on while you are there. They are all free and very small, only a few rooms each. Galleri Golsa seems confusing to find but it is opposite a gym carpark and the door is heavy to open but I promise you're in the right place. They are well worth visitng. I would also recommend visiting a huge lake outside the city called Songsvaan. I know it looks far on a map but it only takes 20 minutes on one line and is still within your zone 1 ticket. There is something so magical about walking round the lake on a winter evening with it frozen over and snow covering the trees. They even have a little cafe. You will notice the increase in cold so you definitely want to your wool innersoles and tights under trousers here, I would recommend that if you venture out of the city anywhere or when it gets dark. If you like hiking and it's not too icy walk up Grefsenkollen and you will get a view over the entire city. In my opinion this is better than the view from Holmenkollen. Since you are staying in Gamle I will also recommend visiting Ekerberg woods which is a ten minute tram ride away and has a scultpure park and also the Botanisk Hage at Tøyen. It is small but pretty inside and guaranteed to be warm. I hope this is a help to you!
oh my god thank you so much, i know this must have taken a lot of time and effort to put together so i hope you know i really appreciate it!!!! these all sound wonderful i am about to start making notes literally right after i finish typing this xx
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The Gjøa
The Gjøa was the first ship to sail through the heavily iced Northwest Passage between the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans in Canada's far north.
She was a herring jakt built in Norway in 1872. She was 21.3 m long, 6.1 m wide and had a speed of 7 knots. She was built of Norwegian wood and named Gjøa after the wife of the first captain Asbjörn Sexe from Haugesund. She was used as a herring trawler on the south-west coast of Norway until 1885, when she was sold to Captain Hans Christian Johannsen from Tromso, who used her as a seal trawler in the Berents Sea.
The Gjøa (x)
In 1901, the inexperienced Roald Amundsen set out to find a cheap but robust ship with which he could launch his ambitious attempt to cross the Northwest Passage. His choice fell on the small but ice-tested Gjøa. Aware of his inexperience, he hired the previous captain and his own Johannsen and sailed with him on a seal hunt to test the Gjøa. After returning to Tromsø, a paraffin engine was installed at the Tromsø shipyard in the winter of 1901/1902, which powered a small propeller. In addition, the hull was further strengthened against ice pressure and the ship was better insulated. In 1902, the ship went to Trondheim, where a fuel tank was installed and finally transferred to Christiania, where she was equipped for the expedition, so that supplies and spare parts were packed for 5 years. On 16 June 1903, the ship finally set sail for the Davis Strait west of Greenland. The crew consisted of six men: Roald Amundsen as expedition leader, 1st officer Godfred Hansen, as 1st mate Helmer Hanssen, as 2nd mate Anton Lund, as 1st engineer Peder Ristvedt, as 2nd engineer Gustav Juel Wiik and as cook Adolf Henrik Lindstrøm.
The Gjøa (x)
After crossing the North Atlantic, she sailed north along the west coast of Greenland, crossed Baffin Bay at Cape York and entered Lancaster Sound. Ice conditions were good and the ship was able to sail swiftly through the sound and the subsequent Barrow Strait. The pack ice to the north of Prince of Wales Island then prohibited further westward travel, so the Gjøa sailed south through Peel Sound east of Prince of Wales Island to King William Island. In September 1903, ice conditions became increasingly difficult, so wintering took place in a natural harbour on King William Island. In 1904, the ice conditions were far worse than the previous year and so the Gjøa was unable to free herself from the ice that year. The crew used the forced stay to explore the surrounding area.
Gjøa during the wintering 1903-1905 in Gjøahavn, King-William-Island (x)
It was not until 1905 that the voyage continued westwards south of KIng William Island and Victoria Island, reaching the Beaufort Sea north of the mouth of the Mackenzie River. In October 1905, ice slowed down the expedition and made it impossible to continue, and the Gjøa froze them again at Herschel Island. On 11 July 1906, the expedition continued west to the Bering Strait and reached Nome, Alaska on 31 August 1906, crossing the Northwest Passage for the first time and arriving in San Francisco as a hero in October 1906. Amundsen and his crew returned to Norway, only the Gjøa the little hero stayed behind. She was acquired by the Norwegian-American Citizenship there and displayed at the Golden Gate Bridge as a museum ship.
The Gjøa in transit (x)
Gjøa in the Fram museum (x)
In 1972, she was returned to Norway and has since been housed in the Fram Museum in Oslo.
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The mystery of the mummified bishop and the stillborn fetus in his coffin
A fetus remains hidden with a Swedish founding father, likely belonged to his grandson, but this is still a mystery.
In life, the 17th-century bishop Peder Winstrup was a man of both god and science, but also a politician who advocated for his city, Lund, which sits in what is now southern Sweden. In death, he is still making his name in the folds of his funerary garb, in an enigma that researchers are only now beginning to solve. In 2012, when Lund Cathedral officials decided to relocate his remains from the…
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#death#denmark#Europe#genetics#halloweek#History#human#international#local history#mummies#mysteries#news#oddities#people#science#stories#Sweden#world
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2020 Olympics Sweden Roster
Archery
Christine Bjerendal (Lindome)
Athletics
Vidar Johansson (Öjersjö)
Kalle Berglund (Jämshög)
Emil Blomberg (Järfälla)
Perseus Ibáñez-Gustavsson (Växjö)
Andreas Kramer (Sävedalens)
Simon Sundström (Stockholm)
Kim Amb (Solna)
Armand Duplantis (Lafayette, Louisiana)
Thobias Montler (Malmö)
Wictor Petersson (Malmö)
Simon Pettersson (Stockholm)
Daniel Ståhl (Solna)
Meraf Bahta-Ogbagaber (Stockholm)
Sarah Lahti (Klippan)
Carolina Wikström (Roslagen)
Angelica Bengtsson (Väckelsång)
Erika Kinsey (Nälden)
Sara Meijer (Göteborg)
Maja Nilsson (Stockholm)
Fanny Roos (Ljungby)
Khadi Sagnia (Helsingborg)
Badminton
Felix Burestedt (Vellinge)
Boxing
Adam Chartoi (Stockholm)
Agnes Alexiusson (Värnamo) Canoeing
Erik Holmer (Nyköping)
Petter Menning-Öström (Vaxholm)
Linnea Stensils (Vaxholm)
Cycling
Jenny Rissveds (Falun)
Diving
Emma Gullstrand (Stockholm)
Equestrian
Sven Svennerstål (Stockholm)
Carl Fredricson (Flen)
Rolf-Göran Bengtsson (Lund)
Peder Fredricson (Flen)
Henrik Von Eckermann (Nyköping)
Louise Romeike (Stockholm)
Therese Viklund (Stockholm)
Therese Nilshagen (Lodbergen, Germany)
Antonia Ramel (Bettna)
Juliette Ramel (Bettna)
Malin Barijard-Johnsson (Söderköping)
Sara Algotsson-Ostholt (Rockneby)
Soccer
Rut Lindahl (Katrineholm)
Jonna Andersson (Mjölby)
Emma Kullberg (Umeå)
Hanna Glas (Sundsvall)
Hanna Bennison (Lomma)
Magdalena Eriksson (Stockholm)
Madelen Janogy (Falköping)
Lina Hurtig (Avesta)
Kosovare Asllani (Kristianstad)
Eva Jakobsson (Örnsköldsvik)
Emma Blackstenius (Vadstena)
Jennifer Falk (Göteborg)
Amanda Ilestedt (Sölvesborg)
Gun Björn (Uppsala)
Olivia Schough (Vanered)
Ingrid Angeldal (Uppsala)
Sara Seger (Helsingborg)
Fridolina Rolfö (Kungsbacka)
Anna Anvegård (Bredaryd)
Julia Roddar (Falun)
Rebecka Blomqvist (Göteborg)
Zećira Mušović (Skåne)
Golf
Alex Norén (Stockholm)
Henrik Norlander (Augusta, Georgia)
Anna Nordqvist (Orlando, Florida)
Magdalene Sagström (Orlando, Florida)
Gymnastics
David Rumbutis (Älvsbyn)
Jonna Alderteg (Eskilstuna)
Handball
Jonathan Carlsbogård (Göteborg)
Max Darj (Göteborg)
Niclas Ekberg (Ystad)
Daniel Pettersson (Eskilstuna)
Andreas Palicka (Lund)
Hampus Wanne (Göteborg)
Mikael Aggefors (Stockholm)
Fredric Pettersson (Jönköping)
Felix Claar (Norrköping)
Lucas Pellas (Stockholm)
Albin Lagergren (Varberg)
Jim Gottridsson (Ystad)
Oscar Sunnefeldt (Mölndal)
Lukas Sandell (Reslöv)
Anton Lindskog (Kristianstad)
Johanna Bundsen (Uddevalla)
Carin Strömberg (Nacka)
Linn Blohm (Stockholm)
Jamina Roberts (Göteborg)
Melissa Petrén (Huddinge)
Mathilda Lundström (Stockholm)
Johanna Westberg (Nacka)
Jessica Ryde (Lund)
Sara Dano (Göteborg)
Anna Lagerquist (Lund)
Emma Lindqvist (Helsingborg)
Nathalie Hagman (Farsta)
Kristin Thorleifsdóttir (Stockholm)
Elin Hansson (Nacka)
Jenny Carlson (Göteborg)
Judo
Tommy Macias (Stockholm)
Robin Pacek (Stockholm)
Marcus Nyman (Tullinge)
Anna Bernholm (Älvsbacka)
Rowing
Lovisa Claesson (Jönköping)
Sailing
Jesper Stålheim (Karlstad)
Emil Järudd (Stockholm)
Max Salminen (Lund)
Fredrik Bergström (Onsala)
Anton Dahlberg (Växjö)
Olivia Bergström (Göteborg)
Lovisa Karlsson (Stockholm)
Cecilia Jonsson (Stockholm)
Josefin Olsson (Nyköping)
Shooting
Stefan Nilsson (Naglarp)
Skateboarding
Oskar Rozenberg-Hallberg (Malmö)
Swimming
Robin Hanson (Stockholm)
Victor Johansson (Nässjö)
Erik Persson (Kungsbacka)
Björn Seeliger (Södertälje)
Michelle Coleman (Vallentuna)
Emelie Fast (Solna)
Louise Hansson (Ramlösa)
Sophie Hansson (Ramlösa)
Sarah Sjöström (Salem)
Sara Junevik (Leksand)
Table Tennis
Anton Källberg (Stockholm)
Mattias Falck-Karlsson (Karlskrona)
Kristian Karlsson (Trollhättan)
Linda Bergström (Stockholm)
Christina Källberg (Stockholm)
Tennis
Rebecca Peterson (Stockholm)
Weightlifting
Patricia Strenius (Karlskrona)
Wrestling
Alex Kessidis-Bjurberg (Stockholm)
Sofia Mattsson (Gällivare)
Henna Johansson (Gällivare)
#Sports#National Teams#Sweden#Races#Louisiana#Fights#Boxing#Boats#Animals#Germany#Soccer#Golf#Georgia#Florida#Tennis
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Peder Severin Krøyer (1851 – 1909) - Julia Strömberg, 1885, oil on canvas
Strömberg traveled to an artist's colony in Skagen in remote northern Denmark, where P.S. Krøyer painted this portrait for display in the Brøndum's Hotel.
Julia Charlotta Mortana Strömberg (1851 - 1920) was a Swedish landscape painter. Her favourite motif was beach and coastal landscapes. Strömberg was born in Lund, Sweden. Her father, Hans Jakob Strömberg, was an architect in Gothenburg and was a talented illustrator and watercolour painter. Julia and her sisters all inherited their father's artistic talent and began their studies at the Valand Art School in Gothenburg (1870). After her father's death in 1872, she moved to Stockholm and began studies at the the Academy of Art in Stockholm (1872-1880) where female students were restricted to a quota of eighteen. The men and women were taught in seperate classes, but they did socialise together in their free time including excursions and dances. Strömberg also studied at the Artists' League school (1899-1901). Strömberg was a member of the Society of Swedish Artists' Association. She exhibited her work in Stockholm and Gothenburg. In addition to her painting, Strömberg supported herself by teaching painter.
#Peder Severin Krøyer#P.S. Krøyer#ps kroyer#Julia Strömberg#Julia Charlotta Mortana Strömberg#swedish painter#nprweigian painter#Brøndum's Hotel#side profile#cigarette#woman artist#female painter#skagen painter#denmark#1885#1880s#realism
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James Lee Byars - Sphere Is a Sphere Is a Sphere Is a Sphere Installation view, Peder Lund Gallery, Oslo, 2016
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#skiss#sketch#skissbok#artists on tumblr#artist on tumblr#p.s krøyer#peder severin krøyer#krøyer#coal#alfons#alfons romild#art#romild#ar#skagenmålarna#lund
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Möbelsnickare Peder Karlsson
Hej, Jag heter Peder Karlsson och jag tillverkar möbler efter kunders önskemål och egen design. Min verkstad ligger på en bakgård till Östra Mårtensgatan 6, Lund, Sverige.
My name is Peder Karlsson and design and construct furniture according to customers wishes as well as my own ideas. My workshop is located in a backyard in Lund, at Östra Mårtensgatan 6.
About me
Jag är en erfaren möbel-, prototyp- och inredningssnickare med över trettio års erfarenhet. Jag är utbildad trätekniker och yrkeslärare och har i många år undervisat inom möbelsnickeri och inredningssnickeri. Produktionen i mitt företag har bestått av möbler, inredning, fönster och dörrar. Men nu koncentrerar jag mig på möbler och en del svarvarbeten.
I'm a skilled cabinet-maker with more than 30 years of professional experience. I've studied woodwork technology and trained to be a teacher in cabinet-making for upper secondary school, and have been teaching secondary school as well as at adult level for many years. In my own business I've been making furniture, interior furnishing, windows and doors. But nowadays i focus on cabinet-making and lathe turning.
My services
Tillverkning av möbler i egen design
Nytillverkning av möbler efter kunders önskemål
Renovering av möbler
My works
Pall i furu 3000:-
(Pallet in pine)
Förvaringsmöbel/sidebord 4000:-
(Storage unit / side table)
bildhuggarklubba1000:-
liten 700:-
(Sculptor’s tools, small size)
skål ek 1000:-
(Oak bowl)
Skål poppel 1000:-
(Poppel bowl)
Skål alm 1000:-
(elm bowl)
Pall mixed wood 1500:-
(Stool mixed wood)
Contact information
Peder Karlsson
Tel: 070-3251738
Email: [email protected]
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Part of the Gjøa’s crew — Gustav Juel Wiik, Roald Amundsen, Peder Ristvedt and Anton Lund — on deck in the Northwest Passage. (Courtesy Fram Museum)
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vimeo
jem & fix - Mega Washer 3000 from Bacon on Vimeo.
Director: Bart Timmer
Production Company: Bacon
EP: Samuel Cantor
DoP: Rasmus Videbæk
Production Managers: Oliver Sand & Nicholas Perry
1st AD: Stefan Danholm
Production designer: Nikolaj Danielsen
Props team; Lukas Gauger, Sputnick, Anette Riis, Astrid Danielsen,
1st AC Daniel Parmo
Video Assist: Atli Kristofer
DIT: Allan Legarth
Chief Gaffer: Morten Kildegaard
Gaffer: David Medina
Gaffer: Mathias Rasmussen
Gaffer Aske Wagner
Grip: Christian Brøndum
Grip ass: Marius Krab
Stylist: Melanie Buchhave
Wardrobe ass: Jonas Worup
Hair and makeup: Henrik Steen
Hair and makeup ass: Christina Dahlin
SFX: Hummer Højmark
Stunt: Anders Nylander
Production ass. Mads Randrup
Runner: Tobias Kjær
Runner: Emil Løppke
Runner: Caroline Rievers
Runner: Mads Friis Becquet
Editor: Anders Jon Petersen
Composers: Asger Baden & Peder Thomas Pedersen
Sound design: Adrian Aurelius / ballad
Post Production: BaconX
VFX supervisor: Jan Tvilling
Colorist: Hannibal Lang
Conform artists: Søren Knudsen & Lasse Selvli
Composite artists: Christian Malkut Predut, Jacob Carlsson & Oliver Buus
VFX producer: Jim Lerch
Exec. producer: Eliana Carranza-Pitcher
Client: jem & fix
Head of marketing & e-commerce: Anna Lund Paludan
Offline & Content Team Manager: Mette Frost Schrøder
Creative Agency: Uncle Grey
Creative Chairman & Chief Strategy Officer: Lars Samuelsen
Chief Operating Officer: Charlotte Porsager
Associate Creative Director: Magnus Breum
Head of Production: Daniel Halasz
Executive Producer: Casper C. Rasmussen
Account Manager: Signe Aas Dam
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Co się dzisiaj działo? #46 15.2.2022
Krykiet, mecz jednodniowy: Nowa Zelandia (275, Suzie Bates 106, Jess Kerr 4/35) pokonała Indie (213, Mithali Raj 59, Rajeshwari Gayakwad 2/28) 62 runami
mecz Twenty20: Australia (124/4, Glenn Maxwell 39, Kane Richardson 3/21) pokonała Sri Lankę (121/6, Dasun Shanaka 39*, Masheesh Theekshana 3/24)
NCAA: Davidson Wildcats-Duquesne Dukes 72:61
Turniej ITF w Oberhaching: Martyn Pawelski-Dan Added 5:7 5:7
Turniej ATP w Marsylii: Kamil Majchrzak/Stefano Travaglia-Edouard Roger Vasselin/Artem Sitak 7:5 6:7(3) 11-13
Szymon Walków/Jan Zieliński-Romain Arneodo/Andriej Wasilewskij 6:2 6:2
Turniej ITF w Altenkirchen: Urszula Radwańska-Jule Niemeier 6:2 7:6(3)
FIBA Europe Cup: Parma Perm-Legia Warszawa 67:78
CEV Liga Mistrzyń: Lokomotiv Kaliningrad-Developres Rzeszów 3:0
Conegliano-Chemik Police 3:0
Liga Europejska w piłce ręcznej: Wisła Płock-Pfadi Wintherthur 35:27
CEV Liga Mistrzów: Projekt Warszawa-Noliko Masseik 3:1
ULEB Eurocup: MoraBanc Andorra-Śląsk Wrocław 99:65
UEFA Liga Mistrzów: PSG-Real Madryt 1:0
Sporting CP-Manchester City 0:5
Campionato Sammarinese:
Cailungo-San Giovanni 1:1
Faetano-Folgore 0:1
Premier League Pool:
Mieszko Fortuński-Joshua Filler 4:5
Mieszko Fortuński-Alexander Kazakis 3:5
Igrzyska Olimpijskie w Pekinie, Dzień 10
Łyżwiarstwo szybkie, zawody drużynowe kobiet:
1. Kanada (Ivanie Blondin, Valerie Maltais, Alexa Scott, Isabelle Weidemann)
2. Japonia (Misaki Oshirigi, Ayano Sato, Miho Takagi, Nana Takagi)
3. Holandia (Antoinette de Jong, Marjike Groenewoud, Irene Schouten, Ireen Wust)
8. Polska (Kaja Bosiek, Natalia Czerwonka, Magdalena Czyszczoń, Andżelika Wójcik)
Kombinacja norweska, skocznia duża:
1. Joergen Graabak (NOR)
2. Jens Luraas Oftebro (NOR)
3. Akito Watabe (JPN)
35. Szczepan Kupczak
45. Andrzej Szechowicz
Łyżwiarstwo figurowe, program krótki solistek:
24. Jekatierina Kurakowa (awans do programu dowolnego)
Curling, turniej kobiet:
Chiny-Rosja 5:11
Szwecja-Dania 9:3
USA-Szwajcaria 6:9
WIelka Brytania-Japonia 10:4
turniej mężczyzn:
Rosja-Norwegia 5:12
Kanada-Chiny 10:8
Szwajcaria-USA 4:7
Szwecja-Dania 8:3
Szwecja-Wielka Brytania 6:7
Włochy-USA 10:4
Norwegia-Chiny 6:8
Rosja-Kanada 7:6
Hokej na lodzie, mecze play-off mężczyzn:
Słowacja-Niemcy 4:0
Dania-Łotwa 3:2
Czechy-Szwajcaria 2:4
Kanada-Chiny 7:2
Pozostałe konkurencje medalowe:
Zjazd kobiet:
1. Corinne Suter (SUI)
2. Sofia Goggia (ITA)
3. Nadia Delago (ITA)
Biathlon, sztafeta mężczyzn:
1. Norwegia (Sturla Holm Laegreid, Tarjei Boe, Johannes Boe, Vetle Christiansen)
2. Francja (Fabien Claude, Emilien Jacquelin, Simon Desthieux, Quentin Fillon Maillet)
3. Rosja (Said Karimulla Khalili, Alexander Loginov, Maxim Tsvetkov, Eduard Latypov)
Big air kobiet:
1. Anna Gasser (AUT)
2. Zoi Sadowski Synnott (NZL)
3. Kokomo Murase (JPN)
Narciarstwo dowolne, slopestyle kobiet:
1. Mathilde Gremaud (SUI)
2. Gu Ailing Eileen (CHN)
3. Kelly Sildaru (EST)
Big air mężczyzn:
1. Su Yiming (CHN)
2. Mons Roisland (NOR)
3. Max Parrot (CAN)
Bobsleje, męskie dwójki
1. Francesco Friedrich/Thorsten Margis (GER)
2. Johannes Lochner/Florian Bauer (GER)
3. Christoph Hafer/Matthias Sommer (GER)
Łyżwiarstwo szybkie, zawody drużynowe mężczyzn
1. Norwegia (Hallgeir Engerbraaten, Allan Dahl Johansson, Peder Kongshaug, Svere Lunde Pedersen)
2. Rosja (Danill Aldoshkin, Alexander Rumyantsev, Sergei Trofimow, Ruslan Zakharov)
3. USA (Ethan Cepuran, Casey Dawson, Emery Lehman, Joey Mantia)
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Elves Trailer
These aren’t nice little toy making elves.
A family Christmas vacation to a remote island turns into a nightmare when they have a run in with an ancient menace.
Elves was created and written by Stefan Jaworski. Roni Ezra directs. The series stars Ann Eleonora Jørgensen, Rasmus Hammerich, Vivelill Søgaard Holm, Sonja Steen, Peder Thomas Pedersen, Lukas Løkken, and Lila Nobel. Miso Film’s Elise H. Lund serves as producer.
Elves hits Netflix on November 28, 2021.
#elves#stefan jaworski#roni ezra#ann eleonora jogensen#rasmus hammerich#vivelill sogaard holm#sonja steen#peder thomas pedersen#lukas lokken#lila nobel#miso films#netflix#TGCLiz
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Un obispo del siglo XVII fue enterrado con un feto y finalmente los científicos saben por qué
Un obispo del siglo XVII fue enterrado con un feto y finalmente los científicos saben por qué
Captura de pantalla Lund University / Gunnar Menander El cuerpo momificado del obispo Peder Winstrup, una de las momias del siglo XVII mejor conservadas de Europa, durante más de 300 años permaneció en una cripta de la catedral de Lund, en Suecia. En 2015, una radiografía a su ataúd reveló restos de un feto de cinco o seis meses que había nacido muerto, un hecho que sorprendió a los expertos y…
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