#Raul Bauer
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limewnade · 11 days ago
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mais desenhos do Raul e do Dankin. A segunda e terceira imagens seriam uma mini comic, mas nunca terminei de fazer
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cleverhottubmiracle · 21 days ago
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Like many Disney stars, Sabrina Carpenter has come a long, long way since her days on the network. After cutting her teeth in the likes of Girl Meets World and Tall Girl, the Pennsylvania native has gone on to forge a successful music career of her own, culminating in the smash hit “Espresso” off her album, Short n’ Sweet. While producing songs like “Nonsense” and “Taste,” Carpenter managed to forge a unique red carpet wardrobe that combines hyper-feminine silhouettes with edgy details like cut-outs and exposed undergarments.The triple threat—she can act, sing, and dance—has cozied up to some of fashion’s top brands like Miu Miu, Louis Vuitton, and Moschino as well as independent labels like Cong Tri and Mônot. It’s become customary for Carpenter pull out a statement red carpet moment during events like the Grammys and MTV Video Music Awards, arming herself with some sort of high-impact gown (probably vintage), a bold color way or pattern, and her signature blonde bangs. Below, a look back at Sabrina Carpenter’s red carpet evolution, from pre-teen star to pure pop princess.2024: Time100 GalaTaylor Hill/WireImage/Getty ImagesVersace is one of Carpenter’s go-to brands and she looked splendid in this chainmail number at a 2024 gala.2024: MTV Video Music AwardsUdo Salters/Patrick McMullan/Getty ImagesIf this plunging Bob Mackie gown looks familiar, it’s likely because Madonna wore it a ton during the early 1990s.2024: Variety Power of Young HollywoodAxelle/Bauer-Griffin/FilmMagic/Getty ImagesCarpenter has never shied away from a referential red carpet look and this butter yellow Prada dress only continued that pattern. Her blinged-out gown took cues from a similar piece Kate Hudson made famous in the 2003 movie, How to Lose a Guy In Ten Days.2024: Louis Vuitton Men’s ShowAntoine Flament/Getty Images Entertainment/Getty ImagesThe Short n’ Sweet singer put her twist on C.E.O. suiting for Pharrell Williams’s Louis Vuitton Men’s show in Paris. She stepped out in a strong-shouldered power blazer, worn sans pants, that she accessorized with a white speedy bag, black tie, and heels.2024: Met GalaJeff Kravitz/FilmMagic/Getty ImagesIn a dramatic princess dress, Carpenter certainly channeled the “Sleeping Beauties” aspect of the 2024 Met Gala dress code with her custom Oscar de La Renta look.2024: Vanity Fair Oscar PartyAxelle/Bauer-Griffin/FilmMagic/Getty ImagesCarpenter sizzled in black during the Vanity Fair Oscar after party in this croc-embossed and sequined Tory Burch number.2024: Pre-Grammy GalaGilbert Flores/Billboard/Getty ImagesFor a pre-Grammy Gala, Carpenter went simple in a ruched LBD that featured a steep side slit and floral embroidery at the waist.2023: MTV Video Music AwardsAxelle/Bauer-Griffin/FilmMagic/Getty ImagesA princess twist on the sheer red carpet trend, courtesy of Vera Wang, for the 2023 MTV VMAs.2023: Billboard Women In MusicSteve Granitz/FilmMagic/Getty ImagesFor the 2023 Billboard Women In Music event, the singer flashed her abs in a Cong Tri confection.2022: American Music AwardsSarah Morris/FilmMagic/Getty ImagesCarpenter indulged in a disco diva moment with this fringe matching set at the 2022 American Music Awards.2022: The Fashion AwardsNeil Mockford/FilmMagic/Getty ImagesCarpenter pulled out one of her edgier red carpet moments for the 2022 Fashion Awards in London. She slipped into a mustard yellow Alberta Ferretti gown that was designed with a plunging neckline and a matching hood.2022: MTV Video Music AwardsAxelle/Bauer-Griffin/FilmMagic/Getty ImagesIn an ab-baring Moschino number, Carpenter went all in on retro florals at the 2022 MTV VMAs.2022: amfAR GalaJacopo M. Raule/Getty Images Entertainment/Getty ImagesWhen she’s not in some sort of statement color or pattern, the hitmaker tends to prefer plenty of skin-baring details for her red carpet moments. Here, she sported a Mônot gown to the 2022 amfAR Gala.2022: Met GalaTaylor Hill/Getty Images Entertainment/Getty ImagesCarpenter made a splash for her debut Met Gala appearance in 2022. She sparkled in a Paco Rabanne set composed of a bra top and a high-impact skirt.2022: Kids’ Choice AwardsFrazer Harrison/Getty Images Entertainment/Getty ImagesThe star wrapped up her cut-out David Koma dress with an exposed bra top at the 2022 Kids’ Choice Awards.2021: ACE AwardsJamie McCarthy/Getty Images Entertainment/Getty ImagesFor the 2021 ACE Awards, Carpenter looked like red carpet royalty with this floral Carolina Herrera number.2020: MTV Movie & TV AwardsKevin Mazur/2020 MTV Movie & TV Awards/Getty Images Entertainment/Getty ImagesCarpenter has dabbled in the exposed underwear trend at multiple points throughout her red carpet career, but her rhinestoned look for the 2020 MTV Movie & TV Awards proved to be her most on-the-nose adaptation yet.2019: Tall Girl PremiereGregg DeGuire/WireImage/Getty ImagesCarpenter suited up for the premiere of Tall Girl in a plunging ivory set.2018: Peoples’ Choice AwardsJEAN-BAPTISTE LACROIX/AFP/Getty ImagesThe singer looked chic in pinstripe Tom Ford at the 2018 Peoples’ Choice Awards.2018: MTV Video Music AwardsKevin Mazur/WireImage/Getty ImagesCarpenter reinvented the bandage dress at the 2018 MTV VMAs in a va-va-voom Versace look that she paired with nude heels.2017: Billboard Women In MusicAxelle/Bauer-Griffin/FilmMagic/Getty ImagesWell before Margot Robbie graced theater screens as Barbie, Carpenter presented a full-on Mattel pink moment at a 2017 Billboard event. 2016: Kids’ Choice AwardsVariety/Penske Media/Getty ImagesWith a copy of Alice In Wonderland doubling as a clutch, Carpenter slipped into black and white lace for the 2016 Kids’ Choice Awards.2015: American Music AwardsMark Davis/Getty Images Entertainment/Getty ImagesAt the 2015 AMAs, Carpenter went with a patterned tea-length look that she paired with a blush pink clutch and strappy heels.2014: Wicked Opening NightChelsea Lauren/Getty Images Entertainment/Getty ImagesThe actress sported high-waisted floral pants and an off-the-shoulder top to the opening night of Wicked in 2014.2013: Kidstock FestivalTommaso Boddi/WireImage/Getty ImagesAlongside fellow Disney actress Rowan Blanchard, Carpenter looked adorable at a 2013 festival.2012: Once Upon A Princess PremiereJeffrey Mayer/WireImage/Getty Images
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norajworld · 21 days ago
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Like many Disney stars, Sabrina Carpenter has come a long, long way since her days on the network. After cutting her teeth in the likes of Girl Meets World and Tall Girl, the Pennsylvania native has gone on to forge a successful music career of her own, culminating in the smash hit “Espresso” off her album, Short n’ Sweet. While producing songs like “Nonsense” and “Taste,” Carpenter managed to forge a unique red carpet wardrobe that combines hyper-feminine silhouettes with edgy details like cut-outs and exposed undergarments.The triple threat—she can act, sing, and dance—has cozied up to some of fashion’s top brands like Miu Miu, Louis Vuitton, and Moschino as well as independent labels like Cong Tri and Mônot. It’s become customary for Carpenter pull out a statement red carpet moment during events like the Grammys and MTV Video Music Awards, arming herself with some sort of high-impact gown (probably vintage), a bold color way or pattern, and her signature blonde bangs. Below, a look back at Sabrina Carpenter’s red carpet evolution, from pre-teen star to pure pop princess.2024: Time100 GalaTaylor Hill/WireImage/Getty ImagesVersace is one of Carpenter’s go-to brands and she looked splendid in this chainmail number at a 2024 gala.2024: MTV Video Music AwardsUdo Salters/Patrick McMullan/Getty ImagesIf this plunging Bob Mackie gown looks familiar, it’s likely because Madonna wore it a ton during the early 1990s.2024: Variety Power of Young HollywoodAxelle/Bauer-Griffin/FilmMagic/Getty ImagesCarpenter has never shied away from a referential red carpet look and this butter yellow Prada dress only continued that pattern. Her blinged-out gown took cues from a similar piece Kate Hudson made famous in the 2003 movie, How to Lose a Guy In Ten Days.2024: Louis Vuitton Men’s ShowAntoine Flament/Getty Images Entertainment/Getty ImagesThe Short n’ Sweet singer put her twist on C.E.O. suiting for Pharrell Williams’s Louis Vuitton Men’s show in Paris. She stepped out in a strong-shouldered power blazer, worn sans pants, that she accessorized with a white speedy bag, black tie, and heels.2024: Met GalaJeff Kravitz/FilmMagic/Getty ImagesIn a dramatic princess dress, Carpenter certainly channeled the “Sleeping Beauties” aspect of the 2024 Met Gala dress code with her custom Oscar de La Renta look.2024: Vanity Fair Oscar PartyAxelle/Bauer-Griffin/FilmMagic/Getty ImagesCarpenter sizzled in black during the Vanity Fair Oscar after party in this croc-embossed and sequined Tory Burch number.2024: Pre-Grammy GalaGilbert Flores/Billboard/Getty ImagesFor a pre-Grammy Gala, Carpenter went simple in a ruched LBD that featured a steep side slit and floral embroidery at the waist.2023: MTV Video Music AwardsAxelle/Bauer-Griffin/FilmMagic/Getty ImagesA princess twist on the sheer red carpet trend, courtesy of Vera Wang, for the 2023 MTV VMAs.2023: Billboard Women In MusicSteve Granitz/FilmMagic/Getty ImagesFor the 2023 Billboard Women In Music event, the singer flashed her abs in a Cong Tri confection.2022: American Music AwardsSarah Morris/FilmMagic/Getty ImagesCarpenter indulged in a disco diva moment with this fringe matching set at the 2022 American Music Awards.2022: The Fashion AwardsNeil Mockford/FilmMagic/Getty ImagesCarpenter pulled out one of her edgier red carpet moments for the 2022 Fashion Awards in London. She slipped into a mustard yellow Alberta Ferretti gown that was designed with a plunging neckline and a matching hood.2022: MTV Video Music AwardsAxelle/Bauer-Griffin/FilmMagic/Getty ImagesIn an ab-baring Moschino number, Carpenter went all in on retro florals at the 2022 MTV VMAs.2022: amfAR GalaJacopo M. Raule/Getty Images Entertainment/Getty ImagesWhen she’s not in some sort of statement color or pattern, the hitmaker tends to prefer plenty of skin-baring details for her red carpet moments. Here, she sported a Mônot gown to the 2022 amfAR Gala.2022: Met GalaTaylor Hill/Getty Images Entertainment/Getty ImagesCarpenter made a splash for her debut Met Gala appearance in 2022. She sparkled in a Paco Rabanne set composed of a bra top and a high-impact skirt.2022: Kids’ Choice AwardsFrazer Harrison/Getty Images Entertainment/Getty ImagesThe star wrapped up her cut-out David Koma dress with an exposed bra top at the 2022 Kids’ Choice Awards.2021: ACE AwardsJamie McCarthy/Getty Images Entertainment/Getty ImagesFor the 2021 ACE Awards, Carpenter looked like red carpet royalty with this floral Carolina Herrera number.2020: MTV Movie & TV AwardsKevin Mazur/2020 MTV Movie & TV Awards/Getty Images Entertainment/Getty ImagesCarpenter has dabbled in the exposed underwear trend at multiple points throughout her red carpet career, but her rhinestoned look for the 2020 MTV Movie & TV Awards proved to be her most on-the-nose adaptation yet.2019: Tall Girl PremiereGregg DeGuire/WireImage/Getty ImagesCarpenter suited up for the premiere of Tall Girl in a plunging ivory set.2018: Peoples’ Choice AwardsJEAN-BAPTISTE LACROIX/AFP/Getty ImagesThe singer looked chic in pinstripe Tom Ford at the 2018 Peoples’ Choice Awards.2018: MTV Video Music AwardsKevin Mazur/WireImage/Getty ImagesCarpenter reinvented the bandage dress at the 2018 MTV VMAs in a va-va-voom Versace look that she paired with nude heels.2017: Billboard Women In MusicAxelle/Bauer-Griffin/FilmMagic/Getty ImagesWell before Margot Robbie graced theater screens as Barbie, Carpenter presented a full-on Mattel pink moment at a 2017 Billboard event. 2016: Kids’ Choice AwardsVariety/Penske Media/Getty ImagesWith a copy of Alice In Wonderland doubling as a clutch, Carpenter slipped into black and white lace for the 2016 Kids’ Choice Awards.2015: American Music AwardsMark Davis/Getty Images Entertainment/Getty ImagesAt the 2015 AMAs, Carpenter went with a patterned tea-length look that she paired with a blush pink clutch and strappy heels.2014: Wicked Opening NightChelsea Lauren/Getty Images Entertainment/Getty ImagesThe actress sported high-waisted floral pants and an off-the-shoulder top to the opening night of Wicked in 2014.2013: Kidstock FestivalTommaso Boddi/WireImage/Getty ImagesAlongside fellow Disney actress Rowan Blanchard, Carpenter looked adorable at a 2013 festival.2012: Once Upon A Princess PremiereJeffrey Mayer/WireImage/Getty Images
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ellajme0 · 21 days ago
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Like many Disney stars, Sabrina Carpenter has come a long, long way since her days on the network. After cutting her teeth in the likes of Girl Meets World and Tall Girl, the Pennsylvania native has gone on to forge a successful music career of her own, culminating in the smash hit “Espresso” off her album, Short n’ Sweet. While producing songs like “Nonsense” and “Taste,” Carpenter managed to forge a unique red carpet wardrobe that combines hyper-feminine silhouettes with edgy details like cut-outs and exposed undergarments.The triple threat—she can act, sing, and dance—has cozied up to some of fashion’s top brands like Miu Miu, Louis Vuitton, and Moschino as well as independent labels like Cong Tri and Mônot. It’s become customary for Carpenter pull out a statement red carpet moment during events like the Grammys and MTV Video Music Awards, arming herself with some sort of high-impact gown (probably vintage), a bold color way or pattern, and her signature blonde bangs. Below, a look back at Sabrina Carpenter’s red carpet evolution, from pre-teen star to pure pop princess.2024: Time100 GalaTaylor Hill/WireImage/Getty ImagesVersace is one of Carpenter’s go-to brands and she looked splendid in this chainmail number at a 2024 gala.2024: MTV Video Music AwardsUdo Salters/Patrick McMullan/Getty ImagesIf this plunging Bob Mackie gown looks familiar, it’s likely because Madonna wore it a ton during the early 1990s.2024: Variety Power of Young HollywoodAxelle/Bauer-Griffin/FilmMagic/Getty ImagesCarpenter has never shied away from a referential red carpet look and this butter yellow Prada dress only continued that pattern. Her blinged-out gown took cues from a similar piece Kate Hudson made famous in the 2003 movie, How to Lose a Guy In Ten Days.2024: Louis Vuitton Men’s ShowAntoine Flament/Getty Images Entertainment/Getty ImagesThe Short n’ Sweet singer put her twist on C.E.O. suiting for Pharrell Williams’s Louis Vuitton Men’s show in Paris. She stepped out in a strong-shouldered power blazer, worn sans pants, that she accessorized with a white speedy bag, black tie, and heels.2024: Met GalaJeff Kravitz/FilmMagic/Getty ImagesIn a dramatic princess dress, Carpenter certainly channeled the “Sleeping Beauties” aspect of the 2024 Met Gala dress code with her custom Oscar de La Renta look.2024: Vanity Fair Oscar PartyAxelle/Bauer-Griffin/FilmMagic/Getty ImagesCarpenter sizzled in black during the Vanity Fair Oscar after party in this croc-embossed and sequined Tory Burch number.2024: Pre-Grammy GalaGilbert Flores/Billboard/Getty ImagesFor a pre-Grammy Gala, Carpenter went simple in a ruched LBD that featured a steep side slit and floral embroidery at the waist.2023: MTV Video Music AwardsAxelle/Bauer-Griffin/FilmMagic/Getty ImagesA princess twist on the sheer red carpet trend, courtesy of Vera Wang, for the 2023 MTV VMAs.2023: Billboard Women In MusicSteve Granitz/FilmMagic/Getty ImagesFor the 2023 Billboard Women In Music event, the singer flashed her abs in a Cong Tri confection.2022: American Music AwardsSarah Morris/FilmMagic/Getty ImagesCarpenter indulged in a disco diva moment with this fringe matching set at the 2022 American Music Awards.2022: The Fashion AwardsNeil Mockford/FilmMagic/Getty ImagesCarpenter pulled out one of her edgier red carpet moments for the 2022 Fashion Awards in London. She slipped into a mustard yellow Alberta Ferretti gown that was designed with a plunging neckline and a matching hood.2022: MTV Video Music AwardsAxelle/Bauer-Griffin/FilmMagic/Getty ImagesIn an ab-baring Moschino number, Carpenter went all in on retro florals at the 2022 MTV VMAs.2022: amfAR GalaJacopo M. Raule/Getty Images Entertainment/Getty ImagesWhen she’s not in some sort of statement color or pattern, the hitmaker tends to prefer plenty of skin-baring details for her red carpet moments. Here, she sported a Mônot gown to the 2022 amfAR Gala.2022: Met GalaTaylor Hill/Getty Images Entertainment/Getty ImagesCarpenter made a splash for her debut Met Gala appearance in 2022. She sparkled in a Paco Rabanne set composed of a bra top and a high-impact skirt.2022: Kids’ Choice AwardsFrazer Harrison/Getty Images Entertainment/Getty ImagesThe star wrapped up her cut-out David Koma dress with an exposed bra top at the 2022 Kids’ Choice Awards.2021: ACE AwardsJamie McCarthy/Getty Images Entertainment/Getty ImagesFor the 2021 ACE Awards, Carpenter looked like red carpet royalty with this floral Carolina Herrera number.2020: MTV Movie & TV AwardsKevin Mazur/2020 MTV Movie & TV Awards/Getty Images Entertainment/Getty ImagesCarpenter has dabbled in the exposed underwear trend at multiple points throughout her red carpet career, but her rhinestoned look for the 2020 MTV Movie & TV Awards proved to be her most on-the-nose adaptation yet.2019: Tall Girl PremiereGregg DeGuire/WireImage/Getty ImagesCarpenter suited up for the premiere of Tall Girl in a plunging ivory set.2018: Peoples’ Choice AwardsJEAN-BAPTISTE LACROIX/AFP/Getty ImagesThe singer looked chic in pinstripe Tom Ford at the 2018 Peoples’ Choice Awards.2018: MTV Video Music AwardsKevin Mazur/WireImage/Getty ImagesCarpenter reinvented the bandage dress at the 2018 MTV VMAs in a va-va-voom Versace look that she paired with nude heels.2017: Billboard Women In MusicAxelle/Bauer-Griffin/FilmMagic/Getty ImagesWell before Margot Robbie graced theater screens as Barbie, Carpenter presented a full-on Mattel pink moment at a 2017 Billboard event. 2016: Kids’ Choice AwardsVariety/Penske Media/Getty ImagesWith a copy of Alice In Wonderland doubling as a clutch, Carpenter slipped into black and white lace for the 2016 Kids’ Choice Awards.2015: American Music AwardsMark Davis/Getty Images Entertainment/Getty ImagesAt the 2015 AMAs, Carpenter went with a patterned tea-length look that she paired with a blush pink clutch and strappy heels.2014: Wicked Opening NightChelsea Lauren/Getty Images Entertainment/Getty ImagesThe actress sported high-waisted floral pants and an off-the-shoulder top to the opening night of Wicked in 2014.2013: Kidstock FestivalTommaso Boddi/WireImage/Getty ImagesAlongside fellow Disney actress Rowan Blanchard, Carpenter looked adorable at a 2013 festival.2012: Once Upon A Princess PremiereJeffrey Mayer/WireImage/Getty Images
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chilimili212 · 21 days ago
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Like many Disney stars, Sabrina Carpenter has come a long, long way since her days on the network. After cutting her teeth in the likes of Girl Meets World and Tall Girl, the Pennsylvania native has gone on to forge a successful music career of her own, culminating in the smash hit “Espresso” off her album, Short n’ Sweet. While producing songs like “Nonsense” and “Taste,” Carpenter managed to forge a unique red carpet wardrobe that combines hyper-feminine silhouettes with edgy details like cut-outs and exposed undergarments.The triple threat—she can act, sing, and dance—has cozied up to some of fashion’s top brands like Miu Miu, Louis Vuitton, and Moschino as well as independent labels like Cong Tri and Mônot. It’s become customary for Carpenter pull out a statement red carpet moment during events like the Grammys and MTV Video Music Awards, arming herself with some sort of high-impact gown (probably vintage), a bold color way or pattern, and her signature blonde bangs. Below, a look back at Sabrina Carpenter’s red carpet evolution, from pre-teen star to pure pop princess.2024: Time100 GalaTaylor Hill/WireImage/Getty ImagesVersace is one of Carpenter’s go-to brands and she looked splendid in this chainmail number at a 2024 gala.2024: MTV Video Music AwardsUdo Salters/Patrick McMullan/Getty ImagesIf this plunging Bob Mackie gown looks familiar, it’s likely because Madonna wore it a ton during the early 1990s.2024: Variety Power of Young HollywoodAxelle/Bauer-Griffin/FilmMagic/Getty ImagesCarpenter has never shied away from a referential red carpet look and this butter yellow Prada dress only continued that pattern. Her blinged-out gown took cues from a similar piece Kate Hudson made famous in the 2003 movie, How to Lose a Guy In Ten Days.2024: Louis Vuitton Men’s ShowAntoine Flament/Getty Images Entertainment/Getty ImagesThe Short n’ Sweet singer put her twist on C.E.O. suiting for Pharrell Williams’s Louis Vuitton Men’s show in Paris. She stepped out in a strong-shouldered power blazer, worn sans pants, that she accessorized with a white speedy bag, black tie, and heels.2024: Met GalaJeff Kravitz/FilmMagic/Getty ImagesIn a dramatic princess dress, Carpenter certainly channeled the “Sleeping Beauties” aspect of the 2024 Met Gala dress code with her custom Oscar de La Renta look.2024: Vanity Fair Oscar PartyAxelle/Bauer-Griffin/FilmMagic/Getty ImagesCarpenter sizzled in black during the Vanity Fair Oscar after party in this croc-embossed and sequined Tory Burch number.2024: Pre-Grammy GalaGilbert Flores/Billboard/Getty ImagesFor a pre-Grammy Gala, Carpenter went simple in a ruched LBD that featured a steep side slit and floral embroidery at the waist.2023: MTV Video Music AwardsAxelle/Bauer-Griffin/FilmMagic/Getty ImagesA princess twist on the sheer red carpet trend, courtesy of Vera Wang, for the 2023 MTV VMAs.2023: Billboard Women In MusicSteve Granitz/FilmMagic/Getty ImagesFor the 2023 Billboard Women In Music event, the singer flashed her abs in a Cong Tri confection.2022: American Music AwardsSarah Morris/FilmMagic/Getty ImagesCarpenter indulged in a disco diva moment with this fringe matching set at the 2022 American Music Awards.2022: The Fashion AwardsNeil Mockford/FilmMagic/Getty ImagesCarpenter pulled out one of her edgier red carpet moments for the 2022 Fashion Awards in London. She slipped into a mustard yellow Alberta Ferretti gown that was designed with a plunging neckline and a matching hood.2022: MTV Video Music AwardsAxelle/Bauer-Griffin/FilmMagic/Getty ImagesIn an ab-baring Moschino number, Carpenter went all in on retro florals at the 2022 MTV VMAs.2022: amfAR GalaJacopo M. Raule/Getty Images Entertainment/Getty ImagesWhen she’s not in some sort of statement color or pattern, the hitmaker tends to prefer plenty of skin-baring details for her red carpet moments. Here, she sported a Mônot gown to the 2022 amfAR Gala.2022: Met GalaTaylor Hill/Getty Images Entertainment/Getty ImagesCarpenter made a splash for her debut Met Gala appearance in 2022. She sparkled in a Paco Rabanne set composed of a bra top and a high-impact skirt.2022: Kids’ Choice AwardsFrazer Harrison/Getty Images Entertainment/Getty ImagesThe star wrapped up her cut-out David Koma dress with an exposed bra top at the 2022 Kids’ Choice Awards.2021: ACE AwardsJamie McCarthy/Getty Images Entertainment/Getty ImagesFor the 2021 ACE Awards, Carpenter looked like red carpet royalty with this floral Carolina Herrera number.2020: MTV Movie & TV AwardsKevin Mazur/2020 MTV Movie & TV Awards/Getty Images Entertainment/Getty ImagesCarpenter has dabbled in the exposed underwear trend at multiple points throughout her red carpet career, but her rhinestoned look for the 2020 MTV Movie & TV Awards proved to be her most on-the-nose adaptation yet.2019: Tall Girl PremiereGregg DeGuire/WireImage/Getty ImagesCarpenter suited up for the premiere of Tall Girl in a plunging ivory set.2018: Peoples’ Choice AwardsJEAN-BAPTISTE LACROIX/AFP/Getty ImagesThe singer looked chic in pinstripe Tom Ford at the 2018 Peoples’ Choice Awards.2018: MTV Video Music AwardsKevin Mazur/WireImage/Getty ImagesCarpenter reinvented the bandage dress at the 2018 MTV VMAs in a va-va-voom Versace look that she paired with nude heels.2017: Billboard Women In MusicAxelle/Bauer-Griffin/FilmMagic/Getty ImagesWell before Margot Robbie graced theater screens as Barbie, Carpenter presented a full-on Mattel pink moment at a 2017 Billboard event. 2016: Kids’ Choice AwardsVariety/Penske Media/Getty ImagesWith a copy of Alice In Wonderland doubling as a clutch, Carpenter slipped into black and white lace for the 2016 Kids’ Choice Awards.2015: American Music AwardsMark Davis/Getty Images Entertainment/Getty ImagesAt the 2015 AMAs, Carpenter went with a patterned tea-length look that she paired with a blush pink clutch and strappy heels.2014: Wicked Opening NightChelsea Lauren/Getty Images Entertainment/Getty ImagesThe actress sported high-waisted floral pants and an off-the-shoulder top to the opening night of Wicked in 2014.2013: Kidstock FestivalTommaso Boddi/WireImage/Getty ImagesAlongside fellow Disney actress Rowan Blanchard, Carpenter looked adorable at a 2013 festival.2012: Once Upon A Princess PremiereJeffrey Mayer/WireImage/Getty Images
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oliviajoyice21 · 21 days ago
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Like many Disney stars, Sabrina Carpenter has come a long, long way since her days on the network. After cutting her teeth in the likes of Girl Meets World and Tall Girl, the Pennsylvania native has gone on to forge a successful music career of her own, culminating in the smash hit “Espresso” off her album, Short n’ Sweet. While producing songs like “Nonsense” and “Taste,” Carpenter managed to forge a unique red carpet wardrobe that combines hyper-feminine silhouettes with edgy details like cut-outs and exposed undergarments.The triple threat—she can act, sing, and dance—has cozied up to some of fashion’s top brands like Miu Miu, Louis Vuitton, and Moschino as well as independent labels like Cong Tri and Mônot. It’s become customary for Carpenter pull out a statement red carpet moment during events like the Grammys and MTV Video Music Awards, arming herself with some sort of high-impact gown (probably vintage), a bold color way or pattern, and her signature blonde bangs. Below, a look back at Sabrina Carpenter’s red carpet evolution, from pre-teen star to pure pop princess.2024: Time100 GalaTaylor Hill/WireImage/Getty ImagesVersace is one of Carpenter’s go-to brands and she looked splendid in this chainmail number at a 2024 gala.2024: MTV Video Music AwardsUdo Salters/Patrick McMullan/Getty ImagesIf this plunging Bob Mackie gown looks familiar, it’s likely because Madonna wore it a ton during the early 1990s.2024: Variety Power of Young HollywoodAxelle/Bauer-Griffin/FilmMagic/Getty ImagesCarpenter has never shied away from a referential red carpet look and this butter yellow Prada dress only continued that pattern. Her blinged-out gown took cues from a similar piece Kate Hudson made famous in the 2003 movie, How to Lose a Guy In Ten Days.2024: Louis Vuitton Men’s ShowAntoine Flament/Getty Images Entertainment/Getty ImagesThe Short n’ Sweet singer put her twist on C.E.O. suiting for Pharrell Williams’s Louis Vuitton Men’s show in Paris. She stepped out in a strong-shouldered power blazer, worn sans pants, that she accessorized with a white speedy bag, black tie, and heels.2024: Met GalaJeff Kravitz/FilmMagic/Getty ImagesIn a dramatic princess dress, Carpenter certainly channeled the “Sleeping Beauties” aspect of the 2024 Met Gala dress code with her custom Oscar de La Renta look.2024: Vanity Fair Oscar PartyAxelle/Bauer-Griffin/FilmMagic/Getty ImagesCarpenter sizzled in black during the Vanity Fair Oscar after party in this croc-embossed and sequined Tory Burch number.2024: Pre-Grammy GalaGilbert Flores/Billboard/Getty ImagesFor a pre-Grammy Gala, Carpenter went simple in a ruched LBD that featured a steep side slit and floral embroidery at the waist.2023: MTV Video Music AwardsAxelle/Bauer-Griffin/FilmMagic/Getty ImagesA princess twist on the sheer red carpet trend, courtesy of Vera Wang, for the 2023 MTV VMAs.2023: Billboard Women In MusicSteve Granitz/FilmMagic/Getty ImagesFor the 2023 Billboard Women In Music event, the singer flashed her abs in a Cong Tri confection.2022: American Music AwardsSarah Morris/FilmMagic/Getty ImagesCarpenter indulged in a disco diva moment with this fringe matching set at the 2022 American Music Awards.2022: The Fashion AwardsNeil Mockford/FilmMagic/Getty ImagesCarpenter pulled out one of her edgier red carpet moments for the 2022 Fashion Awards in London. She slipped into a mustard yellow Alberta Ferretti gown that was designed with a plunging neckline and a matching hood.2022: MTV Video Music AwardsAxelle/Bauer-Griffin/FilmMagic/Getty ImagesIn an ab-baring Moschino number, Carpenter went all in on retro florals at the 2022 MTV VMAs.2022: amfAR GalaJacopo M. Raule/Getty Images Entertainment/Getty ImagesWhen she’s not in some sort of statement color or pattern, the hitmaker tends to prefer plenty of skin-baring details for her red carpet moments. Here, she sported a Mônot gown to the 2022 amfAR Gala.2022: Met GalaTaylor Hill/Getty Images Entertainment/Getty ImagesCarpenter made a splash for her debut Met Gala appearance in 2022. She sparkled in a Paco Rabanne set composed of a bra top and a high-impact skirt.2022: Kids’ Choice AwardsFrazer Harrison/Getty Images Entertainment/Getty ImagesThe star wrapped up her cut-out David Koma dress with an exposed bra top at the 2022 Kids’ Choice Awards.2021: ACE AwardsJamie McCarthy/Getty Images Entertainment/Getty ImagesFor the 2021 ACE Awards, Carpenter looked like red carpet royalty with this floral Carolina Herrera number.2020: MTV Movie & TV AwardsKevin Mazur/2020 MTV Movie & TV Awards/Getty Images Entertainment/Getty ImagesCarpenter has dabbled in the exposed underwear trend at multiple points throughout her red carpet career, but her rhinestoned look for the 2020 MTV Movie & TV Awards proved to be her most on-the-nose adaptation yet.2019: Tall Girl PremiereGregg DeGuire/WireImage/Getty ImagesCarpenter suited up for the premiere of Tall Girl in a plunging ivory set.2018: Peoples’ Choice AwardsJEAN-BAPTISTE LACROIX/AFP/Getty ImagesThe singer looked chic in pinstripe Tom Ford at the 2018 Peoples’ Choice Awards.2018: MTV Video Music AwardsKevin Mazur/WireImage/Getty ImagesCarpenter reinvented the bandage dress at the 2018 MTV VMAs in a va-va-voom Versace look that she paired with nude heels.2017: Billboard Women In MusicAxelle/Bauer-Griffin/FilmMagic/Getty ImagesWell before Margot Robbie graced theater screens as Barbie, Carpenter presented a full-on Mattel pink moment at a 2017 Billboard event. 2016: Kids’ Choice AwardsVariety/Penske Media/Getty ImagesWith a copy of Alice In Wonderland doubling as a clutch, Carpenter slipped into black and white lace for the 2016 Kids’ Choice Awards.2015: American Music AwardsMark Davis/Getty Images Entertainment/Getty ImagesAt the 2015 AMAs, Carpenter went with a patterned tea-length look that she paired with a blush pink clutch and strappy heels.2014: Wicked Opening NightChelsea Lauren/Getty Images Entertainment/Getty ImagesThe actress sported high-waisted floral pants and an off-the-shoulder top to the opening night of Wicked in 2014.2013: Kidstock FestivalTommaso Boddi/WireImage/Getty ImagesAlongside fellow Disney actress Rowan Blanchard, Carpenter looked adorable at a 2013 festival.2012: Once Upon A Princess PremiereJeffrey Mayer/WireImage/Getty Images
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limewnade · 29 days ago
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( tw: suggestive)
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my big feminine male, Raul (and his bf Dankin)
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ulkaralakbarova · 7 months ago
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The eccentric new manager of a UHF television channel tries to save the station from financial ruin with an odd array of programming. Credits: TheMovieDb. Film Cast: George Newman: ‘Weird Al’ Yankovic R.J. Fletcher: Kevin McCarthy Stanley Spadowski: Michael Richards Bob: David Bowe Harvey Bilchik: Stanley Brock Philo: Anthony Geary Raul Hernandez: Trinidad Silva Kuni: Gedde Watanabe Noodles MacIntosh: Billy Barty Richard Fletcher: John Paragon Pamela Finklestein: Fran Drescher Esther Bilchik: Sue Ane Langdon Head Thug: David Proval Killer Thug: Grant James Teri: Victoria Jackson Joe Earley: Emo Philips Gandhi: Jay Levey Cameraman: Lou B. Washington Bum: Vance Colvig FCC Man: Nik Hagler Bartender: Robert K. Weiss Spatula Husband: Eldon G. Hallum Spatula Wife: Sherry Engstrom Spatula Neighbor: Sara Allen Sy Greenblum: Bob Hungerford Crazy Ernie: John Cadenhead Blind Man: Francis M. Carlson Earl Ramsey: Ivan Green Joel Miller: Adam Maras Billy: Travis Knight Little Weasel: Joseph Witt Teri’s Father: Tony Frank Teri’s Mother: Billie Lee Thrash Fletcher Cronie #1: Barry Friedman Fletcher Cronie #2: Kevin Roden Phyllis Weaver: Lisa R. Stefanic Big Edna: Nancy Johnson Betty: Debbie Mathieu Little Old Lady: Wilma Jeanne Cummins Animal Deliveyman: Cliff Stephens Band: Guitar: Jim West Band: Bass Guitar: Steve Jay Band: Drums: Jon Schwartz Band: Keyboards: Kim Bullard Whipped Cream Eater: Barry Hansen Thug #3: Bob Maras Thug #4: George Fisher Guide #1: Tony Salome Guide #2: Joe Restivo Yodeler: Charles Marsh Mud Wrestler: Belinda Bauer Satan: Patrick Thomas O’Brien Conan the Librarian: Roger Callard Timid Man: Robert Frank Boy with Books: Jeff Maynard Promo Announcer (voice): M.G. Kelly Promo Announcer (voice): Jay Gardner Promo Announcer (voice): John Harlan Promo Announcer (voice): Jim Rose Film Crew: Production Manager: Gray Frederickson Original Music Composer: John Du Prez Editor: Dennis M. O’Connor Producer: Gene Kirkwood Producer: John W. Hyde Writer: Jay Levey Director of Photography: David Lewis Production Design: Ward Preston Set Decoration: Robert L. Zilliox Costume Design: Tom McKinley Makeup Effects: Allan A. Apone Special Effects Makeup Artist: Douglas J. White Sound Recordist: Ara Ashjian Sound Editor: Christopher Assells Sound Editor: Charles R. Beith Jr. Sound Recordist: Gregory Cheever Sound Editor: Clayton Collins Sound Re-Recording Mixer: Andy D’Addario Sound Editor: Dino DiMuro Sound Editor: G. Michael Graham Sound Re-Recording Mixer: Jeffrey J. Haboush Sound Mixer: Bo Harwood Sound Editor: Dan Hegeman Sound Editor: A. David Marshall Sound Editor: Diane Marshall Supervising Sound Editor: Dave McMoyler Sound Recordist: Art Schiro Sound Editor: Scott A. Tinsley Visual Effects Producer: John Coats Visual Effects Supervisor: William Mesa Visual Effects Art Director: Richard Kilroy Visual Effects Art Director: Ron Yates Post Production Supervisor: Susan Zwerman Production Supervisor: Bill Carroll Stunt Coordinator: George Fisher Stunts: Bob Maras Stunts: Brent Stice Stunts: T. Alan Kelly Stunts: J. Granville Moulder Stunts: Michael Steven Howl Stunts: Richard Drown Executive In Charge Of Production: Kate Morris Associate Producer: Becki Cross Trujillo Associate Producer: Joe M. Aguilar First Assistant Director: John R. Woodward Second Assistant Director: Benita Allen Casting Assistant: Gregory Raich Casting Assistant: Sandi Black Local Casting: Barbara Brinkley Henry Local Casting: Laurey Lummus Key Hair Stylist: Lynne K. Eagan Makeup & Hair: Roseanne McIlvane Wardrobe Supervisor: Ainslee Colt de Wolf Wardrobe Assistant: Phil O’Nan Boom Operator: Joel Racheff First Assistant Camera: Ed Giovanni Second Assistant Camera: Tiffanie Winton Second Assistant Camera: Brett Reynolds Second Assistant Camera: Cindi Pusheck Production Coordinator: Bonnie Macker Script Supervisor: Carol Stewart Second Second Assistant Director: Lorene M. Duran Third Assistant Director: Pam Whorton Additional Editing: Steve Polivka Assistant Editor: Lewis Schoenbrun Supervising ADR Editor: Karla Caldwell Music Supervisor:...
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waveridden · 3 years ago
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people keep reblogging that post about who has seen the most incinerations and being like “damn i wasn’t expecting X to be on the list” so just for funsies here is the list of everyone who they saw get incinerated
please note that these lists include both teammate incinerations and non-teammate incinerations. but for the sake of drama the teammates are italicized
beck whitney:
flowers, s1 to mid-s6: sosa elftower, famous oconnor, hurley pacheco, bryanayah chang, tyler violet, jorge ito, isaac rubberman, matheo carpenter, morrow doyle, caligula lotus
dale, mid s6-s13: dominic marijuana, murray pony, raul leal, theodore holloway, augusta chadwell
fridays, s14-s22: pudge nakamoto (the first time), alejandro leaf (the first time)
millennials, s22-s24: tot clark
dunlap figueroa:
tigers, s1 to mid-s23: juan rangel, landry violence, combs duende, emmett internet, moody cookbook, elijah bates, mclaughlin scorpler, kiki familia, antonio wallace, sebastian telephone, yazmin mason, frasier shmurmgle, hobbs cain, wichita toaster, igneus delacruz, carmelo plums, yong wright
sunbeams, s23 while super-roamin’: pudge nakamoto (the second time)
karato bean:
fridays, s1-s7: fitzgerald massey, jessi wise, hurley pacheco, sebastian townsend, sam solis, hendricks rangel, sebastian sunshine, thomas england
spies, s8-s14: case sports, raul leal, theodore holloway, norris firestar, son scotch
lovers, s15-s24: sparks beans, helga washington, jon halifax, helga moreno, peanut holloway
knight triumphant:
lovers, s1-s12: lars mendoza, zi delacruz, paul barnes, miguel javier, whit steakknife, caligula lotus, jose haley, tillman henderson
spies, s13: raul leal, theodore holloway, norris firestar
georgias, s16-s17: chorby soul (the third time), luis acevedo, hercules alighieri
steaks, mid s18-s20: chorby soul iii
lift, s21-s22: gerund pantheocide, brock forbes
steaks (again), s22-s24: helga moreno (former teammate)
spears taylor:
pies, s1 to mid-s4: alexandria dracaena, cedric gonzalez, juan rangel, kennedy alstott
tigers, mid-s4 to s8: combs duende, emmett internet, moody cookbook, elijah bates, mclaughlin scorpler, kiki familia, antonio wallace, sebastian telephone, yazmin mason, frasier shmurmgle, hobbs cain
fridays, s9-s24: hands scoresburg, pudge nakamoto (the first time), alejandro leaf (the first time)
tot fox:
jazz hands, s1 to mid-s4: alexandria dracaena, aldon anthony, cedric gonzalez, theodore passon, ogden mendoza, velasquez meadows
crabs, mid-s4 to mid-s19: combs duende, murray pony, tillman henderson, annie roland, chorby soul, luis acevedo, chorby soul iii
lovers, mid-s19 to s24: sparks beans, helga washington, jon halifax (former teammate), helga moreno, peanut holloway
wyatt pothos:
tacos, s1-s9: tyreek olive, scrap murphy, jessi wise, natha kath, blankenship fischer, hendricks rangel, sebastian sunshine, stevenson monstera, eduardo ingram, morrow doyle, richardson turquoise
pods, s10: sebastian telephone
jazz hands, s11-s24: lawrence horne, combs estes, sutton bishop, hercules alighieri, tamara crankit, bauer zimmerman
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Updated Reading List 6.6: Holocaust History
Historiography, Theory, Methodology, Construction, and Philosophy of History American History Ancient History Atlantic World History European History Ancient Jewish History Medieval Jewish History Sephardic and Mizrahi Jewish History Modern European Jewish History American Jewish History
Holocaust History (the only one of these lists where I can say that I’ve read all of these, plus a bunch I removed)
A History of the Holocaust (Single Title Social Studies) by Yehuda Bauer
FDR and the Jews by Richard Breitman
The War Against the Jews: 1933-1945 by Lucy S. Dawidowicz
The Pity of It All: A Portrait of the German-Jewish Epoch, 1743-1933 by Amos Elon [NOTE: I don’t love this one because I’m a snob, but it’s a good overview for non-specialists about how German Jewry got to where it was in 1933]
The Politics of Rescue: The Roosevelt Administration and the Holocaust, 1938-1945 by Henry L. Feingold [NOTE: this book is SO BITCHY it was written during a time where it was acceptable for historians to just be shady af and I recommend it for that alone]
Nazi Germany and the Jews, 1939-1945: The Years of Extermination by Saul Freidlander [NOTE: Speaking as a Holocaust historian and not as a history reader, this is my preferred general history of the Holocaust. Detailed, thorough, impeccably researched, and beautifully presented.]
The Destruction of the European Jews, 3 Volume Set (Third Edition) by Raul Hilberg [NOTE: This was one of the first, if not THE first academic history of the Holocaust, published 1961. I’d only recommend the 3 volume set for serious grad level students of Holocaust history. For everyone else, get the student/abridged version....unless you want to read like, 200 pages about how each branch of the Rothschilds responded to Nazi shit]
Between Dignity and Despair: Jewish Life in Nazi Germany (Studies in Jewish History) by Marion A. Kaplan [NOTE: This book is my academic origin story. It is the First Issue. It changed everything.]
Generation Exodus: The Fate of Young Jewish Refugees from Nazi Germany by Walter Laqueur [NOTE: This one’s a really fantastic overview of the history of Jewish movement and migration between ~1933-1945]
Women in the Holocaust by Dalia Ofer
NOTE: I’m an Amazon Affiliate; I will receive a small portion of the proceeds from ANYTHING [hint] you purchase on Amazon via my links. I am an independent scholar, and need $$$ to pay my translators etc for my book on Jewish women’s Holocaust resistance, so anything you can do helps! If you’d rather not give your $$$ to Amazon but still want to help this independent scholar out, my paypal is here.
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apricotstone47 · 7 years ago
Conversation
Die Matrjoschka: Julian Draxler,Matthias Ginter, Manuel Neuer
Draxler: It really looks good.I never touched such a thing before.
???: First question. Which player did inspire you the most ?
Draxler: Raul inspired me the most. In our common time at Schalke. He has a great personality. He had played 15 years for Real Madrid when he came to us. And he helped me, a 17-year old, with such a casualness ... since then, for me, he is really an idol.
??: Do you like living in France ?
Draxler: Yes, I really like it a lot. Paris is a wonderful city. The city never really sleeps. But you have to get used to the unpunctuality of the french there. We germans are a bit famous for our punctuality. I was two times punctual in my first two days here... I was alone at the training ground and thought "where are all the other players".
???: What's your favorite position in Paris and in the national team ?
Draxler: Left winger. In the past, I always wanted to play on the 10 , but I did not play that for a long time and now I am very happy when I can play as left winger.
???: What's your big target in football ? Since you've reached one big target already
Draxler: Well the big target is always the next target.And the next target would be defending our world cup title.
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Ginter: ahhhh
???: Matrjoschkas... do you know them ? They are typical russian.
Ginter: Of course.
???: We have some questions from football fans for you. Tate asks: How are you feeling now ? And what was the feeling four years ago. You were on the bench a lot of time, did you feel as world champion ?
Ginter: Yes. I was very happy to participate in the world cup at such a young age. It was really a great experience lifting the trophy.
???: Joachim Dittler wants to know your favorite taste of ice cram
Ginter: My favorite sort ice cream is raspberry ice cream.
???: Luka wants to know what you felt when you first wore the national kit.
Ginter: It was a big honor and I felt so proud. A childhood dream came true.
???: Who is your idol?
Ginter: It changed a bit. As a child, my biggest idol was David Beckham, after that it was Zidane....as I grew up my idols became more and more defensive
???: Do you have a nickname, and if you have one do you like it ?
Ginter: Matze.. because of Matthias. And Ginni. Two harmless names
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Neuer: Ah well-known matrjoschka.... just looks a bit different. There is some similarity
???: Oliver Bauer wants to know: If one had such an injury as you had, is it always in the back of your mind?
Neuer: When you are back on the pitch, able to train and to play, you look only forward into the future. Of course you think back to the hard times when you see pictures or talk to the people you worked hard with to get fit again. But even in the rehab there were good moments.
???: Why are the test matches against the U-21 always without press and not in public ?
Neuer: Because our coaches give us tasks in such testgames.Tasks concerning our group opponents. These are tactical measures that one wants to keep to oneself first.And we want to use those tactics. That's why those games are "secret".
???: Do you like to ride the bike?
Neuer: Yes of course. I like to ride the bike in my free time sometimes. Mostly the mountain bike.
???: Beside football, friends and family. Do you have another hobby ?
Neuer: I like to do sports. I like skiing in the winter, I like being out in the nature and doing sports. Stand up paddling for example.
@anon here you go :)
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mn2020 · 8 years ago
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Ladrones k
A LA HORA DE VOTAR ESTE AÑO, ACUERDENSE MUY BIEN DE ESTOS NOMBRES, ARTIFICIES Y COMPLICES DE LA DECADA INFAME, INCLUIDO LOS JUECES CORRUPTOS DEL PEOR GOBIERNO DE LA HISTORIA. MEMORIA! PRESOS O MUERTOS, QUE DEVUELVAN LO ROBADO Y HASTA QUE NO PAGUEN POR SUS CRIMENES NO HABRA PAZ EN LA REPUBLICA ARGENTINA Cristina Elisabet Fernandez, Amado Boudou, Anibal Fernandez, De Vido, Schiavi, Jaime, Cirigliano - cuando los van a guardar de una vez???- , Cristobal Lopez, Spolski, Gvritz, Lazaro Baez, Martin, Leandro, Luciana y Melina Baez, Perez Gadin, Muñoz, Chueco, Zannini, Scioli, Mariotto, Sergio Massa, Rossi (con la hija), Kicillof, Lorenzino, Galuccio, Vanoli, Puricelli, Milani, Parrili, Timerman, Di Cesare, Curien, Roveda, Capitanich, Alperovich x2, Gioja, Insfran, Moreno, Florencia, Maximo & Alicia K, Bonafini, Schoklenderx2, Carlotto, D'Elia, Sala, Esteche, Tomada, DeNegris, Berni, Larroque, De Pedro, Conti, Caamaño, Zaffaroni, Recalde x 2, Liuzzi, Cabandie, Gils Carbo, Oyarbide, Casannelo, Gonella, Eduardo Freiler, Jorge Ballesteros,Ventura Martinez, Fabiana Palmaghini, Andrea Askenazi, Abal Medina, Kunkel, Verbitsky, Manzur, Alak, Alberto Fernandez, Julian Alvarez, Julian Dominguez, Sagasti, Di Tullio, Cabandie, Diego Bossio, Romina Mercado, Del Pont, Debora Giorgi, Cecilia Rodriguez, Saintout, De Pedro, JM Abud, Español, JJ Carbajales, Augusto Costa, Tanos, Tailhade, Arceo, Agis, Franco Picardi, V Hortel, Kreplak, Matias Molle, Marina Aballay, Ñato Fresneda, Norberto Berner, Guillermo Rus, Verónica Piesciorovski, Juan Manuel Pignocco, Martín Reibel Maier, Rafecas,Canicoba Corral, Martina Forns, Lijo, Juan Fantini, Daniel Reposo, Gabriela Vazquez, Victor Hugo Morales, Jorge Chavez, Hernan Brienza, Adrian Paenza, los sucios de Carta Abierta, Fein, Pichetto, Alak, Echegaray, Nolasco, Clos, Capaccioli, Espinoza, Rudy Ulloa, Ottavis, Madaro, Campos, Nilda Garre, Uberti, Gaillard, Romina Picolotti,Herrero, Taiana, Menem, Duahlde, Massa, Ruckauf, Bergoglio, Bancalari, Otahece, Sabatella, Sbatella, Freyre, Calo, Servini de Cubria, Alicia Castro, Victoria Donda, Del Caño, Ballestero, Laura Braiza, Batakis, Felisa Miceli, Feinmann, Parodi, Cynthia Garcia, Gollán, Kampfer, Brancatelli, Mengolini, Acosta, Andrea del Boca Agustina Cherri, Gastón Pauls, Ferraresi, Parodi, Bauer, Cortese, Baradel, Almirón, Petrocini, Dobal, MA Diaz, Sergio Romero, Mussi, Zurieta, Zurro, Artemio Lopez, Del Moro, Soria, Barrientos, Paez, Navarro, Marcolini, Viale, Russo, Barragán, Barone, Cleri, Depetri, Taty Almeida, Stella Maris Leverberg; Graciela De la Rosa; Graciela Camaño; Ricardo Barreiro, Antonio Morante; Ruperto Godoy; Gloria Bidegain; Viviana Damilano; María Laura Leguizamon; Graciela Caselles; Gustavo Zavallo; Octavio Arguello; Guillermo Pereyra; Maria Julia Acosta; Jorge Landau; José Vilariño; Juan Carlos Lorges; Maria Cristina Cremer de Busti; Juan Gonzalez; Patricia Fadel; Marcelo Lopez Arias; Juan Carlos Sluga; Walter Festa, Hugo Perié; Dante Gullo; Jesús Rejal; Alberto Paredes Urquiza; Graciela Giannettasio; Adela Segarra: Alejandro Rossi; Gerónimo Vargas Aignasse; Hilda Aguirre; Susana Diaz; Jorge Cejas; Ramos Ruiz; Gustavo Marconato; Alfredo Dato; Paulina Fiol; Alfaro German; Mario Martiarena; Nora Bedano; Rubén Sciutto; Julia Perié; Juan Pais; Adriana Puiggros; Evaristo Rodríguez; Mariel Calchaquí; Eduardo Fellner; José Díaz Bancalari; Juan Manuel Irrazabal; Manuel Morejón; Beatriz Korenfe, Luis Cigogna, Dulce Granados, Mariano West, Carlos "Cuto" Moreno, Teresa García, Omar Plaini, Remo Carlotto, Dalmacio Mera, María Inés Pilatti Vergara, Sandra Mendoza, Mario Vargas, Nancy González, Carlos Heller, Carmen Nebreda, Eduardo Galantini, Raúl Barrandegui, Juan Carlos Díaz Roig, Marcelo Llanos, María Eugenia Bernal, María Cristina Regazzoli, Roberto Robledo, Jorge Yoma, Omar Félix, Alex Ziegler y Silvia Risko, Ricardo Biazzi, Oscar Albrieu, Fernando Yarade, Daniel Tomas, Margarita Ferrá de Bertol, Fernando Cotillo, Agustín Rossi, Rosana Bertone, Osvaldo Jaldo, Stella Maris Córdoba, Juan Salim,Nancy Duplaá, Pablo Echarri, Moria Casán, Sofía Gala, Nora Cárpena, Graciela Dufau, Cecilia Roth, Rita Cortese, Patricio Contreras, Enrique Pinti, Juan Leyrado, Jorge Marrale, Florencia Peña, Víctor Hugo Morales, Ana María Picchio, Soledad Silveyra, Gerardo Romano, Pablo Rago, Leonardo Sbaraglia, Diego Maradona, Nacha Guevara, Fito Paez, Charly García, Daniel Fanego, Horacio Fontova, Mercedes Morán, Luisa Kuliok, Dolores Fonzi, Dady Brieva, Diego Brancatelli, Mauro Viale, Jorge Rial, Rolando Graña, Daniel Tognetti, Julia Mengolini, Camilo García, Hernán Brienza, Luis Ventura, Gastón Pauls, Federico Luppi, Arturo Bonín, Ignacio Copani, Pablo Ruiz, Raul Rizzo, Víctor Heredia, Teresa Parodi, Luis Luque, Hugo Arana, Darío Grandinetti, Mex Urtizberea, Coco Silly, Alejandro Dolina, Marcelo Tinelli, Pachu Peña, Víctor Laplace, Cristina Tejedor, Roberto Piazza, Diego Capusotto, Liliana Herrero, Juan Pablo Feinman, León Gieco, Marta Minujín, Juan Minujín, Graciela Alfano, Litto Nebbia, Peteco Carabajal, María Onetto, Victoria Onetto, Lito Vitale, Gustavo Garzón, Leonor Benedetto, Paola Barrientos, Susana Rinaldi, Dante López Foresi, su hermana Liliana, Walter Goobar, Jorge Jacobson, Enrique Vázquez, Gerardo Yomal, Julio Villalonga, Horacio Embon, Alejandra Darín, Mario Pasik, Julieta Ortega, Fernán Mirás, Marilina Ross, Alejandro Awada, Jean Pierre Noher, Andrea Rincón, Guillermo Pfening, Diego Torres, Karina Mazzoco, Martin Bossi, el indio Solari, Ricardo Mollo., Natalia Oreiro, Sandra Russo, Pepe Novoa, Ricardo Bartís, Carolina Peleretti, Nacho Gadano, Diego Reinhold, Luis Machín, Andrea Bonelli, Cristina Banegas, Rosario Lufrano, Carlos Polimeni, la productora de America TV Liliana Parodi, Julian Denaro, Francisco Aróstegui, Lovelli, Zurro, David Caceres ...no se trata de opiniones distintas, se trata de ser delincuente, por acción o complicidad. Seguro todavia me faltan varios....NI OLVIDO NI PERDON. A NO OLVIDAR JAMÁS.
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twins2994 · 8 years ago
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Dozier Homers As Twins Beat Rays!
Twins 4 Rays 2 W-Hughes (1-0) L-Ramirez (0-1) SV-Wimmers (1)
Pitching remains a huge question for the Minnesota Twins in 2017. It should be better and it has looked better with Kyle Gibson having a few good starts this spring. Phil Hughes took the mound and pitched well this afternoon to make a case for a better 2017 season. Jorge Polanco gave Phil Hughes some early run support in the second inning. He launched an Erasmo Ramirez offering out to right for a solo home run. This put the Twins up 1-0 after two frames. The Twins were at it again in the third inning as Drew Stubbs walked and Byron Buxton reached on a fielding error. This brought up Brian Dozier to face Diego Moreno. Dozier smoked a Moreno pitch out to left for a three-run shot to give Minnesota a four-run edge. Meanwhile, Phil Hughes threw five scoreless innings and it was up to the bullpen. The Rays would rally in the sixth though once Hughes left the game. Mallex Smith reached on an infield single and stole second base. He reached third on a bad pickoff throw from JT Chargois. Rickie Weeks then hit a grounder to score him and Tampa Bay was on the board. In the seventh, Jake Bauers drilled a Chargois pitch out to right for a solo blast. This pulled the Rays within two, but it wasn’t enough. Buddy Boshers pitched a clean eighth and Alex Wimmers got in and out of trouble in the ninth to secure a St. Patrick’s Day win.
-Final Thoughts- Phil Hughes looked sharp this afternoon. He went five innings and allowed two hits with four strikeouts and a walk. JT Chargois struggled in 1 2/3 innings with two runs on two hits with a strikeout. Raul Fernandez got the team off the field in the seventh, Buddy Boshers threw a 1-2-3 eighth, and Alex Wimmers walked two in the ninth. The Twins hit 1-for-5 with runners in scoring position and left five men on base. Tomorrow they will return home to play the Boston Red Sox. Rick Porcello will face Ryan Vogelsong in a Saturday matinee from Hammond Stadium.
-Chris Kreibich-
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helmeteering · 7 years ago
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Pretty stoked on this new series! 👍 @Regranned from @lazersportusa - Click the link in our profile for our latest Lazer Radio Podcast episode! : Legends of American Cycling – Michael Aisner (part 1) Before the Tour of California there was the Coors International Bicycle Classic. For eight years, under the direction of Michael Aisner, the Coors Classic grew from 3 days of racing in and around Colorado to a two week stage race that also included the states of Wyoming, Nevada, California and Hawaii while becoming the fourth biggest stage race on the world calendar as well as the single biggest women’s stage race ever held. Greg LeMond, Davis Phinney, Phil Anderson, Steve Bauer, Andy Hampsten, Raul Alcala, Bernard Hinault, Connie Carpenter, Rebecca Twig and Inga Thompson all took part in the Coors Classic at some point in their careers. It’s no exageration to state that the Coors Classic played a significant part in laying the foundation for the future of American bike races. In this first episode of the Lazer Radio series “Legends of American Cycling”, podcast host Brad Sohner sits down with Michael Aisner to discuss Michael’s history in the sport of American bike racing. We hope you enjoy our Legends of American Cycling series! There is much more to come! - #regrann
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The major Bella Hadid runway trend you can copy for $13
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Bella Hadid walks the runway at the Fendi’s spring-summer 2019 show during Milan Fashion Week on Sept. 20. (Photo: Jacopo Raule/Getty Images)
Bella Hadid just solidified that the major bike shorts trend is here to stay. During Fendi‘s spring 2019 show during Milan Fashion Week on Thursday, the model strutted the catwalk wearing black bike shorts styled with a cream utilitarian shirt, a utility belt, cat-eye sunglasses, and a chic handbag and black pumps.
Clearly, Fendi’s creative director, Karl Lagerfeld, is looking to elevate the athleisure trend with this sleek, sporty “working-girl” look.
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Model Bella Hadid walks the Fendi spring-summer 2019 show during Milan Fashion Week on Sept. 20. (Photo: Getty Images)
The bike-shorts look is nothing new, but styling it outside the context of cycling is. Celebrities from Kim Kardashian to Kendall Jenner and Bella Hadid herself have all worn this trend in the past. In fact, Princess Diana had been seen sporting her own colorful ’80s-style bike shorts during her time. This trend has worked its way throughout other fashion runways too, including Off-White, Fenty Puma, and of course Kanye West‘s Yeezy collection.
However, the best part of this high-fashion trend is its affordability. You can snag a pair of bike shorts from your local JCPenney for as low as $13. You can also easily find bike shorts at activewear stores like Alo, Eddie Bauer, and REI. But if you’re looking for a high-fashion designer version, there are a few of those too, such as Daniel Patrick’s color-block version or Burberry‘s high-priced $300 pair.
If you love this trend, you can shop it below at all price points. Take solace in how you can wear the look well into next year too. If anyone asks why, say it’s approved by Bella Hadid and Karl Lagerfeld.
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Simple black bike shorts. (Photo: Xersion)
Xersion 8-inch bike shorts, $13, jcpenney.com
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Navy bike shorts. (Photo: Beroy)
Beroy women’s bike shorts, $27, amazon.com 
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Black bike shorts with zippers. (Photo: Eddie Bauer)
Eddie Bauer women’s trail tight shorts, $24, eddiebauer.com 
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Black bike shorts with slit detail. (Photo: Alo)
Divine bike shorts, $68, aloyoga.com 
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Color-block bike shorts. (Photo: Daniel Patrick)
Daniel Patrick LA bike shorts, $110, danielpatrick.com 
Read More from Yahoo Lifestyle:
• First deaf, transgender model is signed to the same agency as Gigi Hadid and Gisele Bündchen  •  Your search for the perfect work bag is over, thanks to Everlane  • Kendall Jenner emerges from her fashion week drought to walk in Burberry show 
Follow us on Instagram, Facebook, and Twitter for nonstop inspiration delivered fresh to your feed, every day.
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2018 GRAMMY Winners: The Complete List!
Once more with feeling! The 60th Annual GRAMMY Awards traveled across the country for the first time in 15 years on Sunday, airing live on CBS from Madison Square Garden in New York.
And that wasn’t the only way the annual awards show set some records. The show marked the first time a white male was not nominated for Album of the Year in nearly 20 years.
After Beyonce’s headline-making performance last year, the Lemonade singer was not set to perform at this year's show, but that didn’t mean there was a lack of A-list acts. The show's lineup of epic performances, include a duet between the newly announced retiree, Elton John, and Miley Cyrus, and a touching tribute to the innocent victims of the Las Vegas Route 91 Harvest Festival shooting from the Brothers Osbourne, Maren Morris and Eric Church.
Many stars planned to make a statement, wearing white roses to show solidarity with the Time’s Up movement on the red carpet. This comes after Hollywood led the charge earlier this month at the Golden Globes, with almost all of the attendees wearing black gowns and suits.
Host James Corden admitted to ET’s Keltie Knight ahead of the show, “[I’m] nervous all the time. I’m never not nervous, so yes, I’ll be terrified.”
But it was the winners who will truly steal the show with their golden gramophone statues. Here’s the complete list of winners:
Best new artist
Alessia Cara **WINNER**
Khalid
Lil Uzi Vert
Julia Michaels
SZA
Album of the year
Awaken My Love -- Childish Gambino
4:44 -- JAY Z
DAMN. -- Kendrick Lamar
Melodrama -- Lorde
24K Magic -- Bruno Mars **WINNER**
Record of the year
"Redbone" -- Childish Gambino
"Despacito" -- Luis Fonsi and Daddy Yankee featuring Justin Bieber
"HUMBLE." -- Kendrick Lamar
"The Story of O.J." -- JAY-Z
"24K Magic" -- Bruno Mars **WINNER**
Song of the year
"Despacito" -- written by Ramón Ayala, Justin Bieber, Jason "Poo Bear" Boyd, Erika Ender, Luis Fonsi and Marty James Garton (Luis Fonsi and Daddy Yankee featuring Justin Bieber)
"4:44" -- Shawn Carter and Dion Wilson (JAY-Z)
"Issues" -- written by Benny Blanco, Mikkel Storleer Eriksen, Tor Erik Hermansen, Julia Michaels and Justin Drew Tranter (Julia Michaels)
"1-800-273-8255" -- written by Alessia Caracciolo, Sir Robert Bryson Hall II, Arjun Ivatury, Khalid Robinson (Logic featuring Alessia Cara and Khalid)
"That's What I Like" -- written by Christopher Brody Brown, James Fauntleroy, Philip Lawrence, Bruno Mars, Ray Charles McCullough II, Jeremy Reeves, Ray Romulus and Jonathan Yip (Bruno Mars) **WINNER**
Pop solo performance
"Love So Soft" — Kelly Clarkson
"Praying" — Kesha
"Million Reasons" — Lady Gaga
"What About Us" — P!nk
"Shape of You" — Ed Sheeran **WINNER**
Pop duo/group performance
"Something Just Like This" — The Chainsmokers & Coldplay
"Despacito" — Luis Fonsi & Daddy Yankee Featuring Justin Bieber
"Thunder" — Imagine Dragons
"Feel It Still" — Portugal. The Man  
"Stay" — Zedd & Alessia Cara
Traditional pop vocal album
Nobody But Me (Deluxe Version)" — Michael Bublé
Triplicate — Bob Dylan
In Full Swing — Seth MacFarlane
Wonderland — Sarah McLachlan
Tony Bennett Celebrates 90 — (Various Artists) **WINNER**
Pop vocal album
Kaleidoscope EP — Coldplay
Lust for Life — Lana Del Rey
Evolve — Imagine Dragons
Rainbow — Kesha
Joanne — Lady Gaga
÷ (Divide) — Ed Sheeran **WINNER**
Dance recording
"Bambro Koyo Ganda" — Bonobo featuring Innov Gnawa
"Cola" — Camelphat & Elderbrook
"Andromeda" — Gorillaz featuring Dram
"Tonite" — LCD Soundsystem **WINNER**
"Line of Sight" — Odesza featuring Wynne & Mansionair
Dance/electronic album
Migration — Bonobo
3-D the Catalogue — Kraftwerk **WINNER**
Mura Masa — Mura Masa
A Moment Apart — Odesza
What Now — Sylvan Esso
Contemporary instrumental album
What If — the Jerry Douglas Band
Spirit — Alex Han
Mount Royal — Julian Lage & Chris Eldridge
Prototype — Jeff Lorber Fusion **WINNER**
Bad Hombre — Antonio Sanchez
Rock performance
"You Want It Darker" — Leonard Cohen **WINNER**
"The Promise" — Chris Cornell
"Run" — Foo Fighters
"No Good" — Kaleo
"Go to War" — Nothing More
Metal performance
"Invisible Enemy" — August Burns Red
"Black Hoodie" — Body Count
"Forever" — Code Orange
"Sultan’s Curse" — Mastodon **WINNER**
"Clockworks" — Meshuggah
Rock song
"Atlas, Rise!" — James Hetfield & Lars Ulrich, songwriters (Metallica)
"Blood in the Cut" — JT Daly & Kristine Flaherty, songwriters (K.Flay)
"Go to War" — Ben Anderson, Jonny Hawkins, Will Hoffman, Daniel Oliver, David Pramik & Mark Vollelunga, songwriters (Nothing More)
"Run" — Foo Fighters, songwriters (Foo Fighters) **WINNER**
"The Stage" — Zachary Baker, Brian Haner, Matthew Sanders, Jonathan Seward & Brooks Wackerman, songwriters (Avenged Sevenfold)
Alternative music album
Everything Now — Arcade Fire
Humanz — Gorillaz
 American Dream — LCD Soundsystem
Pure Comedy — Father John Misty
Sleep Well Beast — The National **WINNER**
Rock album
Emperor of Sand — Mastodon
Hardwired...to Self-Destruct — Metallica
The Stories We Tell Ourselves — Nothing More
Villains — Queens of the Stone Age
A Deeper Understanding — the War on Drugs **WINNER**
R&B performance
"Get You" — Daniel Caesar featuring Kali Uchis
"Distraction" — Kehlani
"High" — Ledisi
"That's What I Like" — Bruno Mars **WINNER**
"The Weekend" — SZA
Traditional R&B performance
"Laugh and Move On" — the Baylor Project
"Redbone" — Childish Gambino **WINNER**
"What I'm Feelin'" — Anthony Hamilton teaturing the Hamiltones
"All the Way" — Ledisi
"Still" — Mali Music
R&B song
"First Began" — PJ Morton, songwriter (PJ Morton)
"Location" — Alfredo Gonzalez, Olatunji Ige, Samuel David Jiminez, Christopher McClenney, Khalid Robinson & Joshua Scruggs, songwriters (Khalid)
"Redbone" — Donald Glover & Ludwig Goransson, songwriters (Childish Gambino)
"Supermodel" — Tyran Donaldson, Terrence Henderson, Greg Landfair Jr., Solana Rowe & Pharrell Williams, songwriters (SZA)
"That's What I Like" — Christopher Brody Brown, James Fauntleroy, Philip Lawrence, Bruno Mars, Ray Charles McCullough II, Jeremy Reeves, Ray Romulus & Jonathan Yip, songwriters (Bruno Mars) **WINNER**
Urban contemporary album
Free 6lack — 6lack
Awaken, My Love! — Childish Gambino
American Teen — Khalid
Ctrl — SZA
Starboy — the Weeknd **WINNER**
R&B album
Freudian — Daniel Caesar
Let Love Rule — Ledisi
24K Magic — Bruno Mars **WINNER**
Gumbo — PJ Morton
Feel the Real — Musiq Soulchild
Rap performance
"Bounce Back" — Big Sean
"Bodak Yellow" — Cardi B
"4:44" — JAY-Z
"Humble." — Kendrick Lamar **WINNER**
"Bad and Boujee" — Migos featuring Lil Uzi Vert
Rap/sung performance
"Prblms" — 6lack
"Crew" — Goldlink featuring Brent Faiyaz & Shy Glizzy
"Family Feud" — JAY-Z featuring Beyoncé
"Loyalty." — Kendrick Lamar featuring Rihanna **WINNER**
"Love Galore" — SZA featuring Travis Scott
Rap song
"Bodak Yellow" — Dieuson Octave, Klenord Raphael, Shaftizm, Jordan Thorpe, Washpoppin & J White, songwriters (Cardi B)
"Chase Me" — Judah Bauer, Brian Burton, Hector Delgado, Jaime Meline, Antwan Patton, Michael Render, Russell Simins & Jon Spencer, songwriters (Danger Mouse featuring Run the Jewels & Big Boi)
"Humble." — K. Duckworth, Asheton Hogan & M. Williams II, songwriters (Kendrick Lamar) **WINNER**
"Sassy" — E. Gabouer & M. Evans, songwriters (Rapsody)
"The Story of O.J." — Shawn Carter & Dion Wilson, songwriters (JAY-Z)
Rap album
4:44 — JAY-Z
Damn. — Kendrick Lamar **WINNER**
Culture — Migos
Laila's Wisdom — Rapsody
Flower Boy — Tyler, the Creator
Country solo performance
"Body Like a Back Road" — Sam Hunt
"Losing You" — Alison Krauss
"Tin Man" — Miranda Lambert
"I Could Use a Love Song" — Maren Morris
"Either Way" — Chris Stapleton  **WINNER**
Country duo/group performance
"It Ain't My Fault" — Brothers Osborne
"My Old Man" — Zac Brown Band
"You Look Good" — Lady Antebellum
"Better Man" — Little Big Town  **WINNER**
"Drinkin' Problem" — Midland
Country song
"Better Man" — Taylor Swift, songwriter (Little Big Town)
"Body Like a Back Road" — Zach Crowell, Sam Hunt, Shane McAnally & Josh Osborne, songwriters (Sam Hunt)
"Broken Halos" — Mike Henderson & Chris Stapleton, songwriters (Chris Stapleton)
"Drinkin’ Problem" — Jess Carson, Cameron Duddy, Shane McAnally, Josh Osborne & Mark Wystrach, songwriters (Midland)
"Tin Man" — Jack Ingram, Miranda Lambert & Jon Randall, songwriters (Miranda Lambert)
Country album
Cosmic Hallelujah — Kenny Chesney
Heart Break — Lady Antebellum
The Breaker — Little Big Town
Life Changes — Thomas Rhett
From a Room: Volume 1 — Chris Stapleton **WINNER**
New Age album
Reflection — Brian Eno
SongVersation: Medicine — India.Arie
Dancing on Water — Peter Kater **WINNER**
Sacred Journey of Ku-Kai, Volume 5 — Kitaro
Spiral Revelation — Steve Roach
Improvised jazz solo
"Can't Remember Why" — Sara Caswell, soloist
"Dance of Shiva" — Billy Childs, soloist
"Whisper Not" — Fred Hersch, soloist
"Miles Beyond" — John McLaughlin, soloist**WINNER**
"Ilimba" — Chris Potter, soloist
Jazz vocal album
The Journey — The Baylor Project
A Social Call — Jazzmeia Horn
Bad A** and Blind — Raul Midón
Porter Plays Porter — Randy Porter Trio With Nancy King
Dreams and Daggers — Cécile McLorin Salvant**WINNER**
Jazz instrumental album
Uptown, Downtown — Bill Charlap Trio
Rebirth — Billy Childs**WINNER**
Project Freedom — Joey DeFrancesco & the People
Open Book — Fred Hersch
The Dreamer Is the Dream — Chris Potter
Large jazz ensemble album
MONK'estra Vol. 2 — John Beasley
Jigsaw — Alan Ferber Big Band
Bringin' It — Christian McBride Big Band**WINNER**
Homecoming — Vince Mendoza & WDR Big Band Cologne
Whispers on the Wind — Chuck Owen and the Jazz Surge
Latin jazz album
Hybrido — From Rio to Wayne Shorter — Antonio Adolfo
Oddara — Jane Bunnett & Maqueque
Outra Coisa — The Music of Moacir Santos — Anat Cohen & Marcello Gonçalves
Típico — Miguel Zenón
Jazz Tango — Pablo Ziegler Trio**WINNER**
Gospel performance/song
"Too Hard Not To" — Tina Campbell
"You Deserve It" — JJ Hairston & Youthful Praise featuring Bishop Cortez Vaughn
"Better Days" — Le'Andria
"My Life" — the Walls Group
"Never Have to Be Alone" — CeCe Winans **WINNER**
Contemporary Christian music performance/song
"Oh My Soul" — Casting Crowns
"Clean" — Natalie Grant
"What a Beautiful Name" — Hillsong Worship**WINNER**
"Even If" — MercyMe
"Hills and Valleys" — Tauren Wells
Gospel album
Crossover: Live From Music City — Travis Greene
Bigger Than Me — Le'Andria
Close — Marvin Sapp
Sunday Song — Anita Wilson
Let Them Fall in Love — CeCe Winans**WINNER**
Contemporary Christian music album
Rise — Danny Gokey
Echoes (Deluxe Edition) — Matt Maher
Lifer — MercyMe
Hills and Valleys — Tauren Wells
Chain Breaker — Zach Williams**WINNER**
Roots gospel album
The Best of the Collingsworth Family — Volume 1 — the Collingsworth Family
Give Me Jesus — Larry Cordle
Resurrection — Joseph Habedank
Sing It Now: Songs of Faith & Hope — Reba McEntire**WINNER**
Hope for All Nations — Karen Peck & New River
Latin pop album
Lo Único Constante — Alex Cuba
Mis Planes Son Amarte — Juanes
Amar y Vivir en Vivo Desde la Ciudad de México, 2017 — La Santa Cecilia
Musas (Un Homenaje al Folclore Latinoamericano en Manos de los Macorinos) — Natalia Lafourcade
El Dorado — Shakira **WINNER**
Latin rock, urban or alternative album
Ayo — Bomba Estéreo
Pa' Fuera — C4 Trío & Desorden Público
Salvavidas de Hielo — Jorge Drexler
El Paradise — Los Amigos Invisibles
Residente — Residente **WINNER**
Regional Mexican music album (including Tejano)
Ni Diablo Ni Santo — Julión Álvarez y Su Norteño Banda
Ayer y Hoy — Banda el Recodo de Cruz Lizárraga
Momentos — Alex Campos
Arriero Somos Versiones Acústicas — Aida Cuevas **WINNER**
Zapateando en el Norte — Humberto Novoa, producer (Various Artists)
Tropical Latin album
Albita — Albita
Art of the Arrangement — Doug Beavers
Salsa Big Band — Rubén Blades con Roberto Delgado & Orquesta **WINNER**
Gente Valiente — Silvestre Dangond
Indestructible — Diego el Cigala
American roots performance
"Killer Diller Blues" — Alabama Shakes **WINNER**
"Let My Mother Live" — Blind Boys of Alabama
"Arkansas Farmboy" — Glen Campbell
"Steer Your Way" — Leonard Cohen
"I Never Cared for You" — Alison Krauss
American roots song
"Cumberland Gap" — David Rawlings
"I Wish You Well" — the Mavericks
"If We Were Vampires" — Jason Isbell and the 400 Unit **WINNER**
"It Ain't Over Yet" — Rodney Crowell featuring Rosanne Cash & John Paul White
"My Only True Friend" — Gregg Allman
Americana album
Southern Blood — Gregg Allman
Shine on Rainy Day — Brent Cobb
Beast Epic — Iron & Wine
The Nashville Sound — Jason Isbell and the 400 Unit  **WINNER**
Brand New Day — the Mavericks
Bluegrass album
Fiddler's Dream — Michael Cleveland
Laws of Gravity — the Infamous Stringdusters  **WINNER**
Original — Bobby Osborne
Universal Favorite — Noam Pikelny
All the Rage - In Concert Volume One [Live] — Rhonda Vincent and the Rage  **WINNER**
Traditional blues album
Migration Blues — Eric Bibb
Elvin Bishop's Big Fun Trio — Elvin Bishop's Big Fun Trio
Roll and Tumble — R.L. Boyce
Sonny & Brownie's Last Train — Guy Davis & Fabrizio Poggi
Blue & Lonesome — the Rolling Stones  **WINNER**
Contemporary blues album
Robert Cray & Hi Rhythm — Robert Cray & Hi Rhythm
Recorded Live in Lafayette — Sonny Landreth
TajMo — Taj Mahal & Keb' Mo'  **WINNER**
Got Soul — Robert Randolph & the Family Band
Live From the Fox Oakland — Tedeschi Trucks Band
Folk album
Mental Illness — Aimee Mann  **WINNER**
Semper Femina — Laura Marling
The Queen of Hearts — Offa Rex
You Don't Own Me Anymore — the Secret Sisters
The Laughing Apple — Yusuf / Cat Stevens
Regional roots music album
Top of the Mountain — Dwayne Dopsie and the Zydeco Hellraisers
Ho'okena 3.0 — Ho'okena
Kalenda — Lost Bayou Ramblers  **WINNER**
Miyo Kekisepa, Make a Stand [Live] — Northern Cree
Pua Kiele — Josh Tatofi
Reggae album
Chronology — Chronixx
Lost in Paradise — Common Kings
Wash House Ting — J Boog
Stony Hill — Damian "Jr. Gong" Marley  **WINNER**
Avrakedabra — Morgan Heritage
World music album
Memoria de los Sentidos — Vicente Amigo
Para Mi — Buika
Rosa Dos Ventos — Anat Cohen & Trio Brasileiro
Shaka Zulu Revisited: 30th Anniversary Celebration — Ladysmith Black Mambazo  **WINNER**
Elwan — Tinariwen
Children's album
Brighter Side — Gustafer Yellowgold
Feel What U Feel — Lisa Loeb  **WINNER**
Lemonade — Justin Roberts
Rise Shine #Woke — Alphabet Rockers
Songs of Peace & Love for Kids & Parents Around the World — Ladysmith Black Mambazo
Spoken word album (includes poetry, audiobooks & storytelling)
Astrophysics for People in a Hurry — Neil deGrasse Tyson
Born to Run — Bruce Springsteen
Confessions of a Serial Songwriter — Shelly Peiken
Our Revolution: A Future to Believe In (Bernie Sanders) — Bernie Sanders and Mark Ruffalo
The Princess Diarist — Carrie Fisher **WINNER**
Comedy album
The Age of Spin & Deep in the Heart of Texas — Dave Chappelle **WINNER**
Cinco — Jim Gaffigan
Jerry Before Seinfeld — Jerry Seinfeld
A Speck of Dust — Sarah Silverman
What Now? — Kevin Hart
Musical theater album
Come From Away — Ian Eisendrath, August Eriksmoen, David Hein, David Lai & Irene Sankoff, producers; David Hein & Irene Sankoff, composers/lyricists (Original Broadway Cast Recording)
Dear Evan Hansen — Ben Platt, principal soloist; Alex Lacamoire, Stacey Mindich, Benj Pasek & Justin Paul, producers; Benj Pasek & Justin Paul, composers/lyricists (Original Broadway Cast Recording) **WINNER**
Hello, Dolly! — Bette Midler, principal soloist; Steven Epstein, producer (Jerry Herman, composer & lyricist) (New Broadway Cast Recording)
Compilation soundtrack for visual media
Baby Driver (Various Artists)
Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2: Awesome Mix Vol. 2 (Various Artists)
Hidden Figures: The Album (Various Artists)
La La Land (Various Artists) **WINNER**
Moana: The Songs (Various Artists)
Score soundtrack for visual media
Arrival — Jóhann Jóhannsson, composer
Dunkirk — Hans Zimmer, composer
Game of Thrones: Season 7 — Ramin Djawadi, composer
Hidden Figures — Benjamin Wallfisch, Pharrell Williams & Hans Zimmer, composers 
La La Land — Justin Hurwitz, composer **WINNER**
Song written for visual media
"City of Stars" — Justin Hurwitz, Benj Pasek & Justin Paul, songwriters (Ryan Gosling & Emma Stone)
"How Far I'll Go" — Lin-Manuel Miranda, songwriter (Auli'i Cravalho) **WINNER**
"I Don't Wanna Live Forever (Fifty Shades Darker)" — Jack Antonoff, Sam Dew & Taylor Swift, songwriters (Zayn & Taylor Swift)
"Never Give Up" — Sia Furler & Greg Kurstin, songwriters (Sia)
"Stand Up for Something" — Common & Diane Warren, songwriters (Andra Day featuring Common)
Instrumental composition
"Alkaline" — Pascal Le Boeuf, composer (Le Boeuf Brothers & JACK Quartet)
"Choros #3" — Vince Mendoza, composer (Vince Mendoza & WDR Big Band Cologne)
"Home Free (For Peter Joe)" — Nate Smith, composer (Nate Smith)
"Three Revolutions" — Arturo O'Farrill, composer (Arturo O'Farrill & Chucho Valdés) **WINNER**
"Warped Cowboy" — Chuck Owen, composer (Chuck Owen and the Jazz Surge)
Arrangement, instrumental or a cappella
"All Hat, No Saddle" — Chuck Owen, arranger (Chuck Owen and the Jazz Surge)
"Escapades for Alto Saxophone and Orchestra From Catch Me If You Can" — John Williams, arranger (John Williams) **WINNER**
"Home Free (For Peter Joe)" — Nate Smith, arranger (Nate Smith)
"Ugly Beauty/Pannonica" — John Beasley, arranger (John Beasley)
"White Christmas" — Chris Walden, arranger (Herb Alpert)
Arrangement, instruments and vocals
"Another Day of Sun" — Justin Hurwitz, arranger (La La Land Cast)
"Every Time We Say Goodbye" — Jorge Calandrelli, arranger (Clint Holmes featuring Jane Monheit)
"I Like Myself" — Joel McNeely, arranger (Seth MacFarlane)
"I Loves You Porgy/There's a Boat That's Leavin' Soon for New York" — Shelly Berg, Gregg Field, Gordon Goodwin & Clint Holmes, arrangers (Clint Holmes featuring Dee Dee Bridgewater and the Count Basie Orchestra)
"Putin" — Randy Newman, arranger (Randy Newman) **WINNER**
Recording package
El Orisha de la Rosa — Claudio Roncoli & Cactus Taller, art directors (Magín Díaz) TIE **WINNER**
Mura Masa — Alex Crossan & Matt De Jong, art directors (Mura Masa)
Pure Comedy (Deluxe Edition) — Sasha Barr, Ed Steed & Josh Tillman, art directors (Father John Misty) TIE **WINNER**
Sleep Well Beast — Elyanna Blaser-Gould, Luke Hayman & Andrea Trabucco-Campos, art directors (The National)
Solid State — Gail Marowitz, art director (Jonathan Coulton) Gail Marowitz, art director (Jonathan Coulton)
Boxed or special limited edition package
Bobo Yeye: Belle Epoque in Upper Volta — Tim Breen, art director (Various Artists)
Lovely Creatures: The Best of Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds (1984- 2014) — Tom Hingston, art director (Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds)
May 1977: Get Shown the Light - Masaki Koike, art director (Grateful Dead)
The Voyager Golden Record: 40th Anniversary Edition — Lawrence Azerrad, Timothy Daly & David Pescovitz, art directors (Various Artists) **WINNER**
Warfaring Strangers: Acid Nightmares — Tim Breen, Benjamin Marra & Ken Shipley, art directors (Various Artists)
Album notes
Arthur Q. Smith: The Trouble With the Truth — Wayne Bledsoe & Bradley Reeves, album notes writers (Various Artists)
Big Bend Killing: The Appalachian Ballad Tradition — Ted Olson, album notes writer (Various Artists)
The Complete Piano Works of Scott Joplin — Bryan S. Wright, album notes writer (Richard Dowling)
Edouard-Léon Scott de Martinville, Inventor of Sound Recording: A Bicentennial Tribute — David Giovannoni, album notes writer (Various Artists)
Live at the Whisky A Go Go: The Complete Recordings — Lynell George, album notes writer (Otis Redding) **WINNER**
Washington Phillips and His Manzarene Dreams — Michael Corcoran, album notes writer (Washington Phillips)
Historical album
Bobo Yeye: Belle Epoque in Upper Volta — Jon Kirby, Florent Mazzoleni, Rob Sevier & Ken Shipley, compilation producers; Jeff Lipton & Maria Rice, mastering engineers (Various Artists)
The Goldberg Variations — the Complete Unreleased Recording Sessions June 1955 — Robert Russ, compilation producer; Matthias Erb, Martin Kistner & Andreas K. Meyer, mastering engineers (Glenn Gould)
Leonard Bernstein — the Composer — Robert Russ, compilation producer; Martin Kistner & Andreas K. Meyer, mastering engineers (Leonard Bernstein) **WINNER**
Sweet as Broken Dates: Lost Somali Tapes From the Horn of Africa — Nicolas Sheikholeslami & Vik Sohonie, compilation producers; Michael Graves, mastering engineer (Various Artists)
Washington Phillips and His Manzarene Dreams — Michael Corcoran, April G. Ledbetter & Steven Lance Ledbetter, compilation producers; Michael Graves, mastering engineer (Washington Phillips)
Engineered album, non-classical
Every Where Is Some Where — Brent Arrowood, Miles Comaskey, JT Daly, Tommy English, Kristine Flaherty, Adam Hawkins, Chad Howat & Tony Maserati, engineers; Joe LaPorta, mastering engineer (K.Flay)
Is This the Life We Really Want? — Nigel Godrich, Sam Petts-Davies & Darrell Thorp, engineers; Bob Ludwig, mastering engineer (Roger Waters)
Natural Conclusion — Ryan Freeland, engineer; Joao Carvalho, mastering engineer (Rose Cousins)
No Shape — Shawn Everett & Joseph Lorge, engineers; Patricia Sullivan, mastering engineer (Perfume Genius)
24K Magic — Serban Ghenea, John Hanes & Charles Moniz, engineers; Tom Coyne, mastering engineer (Bruno Mars) **WINNER**
Producer of the year, non-classical
Calvin Harris
Greg Kurstin **WINNER**
Blake Mills
No I.D.
The Stereotypes
Remixed recording
"Can't Let You Go (Louie Vega Roots Mix)" — Louie Vega, remixer (Loleatta Holloway)
"Funk O' De Funk (SMLE Remix)" — SMLE, remixers (Bobby Rush)
"Undercover (Adventure Club Remix)" — Leighton James & Christian Srigley, remixers (Kehlani)
"A Violent Noise (Four Tet Remix)" — Four Tet, remixer (The xx)
"You Move (Latroit Remix)" — Dennis White, remixer (Depeche Mode) **WINNER**
Surround sound album
Early Americans — Jim Anderson, surround mix engineer; Darcy Proper, surround mastering engineer; Jim Anderson & Jane Ira Bloom, surround producers (Jane Ira Bloom) **WINNER**
Kleiberg: Mass for Modern Man — Morten Lindberg, surround mix engineer; Morten Lindberg, surround mastering engineer; Morten Lindberg, surround producer (Eivind Gullberg Jensen & Trondheim Symphony Orchestra And Choir)
So Is My Love — Morten Lindberg, surround mix engineer; Morten Lindberg, surround mastering engineer; Morten Lindberg, surround producer (Nina T. Karlsen & Ensemble 96)
3-D the Catalogue — Fritz Hilpert, surround mix engineer; Tom Ammermann, surround mastering engineer; Fritz Hilpert, surround producer (Kraftwerk)
Tyberg: Masses — Jesse Brayman, surround mix engineer; Jesse Brayman, surround mastering engineer; Blanton Alspaugh, surround producer (Brian A. Schmidt, Christopher Jacobson & South Dakota Chorale)
Engineered album, classical
Danielpour: Songs of Solitude & War Songs — Gary Call, engineer (Thomas Hampson, Giancarlo Guerrero & Nashville Symphony)
Kleiberg: Mass for Modern Man — Morten Lindberg, engineer (Eivind Gullberg Jensen, Trondheim Vokalensemble & Trondheim Symphony Orchestra)
Schoenberg, Adam: American Symphony; Finding Rothko; Picture Studies — Keith O. Johnson & Sean Royce Martin, engineers (Michael Stern & Kansas City Symphony)
Shostakovich: Symphony No. 5; Barber: Adagio — Mark Donahue, engineer (Manfred Honeck & Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra) **WINNER**
Tyberg: Masses — John Newton, engineer; Jesse Brayman, mastering engineer (Brian A. Schmidt, Christopher Jacobson & South Dakota Chorale)
Producer of the year, classical
Blanton Alspaugh
Manfred Eicher
David Frost**WINNER**
Morten Lindberg
Judith Sherman
Orchestral performance
"Concertos for Orchestra" — Louis Langrée, conductor (Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra)
"Copland: Symphony No. 3; Three Latin American Sketches" — Leonard Slatkin, conductor (Detroit Symphony Orchestra)
"Debussy: Images; Jeux & aa Plus Que Lente" — Michael Tilson Thomas, conductor (San Francisco Symphony)
"Mahler: Symphony No. 5" — Osmo Vänskä, conductor (Minnesota Orchestra)
"Shostakovich: Symphony No. 5; Barber: Adagio" — Manfred Honeck, conductor (Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra)**WINNNER**
Opera recording
"Berg: Lulu" — Lothar Koenigs, conductor; Daniel Brenna, Marlis Petersen & Johan Reuter; Jay David Saks, producer (The Metropolitan Opera Orchestra)
"Berg: Wozzeck" — Hans Graf, conductor; Anne Schwanewilms & Roman Trekel; Hans Graf, producer (Houston Symphony; Chorus of Students and Alumni, Shepherd School of Music, Rice University & Houston Grand Opera Children's Chorus)**WINNER*
"Bizet: Les Pêcheurs de Perles" — Gianandrea Noseda, conductor; Diana Damrau, Mariusz Kwiecień, Matthew Polenzani & Nicolas Testé; Jay David Saks, producer (The Metropolitan Opera Orchestra; The Metropolitan Opera Chorus)
"Handel: Ottone" — George Petrou, conductor; Max Emanuel Cencic & Lauren Snouffer; Jacob Händel, producer (Il Pomo D'Oro)
"Rimsky-Korsakov: The Golden Cockerel" — Valery Gergiev, conductor; Vladimir Feliauer, Aida Garifullina & Kira Loginova; Ilya Petrov, producer (Mariinsky Orchestra; Mariinsky Chorus)
Choral Performance
"Bryars: The Fifth Century" — Donald Nally, conductor (PRISM Quartet; The Crossing)**WINNER**
"Handel: Messiah" — Andrew Davis, conductor; Noel Edison, chorus master (Elizabeth DeShong, John Relyea, Andrew Staples & Erin Wall; Toronto Symphony Orchestra; Toronto Mendelssohn Choir)
"Mansurian: Requiem" — Alexander Liebreich, conductor; Florian Helgath, chorus master (Anja Petersen & Andrew Redmond; Münchener Kammerorchester; RIAS Kammerchor)
"Music of the Spheres" — Nigel Short, conductor (Tenebrae)
“Tyberg: Masses” — Brian A. Schmidt, conductor (Christopher Jacobson; South Dakota Chorale)
Chamber music/small ensemble performance
"Buxtehude: Trio Sonatas, Op. 1" — Arcangelo
"Death & the Maiden" — Patricia Kopatchinskaja & the Saint Paul Chamber Orchestra**WINNER**
"Divine Theatre — Sacred Motets by Giaches De Wert" — Stile Antico
"Franck, Kurtág, Previn & Schumann" — Joyce Yang & Augustin Hadelich
"Martha Argerich & Friends — Live From Lugano 2016" — Martha Argerich & Various Artists
Classical instrumental solo
"Bach: The French Suites" — Murray Perahia
"Haydn: Cello Concertos" — Steven Isserlis; Florian Donderer, conductor (The Deutsch Kammerphilharmonie Bremen)
"Levina: The Piano Concertos" — Maria Lettberg; Ariane Matiakh, conductor (Rundfunk-Sinfonieorchester Berlin)
"Shostakovich: Violin Concertos Nos. 1 & 2" — Frank Peter Zimmermann; Alan Gilbert, conductor (NDR Elbphilharmonie Orchester)
"Transcendental" - Daniil Trifonov **WINNER**
Classical solo vocal album
Bach & Telemann: Sacred Cantatas — Philippe Jaroussky; Petra Müllejans, conductor (Ann-Kathrin Brüggemann & Juan de la Rubia; Freiburger Barockorchester)
Crazy Girl Crazy — Music by Gershwin, Berg & Berio — Barbara Hannigan (Orchestra Ludwig)**WINNER**
Gods & Monsters — Nicholas Phan; Myra Huang, accompanist
In War & Peace — Harmony Through Music — Joyce DiDonato; Maxim Emelyanychev, conductor (Il Pomo D’Oro)
Sviridov: Russia Cast Adrift — Dmitri Hvorostovsky; Constantine Orbelian, conductor (St. Petersburg State Symphony Orchestra & Style of Five Ensemble)
Classical compendium
"Barbara" — Alexandre Tharaud; Cécile Lenoir, producer
"Higdon: All Things Majestic, Viola Concerto & Oboe Concerto" — Giancarlo Guerrero, conductor; Tim Handley, producer**WINNER**
"Kurtág: Complete Works for Ensemble & Choir" — Reinbert de Leeuw, conductor; Guido Tichelman, producer
"Les Routes de l'Esclavage" — Jordi Savall, conductor; Benjamin Bleton, producer
"Mademoiselle: Première Audience — Unknown Music of Nadia Boulanger" — Lucy Mauro; Lucy Mauro, producer
Contemporary classical composition
"Danielpour: Songs of Solitude" — Richard Danielpour, composer (Thomas Hampson, Giancarlo Guerrero & Nashville Symphony)
"Higdon: Viola Concerto" — Jennifer Higdon, composer (Roberto Díaz, Giancarlo Guerrero & Nashville Symphony)**WINNER**
"Mansurian: Requiem" — Tigran Mansurian, composer (Alexander Liebreich, Florian Helgath, RIAS Kammerchor & Münchener Kammerorchester)
"Schoenberg, Adam: Picture Studies" — Adam Schoenberg, composer (Michael Stern & Kansas City Symphony)
"Zhou Tian: Concerto for Orchestra" — Zhou Tian, composer (Louis Langrée & Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra)
Music video
"Up All Night" — (Beck) Canada, video director; Laura Serra Estorch & Oscar Romagosa, video producers
"Makeba" — (Jain) Lionel Hirle & Gregory Ohrel, video directors; Yodelice, video producer
"The Story of O.J." — (JAY-Z) Shawn Carter & Mark Romanek, video directors; Daniel Midgley, video producer
"Humble." — (Kendrick Lamar) The Little Homies & Dave Meyers, video directors; Jason Baum, Dave Free, Jamie Rabineau, Nathan K. Scherrer & Anthony Tiffith, video producers **WINNER**
"1-800-273-8255" — (Logic featuring Alessia Cara & Khalid) Andy Hines, video director; Andrew Lerios, video producer
Music film
One More Time With Feeling (Nick Cave & the Bad Seeds) Andrew Dominik, video director; Dulcie Kellett & James Wilson, video producers
Long Strange Trip (The Grateful Dead) Amir Bar-Lev, video director; Alex Blavatnik, Ken Dornstein, Eric Eisner, Nick Koskoff & Justin Kreutzmann, video producers
The Defiant Ones (Various Artists) Allen Hughes, video director; Sarah Anthony, Fritzi Horstman, Broderick Johnson, Gene Kirkwood, Andrew Kosove, Laura Lancaster, Michael Lombardo, Jerry Longarzo, Doug Pray & Steven Williams, video producers **WINNER**
Soundbreaking (Various Artists) Maro Chermayeff & Jeff Dupre, video directors; Joshua Bennett, Julia Marchesi, Sam Pollard, Sally Rosenthal, Amy Schewel & Warren Zanes, video producers
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