#Stelios Papadopoulos
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
thephotoregistry · 1 year ago
Photo
Tumblr media
Stelios Papadopoulos
114 notes · View notes
mariaangels · 1 year ago
Text
Tumblr media
Stelios Papadopoulos
2 notes · View notes
javierizquierdo · 7 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media
Stelios Papadopoulos
123 notes · View notes
elladastinkardiamou · 3 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Tinos
Photos by Stelios Papadopoulos
14 notes · View notes
alatismeni-theitsa · 5 years ago
Video
youtube
The Greeks who voiced AC Odyssey
Searching for Sparti I fell on that awesome video! It shows a lot of voice actors of the characters in AC Odyssey and many of those are Greek/of Greek descent!
The people on this list were chosen solely on name and surname. There might be other people of Greek descent with non Greek names. But I wanted to be sure, so I put here the ones who have either a Greek name or surname or both)
Here is the Greek people in the cast:
Melissanthi Mahut ... Kassandra Michael Antonakos ... Alexios Leonidas Castrounis ... Young Alexios Maria Syrgiannis ... Young Kassandra / Myrinne Elias Toufexis ... Leonidas / Nikolaos Andreas Apergis ... Barnabas Damon Papadopoulos Damon Papadopoulos ... Markos Tara Nicodemo ... Dr. Victoria Bibeau John Tokatlidis Tracy Michailidis ... Greek Civilian (voice) Alexander Andreou ... Greek Civilian (voice) Marianthi Evans ... Aspasia / Bryce / Greek Civilian (voice) Alexis Georgoulis ... Greek Civilian (voice) Alex Karzis ... Greek Civilian (voice) Alexandra Valassis ... Greek Civilian (voice) Alkis Kritikos ... Artaxerxes / Greek Civilian (voice) Alexia Karas ... Greek Civilian (voice) Simon Kassianides ... Greek Civilian (voice) Anastasia Kokolakis ... Kallipateira / Astra / Greek Civilian (voice) Aris Athanasopoulos ... Greek Civilian (voice) Katerina Taxia ... Otonia / Greek Civilian (voice) Yorgos Pirpassopoulos ... Kleon / Greek Civilian (voice) Nikos Poursanidis ... Greek Civilian (voice) Angela Christofilou ... Sphinx / Greek Civilian (voice) Constantine Meglis ... Greek Civilian (voice) George Nickolas K. ... Leiandros the fake Minotaur (voice)  Argyris Gaganis ... Greek Civilian (voice)  Georgia Hadjis ... Greek Civilian (voice) Chris Pavlo Chris Pavlo ... Perikles / Greek Civilian (voice) Daphne Alexander ... Anthousa / Greek Civilian (voice) Yorgos Karamihos ... Greek Civilian (voice) Fanos Xenofós ... Empedokles / Charon / Priest / Greek Civilian (voice) George Georgiou ... Greek Civilian (voice) Michael Iliadis ... Greek Civilian (voice) Athena Karkanis ... Greek Civilian (voice) Théa Taxia ... Khloe / Greek Civilian (voice) Hara Yannas ... Greek Civilian (voice) Laz Geronikolos ... Greek Civilian (voice) John Moraitis ... Greek Civilian (voice) Maria Vacratsis ... Greek Civilian (voice) Louiza Patikas ... Greek Civilian (voice) Manolis Emmanouel ... Greek Civilian (voice) Alex Hatz ... Greek Civilian (voice) Alexandra Metaxa ... Kyra / Greek Civilian (voice) Alix Sideris ... Greek Civilian (voice) Olivia Lebedeva-Alexopoulou ... Phoibe / Greek Civilian (voice) Andreas Tsogkas ... Greek Civilian (voice) Anthony Skordi ... Pythagoras (voice) Pano Masti ... Greek Civilian (voice) Aris Tyros ... Greek Civilian (voice) Christine Diakos ... Greek Civilian (voice) Christos Vasilopoulos ... Greek Civilian (voice) Peter Polycarpou ... Herodotos / Greek Civilian (voice) Sergio Priftis ... Greek Civilian (voice) Harrison Ioannou ... Greek Civilian (voice) Jimmy Makris ... Various voices (voice) Stavros Demetraki ... Greek Civilian (voice) Kaliopi Kuzyk ... Greek Civilian (voice) Stelios Trakas ... Greek Civilian (voice) Melina Theocharidou ... Greek Civilian (voice) Sophia Pantazi ... Greek Civilian (voice) Tania Kontoyanni ... Greek Civilian (voice) Vangelis Christodoulou ... Thaletas / Greek Civilian (voice) Chrisanthi Ali ... Greek Civilian (voice) Stella-Semeli Bazante ... Greek Civilian (voice) Despoina Kaptzi     ... Greek Civilian (voice) George Kopsidas    ... Greek Civilian (voice) Nestor Kopsidas      ... Greek Civilian (voice) Vassilis Koukalani     ... Greek Civilian (voice) Varvara Larmou      … Greek Civilian (voice) Alexandros Logothetis ... Greek Civilian (voice) Dennis Makris ... Greek Civilian (voice) Leda Maniatakou ... Greek Civilian (voice)  Lena Papaligoura ... Greek Civilian (voice) Nikos Psarras ... Greek Civilian (voice) Zoi Rigopoulou ... Greek Civilian (voice)  Nikolaos Siozos ... Greek Civilian (voice) Christos Smirnis ... Greek Civilian (voice) Martha Tompoulidou ... Chrysis / Greek Civilian (voice) Electra Tsakalia ... Greek Civilian (voice)  Penelope Tsilika ... Greek Civilian (voice) Antonis Tsiotsiopoulos ... Greek Civilian (voice) Anna Tzanakaki ... Greek Civilian (voice) Marita Tzatzadaki Aspioti ... Greek Civilian (voice)  Larisa Vergou ... Greek Civilian (voice)  Georgios Zacharopoulos ... Greek Civilian (voice)  Ilias Zervos ... Greek Civilian (voice) Marios Gavrilis ... Alexios (voice) Natalie Papanou ... Nerita / Greek Civilian (voice) Lia Pappas-Kemps  Elias Scoufaras   ... Various Voices (voice)
Many, huh? See Hollywood? We are not that hard to find :) 
76 notes · View notes
sophi-aubrey · 6 years ago
Text
Tumblr media
I can only breathe at your feet . . . .
© Ivan Turgenev
by Stelios Papadopoulos
Merci @finita--la--commedia for this words
32 notes · View notes
seemoreandmore · 7 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media
stelios papadopoulos
749 notes · View notes
hearfootsteps · 7 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media
_____ Stelios  Papadopoulos
3 notes · View notes
thephotoregistry · 1 year ago
Photo
Tumblr media
Stelios Papadopoulos
44 notes · View notes
reneeacaseyfl · 5 years ago
Text
Earthquake in Athens: Greece capital rocked by strong quake today; one building collapsed, others seriously damaged – live updates
Athens, Greece – A strong earthquake hit Friday near the Greek capital of Athens, causing residents to run into the streets in fear and firefighters to check for people trapped in elevators. The Athens Institute of Geodynamics gave the earthquake a preliminary magnitude of 5.1 but the U.S. Geological Survey gave it a preliminary magnitude of 5.3.  The Athens Institute says the quake struck at 2:13 p.m. local time about 13.7 miles north of Athens.
Damaged buildings in city’s downtown are seen following an earthquake in Athens, Greece, July 19, 2019.
ALKIS KONSTANTINIDIS / REUTERS
The quake sparked limited power cuts and communication problems around Athens and the fire brigade reported receiving calls about people being trapped in elevators. The shock was caught live in the studios of state broadcaster ERT.
Authorities inspected areas close to the epicenter by helicopter and police patrols but no deaths or serious injuries were reported. Government spokesman Stelios Petsas said one abandoned building had collapsed in a western district of Athens and that several other abandoned buildings had suffered serious damages in other parts of the city.
“There are no reports of serious injuries … I urge members of the public to remains calm, in Greece we are well acquainted with earthquakes,” he said.
The most powerful quake to hit the Greek capital in the last 20 years came in 1999, when a temblor of magnitude 6.0 caused extensive damage and killed more than 140 people.
Gerasimos Papadopoulos, the senior seismologist at the Geodynamics Institute said Friday’s quake was felt across southern Greece.
“It had a very shallow depth and that’s why it was felt so strongly,” he said. “It is too early to say whether this was the main earthquake, but there have been aftershocks of magnitude 3.5, 2.5 and 3.2 and that is encouraging. But we need more time and data to have a clear picture.”
A firefighter stands next to a partly demolished structure following an earthquake, at the port of Piraeus, near Athens, Greece, July 19, 2019.
ALKIS KONSTANTINIDIS / REUTERS
Earthquakes are common in Greece and neighboring Turkey.
The head of the anti-quake protection agency, Efthymios Lekkas, told Greeks to remain calm, BBC News reported. “There is no reason for concern. The capital’s buildings are built to withstand a much stronger earthquake,” he said.  
The quake struck about 13.7 miles north of Athens.
U.S. Geological Survey
Credit: Source link
The post Earthquake in Athens: Greece capital rocked by strong quake today; one building collapsed, others seriously damaged – live updates appeared first on WeeklyReviewer.
from WeeklyReviewer https://weeklyreviewer.com/earthquake-in-athens-greece-capital-rocked-by-strong-quake-today-one-building-collapsed-others-seriously-damaged-live-updates/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=earthquake-in-athens-greece-capital-rocked-by-strong-quake-today-one-building-collapsed-others-seriously-damaged-live-updates from WeeklyReviewer https://weeklyreviewer.tumblr.com/post/186405935552
0 notes
velmaemyers88 · 5 years ago
Text
Earthquake in Athens: Greece capital rocked by strong quake today; one building collapsed, others seriously damaged – live updates
Athens, Greece – A strong earthquake hit Friday near the Greek capital of Athens, causing residents to run into the streets in fear and firefighters to check for people trapped in elevators. The Athens Institute of Geodynamics gave the earthquake a preliminary magnitude of 5.1 but the U.S. Geological Survey gave it a preliminary magnitude of 5.3.  The Athens Institute says the quake struck at 2:13 p.m. local time about 13.7 miles north of Athens.
Damaged buildings in city’s downtown are seen following an earthquake in Athens, Greece, July 19, 2019.
ALKIS KONSTANTINIDIS / REUTERS
The quake sparked limited power cuts and communication problems around Athens and the fire brigade reported receiving calls about people being trapped in elevators. The shock was caught live in the studios of state broadcaster ERT.
Authorities inspected areas close to the epicenter by helicopter and police patrols but no deaths or serious injuries were reported. Government spokesman Stelios Petsas said one abandoned building had collapsed in a western district of Athens and that several other abandoned buildings had suffered serious damages in other parts of the city.
“There are no reports of serious injuries … I urge members of the public to remains calm, in Greece we are well acquainted with earthquakes,” he said.
The most powerful quake to hit the Greek capital in the last 20 years came in 1999, when a temblor of magnitude 6.0 caused extensive damage and killed more than 140 people.
Gerasimos Papadopoulos, the senior seismologist at the Geodynamics Institute said Friday’s quake was felt across southern Greece.
“It had a very shallow depth and that’s why it was felt so strongly,” he said. “It is too early to say whether this was the main earthquake, but there have been aftershocks of magnitude 3.5, 2.5 and 3.2 and that is encouraging. But we need more time and data to have a clear picture.”
A firefighter stands next to a partly demolished structure following an earthquake, at the port of Piraeus, near Athens, Greece, July 19, 2019.
ALKIS KONSTANTINIDIS / REUTERS
Earthquakes are common in Greece and neighboring Turkey.
The head of the anti-quake protection agency, Efthymios Lekkas, told Greeks to remain calm, BBC News reported. “There is no reason for concern. The capital’s buildings are built to withstand a much stronger earthquake,” he said.  
The quake struck about 13.7 miles north of Athens.
U.S. Geological Survey
Credit: Source link
The post Earthquake in Athens: Greece capital rocked by strong quake today; one building collapsed, others seriously damaged – live updates appeared first on WeeklyReviewer.
from WeeklyReviewer https://weeklyreviewer.com/earthquake-in-athens-greece-capital-rocked-by-strong-quake-today-one-building-collapsed-others-seriously-damaged-live-updates/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=earthquake-in-athens-greece-capital-rocked-by-strong-quake-today-one-building-collapsed-others-seriously-damaged-live-updates from WeeklyReviewer https://weeklyreviewer.tumblr.com/post/186405935552
0 notes
global-news-station · 5 years ago
Link
A strong and shallow 5.1-magnitude earthquake jolted Athens on Friday, knocking out phone connections, collapsing a couple of abandoned buildings and causing power outages, as worried residents rushed into the streets.
“It was a very intense quake, we were terrified, everyone started coming out (of the building),” said Katerina, who works in a six-storey cosmetics store.
“It was more like an explosion,” another woman told state TV ERT on central Syntagma Square.
“We were all very afraid, so we’ll stay here for a couple of hours,” she said.
“There are no reports of serious injury,” government spokesman Stelios Petsas said on television, adding that a small number of other buildings had suffered minor damage.
Petsas added that phone networks had become “overcharged” by the sheer number of users calling to check up on friends and family.
SKAI TV said there were 20,000 calls per second, more than on New Year’s Eve.
Cracks appeared in some walls in Greece’s 170-year-old parliament building.
A female tourist was lightly injured by falling plaster elsewhere, reports said, and at least two abandoned buildings in the capital collapsed.
News channels ran images sent in by viewers showing parked cars in central Athens damaged by fallen masonry.
One Athens church had its cupola cross snapped by the tremor, and a disused cargo transport bridge at the port of Piraeus collapsed, TV footage showed.
– ‘Remain calm’ –
According to the Greek geodynamic institute, it was a 5.1-magnitude quake with an epicentre near the town of Magoula, 23 kilometres (14 miles) northwest of Athens, and was followed by several aftershocks.
State engineers were already checking buildings for structural damage, and two helicopters overflew the quake’s epicentre, officials said.
The quake struck at around 1100 GMT at a depth of 13 kilometres, the institute said.
Worried residents and office staff have crowded outdoor areas but the government denied it had ordered an evacuation alert.
The fire department rescued dozens of people trapped in elevators in the capital, state broadcaster ERT said.
“People must remain calm,” said Efthymios Lekkas, head of the state anti-quake protection agency.
“There is no reason for concern. The capital’s buildings are built to withstand a much stronger earthquake,” he told ERT.
The epicentre was close to where a 5.9-magnitude quake in 1999 left 143 people dead in and near Athens.
The US geological institute said Friday’s quake had a magnitude of 5.3.
“For the time being we cannot be sure whether this was the main earthquake,” seismologist Gerassimos Papadopoulos told ERT.
“There have been at least three (smaller) aftershocks already, which is a positive sign,” he said, adding that the quake was felt as far as the Peloponnese islands.
“People in the capital must remain calm… they must be psychologically ready for more aftershocks,” he said.
– Major fault lines –
News media reported electricity outages but said internet connections were still operating.
Friday’s emergency was the second in just over a week for the new conservative administration of Kyriakos Mitsotakis, who took over after July 7 elections.
On July 10, seven people died and at least 23 were injured — most of them tourists — as a fierce storm ripped through beachfronts in Halkidiki, one of Greece’s top tourist areas.
Greece lies on major fault lines and is regularly hit by earthquakes, but they rarely cause casualties.
In July 2017, a 6.7-magnitude earthquake killed two people on the island of Kos in the Aegean sea, causing significant damage.
The post Strong quake shakes Athens, knocks out phone service appeared first on ARYNEWS.
https://ift.tt/30GBurt
0 notes
weeklyreviewer · 5 years ago
Text
Earthquake in Athens: Greece capital rocked by strong quake today; one building collapsed, others seriously damaged – live updates
Athens, Greece – A strong earthquake hit Friday near the Greek capital of Athens, causing residents to run into the streets in fear and firefighters to check for people trapped in elevators. The Athens Institute of Geodynamics gave the earthquake a preliminary magnitude of 5.1 but the U.S. Geological Survey gave it a preliminary magnitude of 5.3.  The Athens Institute says the quake struck at 2:13 p.m. local time about 13.7 miles north of Athens.
Damaged buildings in city’s downtown are seen following an earthquake in Athens, Greece, July 19, 2019.
ALKIS KONSTANTINIDIS / REUTERS
The quake sparked limited power cuts and communication problems around Athens and the fire brigade reported receiving calls about people being trapped in elevators. The shock was caught live in the studios of state broadcaster ERT.
Authorities inspected areas close to the epicenter by helicopter and police patrols but no deaths or serious injuries were reported. Government spokesman Stelios Petsas said one abandoned building had collapsed in a western district of Athens and that several other abandoned buildings had suffered serious damages in other parts of the city.
“There are no reports of serious injuries … I urge members of the public to remains calm, in Greece we are well acquainted with earthquakes,” he said.
The most powerful quake to hit the Greek capital in the last 20 years came in 1999, when a temblor of magnitude 6.0 caused extensive damage and killed more than 140 people.
Gerasimos Papadopoulos, the senior seismologist at the Geodynamics Institute said Friday’s quake was felt across southern Greece.
“It had a very shallow depth and that’s why it was felt so strongly,” he said. “It is too early to say whether this was the main earthquake, but there have been aftershocks of magnitude 3.5, 2.5 and 3.2 and that is encouraging. But we need more time and data to have a clear picture.”
A firefighter stands next to a partly demolished structure following an earthquake, at the port of Piraeus, near Athens, Greece, July 19, 2019.
ALKIS KONSTANTINIDIS / REUTERS
Earthquakes are common in Greece and neighboring Turkey.
The head of the anti-quake protection agency, Efthymios Lekkas, told Greeks to remain calm, BBC News reported. “There is no reason for concern. The capital’s buildings are built to withstand a much stronger earthquake,” he said.  
The quake struck about 13.7 miles north of Athens.
U.S. Geological Survey
Credit: Source link
The post Earthquake in Athens: Greece capital rocked by strong quake today; one building collapsed, others seriously damaged – live updates appeared first on WeeklyReviewer.
from WeeklyReviewer https://weeklyreviewer.com/earthquake-in-athens-greece-capital-rocked-by-strong-quake-today-one-building-collapsed-others-seriously-damaged-live-updates/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=earthquake-in-athens-greece-capital-rocked-by-strong-quake-today-one-building-collapsed-others-seriously-damaged-live-updates
0 notes
thedesignambassador · 6 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Invisible Hotel Competition / Exhibition works 
Date: 2005
Media Sponsor Surface Magazine
Location Deste Foundation
A production of the Design Ambassador
Curator Memos Filippidis
PRESS RELEASE 2005
The design hotel is a magnet attracting a new informed clientele as well as the most talented architects and designers in the world . The impressive hotels designed by Philippe Starck, Antonio Citterio, Mattheo Thun, Graft, King+Roselli or Yabu Pushelberg, have established what their designers consider the ideal residence. Design hotels have offered us the unique opportunity to be temporarily hosted in the living room, the dining room and the bedrooms of a luxury house that embodies with clarity the vision of the designer and architect for the ideal home. A vision disengaged from any regional limitations and the personal "signature" of an individual client who usually asks for a domestic architecture of the familiar and the deja vu. The forthcoming exhibition Invisible Hotel (Athens, April 2005) makes one step further: It disengages the participating architects completely from any budget and pre-selected site. It arranges the meeting with the ideal client. Invisible Hotel presents 10 virtual projects designed by the best Greek avant-garde architects. The projects will be represented with digital renderings and animations (walkthroughs). These will provide the visitors with views of the entrance and lobby space, the room`s interiors as well as the elevations and other interior spaces of the hotel. Participating architects will be able to use materials distributed by Carteco. All the projects will be displayed on B&O Sound and Vision Systems. The creative work and art supervision as well as the web site is sponsored by KARAMELLA Advertising and Creative team. The 1st prize of the Invisible Hotel show will be included in the exhibition "Hotel/Recreation"curated by architect Sotirios Papadopoulos in Milan, during the Salone del Mobile (13-18 April 2005). This exhibition will take place at Åx-Faema space, Via Ventura 15 (Lambrate), a 600 sq. m space, across the new headquarters of Abitare magazine and will be featured in Interni magazine. In Athens, the exhibition Invisible Hotel will be hosted in the DESTE Foundation`s Centre for Contemporary Art at 8 Omirou St, Neo Psychico. The Deste Centre for Contemporary Art Center was inaugurated in May 1998, a former paper warehouse, renovated by New York architect/ designer Christian Hubert, with respect for its original identity. The young architects participating in the Invisible Hotel exhibition (in alphabetic order): Andreas Angelidakis, Yiannis Aisopos, Iro Bertaki+Christina Loukopoulou+Kostis Panigiris, Panos Dragonas+Varvara Hristopoulou, Thanasis Hohlidakis, Eleana Horiti, Eleni Kostika, Stella Merminga+Vangelis Ravanos, Panos Nikolaidis + Errica Protestou, and Nikolas Travasaros. The exhibition is supported and organized by Carteco, one of the biggest companies of hotel equipment and architectural materials in Greece for the last 20 years. Curator of the exhibition is architect Memos Philippidis. Diathlasis (representing iGuzzini) co-organizes the exhibition and undertakes the lighting installation. The international bookstore Papasotiriou has agreed to finance the production of the Invisible Hotel catalog. Two judging committees will evaluate the proposals of architects, granting rewards. The members of the Greek Committee are (in alphabetic order): Stavros Andreadis, President of the Association of Greek Tourist Enterprises (SETE), Harry Bougadellis Architect, Stelios Dimou Architect, Kostis Georgiou Painter/Sculptor, Babis Ioannou Architect, Dakis IoannouBusinessman and International Art Collector, Nikos Ktenas Architect, Dimitris PotiropoulosArchitect, Alexandros Tombazis Architect, Tasos Zeppos Architect. The proposed members for the international Architectural Committee: Juergen Mayer Architect, Delugan-Meissl Architects and Joel Sanders Architect. The exhibition will appear in Greek and foreign magazines, radio stations, Greek and foreign web sites (such as www.greekarchitect.gr, www.ktirio.gr). Journalists from architectural and design magazines such as Abitare, Domus, Architectural Review, will also be invited. A website www.invisiblehotel.com will be constructed, designed by Caramella, the total communication company that will create and supervise all the visual and graphic elements of the Invisible Hotel exhibition.
0 notes
seemoreandmore · 7 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media
stelios papadopoulos
27 notes · View notes
hearfootsteps · 7 years ago
Quote
Κι ακόμα παραπέρα
https://youtu.be/51LfWB74-Gk
Tumblr media
______ Stelios Papadopoulos
0 notes