#dr Jane c. wright
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womeninfictionandirl · 2 years ago
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Dr. Jane Cooke Wright by The Covatar
Jane Cooke Wright (also known as "Jane Jones") (November 20, 1919 – February 19, 2013) was a pioneering cancer researcher and surgeon noted for her contributions to chemotherapy. In particular, Wright is credited with developing the technique of using human tissue culture rather than laboratory mice to test the effects of potential drugs on cancer cells. She also pioneered the use of the drug methotrexate to treat breast cancer and skin cancer.
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So, project 2025 has been deleting their PDFs but a few lovely people have posted the list of books they want to ban and other than the fact that the entire list is stupid, here's some that stuck out to me + the reasons listed next to them. Most of the books on the list are lgbtq+ books which one would expect to find there, so I just did ones I didn't expect.
The Holy Bible - Challenged for religious beliefs and graphic content.
A Game of Thrones by George R.R. Martin - Sexual violence, political intrigue.
Bridge to Terabithia by Katherine Paterson - Death and religious content.
Captain Underpants series by Dav Pilkey - Toilet humor and "disobedience."
Doctor Zhivago by Boris Pasternak - Critique of the Russian Revolution.
Deadly Deceits by Ralph McGehee - Former CIA agent's critiques of the agency.
Emma by Jane Austen - Complex gender themes, social critique.
Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury - Censorship and media manipulation by the government.
Harry Potter series by J.K. Rowling - Accusations of promoting witchcraft.
Howl by Allen Ginsberg - Explicit sexual content, anti-establishment themes
Hop on Pop by Dr. Seuss - Concerns over violence against parents.
I Am Not Your Perfect Mexican Daughter by Erika L. Sánchez - Mental health, sexual content.
It's Perfectly Normal by Robie H. Harris - Sex education content.
It's So Amazing! by Robie H. Harris - Sex education content.
None Dare Call It Conspiracy by Gary Allen - Discusses alleged hidden global power structure.
None Dare Call It Treason by John A. Stormer - Anti-communist and conspiracy-focused.
One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich by Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn - Critique of Soviet labor camps.
Operation Paperclip by Annie Jacobsen - Exposes secret U.S. program involving former Nazis.
My Brother Sam Is Dead by James Lincoln Collier - Violence, anti-war themes.
Slaughterhouse-Five by Kurt vonnegut- Anti-war themes.
Spycatcher by Peter Wright - Ex-MI5 agent's account of intelligence operations.
The Art of Happiness by the Dalai Lama - Criticism of religion, perceived political messages.
The Awakening by Kate Chopin - Female independence, sexuality.
The Book of Night Women by Marlon James - Slavery, graphic violence.
The Enchanted Forest Chronicles by Patricia C. Wrede - Magic, feminism.
The Giving Tree by Shel Silverstein - Themes of selfishness, parenting.
The God of Small Things by Arundhati Roy - Examines class and caste issues in India.
The Handmaid's Tale by Margaret Atwood - Critique of religious extremism and patriarchy.
The Hate U Give by Angie Thomas - Examines police violence and racial injustice
The Hunger Games Series by Suzanne Collins - Depicts oppressive government and rebellion.
The Phantom Tollbooth by Norton Juster - Political subtext, wordplay.
The Poisonwood Bible by Barbara Kingsolver - Critique of colonialism and missionary work.
The Power and the Glory by Graham Greene - Critique of religion and political oppression
The Power of Now by Eckhart Tolle - Religious critique.
The Prince by Niccolò Machiavelli - Seen as a critique of political ethics.
The Taming of the Shrew by William Shakespeare - Often challenged for themes of submission of women in marriage.
Twilight series by Stephenie Meyer - Themes of violence, supernatural elements.
V for Vendetta by Alan Moore - Political rebellion, violence.
War is a Racket by Smedley D. Butler - Critique of war profiteering.
Where the Sidewalk Ends by Shel Silverstein - Dark humor, "rebellious" themes.
Where the Wild Things Are by Maurice Sendak - Themes of rebellion, dark imagery.
Where's Waldo? by Martin Handford - Alleged inappropriate illustrations.
White Noise by Don DeLillo - Critique of consumerism and modern society.
Women Who Run with the Wolves by Clarissa Pinkola Estes - Feminist themes.
Yertle the Turtle by Dr. Seuss - Seen as political allegory.
Zorba the Greek by Nikos Kazantzakis - Critique of authority and societal norms.
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mogai-sunflowers · 2 years ago
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MOGAI BHM- Belated Day 16!
happy BHM! today i’m going to be listing different important inventions by Black people!
Black Inventors-
Marie Van Brittan Brown invented modern home security systems.
Jane C. Wright invented several chemotherapy drugs still in use today.
Alan Emtage invented the first internet browser, which he called ‘Archie’.
George Carruthers invented the ultraviolet spectrograph, which eventually accompanied probes to the moon.
Mark Dean invented forms of processor chips and co-created the IBM computer in 1987.
Patricia Bath pioneered early laser cataract surgery.
Lonnie Johnson invented the popular Super Soaker.
Lewis Howard Latimer helped invent the telephone and invented carbon filaments which hugely improved incandescent light bulbs.
Garrett Morgan invented a form of a gas mask and the three-position traffic signal.
Dr. James West helped co-invent microphone technology.
Lisa Gelobter was crucial to inventing Shockwave, the internet’s first web animation technology.
Frederick McKinley Jones invented and innovated refrigeration technology, including refrigerated trucks which were crucial in WWII.
Alexander Miles invented automatic elevator doors.
Madame CJ Walker invented a huge hair and beauty line for African American hair.
Elijah McCoy invented the portable ironing board and Sarah Boone innovated it.
Alice Parker invented a heating furnace system still used by many today.
Charles Brooks invented the design and technology for modern trucks that clean and sweep city streets.
George Alcorn invented x-ray imaging spectroscopy.
Benjamin Banneker invented America’s first clock.
Otis Boykin invented improved electrical resistors that are used today in everything from TVs to computers to radios.
Dr. Charles Drew created innovations in blood plasma that led to the creation of blood banks.
Dr. Philip Emeagwali invented the world’s fastest computer.
James Parsons work led to the invention of stainless steel.
George Washington Carver invented many, many culinary products derived from peanuts.
There are many, many more. I can not list them all here. I highly recommend looking more into the history of Black inventors and innovators, especially in the field of STEM! There are some good resources below to get you started!
Tagging @metalheadsforblacklivesmatter 
Sources-
https://www.black-inventor.com/
https://www.eduporium.com/blog/eduporium-weekly-celebrating-significant-stem-accomplishments-by-black-innovators/
https://sphero.com/blogs/news/black-leaders-in-stem
https://www.idtech.com/blog/black-stem-innovators-who-defined-modern-world
https://news.vmware.com/dei/10-black-technology-inventors-innovators
https://www.biography.com/inventors/madam-cj-walker-black-inventors
https://www.black-inventor.com/george-alcorn
https://www.black-inventor.com/benjamin-banneker
https://www.black-inventor.com/otis-boykin
https://www.black-inventor.com/dr-charles-drew
https://education.nationalgeographic.org/resource/african-american-inventors-20th-and-21st-century/
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sporadiceagleheart · 9 months ago
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This is Thursday April 11th 2024 is for those victims that was gunned down and also for the Manchester Arena victims that was bombed down as well they aren't just rappers wrestlers kids or dreamers but they are angels sent back to heaven Ava Jordan Wood, Olivia Pratt Korbel, Saffie Rose Roussos, Pop Smoke, Young Dolph, Tupac Shakur and Christopher George Latore Wallace, Natalia Victoria Wallace, Shinzo Abe, Abraham Lincoln, Dr. Rev, Martin Luther King Jr., Secoriea Turner, Royta De'Marco Layfield Giles Jr., Davon McNeal, Dajore Wilson, Mekhi James, Judith and Maria Barsi, Janari A. Ricks, Carolyn Kay “Katy” Davis, Christiana Mae “Chrissy” Duarte, Shirley Virginia Ferrell Drouet, Stacee Ann Etcheber, Brisenia Ylianna Flores, Keri Lynn Galvan, Christian Riley Garcia, Angela Christine “Angie” Gomez, Jaime Taylor Guttenberg, Nicole Marie Hadley, Caitlin Millar Hammaren, Linda Sue Miller Hathorn, Aubrey Wright Hawkins, Demetrius C. “D” Hewlin, Rachael Elizabeth Hill, Emily Jane Hilscher, Dawn Alyson Lafferty Hochsprung, Anah Michelle Hodges, Winter Ashley Hodges, Kenzie Marie Houk, Lisa Rachelle Huff Huff, Cynthia Marie Graham Hurd, Caleb Curtis Jackson, Dwayne Clifford Jackson Jr., Honesty Faith Jackson, Jonah Curtis Jackson, Trinity Hope Jackson, Jessica Jeanette James, Veronica Lynn “Tina” Jefferson, SGT Kent Dean Kincaid, Lawrence Fobes “Larry” King, Kandy Janell Kirtland, Russell Dennis King Jr., Amy Michelle Kitchen, Carly Anne Buchholtz Kreibaum, Matthew Joseph La Porte VVETERAN, Cara Marie Loughran, Trayvon Benjamin Martin, Rhonda M. LeRocque, Rebecka Ann Carnes, Adriana “Adri” Dukić, Cassie Bernall, Ross Abdallah Alameddine, Arielle Anderson, Lucero Alcaraz, PnB Rock, Nipsey Hussle, Takeoff, Dayvon Daquan Bennett, Jahseh Dwayne Onfroy, Janette Becraft, Eddie Graham, Shannon Claire Spruill, Dino Bravo, Lena Marie Nunez-Anaya, Sincere Gaston, Rebecka Ann Carnes, Annabelle Renee Pomeroy, Darius “DJ” Dugas II, Jason Leonard Abbott, Hannah Lassette Magiera Ahlers, Tammy Jo Alexander, Alyssa Miriam Alhadeff, Teresa Carol Allen, Cory Adam Andrewski, Thomas Aquinas Ashton, Charlotte Helen “Char” Bacon, Daniel Gerard “Danny” Barden, Carrie Rae Barnette, and more
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blvvdyindustries · 2 years ago
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potential authors that may appear in bsd
Arthur Conan Doyle- wrote sherlock holmes, definitely getting into the DETECTIVE manga (maybe apart of the clocktower?, he was also famously gullible in contrast to his work, was friends with harry houdini and genuinely believed he was a wizard even though houdini repeatedly showed how his tricks worked, was also tricked by the first case of photo-editing by two little girls, prime joke material), THEORY TIME: he's going to have the actual 'super deduction' ability and will make ranpo face once and for that he's a normal person but ranpo will be able to out deduce him thus disproving that normal people can't defeat ability users
Joseph Sheridan Le Fanu- carmilla (the lesbian vampire story that predated bram stoker's dracula by 26 YEARS CARMILLA SHOULD HAVE BEEN FIRST, he could show up with a possible cure to the vampire curse in the current arc?, maybe he or carmilla was even the one to bite and turn stoker)
Lewis Carrol- wrote alice's adventures in wonderland
jrr tolkien- wrote the hobbit and lord of the rings
Hans Christian Andersen- wrote the little mermaid and the snow queen
The Grimm brothers- wrote most famous fairytales
Johnston McCulley- wrote zorro (may appear as part of a phantom theives guild in a more lighthearted arc after this one before jumping back into the main story?)
Marice Leblanc- wrote arsene lupine (had a crossover with edogawa ranpo's kogoro akechi lmao ty p5 knowledge AND sherlock holmes, a near guaranteed shoe-in, also part of that phantom theives guild with a potential past involving both doyle and ranpo)
Prosper Mérimée (?)- in the same vein of p5 references, the thief woman in prison may have actually been carmen from the opera carmen by prosper mérimée (soon to be thieves guild member?)
Robert Louis Stevenson- wrote the strange case of dr jerkyll and mr hyde and treasure island (thieves guild member, possible split personality a la jerkyll/hyde, blackbeard and william kid references incoming)
Alexandre Dumas- the three musketeers, the count of monte cristo (also thieves guild member)
Gaston Leroux- phantom of the opera (possible thieves guild member off work only)
toni morrison- we are in DESPARATE NEED of black writers, although maybe not since she only recently passed, wrote beloved and the bluest eye
zora neale hurston- their eyes were watching god
hughs langston- famous poet
richard wright- black boy, native son
Harriet Beecher Stowe- uncle tom's cabin
harper lee- to kill a mockingbird
robert frost- famous poet, wrote the road not taken
emiliy dickinson- famous poet
ernest hemmingway- famous poet (if his ability is for whom the bell tolls we're fucked)
jane austen- pride and prejudice (would probably get along with margaret and Nathaniel)
the brontë sisters- jane eyre, wuthering heights (would get along with jane, margaret, and Nathaniel)
george orwell- 1984 and animal farm
william golding- the lord of the flies
Joseph hellar- catch-22 (his power would be hell, a literal catch-22)
ralph ellison- the invisible man (ability is obvious, thieves guild member, maybe a conflict with tanizaki considering the similar abilities?)
oscar wilde- the picture of dorian gray (this man was a great big bisexual SLUT in life i want him to be the same in bsd)
virginia woolf- to the lighthouse (maybe will reference who's afraid of virginia woolf?)
c. s. lewis- the chronicles of narnia (personally knew jrr tolkien, famously at odds over Christmas, prime joke material)
charles dickens- a Christmas carol, oliver twist, a tale of two cities, and great expectations
arthur miller- the crucible (maybe his ability makes people distrust others?)
Johnathan swift- Gulliver's travels (teleporting ability definitely, new fast travel plot device although maybe not as it could conflict with Gogol's ability)
Vladimir Nabokov- lolita, pale fire (on second thought i don't want him in here i can only IMAGINE how that would turn out, if he shows up he and mori would either get along or HATE each other)
Leo Tolstoy- war and peace (we already know fyodor is surviving this we still don't know what crime and punishment does CAN YOU IMAGINE HIM AND FYODOR TOGETHER HELLWORLDHELLWORLDHELLWORLD) THEORY TIME AGAIN: his power is one that specifically targets only ability users and makes them slowly start acting in either anger or complete affability until everyone is at war or peace, he would be the perfect compliment to fyodor if crime and punishment kills people who believe they're guilty literally the perfect storm of abilities, the absolute worst case scenario powers we're looking at a dark soukoku here
franz kafka- metamorphosis (he's gonna turn into a bug, isn't he)
Harlan Ellison- i have no mouth and i must scream (the horror related ability to replace lovecraft without being horrifically broken)
authors that i desparately want to show up but probably won't bc they didn't write in the 1800-1900s range that asagiri likes, are still alive, or are not globally recognizable enough
homer- the illiad and oddessy (i hope he starts his ability by making an invocation to the muses)
sappho (LESBIANS RISE UP)
virgil- the aeniad
dante- the divine comedy (virgil is a character in divine comedy like how bsd includes authors of other works, prime joke material)
john milton- paradise lost
Gilgamesh or Enkidu- we don't know who wrote the epic of Gilgamesh so the characters themselves could appear
margret atwood- oryx and crake, cat's eye (potentially another animal shapeshifting power, atsushi's gonna have a little cat colony gang at this rate)
neil gaiman- american gods, the sandman ('american gods sounds like a broken ability)
ursula k. guin- earthsea series
stan lee- i know he wrote comics not long form literature but i think the father of american comics and the superhero genre deserves to be recognized in the superhero/mafia/detective noir manga; plus japanese manga was heavily influenced by american comics after wwii, we would literally not be reading bsd in the same state today without stan lee
stephen king- no explanation needed, PLEASE LET HIM MEET LOVECRAFT KING IS A GIANT FAN OF LOVECRAFT I THINK HE SHOULD GET TO MEET HIS IDOL
r. l. stein- goosebumps, if literally NONE of these authors make it in PLEASE AT LEAST LET RL STEIN GET IN AND LET HIM MEET LOVECRAFT PLEASE GOOSEBUMPS DESERVES SO MUCH LOVE AND PLEASE GOD LET HIS POWER BE THAT FUCKING PUPPET I WANT TO SLAPPY TO BE ABSOLUTELY USELESS AND JUST EXIST TO TORMENT STEIN
chuck tingle- pounded in the butt series guy, he should be the god of the bsd universe this is not a joke
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openheartfanfics · 2 years ago
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Meet OPH MCs: Ethan Ramsey
Ethan x F!MC (A - N)
Dr. Adelaide Nicholson - @dr-addieramsey
Meet MC
Dr. Adelina Nari Lee - @openheartforeverinmyheart
Meet MC
Dr. Alexandria Karlynn Lee (李嘉靈)- @cryomyst
Meet MC  |  The Past  |  The Present |  The Future
Dr. Amelia Catharina Wright - @blossomanarchy
Meet MC  |  The Past  |  The Present
Anastasia Audhild - @luvsyana
Meet MC
Dr. Angel Martin - @rookiemartin
Meet MC
Dr. Aspen Mila Kallie - @zealouscanonindeer
Meet MC | The Past - 1 | The Past - 2 | OC Children
Dr. Casey Valentine - @crazy-loca-blog
Meet MC  |  The Past  |  The Present  |  The Future  | OC Sibling
Dr. Casey Mara Valentine - @coffeeheartaddict2
Meet MC
Dr. Casey Hollyn Valentine - @hopelessromantic1352
Meet MC
Dr. Cass Smith - @custaroonie
Meet MC
Dr. Cassie Valentine - @liaromancewriter
Meet MC  |  The Past  |  The Present  |  The Future
OC Sibling
Dr. Catherine Jane Valentine - @amortentiaopenheart
Meet MC
Dr. Celia Moore - @trappedinfanfiction
Meet MC  | The Past  |  The Present  |  The Future
OC Brother  
Dr. Celia Jade Valentine - @lem-20
Meet MC  |   The Past  |  The Present
Dr. Chiara Ray - @terrm9
Meet MC
Dr. Claire Grace Evans - @tveitertotwrites
Meet MC | OC Children
Dr. Diana Torsha Ramirez - @gryffindordaughterofathena
Meet MC | The Past  |  The Present |  The Future 1, 2
Relationship Stats
Dr. Ellie Madeline Shepherd - @storyofmychoices
Meet MC
Dr. Eiselee Elise Blake - @quixoticdreamer16
Meet MC
Dr. Eve Valentine - @starrystarrytrouble
Meet MC
Dr. Evelyn Long - @starryeyedrookie
Meet MC   |   The Past
Dr. Genevieve Rose McClure - @genevievemd
Meet MC  |  The Present  |  The Past
Dr. Haley Jane Rochester - @parisa-kh
Meet MC
Dr. Jane Fletcher - @inlocusmads
Meet MC
Dr. Jill Valentine - @danijimenezv
Meet MC  |  The Past  |  The Present
Relationship Stats
OC Kids & Pets
Dr Josephine (Josie) Kingsley - @josiesopenheart
Meet MC  |  The Past  |   The Present  |  The Future
Dr. Kaycee C. MacClennan - @jerzwriter
Meet MC  |  The Past  |  The Present  |  The Future
Dr.  Klaudia Helena Craig - @theinvisibledreamergirl
Meet MC
Dr. Leah García - @drethanramslay
Meet MC
Dr.  Li Hui Yin (李徽因) - @beastlyinstrument
Meet MC
Dr. Lilac Allende - @jamespotterthefirst
Meet MC | The Past  |  The Present  |  The Future
OC Children
Dr. Luz Beltrán - @takemyopenheart
Meet MC  |  The Past  |  The Present
OC Children
Maddie Diaz - @beebubbly
Meet MC  |  The Past
Dr. Marchia Ivy Bisognin - @a-crepusculo
Meet MC
Dr. Meera Bose - @headoverheelsforramsey
Meet MC
Dr. Naomi Valentine - @heauxplesslydevoted
Meet MC  |  The Past
Dr. Natalie Cusack - @bex-la-get
Meet MC | The Past  |  The Present  |  The Future
OC Siblings/Friends
_
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savewritingnsw · 4 years ago
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Save Writing NSW
An open letter to Create NSW and the NSW Minister for the Arts
We, as writers and active members of the literary community, were dismayed by Create NSW’s decision not to grant Writing NSW Multi-Year Organisations Funding in their latest round, despite the fact that Writing NSW was recommended for funding.
This decision demonstrates the ongoing devaluation of literature within the Australian arts funding landscape. We know literature is the most popular artform in the country, with 87% of Australian reading some form of literary work in any given year, yet in this round Create NSW offered only 5.7% of their ongoing funding to literature organisations.
The decision to defund Writing NSW carries a particular sting. Writing NSW is the leading organisation representing writers in a state with a long literary history and one that is home to many of Australia’s leading publishers, writers, literary agents and other core participants in the Australian literary industry.
Writing NSW is an important stepping-stone for writers at the beginning of their careers, providing high quality professional development programs, and it also employs emerging and established writers to deliver and lead these programs. For decades the organisation has provided high-quality courses, seminars, workshops, festivals, events, grants and literary prizes. In putting such programs at risk, Create NSW is jeopardising both an entry point and an ongoing support system for writers.
Macquarie University research shows that the average income of an Australian author from their practice is $12,900. The current economic crisis caused by the coronavirus pandemic makes the situation of writers even more precarious. Writing NSW offers key employment opportunities to writers, through teaching, publication, speaking engagements and both curatorial and judging positions. The removal of these opportunities will mean many writers will not be able to maintain the other income streams that support their writing careers.
The removal of $175,000 from a single source would be catastrophic for any business – not-for-profit or otherwise. For a government funding body to enact such a blunt economic withdrawal in the midst of a global pandemic and without concern for the economic flow-on effect to hundreds of industry professionals is deeply distressing.
We call on Create NSW to reverse this decision and ask them to reveal their future strategies for arts funding and how they plan to rectify the disparity in funding between other funded artforms and literature.
As writers, we will never accept the loss of a vibrant, essential cultural network such as Writing NSW.
What you can do We invite anyone affected by Create NSW’s decision – writers, publishers, literary agents, illustrators, readers alike – to co-sign this letter. You can copy and customise this letter to draft a version from your own point of view on this matter to send to a Member of Parliament.
To co-sign this letter, add your name here: shorturl.at/dERX6
Signatories
Pip Smith, Writer, creative writing teacher Sam Twyford-Moore, Writer and arts administrator Fiona Wright, Writer, editor, critic, reader Gabrielle Tozer, Author, writer, editor Brigid Mullane, Editor Jules Faber, Author, Illustrator Dr Christopher Richardson, Author and academic Liz Ledden, Author, podcaster, book reviewer Kate Tracy Ashley Kalagian Blunt, Writer, reviewer, reader Julie Paine, Writer Nick Tapper, Editor Belinda Castles, Writer and academic Simon Veksner, Writer Amanda Ortlepp, Writer, reader, reviewer, High School English Teacher Bronwyn Birdsall, Writer, editor Robin Riedstra, Writer, reviewer, reader, English teacher Dr Delia Falconer, Writer, critic, academic Robert McDonald, Author, writer, creative writing teacher Dr Kathryn Heyman, Author Wai Chim, Author Kirsten Krauth, Writer, editor Tricia Dearborn, Poet, writer, editor Dr Mireille Juchau, Writer Gail Jones, Writer Dr Jeff Sparrow, Writer, editor, academic Linda Jaivin, Writer, editor, translator Adara Enthaler, Poet, editor, literary arts manager Keighley Bradford, Writer, editor, arts and festival administrator Nicole Priest, Reader and aspiring writer Shamin Fernando, Writer Andrew Pippos, Writer Bianca Nogrady, Writer and journalist James Bradley, Writer Ali Jane Smith, Writer Dr Eleanor Limprecht Idan Ben-Barak, Writer Jennifer Mills, Writer Nicole Hayes, Writer, podcaster Michelle Starr, Writer/journalist Phillipa McGuinness, Writer and publisher Vanessa Berry, Writer and academic Blake Ayshford, Screenwriter Emily Maguire, Writer Sarah Lambert, Screenwriter Anwen Crawford, Writer Sarah Bassiuoni, Screenwriter Jackson Ryan, Writer, journalist, academic Simon Thomsen, Journalist, editor, other wordy stuff Ivy Shih, Writer Miro Bilbrough, Writer, filmmaker, screenwriting teacher, script editor Graham Davidson, Writer, artist, festival director Christos Tsiolkas, Writer JZ Ting, Writer, lawyer Susan Francis, Writer, teacher Suneeta Peres da Costa, Writer Dr Harriet Cunningham, Writer, critic, journalist Adele Dumont, Writer, reader Sheree Strange, Writer, book reviewer, book seller Phil Robinson, Reader Ashleigh Meikle, Reader, writer, book blogger Naomi RIddle, Writer, editor Cathal Gwatkin-Higson, Writer, book seller Hannah Carroll Chapman, Screenwriter Angela Meyer, Writer, editor Steve Blunt, Reader, supporter Ambra Sancin, Writer, arts administrator Michelle Baddiley, Writer, reader, archive producer Dinuka McKenzie, Writer, reader Catherine C. Turner, Writer, reader, freelance editor and publisher, arts worker Hilary Davidson, Writer, poet, academic, reader Dr Eleanor Hogan, Writer Nicola Robinson, Commissioning Editor Kim Wilson, Screenwriter Jane Nicholls, Freelance writer and editor Lisa Kenway, Writer Virginia Peters, Writer Sarah Sasson, Physician-writer and reader Dr Joanna Nell, Writer Laura Clarke Author / Copywriter Nicole Reddy, Screenwriter Anna Downes, Writer Sharon Livingstone, Writer, editor, reader Lily Mulholland, Writer, screenwriter, technical editor Benjamin Dodds, Poet, reviewer, teacher Markus Zusak, Writer Alexandria Burnham, Writer, screenwriter Sam Coley, Writer Marian McGuinness, Writer Selina McGrath, Artist Adeline Teoh Natasha Rai, Writer Catherine Ferrari, Reader Jessica White, Writer & academic Zoe Downing, Writer, reader, creative writing student Amanda Tink, Writer, researcher, reader Lisa Nicol, Children's author, screenwriter, copywriter Aurora Scott, Writer Gillian Polack, Writer, academic Susan Lever, Critic and writer Denise Kirby, Writer Michele Seminara, Poet & editor Meredith Curnow, Publisher, Penguin Random House David Ryding, Arts Manager Catherine Hill Genevieve Buzo, Editor Hugo Wilcken DJ Daniels, Writer Linda Vergnani, Freelance journalist, writer and editor Tony Spencer-Smith, Author, writing trainer & editor Dr Viki Cramer, Freelance writer and editor Petronella McGovern, Author, freelance writer and editor Jacqui Stone, Writer and editor Talia Horwitz, Writer, reader & writing student Sophie Ambrose, Publisher, Penguin Random House Rebecca Starford, Publishing director, KYD; editor and writer David Blumenstein, Writer, artist Rashida Tayabali, Freelance writer Sheila Ngoc Pham, Writer, editor and producer Rosalind Gustafson, Writer Alan Vaarwerk, Editor, Kill Your Darlings Gillian Handley, Editor, journalist, writer Karina Machado Isabelle Yates, Commissioning Editor, Penguin Random House Michelle Barraclough, Writer Natalie Scerra, Writer Melanie Myers, Writer, editor and Creative Writing teacher Emily Lawrence, Aspiring Writer Nicola Aken, Screenwriter Jennifer Nash, Librarian, writer Clare Millar, Writer and editor Kathryn Knight, Editor, Penguin Random House Linda Funnell, Editor, reviewer, tutor, Newtown Review of Books Stacey Clair, Editor, writer, former events/projects producer at Queensland Writers Centre Virginia Muzik, Writer, copyeditor, proofreader, aspiring author Lisa Walker, Writer Sarah Morton, Copywriter, aspiring author, Member of Writing NSW Board Laura Russo, Writer and editor Vivienne Pearson, Freelance writer Justin Ractliffe, Publishing Director, Penguin Random House Australia James Ley, Contributing Editor, Sydney Review of Books Alison Urquhart, PublisherPenguin Random House Debra Adelaide, Author and associate professor of creative writing, University of Technology Sydney Magdalena Ball, Writer, Reviewer, Compulsive Reader Anna Spargo-Ryan, Writer, writing teacher, editor, reader Charlie Hester, Social media & project officer, Queensland Writers Centre Mandy Beaumont, Writer, researcher and reviewer Chloe Barber-Hancock, Writer, reader, pre-service teacher Dr Patrick Mullins, Academic and writer Wendy Hanna, Screenwriter Chloe Warren Dianne Masri, Social Media Consultant Jane Gibian, Writer, librarian, reader Dr Airlie Lawson, Academic and writer Karen Andrews, Writer, teacher, reader Tim Coronel, General manager, Small Press Network and Industry adjunct lecturer, University of Melbourne Tommy Murphy, Playwright and screenwriter Evlin DuBose, Editor, writer, screenwriter, director, poet, UTS's Vertigo Magazine Tony Maniaty, Writer Emma Ashmere, Writer, reader, teacher Alicia Gilmore, Writer Suzanne O'Sullivan, Publisher, Hachette Australia Jacqui DentWriter, Content Strategist Rachel Smith, Writer Intan Paramaditha, Writer Cassandra Wunsch, Director TasWriters (The Tasmanian Writers Centre) Meera Atkinson Eileen Chong, Poet, Writer, Educator Debra Tidball, Author, reviewer Beth Spencer, Author, poet, reader Lou Pollard, Comedy writer, blogger Bronwyn Stuart/Tilley, Author and program coordinator, Writers SA Gemma Patience, Writer, illustrator, reviewer Amarlie Foster, Writer, teacher Dr Felicity Plunkett, writer Angela Betzien Drew Rooke, Journalist and author Michael Mazengarb, Journalist RenewEconomy Katrina Roe, Children's author, broadcaster, audiobook narrator Liz Doran, Screenwriter Arnold Zable, Writer. Tom Langshaw, Editor, Penguin Random House Brooke Maddison Monica O'Brien, ProducerAmbience Entertainment Jacinta Dimase, Literary AgentJacinta Dimase Management Jane Novak, Literary AgentJane Novak Literary Agency Sarah Hollingsworth, Arts Organisation ManagerMarketing and Communications Manager, Writers Victoria Barbara Temperton, Writer Sandra van Doorn, Publisher Red Paper Kite Alex Eldridge, Writer Karen Beilharz, Writer, editor, comic creator Esther Rivers, Writer, editor, poet Jane Pochon, Board Member, lawyer and reader Zoe Walton, Publisher, Penguin Random House Eliza Twaddell Alison Green, CEO, Board Member, Pantera Press Emma Rafferty, Editor Sarah Swarbrick, Writer Dayne Kelly, Literary Agent, RGM Léa Antigny, Head of Publicity and Communications, Pantera Press Jenny Green, Finance, Pantera Press Sarah Begg, Writer Mark Harding, Writer, Brand Manager, Social Media and Content Specialist Shanulisa Prasad, Bookseller Katy McEwen, Rights Manager, Pantera Press Olivia Fricot, Content Writer/Bookseller, Booktopia Jack Peck, Writer, Open Genre Group Convenor, Writing NSW, Retired Kathy Skantzos, Writer, Editor Serene Conneeley, Author, Editor Kerry Littrich, Writer Merran Hughes, Creative Cassie Watson, Writer Lisa Seltzer, Copywriter, Social Media Manager and Marketing Consultant Gemma Noon, Writer and Librarian Tanya Tabone, Reader Laura Franks, Reader, Editor, Writer Dani Netherclift, Writer Who to contact We urge you to join us in advocating for Writing NSW and the state of funding for Australian literature, by contacting Create NSW, your NSW Member of Parliament, and the NSW Minister for the Arts.
Chris Keely Executive Director, Create NSW Email: [email protected]
The Hon. Don Harwin, MLC Phone: (02) 8574 7200 Email: [email protected]
Who to else to contact
The Hon. (Walt) Walter Secord, MLC Shadow Minister for the Arts Phone: (02) 9230 2111 Email: [email protected] Ms. Cate Faehrmann, MLC Greens representative for Arts, Music, Night-Time Economy and Culture Phone: (02) 9230 3771 Email: [email protected] A full list of names and contact details for NSW State MPs is available here.
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ao3feed-turn · 5 years ago
Text
Becoming Your Sacrifice
read it on the AO3 at https://ift.tt/2J2HS5H
by IWroteTheOther51
When Alexander Hamilton gets drafted for the Revolutionary war, he ends up getting a spot as a treasury secretary but on the midst of all of the war that's going on in america, he also ends up falling in love with one of his bestfriends and aide de camp, John Laurens, an american soldier whose married to another women but John never really loved his wife, his father Henry Laurens finds out that Alex is pregnant with John's child, so he pays someone to shut Alex up about the whole thing...and life just goes down hill from their, war is shit, everyone sucks, and no one plays games during these dark times. And lastly...you can't really trust anyone.
Words: 5, Chapters: 1/?, Language: English
Fandoms: Hamilton - Miranda, Turn (TV 2014)
Rating: Explicit
Warnings: Graphic Depictions Of Violence, Major Character Death, Rape/Non-Con, Underage
Categories: Other
Characters: Alexander Hamilton, John Laurens, Gilbert du Motier Marquis de Lafayette, Thomas Jefferson, Elizabeth "Eliza" Schuyler, Aaron Burr, Hercules Mulligan, George Washington, Angelica Schuyler, James Madison, Margaret "Peggy" Schuyler, Maria Reynolds, Philip Hamilton, Charles Lee, Theodosia Prevost Burr, Martha Washington, George III of the United Kingdom, Theodosia Burr Alston, Angelica Hamilton, John Adams, Frances Laurens, Henry Laurens (1723-1792), Dolley Madison, George Eacker, Philip Schuyler, Martha Laurens Ramsay, Alexander Hamilton Jr., Samuel Seabury (1729-1796), Theodosia Burr, John Church Hamilton, Rachel Faucette Buck, Philip Hamilton (1782-1801), John Barker Church, James Laurens (1765-1775), John Jay, James Hamilton Sr. (c.1718-1799), Henry Knox, James Reynolds (fl.1783-1792), William P. Van Ness, Hugh Mulligan Jr., Nathanael Greene, Nathaniel Pendelton, Philip Schuyler (1733-1804), Charles Lee (1732-1782), Thomas Conway (1735-c.1800), David Hosack (1769-1835), Richard Montgomery (1738-1775), Alexander Hamilton (Cat), Levi Weeks (1776-1819), Charles Lee (1758-1801), John Baker White (1794–1862), Charles Lee (1732-1782)'s Wife, Benjamin Tallmadge, Caleb Brewster, Anna Strong, Abraham Woodhull, Edmund Hewlett, John Graves Simcoe, John André, Benedict Arnold, Mary Woodhull, Tench Tilghman, Peggy Shippen, Abigail (Turn), Richard Woodhull, Selah Strong, Nathaniel Sackett, Robert Rogers, Robert Townsend (1753-1838), Samuel Tallmadge, Samuel Townsend, Martha "Patsy" Parke Custis, Ensign Baker, Nathan Hale (1755-1776), Nathaniel Tallmadge, Akinbode | Jordan, John Parke Custis, Cicero (Turn), Philomena Cheer, Elizabeth Gwillim Simcoe, James Rivington, William Bradford (Turn), John Robeson, Lola (Turn), Aberdeen (Turn), Henry Clinton (1730-1795), Lieutenant Gamble (Turn), 2nd Continental Light Dragoons, Samuel Graves (1713-1787), Mary Floyd Tallmadge, Captain Wakefield, Charles Scott, Freddy Morgan, Thomas "Sprout" Woodhull, Sarah Livingston (Turn), Queen's Rangers, Captain Joyce, William Howe 5th Viscount Howe, Austin Roe, Lucas Brewster, Reverend Worthington, Lucy Scudder, Lydia Ketcham, Rachel Clark, Dr. Mabbs, Corporal Eastin, Walter Havens, Awasos, Mary Graves (1772-1860), Richard Grosvenor 1st Earl Grosvenor (1731-1802), Thomas Lynch Jr, Sarah Townsend (1724-1800), Patience Wright, Thomas Woodhull Sr, Francis Marion (c.1732-1795), Edmund Hewlett's Mother, Becky Redman, Hannah Ketcham, Elizabeth Lloyd Loring (1744-1831), Bridget Graves (1750-1795), Captain Jim Ryder, Lieutenant Chaffe (Turn), Rachel Peale, Colonel Jonathan Cooke, William "Billy" Lee (Turn), Peyton Randolph (1721–1775), John Randolph (1727–1784), Keturah Strong Woodhull, Sarah "Sally" Townsend (1760-1842), William André (1760-1802), Mopsey (Dog)
Relationships: Alexander Hamilton/John Laurens, Alexander Hamilton/Elizabeth "Eliza" Schuyler, Alexander Hamilton/Thomas Jefferson, Thomas Jefferson/James Madison, Aaron Burr/Alexander Hamilton, Gilbert du Motier Marquis de Lafayette/Hercules Mulligan, Maria Reynolds/Elizabeth "Eliza" Schuyler, Alexander Hamilton/George Washington, Aaron Burr/Theodosia Prevost Burr, George Washington/Martha Washington, Alexander Hamilton/John Laurens/Gilbert du Motier Marquis de Lafayette/Hercules Mulligan, Alexander Hamilton/Gilbert du Motier Marquis de Lafayette, Alexander Hamilton/John Laurens/Elizabeth "Eliza" Schuyler, John Laurens/Gilbert du Motier Marquis de Lafayette, Theodosia Burr Alston/Philip Hamilton, Alexander Hamilton/John Laurens/Gilbert du Motier Marquis de Lafayette, Alexander Hamilton/Angelica Schuyler, Gilbert du Motier Marquis de Lafayette/George Washington, Alexander Hamilton/Maria Reynolds, Benjamin Tallmadge/George Washington, Thomas Jefferson/Angelica Schuyler, Adrienne de Lafayette/Gilbert du Motier Marquis de Lafayette, George III of the United Kingdom/Samuel Seabury, Aaron Burr & George Washington, Martha Manning/Margaret "Peggy" Schuyler, Gilbert du Motier Marquis de Lafayette/Hercules Mulligan/George Washington, James Madison & Elizabeth "Eliza" Schuyler, John Adams & Richard Henry Lee, Adrienne de Lafayette/Gilbert du Motier Marquis de Lafayette/Angelica Schuyler, George Eacker/Philip Hamilton (1782-1801), Thomas Jefferson/John Laurens, Aaron Burr/John Laurens, Philip Hamilton/Lucy Jefferson Lewis, Dolley Madison & James Madison, John Laurens/Original Male Character(s), Alexander Hamilton/John Laurens/Angelica Schuyler/Elizabeth "Eliza" Schuyler, Caleb Brewster & John Laurens, Jonathan Bellamy (d.1777)/John Laurens, Nathan Hale (1755-1776)/Benjamin Tallmadge/George Washington, Jane Jefferson/George Washington, Aaron Burr/George Washington, Theodosia Prevost Burr/Angelica Schuyler, Thomas Jefferson/Gilbert du Motier Marquis de Lafayette, John Barker Church/Angelica Schuyler, Alexander Hamilton & Hercules Mulligan, Charles Lee/Gilbert du Motier Marquis de Lafayette, Theodosia Prevost Burr/Jacques Marcus Prevost, Hercules Mulligan/Elizabeth Sanders Mulligan, Abigail Adams/John Adams, Alexander Hamilton & Gouverneur Morris (1752-1816), Jonathan Bellamy (d.1777) & Aaron Burr, John Adams/John Hancock/Charles Thomson, Caleb Brewster/Margaret "Peggy" Schuyler, Robert Townsend/Abraham Woodhull, John André/Alexander Hamilton, John Graves Simcoe/Anna Strong, Edmund Hewlett & Anna Strong, Edmund Hewlett/John Graves Simcoe, Nathan Hale (1755-1776)/Benjamin Tallmadge, Robert Townsend & Mary Woodhull, Benedict Arnold/Benjamin Tallmadge, Anna Strong/Abraham Woodhull, Caleb Brewster & Anna Strong, Anna Strong/Selah Strong, Edmund Hewlett/Original Female Character(s), Edmund Hewlett/Richard Woodhull, John Graves Simcoe/Lola (Turn), Aaron Burr/Angelica Schuyler, Dolley Madison/Margaret "Peggy" Schuyler, John Laurens/James Madison, Aaron Burr/Alexander Hamilton/John Laurens
Additional Tags: American Revolution, Mpreg, Gay Founding Fathers (Hamilton), Explicit Sexual Content, Fluff, Angst, Family Issues, Dysfunctional Family, Politics, Canon-Typical Violence, Mental Health Issues, Unplanned Pregnancy, Pregnancy Scares, Forced Pregnancy, Secrets, Developing Relationship, Relationship(s), Slave Trade, Shameless Smut, BDSM, LGBTQ Themes, Porn, Jealousy, Kinks, Bromance to Romance, War, Humiliation, Praise Kink, Soulmates, Boys Kissing, French Kissing, Neck Kissing, Drunken Confessions, Marriage Contracts, Hand & Finger Kink, Finger Sucking, Breast Fucking, Cock Tease, Orgasm Delay/Denial, Multiple Orgasms, Crossdressing, Angst with a Happy Ending, Falling In Love, Love Confessions, Boys In Love, Idiots in Love, Friendship/Love, Slow Build, Slow Romance, Not Suitable/Safe For Work, Possessive Behavior, Thomas Jefferson Being an Asshole, Bisexual Alexander Hamilton, Human Disaster Aaron Burr, Poor Aaron Burr, Aaron Burr is So Done, Angst and Tragedy, Male Slash, Implied/Referenced Homophobia, Homophobic Henry Laurens, Homophobic Language, Hamilton References, Hurt Alexander Hamilton, Henry Laurens' A+ Parenting, Illnesses, HIV/AIDS, First Kiss, Gender Identity, Fist Fights, Fights, George Washington is a Dad, Some Humor, Dark Past, Emotional Hurt/Comfort, Gang Rape, Semi-Public Sex, Blow Jobs, First Time Blow Jobs, Anal Sex, Oral Sex, Rough Oral Sex, Post Mpreg, Penises, Painplay, Painful Sex, Lesbian Sex, Body Worship, Sharing Body Heat, Sharing a Bed, Sad with a Happy Ending, Minor Original Character(s), Secret Children, Substance Abuse, Suicide Attempt, Suicide Notes, Domestic Violence, Confessional Sex, Protectiveness, Historical Inaccuracy, Historical References
read it on the AO3 at https://ift.tt/2J2HS5H
5 notes · View notes
ao3feed-whamilton · 5 years ago
Text
Becoming Your Sacrifice
read it on the AO3 at https://ift.tt/2J2HS5H
by IWroteTheOther51
When Alexander Hamilton gets drafted for the Revolutionary war, he ends up getting a spot as a treasury secretary but on the midst of all of the war that's going on in america, he also ends up falling in love with one of his bestfriends and aide de camp, John Laurens, an american soldier whose married to another women but John never really loved his wife, his father Henry Laurens finds out that Alex is pregnant with John's child, so he pays someone to shut Alex up about the whole thing...and life just goes down hill from their, war is shit, everyone sucks, and no one plays games during these dark times. And lastly...you can't really trust anyone.
Words: 5, Chapters: 1/?, Language: English
Fandoms: Hamilton - Miranda, Turn (TV 2014)
Rating: Explicit
Warnings: Graphic Depictions Of Violence, Major Character Death, Rape/Non-Con, Underage
Categories: Other
Characters: Alexander Hamilton, John Laurens, Gilbert du Motier Marquis de Lafayette, Thomas Jefferson, Elizabeth "Eliza" Schuyler, Aaron Burr, Hercules Mulligan, George Washington, Angelica Schuyler, James Madison, Margaret "Peggy" Schuyler, Maria Reynolds, Philip Hamilton, Charles Lee, Theodosia Prevost Burr, Martha Washington, George III of the United Kingdom, Theodosia Burr Alston, Angelica Hamilton, John Adams, Frances Laurens, Henry Laurens (1723-1792), Dolley Madison, George Eacker, Philip Schuyler, Martha Laurens Ramsay, Alexander Hamilton Jr., Samuel Seabury (1729-1796), Theodosia Burr, John Church Hamilton, Rachel Faucette Buck, Philip Hamilton (1782-1801), John Barker Church, James Laurens (1765-1775), John Jay, James Hamilton Sr. (c.1718-1799), Henry Knox, James Reynolds (fl.1783-1792), William P. Van Ness, Hugh Mulligan Jr., Nathanael Greene, Nathaniel Pendelton, Philip Schuyler (1733-1804), Charles Lee (1732-1782), Thomas Conway (1735-c.1800), David Hosack (1769-1835), Richard Montgomery (1738-1775), Alexander Hamilton (Cat), Levi Weeks (1776-1819), Charles Lee (1758-1801), John Baker White (1794–1862), Charles Lee (1732-1782)'s Wife, Benjamin Tallmadge, Caleb Brewster, Anna Strong, Abraham Woodhull, Edmund Hewlett, John Graves Simcoe, John André, Benedict Arnold, Mary Woodhull, Tench Tilghman, Peggy Shippen, Abigail (Turn), Richard Woodhull, Selah Strong, Nathaniel Sackett, Robert Rogers, Robert Townsend (1753-1838), Samuel Tallmadge, Samuel Townsend, Martha "Patsy" Parke Custis, Ensign Baker, Nathan Hale (1755-1776), Nathaniel Tallmadge, Akinbode | Jordan, John Parke Custis, Cicero (Turn), Philomena Cheer, Elizabeth Gwillim Simcoe, James Rivington, William Bradford (Turn), John Robeson, Lola (Turn), Aberdeen (Turn), Henry Clinton (1730-1795), Lieutenant Gamble (Turn), 2nd Continental Light Dragoons, Samuel Graves (1713-1787), Mary Floyd Tallmadge, Captain Wakefield, Charles Scott, Freddy Morgan, Thomas "Sprout" Woodhull, Sarah Livingston (Turn), Queen's Rangers, Captain Joyce, William Howe 5th Viscount Howe, Austin Roe, Lucas Brewster, Reverend Worthington, Lucy Scudder, Lydia Ketcham, Rachel Clark, Dr. Mabbs, Corporal Eastin, Walter Havens, Awasos, Mary Graves (1772-1860), Richard Grosvenor 1st Earl Grosvenor (1731-1802), Thomas Lynch Jr, Sarah Townsend (1724-1800), Patience Wright, Thomas Woodhull Sr, Francis Marion (c.1732-1795), Edmund Hewlett's Mother, Becky Redman, Hannah Ketcham, Elizabeth Lloyd Loring (1744-1831), Bridget Graves (1750-1795), Captain Jim Ryder, Lieutenant Chaffe (Turn), Rachel Peale, Colonel Jonathan Cooke, William "Billy" Lee (Turn), Peyton Randolph (1721–1775), John Randolph (1727–1784), Keturah Strong Woodhull, Sarah "Sally" Townsend (1760-1842), William André (1760-1802), Mopsey (Dog)
Relationships: Alexander Hamilton/John Laurens, Alexander Hamilton/Elizabeth "Eliza" Schuyler, Alexander Hamilton/Thomas Jefferson, Thomas Jefferson/James Madison, Aaron Burr/Alexander Hamilton, Gilbert du Motier Marquis de Lafayette/Hercules Mulligan, Maria Reynolds/Elizabeth "Eliza" Schuyler, Alexander Hamilton/George Washington, Aaron Burr/Theodosia Prevost Burr, George Washington/Martha Washington, Alexander Hamilton/John Laurens/Gilbert du Motier Marquis de Lafayette/Hercules Mulligan, Alexander Hamilton/Gilbert du Motier Marquis de Lafayette, Alexander Hamilton/John Laurens/Elizabeth "Eliza" Schuyler, John Laurens/Gilbert du Motier Marquis de Lafayette, Theodosia Burr Alston/Philip Hamilton, Alexander Hamilton/John Laurens/Gilbert du Motier Marquis de Lafayette, Alexander Hamilton/Angelica Schuyler, Gilbert du Motier Marquis de Lafayette/George Washington, Alexander Hamilton/Maria Reynolds, Benjamin Tallmadge/George Washington, Thomas Jefferson/Angelica Schuyler, Adrienne de Lafayette/Gilbert du Motier Marquis de Lafayette, George III of the United Kingdom/Samuel Seabury, Aaron Burr & George Washington, Martha Manning/Margaret "Peggy" Schuyler, Gilbert du Motier Marquis de Lafayette/Hercules Mulligan/George Washington, James Madison & Elizabeth "Eliza" Schuyler, John Adams & Richard Henry Lee, Adrienne de Lafayette/Gilbert du Motier Marquis de Lafayette/Angelica Schuyler, George Eacker/Philip Hamilton (1782-1801), Thomas Jefferson/John Laurens, Aaron Burr/John Laurens, Philip Hamilton/Lucy Jefferson Lewis, Dolley Madison & James Madison, John Laurens/Original Male Character(s), Alexander Hamilton/John Laurens/Angelica Schuyler/Elizabeth "Eliza" Schuyler, Caleb Brewster & John Laurens, Jonathan Bellamy (d.1777)/John Laurens, Nathan Hale (1755-1776)/Benjamin Tallmadge/George Washington, Jane Jefferson/George Washington, Aaron Burr/George Washington, Theodosia Prevost Burr/Angelica Schuyler, Thomas Jefferson/Gilbert du Motier Marquis de Lafayette, John Barker Church/Angelica Schuyler, Alexander Hamilton & Hercules Mulligan, Charles Lee/Gilbert du Motier Marquis de Lafayette, Theodosia Prevost Burr/Jacques Marcus Prevost, Hercules Mulligan/Elizabeth Sanders Mulligan, Abigail Adams/John Adams, Alexander Hamilton & Gouverneur Morris (1752-1816), Jonathan Bellamy (d.1777) & Aaron Burr, John Adams/John Hancock/Charles Thomson, Caleb Brewster/Margaret "Peggy" Schuyler, Robert Townsend/Abraham Woodhull, John André/Alexander Hamilton, John Graves Simcoe/Anna Strong, Edmund Hewlett & Anna Strong, Edmund Hewlett/John Graves Simcoe, Nathan Hale (1755-1776)/Benjamin Tallmadge, Robert Townsend & Mary Woodhull, Benedict Arnold/Benjamin Tallmadge, Anna Strong/Abraham Woodhull, Caleb Brewster & Anna Strong, Anna Strong/Selah Strong, Edmund Hewlett/Original Female Character(s), Edmund Hewlett/Richard Woodhull, John Graves Simcoe/Lola (Turn), Aaron Burr/Angelica Schuyler, Dolley Madison/Margaret "Peggy" Schuyler, John Laurens/James Madison, Aaron Burr/Alexander Hamilton/John Laurens
Additional Tags: American Revolution, Mpreg, Gay Founding Fathers (Hamilton), Explicit Sexual Content, Fluff, Angst, Family Issues, Dysfunctional Family, Politics, Canon-Typical Violence, Mental Health Issues, Unplanned Pregnancy, Pregnancy Scares, Forced Pregnancy, Secrets, Developing Relationship, Relationship(s), Slave Trade, Shameless Smut, BDSM, LGBTQ Themes, Porn, Jealousy, Kinks, Bromance to Romance, War, Humiliation, Praise Kink, Soulmates, Boys Kissing, French Kissing, Neck Kissing, Drunken Confessions, Marriage Contracts, Hand & Finger Kink, Finger Sucking, Breast Fucking, Cock Tease, Orgasm Delay/Denial, Multiple Orgasms, Crossdressing, Angst with a Happy Ending, Falling In Love, Love Confessions, Boys In Love, Idiots in Love, Friendship/Love, Slow Build, Slow Romance, Not Suitable/Safe For Work, Possessive Behavior, Thomas Jefferson Being an Asshole, Bisexual Alexander Hamilton, Human Disaster Aaron Burr, Poor Aaron Burr, Aaron Burr is So Done, Angst and Tragedy, Male Slash, Implied/Referenced Homophobia, Homophobic Henry Laurens, Homophobic Language, Hamilton References, Hurt Alexander Hamilton, Henry Laurens' A+ Parenting, Illnesses, HIV/AIDS, First Kiss, Gender Identity, Fist Fights, Fights, George Washington is a Dad, Some Humor, Dark Past, Emotional Hurt/Comfort, Gang Rape, Semi-Public Sex, Blow Jobs, First Time Blow Jobs, Anal Sex, Oral Sex, Rough Oral Sex, Post Mpreg, Penises, Painplay, Painful Sex, Lesbian Sex, Body Worship, Sharing Body Heat, Sharing a Bed, Sad with a Happy Ending, Minor Original Character(s), Secret Children, Substance Abuse, Suicide Attempt, Suicide Notes, Domestic Violence, Confessional Sex, Protectiveness, Historical Inaccuracy, Historical References
read it on the AO3 at https://ift.tt/2J2HS5H
5 notes · View notes
alystayr · 5 years ago
Text
Playlist musicale 2019 (2/2)
Liste des chansons (playlist 2019 - part. 2)
Mise à jour : 31 décembre 2019
playlist 2019 (part.2), playlist 2019 (part. 1)
playlist 2018 (part. 2), playlist 2018 (part. 1)
playlist 2017 (part. 2), playlist 2017 (part. 1)
playlist 2016 (part. 2), playlist 2016 (part. 1)
playlist 2015
0-9 #
16 Horsepower - American Wheeze (1996)
A
AaRON - Blouson Noir (2015)
Abd Al Malik - Le jeune noir à l’épée (2019)
The Afghan Whigs - Algiers (2014)
Air - Alpha Beta Gaga (2004-2016)
Alabama Shakes - Don’t Wanna Fight (2015)
Alice In Chains -  Rainier Fog (2018)
Angels of Light - Dawn (2005)
Aphrodite’s Child - Rain and tears (1968)
Archive - Erase (2019)
Louis Armstrong - St. James Infirmary (1928)
B
The B52's - Planet Claire (1979)
The Beatles - All You Need Is Love (1967)
Beck - Saw Lightning (2019)
Belle and Sebastian - Sister Buddha (2019)
Bénabar - Y'a une fille qu'habite chez moi (2001)
The Beta Band - Dry The Rain (1997)
Björk - Declare Independence (2008)
The Black Keys - Go (2019)
Blue Oyster Cult - (Don't Fear) The Reaper (1976)
Blur - There’s No Other Way (1991)
Joe Bonamassa - Lonesome Christmas (2016)
David Bowie - When I'm Five (1967)
Georges Brassens - Les copains d'abord (1964)
Jacques Brel - Mathilde (1963)
John Butler Trio - Bully (2017)
C
Cage The Elephant - Shake Me Down (2011)
Calexico - The Ballad of Cable Hogue (2000)
Calogero - En Apesanteur (2002)
Captain Kid - We & I (2012)
Johnny Cash (cover Nine Inch Nails) - Hurt (2002/1994)
Chloé - One in other (2010)
The Clash - White Riot (1977)
Johnny Clegg & Savuka - Asimbonanga (1987)
Eddie Cochran - Summertime Blues (1958)
Cocoon - Back To One (2019)
Cold War Kids - Passing the Hat (2006)
Chris Cornell - Seasons (from Singles) (1992)
Cypress Hill (feat. Chino Moreno and Everlast) - (Rock) Superstar (2000)
D
Dead Kennedys - Kill The Poor (1980)
Depeche Mode - Enjoy the Silence (1990)
dEUS - Instant Street (1999)
Dolly - Comment taire (2002)
The Doors - Love Street (1968)
Dr. John - Right Place Wrong Time (1973)
Bob Dylan - Hurricane (1975)
E
Eels - You Are The Shining Light (2018)
Eiffel - Cascade (2019)
Lisa Ekdahl (cover Betty Hutton) - It's Oh So Quiet (1997/1951)
Eminem - Venom (2018)
Eurythmics - Here Comes The Rain Again (1983)
F
Mylène Farmer - Des larmes (2018)
Les Fatals Picards - La Sécurité de l'Emploi (2007)
Fine Young Cannibals - Johnny Come Home (1985)
Florence + the Machine - Jenny of Oldstones (from Game of Thrones) (2019)
Foals - What Went Down (2015)
Foo Fighters - Best Of You (2005)
Foster The People - Pumped up Kicks (2011)
Future Islands - Fall From Grace (2014)
G
Peter Gabriel - Shock The Monkey (1982)
Liam Gallagher - One Of Us (2019)
Jean-Jacques Goldman - Je marche seul (1985)
The Good, The Bad & The Queen - Gun To The Head (2019)
Kim Gordon - Sketch Artist (2019)
Gossip - Standing In the Way of Control (2006)
Gravenhurst - The Collector (2007)
Juliette Gréco (cover Léo Ferré) - Jolie Môme (1961)
Grinderman - Man In The Moon (2007)
H
Nina Hagen - African Reggae (1979)
Ben Harper & Charlie Musselwhite - The Bottle Wins Again (2018)
PJ Harvey - Rid Of Me (1993)
The Jimi Hendrix Experience - Purple Haze (1967)
Kristin Hersh - The Cuckoo (1994)
Jacques Higelin - Paris-New York, New York-Paris (1974)
I
Interpol - The Weekend (2019)
Iron Maiden - Flight of Icarus (1983/2019)
Izia - Hey Bitch (2009)
J
Julia Jacklin (cover The Strokes) - Someday (2019/2001)
JAY-Z - Marcy Me (2017)
Joy Division - New Dawn Fades (1979)
Judas Priest - Breaking The Law (1980)
K
Kaiser Chiefs - Don't Just Stand There, Do Something (2019)
Kings of Leon - Family Tree (2013)
Mark Knopfler - Redbud Tree (2012)
L
Mark Lanegan Band - Stitch It Up (2019)
Cyndi Lauper - Girls Just Want To Have Fun (1983)
Bernard Lavilliers & Catherine Ringer - Idées Noires (1983-2014)
Led Zeppelin - No Quarter (1973)
The Lemonheads - Alison’s Starting To Happen (1992)
Linkin Park - Breaking The Habit (2003)
Little Eva - The Loco-Motion (1962)
Luke - Hasta Siempre (2004)
M
Scott McKenzie - San Francisco (1967)
Marcela Mangabeira (cover Michael Jackson) - Human Nature (2008/1982)
Loreena McKennitt - The Lady of Shalott (1991)
Marilyn Manson - God’s Gonna Cut You Down (2019)
Marilyn Manson (cover The Doors) - The End (1967-2019)
Massive Attack - Protection (1994)
Metallica - Seek and Destroy (1983)
Midnight Oil - Forgotten Years (1990)
Eddy Mitchell - Sur la route de Memphis (1976)
Modest Mouse - Lampshades on Fire (2015)
Gary Moore - The Loner (1987)
Moriarty - Isabella (2011)
Muddy Waters - Mannish Boy (1955)
N
The National - Hey Rosey (2019)
Nirvana - Come As You Are (1992)
Nirvana - Negative Creep (1991)
Noir Désir - Bouquet de nerfs (2001)
O
Les Ogres de Barback - Si tu restes (2019)
Mike Oldfield - Tubular Bells (1973)
OrelSan - Dis moi (2018)
P
Vanessa Paradis - Ces mots simples (2018)
Charles Pasi - A Man I Know (2014)
Pearl Jam - Jeremy (1991)
Pink Floyd - Money (1973)
Pixies - Hey (1989)
Placebo - Battle For The Sun (2009)
Iggy Pop - Run Like A Villain (1982)
Portishead - Misterons (1994)
The Pretenders - Middle of the Road (1984)
Q
Queens Of The Stone Age - Regular John (1998)
R
The Raconteurs - Help Me Stranger (2019)
Radiohead - Street Spirit (Fade Out) (1995)
Ram Jam - Black Betty (1977)
Red Hot Chili Pepper - Under The Bridge (1991)
Renaud - Fatigué (1985)
Calvin Russell - Soldier (1992/2011)
S
Saez - Germaine (2019)
Screamin' Jay Hawkins - Constipation Blues (1969)
Screaming Trees - Nearly Lost You (1992)
Seasick Steve - Hobo Low (2006)
Shaka Ponk - My Name Is Stain (2011)
William Sheller - Maintenant Tout Le Temps (1994)
Alan Silvestri - Retour vers le Futur (from Back to the Future) (1985)
Simon & Garfunkle - El Condor Pasa (1970)
Slaves - The Velvet Ditch (2019)
Smoke City - Underwater Love (1997)
Sonic Youth - Bull In The Heather (1994)
Joss Stone (cover The Dells) - The Love We Had (Stays On My Mind) (2012)
Alain Souchon - Presque (2019)
Soundgarden - The Day I Tried To Live (1994)
Supertramp - Give A Little Bit (1977)
T
Taj Mahal - Ain't That A Lot Of Love (1968)
Tame Impala - Patience (2019)
Tarmac - Tu semblante (2001)
Taxi Girl -   Cherchez le Garçon (1980)
Tindersticks - For The Beauty (2019)
Tool - Fear Inoculum (2019)
Tricky (feat. Marta) - Makes Me Wonder (2019)
The Twilight Singers - King Only (2000)
U
U2 - Mysterious Ways (1991)
U2 - Pride (In The Name Of Love) (1984)
Ugly Kid Joe - Cats In The Cradle (1992)
UNKLE - The Lost Highway (2019)
V
Volbeat - Still Counting (2008)
W
Tom Waits - I hope I don’t fall in love with you (1973)
Les Wampas - Ce Soir C'est Noël (1990)
Les Wampas - Chirac En Prison (2003)
The War on Drugs - Pain (2017)
Emily Jane White - Dark Undercoat (2007)
Jim White - Bluebird (2004)
The Who - Behind Blue Eyes (1971)
Wilco - Everyone Hides (2019)
John Williams - Star Wars Main Theme (1977)
Shannon Wright - These Present Arms (2019)
X
Y
Yodelice - Wake Me Up (2010)
Thom Yorke - Not The News (2019)
Z
Zebda - Le Bruit Et L'Odeur (1995)
Rob Zombie - Dead City Radio And The New Gods Of Supertown (2013)
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archiveofolives · 5 years ago
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tagged by @captainmrvels, tyvm!! here's the funny thing tho: i don't watch tv shows anymore :D sometime between 2014 and now, i decided it was no use pretending and completely stopped trying to catch up with the episodes i'd missed so i'm just going to sort of retrofit this questionnaire to make it applicable to me! i hope that's ok ❤️❤️❤️
Pick 5 shows fandoms, then answer the following questions (don’t cheat!)
marvel (oh i just realized the avengers have a cartoon series!)
ff7 (errr movie and oav?)
ace attorney (it has an anime! does that count)
star wars (eh)
his dark materials (hey this one at least has a tv show coming out soon)
1. Who is your favorite character in 2?
it's this guy cloud strife, you may have heard of him from my blog lmao
2. Who is your favorite in 1?
WE ARE LOKI ON MAIN FOR A REASON, BABY
3. What’s your favorite episode of 4?
HA this one worked like a charm. ummm probably episode 7 bc that made me feel Things and i loved rewatching it as compared to the others. altho if we bring in every other movie in-between, it's obviously rogue one. BUT i DO have a special place in my heart for episode 1! i've been a star wars fan since i was a kid thanks to my dad but i was obsessed with episode 1, it really pushed all the right buttons for me. like i wouldn't call it a solid movie next to episode 7 but man is it a classic!
4. what’s your favorite season of 5?
i think i will love every season when they do come out but book-wise, i think you can't beat the level of wonder of northern lights/golden compass, depending on which edition your bookstores sold. my REAL absolute favorite tho has got to be once upon a time in the north bc the leads are basc my two favorite characters lmao
5. Who’s your favorite couple in 3?
OH MAN mia fey and godot! i'm such a trash for tragic relationships and i think they looked very handsome together!
6. Who’s your favorite couple in 2?
cloud and aerith—my home ship since 20 years ago and the reason, i think, a lot of my ships tend to be on the tragic side >.>;; but i just love the tropes they're hitting, you know? and then how their colors and characters complement each other, i think they're a very attractive couple
7. Least favorite episode movie of 1?
movie bc it's easier than the comics lmao. but probably dr strange? icn say it's civil war bc it has spider-man, black panther and ant-man which for me are the only things really worth seeing in there but dr strange doesn't really even have that much of a hook for me to begin with. i wouldn't have gone and seen it if not bc of my team who wanted to see it for our team building excursion lol
8. Favorite episode of 5?
find me anything with lee scoresby in it baby!!!
9. Favorite season installment of 2?
i think i will forever be devoted to the classic polygon game, the one that started it all, y'know? but i'm really excited for the remake and i really enjoyed ff7ac/c! i also have not played the other games in the compilation bc money and time lmao (says the woman who just spent 12 hours on the game yesterday like some high schooler >.>;;; i just got aerith's great gospel and i already miss her ;_;)
10. How long have you watched 1?
i have been a clown since 2012
11. How did you become interested in 3?
we got a ds lite!! and then everyone kept raving about the phoenix wright game so my sister got it for us and then one day, i just decided to watch and help her play the third case and now, it's part of how we bond. we've always solved cases together ever since, they're much easier and less creepier that way
12. Favorite actor in 4?
oh wow, another lucky hit! ummm ewan mcgregor? i was a huge fan of his obi-wan kenobi like, icn remember calling other characters my favorite after his obi-wan anymore. so i'm really excited he's going to reprise the role, finally!!
13. Which do you prefer, 1, 2, or 5?
oh god, probably 2?? bc between the three of them, ff7 has had the biggest influence in my life. like seriously, the reason i'm in my job rn is bc of it—i went to college to take up computer science bc i wanted to make games like ff7 lmao but that didn't work out bc calculus is the worst. STILL it pushed me to the right direction of being in stem!
14. Which have you seen more episodes new releases of, 1 or 3?
i'm gonna have to say 1 for the obvious reason that they've released more movies than 3 has released games bc they're the products of an entertainment tycoon, you know? while with 3, there's still a part of it that still feels like a passion project and i haven't seen the anime yet lmao.
15. If you could be anyone from 4 who would you be?
i'd be a rebel. when i was a kid, i wanted to be a jedi, tho, lol
16. Would a crossover between 3 and 4 work?
ACE ATTORNEY IN SPACE. SPACE ATTORNEY AHAHAHAHAHA. i mean WHY NOT, you've got coruscant, you've got imperial sympathizers sowing discontent to lead to the first order (i think), you've got other separatists while we're at it, smuggling, bounty hunting, the fall of the jedi order. especially after rotj, i can imagine how active the courtrooms were with the war criminals and the petty ones taking advantage of the shift of government. the feys are obviously of the force, the von karmas could be a family linked to sympathizers, maybe nick is even attuned to the force which is why mia singled him out! it's easy to work out the whole thing ❤️
17. Pair two characters in 1 who would make an unlikely but strangely ok couple.
but marvel is already doing that job for me lmao. ummmm jane and roz solomon? but it's not unlikely bc they ARE friends and roz was the first person jane confided to about being thor. really icn think of anything off the top of my head, i'm not a shippy kind of person unless the canon lays it out before me and i get convinced. which, in itself, is rare.
18. Overall which show franchise has a better storyline, 1 or 3?
3, hands down. i'd much rather miss more movies of 1 than new releases of 3. it's in the quality of the storytelling, y'know? which isn't to say i loved all games lol i mean honestly, if you ask me? i'd tell you apollo justice is a huge au.
19. Which has better theme music, 2 or 4?
OH THIS IS A GOOD QUESTION. you're asking me who did it better, john williams or nobuo uematsu??? damn, they're both solid composers with amazingly timeless pieces but from my biased point of view, you can't beat nobuo uematsu. his work on final fantasy as compared to williams' work on star wars is more varied and he freaking makes MIDI sound like an orchestra!! and, he was the fucking soundtrack of my childhood. i was SO lucky to have been raised in a generation where he still did the music to all final fantasy games.
tagging: OH NO I DON'T KNOW WHO TO TAG DDDD: ummm @summoneryuna watches lots of shows, right??? @egregiousderp but with anime?? @safarikalamari just bc???? lmao idfk
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dalekofchaos · 6 years ago
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DCEU Recast
For fun I’ve decided to do a recast of the DCEU and ps in my version everyone gets their movie before Justice League and it’s Martian Manhunter who brings everyone together
My other DC Fancasts
Batman
Batman Beyond
Superman
Wonder Woman
The Flash
Aquaman
Green Lantern
Green Arrow
Justice League
Teen Titans
Justice League Dark
The Dark Knight Returns
Telltale’s Batman
Injustice
Legion Of Doom
Birds Of Prey
Phase 1
Man Of Steel
Josh Hartnett as Superman/Clark Kent
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Emily Blunt as Lois Lane
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Harrison Ford as Jonathan Kent
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Meryl Streep as Martha Kent
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Kate Mara as Lana Lang
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Tobey Maguire as Pete Ross
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Sean Bean as Jor-El
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Kate Winslett as Lara Lor-Van
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Rupert Grint as Jimmy Olsen
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William Shatner as Perry White
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Rachel McAdams as Cat Grant
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Patrick Warburton as Steve Lombard
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Sterling K Brown as Ron Troupe
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Billie Piper as Maggie Sawyer
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Christopher Meloni as Dan Turpin
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Danny Glover as William Henderson
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Richard Schiff as Dr Emil Hamilton
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Clancy Brown as  General Sam Lane
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Terry O’Quinn as Lex Luthor
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Tao Okamoto as Mercy Graves
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Viggo Mortensen as General Zod
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Lena Headley as Faora
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Robert Maillet as Non
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The Batman(in my version, The Batman comes after Man Of Steel, this will be about how The Joker and Harley Quinn kills Jason Todd, yes both Joker and Harley kill Jason. It’s important that everyone realizes Harley is a villain and not a anti-hero)
Karl Urban as Batman/Bruce Wayne
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Peter Capaldi as Alfred Pennyworth
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Michael Keaton as Thomas Wayne
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Kim Basinger as Martha Wayne
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Courtney B Vance as Lucius Fox
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Kate Mulgrew as Dr Leslie Thompkins
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Diane Kruger as Vicki Vale
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Mark Pellegrino  as Jack Ryder/The Creeper
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Jesús Castro as Nightwing/Dick Grayson
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Jane Levy as Barbara Gordon/Oracle
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Matthew Daddario as Jason Todd/Robin
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Morena Baccarin as Catwoman/Selina Kyle
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or Odette Annable as Catwoman/Selina Kyle
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or Eiza González as Catwoman/Selina Kyle
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Bryan Cranston as James Gordon
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Michael Madsen as Harvey Bullock
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Stephanie Beatriz as Renee Montoya
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Jodie Foster as Sarah Essen
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Ben Mendelsohn as Dr Jeremiah Arkham
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Rockmond Dunbar as Aaron Cash
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Joe Giligun as The Joker
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Amanda Seyfried as Harley Quinn
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And on the Batcomputer we’d see cameos from the other Batman villains
Alfred Molina as The Penguin/Oswald Chesterfield Cobblepot
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Liev Schreiber as Two-Face/Harvey Dent
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David Tennant as The Riddler
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Tobin Bell as Mr Freeze/Victor Fries
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Jessica Chastain as Poison Ivy/Pamela Isley
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Michael Wincott as Black Mask/Roman Sionis
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Adam Driver as Scarecrow/Jonathan Crane
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Ben Kingsley as Hugo Strange
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Toby Jones as Mad Hatter/Jervis Tetch
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Majid Al Masri as Ra’s Al Ghul
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Shanina Shaik as Talia Al Ghul
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Yasmine Al Massri as Nyssa Raatko
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Zhang Ziyi as Lady Shiva
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John Lithgow as Arnold Wesker/The Ventriloquist
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Adewale Akinnuoye-Agbaje as Killer Croc/Waylon Jones
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Pedro Pascal as Deadshot/Floyd Lawton
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Kevin Durand as Solomon Grundy
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Jackie Earle Haley as Victor Zsasz
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Leonardo DiCaprio as Clayface/Basil Karlo
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Woody Harrelson as Firefly/Garfield Lynns
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Doug Jones as Man-Bat /Dr. Kirk Langstrom
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Daniel Radcliffe as Anarky
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Conleth Hill as Calandar Man/Julian Day
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Tom Berenger as Commissioner Gillian B. Loeb
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Michael Weatherly as Detective Arnold Flass
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Will Arnett as Lt. Howard Branden
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Robert DeNiro as Carmine Falcone
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Al Pacino as Salvatore Maroni
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Charlie Heaton as Alberto Falcone
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Gwendoline Christie as Sofia Falcone
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Vincent Karthieser as Mario Falcone
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Nick Nolte as Rupert Thorne
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Brad Dourif as Joe Chill
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World’s Finest(This is not BVS this is World’s Finest. This is not a dumbed down fight scene just to kiss Frank Miller’s ass to adapt the most overrated comic. I care more about Batman and Superman having strong differences and overcoming them and working together in the end to stop a common threat. They are called the World’s Finest for a reason.)
Karl Urban as Batman/Bruce Wayne
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Josh Hartnett as Superman/Clark Kent
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Emily Blunt as Lois Lane
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Peter Capaldi as Alfred Pennyworth
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Bryan Cranston as James Gordon
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Michael Madsen as Harvey Bullock
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Stephanie Beatriz as Renee Montoya
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Rupert Grint as Jimmy Olsen
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William Shatner as Perry White
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Billie Piper as Maggie Sawyer
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Christopher Meloni as Dan Turpin
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Joe Gilgun as The Joker
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Amanda Seyfried as Harley Quinn
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Terry O’Quinn as Lex Luther
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Tao Okamoto as Mercy Graves
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Wonder Woman
Gemma Arterton as Wonder Woman/Diana Prince
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Ryan Gosling as Steve Trevor
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Lucy Davis as Etta Candy
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Lynda Carter as Hippolyta
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Alexandra Daddario as Artemis
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Lisa Berry as General Philippus
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Robin Wright as General Antiope
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Gerard Butler as Ares
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Anne Hathaway as Athena
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Lucy Lawless as Hera
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Liam Neeson as Zeus
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Peter Stormare as Hades
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Green Lantern(Basically what the animated movie First Flight was. But  Buddy Cop adventures of Hal and Sinestro. Hal Jordan mentoring under Sinestro (who does NOT turn evil at the end of the first, but instead the end of the second movie and in the third movie is when we get Sinestro Corps, however my big change to Sinestro’s character is Sinestro isn't a tyrant of his own people. Have it be that Sinestro used the ring to better his own world and his people love him, but the Guardians saw that as interference and marked Sinestro as a threat)
Chris Pine as Green Lantern/Hal Jordan
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Lauren Cohan as Carol Ferris
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Luke Evans as Sinestro
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Zachary Quinto as  Tomar-Re
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Ken Watanabe as Abin Sur
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Scott Bakula as Alan Scott
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Ron Pearlman as Kilowog
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Michael Sheen as Hector Hammond
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With cameos from future Green Lanterns
Trevante Rhodes as John Stewart/Green Lantern
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Diego Luna as Kyle Rayner
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Aaron Paul as Guy Gardner
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Saad Siddiqui as Simon Baz
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Dianne Guerrero as Jessica Cruz
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The Flash
Garrett Hedlund as The Flash/Barry Allen
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Anna Kendrick as Iris West
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David Duchovny as Henry Allen
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Gillian Anderson as Nora Allen
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Sendhil Ramamurthy as David Singh
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Lennie James as James Forrest
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Peter Weller as Darryl Frye
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Juno Temple as Patty Spivot
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Tiffany Espensen as Linda Park
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Bruce Greenwood as Jay Garrick
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Peyton Meyer  as Wally West/Kid Flash
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Michael C Hall as Eobard Thawne/Reverse Flash
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Aquaman
Alexander Skarsgard as Aquaman/Arthur Curry
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Christina Hendricks as Mera
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Stellan Skarsgård as Tom Curry
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Kelsey Grammer as Nuidis Vulko
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Cary-Hiroyuki Tagawa as Dr. Stephen Shin
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Nicole Kidman as Atlanna
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Michael K Williams as Black Manta
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Gustaf Skarsgard as Ocean Master
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Teen Titans(I think it’s better to have Teen Titans instead of Suicide Squad in phase 1)
Jesús Castro as Nightwing/Dick Grayson
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Ray Fisher as Cyborg/Victor Stone
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Sharon Belle as Starfire/ Koriand'r
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Natasha Negovanlis as Raven/Rachel Roth
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Dylan O'Brien as Beast Boy/Garfield Logan
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Peyton List as Terra
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Joe Manganiello as Deathstroke/Slade Wilson
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Justice League(White Martians will be the villains and J’onn is the one who unites the Justice League)
Karl Urban as Batman/Bruce Wayne
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Josh Hartnett as Superman/Clark Kent
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Gemma Areton as Wonder Woman/Diana Prince
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Garrett Hedlund as The Flash/Barry Allen
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Alexander Skarsgard as Aquaman/Arthur Curry
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Chris Pine as Green Lantern/Hal Jordan
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Giancarlo Esposito as J’onn J’onzz/Martian Manhunter
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Phase 2
Man Of Steel 2
Josh Hartnett as Superman/Clark Kent
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Emily Blunt as Lois Lane
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Elle Fanning as Supergirl/Kara Zor-El
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Meryl Streep as Martha Kent
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Rupert Grint as Jimmy Olsen
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William Shatner as Perry White
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Rachel McAdams as Cat Grant
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Patrick Warburton as Steve Lombard
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Warner Miller as Ron Troupe
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Billie Piper as Maggie Sawyer
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Robert De Niro as Dan Turpin
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Mark Harmon as William Henderson
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Richard Schiff as Dr Emil Hamilton  
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Clancy Brown as  General Sam Lane
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Terry O’Quinn as Lex Luthor
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Ralph Fiennes as Brainiac
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Shazam(In title name and Billy shouting only, the choice to call Billy’s hero persona Shazam is a confusing mess)
Channing Tatum as Captain Marvel
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Noah Schnapp as Billy Batson
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Finn Wolfhard as Freddy Freeman
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Rowan Blanchard as Mary Batson
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Jim Beaver as Uncle Dudley
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Ernie Hudson as Jebidiah of Canaan/The Wizard of Shazam
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Jeffrey Wright as Tawky Tawny
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Hugh Laurie as Dr. Thaddeus Sivana
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Dwayne Johnson as Black Adam
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Suicide Squad
Mo´Nique as Amanda Waller
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Daniel Craig as Colonel Rick Flag
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Pedro Pascal as Deadshot/Floyd Lawton
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Jonny Lee Miller as Captain Boomerang
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Kristen Bell as Killer Frost
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Derek Mears as King Shark
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Michael Jai White as Bronze Tiger
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Karen Fukuhara as Katana
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Holland Roden as Plastique 
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Wonder Woman 2
Gemma Areton as Wonder Woman/Diana Prince
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Ryan Gosling as Steve Trevor
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Lynda Carter as Hippolyta
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Alexandra Daddario as Artemis
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Lisa Berry as General Philippus
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Angelina Jolie as Circe
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Charlize Theron as Cheetah
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Green Arrow
Charlie Hunam as Green Arrow/Oliver Queen  
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Katheryn Winnick as Black Canary/Dinah Lance  
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Taron Egerton as Arsenal/Roy Harper
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Alona Tal as Speedy/Mia Dearden
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Common as John Diggle
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Josh Gad as Henry Fyff
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Donnie Yen as Yao Fei
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Devon Aoki as Shado
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Keanu Reeves as Merlyn
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Bird Of Prey
Jane Levy as Barbara Gordon/Oracle
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Teresa Ting as Batgirl/Cassandra Cain
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Katheryn Winnick as Black Canary/Dinah Lance
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Eliza Dushku as Helena Bertinelli/The Huntress
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Tatiana Maslany as Lady Blackhawk/Zinda Blake
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Gugu Mbatha-Raw as Vixen/Mari Jiwe McCabe 
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Lily Collins as Starling/Evelyn Crawford
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Zhang Ziyi as Lady Shiva
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Batman Under The Red Hood
Karl Urban as Batman/Bruce Wayne
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Peter Capaldi as Alfred Pennyworth
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Matthew Daddario as Red Hood/Jason Todd
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Bryan Cranston as James Gordon
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Michael Madsen as Harvey Bullock
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Stephanie Beatriz as Renee Montoya
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Michael Wincott as Black Mask/Roman Sionis
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Joe Giligun as The Joker
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Amanda Seyfried as Harley Quinn
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Shanina Shaik as Talia Al Ghul 
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Justice League:Legion Of Doom
Karl Urban as Batman/Bruce Wayne
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Josh Hartnett as Superman/Clark Kent
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Gemma Areton as Wonder Woman/Diana Prince
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Garrett Hedlund as The Flash/Barry Allen
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Alexander Skarsgard as Aquaman/Arthur Curry
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Chris Pine as Green Lantern/Hal Jordan
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Giancarlo Esposito as J’onn J’onzz/Martian Manhunter
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Terry O’Quinn as Lex Luthor
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Joe Gilgun as The Joker
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Joe Manganiello as Deathstroke
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Michael K Williams as Black Manta
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Charlize Theron as Cheetah
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Dwayne Johnson as Black Adam
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Luke Evans as Sinestro
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Michael C Hall as Reverse Flash/ Eobard Thawne
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82 notes · View notes
sporadiceagleheart · 5 months ago
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loudlydopevoid-blog · 7 years ago
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Cien años de soledad, Gabriel García Márquez.   469 puntos
El señor de los anillos (Trilogía), de J. R. R. Tolkien.    389 puntos
1984, de George Orwell.   382 puntos
Un mundo feliz, de Aldous Huxley.   374 puntos
Orgullo y prejuicio, de Jane Austen.   341 puntos
Crimen y castigo, de Fiódor Dostoyevski.   324 puntos
Lolita, de Vladimir Nabokov.   318 puntos
Ulises, de James Joyce.   311 puntos
Madame Bovary, de Gustave Flaubert.   310 puntos
En busca del tiempo perdido, de Marcel Proust.   304 puntos
Don Quijote de la Mancha, de Miguel de Cervantes.   279 puntos
El retrato de Dorian Gray, de Oscar Wilde.   277 puntos
Ana Karenina, de León Tolstói.   261 puntos
El Principito, de Antoine de Saint-Exupéry.   253 puntos
El proceso, de Franz Kafka.   247 puntos
El ruido y la furia, de William Faulkner.  246 puntos
Hamlet, de William Shakespeare.  246 puntos
Lo que el viento se llevó, de Margaret Mitchell.  238 puntos
La Odisea, de Homero.  232 puntos
Las uvas de la Ira, de John Steinbeck.  232 puntos
El guardián entre el centeno, de J. D. Salinger.  228 puntos
Cumbres borrascosas, de Emily Brontë.  219 puntos
El gran Gatsby, de F. Scott Fitzgerald.  213 puntos
Mil soles esplendidos, de Khaled Hosseini.  211 puntos
Alicia en el País de las Maravillas, de Lewis Carroll.   211 puntos
Rebelión en la granja, de George Orwell.   209 puntos
Los pilares de la tierra de, Ken Follett.   206 puntos
Guerra y paz, de León Tolstói.   197 puntos
Memorias de una geisha, de Arthur Golden.   195 puntos
Frankenstein o El moderno Prometeo, de Mary W. Shelley.   191 puntos
Los viajes de Gulliver, de Jonathan Swift.   186 puntos
La ladrona de libros, de Markus Zusak.   183 puntos
Matar a un ruiseñor, de Harper Lee.   183 puntos
El conde de Montecristo, de Alejandro Dumas.   183 puntos
Los juegos del hambre, de Suzanne Collins.   181 puntos
Harry Potter y la piedra filosofal (Harry Potter 1 ) de J. K. Rowling.   179 puntos
El señor de las moscas, de William Golding.   177 puntos
Moby Dick, Herman Melville.  174 puntos
Los miserables, de Victor Hugo.   172 puntos
Las aventuras de Huckleberry Finn, de Mark Twain.  170 puntos
Tristam Shandy, de Laurence Sterne.  168 puntos
Drácula, de Bram Stoker.  166 puntos
El nombre de la rosa, de Umberto Eco.  166 puntos
El extranjero, Albert Camus.  165 puntos
Los hermanos Karamázov, de Fiódor Dostoyevski.   164 puntos
El amor en los tiempos del cólera, de Gabriel García Márquez.   163 puntos
Harry Potter y las Reliquias de la Muerte (Harry Potter 7 ) de J. K. Rowling.  163 puntos
El código Da Vinci, de Dan Brown.   162 puntos
Harry Potter y el prisionero de Azkaban (Harry Potter 3 ) de J. K. Rowling.  162 puntos
Cometas en el cielo de Khaled Hosseini.   161 puntos
Ensayo sobre la ceguera, de José Saramago.   159 puntos
Las crónicas de Narnia, de C. S. Lewis.  152 puntos
Los renglones torcidos de Dios, de Torcuato Luca de Tena 152 puntos
En llamas, de Suzanne Collins.  151 puntos
Harry Potter y el cáliz de fuego (Harry Potter 4 ), de J. K. Rowling.  151 puntos
La sombra del viento, de Carlos Ruiz Zafón.  151 puntos
Viaje al fin de la noche, de Louis Ferdinand Céline.  151 puntos
Harry Potter y el misterio del príncipe ( Harry Potter 6 ) de J. K. Rowling.  150 puntos
El juego de Ender, de Orson Scott Card.  149 puntos
La Biblia.   147 puntos
La montaña mágica, de Thomas Mann.   147 puntos
Harry Potter y la Orden del Fénix ( Harry Potter 5 ) de J. K. Rowling. 144 puntos
El psicoanalista, de John Katzenbach.  141 puntos
Trampa 22, de Joseph Heller.  141 puntos
Por quién doblan las campanas, de Hernest Hemingway.  135 puntos
Dr. Jekyll y mr. Hyde, de Robert Louis Stevenson.  135 puntos
El médico, de Noah Gordon.  134 puntos
La metamorfosis, de Franz Kafka.  134 puntos
La telaraña de Carlota, de E.B. White.  134 puntos
La divina comedia, de Dante Alighieri.   132 puntos
La señora Dalloway, de Virginia Woolf.   132 puntos
Crepúsculo, de Stephenie Meye.r   129 puntos
En el camino, de Jack Kerouac.   129 puntos
La Iliada, de Homero.   127 puntos
Jane Eyre, de Charlotte Brontë.   126 puntos
Diario, de Ana Frank.   125 puntos
El retorno del rey, de J.R.R. Tolkien.  125 puntos
El perfume, de Patrick Süskind.  124 puntos
Fahrenheit 451, de Ray Bradbury.    124 puntos
Crónica de una muerte anunciada, de Gabriel García Márquez.   122 puntos
La casa de los espíritus, de Isabel Allende.  121 puntos
Mientras agonizo, de William Faulkner.  121 puntos
La isla del tesoro, de Robert Louis Stevenson.  119 puntos
Todo se desmorona, de Chinua Achebe.  117 puntos
Emma, de Jane Austen.  117 puntos
Pasaje a la India, de E. M. Forster.  117 puntos
Ficciones, de Jorge Luis Borges.  113 puntos
Harry Potter y la cámara secreta (Harry Potter 2 ) de J. K. Rowling.  113 puntos
A sangre fría, de Truman Capote. 111 puntos
Rimas y leyendas, de Gustavo Adolfo Bequer. 109 puntos
El corazón es un cazador solitario, de Carson Mccullers. 104 puntos
El Rey Lear, de William Shakespeare. 104 puntos
Tormenta de espadas, de George R.R. Martin. 100 puntos
Juego de tronos, de George R.R.Martin. 99 puntos
La catedral del mar, de Ildefonso Falcones. 99 puntos
Progreso del peregrino de John Bunyan. 99 puntos
El corazón de las tinieblas, de Joseph Conrad. 98 puntos
Robinson Crusoe, de Daniel Defoe. 98 puntos
La isla de los amores infinitos, de Daína Chaviano. 97 puntos
David Copperfield, de Charles Dickens. 97 puntos
La condición humana, de André Malraux. 96 puntos
Un mundo sin fin, de Ken Follett. 96 puntos
Tom Jones, de Henry Fielding. 96 puntos
El clan del oso cavernario. Los hijos de la tierra I, de Jean M. Auel. 95 puntos
El hombre invisible, de Ralph Ellison. 95 puntos
Clarissa, de Samuel Richardson. 95 puntos
Al faro, de Virginia Woolf. 94 puntos
Choque de reyes, de George R. R. Martin. 93 puntos
Cuentos, de Antón Chéjov. 93 puntos
El último catón, de Matilde Asensi. 93 puntos
Las amistades peligrosas Pierre Choderlos De Laclos. 93 puntos
El gran Meaulnes, de Alain-Fournier. 92 puntos
Sinuhé el egipcio, de Mika Waltari. 92 puntos
El segundo sexo, de Simone de Beauvoir. 91 puntos
La espuma de los días, de Boris Vian. 91 puntos
Once minutos, de Paulo Coelho. 91 puntos
Cuentos de Canterbury, de Geoffrey Chaucer. 90 puntos
Poeta en Nueva York, de Federico García Lorca. 90 puntos
Abadía pesadilla, Thomas Love Peacock. 90 puntos
El Hobbit, de J.R.R. Tolkien. 89 puntos
Esperando a Godot, de Samuel Beckett. 89 puntos
La oveja negra, de Honore De Balzac. 89 puntos
Cuentos, de Edgar Allan Poe. 88 puntos
El ser y la nada, de Jean-Paul Sartre. 88 puntos
Middlemarch, de George Eliot. 88 puntos
La cartuja de Parma, de Stendhal. 88 puntos
Ángeles y demonios, de Dan Brown. 87 puntos
El árbol dador, de Shel Silverstein. 87 puntos
La comunidad del anillo (El señor de los anillos I), de J. R. R. Tolkien.  87 puntos
Archipiélago Gulag , de Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn.  86 puntos
El niño con el pijama de rayas, de John Boyne.  86 puntos
Las dos torres (El señor de los anillos II), de J. R. R. Tolkien.  86 puntos
Sybil, de Benjamin Disraeli.  86 puntos
Amanecer, de Stephenie Meyer.  85 puntos
El lobo estepario, de Hermann Hesse.  85 puntos
Paroles, de Jacques Prévert.  85 puntos
Pedro Páramo, de Juan Rulfo.  85 puntos
El sueño eterno, de Raymond Chandler.  85 puntos
Alcoholes, de Guillaume Apollinaire.  84 puntos
El nombre del viento, de Patrick Rothfuss.  84 puntos
La guía del autoestopista galáctico, de Douglas Adams.  84 puntos
El Loto Azul, de Hergé.  83 puntos
Bajo el volcán, de Malcolm Lowry.  82 puntos
Eclipse, de Stephenie Meyer.  82 puntos
Verónika decide morir, de Paulo Coelho.  82 puntos
Vanity Fair, de William Makepeace Thackeray.  82 puntos
Beloved, de Toni Morrison.  81 puntos
Las mil y una noches.  81 puntos
Tristes trópicos, de Claude Lévi-Strauss.  81 puntos
La letra escarlata, de Nathaniel Hawthorne.  81 puntos
Hijos de la medianoche, de Salman Rushdie.  80 puntos
Inés del alma mía, de Isabel Allende.  80 puntos
La muerte de Virgilio, de Hermann Broch.  79 puntos
Travesuras de la niña mala, de Mario Vargas Llosa.  79 puntos
Astérix el Galo, de René Goscinny y Albert Uderzo.  78 puntos
Ensayos, de Michel de Montaigne.  78 puntos
Luna Nueva , de Stephenie Meyer.  78 puntos
La dama de blanco, de Wilkie Collins.  78 puntos
Azteca, de Gary Jennings.  77 puntos
La cantante calva, de Eugène Ionesco.  77 puntos
Matadero 5, de Kurt Vonnegut.  77 puntos
El alquimista, de Paulo Coelho.  76 puntos
Hijo nativo, de Richard Wright.  76 puntos
Rojo y negro, Stendhal.  76 puntos
Romeo y Julieta, de William Shakespeare.  76 puntos
Tres ensayos sobre teoría sexual, de Sigmund Freud.  76 puntos
Mujercitas, de Louisa M. Alcott.  76 puntos
De la democracia en América, de Alexis de Tocqueville.  75 puntos
El aleph, Jorge Luis Borges.  75 puntos
Historias de hadas para adultos, de Daína Chaviano.  75 puntos
La mujer del viajero en el tiempo, de Audrey Niffenegger.  75 puntos
Los santos inocentes, de Miguel Delibes.  75 puntos
Opus Nigrum, de Marguerite Yourcenar.  75 puntos
Sinsajo, de Suzanne Collins.  75 puntos
El mundo en que vivimos, Anthony Trollope.  75 puntos
El origen de las especies, de Charles Darwin.  74 puntos
Historia, de Heródoto.  73 puntos
Daniel Deronda, de George Eliot.  73 puntos
El contrato social, de Jean-Jacques Rousseau.  72 puntos
El desierto de los tártaros, de Dino Buzzati.  72 puntos
El capital, de Karl Marx.  71 puntos
Las flores del mal, de Charles Baudelaire.  71 puntos
Los monederos falsos, de André Gide.  71 puntos
El retrato de una dama, de Henry James.  71 puntos
Ana de las tejas verdes, de L. M. Montgomery.  70 puntos
El banquete, de Platón.  70 puntos
El húsar en el tejado, de Jean Giono.  70 puntos
El príncipe, de Maquiavelo.  70 puntos
Bella del Señor, de Albert Cohen.  69 puntos
Las confesiones, de San Agustín.  69 puntos
Mi planta de naranja-lima, de José Mauro de Vasconcelos.  69 puntos
Veinte poemas de amor y una canción, de Pablo Neruda.  69 puntos
La educación sentimental, de Gustave Flaubert.  68 puntos
Leviatan, de Thomas Hobbes.  68 puntos
Rayuela, de Julio Cortázar.  68 puntos
Tres hombres en una barca, de Jerome K. Jerome.  68 puntos
Como agua para chocolate, de Laura Esquivel.  67 puntos
Elegías de Duino, de Rainer Maria Rilker.  67 puntos
Festín de cuervos, de George R.R. Martin  67 puntos
Historia de la guerra del Peloponeso, de Tucídides.  67 puntos
En tiempo de prodigios, de Marta Rivera de la Cruz.  66 puntos
Therese Desqueyroux , de François Mauriac.  66 puntos
La canción de Solomon, de Toni Morrison.  66 puntos
El viento en los sauces, de Kenneth Grahame.  66 puntos
Diario de un don nadie, de George Grossmith.  66 puntos
El oficio de vivir, de Cesare Pavese.  65 puntos
La historia interminable, de Michael Ende.  65 puntos
Winnie-the-Pooh, de A. A. Milne.  65 puntos
Zazie en el metro, de Raymond Queneau.  65 puntos
Jude el oscuro, de Thomas Hardy.  65 puntos
El libro del desasosiego, de Fernando Pessoa.  64 puntos
La confusión de los sentimientos, de Stefan Zweig.  64 puntos
Una arruga en el tiempo, de Madeleine L' Engle.  64 puntos
El enigma de las arenas, de Erskine Childers.  64 puntos
Arráncame la vida, de Ángeles Mastretta.  63 puntos
Obra completa, de Jorge Luis Borges.  63 puntos
La llamada de la selva, de Jack London. 63 puntos
Así habló Zaratustra, de Friederich Nietzsche. 62 puntos
El amante de Lady Chatterley , de D. H. Lawerence 62 puntos
El corazón helado, de Almudena Grandes.  62 puntos
Lord Jim, de Joseph Conrad.  62 puntos
Nostromo, de Joseph Conrad.  62 puntos
De ratones y hombres de, John Steinbeck.  61 puntos
El hombre, la hembra y el hambre, de Daína Chaviano.  61 puntos
La naranja mecánica, de Anthony Burgess.  61 puntos
Buenos días, tristeza, de Françoise Sagan.  60 puntos
Diez negritos, de Agatha Christie.  60 puntos
Siddharta, de Hermann Hesse.  60 puntos
El silencio del mar, de Vercors,Jean Bruller.  59 puntos
Fortuna y Jacinta, de Benito Pérez Galdós.  59 puntos
La princesa prometida, de William Goldman.  59 puntos
Noche, de Elie Wiesel.  59 puntos
El arcoíris, de D. H. Lawrence.  59 puntos
El plan infinito, de Isabel Allende.  58 puntos
Historias extraordinarias, de Edgar Allan Poe.  58 puntos
La vida: instrucciones de uso , de Georges Perec.  58 puntos
Luz de agosto, de William Faulkner.  58 puntos
Marina de Carlos Ruiz Zafón.  58 puntos
El buen soldado Ford, Madox Ford.  58 puntos
A orillas del río Piedra me senté y lloré, de Paulo Coelho.  57 puntos
La ciudad y los perros, de Mario Vargas Llosa.  57 puntos
Las almas de la gente negra, de W. E. B. Du Bois.  57 puntos
Treinta y nueve escalones, de John Buchan.  57 puntos
Alguien voló sobre el nido del cuco, de Ken Kesey.  56 puntos
Bajo el sol de Satanás, de Georges Bernanos.  56 puntos
Donde viven los monstruos, de Maurice Sendak.  56 puntos
El ancho mar de los Sargazos, de Jean Rhys.  56 puntos
El caballero de la armadura oxidada, de Robert Fisher.  56 puntos
La tierra baldía, de T.S. Elilot.  56 puntos
Metamorfosis, de Ovidio  55 puntos
La broma, de Milan Kundera.  54 puntos
Paraíso perdido, de John Milton.  54 puntos
Poemas, de Emily Dickinson.  54 puntos
El club Dante, de Matthew Pearl.  53 puntos
El desprecio, de Alberto Moravia.  53 puntos
Desde mi cielo, de Alice Sebold.   52 puntos
El asesinato de Roger Ackroyd, de Agatha Christie.  52 puntos
El camino, de Miguel Delibes.  52 puntos
La bruja de Portobello, de Paulo Coelho.  52 puntos
La suma de los días, de Isabel Allende.  51 puntos
Nadja, de André Breton.  51 puntos
Trilce, de César Vallejo.  51 puntos
Men Without Women Ernest Hemingway.  51 puntos
Agua para elefantes, de Sara Gruen.  50 puntos
Aurélien, de Louis Aragon.  50 puntos
Otello, de William Shakespeare.  50 puntos
El puente de Alcántara, de Frank Baer.  49 puntos
El zapato de raso, de Paul Claudel.  49 puntos
Huevos verdes con jamón, de Dr. Seuss.  49 puntoss
Sonetos, de William Shakespeare.  49 puntos
¡Absalón, absalón! De William Faulkner.  49 puntos
El jardín secreto, de Frances Hodgson Burnett.  48 puntos
Hojas de hierba, de Walt Whitman.  48 puntos
La sonrisa etrusca, de José Luis Sampedro.  48 puntos
Odas, de Horacio.  48 puntos
Seis personajes en busca de autor,de Luigi Pirandello.  48 puntos
El largo adiós, de Raymond Chandler.  47 puntos
El resistible ascenso de Arturo Ui, de Bertolt Brecht.  47 puntos
La ayuda, de Kathryn Stockett.  47 puntos
Scoop Evelyn Waugh.  47 puntos
El cuento número trece, de Diane Setterfield.  46 puntos
El idiota, de Fiódor Dostoievski.  46 puntos
Kim, de Rudyard Kipling.  46 puntos
Lazarillo de Tormes.  46 puntos
Viernes o la vida salvaje, de Michel Tournier.  46 puntos
EE.UU. de John Dos Passos.  46 puntos
El astillero, de Juan Carlos Onetti.  45 puntos
El Juego del Ángel, de Carlos Ruiz Zafón.  45 puntos
Historia de dos ciudades, de Charles Dickens.  45 puntos
La guerra de los mundos, de H. G. Wells.  45 puntos
El primer hombre, de Albert Camus.  44 puntos
La huésped, de Stephenie Meyer.   44 puntos
Si esto es un hombre, de Primo Levi.  44 puntos
La búsqueda del amor, de Nancy Mitford. 44 puntos
El hacedor, de Jorge Luis Borges. 43 puntos
La quinta montaña, de Paulo Coelho.  43 puntos
La peste, de Albert Camus.  43 puntos
Asesinato en el Oriente Express, de Agatha Christie.  42 puntos
Los zarcillos de la viña, de Colette.  42 puntos
Sentido y sensibilidad, de Jane Austen.  42 puntos
Y de repente, un ángel, de Jaime Bayly.  42 puntos
Capital del dolor, de Paul Éluard.  41 puntos
El origen perdido, de Matilde Asensi.  41 puntos
Los hombres que no amaban a las mujeres, de Stieg Larsson.  41 puntos
Malone muere, de Samuel Beckett.  41 puntos
La conjura de los necios, de John Kennedy Toole.  40 puntos
La regenta, Leopoldo Alas Clarín.  40 puntos
Martin Eden, de Jack London.  40 puntos
Memorias de Idhún I. La Resistencia, de Laura Gallego García.  40 puntos
Vida de Pi , de Yann Martel.  40 puntos
La balada del mar salado, de Hugo Pratt.  39 puntos
La casa de Bernarda Alba, de Federico García Lorca.  39 puntos
Las luces de septiembre, de Carlos Ruiz Zafón.  39 puntos
Las olas, de Virginia Woolf.  39 puntos
Sangre sabia, de Flannery O'Connor.  39 puntos
El grado cero de la escritura, de Roland Barthes.  38 puntos
La mujer justa, de Sándor Márai.  38 puntos
Al este del Edén, de John Steinbeck.  37 puntos
Diarios, de Franz Kafka.   37 puntos
El cuaderno dorado, de Doris Lessing.   37 puntos
El honor perdido de Katharina Blum, de Heinrich Boll.  37 puntos
El mar de las Sirtes, de Julien Gracq.  36 puntos
La celestina, de Fernando de Rojas.  36 puntos
Retrato en sepia, de Isabel Allende.  36 puntos
Lucky Jim, de Kingsley Amis.  36 puntos
El evangelio según Jesucristo, de José Saramago.  35 puntos
El tiempo entre costuras, de María Dueñas.  35 puntos
Las palabras y las cosas, de Michel Foucault.  35 puntos
Lo mejor que le puede pasar a un cruasán, de Pablo Tusset.  35 puntos
Ricardo III, de William Shakespeare.  35 puntos
Residencia en la tierra, de Pablo Neruda.  34 puntos
El americano impasible, de Graham Greene.  34 puntos
Demian, de Herman Hesse.  33 puntos
El maravilloso viaje de Nils Holgersson, Selma Lagerlöf.  33 puntos
Fiesta, de Ernest Hemingway.  33 puntos
Paula, de Isabel Allende.  33 puntos
La ciudad de las bestias, de Isabel Allende.  32 puntos
Una habitación propia, de Virginia Woolf.  32 puntos
Yo, Claudio, de Robert Graves.  32 puntos
Ciudad de Hueso, de Cassandra Clare.  31 puntos
Conversación en la catedral, de Mario Vargas Llosa.  31 puntos
Crónicas marcianas, de Ray Bradbury.  31 puntos
Marianela, de Benito Pérez Galdós.  31 puntos
Tokio blues, de Haruki Murakami.  31 puntos
El tambor de hojalata, de Günter Grass.  31 puntos
El arrebato de Lol V. Stein, de Marguerite Duras. 30 puntos
El príncipe de la niebla, de Carlos Ruiz Zafón.  30 puntos
Hijos y amantes, de D. H. Lawrence.  30 puntos
El atestado, de J. M. G. Le Clézio.  29 puntos
El gatopardo, de Giussepe Tomasi de Lampedusa.  29 puntos
El Reino del Dragón de Oro, de Isabel Allende.  29 puntos
Rebeldes, de S.E. Hinton.  29 puntos
Todos los hombres del Rey, de Robert Penn Warren.  29 puntos
Los mejores años de Miss Brodie, de Muriel Spark.  29 puntos
Dune, de Frank Herbert.  28 puntos
Pantaleón y las visitadoras, de Mario Vargas Llosa.  28 puntos
Tropismos, de Nathalie Sarraute.  28 puntos
Ve y dilo en la montaña, de James Baldwin.  28 puntos
Diario, 1887-1910 , de Jules Renard.  27 puntos
La colina de Watership, de Richard Adams.  27 puntos
¿Hay alguien ahí fuera? de Marian Keyes.  27 puntos
La chica que soñaba con una cerilla y un bidón de gasolina, de Stieg Larsson.  26 puntos
La danza de la muerte, de Stephen King. 26 puntos
Tus zonas erróneas, de Wayne Dyer.  26 puntos
Herzog, de Saul Bellow.  26 puntos
Canto general, de Pablo Neruda.  25 puntos
El rabino, de Noah Gordon.  25 puntos
El viejo y el mar, de Ernest Hemingway.  25 puntos
Escritos, de Jacques Lacan.  25 puntos
Conejo, corre, de J. Updike.  24 puntos
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papermoonloveslucy · 7 years ago
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LUCY’S PUNCTURED ROMANCE
S4;E22 ~ February 7, 1972
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Directed by Coby Ruskin ~ Written by Fred S. Fox and Seaman Jacobs
Synopsis
Lucy takes an interest in a new man (Robert Cummings), but the milkman tips off Kim that he may be a womanizing alcoholic. To protect her mother, Kim and Harry scheme to make him think the family is crazy, hoping he'll run for the hills.
Regular Cast
Lucille Ball (Lucy Carter), Gale Gordon (Harrison Otis Carter), Lucie Arnaz (Kim Carter)
Guest Cast
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Robert Cummings (Bob Collins) was born in 1910 in Joplin, Missouri. His godfather was the aviation pioneer Wilbur Wright, so naturally he got his pilot’s license and studied aeronautical engineering. After the stock market crash of 1929, he gave flying up to study drama in New York City, making his Broadway debut in 1931. In 1934 he moved to Hollywood and started making films. During World War II he was a captain in the Air Force Reserves. His television career kicked off in 1952, winning an Emmy for his role in the series “My Hero.” Starting in 1955, Cummings starred on a successful NBC sitcom, "The Bob Cummings Show” (aka “Love That Bob”), in which he played Bob Collins (the same character name he uses in this episode of “Here's Lucy”), an ex–World War II pilot who became a successful photographer. The show ended in July 1959, just a few months prior to filming “The Ricardos Go To Japan” the penultimate episode of “The Lucy-Desi Comedy Hour.” Cummings returned to “Here's Lucy” for an episode in season 5. Cummings was married five times and fathered seven children. He died in 1990 at the age of 80.
Bob Collins graduated from Carnegie Tech and is a field representative for a cosmetics company. He enjoys dancing.
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Mary Jane Croft (Mary Jane Lewis) played Betty Ramsey during season six of “I Love Lucy. ” She also played Cynthia Harcourt in “Lucy is Envious” (ILL S3;E23) and Evelyn Bigsby in “Return Home from Europe” (ILL S5;E26). She played Audrey Simmons on “The Lucy Show” but when Lucy Carmichael moved to California, she played Mary Jane Lewis, the actor’s married name and the same one she uses on all 31 of her episodes of “Here’s Lucy. Her final acting credit was playing Midge Bowser on “Lucy Calls the President” (1977). She died in 1999 at the age of 83.  
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Billy Sands (Mr. Larson, the Milkman) returns to the role of Lucy's Milkman from “Lucy's Lucky Day” (S4;E15). Sands began his professional acting career in 1946 when he appeared on Broadway with Spencer Tracy in Robert Sherwood’s Rugged Path, but he eventually became a television character actor who appeared regularly as Dino Papparelli on “The Phil Silvers Show” and as  ‘Tinker’ Bell on “McHale’s Navy.” He will make one more appearance on “Here’s Lucy” (but not as the milkman).
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Larry J. Blake (Fire Chief, left) first appeared as a Native American Medicine Man in “Lucy the Rain Goddess” (TLS S4;E15). He was an ex-vaudevillian making the sixth of his eight “Here’s Lucy” appearances.
Orwin C. Harvey (Fireman, center) was an actor and stuntman who played one of the singing and dancing teamsters in “Lucy Helps Ken Berry” (TLS S6;E21). This is one of his six appearances on “Here’s Lucy.”
Sid Gould (Fireman, right) made more than 45 appearances on “The Lucy Show,” and nearly as many on “Here’s Lucy.” Gould (born Sydney Greenfader) was Lucille Ball’s cousin by marriage to Gary Morton.
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The script for this episode was dated October 6, 1971.  It was filmed on October 28, 1971. 
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The title may have been inspired by the Charlie Chaplin silent film “Tillie’s Punctured Romance” (1914), remade in 1928 with W.C. Fields. It may have also inspired “Fester’s Punctured Romance,” a 1964 episode of “The Addams Family.” 
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In his book I Had A Ball: My Friendship with Lucille Ball, Michael Z. Stern recounts when he attended the filming of this episode in 1972.
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The date this episode was originally aired, film director Walter Lang died at age 75.  He had directed Lucille Ball (who was uncredited) in two films in 1935: Carnival and Hooray for Love. In 1957 Lang was nominated for an Oscar for directing The King and I.
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As the episode opens, Mary Jane is sitting on the living room sofa reading the November 1968 issue of Better Homes and Gardens magazine. In “Redecorating the Mertzes' Apartment” (ILL S3;E8), Lucy Ricardo says she got the idea to hold a painting party from reading Better Homes and Gardens. The magazine got plenty of airtime because the writers felt bad after making a ‘Better Homes and Garbage’ joke in “Men Are Messy” (ILL S1;E8).
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In the Carter living room, the large gold-framed mirror on the landing has temporarily been replaced by an ornate cuckoo clock in order to make the final gag pay off. If the clock looks familiar, it was formerly in a home of “The Munsters” (1964-66) at 1313 Mockingbird Lane. The raven has been replaced by a cardinal, but it is otherwise identical.  Both “Here’s Lucy” and “The Munsters” were filmed at Universal Studios. [Thanks to Lucy fan Bill Graff for spotting this!]  In 1957, the same clock was seen on “Those Whiting Girls” - a Desilu production.
Also, just for this episode, the French doors in the living room can only be opened by banging on the wall above the fireplace mantle.
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Lucille Ball’s ‘showgirl style’ entrance down the stairs gets a round of applause from the studio audience. Mary Jane admires her new outfit. Lucy and Bob (her new boyfriend) ‘met cute’ in the supermarket when she dropped her knockwurst and he dropped his sauerkraut. 
The studio audience is very enthusiastic, also bursting into spontaneous applause for Bob’s entrance, Mary Jane’s exit, and the end of scene 1. 
MILKMAN: “Cross my heart and hope to die. May my sweet cream curdle if I tell a lie.” 
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Mr. Larson the milkman reports that the Wilsons down the street are splitting up. Larson says his wife calls him her “homogenized Walter Winchell.” Walter Winchell (1897-1972) was a journalist and radio host who was the narrator of “The Untouchables.” His voice was heard (uncredited) in the 1949 Lucille Ball film Sorrowful Jones and “Lucy the Gun Moll” (TLS S4;E25). His name was in the lyrics of the Desi Arnaz song “We're Having A Baby” sung on “Lucy is Enceinte” (ILL S2;E10). Winchell died just two weeks after this episode first aired.  
Mr. Larson awkwardly used the ‘modern lingo’ with Kim:
Pad (apartment)
Swinger (wolf)
Splitsville (break up)
Kim calls Bob a “Cut-Rate Casanova”.  Giacomo Girolamo Casanova (1725-1798) was an Italian adventurer and memoirist who’s name became synonymous with a man who seduces multiple women. Coincidentally, in "The Gossip” (ILL S1;E24), the milkman was labeled a “cottage cheese Casanova”! 
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In order to convince Bob Collins that the Carters are crazy, Kim and Harry do the following:
Convince Lucy that Collins is partially deaf, reads lips and has a hearing aid in his cuff links.
Pretend that Lucy has been married six times by prominently placing her wedding gown in the hall closet.
Having Kim make inappropriate advances on Collins while sitting on his lap.
Spiking Collins' hors d'oeuvres with a concoction of Tabasco sauce, cayenne pepper, hot mustard and chili pepper.  
“Lucy is just a deaf alcoholic who's been married six times!”
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Even after they confess their deceit, things get even crazier when Mary Jane shows up dressed as a chicken, Lucy banging on the wall to open the doors sets off the phonograph and the cuckoo clock, and Lucy burns the roast causing the fire department to smash the front door glass.  
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A flustered Mary Jane makes it clear to Bob that she is unmarried by stressing that she is MISS Lewis. Miss Lewis was also the name of a single lady who lived at 623 East 68th Street, played by Bea Benadaret in “Lucy Plays Cupid” (ILL S1;E15).
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Lucy says that Bob Collins tangos better than Rudolph Valentino. The dance was responsible for the longest laugh in “I Love Lucy” history in “Lucy Does the Tango” (ILL S6;E20). Heartthrob actor of the silent era Rudolph Valentino was also mentioned in that episode. Valentino was one of Mrs. McGillicuddy's favorite screen stars and was mentioned in “The Hedda Hopper Story” (ILL S4;E20) and “The Homecoming” (ILL S5;E6).  
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This is the first time that Lucy has had a boyfriend since Tony Rivera (Cesar Romero) in “A Date for Lucy” (S1;E19). Lucille Ball had no plans for Lucy Carter (or Lucy Carmichael) to have a serious relationship.
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Robert Cummings played himself in a 1959 episode of “The Lucy-Desi Comedy Hour” set in Japan.  
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A cuckoo clock played an integral role in “The Kleptomaniac” (ILL S1;E27). Lucy hid the clock under her coat - but the ‘cuckoo’ nearly gave her away!  
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A milkman (Bobby Jellison) was the conveyor of "The Gossip” (ILL S1;E24) about the marriage of the Ricardo’s neighbors Grace and Bill Foster.
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Trying to make her mother out to be undesirable, Kim says that Lucy has always married men who’s last name begins with ‘C’ so she doesn’t have to change the monogram on her luggage!  Is this a reference to “The Lucy Show”’s widow, Mrs. Carmichael?  Other folks named Collins in the Lucy-verse include:
Kitty Collins - Lucille Ball’s character in the 1936 film Follow The Fleet
Sylvia Collins - an unseen character on “I Love Lucy”
Dr. Collins - Mr. Mooney’s eye doctor on “The Lucy Show”
Mr. Collins - Manager of Stacey’s Department Store on “The Lucy Show”
Eddie Collins - Viv’s boyfriend on “The Lucy Show”
Pat Collins - the ‘hip’ hypnotist on “The Lucy Show”
FAST FORWARD
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Lucy would finally become Lucy Collins in a 1975 special titled “Lucy Gets Lucky” co-starring Dean Martin and set in Las Vegas. 
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Character Consistency! Two episodes earlier Kim moved out of the house into a garage apartment nearby.  But in this episode she is apparently still living at home.
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Fur Blur!  When Lucy comes from the closet after retrieving her stole, the camera momentarily goes out of focus. 
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Props! On the bookshelves behind Lucy's head, a small ceramic vase has been tipped over by some books.  This was probably caused when the finale with Lucy banging on the wall and the picture frames falling was rehearsed before filming.  
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No Stove Is A Floating Island! In the kitchen, the counter top island has been awkwardly moved out of the way to make room for Lucy’s tango and give better sight lines of the refrigerator. This island also holds the cook top range, so it would be technically impossible for it to be un-grounded by electric wires or a gas hookup!  
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Cap Redact!  The first letter of the name of the milkman’s dairy (mostly illegible) is covered with white tape. This was likely done to avoid any legal action by a company with the same name. 
Let Yourself Out?  When Kim marches into the living room to have a heart-to-heart talk with her mother about Bob, she leaves the milkman alone in the kitchen!  
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Wardrobe!  Kim’s picnic table skirt does not have pockets, so there is a conspicuous pouch sewn to her waist in a slightly different pattern in order to hold the small bottle of spices she intends to use to spice up Bob’s hors d'oeuvres. 
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Plot Loops! Mr. Larson thinks Bob Collins is a wolf because girls are seen coming and going from his home and he orders five quarts of orange juice daily. He reasons some people mix orange juice with liquor for wild parties. At the end of the episode, the girls are explained by his being a cosmetics distributor but the orange juice surplus is never explained. He may not be a wolf, but he might be a lush!
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“Lucy’s Punctured Romance” rates 3 Paper Hearts out of 5
In this episode, the roles of mother and daughter are reversed, giving Lucie Arnaz a larger and more commanding role. This fits in with plans for her to launch a spin-off series after the end of season 4. Lots of sight gags in this episode. The living room runs amok in a very visual (but not very character-driven) finale. Mary Jane in a chicken suit.  
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womenruntheworld · 8 years ago
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A Dozen Women Scientists You’ve Never Heard Of
Dr. Alice Hamilton: pioneer in industrial medicine in the U.S Dr. Florence Rena Sabin: pioneer in the movement to change the aim of medical study from the cure to the prevention of disease. Dr. Lise Meitner: Pioneer in nuclear physics. First scientist to recognize that the atom could be split to release tremendous amounts of energy. Dr. Leta S. Holilngworth: Pioneer in the science of clinical psychology. An early fighter for women's rights. Dr. Rachel Fuller Brown: Chemist. Co-discoverer of the antibiotic nystatin, the first antibiotic effective against fungus diseases. Dr. Gladys Anderson Emerson: The first to isolate vitamin E from wheat germ oil and study its functions. Studied the possible relationship of nutrition to cancer and arteriosclerosis. Dr. Maria Goeppert Mayer: Nobel Prize winner in physics fro her shell theory of the nucleus of the atom. Dr. Myra Adele Logan: Pioneer in medicine. First woman surgeon to operate on the heart. First black woman to be elected a Fellow of the American College of Surgeons Dr. Dorothy Crowfoot Hodgkin: Nobel Prize winner in chemistry in 1964. Determined the structure of important chemical compounds of the body by cyrstallography. Dr. Jane C. Wright: Pioneer of chemotherapy. First black woman to be appointed to a high post in medical administration. Dr. Rosalyn S. Yalow: Nobel Prize winner in medicine, 1977, for her discovery of radioimmunoassay Dr. Sylvia Earle Mead: Marine biologist who led the first US team of female aquanauts in the Tektite Underwater Research Project 
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