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c-40 · 24 days ago
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A-T-5 017 Hiroshi The Ripper & Dr Yann Hiroshi The Ripper
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Pioneers of Japanese hip hop Hiroshi The Ripper (Hiroshi Fujiwara) and Dr. Yann (Yann Tomita). They are contemporaries of Dub Master X (Miyazaki Izumi), Takagi Kan, DJ Kudo (Masayuki Kudo), Tycoon To$h (Toshio Nakanishi), and rapper Seiko Ito
Hiroshi Fujiwara would form the Tiny Panx Organisation (TPO) with Takagi Kan. The two also wrote the occasional linear notes for Japanese copies of American hip hop releases. He was on the first Major Force releases. A real ambassador for Japanese hip hop
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burntoutdaydreamer · 1 year ago
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Book Openings I Love
Deciding how to start your book is an important and daunting question. I put together a list of book openings I love- and what makes them so good- to help brainstorm.
If you have any you'd like to add, please do! Let's keep this post ongoing.
1) Percy Jackson and the Lightning Thief by Rick Riordan
Anyone who read this book as a kid will know exactly what I mean.
'The Lightning Thief' starts with a warning to the reader to stop reading the book immediately and believe whatever lies their parents have told them. Otherwise, 'they' might come for them.
An adult might roll their eyes at this, but as a kid, you believe it. You find yourself wondering if what you're reading is true. It makes you feel like you're a part of this story- even if you haven't realized it yet. So, as you read on, you might end up looking for the signs and clues that this world of Greek gods and monsters exists around you in real life. The lines between fiction and reality blur, if only for a little while, and you become immersed in the story, because on some level, you can't help but want it to be real.
It also leaves you feeling that by reading this, you're doing something forbidden- something dangerous. Exactly the kind of stuff that gets your heart racing as a kid.
2) Life of Pi by Yann Martel
Life of Pi is one of my favorite books of all time, and the beginning has a lot to do with it.
"This book was born as I was hungry. Let me explain."
The book begins with an author's note that's not exactly an author's note. It begins as any author's note might- the writer explains how his previous publication was a bust, and that he took a trip to India to reinvigorate his creativity as he tried to write a new book that ultimately sputtered and died. That was, until he met a man who promised to tell him a story that will make him believe in God. The man then told him to seek out the main character, who is alive, and living in Canada. When the author does, he agrees that his story is indeed a story to make one believe in God, and commits to writing it down as a book through the main character's point of view, only with the disclaimer "any inaccuracies or mistakes are mine."
As they follow this progression, because of the way it's all structured, there's a good chance the reader might find themselves asking "Wait, is this a true story?"
The answer is of course no, and anyone who's read through most of the book would probably figure that out easily. However, if you get to the ending, you realize the question "Is this a true story?" has significant implications for the story's themes- and that makes them all the more resonant.
TL;DR: Life of Pi's beginning does the same as The Lightning Thief's beginning, only in a less obvious way that's far more effective on adults.
3) One of Us is Lying by Karen M. McManus
The premise of "One of Us is Lying" is that someone killed a boy named Simon, and that the people in the room when it happened- who just so happen to be the four POV characters- are the main suspects. The book then starts off my immediately putting the reader in the scene where Simon dies.
Now I'm not sure if this is a common mystery novel set up (I haven't read enough of this genre to know), but it's an effective one. This has the effect of getting the reader engaged in the story right from the get-go. Instead of passively reading the chain of events, the people who picked up the book are already going to be searching in between the lines for any clues on 'who done it.'
But not only is the reader looking all the little details in the scene, but they're also going to be questioning the POV of the person narrating the chapter. From the very start of the story, the reader gets immersed in several levels of tension that hook them and carry them through the rest of the story.
4) The Giver by Lois Lowry
"It was almost December, and Jonas was beginning to be frightened. No. Wrong word, Jonas thought. Frightened meant that deep, sickening feeling of something terrible about to happen."
The first chapter begins with a scene of an aircraft flying overhead a peaceful community, and a child narrator who's overly careful about using the right words to describe things. The narrator's trait doesn't appear to be unique though- a quick flashback to a moment in his classroom shows that this tendency has been drilled into him, just as with any other kid. The reader immediately gets the sense that something is off. What that something is, though, is a bit harder to pin.
There doesn't seem to be anything nefarious going on, aside from maybe the mention of a citizen getting 'released' after the aircraft landed and everything calmed down. Only, later in that chapter, being 'released' gets mentioned twice again at his family dinner, as his parents discuss how their work went that day. But otherwise, the dinner seems to be a normal and mundane affair with an emotionally mature, functional family. Maybe a little too functional.
So, when Jonas decides that the feeling he's experiencing is 'apprehensive,' the readers start to feel that way too.
5) A Natural History of Dragons by Marie Brennan
The preface and first chapter of "A Natural History of Dragons" does a great job of introducing one of the series's greatest assets: its main character.
"One benefit of being an old woman now, and moreover one who has been called a "national treasure," is that there are very few who can tell me what I may and may not write."
In the preface of the book, we find out exaclty who the main character/narrator is: a famous Victorian-era woman and accomplished dragon scholar, who's too old to care about being a 'proper lady' anymore. What's more, she's writing a series of memoirs about her life to satisfy the many adoring fans who have been writing her letters in hopes of hearing about the juicy gossip of her famous expeditions.
The narration oozes with personality from the very beginning, and that's before we even get to meet any dragons. Following this introduction, we get to see where her passion for dragon studies began: collecting little dragon "sparklings" as a kid. While her fictional readers would know these little creatures as commonplace in her world, the actual readers don't, since this world is as new to us as it was to her as a child. As such, the reader gets to share in her childlike wonder, and gets excited by the promise to discover the secrets of dragons right along with her.
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actualbird · 1 year ago
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Hi! Slightly random question, by any chance do you know the lines for : the 3rd part of the event, around the 1st 20 min or so after Yann Kahn and Dr Ronson are talking in the utility room, the ending bit where the nxx is about to leave. Do you know where I could find the lines for that section?
I was doing the story and recording it and then I dropped my phone and accidently skipped it to the end.... by any chance do you know where I could find it?
Thanks and sorry for bothering you!!
sorry for the late reply on this, but you can check out this playthrough of phase 3 of the event!! the part where yann kahn and dr ronson are talking is at 21:19, so whatever youre looking for should be somewhere after that
alternatively, you can check the transcript of bakerlon phase 3 on the tot wiki over here!!
sorry if this answer is too late to be useful huhu OTL
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doyouknowthisbook-poll · 11 months ago
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welcome to do you know this book poll!
about:
This blog was inspired by RecommendMeABook.com—which posts first pages of novels before revealing the title and author—and by poll blogs such as doyoulikethissong-poll. The main goal of this blog is to expose people to books that they might like and read through posting snippets of different books.
how this works:
I post polls with excerpts from books—occasionally I post excerpts from novellas and short stories. Polls run for one week, so results are posted eight days after the original post date. Part of the fun is guessing/trying to figure out which book the excerpt is from, with some excerpts being more obvious than others. Feel free to leave suggestions for books you want to see posted (or suggestions for the blog in general) in the replies of this post 😊📚
I am one person running this blog so please be patient and kind. I currently post 1-3 polls per week.
submissions are now open, submit a book here!
current voting options:
A) I’ve read this book before, and I like it!
B) I can tell which book this is from based on this excerpt, but I haven't read it
C) I started reading this, but didn’t finish it (or I am reading it currently)
D) I haven’t read this book, but I like this excerpt!
E) I’ve read this book before, and I don’t like it
F) I haven’t read this book and I don’t like this excerpt
tags:
open polls you can still vote on: tagged/open
closed polls/revealed: tagged/results
all of this blog’s polls: tagged/poll time
fiction polls only: tagged/fiction
nonfiction polls only: tagged/nonfiction
submitted polls only: tagged/submission
all polls (includes polls from other blogs): tagged/poll
all posts that are not a poll: tagged/not a poll
resources to free reading, libraries, and posts about libraries: tagged/library
additional tags not listed here include names of titles and their authors.
a list of all excerpts that have been posted and revealed:
Snow Flower and the Secret Fan by Lisa See
Invisible Man by Ralph Ellison
Speak by Laurie Halse Anderson
The Glass Castle by Jeannette Walls
Jurassic Park by Michael Crichton
A Tale for the Time Being by Ruth Ozeki
Six of Crows (part of the Six of Crows duology and the Grishaverse) by Leigh Bardugo
Beloved by Toni Morrison
“The Metamorphosis” by Franz Kafka
Gone Girl by Gillian Flynn
If I Had Your Face by Frances Cha
If Beale Street Could Talk by James Baldwin
Their Eyes Were Watching God by Zora Neale Hurston
The Last Unicorn by Peter S. Beagle
The Bell Jar by Sylvia Plath
A Clockwork Orange by Anthony Burgess
My Immortal fanfiction — this was posted for April Fool’s Day
The Body Keeps the Score by Bessel von der Kolk
Bud, Not Buddy by Christopher Paul Curtis
Love in the Time of Cholera by Gabriel Garcia-Marquez
Silver in the Wood (part of The Greenhollow Duology) by Emily Tesh
Hang the Moon by Jeannette Walls
Holes by Louis Sachar
1984 by George Orwell
Life of Pi by Yann Martel
“I Have No Mouth, and I Must Scream” by Harlan Ellison
A Dowry of Blood by S.T. Gibson
Anne of Green Gables by L.M. Montgomery
The Island of Dr. Moreau by H.G. Wells
I’m Glad My Mom Died by Jeanette McCurdy
The Giver by Lois Lowry
If You Could Be Mine by Sara Farizan
“The Yellow Wallpaper” by Charlotte Perkins Gilman
Felix Ever After by Kacen Callender
The Invisible Life of Addie LaRue by V.E. Schwab
All Systems Red (part of The Murderbot Diaries) by Martha Wells
The Music of What Happens by Bill Konigsburg
Sister Outsider by Audre Lorde
The Picture of Dorian Gray by Oscar Wilde
This is How You Lose the Time War by Amal El-Mohtar and Max Gladstone
Aces Wild by Amanda DeWitt
Ripe by Sarah Rose Etter
Red Queen by Victoria Aveyard
Some Desperate Glory by Emily Tesh
The Adventures of Amina al-Sirafi by Shannon Chakraborty
The Heaven & Earth Grocery Store by James McBride
Geisha: A Life by Mineko Iwasaki (the results also discuss Memoirs of A Geisha by Arthur Golden)
Nettle & Bone by T. Kingfisher
The Alchemist by Paulo Cuelho
Mistborn: The Final Empire (part of the Mistborn trilogy and universe) by Brandon Sanderson
Braiding Sweetgrass by Robin Wall Kimmerer
Eve by Cat Bohannon
The Bluest Eye by Toni Morrison
Fingersmith by Sarah Waters
Ninth House by Leigh Bardugo
Carrie by Stephen King
Frankenstein by Mary Shelley
“The Tell Tale Heart” by Edgar Allan Poe
Silver Nitrate by Silvia Moreno-Garcia
Sharp Objects by Gillian Flynn
Interview With the Vampire by Anne Rice
We Have Always Lived in the Castle by Shirley Jackson
Carmilla by Sheridan Le Fanu
Lovecraft Country by Matt Ruff
The Forests of Silence (part of the Deltora Quest series) by Emily Rodda — submission by @/pearlhoardingdragon
And Then There Were None by Agatha Christie
The Count of Monte Cristo by Alexandre Dumas
The Color Purple by Alice Walker
Wintergirls by Laurie Halse Anderson
The Forever King by Molly Cochran and Warren Murpy (part of the Forever King trilogy) — submission by @/0rions-belt
House of Leaves by Mark Z. Danielewski — submission by @/hdfjsjkj
Careless in Red by Elizabeth George — submission by @/pearlhoardingdragon
The Goldfinch by Donna Tartt
Untwine by Edwidge Danticat — submission by @/klainelynch
Wind and Truth by Brandon Sanderson — submission by @/pearlhoardingdragon
Project Hail Mary by Andy Weir
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redowlkitchen · 2 years ago
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Cross out what you’ve already read. Six is the average.
Pride and Prejudice - Jane Austen Lord of the Rings - JRR Tolkien Jane Eyre - Charlotte Bronte Harry Potter series - JK Rowling To Kill a Mockingbird - Harper Lee The Bible - Council of Nicea (Not the whole thing, but a lot at church and all of Genesis for my Bible as Literature class) Wuthering Heights - Emily Bronte Nineteen Eighty Four - George Orwell His Dark Materials - Philip Pullman Great Expectations - Charles Dickens Little Women - Louisa M Alcott Tess of the D’Urbervilles - Thomas Hardy Catch 22 - Joseph Heller Rebecca - Daphne Du Maurier The Hobbit - JRR Tolkien Birdsong - Sebastian Faulk Catcher in the Rye - JD Salinger The Time Traveler’s Wife - Audrey Niffenegger Middlemarch - George Eliot Gone With The Wind - Margaret Mitchell The Great Gatsby - F Scott Fitzgerald Bleak House - Charles Dickens War and Peace - Leo Tolstoy The Hitch Hiker’s Guide to the Galaxy - Douglas Adams Brideshead Revisited - Evelyn Waugh Crime and Punishment - Fyodor Dostoyevsky Grapes of Wrath - John Steinbeck Alice in Wonderland - Lewis Carroll The Wind in the Willows - Kenneth Grahame Anna Karenina - Leo Tolstoy David Copperfield - Charles Dickens Chronicles of Narnia - CS Lewis Emma - Jane Austen Persuasion - Jane Austen (currently reading!) The Kite Runner - Khaled Hosseini Captain Corelli’s Mandolin - Louis De Bernieres Memoirs of a Geisha - Arthur Golden Winnie the Pooh - AA Milne Animal Farm - George Orwell The Da Vinci Code - Dan Brown One Hundred Years of Solitude - Gabriel Garcia Marquez A Prayer for Owen Meaney - John Irving The Woman in White - Wilkie Collins Anne of Green Gables - LM Montgomery Far From The Madding Crowd - Thomas Hardy The Handmaid’s Tale - Margaret Atwood Lord of the Flies - William Golding Atonement - Ian McEwan Life of Pi - Yann Martel Dune - Frank Herbert Cold Comfort Farm - Stella Gibbons Sense and Sensibility - Jane Austen A Suitable Boy - Vikram Seth The Shadow of the Wind - Carlos Ruiz Zafon A Tale Of Two Cities - Charles Dickens Brave New World - Aldous Huxley The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time - Mark Haddon Love In The Time Of Cholera - Gabriel Garcia Marquez Of Mice and Men - John Steinbeck Lolita - Vladimir Nabokov The Secret History - Donna Tartt The Lovely Bones - Alice Sebold Count of Monte Cristo - Alexandre Dumas On The Road - Jack Kerouac Jude the Obscure - Thomas Hardy Bridget Jones’s Diary - Helen Fielding Midnight’s Children - Salman Rushdie Moby Dick - Herman Melville Oliver Twist - Charles Dickens Dracula - Bram Stoker The Secret Garden - Frances Hodgson Burnett Notes From A Small Island - Bill Bryson Ulysses - James Joyce The Bell Jar - Sylvia Plath Swallows and Amazons - Arthur Ransome Germinal - Emile Zola Vanity Fair - William Makepeace Thackeray Possession - AS Byatt A Christmas Carol - Charles Dickens Cloud Atlas - David Mitchell The Color Purple - Alice Walker The Remains of the Day - Kazuo Ishiguro Madame Bovary - Gustave Flaubert A Fine Balance - Rohinton Mistry Charlotte’s Web - EB White The Five People You Meet In Heaven - Mitch Albom Adventures of Sherlock Holmes - Sir Arthur Conan Doyle The Faraway Tree Collection - Enid Blyton Heart of Darkness - Joseph Conrad The Little Prince - Antoine De Saint-Exupery The Wasp Factory - Iain Banks Watership Down - Richard Adams A Confederacy of Dunces - John Kennedy Toole A Town Like Alice - Nevil Shute The Three Musketeers - Alexandre Dumas Hamlet - William Shakespeare Charlie and the Chocolate Factory - Roald Dahl Frankenstein - Mary Shelley The Canterbury Tales - Geoffrey Chaucer Paradise Lost - John Milton The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn - Mark Twain White Fang - Jack London The Portrait of Dorian Gray - Oscar Wilde Queen of the Damned - Anne Rice Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde - Robert Louis Stevenson The Call of the Wild - Jack London The Importance of Being Earnest - Oscar Wilde The Wonderful Wizard of Oz — L. Frank Baum Don Quixote — Miguel De Cervantes Where the Wild Things Are — Maurice Sendak The Cat in the Hat — Dr Seuss The Giver — Lois Lowry Inkheart — Cornelia Funke Divine Comedy — Dante Alighieri Macbeth — William Shakespeare Romeo and Juliet — William Shakespeare The Child Called ‘It’ — Dave Pelzer The Hunger Games — Suzanne Collins The Diary of a Young Girl — Anne Frank Night — Elie Wiesel Les Misérables — Victor Hugo The Odyssey — Homer The Scarlet Letter — Nathaniel Hawthorne The Brothers Karamasov — Fyodor Dostoyevsky Eragon — Christopher Paolini
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alexlacquemanne · 2 years ago
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Mai MMXXIII
Films
Quand la Panthère rose s'emmêle (The Pink Panther Strikes Again) (1976) de Blake Edwards avec Peter Sellers, Herbert Lom, Leonard Rossiter, Colin Blakely, Lesley-Anne Down, André Maranne, Michael Robbins et Burt Kwouk
Le Dimanche de la vie (1967) de Jean Herman avec Danielle Darrieux, Jean-Pierre Moulin, Olivier Hussenot, Françoise Arnoul, Berthe Bovy, Anne Doat, Hubert Deschamps et Jean Rochefort
Romance inachevée (The Glenn Miller Story) (1954) de Anthony Mann avec James Stewart, June Allyson, Henry Morgan, Charles Drake, George Tobias et Barton MacLane
La Canonnière du Yang-Tsé (The Sand Pebbles) (1966) de Robert Wise avec Steve McQueen, Richard Attenborough, Richard Crenna, Candice Bergen, Marayat Andriane et Makoto Iwamatsu
Deux Heures moins le quart avant Jésus-Christ (1982) de Jean Yanne avec Coluche, Michel Serrault, Jean Yanne, Michel Auclair, Françoise Fabian, Mimi Coutelier et Darry Cowl
Le Dernier Voyage (2020) de Romain Quirot avec Hugo Becker, Paul Hamy, Lya Oussadit-Lessert, Jean Reno, Bruno Lochet et Émilie Gavois-Kahn
Le Dernier Métro (1980) de François Truffaut avec Catherine Deneuve, Gérard Depardieu, Heinz Bennent, Jean Poiret, Andréa Ferréol, Paulette Dubost, Jean-Louis Richard et Maurice Risch
Les cadavres ne portent pas de costard (Dead Men Don't Wear Plaid) (1982) de Carl Reiner avec Steve Martin, Rachel Ward, Carl Reiner, Reni Santoni, George Gaynes, Barbara Stanwyck, Ava Gardner, Burt Lancaster, Humphrey Bogart, Cary Grant et Ingrid Bergman
Docteur Folamour ou : comment j'ai appris à ne plus m'en faire et à aimer la bombe (Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb) (1964) de Stanley Kubrick avec Peter Sellers, George C. Scott, Sterling Hayden, Keenan Wynn, Slim Pickens, Peter Bull et Tracy Reed
Un homme est passé (Bad Day at Black Rock) (1955) de John Sturges avec Spencer Tracy, Robert Ryan, Anne Francis, Dean Jagger, Walter Brennan, John Ericson, Ernest Borgnine et Lee Marvin
Le Monde, la Chair et le Diable (The World, The Flesh and the Devil) (1959) de MacDougall avec Harry Belafonte, Inger Stevens et Mel Ferrer
La Belle Saison (2015) de Catherine Corsini avec Izïa Higelin, Cécile de France, Noémie Lvovsky, Kévin Azaïs, Lætitia Dosch et Benjamin Bellecour
Le Grand Embouteillage (L'ingorgo) (1979) de Luigi Comencini avec Annie Girardot, Fernando Rey, Miou-Miou, Gérard Depardieu, Ugo Tognazzi, Marcello Mastroianni, Stefania Sandrelli, Alberto Sordi, Orazio Orlando, Gianni Cavina, Harry Baer et Ángela Molina
Ariane (Love in the Afternoon) (1957) de Billy Wilder avec Gary Cooper, Audrey Hepburn, Maurice Chevalier, Van Doude, John McGiver et Lise Bourdin
Voici le temps des assassins (1956) de Julien Duvivier avec Jean Gabin, Danièle Delorme, Gérard Blain, Lucienne Bogaert, Germaine Kerjean, Gabrielle Fontan et Jean-Paul Roussillon
Séries
Castle Saison 1, 2
Des fleurs pour ta tombe - Jeunes Filles au père - Amis à la vie, à la mort - Sexe, Scandale et Politique - Calcul glacial - La Piste du vaudou - Crimes dans la haute - Mémoires d’outre-tombe - Où est Angela ? - Double face - La Mort à crédit - Quitte ou Double - L'Enfer de la mode - L'Escroc au cœur tendre - L'auteur qui m'aimait - Pour l'amour du sang - Dernières paroles
Coffre à Catch
#113 : Unforgiven 2008 : Matt Hardy will not die ! - #114 : Matt Hardy champion, les débuts de Jack Swagger ! - #115 : La ECW, c'est bien, mais avec Vianney c'est mieux ! - #116 : Maryse : Pourquoi es-tu si belle? - # 117 : All Star Main Event + Gérard Lenorman !
James May : Notre Homme au Japon
Allez ! - Chou farci - Déodorant - Salut Bim ! - Le garçon de la pêche - Prune salée
Friends Saison 8
Celui qui venait de dire oui - Celui qui avait un sweat rouge - Celui qui découvrait sa paternité - Celui qui avait une vidéo - Celui qui draguait Rachel - Celui qui perturbait Halloween - Celui qui voulait garder Rachel - Celui qui engageait une strip-teaseuse - Celui qui avait fait courir la rumeur - Celui qui défendait sa sœur - Celui qui ne voulait pas aller plus loin - Celui qui passait une soirée avec Rachel - Celui qui découvrait les joies du bain - Celui qui découvrait le placard secret - Celui qui visionnait la vidéo de l'accouchement - Celui qui avouait tout à Rachel - Celui qui voyait dans les feuilles de thé - Celui qui était trop positif
Inspecteur Barnaby Saison 8
Un cri dans la nuit - Les Régates de la vengeance - Requiem pour une orchidée - Pari mortel - Double vue - Le Saut de la délivrance - L'assassin est un fin gourmet - Rhapsodie macabre
L'agence tous risques Saison 4, 5
Qui est qui ? - Cowboy George - La roue de la fortune - Services en tous genres - Club privé - Harry a des ennuis - Un monde de fou - La mission de la paix - Les orages du souvenir - Un témoin capital : 1re partie - Condamnation : 2e partie - Exécution : 3e partie - Match au sommet - Théorie de la révolution - Mort sur ordonnance - Une vieille amitié
Columbo Saison 2
Rançon pour un homme mort - Requiem pour une star
Les Petits Meurtres d'Agatha Christie Saison 3
Jusqu'à ce que la mort nous sépare - Meurtres du troisième type
Affaires Sensibles
Algues vertes : le danger qui empoisonne la Bretagne - James Jesus Angleton : paranoïa à la CIA - THE GRIM SLEEPER : Le faucheur en embuscade 1985-2007 - La création du festival de Cannes - 2000, les Jeux paralympiques de Sydney : la fraude des basketteurs espagnols
Bardot
Une enfant sage - B.B - La Madrague - Le papillon - Bébé - La vérité
Les Enquêtes de Morse saison 9
Mascarade - Prélude - Sorties de scène
James May's Cars of the People Saison 1, 2
Transports et totalitarisme - Rien n'arrête les nouilles - Les voitures qui nous ont toujours fait rêver - La puissance de la vapeur - 4x4 - Boom (et effondrement) d'après-guerre
The Grand Tour Saison 4, 3, 1, 2
The Grand Tour présente… Seamen - The Grand Tour présente… La Chasse au trésor - Eaux salées et eaux douces - The Grand Tour: A Scandi Flick - Virée à l’Italienne - Spéciale Colombie : Première partie - Spéciale Colombie ; Deuxième partie - Oh, Canada - Coup de vieux
Livres
Orage de chaleur de Richard Castle
Cinq Gars pour Singapour de Jean Bruce
Lucky Luke, tome 27 : Le 20ème de cavalerie de Morris et René Goscinny
Garôden de Jirô Taniguchi et Baku Yumemakura
Une enquête du commissaire Dupin : Etrange printemps aux Glénan de Jean-Luc Bannalec
Détective Conan, tome 9 de Gôshô Aoyama
Il était une fois… Le cinéma, Tome 1 : Des frères Lumière à Charlie Chaplin de Jean-Pierre Georges et Dentiblu
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lailleursetici · 6 days ago
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Affiche américaine de « Tel père, tel fils », d’Hirokazu Kore-Eda. DR
« Tel père, tel fils » : au-delà des liens du sang
L’histoire d’un échange de nouveau-nés donne lieu à un film subtil, signé Hirokazu Kore-Eda, sur les relations parents-enfants (vendredi 17 juin à 18 h 40 sur OCS City).
Par Yann Plougastel Publié le 15 juin 2016 à 16h51, modifié le 17 juin 2016 à 09h26
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L’histoire d’un échange de nouveau-nés donne lieu à un film subtil, signé Hirokazu Kore-Eda, sur les relations parents-enfants.
Prix du jury à Cannes en 2013, Tel père, tel fils, du metteur en scène japonais Hirokazu Kore-Eda, doit se voir comme une attachante et subtile exploration des liens unissant un père et son fils. En se demandant à partir de quel moment on devient réellement le père de son enfant, le réalisateur décrit, avec intelligence et sensibilité, l’état de la famille, aussi bien dans la société japonaise de l’après-Fukushima que d’un point de vue plus universel… D’où l’incroyable intérêt que suscite ce film chez les spectateurs de 7 à 77 ans.
« Je voulais réfléchir à ce qui unit un père et son enfant. C’est en voyant ma petite fille de 6 ans grandir que je me suis demandé ce qui me liait à elle : le temps ou le sang ? Que pense-t-elle de moi comme père ? Qu’est-ce qui fait qu’elle est ma fille ? Les faits divers sur les échanges d’enfants ont été un prétexte pour raconter l’histoire », expliquait Hirokazu Kore-Eda lors de la sortie de son film en France.
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Riri Furanki et Keita Ninomiya dans une scène de « Tel père, tel fils » (prix du jury au Festival de Cannes 2013). OCS
L’intrigue en est simple. Elle s’appuie sur une des angoisses récurrentes des parents lors de la naissance d’un bébé : l’échange à la maternité. En 1988, avec La vie est un long fleuve tranquille, Etienne Chatiliez en avait tiré une comédie insolente. Le propos de Kore-Eda se veut plus grave : dans le Tokyo d’aujourd’hui, deux ­familles apprennent que leurs fils, Keita et Ryusei, ont été échangés six ans auparavant. Que faire ? Faut-il rétablir les liens du sang et les échanger à nouveau ?
Réalités de la vie adulte
Les Nonomiya, parmi lesquels le père, Ryota, est un architecte ambitieux, obsédé par son travail, privilégient une ambiance très protégée, avec une éducation stricte où la compétition paraît être le maître mot. En revanche, les Saiki, plus modestes, où le père, Yudai, est heureux de son emploi de quincaillier, vivent d’une façon plus décontractée, prenant le temps de le perdre avec leurs ­enfants… Peu à peu, à travers des scènes d’une extraordinaire banalité (une photographie prise sur une balançoire, une façon de boire à la paille, une séance de pêche à la ligne sur un balcon, etc.), apparaît une profonde réalité. Ce qui compte, ce n’est pas tant la filiation biologique que la vie passée ensemble à tenter de construire un avenir le plus lumineux possible. Ryota, architecte doué mais imbuvable qu’irritait Keita, son « fils » lunaire et poétique, le comprend progressivement en découvrant par hasard l’admiration et l’amour que le bout de chou lui porte.
Le précédent film de Kore-Eda, I Wish (2011), résonnait comme une petite fugue ensorcelante sur le passage des illusions enfantines aux réalités de la vie. Tel père, tel fils, qu’il est recommandé de regarder avec ses propres rejetons, repose en quelque sorte sur le mouvement inverse : les tristes réalités de la vie adulte se fracassant – heureusement – sur la simple tendresse d’un enfant. A cet égard, la scène où un petit garçon demande simplement à un adulte pourquoi il doit l’appeler papa est plus que bouleversante.
Tel père, tel fils (Soshite chichi ni naru, titre original), d’Hirokazu Kore-Eda. Avec Masaharu Fukuyama, Machiko Ono, Yôko Maki, Rirî Furankî (Japon, 2013, 115 min). Le vendredi 17 juin à 18 h 40 sur OCS City. Rediffusion le mercredi 22 juin à 15 h 15.
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digitalmore · 17 days ago
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slag0000 · 1 year ago
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3月以降の予定。2月は、数はそれなりながら妙に濃いライブが続き、印象的な月になりました。3月以降もいろいろと楽しみなものが続きます。まずはソロから。 ◇2024◇
●3/1(fri) Naoyasu Takahashi electric bass solo @ 江古田 Cafe Flying Teapot 高橋直康(b) https://slag0000.tumblr.com/post/738219878266421248/
●3/2(sat) TEN JAM @ 阿���ヶ谷 天 森順治(reeds) 多田葉子(reeds) 高橋直康(b) 山田邦喜(dr) w/ アカノシバヒト(sax, etc) tani(g) 佐伯武昇(tb, etc) 河本隆弘(dr) https://slag0000.tumblr.com/post/740306892401803264/
●3/15(fri) ZOZOZEZE @ 江古田 Cafe Flying Teapot 高橋直康(b) 藤ヨシア(b) 小川新(dr) https://slag0000.tumblr.com/post/739470193719459840/
●3/21(thu) Itsuro1×2_6+Topological @ 三軒茶屋 Heaven’s Door Itsuro1×2_6(vo, key) 高橋直康(b) 堀口隆司(dr) w/ おくずみよしたか, World Wide Size, BROCANTE, 川サキ×嗚咽民 https://slag0000.tumblr.com/post/743458244714987520/
●3/27(wed) KEEP THE BASTARD HONEST @ 江古田 Cafe Flying Teapot Yann Joussein(dr) 秋山徹次(g) 高橋直康(b) https://slag0000.tumblr.com/post/742464018766315520/
●3/30(sat) Itsuro1×2_6+Topological @ 阿佐ヶ谷 天 “TEN CHAOS” Itsuro1×2_6(vo, key) 高橋直康(b) 堀口隆司(dr) w/ Aural Fit, ZO-KI, 宮本隆(b)+山沢輝人(sax, fl) duo https://slag0000.tumblr.com/post/743396193885978624/
●4/6(sat) electric bass solo with liquid light @ 江古田 Cafe Flying Teapot 高橋直康(b) 浅井永久+堀口隆司(liquid light) https://slag0000.tumblr.com/post/738934092634144768/
●4/7(sun) TEN JAM @ 阿佐ヶ谷 天 naco(electronics) 高橋直康(b) 林哲也(g) 三科律子(dr) 山田邦喜(dr) and more...
●4/21(sun) VARRISPEEDS @ 早稲田 RiNen “SKRIPT Vol.13” w/ 俺はこんなもんじゃない, CxGx, TERRO TERRO https://slag0000.tumblr.com/post/742655264992395264/
●4/23(tue) 古川中鉢高橋木村 @ 国分寺 Art×Jazz M’s 古川忠幸(sax) 中鉢洋夫(g) 高橋直康(b) 木村由(dance) https://slag0000.tumblr.com/post/739470809701253120/
●4/25(thu) FLYING JAM @ 江古田 Cafe Flying Teapot Akio Jeimus(dr) 山田邦喜(dr) naco(electronics) 高橋直康(b) with 坂出雅海(electric bass/ヒカシュー) https://slag0000.tumblr.com/post/741499863759486976/
●4/30(tue) ??? @ 阿佐ヶ谷 天 TBA…
●5/4(sat) Naoyasu Takahashi electric bass solo @ 江古田 Cafe Flying Teapot 高橋直康(b) https://slag0000.tumblr.com/post/741757902570815488/
●5/19(sun) Multitrack recording in public @ 江古田 Cafe Flying Teapot 山崎正明(g) 高橋直康(b) 石川寧(tp) https://slag0000.tumblr.com/post/742013868887474176/
●5/23(thu) Q根たちの競宴 vol.6 @ 成城学園前 アトリエ第Q藝術 TBA…
●6/15(sat) OTZIER GODOT JAM @ 江古田 Cafe Flying Teapot Otzir Godot(dr) 山田邦喜(dr) 高橋直康(b) ���井千枝(dance) Lei Abe(voice) and more...
●7/14(sun) FLYING JAM @ 江古田 Cafe Flying Teapot Libia Bosker(dance) 村井千枝(dance) naco(electronics) 高橋直康(b) 山田邦喜(dr) https://slag0000.tumblr.com/post/743371775508873216/
●7/20(sat) ??? @ 江古田 Cafe Flying Teapot TBA…
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metrostartup · 1 year ago
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Why we should reject Devolution under the 13th Amendment
Dr Sudath Gunasekara. President Mahanuwara Senior Citizens Movement- writing from U.S.A. 15.6.2009.  _“Manga hondata tibenam -Yanta parath penenam Kima bediwala yanne -Man mulawu ekaku se” –_An old Sinhala dictum If we devolve political power to the provinces under the 13th Amendment  that will definitely mark the first step in the division of this Island nation in to a number of rival ethnic…
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biblenewsprophecy · 1 year ago
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'Science Events' to Watch for in 2024
The journal 'Nature' ran an article titled, 'The science events to watch for in 2024.' These included advances in Artificial Intelligence (AI), telescopic cosmology, weaponized, mosquitoes, 'Beyond the pandemic,' dark matter, and super-fast supercomputers. Some of the issues sounded a bit ominous to Steve Dupuie. Are there real risks associated with genetically modified mosquitoes? Could there be an European military potential to dark matter? What about AI, the Jupiter exascale supercomputer, and biblical warnings about control of buying and selling (666)? Was the expansion of knowledge prophesied in the Bible in the Book of Daniel? What about in the Book of Genesis? Dr. Thiel and Steve Dupuie address these matters and more.
A written article of related interest is available titled 'Artificial Intelligence (AI) and other ‘science events to watch for in 2024’
Artificial Intelligence (AI) and other ‘science events to watch for in 2024’
COGwriter
We continue to see concerns raised related to Artificial Intelligence (AI):
December 23, 2023
AI is growing faster than we ever imagined and some worry it might soon be smarter than us and out of control. …
On one side, we have former Google scientist Dr. Geoffrey Hinton warning that we’re going too fast and AIs could ruin everything from jobs to truth.  On the other side, we find Meta’s Yann LeCun. …
LeCun’s argument, which in its TLDR form is something making to, “Don’t worry, embrace AI,” … Is less regulation, more open source, and a firmer embrace of AI mediation the path forward to a safer future? Maybe. LeCun certainly thinks so. https://www.techradar.com/computing/artificial-intelligence/4-reasons-why-this-ai-godfather-thinks-we-shouldnt-be-afraid
It is not the individual use of AI for search engine purposes that we need to be too worried about (though they do currently have limitations and often obscure truth), it is governmental use to control populations, eliminate privacy, etc. And those of us who believe Bible prophecy can see how AI is likely to be used by the Beast and final Antichrist power.
But before getting to that, notice some scientific items that the journal Nature says to watch out for in 2024:
The science events to watch for in 2024
AI advances
The rise of ChatGPT had a profound effect on science this year. Its creator, OpenAI in San Francisco, California, is expected to release GPT-5, the next generation of the artificial intelligence (AI) model that underpins the chatbot, late next year. GPT-5 is likely to showcase more advanced capabilities than those of its predecessor, GPT-4. Scientists are also watching the rollout of Gemini, Google’s GPT-4 competitor. …
Big questions loom on the regulatory front. The United Nations High-Level Advisory Body on Artificial Intelligence will share its final report in mid-2024, laying down guidelines for the international regulation of AI. …
Weaponized mosquitoes
The World Mosquito Program will start producing disease-fighting mosquitoes at a factory in Brazil next year. …
Beyond the pandemic
As the world moves past the emergency phase of the COVID-19 pandemic, the US government is funding trials of three next-generation vaccines, two of which are intranasal vaccines that aim to prevent infection by generating immunity in airway tissues. …
Meanwhile, the World Health Organization is due to unveil final draft of its pandemic treaty during the 77th World Health Assembly in May. The accord seeks to better equip governments worldwide to prevent and manage future pandemics. …
Illuminating dark matter
Results of an experiment to detect dark-matter particles known as axions will see light in 2024. … The experiment BabyIAXO at the German Electron Synchrotron in Hamburg is using a solar telescope made of a 10-metre-long magnet and ultra-sensitive noise-free X-ray detectors to track the centre of the Sun for 12 hours per day, to capture the conversion of axions into photons. …
Super-fast supercomputers
Early next year, researchers will switch on Jupiter, Europe’s first exascale supercomputer. The gigantic machine can perform one quintillion (a billion billion) computations each second. 12/18/23 https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-023-04044-9
As far as weaponizing mosquitoes goes, there are often unintended consequences when scientists have done that in the past. I warned about risks from an earlier attempt to do something related, and sadly facts ended up confirming my warning (see Scientists confirm COGwriter GMO mosquito warning).
I first reported about the release of GMOs mosquitoes on July 28, 2018. Here are some of my posted warnings.
Mosquitoes can carry and spread many diseases.
But releasing genetically-modified ones into the wild presents unknown risks.
One assumption that scientists have tended to make with genetically-modified organisms (GMOs) is that if they do not see any dangers, then there are none. That is foolish, yet that continues to be the view of the pro-GMO crowd.
While there certainly are risks associated with contracting the Zika virus (see Zika is more dangerous than many thought; USA has its first Zika death), this ‘solution’ poses risks to various parts of the ecosystem as well as the possibility that some of the offspring produced will have greater longevity as opposed to greatly reduced longevity.
The vast quantity of mosquito offspring increases the possibility that there will be some that have the opposite traits that the GMO crowd is hoping to get. And if this occurs, this could cause much greater problems than the GMO ‘solution’ was supposed to fix. …
Genetically modified mosquitoes pose dangerous risks. (Thiel B. Genetically-modified mosquitoes have been released to ‘fight Zika’. COGwriter, July 28, 2018)
Then a year later, someone tipped me off to the following report:
Deadly ‘super mosquitoes that are even tougher’ accidentally created by scientists after bungled experiment
Updated September 18, 2019
GENETICALLY modified mosquitoes that were designed by scientists to help populations decrease are actually thriving.
This is according to new research that claims the plan to create gene-hacked mosquitoes that have offspring which die immediately has spectacularly backfired and now scientists don’t know what will happen next.
The modified mosquitoes were released in Jacobina in Brazil and were supposed to mix with the local population and decrease numbers with their weak offspring genetics.
Although the wild population did plummet for a short while, 18 months later it was right back up again.
This is mostly concerning because scientists think the new ‘super mosquitoes’ have properties that might make them harder to kill.
Research about the pests has been published in the journal Nature Scientific Reports. …
Mosquitoes like the Aedes aegypti variety that was edited can carry dangerous diseases like yellow fever, Zika virus and Malaria.
This is why efforts are being made to reduce their numbers.
However, now traces of the genetically modified genes have been found in the natural population.
This means they are successfully interbreeding. …
The offspring of the gene-hacked mosquitoes and the natural ones are thought to be more robust but whether they pose a threat is unknown.
Researcher Jeffrey Powell told News Atlas: “It is the unanticipated outcome that is concerning.” https://www.thesun.co.uk/tech/9947305/deadly-super-mosquitoes-accidentally-created/
So, scientists were concerned about “the unanticipated outcome.” Having mosquitoes that are “more robust” makes them harder to kill and, thus tends to increase their longevity.
This does not mean that there cannot be any success in 2024, as this time I suspect there may be, but such interventions carry more risks than the public tends to be told. There are also biblical prophecies about pestilences.
That brings us to the development of the RNA vaccines. The fact is that they were not as good as the public was told related to COVID-19. Furthermore, since Jesus said we would have pestilences (Matthew 24:7) and much death is associated with the ride of the fourth horseman of the Apocalypse (Revelation 6:7-8), I do not believe that vaccines can possibly save humanity from what is coming–though some vaccines do help some people. Furthermore, let me state that the “pandemic treaty” that the World Health Organization wants to get adopted is another step toward globalist control and loss of individual freedom.
As far as “dark matter” goes, here is some information on dark matter from CERN, the group responsible for the Large Hadron Collider project:
Dark matter
Unlike normal matter, dark matter does not interact with the electromagnetic force. This means it does not absorb, reflect or emit light, making it extremely hard to spot. In fact, researchers have been able to infer the existence of dark matter only from the gravitational effect it seems to have on visible matter. Dark matter seems to outweigh visible matter roughly six to one, making up about 26% of all the matter in the universe. Here’s a sobering fact: The matter we know and that makes up all stars and galaxies only accounts for 4% of the content of the universe! But what is dark matter? One idea is that it could contain “supersymmetric particles” – hypothesized particles that are partners to those already known in the Standard Model. Experiments at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) may provide more direct clues about dark matter.
Many theories say the dark matter particles would be light enough to be produced at the LHC. If they were created at the LHC, they would escape through the detectors unnoticed. However, they would carry away energy and momentum, so physicists could infer their existence from the amount of energy and momentum “missing” after a collision. http://home.web.cern.ch/about/physics/dark-matter
Perhaps dark matter will be used for stealth jets and/or missiles and/or hiding military facilities. I do not believe that all possible uses of it will be peaceful.
The work being done in at the LHC facility is mainly for Europe (CERN is the European Organization for Nuclear Research) and has destructive potential. Note also that Nature referred to research being done at the German Electron Synchrotron in Hamburg, which of course, is also in and for Europe. Additionally, the name of the experiment, BabyIAXO, brings to mind the biblical warnings about “Mystery Babylon the Great” of Revelation 17 and 18.
As far as Europe goes, the fact of its coming supercomputer has prophetic potential. I warned about the Jupiter computer in 2022, when the Europeans hoped it would be online in 2023 (see Europe taking the lead with exascale supercomputers–could these support 666 control of buying and selling?).
The prophet Daniel was told to write:
4 … the time of the end; many shall run to and fro, and knowledge shall increase. (Daniel 12:4)
Supercomputers should help increase knowledge.
However supercomputers, particularly when combined with advances in Artificial Intelligence, look to be something that will be used by the coming European Beast power to control buying and selling (Revelation 13:16-18) as well as to enforce other edicts of the Beast and the final Antichrist (e.g. Revelation 13:15).
Much is happening and privacy, financial and otherwise, is being lost.
As far as ChatGPT goes, we made a video on that. Here is a link: ChatGPT and 666.
And related to AI, here are links to other videos we put out:
Is AI in the Bible?
AI Jesus? Artificial Intelligence God?
666, the Censorship Industrial Complex, and AI
Artificial Intelligence Superhuman Persuasion?
Europe wants to control AI, and to a degree it will.
While it is putting restrictions and regulations in place related to it (see EU (European Union) provisionally agrees first AI (Artificial Intelligence) regulations–666 prelude?), do not believe that human rights will be properly protected, no matter what these proposed rules may indicate.
The Bible shows that massive improper censorship is coming:
11 “Behold, the days are coming,” says the Lord God, “That I will send a famine on the land, Not a famine of bread, Nor a thirst for water, But of hearing the words of the Lord. 12 They shall wander from sea to sea, And from north to east; They shall run to and fro, seeking the word of the Lord, But shall not find it.  (Amos 8:11-12)
Artificial Intelligence will be involved in pulling proper religious content off the internet.
AI will also be used to persuade and deceive people (e.g., watch also Artificial Intelligence Superhuman Persuasion?).
We also know that financial controls are coming to Europe. The Apostle John was told by Jesus to write the following:
15 He was granted power to give breath to the image of the beast, that the image of the beast should both speak and cause as many as would not worship the image of the beast to be killed. 16 He causes all, both small and great, rich and poor, free and slave, to receive a mark on their right hand or on their foreheads, 17 and that no one may buy or sell except one who has the mark or the name of the beast, or the number of his name.
18 Here is wisdom. Let him who has understanding calculate the number of the beast, for it is the number of a man: His number is 666. (Revelation 13:15-18)
666 is the final revival of the Roman Empire. Hence, 666 is a European power. When Jesus had the Apostle John pen this 1900+ years ago, there was no way to monitor most buying and selling. With supercomputers and software including AI, much is already being done, and more will be done. A totalitarian system is being put in place. Europe wants to lead it.
Steps towards that will happen in 2024.
UPDATE 12/27/23: We just uploaded the following related video:
youtube
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‘Science Events’ to Watch for in 2024
The journal ‘Nature’ ran an article titled, ‘The science events to watch for in 2024.’ These included advances in Artificial Intelligence (AI), telescopic cosmology, weaponized, mosquitoes, ‘Beyond the pandemic,’ dark matter, and super-fast supercomputers. Some of the issues sounded a bit ominous to Steve Dupuie. Are there real risks associated with genetically modified mosquitoes? Could there be an European military potential to dark matter? What about AI, the Jupiter exascale supercomputer, and biblical warnings about control of buying and selling (666)? Was the expansion of knowledge prophesied in the Bible in the Book of Daniel? What about in the Book of Genesis? Dr. Thiel and Steve Dipuie address these matters and more.
Here is a link to our video: ‘Science Events’ to Watch for in 2024.
Are YOU paying attention? Things are changing and will not remain as they have.
Related Items:
Artificial Intelligence (AI) and other ‘science events to watch for in 2024’
24 items to prophetically watch in 2024 Much is happening. Dr. Thiel points to 24 items to watch (cf. Mark 13:37) in this article.
When Will the Great Tribulation Begin? 2024, 2025, or 2026? Can the Great Tribulation begin today? What happens before the Great Tribulation in the “beginning of sorrows”? What happens in the Great Tribulation and the Day of the Lord? Is this the time of the Gentiles? When is the earliest that the Great Tribulation can begin? What is the Day of the Lord? Who are the 144,000? Here is a version of the article in the Spanish language: ¿Puede la Gran Tribulación comenzar en el 2020 o 2021? ¿Es el Tiempo de los Gentiles? A related video is: Great Tribulation: 2026 or 2027? A shorter video is: Can the Great Tribulation start in 2022 or 2023? Notice also: Can Jesus return in 2023 or 2024? Here is a video in the Spanish language: Es El 2021 el año  de La Gran Tribulación o el Grande Reseteo Financiero.
The Gospel of the Kingdom of God This free online pdf booklet has answers many questions people have about the Gospel of the Kingdom of God and explains why it is the solution to the issues the world is facing. It is available in hundreds of languages at ccog.org. Here are links to four kingdom-related sermons:  The Fantastic Gospel of the Kingdom of God!, The World’s False Gospel, The Gospel of the Kingdom: From the New and Old Testaments, and The Kingdom of God is the Solution.
Europa, the Beast, and Revelation Where did Europe get its name? What might Europe have to do with the Book of Revelation? What about “the Beast”? Is an emerging European power “the daughter of Babylon”? What is ahead for Europe? Here is a link to a video titled: Can You Prove that the Beast to Come is European?
Who is the King of the North? Is there one? Do biblical and Roman Catholic prophecies for the Great Monarch point to the same leader? Should he be followed? Who will be the King of the North discussed in Daniel 11? Is a nuclear attack prophesied to happen to the English-speaking peoples of the United States, Great Britain, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand? When do the 1335 days, 1290 days, and 1260 days (the time, times, and half a time) of Daniel 12 begin? When does the Bible show that economic collapse will affect the United States? In the Spanish language check out ¿Quién es el Rey del Norte? Here are links to two related videos: The King of the North is Alive: What to Look Out For and The Future King of the North.
Preparing for the ‘Short Work’ and The Famine of the Word What is the ‘short work’ of Romans 9:28? Who is preparing for it? Will Philadelphian Christians instruct many in the end times? Here is a link to a related video sermon titled: The Short Work. Here is a link to another: Preparing to Instruct Many.
Who is the Man of Sin of 2 Thessalonians 2? Is this the King of the North, the ten-horned beast of Revelation 13:1-11, or the two-horned Beast of Revelation 13:12-16? Some rely on traditions, but what does the Bible teach? Here is a related link in Spanish/español: ¿Quién es el Hombre de Pecado de 2 Tesalonicenses 2?; here here are links to videos in Spanish: ¿Quién es el Hombre de Pecado de 2 Tesalonicenses 2? and ¿Quién es el ‘hombre de pecado’? Here is a version in Mandarin: N;ÿ Œf/’Y’jNº’ÿ Here is a link to a related English sermon video titled: The Man of Sin will deceive most ‘Christians’.
LATEST BIBLE PROPHECY INTERVIEWS
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miamedia · 1 year ago
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La clé du sol : jeu pédagogique sur la transition agroécologique
 Faire l’expérience des freins et des leviers les plus communs de la transition agroécologique, c’est l’objectif que s’est fixé l’équipe Ecodeveloppement de l’INRAE basée à Avignon.  Pour ce faire, le Dr. Yann Boulestreau, Emily Henry et leurs collègues ont co-créé un jeu pédagogique innovant, véritable outil de simulation du processus de transition agroécologique, La clé du sol. En effet, il…
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gaboninfoslive · 1 year ago
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CTRI : Dr Oligui ou Mr Nguema, qui est sur les pas d'Ali Bongo Ondimba ?
Il y’a déjà un adage au Gabon qui dit : « Oligui a pris le pouvoir et c’est Nguema qui gouverne » comprendra qui pourra. Oligui Nguema 1er nous avait promis des enquêtes de moralité avant chaque nomination, force est de constater que c’était une distraction ni Hervé Patrick Opinion, ni Ted Stéphane Adiminga Kouna niveau 3e, Franck Yann Koubge, Fabrice Andjoua Bongo Ondimba etc… ne sont passés…
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gazeta24br · 1 year ago
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O surgimento da impressão em meados do século XV foi um evento de grande ruptura para o mundo ocidental. Seu impacto, extremamente amplo, prenuncia o nascimento de uma cultura impressa que ainda permanece, pois estabelece as condições para o nascimento da mídia, tem implicações na vida social, na história das línguas, das ciências, da educação, das artes gráficas, entre outros. Mas o que, de fato, sabemos sobre a invenção de Gutenberg, e por que meios, essa tecnologia foi aperfeiçoada a ponto de permitir o estabelecimento de um novo ecossistema de comunicação, produção e circulação de textos e, consequentemente, de ideias? Desta forma, o CPF Sesc promove a palestra, que abordará a extraordinária história do livro, da invenção da escrita à revolução digital. Realizada por ocasião do lançamento do livro História do Livro e da Edição, publicação em coedição pelas Edições Sesc e Ateliê Editorial. Data: 18/09/2023 Dias e Horários: Segunda, 19h30 às 21h30. Curso Presencial Inscrições a partir das 14h do dia 28/8, até o dia 18/9. Enquanto houver vagas. Local Rua Dr. Plínio Barreto, 285 - 4º andar} Bela Vista - São Paulo. Grátis Palestrantes Marisa Midori Deaecto Professora livre-docente em História do Livro na Escola de Comunicações e Artes (ECA-USP). Doutora Honoris Causa pela Universidade Eszterházy Károly, Eger (Hungria). Autora de “Império dos Livros - instituições e práticas de leituras na São Paulo oitocentista” (Edusp/Fapesp, 2011; 2019), vencedor do prêmio Jabuti da CBL (1º lugar em Comunicação) e o Prêmio Sérgio Buarque de Holanda, pela Fundação Biblioteca Nacional do Rio de Janeiro na categoria melhor ensaio social. Publicou, recentemente, “História de um livro. A Democracia na França, de François Guizot” (Ateliê Editorial, 2021) e organizou a edição bilíngue de “Bibliodiversidade e preço do livro. Da Lei Lang à Lei Cortez. Experiências e expectativas em torno da regulação do mercado editorial (1981-2021)” (Ateliê Editorial, 2021). Yann Sordet Historiador do livro e curador geral de bibliotecas na França (Paris). Formou-se na École Nationale des Chartes (turma de 1997), depois na École Nationale Supérieure des Sciences de l'Information et des Libraries (ENSSIB). Foi curador do Departamento de Manuscritos e Livros Raros da Bibliothèque Sainte-Geneviève (1998-2009), e, desde 2011, é diretor da Biblioteca Mazarina, a biblioteca pública mais antiga da França. Desde 2021, é Diretor Geral das Bibliotecas do Institut de France. Suas pesquisas concentram--se na história das bibliotecas e da bibliofilia, nas práticas bibliográficas, nos incunábulos, na produção e distribuição de livros sobre espiritualidade nos tempos modernos, bem como em edição de música. Lecionou história da edição na Universidade de Paris XIII (1999-2006) e história das bibliotecas na École Pratique des Hautes Etudes (2007-2009). É encarregado pelos cursos de formação na área patrimonial junto à ENSSIB. É editor-chefe da revista Histoire et Civilisation du Livre. Publicou recentemente História do Livro e da Edição: Produção e Circulação, Formas e Mutações (Paris, Albin Michel, 2021, posfácio de Robert Darnton), atualmente em tradução no Brasil. (Foto: Acervo Pessoal) Sobre o CPF Sesc Com uma programação bastante diversa, o Centro de Pesquisa e Formação do Sesc São Paulo (CPF Sesc), localizado na Bela Vista, promove uma série de encontros, cursos, vivências, lançamentos de livros, ciclos, seminários e outras atividades. Muitas dessas atrações, que acontecem de forma presencial ou online, têm entrada gratuita e outras custam até R$50. As inscrições podem ser no site do CPF Sesc ou presencialmente na unidade. Serviço Centro de Pesquisa e Formação – CPF Sesc Rua Dr. Plínio Barreto, 285 – 4º andar. Tel: 3254-5600 Programação completa em https://centrodepesquisaeformacao.sescsp.org.br/
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hardynwa · 1 year ago
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23,000 people missing in Nigeria – FG
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The Minister of Humanitarian Affairs and Poverty Alleviation, Dr Betta Edu, disclosed on Wednesday that 23,000 people have been reported missing in less than a decade due to the insurgency in some parts of the country. Edu stated this in Abuja at a stakeholders’ engagement with the theme “Where are you now”, to mark the International Day of the Disappeared. She said that the figure represented half the number of missing people in the whole of Africa. Edu said that the report of the missing people released by the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) and the Nigerian Red Cross Society (NRCS) was as a result of the insurgency in some parts of the country. “Today, over 23,000 persons are still missing. “However, it is likely that this is just a tip of the iceberg as a more efficient mechanism is needed to improve the reporting and forensically trace cases of missing persons,” she said. The minister said the issue of missing people had become one of the most critical and long-lasting humanitarian consequences of armed conflicts, and as such called for sober reflections. Edu said that the present administration was committed to curbing the issue, hence the need to facilitate and strengthen the legal frameworks that would substantially address the incidences of disappearance. On his part, Mr Yann Bonzon, Head of Delegation, ICRC, said that more than 23,000 people, registered by the Family Links Network in Nigeria, never returned home, and remained missing until date. “The actual number of missing persons is likely to be much higher, with Nigeria having more missing people than any other country on the continent,” Bonzon added. Read the full article
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crimechannels · 1 year ago
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By • Olalekan Fagbade 23,000 people missing in Nigeria – FG The Minister of Humanitarian Affairs and Poverty Alleviation, Dr Betta Edu, disclosed on Wednesday that 23,000 people have been reported missing in less than a decade due to the insurgency in some parts of the country. Edu stated this in Abuja at a stakeholders’ engagement with the theme “Where are you now”, to mark the International Day of the Disappeared. She said that the figure represented half the number of missing people in the whole of Africa. Edu said that the report of the missing people released by the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) and the Nigerian Red Cross Society (NRCS) was as a result of the insurgency in some parts of the country. “Today, over 23,000 persons are still missing. “However, it is likely that this is just a tip of the iceberg as a more efficient mechanism is needed to improve the reporting and forensically trace cases of missing persons,” she said. The minister said the issue of missing people had become one of the most critical and long-lasting humanitarian consequences of armed conflicts, and as such called for sober reflections. Edu said that the present administration was committed to curbing the issue, hence the need to facilitate and strengthen the legal frameworks that would substantially address the incidences of disappearance. On his part, Mr Yann Bonzon, Head of Delegation, ICRC, said that more than 23,000 people, registered by the Family Links Network in Nigeria, never returned home, and remained missing until date. “The actual number of missing persons is likely to be much higher, with Nigeria having more missing people than any other country on the continent,” Bonzon added #FederalGovernment #missing #Nigeria
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