#frank cassini
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#304#xf304#txf304#3x04#Clyde Bruckman's final repose#x-files#xfiles#The X-Files#xf#txf#thexfiles#chris carter#chriscarter#Mulder#agent Mulder#Fox Mulder#agentmulder#foxmulder#David Duchovny#davidduchovny#Scully#agent Scully#Dana Scully#agentscully#danascully#Gillian Anderson#gilliananderson#Detective Cline#Frank Cassini
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#Adrian Glynn McMorran#Aleks Paunovic#Bill Marchant#Frank Cassini#Jaden Oehr#Jason Simpson#John Cassini#Magda Apanowicz#Ryan W Smith#Tony Dean Smith#science fiction#film
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is the green hair natural? i wonder what color he'd have irl
well, yes, that IS his name
...
ok seriously though i do think thats his actual hair color. theres stranger things going on in the pokemon world, yknow? however, you got me curious, so i de-broccolied him
and you know while we're at it, i do think ghetsis' hair is dyed. sell the ruse, yknow? hes probably naturally got a dark brownish red kind of colour. im too lazy to edit this one, so just imagine it real hard. if you have aphantasia, no you dont
#very natural looking lisa frank hair#cassini aNswers#pokemon black and white#pokemon#pokemon b2w2#pokemon black 2 and white 2#pokemon bw#pokemon n harmonia#natural harmonia gropius#pokémon#pokemon n
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FINAL SHOWDOWN
I genuinely wouldn't have this any other way.
Rip each other to shreds, ladies.
those who fought valiantly but didn't make it under the cut:
Clive (Rose)
Raffalo from Crespellion (The End of the World)
Jabe (The End of the World)
Gwyneth (The Unquiet Dead)
Toshiko Sato (Aliens of London/World War III)
Cathica (The Long Game)
Suki (The Long Game)
Sarah Clark and Stuart Hoskins (Father’s Day)
Dr. Constantine (The Empty Child/The Doctor Dances)
Nancy (The Empty Child/The Doctor Dances)
Lynda Moss (Bad Wolf/Parting of the Ways)
Unnamed Female Programmer (Bad Wolf/Parting of the Ways)
Novice Hame (New Earth)
Mrs. Moore (The Rise of the Cybermen/Age of Steel)
Zachary Cross Flane (The Impossible Planet/The Satan Pit)
Ida Scott (The Impossible Planet/The Satan Pit)
Danny Bartock (The Impossible Planet/The Satan Pit)
Scooti Manista (The Impossible Planet/The Satan Pit)
Ursula Blake (Love and Monsters)
Nerys (The Runaway Bride)
Thomas Kincade Brannigan and Valerie (Gridlock)
Alice and May Cassini (Gridlock)
Tallulah (Daleks in Manhattan/Evolution of the Daleks)
Frank (Daleks in Manhattan/Evolution of the Daleks)
Jenny (Human Nature/The Family of Blood)
Tim Latimer (Human Nature/The Family of Blood)
Billy Shipton (Blink)
Kathy Nightingale (Blink)
Chantho (Utopia)
Morvin and Foon (Voyage of the Damned)
Bannakaffalatta (Voyage of the Damned)
Caecilius (Fires of Pompeii)
Evelina (Fires of Pompeii)
Soothsayer (Fires of Pompeii)
Ood Sigma (Planet of the Ood)
Miss Evangelista (Silence in the Library/Forest of the Dead)
Proper Dave (Silence in the Library/Forest of the Dead)
Anita (Silence in the Library/Forest of the Dead)
Val, Biff, and Jethro Cane (Midnight)
Unnamed Hostess (Midnight)
Rocco Colasanto (Turn Left)
Capt. Erisa Magambo (Planet of the Dead)
Yuri Kerenski (The Waters of Mars)
Maggie Cain (The Waters of Mars)
Addams and Rossiter of Vinvocci (The End of Time)
The Unnamed Curator (Vincent and the Doctor)
Canton Everett Delaware III (The Impossible Astronaut/Day of the Moon)
Lorna Bucket (A Good Man Goes To War)
Rita (The God Complex)
Brian Williams (Dinosaurs on a Spaceship)
John Riddell (Dinosaurs on a Spaceship)
Emma Grayling (Hide)
Journey Blue (Into the Dalek)
Orson Pink (Listen)
Perkins (Mummy on the Orient Ecpress)
Rigsy (Flatline)
O'Donnell (Under the Lake/Before the Flood)
Cass (Under the Lake/Before the Flood)
Bennett (Under the Lake/Before the Flood)
Heather (The Pilot)
Jenny (The Doctor’s Daughter)
Jake Simmons (Age of Steel)
Katherine (The Girl in the Fireplace)
Ross Jenkins (The Poison Sky/The Sontaran Stratagem)
Eve Cicero (The Tsuranga Conundrum)
Daniel Llewellyn (The Christmas Invasion)
Diana Goddard (Dalek)
Rita-Ann Smith (The Rise of the Cybermen/Age of Steel)
Shona (Last Christmas)
Vivien Rook (the sound of drums)
Unnamed Male Programmer (Bad Wolf/Parting of the Ways)
Dee Dee Blasco (Midnight)
Lee Clayton (fugitive of the Judoon)
Sabra (Time Heist)
Mr. Copper (Voyage of the Damned)
Psi (Time Heist)
Pete Tyler (age of steel)
Ohila (Hell Bent)
Professor Docherty (The Sound of Drums/The Last of the Time Lords)
Hath Peck (The Doctor’s Daughter)
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Marilyn wearing the Oleg Cassini dress she wore to the première of Monkey Business. Photo by Frank Powolny, 1952.
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Birthdays 6.8
Beer Birthdays
Pedro Rodenbach (1794)
Johann George Moerlein (1852)
Van Havig (1970)
Five Favorite Birthdays
Herb Adderly; Green Bay Packers CB (1939)
John Everett Millais; artist (1829)
Robert Schumann; composer (1810)
Nancy Sinatra; pop singer (1940)
Frank Lloyd Wright; architect (1867)
Famous Birthdays
Scott Adams; cartoonist (1957)
Tomaso Albinoni; composer (1671)
Kathy Baker; actor (1950)
Mark Belanger; Baltimore Orioles SS (1944)
Tim Berners-Lee; internet developer (1955)
Sonia Braga; actor (1950)
Giovanni Domenico Cassini; Italian astronomer (1552)
Francis Crick; molecular biologist (1916)
James Darren; singer (1936)
Lindsay Davenport; tennis player (1976)
Griffin Dunne; actor (1955)
Trish Goff; model (1976)
Annie Haslam; rock singer (1947)
Julianna Margulies; actor (1966)
Chuck Negron; rock singer (1942)
Leroy Neiman; artist (1927)
Robert Preston; actor (1918)
Charles Reade; English writer (1814)
Nick Rhodes; pop keyboardist (1962)
Tony Rice; acoustic guitarist (1951)
Joan Rivers; comedian (1933)
Boz Scaggs; rock musician (1944)
Alexis Smith; actor (1921)
Jerry Stiller; comedian, actor (1927)
Bonnie Tyler; rock singer (1951)
Alex Van Halen; rock drummer (1950)
Keenan Ivory Wayans; actor, writer (1958)
Byron White; U.S. Supreme Court justice (1917)
Kenneth G. Wilson; physicist (1936)
Dana Wynter; actor (1931)
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Repeat Performance
Eddie Muller has called Alfred L. Werker’s REPEAT PERFORMANCE (1947, TCM, YouTube) the noir IT’S A WONDERFUL LIFE (1946). The main difference is that instead of envisioning a world in which she hadn’t lived, protagonist Joan Leslie relives the last year of her life, which had led to her killing husband Louis Hayward on New Year’s Eve. It’s also not quite as masochistic as the Frank Capra film. Leslie actively attempts to change the future by changing her choices, and no matter how much things go wrong, she keeps trying. Leslie is a sweet, likable actress, though she wasn’t there the day they were handing out star quality, so it’s a little hard to believe her as a Broadway diva whose shows regularly sell out. Still, you can’t help rooting for her. The film starts with Hayward dead, so his first scene is a year earlier and he’s quite appealingly vulnerable. But then he starts drinking and carrying on with playwright Virginia Field, and by the time the picture is half over, you’re rooting for Leslie to plug him again. That’s a very modern reaction. In the 1940s, besides the old “sanctity of marriage” myth promoted under the Production Code, Leslie didn’t have any alternative. Living alone would be out of the question, even though she’s the clear breadwinner. She has to have a man to whom she can belong. And her only fallback guys, producer Tom Conway and poet Richard Basehart (in his film debut), seem to be coded gay characters. Basehart’s character in the original novel by William O’Farrell was a cross-dresser. That wouldn’t fly in Hollywood, though, but even though his character develops a relationship with a wealthy, older woman (Natalie Schaffer, who’s quite delicious as the libidinous society woman on the prowl for her next protégé), he plays up the effete mannerisms and gives his character’s bon mots a distinct lavender tinge. He’s marvelous in the role, and the producers were so impressed they gave him extra scenes. In the restored print shown on TCM, the picture looks terrific, with great camera work by L. William O’Connell. And Leslie is ravishing in a series of Oleg Cassini gowns. Who wouldn’t want to relive a year in which you got to dress that well?
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By Katrina Miller
Enceladus — the sixth-largestof Saturn’s 146 moons— has a liquid ocean with a rocky floor under its bright, white and frosty surface. Ice volcanoes spew frozen grains of material into space, generating one of the many rings circling the planet.
Now, a team of researchers has discovered that those icy grains contain phosphates. They found them using data from Cassini,a joint NASA-European orbiter that concluded its study of Saturn, its rings and moons in 2017. It is the first time phosphorus has been found in an ocean beyond Earth. The results, which add to the prospect that Enceladus is home to extraterrestrial life, were published on Wednesday in the journal Nature.
“We weren’t expecting this. We didn’t look for it,” said Frank Postberg, a planetary scientist at the Free University of Berlin who led the study. He described the realization that they had found phosphates (chemicals containing the element phosphorus) as a “tantalizing moment.”
With the discovery of phosphorus on the ocean world, scientists say they have now found all of the elements there that are essential to life as we know it. Phosphorus is a key ingredient in human bones and teeth, and scientists say it is the rarest bio-essential ingredient in the cosmos. Planetary researchers had previously detected the other five key elements on Enceladus: carbon, hydrogen, nitrogen, oxygen and sulfur (the last of which has been tentatively detected).
Earlier research indicated that phosphorus should be scarce on extraterrestrial ocean worlds, which could hold back life from forming elsewhere in the solar system or galaxy.
But on Enceladus, the researchers found the “exact opposite,” Dr. Postberg said. Rather than having a lack of phosphates, he said, its icy sea was “enriched compared to Earth’s oceans by a factor of 1,000 or so.”
Dr. Postberg and his colleagues reached this conclusion by performing an in-depth survey of 345 ice grains that Cassini studied as it flew through Saturn’s “E-ring,” which is formed by Enceladus’s emissions. They measured the composition of dust puffs arising from the collisions of these grains with the metal plate of an instrument on the spacecraft, the Cosmic Dust Analyzer. Nine of the icy particles, they found, had molecular masses that hinted at the presence of phosphates.
A view from the Cassini spacecraft in 2013 of Enceladus within Saturn’s E-ring. Credit...NASA/JPL-Caltech/Space Science Institute/Val Klavans
To ensure they weren’t misinterpreting Cassini’s readings, they set up a series of experiments in the lab, trying out different states and concentrations of phosphorus. “And after doing many measurements, we hit the bull's-eye,” said another of the study’s authors, Fabian Klenner, who is now an astrobiologist at the University of Washington. “We found one perfect match with the data from space.”
But the researchers still couldn’t explain how Enceladus had such high concentrations of phosphates in its ocean. Some of the study’s researchers investigated this at the Tokyo Institute of Technology by simulating the geochemical interactions between the ocean’s water and its rocky floor.
They found answers in the alkaline waters of Enceladus, which are rich in carbonates. “You could call it a ‘soda ocean,’” Dr. Postberg said.
Phosphorus naturally occurs most often in solid minerals, such as those found inside asteroids and comets. “And if it’s locked up in a rock, it’s hard to harvest for life,” Dr. Postberg said, because it needs to be soluble to be used biologically. “But we find that this soda water can dissolve phosphates really well.”
Mikhail Zolotov, a planetary geochemist at Arizona State University who wrote a perspective article on the study for Nature, was unsurprised by this explanation. “It was clear before, by studies of soda lakes on Earth, that we would expect high amounts of phosphorus in any natural soda lakes,” he said.
Beyond Enceladus, Dr. Postberg says, this discovery may indicate that other ocean worlds in the outer solar system, like Jupiter’s moon Europa or the dwarf planet Pluto, are rich in phosphates — and thus potentially habitable.
He and fellow researchers hope to analyze a larger sample of Cassini data to strengthen their results. But a definitive search for life on Enceladus will take another mission that is a decade or two away, if it ever gets approved.
“We don’t know yet if this very habitable place is actually inhabited,” Dr. Postberg said. “But it is certainly worth looking.”
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By Katrina Miller
Enceladus — the sixth-largestof Saturn’s 146 moons— has a liquid ocean with a rocky floor under its bright, white and frosty surface. Ice volcanoes spew frozen grains of material into space, generating one of the many rings circling the planet.
Now, a team of researchers has discovered that those icy grains contain phosphates. They found them using data from Cassini,a joint NASA-European orbiter that concluded its study of Saturn, its rings and moons in 2017. It is the first time phosphorus has been found in an ocean beyond Earth. The results, which add to the prospect that Enceladus is home to extraterrestrial life, were published on Wednesday in the journal Nature.
“We weren’t expecting this. We didn’t look for it,” said Frank Postberg, a planetary scientist at the Free University of Berlin who led the study. He described the realization that they had found phosphates (chemicals containing the element phosphorus) as a “tantalizing moment.”
With the discovery of phosphorus on the ocean world, scientists say they have now found all of the elements there that are essential to life as we know it. Phosphorus is a key ingredient in human bones and teeth, and scientists say it is the rarest bio-essential ingredient in the cosmos. Planetary researchers had previously detected the other five key elements on Enceladus: carbon, hydrogen, nitrogen, oxygen and sulfur (the last of which has been tentatively detected).
Earlier research indicated that phosphorus should be scarce on extraterrestrial ocean worlds, which could hold back life from forming elsewhere in the solar system or galaxy.
But on Enceladus, the researchers found the “exact opposite,” Dr. Postberg said. Rather than having a lack of phosphates, he said, its icy sea was “enriched compared to Earth’s oceans by a factor of 1,000 or so.”
Dr. Postberg and his colleagues reached this conclusion by performing an in-depth survey of 345 ice grains that Cassini studied as it flew through Saturn’s “E-ring,” which is formed by Enceladus’s emissions. They measured the composition of dust puffs arising from the collisions of these grains with the metal plate of an instrument on the spacecraft, the Cosmic Dust Analyzer. Nine of the icy particles, they found, had molecular masses that hinted at the presence of phosphates.
A view from the Cassini spacecraft in 2013 of Enceladus within Saturn’s E-ring. Credit...NASA/JPL-Caltech/Space Science Institute/Val Klavans
To ensure they weren’t misinterpreting Cassini’s readings, they set up a series of experiments in the lab, trying out different states and concentrations of phosphorus. “And after doing many measurements, we hit the bull's-eye,” said another of the study’s authors, Fabian Klenner, who is now an astrobiologist at the University of Washington. “We found one perfect match with the data from space.”
But the researchers still couldn’t explain how Enceladus had such high concentrations of phosphates in its ocean. Some of the study’s researchers investigated this at the Tokyo Institute of Technology by simulating the geochemical interactions between the ocean’s water and its rocky floor.
They found answers in the alkaline waters of Enceladus, which are rich in carbonates. “You could call it a ‘soda ocean,’” Dr. Postberg said.
Phosphorus naturally occurs most often in solid minerals, such as those found inside asteroids and comets. “And if it’s locked up in a rock, it’s hard to harvest for life,” Dr. Postberg said, because it needs to be soluble to be used biologically. “But we find that this soda water can dissolve phosphates really well.”
Mikhail Zolotov, a planetary geochemist at Arizona State University who wrote a perspective article on the study for Nature, was unsurprised by this explanation. “It was clear before, by studies of soda lakes on Earth, that we would expect high amounts of phosphorus in any natural soda lakes,” he said.
Beyond Enceladus, Dr. Postberg says, this discovery may indicate that other ocean worlds in the outer solar system, like Jupiter’s moon Europa or the dwarf planet Pluto, are rich in phosphates — and thus potentially habitable.
He and fellow researchers hope to analyze a larger sample of Cassini data to strengthen their results. But a definitive search for life on Enceladus will take another mission that is a decade or two away, if it ever gets approved.
“We don’t know yet if this very habitable place is actually inhabited,” Dr. Postberg said. “But it is certainly worth looking.”
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#science#physic#news#technology#space#Astronomy#NASA#Night#Sky#Stars#Space#Science#Universe#Cosmos#Cosmic#Solar System#Milky Way#Bioluminescence#Galaxy#Nebula#Constellations#Constellation#Rainbow#Bright
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An article published in the journal "Nature" reports the discovery of phosphorus, a key element for many biological processes, on Enceladus, the moon of the planet Saturn which has an underground ocean of liquid water. A team of researchers led by Frank Postberg of the Freie Universität Berlin, Germany, analyzed data collected by the Cassini space probe made available in the Planetary Data System and in particular the data detected by the Cosmic Dust Analyzer instrument in samples of icy particles emitted by the geysers of Enceladus that arrived in one of Saturn's rings.
The result of the analysis was the discovery of phosphates in concentrations at least one hundred times higher than those of the Earth's oceans. Geochemical models suggest that phosphorus may be present in subsurface oceans of other moons. These discoveries increase the probability that life forms have arisen in the subsurface of some of those moons.
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Volition Official Trailer (2020) , Thriller Movies Series
#volition#thriller movies#movies#adrian glynn mcmorran#magda apanowicz#john cassini#frank cassini#aleks paunovic#bill marchant
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Ongoing list of characters who will be included in the bracket under the cut—still adding but please ask for any you don't see:
Clive (Rose)
Steward (The End of the World)
Raffalo from Crespellion (The End of the World)
Moxx of Balhoon (The End of the World)
Jabe (The End of the World)
Gwyneth (The Unquiet Dead)
Gabriel Sneed (The Unquiet Dead)
Redpath (The Unquiet Dead)
Toshiko Sato (Aliens of London/World War III)
Indra Ganesh (Aliens of London/World War III)
Diana Goddard (Dalek)
De Maggio (Dalek)
More under the cut!
Cathica (The Long Game)
Suki (The Long Game)
Nurse (The Long Game)
Sarah Clark and Stuart Hoskins (Father’s Day)
Dr. Constantine (The Empty Child/The Doctor Dances)
Nancy (The Empty Child/The Doctor Dances)
Kathy Salt (Boom Town)
Idris Hopper (Boom Town)
Rodrick (Bad Wolf/Parting of the Ways)
Lynda Moss (Bad Wolf/Parting of the Ways)
Unnamed Male Programmer (Bad Wolf/Parting of the Ways)
Unnamed Female Programmer (Bad Wolf/Parting of the Ways)
Danny Llewellyn (The Christmas Invasion)
Major Blake (The Christmas Invasion)
Alex (The Christmas Invasion)
Sally Jacobs (The Christmas Invasion)
Chip (New Earth)
Duke of Manhattan (New Earth)
Clovis (New Earth)
Novice Hame (New Earth)
Captain Reynolds (Tooth and Claw)
Lady Isobel and Sir Robert (Tooth and Claw)
Parsons (School Reunion)
Katherine (The Girl in the Fireplace)
Sally Phelan (The Rise of the Cybermen/Age of Steel)
Rita-Ann Smith (The Rise of the Cybermen/Age of Steel)
Mr. Crane (The Rise of the Cybermen/Age of Steel)
Mrs. Moore (The Rise of the Cybermen/Age of Steel)
The Connellys (The Idiot’s Lantern)
Zachary Cross Flane (The Impossible Planet/The Satan Pit)
Ida Scott (The Impossible Planet/The Satan Pit)
Danny Bartock (The Impossible Planet/The Satan Pit)
Scooti Manista (The Impossible Planet/The Satan Pit)
Ursula Blake (Love and Monsters)
Bliss (Love and Monsters)
Bridget (Love and Monsters)
Mr. Skinner (Love and Monsters)
Trish Webber (Fear Her)
Yvonne Hartman (Army of Ghosts/Doomsday)
Dr. Rajesh Singh (Army of Ghosts/Doomsday)
Adeola (Army of Ghosts/Doomsday)
Gareth (Army of Ghosts/Doomsday)
Nerys (The Runaway Bride)
Julia Swales (Smith and Jones)
Mr. Stoker (Smith and Jones)
Oliver Morgenstern (Smith and Jones)
Dolly Bailey (The Shakespeare Code)
Milo and Cheen (Gridlock)
Pale Woman (Gridlock)
Thomas Kincade Brannigan and Valerie (Gridlock)
Businessman (Gridlock)
Alice and May Cassini (Gridlock)
Tallulah (Daleks in Manhattan/Evolution of the Daleks)
Frank (Daleks in Manhattan/Evolution of the Daleks)
Solomon (Daleks in Manhattan/Evolution of the Daleks)
Sylvia Thaw (The Lazarus Experiment)
Jenny (Human Nature/The Family of Blood)
Tim Latimer (Human Nature/The Family of Blood)
Kath McDonnell (42)
Billy Shipton (Blink)
Kathy Nightingale (Blink)
Chantho (Utopia)
Professor Docherty (The Sound of Drums/The Last of the Time Lords)
Vivien Rook (The Sound of Drums)
Albert Dumphries (The Sound of Drums)
Thomas Milligan (The Last of the Time Lords)
Mr. Copper (Voyage of the Damned)
Morvin and Foon (Voyage of the Damned)
Bannakaffalatta (Voyage of the Damned)
Alonso Frane (Voyage of the Damned)
Penny Carter (Partners in Crime)
Caecilius (Fires of Pompeii)
Evelina (Fires of Pompeii)
Metella (Fires of Pompeii)
Quintus (Fires of Pompeii)
Soothsayer (Fires of Pompeii)
Ryder (Planet of the Ood)
Solana Mercurio (Planet of the Ood)
Ross Jenkins (The Sontaran Stratagem/The Poison Sky)
Cline (The Doctor’s Daughter)
Hath Peck (The Doctor’s Daughter)
Lady Eddison (The Unicorn and the Wasp)
Miss Chandrakala (The Unicorn and the Wasp)
Roger Curbishley (The Unicorn and the Wasp)
Hugh Curbishley (The Unicorn and the Wasp)
Robina Redmond (The Unicorn and the Wasp)
Miss Evangelista (Silence in the Library/Forest of the Dead)
Other Dave (Silence in the Library/Forest of the Dead)
Proper Dave (Silence in the Library/Forest of the Dead)
Anita (Silence in the Library/Forest of the Dead)
Strackman Lux (Silence in the Library/Forest of the Dead)
Lee McAvoy (Silence in the Library/Forest of the Dead)
Dee Dee Blasco (Midnight)
Professor Hobbes (Midnight)
Val, Biff, and Jethro Cane (Midnight)
Unnamed Hostess (Midnight)
Rocco Colasanto (Turn Left)
Jival Chowdry (Turn Left)
The Shadow Architect (The Stolen Earth)
The German Woman (The Stolen Earth)
Rosita Farisi (The Next Doctor)
Malcolm Taylor (Planet of the Dead)
Capt. Erisa Magambo (Planet of the Dead)
Barclay (Planet of the Dead)
DI McMillan (Planet of the Dead)
Lou and Carmen (Planet of the Dead)
Nathan (Planet of the Dead)
Angela Whittaker (Planet of the Dead)
Yuri Kerenski (The Waters of Mars)
Mia Bennett (The Waters of Mars)
Steffi Ehrlich (The Waters of Mars)
Roman Groom (The Waters of Mars)
Ed Gold (The Waters of Mars)
Maggie Cain (The Waters of Mars)
Tarak Ital (The Waters of Mars)
Joshua and Abigail Naismith (The End of Time)
Minnie Hooper (The End of Time)
Addams and Rossiter of Vinvocci (The End of Time)
Jeff (The Eleventh Hour)
Dr. Ramsden (The Eleventh Hour)
Lilian Breen (Victory of the Daleks)
Edwin Bracewell (Victory of the Daleks)
Guido (The Vampires of Venice)
Isabella (The Vampires of Venice)
Nasreen Chaudhry (The Hungry Earth/Cold Blood)
Ambrose Northover (The Hungry Earth/Cold Blood)
Sophie Benson (The Lodger)
The Unnamed Curator (Vincent and the Doctor)
Aunt Sharon (The Big Bang)
Amy’s parents (The Big Bang/The Pandorica Opens)
Dorium Maldovar (The Pandoria Opens)
Canton Everett Delaware III (The Impossible Astronaut/Day of the Moon)
Jennifer (The Rebel Flesh/The Almost People)
Lorna Bucket (A Good Man Goes To War)
Alex (Night Terrors)
Auntie and Uncle (The Doctor’s Wife)
Rita (The God Complex)
Howie Spragg (The God Complex)
Joe Buchanan (The God Complex)
Gibbis (The God Complex)
Cassandra (Asylum of the Daleks)
Harvey (Asylum of the Daleks)
Brian Williams (Dinosaurs on a Spaceship)
John Riddell (Dinosaurs on a Spaceship)
Indira (Dinosaurs on a Spaceship)
Ellie and Dave Oswald (Rings of Akhaten)
Onegin (Cold War)
Stepashin (Cold War)
Grisenko (Cold War)
Hila Tacorien (Hide)
Professor Alec Palmer (Hide)
Emma Grayling (Hide)
The Van Baalen brothers (Journey to the Center of the TARDIS)
Ada Gillyflower (The Crimson Horror)
Porridge (Nightmare in Silver)
Alice Ferrin (Nightmare in Silver)
Missy (Nightmare in Silver)
Handles (Time of the Doctor)
Tasha Lem (Time of the Doctor)
Clara’s Gran (Time of the Doctor)
Linda (Time of the Doctor)
Abramal and Marta (Time of the Doctor)
Journey Blue (Into the Dalek)
Gretchen Allison Carlisle (Into the Dalek)
Orson Pink (Listen)
Psi (Time Heist)
Sabra (Time Heist)
Adrian (The Caretaker)
Captain Lundvik (Kill the Moon)
Perkins (Mummy on the Orient Ecpress)
Rigsy (Flatline)
Seb (Death in Heaven/Dark Water)
Shona (Last Christmas)
Albert Smithe (Last Christmas)
Fiona Bellows (Last Christmas)
Ashley Carter (Last Christmas)
Jac (The Magician’s Apprentice)
O'Donnell (Under the Lake/Before the Flood)
Cass (Under the Lake/Before the Flood)
Lunn (Under the Lake/Before the Flood)
Bennett (Under the Lake/Before the Flood)
Lofty (The Girl who Died)
Walsh (The Zygon Invasion)
Anahson (Face the Raven)
The General (Hell Bent)
Ohila (Hell Bent)
Moira (The Pilot)
Heather (the Pilot)
Felicity (Knock Knock)
Paul (Knock Knock)
Harry (Knock Knock)
Pavel (Knock Knock)
Shireen (Knock Knock)
Dahh-Ren (Oxygen)
Abby (Oxygen)
Ivan (Oxygen)
Penny (Extremis)
Erica (the pyramid at the end of the world)
Colonel Babbit (pyramid)
Kar (The Eaters of Light)
Lucius, Simon, and Thracius (The Eaters of Light)
The Captain (Twice Upon a Time)
Karl (The Woman Who Fell to Earth)
Angstrom (The Ghost Monument)
Epzo (The Ghost Monument)
Jade McIntyre (Arachnids in the UK)
Astos (The Tsuranga Conundrum)
Mabli (The Tsuranga Conundrum)
Eve Cicero (The Tsuranga Conundrum)
Yoss Inkl (The Tsuranga Conundrum)
Prem (Demons of the Punjab)
Kira Arlo (kerblam)
Dan Cooper (kerblam)
Willa Twiston (the witchfinders)
Ribbons (it takes you away)
Andinio and Delph (The Battle of Ranskoor Av Kolos)
Lee Clayton (fugitive of the judoon)
Jamila and Gabriela (Praxeus)
Jake Willis and Adam Lang (Praxeus)
Tibo (Can You Hear Me?)
Shaw (Village of the Angels)
Professor Jericho (Village of the Angels)
Gerald and Jean (Village of the Angels)
Sarah (Eve of the Daleks)
Nick (Eve of the Daleks)
Ying Ki (Legend of the Sea Devils)
Ji-Hun (Sea Devils)
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THE SOURCE Episode 08 VOLITION Review & Interview
The Source is back with Episode 08 where Darryl and Domingos talk Volition the new indie Sci-Fi film from The Smith Brothers. We have been eagerly following Volition as it made its way on its festival tour and before that during production, so you can click right here for an earlier interview we conducted with…
THE SOURCE Episode 08 VOLITION Review & Interview was originally published on Hollywood News Source
#Adrian Glynn McMorran#Frank Cassini#Hollywood News Source#John Cassini#Magda Apanowicz#Sci-Fi#The Smith Brothers#The Source Podcast#Volition
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Events 6.11 (after 1920)
1920 – During the U.S. Republican National Convention in Chicago, U.S. Republican Party leaders gathered in a room at the Blackstone Hotel to come to a consensus on their candidate for the U.S. presidential election, leading the Associated Press to coin the political phrase "smoke-filled room". 1935 – Inventor Edwin Armstrong gives the first public demonstration of FM broadcasting in the United States at Alpine, New Jersey. 1936 – The London International Surrealist Exhibition opens. 1937 – Great Purge: The Soviet Union under Joseph Stalin executes eight army leaders. 1938 – Second Sino-Japanese War: The Battle of Wuhan starts. 1940 – World War II: The Siege of Malta begins with a series of Italian air raids. 1942 – World War II: The United States agrees to send Lend-Lease aid to the Soviet Union. 1942 – Free French Forces retreat from Bir Hakeim after having successfully delayed the Axis advance. 1944 – USS Missouri, the last battleship built by the United States Navy and future site of the signing of the Japanese Instrument of Surrender, is commissioned. 1955 – Eighty-three spectators are killed and at least one hundred are injured after an Austin-Healey and a Mercedes-Benz collide at the 24 Hours of Le Mans, the deadliest ever accident in motorsports. 1956 – Start of Gal Oya riots, the first reported ethnic riots that target minority Sri Lankan Tamils in the Eastern Province. The total number of deaths is reportedly 150. 1962 – Frank Morris, John Anglin and Clarence Anglin allegedly become the only prisoners to escape from the prison on Alcatraz Island. 1963 – American Civil Rights Movement: Governor of Alabama George Wallace defiantly stands at the door of Foster Auditorium at the University of Alabama in an attempt to block two black students, Vivian Malone and James Hood, from attending that school. Later in the day, accompanied by federalized National Guard troops, they are able to register. 1963 – Buddhist monk Thích Quảng Đức burns himself with gasoline in a busy Saigon intersection to protest the lack of religious freedom in South Vietnam. 1963 – John F. Kennedy addresses Americans from the Oval Office proposing the Civil Rights Act of 1964, which would revolutionize American society by guaranteeing equal access to public facilities, ending segregation in education, and guaranteeing federal protection for voting rights. 1964 – World War II veteran Walter Seifert attacks an elementary school in Cologne, Germany, killing at least eight children and two teachers and seriously injuring several more with a home-made flamethrower and a lance. 1968 – Lloyd J. Old identified the first cell surface antigens that could differentiate among different cell types. 1970 – After being appointed on May 15, Anna Mae Hays and Elizabeth P. Hoisington officially receive their ranks as U.S. Army general officers, becoming the first women to do so. 1971 – The U.S. Government forcibly removes the last holdouts to the Native American Occupation of Alcatraz, ending 19 months of control. 1978 – Altaf Hussain founds the student political movement All Pakistan Muhajir Students Organisation (APMSO) in Karachi University. 1981 – A magnitude 6.9 earthquake at Golbaf, Iran, kills at least 2,000. 1987 – Diane Abbott, Paul Boateng and Bernie Grant are elected as the first black MPs in Great Britain. 1998 – Compaq Computer pays US$9 billion for Digital Equipment Corporation in the largest high-tech acquisition. 2001 – Timothy McVeigh is executed for his role in the Oklahoma City bombing. 2002 – Antonio Meucci is acknowledged as the first inventor of the telephone by the United States Congress. 2004 – Cassini–Huygens makes its closest flyby of the Saturn moon Phoebe. 2007 – Mudslides in Chittagong, Bangladesh, kill 130 people. 2008 – Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper makes a historic official apology to Canada's First Nations in regard to abuses at a Canadian Indian residential school. 2008 – The Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope is launched into orbit. 2010 – The first African FIFA World Cup kicks off in South Africa.
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