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#harvey awards 2018
yurimother · 2 years
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Kabi Nagata's Autobiographical Manga 'My Pancreas Broke, But Life Got Better' Licensed; Special Edition of 'My Lesbian Experience with Loneliness Announced'
On Tuesday, Seven Seas Entertainment announced that it has licensed My Pancreas Broke, But My Life Got Better (Suizou ga Kowaretara, Sukoshi Iki Yasuku Narimashita), the latest autobiographical manga from Kabi Nagata, author of the Harvey-Award winning My Lesbian Experience with Loneliness. The manga will be released in English digitally and in paperback editions in November 2023.
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The publisher describes the manga:
In this new autobiographical manga following My Wandering Warrior Existence, Nagata Kabi has quit drinking in an attempt to get healthier–or she’s trying to, anyway. Her former struggles with alcohol led to pancreatitis and a serious hospitalization, and now she has no choice but to give it up. Follow the author as she details the quest to improve her health during a global pandemic.
In addition to the licensing announcement, Seven Seas also unveiled a new special edition of Nagata's original breakout manga, My Lesbian Experience with Loneliness. The new release will be a single hardcover edition that features new cover art and a new bonus chapter. A digital version will also be available. It will also be published in November 2023.
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Kabi Nagata is a Japanese mangaka known for her powerful and raw autobiographical manga series. She originally posted her manga online on Pixiv where it went viral and was revised and published in Japanese print in 2016 by East Press and in English by Seven Seas. The manga received critical acclaim, winning the 2017 Harvey Award for best manga of 2018. Subsequent volumes, My Solo Exchange Diary Volumes 1 and 2, My Alcoholic Escape from Reality, and My Wandering Warrior Existence, received similar acclaim.
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dystini · 1 year
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Indycar Driver Lore
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Indycar Driver Lore Masterlist
Marcus John Armstrong
Birthdate: July 29, 2000 Hometown: Christchurch, New Zealand Residence: London, UK/Indianapolis, indiana Height/Weight: 5’9”/130lbs
Rookie Year: 2023
Team: Chip Ganassi Racing (CGR)
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Follow him on: Instagram Twitter
Career Stats
2023: Chip Ganassi Racing #11 (road and street courses only)
The Side Pod (with Callum Ilott) on You Tube Screaming Meals (with Clement Novalak and James Harvey Blair) on You Tube Screaming Meals on Twitch Screaming Meals on Instagram
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Past Racing
2017: Italian Formula 4 - 1st overall ADAC Formula 4 - 2nd overall Toyota Racing Series - 4th overall
2018: FIA Formula 3 European Championship - Prema Theodore Racing -5th Overall Toyota Racing Series - 3rd overall
2019: FIA Formula 3 - Prema Racing - 2nd Overall Toyota Racing Series - 2nd overall
2020: FIA Formula 2 - ART Grand Prix - 13th overall
2021: FIA Formula 2 - DAMS - 13th overall
2022: FIA Formula 2 - Hitech Grand Prix - 13th overall
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His father owns Armstrong's, a major car dealership chain in NZ
Has two older half-brothers, a younger sister, and a younger brother
Started karting in NZ at 10 years old, winning multiple national titles
Member of the Ferrari Driver Academy from 2017 - 2021
Finished second in the 2019 Formula 3 championship standings driving for Prema
Multiple race winner and podium sitter in Formula 2
Was Lundgaard's teammate in F2 in 2020
Pescatarian (and very vocal about it)
Drinks a lot of espresso
Has a video podcast called Screaming Meals co-hosted with his childhood friend James and F2 driver Clement Novalak, with an offshoot called The Sidepod that he hosts with Callum Ilott
Lived with Callum in Italy when they were both Ferrari Driver Academy members
Speaks Italian, but will only do so after a few drinks
Hobbies are going to the gym, listening to podcasts, going to restaurants, and watching American football
Used to be an avid cyclist, but gave it up due to it keeping his weight too low and causing problems with his ability to handle the car
Has a serious issue placing bets with his friends, to the extent that he had to pay to take fellow F2 driver Jehan Daruvala on vacation because he owed him so much money from lost bets
Scott Dixon was his childhood hero, and Kimi Räikkönen was his favorite F1 driver as a kid
Hates video games
Doesn’t like animals, but loves children
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Iconic/memorable moments Indycar: Marcus Armstrong At IndyCar Spring Training New Indy Car Driver Marcus Armstrong about the Grand Prix of St Pete OVER THE WALL // ACURA GRAND PRIX OF LONG BEACH Marcus Armstrong Long Beach Preview Marcus Armstrong Post Qualifications Marcus Armstrong rocked up to Turn 1 at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway to see what 235mph looks like… Callum and Marcus chat during pre-season testing:
F2 and earlier: F2 Speed Date: Marcus Armstrong The Wet Head Challenge HOW TO BECOME A FERRARI DRIVER, A CONVERSATION WITH MARCUS ARMSTRONG F2 DRIVER | Sector 1 Marcus Armstrong Interview | Sky Speed Marcus Armstrong: All the way from New Zealand Keeping it cool at Prema “Michael Shakespeare”: Bullying from Callum and James: Marcus wins “best late lunge” award from F2: Marcus Armstrong Once Said…: Marcus absolutely annoying the shit out of Arthur Leclerc during a virtual GP: F2 Speed Date (2020): Marcus sings “Rocket Man”: Marcus attempting to be sweet with Callum, who is absolutely not having it:
Doing fast laps around Goodwood in his dad’s car: 16-year-old Marcus talks about leaving home to move to Europe alone: Clem Novalak loves Marcus: He likes pineapple on pizza: Interesting content:
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Marcus is a self-proclaimed "lover not a fighter". He's known to be very friendly and approachable, with a significant portion of the Formula 2 grid mentioning that he was the driver they got on with best in the paddock during his time there. His results in F2 were mixed, moving teams in 3 successive years, as he sometimes had difficulty getting to grips with the F2 car and tyres, however it’s generally agreed that his midfield championship positions during his F2 tenure aren’t an accurate reflection of his genuine ability and talent. Multiple Ganassi team members (including the boss) have commented on how impressed they are by his raw speed, work ethic, and attitude since his arrival in IndyCar. Marcus himself has already talked about how much more enjoyable the Indy car is to drive and how much fun he’s having now after several years of struggling with the notoriously difficult F2 car. He also appears to be getting on well with his CGR teammates and in particular has talked about how much he likes Marcus Ericsson.
He moved to London in early 2022 after spending several years living near Ferrari’s HQ in Maranello, Italy, and is known to enjoy city nightlife, being a big fan of wine. He’s a major foodie who likes taking photos of good food almost as much as he enjoys complaining about bad food. He is known to be determined to the point of stubbornness, causing himself permanent damage to his knee during a half-marathon due to refusing to stop when he was in pain. He had a low attendance record at school due to focusing on his racing career and moving to Europe at the age of 14, and as such, although he’s not unintelligent he’s known to be somewhat lacking in general knowledge (such as thinking Shakespeare’s first name was Michael). However, he has the characteristically Kiwi dry, sarcastic sense of humor and very much enjoys mutual teasing and banter with his close friends, something that’s often on display in the Screaming Meals podcasts.
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Fanfic Lore
Usually paired with Callum Ilott, or F2 driver Clement Novalak due to their extremely close and physically affectionate friendship - was Clem’s teammate during their karting days, and has said that they talk every day while he’s in the US Likes to tease Callum and wind him up to his face, but often calls him his best mate and praises him when he’s not around. However Callum rarely (if ever) reciprocates the latter, probably due to his intense Britishness Good friends with multiple drivers from various series, including Juan Manuel Correa, Jüri Vips, Guanyu Zhou, Nick Cassidy, Max Fewtrell and Felipe Drugovich Also has a tendency to “adopt” younger drivers and refer to them as “little bro”, including Jak Crawford and Dino Beganovic Has said on several occasions that he doesn’t wear underwear, and also shaves his legs (and possibly elsewhere, having claimed that he is “hairless from the eyebrows down”) Claims he can’t tell the difference between someone being nice to him and someone flirting with him
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credit for most of this post to @whitewindhowl and friends
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It's Appreciate a Dragon Day, and I just wanted to rec one of my favorite dragon books! From the website:
The Tea Dragon Society is a graphic novel suitable for all-ages, in which a young blacksmith apprentice named Greta discovers the fascinating world of Tea Dragons. These cute but extremely fussy creatures require a great deal of attention and care, however they hold a magical secret that makes the trouble worthwhile. Along the way Greta meets the mysterious girl Minette, the retired adventurers Hesekiel and Erik, and of course all of their Tea Dragons.
Winner of 2018 Eisner Award for Best Kid’s Publication Winner of 2018 Eisner Award for Best Webcomic Winner of 2018 Dwayne McDuffie Award for Kids Comics Co-Winner of 2018 Harvey Award for Best Kid’s or YA Publication ALA Rainbow List (2018) Amazon.com’s Best Comics & Graphic Novels (2017) School Library Journal’s Top 10 Graphic Novels (2017)
The story will always be free to read online here, and the hardcover book is now also available via Barnies & Noble.
A really sweet, insanely creative, delightfully queer and disabled fantasy that's ridiculous cute and soothing, not to mention its fascinating exploration of inheritance, memory, and passing on tradition. I was enough to find it at my local library and enjoyed the shit out of it, and I think you will, too!
Apparently there are sequels I haven't had a chance to read yet, but I intend to very soon!
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beansonbread2 · 9 months
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BEANSONBREAD AWARDS 2023 - BEST ALBUM
AWARD NO.2 - BEST ALBUM OF 2023
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PAST WINNERS
2022 > Jockstrap - ' I Love You Jennifer B' (see full list HERE)
2021 > Self Esteem - ‘Prioritise Pleasure’ (see full list HERE)
2020 > The Flaming Lips - ‘American Head’ (see full list HERE)
2019 > Self Esteem - ‘Compliments Please’ (see full list HERE)
2018 > Kero Kero Bonito - ‘Time ‘n’ Place’ (see full list HERE)
2017 > Richard Dawson - ‘Peasant’ (see full list HERE)
2016 > Blood Orange - ‘Freetown Sound’ (see full list HERE)
2015 > Holly Herndon - ‘Platform’ (see full list HERE)
2014 > FKA Twigs - ‘LP1′ (see full list HERE)
2013 > These New Puritans - ‘Field Of Reeds’ (see full list HERE)
2012 > Django Django - ‘Django Django’ (see full list HERE)
2011 > Shabazz Palaces - ‘Black Up’ (see full list HERE)
2010 > These New Puritans - ‘Hidden’ (see full list HERE)
2009 > Animal Collective - ‘Merriweather Post Pavilion’ (see full list HERE)
2008 > Wild Beasts - ‘Limbo, Panto’ (see full list HERE)
2007 > Animal Collective - ‘Strawberry Jam’ (see full list HERE)
2006 > Safetyword - ‘Man’s Name Is Legion’ (see full list HERE)
2005 > Animal Collective - ‘Feels’ (see full list HERE)
2004 > Devendra Banhart - ‘Rejoicing In The Hands’ / ‘Nino Rojo’
2003 > Dizzee Rascal - ‘Boy In Da Corner’
2002 > The Streets - ‘Original Pirate Material’
2001 > The Beta Band - ‘Hot Shots II’
2000 > Outkast - ‘Stankonia’
1999 > The Beta Band - ‘The Beta Band’
1998 > The Beta Band - ‘The Three EPs’
1997 > Radiohead - ‘OK Computer’
1996 > Beck - ‘Odelay’
THE RULES - No Re-issues, Live Albums, Compilations, or EPs.
SPECIAL MENTIONS for these things that don’t really live on the main lists.
Bulbils no.72 > 79
Bulbils ‘Map’
EP/64 'EP-64'
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WORTH A MENTION (in no order) - A bunch of albums i enjoyed but didn’t quite make the final lists and others i just didn’t hear enough to be considered properly. 
Matmos / Eartheater / Tkay Maidza / Xiu Xiu / Ashnikko / Arthur Russell / Spellling / Cornelius / Liv.e / John Bence / Daniel Blumberg / Thy Slaughter / Two White Cranes / Billy Woods & Kenny Segal / L’Rain / Callum Easter / Cleo Sol / Holly Waxwing / Doon Kanda / DELUXE100 / ‘Barbie’ OST / Khan & Neek / Mui Zyn / Steady Holiday / Jamie Branch / Mitski / Mac DeMarco / Slowdive / Underscores / Armand Hammer / James Blake / Dutch Uncles / DJ Brittle / Slug / The Go! Team / Sofia Kourtesis / Kali Uchis / Sampha / Yussef Dayes / Unknown Mortal Orchestra / King Creosote / Niecy Blues / Lankum / The HIRS Collective / Alexia Avina / Altin Gun / Sulka / Spektral Quartet, Julia Holter & Alex Temple / L.T. Leif / Maria BC / Tom Rasmussen / Wednesday / Tim Hecker / HMLTD / Andrew Hung / Blonde Redhead / Frost Children / Heavy Lungs / Fire-Toolz / Jim Legxacy / Durand Jones / Clark / Teenage Fanclub / Galen Tipton / Feeble Little Horse / Grouptheraphy / Grian Chatten / Asake / Speakers Corner Quartet / George Clanton / PJ Harvey / Jonatan Leandoer96 / Fenne Lily / Terry / The Coral / Modern Nature / Snooper / Gabriels / Little Dragon / Being Dead / Earl Sweatshirt & The Alchemist / Noname / Overmono / Olivia Rodrigo / Nation Of Language / Caro / Irreversible Entanglements / Devendra Banhart / Say She She / The Streets / Vanishing Twin / BC Camplight / Ethan P. Flynn / Withered Hand / ThisisDA / Sarahsson / Blanck Mass / Jadu Heart / Hotel Lux / Emily Breeze / Chloe / Feather Beds / Margaret Glaspy / Nature Of Language / WaqWaq Kingdom / Bo en / Patten’ / David Holmes / Belle & Sebastian / Cloth / Phoenix / The Golden Dregs  / Julie Byrne
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2023 RUNNERS UP (in no order)
Laurel Halo ‘Atlas’ 
Ryuichi Sakamoto ‘12’
John Cale ‘Mercy’
Felicita ‘Spalarkle’
Hyperdawn ‘Steady’
Moin ‘Paste’
Spencer Cullum ‘Spencer Cullum’s Coin Collection 2’
MC Yallah ‘Yallah Beibe’
Alabaster DePlume ‘Come With Fierce Grace’ 
Kwes ‘Rye Lane’ OST
Bianca Scout ‘Heart Of The Anchoress’
James Yorkston, Nina Persson & The Second Hand Orchestra ‘The Great White Sea Eagle’ 
Sweet Baboo ‘The Wreckage’
ML Buch ‘Suntub’
RS Tangent ‘When A Worm Wears A Wig’
Blockhead ‘The Aux’
Martha Ffion ‘The Wringer’
Mark Jenkin ‘Enys Men’ OST
Yo La Tengo ‘This Stupid World’
Tennis ‘Pollen’
Bar Italia ‘The Twits’
Klein ‘Touched By An Angel’
Pigs Pigs Pigs Pigs Pigs Pigs Pigs ‘Land Of Sleeper’
David Brewis ‘The Soft Struggles’
Lorraine James ‘Gentle Confrontation’
Black Country, New Road ‘Live at Bush Hall’
Mandy, Indiana ‘I’ve Seen A Way’
Firestations ‘Thick Terrain’
Memotone ‘How Was Your Life?’ / ‘Illuminations Part I-III w/ Chris Yates’
Janelle Monae ‘The Age Of Pleasure’
Girl Ray ‘Prestige’ 
Vagabon ‘Sorry I Haven’t Called’
Gruff Rhys ‘The Almond And The Seahorse’
Yves Tumor ‘Praise A Lord Who Chews But Which Does Not Consume..’
Sleaford Mods ‘UK GRIM’
Podcasts ‘Podcasts’
Noah Radley ‘Devoid Of A Contact Or Contextual Clues’
Deerhoof ‘Miracle-Level’
H Hawkline ‘Milk For Flowers’
Mary Lattimore ‘Goodbye, Hotel Arkada’
Jessie Ware ‘That! Feels Good!’
Feist ‘Multitudes’
Weird Wave ‘Lost Map Presents Weird Wave’
Blur ‘The Ballad Of Darren’
Avalon Emerson ‘& The Charm’
Roisin Murphy ‘Hit Parade’
Actress ‘LXXXVIII’
Amy May Ellis ‘Over Ling And Bell’
Jam City ‘Jam City Presents EFM’
King Krule ‘Space Heavy’
Peter Brewis ‘Blowdry Colossus’
Amaarae ‘Fountain Baby’
Death’s Dynamic Shroud ‘After Angel’ / ‘Keys To The Gate’ / ‘Midnight Tangerine’ / ‘Transcendence Bot’
This Is The Kit ‘Careful Of Your Keepers’
Decisive Pink ‘Ticket To Fame’
Travis Scott ‘UTOPIA’
James Holden ‘Imagine This Is A High Dimensional Space Of All Possibilities’
Willie J Healey ‘Bunny’
CHAI ‘CHAI’
James Ferraro ‘Concerto For Strings’
Sufjan Stevens ‘Javelin’
Shabazz Palaces ‘Robed In Rareness’
Bas Jan ‘Back To The Swamp’
Free Love ‘Inside’
John Medeski ‘The Curse’ OST
Brother May ‘Pattern With Force’
Langkamer ‘The Noon And Midnight Manual’
Uh ‘Humanus’
Patten ‘Mirage FM’
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MY TOP 50 ALBUMS OF 2023
50. Robbie & Mona ‘Tusky’
49. Lonnie Holley ‘Oh Me Oh My’
48. MF Tomlinson ‘We Are Still Wild Horses’
47. Oliver Coates ‘Aftersun’ OST
46. Joanne Robertson ‘Blue Car’
45. Yeule ‘Softscars’
44. Lil Yachty ‘Let’s Start Here’
43. Robin Allender ‘Underground River’
42. PinkPantheress ‘Heaven Knows’
41. ANOHNI & The Johnsons ‘My Back Was A Bridge For You To Cross’
40. Joanna Sternberg ‘I’ve Got Me’
39. Bonnie Prince Billy ‘Keeping Secrets Will Destroy You’
38. Andre 3000 ‘New Blue Sun’
37. Kinlaw ‘WELD’
36. Memotone ‘Tollard’
35. Cleo Sol ‘Gold’
34. Mun Sing ‘Inflatable Gravestone’
33. Dorian Electra ‘Fanfare’
32. Bar Italia ‘Tracey Denim’
31. Panda Bear & Sonic Boom ‘Reset In Dub’
30. Kara Jackson ‘Why Does The Earth Give Us People To Love?’
29. Avey Tare ‘7s’
28. Kate NV ‘WOW’
27. Kelela ‘Raven’
26. Danny Brown ‘Quaranta’
25. Jessy Lanza ‘Love Hallucination’
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24. 100 gecs ‘10,000 gecs’
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23. Christopher Bear & Daniel Rossen ‘Past Lives’ OST
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22. Quade ‘Nacre’
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21. Django Django ‘Off Planet’
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20. Tirzah ‘trip9love…???’
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19. Nourished By Time ‘Erotic Probiotic 2’
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18. Das Koolies ‘DK.01’
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17. Jockstrap ‘I <3UQTINVU’
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16. Lana Del Rey ‘Did You Know That There’s A Tunnel Under Ocean Blvd’
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15. Fever Ray ‘Radical Romantics’
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14. Hannah Diamond ‘Perfect Picture’
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13. Water From Your Eyes ‘Everyone’s Crushed’
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12. Rozi Plain ‘Prize’
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11. Young Fathers ‘Heavy Heavy’
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10. Yaeji ‘With A Hammer’
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9. Pozi ‘Smiling Pools’
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8. Animal Collective ‘Isn’t It Now?’
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7. Slauson Malone 1 ‘Excelsior’
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6. Steve Mason ‘Brothers & Sisters’
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5. The Lemon Twigs ‘Everything Harmony’
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4. Oneohtrix Point Never ‘Again’
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3. Caroline Polachek ‘Desire, I Want To Turn Into You’
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2. JPEGMAFIA & Danny Brown ‘Scaring The Hoes’
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1. Squid ‘O Monolith’
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LOST ANGELA
Our dog Othello was a fan of Angela Lansbury.
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My mother-in-law would often dogsit him, and she, like many people of her generation, was a devoted viewer of Murder, She Wrote, Lansbury's series that ran from 1984 to 1996 on CBS, and for decades thereafter in syndication. So she and Othello would sit happily on the couch together and enjoy the adventures of mystery novelist and small-town slueth Jessica Fletcher.
This is how many people will remember Lansbury. But her remarkable career is far from defined by the hugely successful Murder, She Wrote.
Sometimes the death of a famous person who has attained great age can be oddly more startling than that of a younger celebrity. This was the case, for me, with Lansbury, who passed on last October; today would be her 98th birthday. She was around so long, and so vitally, that she had become almost a symbol of geriatric health, agency and relevancy. She was on Law and Order: Special Victims Unit in 2005, and was still acting as recently as Mary Poppins Returns in 2018; she also had a cameo as herself in Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery. It seemed like she might outlive us all.
A native of London, Lansbury came to the U.S. in her teens when her family fled the Blitz. She studied at the American Theatre Wing, then made her movie debut, at the age of 17, in support of Ingrid Bergman and Charles Boyer in 1944's Gaslight. Her role as a shifty maid in that film got her the first of three Oscar nominations. The second came a year later, when she played Sybil Vane in The Picture of Dorian Gray. 
Many other film and television roles followed, from The Harvey Girls to The Court Jester to The Long, Hot Summer to Bedknobs and Broomsticks to Death on the Nile, but in the '60s and '70s Lansbury ascended to legendary stardom on the Broadway stage, with leads in productions of Mame, Gypsy, Sweeney Todd and others. She won a total of six Tony Awards, from eight nominations. In the  '90s, she provided the voice of Mrs. Potts in Disney's animated Beauty and the Beast, probably the role by which younger audiences know her the best, and sweetly sang the title song.
An impressive career by any standard. But none of the above achievements are what I think of first when I think of Angela Lansbury. No, for me her most memorable role is the one that brought her a third Oscar nomination, in one of my top ten all-time favorite movies: that of  Eleanor Iselin, mother of poor Laurence Harvey's hapless brainwashed Raymond Shaw in John Frankenheimer's 1962 political thriller The Manchurian Candidate.
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Lansbury's Eleanor is the true power behind the title character, buffonish McCarthy-esque Red-baiting Senator Johnny Iselin (James Gregory), and she's more than willing to conspire with Communists and to sacrifice her son Raymond's mind and heart to steer Johnny to the White House. Her performance is hard-edged and scary and despicable, but also strong, intelligent and witty, with a touch of wry lechery toward her husband and an unsavory Oedipal undercurrent toward her son.
It's strange to think that the same Angela Lansbury who played Jessica Fletcher and Mrs. Potts could also have created one of the great villains in American movies. But watch The Manchurian Candidate and you'll see the iron behind the sweetness.
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maddie-grove · 2 years
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Little Book Review: Nonfiction Round-Up (May-December 2022)
Waking the Tiger by Peter A. Levine (1997): a self-help book with a somatic approach to dealing with trauma symptoms. It contained some advice that was useful at my old job. Unfortunately, I was too traumatized from said job to concentrate properly on the audiobook, so I was kind of in a Catch-22.
The Nineties by Chuck Klosterman (2022): A deliciously disconcerting series of essays about the fractured last decade of the twentieth century. It wins the coveted "book I'm most determined to lend to my mom" award.
Yes, I'm Hot in This by Huda Fahmy (2018): a cute collection of comics from Fahmy's Instagram, covering subjects from strangers being stupid about her hijab (hence the title) to lighthearted scenes of domestic life. I found it in a Little Library.
Unmask Alice by Rick Emerson (2022): an exploration of the life and writing career of Beatrice Sparks, author of multiple "real" diaries by troubled teens, through-and-through grifter, and coiner of the immortal phrase "freak wharf." This fucked, y'all. Emerson seamlessly delves into multiple topics of interest--Sparks's hardscrabble youth, the discovery of LSD, the Satanic Panic--with plenty of compassion and humor.
The Good Nurse by Charles Graeber (2013): the true-crime account of Charles Cullen, a Pennsylvania/New Jersey nurse who murdered possibly hundreds of patients by poisoning their IV bags in the late 1980s to early 2000s. The subject matter is shocking, and it's horrifying how the indifference of the large medical systems he worked for kept him from facing consequences other than getting fired for years. The style/organization of the book is kind of pedestrian, though.
Catch and Kill by Ronan Farrow (2019): an account of Farrow's efforts to write a story for NBC about the decades-long sexual predation of producer Harvey Weinstein, including NBC's sideways attempts to get him to back off. Farrow's a solid narrative writer, not great, and the book gets less interesting when he strays beyond the inner workings of NBC.
Slouching Towards Bethlehem by Joan Didion (1968): In her first collection of essays, Didion talks about murder, movies, mental distress, and Sacramento. It's incredibly fresh in some ways (the essay where she talks about raising her daughter away from her extended family) and incredibly dated in others (her incredulity at people who ascribe artistic vision to Meet Me in St. Louis). I genuinely appreciate her ability to make me go "girl, what are you even talking about."
Solutions and Other Problems by Allie Brosh (2020): an illustrated memoir/series of comics, focusing on coping with mental illness and the unexpected loss of a loved one. There are some very funny passages (particularly one involving a troublesome dog), some devastating ones (Brosh's montage of memories of her late younger sister), and some aimless ones.
Monkey Mind by Daniel Smith (2012): part memoir and part general information about anxiety (the science of it, how different people have written about it through history, etc.). It's more interesting as a memoir. I remember that it had some good advice at the end for managing anxiety, but I don't know for the life of me what it was. Still, I feel like I should give him credit for it.
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heartlandians · 2 years
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Heartland's Michelle Morgan takes the helm as director for episode of Season 16
NOTE TO READERS: This interview with Michelle Morgan was conducted prior to the death of Heartland actor Robert Cormier. Cormier, 33, died Sept. 23 in hospital from injuries suffered in a fall. He played Finn Cotter for the past two seasons of the show, which is filmed outside of Calgary. The cast and crew have dedicated Season 16 to Cormier. Many involved in the show expressed condolences on social media after the death, including Morgan. On her Instagram account, she wrote: “You had so many more stories to tell. May you Rest In Peace Robert.”
Michelle Morgan admits she was never one of those thespians whose real ambitions were behind the camera. The old ” … but what I really want to do is direct” line was not something she said or thought.
At least not at first.
Morgan has played Lou Fleming, older sister of Amy (Amber Marshall), since the series began in 2017. But she waited 14 seasons before taking the helm of an episode as director.
“I was always curious about it, for sure,” says Morgan, in an interview with Postmedia. “But I didn’t really see it as something I could do.”
Her older sister Wendy is an accomplished Canadian director of TV, film and music videos whose work includes 2020’s Sugar Daddy, which earned her an award from the Directors Guild of Canada last year for best director.
Morgan had worked on her sister’s sets in the past and decided early on that she didn’t have what it takes to be a director.
“She is so different from me,” she says. “I was like ‘I’m not as tough as Wendy. I’m not as thick-skinned as Wendy. I won’t cut it as a director.’ But I realized I can do it. I just have to do it in a different way.”
This is what she has been doing on the Alberta set of Heartland, where she is directing an action-packed episode of the beloved family show’s 16th season. It’s Morgan’s third time directing for the series. She began in 2020 in Season 14 and directed two more instalments last year for Season 15. She also directed episodes of Heartland’s short-lived web series Hudson and two short films, 2019’s Save Yourself and 2018’s Mi Madre, My Father. All of which had her nicely prepped for the episode of Heartland she is working on, which involves a good deal of action alongside its usual mix of earnest family drama, romance, coming-of-age and comedy on the Bartlett ranch in rural Alberta. She couldn’t divulge too many plot points but said the episode will end as a cliffhanger before the mid-season break in December.
“This episode is super challenging,” she says. “There is just so much horse action and stunts. I can’t even count how many stunts we have. I feel like every third page there is more horse action and roping and rodeo, just a lot of that. It’s super fun and fun to film but it’s complicated and takes a lot of time and on TV we don’t have a lot of time.”
Morgan is not the first Heartland star to direct. Chris Potter, who plays Lou and Amy’s father Tim, has directed more than two dozen episodes. But he began directing episodes in the second season of the series, having had directing opportunities written into his contract. Morgan, on the other hand, was known solely as an actor among the cast and crew before her directorial debut in 2020. So it was a daunting prospect at first, she admits.
“That was one of the big things that gave me pause when I decided to try it,” she says. “It was ‘They are not going to want to see me as a director, this crew and actors I’ve worked with so long. Maybe they won’t buy me as a director.’ That definitely gave me pause. But, luckily, it’s actually been a benefit to me to know all these people, to know this show so well. It’s worked in my favour and everyone has been really supportive.”
Morgan admits that after 15 years on the series, she was ready for a new challenge. She was inspired by other directors on the series including Grant Harvey and Bruce McDonald. She also took cues from veteran Dean Bennett, who directed the pilot and dozens of other episodes and is now a producer, and newer additions such as actress Kristin Lehman, who directed episodes in seasons 13 and 15. Actress Melanie Scrofano, who played the titular character in the Alberta-shot series Wynonna Earp, is also directing an episode this season.
In 2016, CBC joined the NFB and Telefilm in taking steps to improve gender parity in Canadian film and television. The Mother Corp. announced that at least half the episodes of Heartland and other CBC favourites such as Murdoch Mysteries would be directed by women.
“I don’t even know how many seasons (in which) we would pretty much only have men and probably only white men for the most part, like 99 per cent white men,” Morgan says. “Then it slowly began to change and there began a 50 per cent female mandate and then there became a certain BIPOC mandate. So it’s changed dramatically.”
Morgan would love to direct episodes for other TV series and has a Toronto-based directing agent, but with her full-time acting gig and a growing family – she has three children including a two-and-a-half-month-old daughter – it’s a matter of finding the time. She is also been working on developing her own feature, a western, for years.
As for her day job, Morgan says fans can expect plenty of twists and character development in Season 16, which kicks off Sunday. Oct. 2. Of course, some fans are still reeling from the most drastic twist in the series’ long history in Season 14. Amy’s husband Ty (played by Graham Wardle) dropped dead a few minutes into the first episode. Wardle had been in the series since the beginning but wanted to leave, so the producers and writers decided to make the departure permanent and play up the melodrama. For some longtime fans, it was a devastating turn.
“It was a big move for the show and some people thought that the show wouldn’t survive it, which is kind of ridiculous,” Morgan says. “The show has totally survived it and I think on shows like this – especially on shows like this where it’s a lot of comfort, it’s a lot of the same characters and tone and similar feel – to have a big change like that is not welcome. But sometimes it’s needed. Sometimes a big change is just what the doctor ordered.”
Wardle is among only a small handful of lead actors who have left the series. For the most part, the series has maintained the same cast for most of its existence, which is a rarity in a 16-year-old show. Part of the main dynamic of Heartland has always been the bond between the Fleming sisters throughout the years. So what is it like calling the shots as director for longtime castmates such as Marshall?
“With Amber, I’m really lucky and happy to say that we have an excellent working relationship,” Morgan says. “We respect each other. We push back, we don’t necessarily take each other’s suggestions right away. We’ll sometimes discuss things and come to some sort of agreement. But we have a great working relationship and it’s really fun and easy to work with her. With a lot of (the cast), it’s that way, too. With some of them, it’s a little trickier. But they are all healthy relationships, they are just all different. Everyone is an individual.”
Season 16 of Heartland begins Sunday, Oct. 2 on CBC.
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hbcsource · 1 year
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@comicconlpool: COMIC CON LIVERPOOL GUEST ANNOUNCEMENT - HELENA BONHAM CARTER Helena Bonham Carter CBE is an English actress. Known for her roles in blockbusters and independent films, particularly period dramas, she has received various awards and nominations, including a British Academy Film Award and an International Emmy Award, in addition to nominations for two Academy Awards, four British Academy Television Awards, five Primetime Emmy Awards, and nine Golden Globe Awards. Helena rose to prominence by playing Lucy Honeychurch in A Room with a View (1985) and the title character in Lady Jane (1986). For her role as Kate Croy in The Wings of the Dove (1997), Bonham Carter received a nomination for the Academy Award for Best Actress, and for her portrayal of Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother in The King's Speech (2010), she won the BAFTA Award for Best Actress in a Supporting Role, and was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress. Her other films include Hamlet (1990), Howards End (1992), Mary Shelley's Frankenstein (1994), Mighty Aphrodite (1995), Fight Club (1999), Wallace & Gromit: The Curse of the Were-Rabbit (2005), the Harry Potter series (2007–2011) as Bellatrix Lestrange, Great Expectations (2012) as Miss Havisham, Les Misérables (2012), Cinderella (2015), Ocean's 8 (2018), and Enola Holmes (2020). Her collaborations with director Tim Burton include Big Fish (2003), Corpse Bride (2005), Charlie and the Chocolate Factory (2005), Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street (2007) as Mrs. Lovett, Alice in Wonderland (2010) as the Red Queen, and Dark Shadows (2012). For her role as children's author Enid Blyton in the BBC Four biographical film Enid (2009), she won the 2010 International Emmy Award for Best Actress and was nominated for the British Academy Television Award for Best Actress. Her other television films include Fatal Deception: Mrs. Lee Harvey Oswald (1993), Live from Baghdad (2002), Toast (2010), and Burton & Taylor (2013). From 2019 to 2020, she portrayed Princess Margaret in seasons three and four of Netflix's The Crown. To get tickets to meet Helena please go to www.comicconventionliverpool.co.uk
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thecrownnet · 1 year
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Emmy Awards 2023: FYC
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“Netflix has just updated its FYC campaign site, giving us the full list of titles they’ve submitted and will campaign for in the forthcoming 75th Primetime Emmy Awards.” (whats-on-netflix) Netflix is submitting The Crown season 5 for the following categories.
FOR YOUR CONSIDERATION 
PRIMETIME EMMY AWARDS
OUTSTANDING DRAMA SERIES
OUTSTANDING LEAD ACTRESS IN A DRAMA SERIES - IMELDA STAUNTON AS QUEEN ELIZABETH II
OUTSTANDING LEAD ACTOR IN A DRAMA SERIES - DOMINIC WEST AS PRINCE CHARLES
OUTSTANDING SUPPORTING ACTRESS IN A DRAMA SERIES - ELIZABETH DEBICKI AS PRINCESS DIANA, and LESLEY MANVILLE AS PRINCESS MARGARET
OUTSTANDING SUPPORTING ACTOR IN A DRAMA SERIES - JONATHAN PRYCE AS PRINCE PHILIP, DUKE OF EDINBURGH, SALIM DAW AS MOHAMED AL FAYED, and JONNY LEE MILLER AS JOHN MAJOR
OUTSTANDING GUEST ACTRESS IN A DRAMA SERIES - CLAIRE FOY AS YOUNG QUEEN ELIZABETH II, VANESSA KIRBY AS YOUNG PRINCESS MARGARET, and NATASCHA MCELHONE AS PENNY KNATCHBULL
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OUTSTANDING GUEST ACTOR IN A DRAMA SERIES - ALEX JENNINGS AS DUKE OF WINDSOR, TIMOTHY DALTON AS PETER TOWNSEND, PRASANNA PUWANARAJAH AS MARTIN BASHIR, and KHALID ABDALLA  AS DODI FAYED
OUTSTANDING DIRECTING FOR A DRAMA SERIES "IPATIEV HOUSE" CHRISTIAN SCHWOCHOW, "GUNPOWDER" ERIK RICHTER STRAND, "MOU MOU" ALEX GABASSI, and "ANNUS HORRIBILIS" MAY EL-TOUKHY
OUTSTANDING WRITING FOR A DRAMA SERIES  "GUNPOWDER" PETER MORGAN
OUTSTANDING CASTING FOR A DRAMA SERIES ROBERT STERNE
OUTSTANDING CINEMATOGRAPHY FOR A SERIES (ONE HOUR) "NO WOMAN’S LAND" BEN WILSON, and "MOU MOU" ADRIANO GOLDMAN (ASC)
OUTSTANDING MUSIC COMPOSITION FOR A SERIES (ORIGINAL DRAMATIC SCORE) MARTIN PHIPPS
OUTSTANDING MUSIC SUPERVISION SARAH BRIDGE
OUTSTANDING PERIOD COSTUMES AMY ROBERTS, SIDONIE ROBERTS, CHRISTOF ROCHE-GORDON
OUTSTANDING PICTURE EDITING FOR A DRAMA SERIES "COUPLE 31" RICHARD GRAHAM, "MOU MOU" DANIEL GREENWAY, "IPATIEV HOUSE" SIMON BRASSE, and "GUNPOWDER" AMY HOUNSELL
OUTSTANDING PRODUCTION DESIGN FOR A NARRATIVE PERIOD OR FANTASY PROGRAM (ONE HOUR OR MORE) MARTIN CHILDS, MARK RAGGETT, ALISON HARVEY
OUTSTANDING SOUND EDITING FOR A COMEDY OR DRAMA SERIES (ONE HOUR) "GUNPOWDER" LEE WALPOLE (MPSE), IAIN EYRE, ANDY KENNEDY, SAOIRSE CHRISTOPHERSON, MATTHEW MEWETT, TOM STEWART, ANNA WRIGHT
OUTSTANDING SOUND MIXING FOR A COMEDY OR DRAMA SERIES (ONE HOUR) "MOU MOU" LEE WALPOLE (MPSE), MARTIN JENSEN, STUART HILLIKER (CAS), JAMES HARRIS
OUTSTANDING SPECIAL VISUAL EFFECTS IN A SINGLE EPISODE BEN TURNER, REECE EWING
OUTSTANDING STUNT COORDINATION FOR A DRAMA SERIES, LIMITED OR ANTHOLOGY SERIES OR MOVIE ANDY BENNETT
*The Crown has received 63 Emmy Nominations and won 21 times for the past four seasons. Claire Foy won twice for Outstanding Lead Actress In A Drama Series - 2018, and Outstanding Guest Actress In A Drama Series - 2021. The show won Outstanding Drama Series - 2021.
** June 15 - 26 Nominations-round voting
*** July 12 Nominations announced.
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heavenboy09 · 2 years
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Happy Birthday 🎂 🥳 🎉 🎈 🎁 🎊 To 1 Of The Most Incredible & Greatest Actors Of Our Times & Has Been Hailed The Face Of Versatility In Acting & 1 Of The Greatest Actora Of His Generation.
Hailing all the way from New Cross, England 🇬🇧
He is an English actor and filmmaker. Known for his versatility and intense acting style, he has received various accolades, including an Academy Award, a Golden Globe Award, and three British Academy Film Awards. His films have grossed over $11 billion worldwide, making him one of the highest-grossing actors of all time.
Born On March 21st, 1958 In New Cross, London.
the son of Leonard Bertram  (1921–1985), a former sailor who also worked as a welder, and Kathleen (née Cheriton; 1919–2018). He said his father was an alcoholic who left the family when He was seven years old. His older sister, Maureen, is an actress better known as Laila Morse; she performed in His directorial debut Nil by Mouth (1997), before taking on her most famous role of Mo Harris in the BBC soap opera EastEnders.
He attended West Greenwich School in Deptford, leaving at the age of 16 to work in a sports shop. He played piano as a child, but he gave up his musical aspirations to pursue an acting career after seeing Malcolm McDowell's performance in the film The Raging Moon (1971). In a 1995 interview with Charlie Rose, he said, "Something about Malcolm just arrested me, and I connected, and I said, 'I wanna do that.'"
He began acting in theatre in 1979 and made his film debut in Remembrance (1982). He continued to follow a stage career in London's Royal Court and was a member of the Royal Shakespeare Company, with credits including Cabaret, Romeo and Juliet, Entertaining Mr Sloane, Saved, The Country Wife and Hamlet. He rose to prominence in British film with his portrayals of Sid Vicious in Sid and Nancy (1986), Joe Orton in Prick Up Your Ears (1987) and Rosencrantz in Rosencrantz & Guildenstern Are Dead (1990), while also attracting attention as the leader of a gang of football hooligans in the television film The Firm (1989). Regarded as a member of the "Brit Pack", he achieved greater recognition as a New York gangster in State of Grace (1990), Lee Harvey Oswald in JFK (1991) and 
He would have gained the greatest recognition of all when he starred in the Most Important Role of a Lifetime
As The Infamous Vampire 🧛‍♂️ In All Of History & Based On The Actual Person In Life but Fictionalised In Novels
Count Dracula
 in 
Bram Stoker's Dracula (1992).
He portrayed the villains in films such as True Romance (1993), The Fifth Element (1997), Air Force One (1997) and The Contender (2000); corrupt DEA agent Norman Stansfield, whom he played in Léon: The Professional (1994), was called one of cinema's best villains. He also played Ludwig van Beethoven in Immortal Beloved (1994) and later appeared in franchise roles such as Sirius Black in the Harry Potter series, 
&
Lieutenant / Commissioner James Gordon in The Dark Knight Trilogy (2005–2012)
Critics never fail to single Him out... he is one of a few truly great living actors—arguably, even, the best." Of his diversity, Yahoo! Movies noted that he had "gained a well-earned reputation as a brilliant chameleon"; the Houston Chronicle dubbed He Is "the face of versatility".He was regarded as one of the greatest actors never nominated for the award.
Please Wish This Distinguished & Devoted Actor Of English 🇬🇧 Filmmaking a Very Happy Birthday 🎂 🥳 🎉 🎈 🎁 🎊
You Know Him & You Already Love Him
The 1
& The Only
MR. GARY LEONARD OLDMAN 🇬🇧
HAPPY 65TH BIRTHDAY 🎂 🥳 🎉 🎈 🎁 🎊 TO YOU MR. OLDMAN & HERE'S TO MANY MORE YEARS TO COME.
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lindsaywesker · 2 years
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Good morning! I hope you slept well and feel rested? Currently sitting at my desk, in my study, attired only in my blue towelling robe, enjoying my first cuppa of the day. Welcome to Too Much Information Tuesday!
Sir Isaac Newton died a virgin.
It is illegal to mispronounce "Arkansas" while in Arkansas.
Some penguins are prostitutes, offering sex in exchange for pebbles.
Once you fall in love, there’s no going back to just being friends.
A man once tried to rob a bank after paying $500 to a ‘wizard’ to make him invisible.
Cameron Diaz and Snoop Dogg used to go to the same high school and she bought weed from him.
Squeezing a man's testicles can kill him, due to the release of too much adrenaline.
In 2018, Munafri Arifuddin ran unopposed for mayor of Makassar, Indonesia. He lost the election to "none of the above".
82% teens don’t ring the doorbell. They text or call to say they’re outside.
Australian koalas are in danger of extinction because over half of them have chlamydia.
A man named Walter Summerford was struck by lightning three times in his life. After his death, his gravestone was also struck.
Emotional pain lasts for 10 to 20 minutes, anything longer is actually self-inflicted by over-thinking, making things worse.
In 2020, two men were arrested in Florida while carrying bags full of drugs with the words ‘Bag Full of Drugs’ written on them.
When a potential meteorite turns out to be just a rock, geologists call it a 'meteorwrong’.
The New York Museum of Modern Art has had a Mondrian painting hanging upside down for 75 years. They plan to keep it hanging as is.
In China, it’s illegal to reincarnate without filling in a government Reincarnation Application form.
The most recent winner of the Bookseller/Diagram Prize for Oddest Title Of The Year was "Is Superman Circumcised?" by Roy Schwartz.
The only difference between fog and mist is visibility: if you can’t see more than 100 metres ahead, it’s fog, not mist.
One of the best feelings comes when you realize that you're perfectly happy without the people you thought you needed most.
The sentence "Are you as bored as I am?" can be read backwards and still makes sense.
Vincent Van Gogh died penniless. He only sold one painting during his lifetime, 'The Red Vineyard'.
When you kiss someone passionately, their DNA will stay in your mouth for at least an hour afterwards.
At a restaurant, wash your hands after ordering. The menu is generally the dirtiest thing in a restaurant!
When the KGB tried to blackmail Indonesian President Sukarno with a sex tape, he is said to have been delighted and asked for more copies to be made.
When restaurants play classical music in the background, diners spend 10% more per person. When they play pop music, diners spend 10% less.
In 2020, a French man was awarded €40,000 by a court because they determined his job was so incredibly boring it had damaged his mental health.
John Harvey Kellogg, the co-creator of Corn Flakes, fostered 42 children but was so repelled by sex he never consummated his marriage.
Some of the stranger jobs listed in the 1881 UK census were ‘Turnip Shepherd’, ‘Gymnast To House Painter’, ‘Electric Bath Attendant’, ‘Examiner Of Underclothing’ and ‘Running About’.
According to a historical anecdote, a Neapolitan nobleman once fought 14 duels to prove that Dante was a better poet than Ariosto. At his deathbed, he confessed that he had read neither of them.
In 2010, a debate between the two candidates for prime minister of Australia had to be rescheduled because it conflicted with the final of ‘Masterchef’.
In 1986, two Russian pilots got into an argument over whether one could land the plane blind. Determined to prove he could, the main pilot shut the curtains and proceeded to land without vision. He missed the runaway, flipped the plane and killed 70 passengers.
In 2013, a 16-year-old girl cheated death and survived the tragic Asiana plane crash at San Francisco Airport. However, moments after the crash, she was run over and killed by a responding fire truck arriving at the scene.
To avoid US libel suits, authors will sometimes make sure to note that a fictionalized person has a small penis. For libel, it must be obvious the real person and character are the same. Men rarely want to prove in court that they are obviously the character with a small penis.
In 1940, a live broadcast of a BBC radio production of ‘Hamlet’ was so far behind the schedule that, before most of the characters had died, an announcer had to step in and say, “And there we must leave them ...”
Contrary to popular belief, Olympic athletes in ancient Greece didn't compete completely naked, they wore something called a kynodesme, a cord or string or sometimes a leather strip that was to prevent exposure in public and to restrict untethered movement of the penis during sporting competition.
Okay, that’s enough information for one day. Have a tremendous and tumultuous Tuesday! I love you all.
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sunaleisocial · 2 months
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Knight Science Journalism Program at MIT announces 2024-25 fellows
New Post has been published on https://sunalei.org/news/knight-science-journalism-program-at-mit-announces-2024-25-fellows/
Knight Science Journalism Program at MIT announces 2024-25 fellows
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The Knight Science Journalism Program at MIT (KSJ) will welcome 12 fellows in August. In addition to 10 Academic-Year Fellows, KSJ welcomes the inaugural Fellow for Advancing Science Journalism in Africa and the Middle East, and co-hosts a Sharon Begley Fellow with Boston-based publication STAT.
The Knight Science Journalism Program, established at MIT in 1983, is the world’s leading science journalism fellowship program. Fellows come to Cambridge, Massachusetts, to explore science, technology, and the craft of journalism in depth.
The class of 2025 represents the expansive media environment of today’s journalism. Together, the group has award-winning experience in a wide array of journalistic media, reaching the public through podcasts, documentaries, photographs, books, YouTube, TV, and radio.
“It is a privilege to welcome journalists to our programs who are so deeply aware of the importance of quality science coverage, who are eager to improve their craft, and who will continue to contribute positively to the public understanding of science once they leave here,” says Deborah Blum, KSJ director.
The fellows will spend their time in Cambridge studying at MIT and other leading research universities in the Boston area. They’ll also attend seminars by leading scientists and storytellers, take part in hands-on classes and workshops, and visit world-renowned research laboratories. Each journalist will also pursue an independent research project, focused on a topic of their choice, that advances science journalism in the public interest.
“Many of the biggest headlines of our era derive from science and technology — and the way we apply it to the world around us,” says Blum. “Our fellowship program recognizes the dedication and understanding required for stories that do justice to these issues. We bring fellows to MIT to provide them with an opportunity to enrich and deepen that understanding.”
Fabiana Cambricoli is an award-winning Brazilian journalist based in São Paulo, working as a senior health correspondent for Estadão newspaper, with a focus on in-depth and investigative stories. Before that, she contributed to major media outlets like Grupo Folha and was a fellow at ProPublica. She earned her bachelor’s degree in journalism and a master’s degree in public health from the University of São Paulo, receiving over 10 awards and grants for her work. Cambricoli’s reporting uncovered government negligence during epidemics, highlighted health disparities, and investigated funding behind scientific disinformation. She also co-founded Fiquem Sabendo, a nonprofit promoting transparency and supporting journalists in accessing public information.
Emily Foxhall is the climate reporter at The Texas Tribune, where she focuses on the clean energy transition and threats from climate change. She joined the Tribune in 2022 after two years at The Los Angeles Times and its community papers and seven years at The Houston Chronicle, where she covered the suburbs, Texas features, and the environment. She has won multiple Texas Managing Editors awards, including for community service journalism, and was part of the team named a 2018 finalist for the Pulitzer Prize for coverage of Hurricane Harvey. She is a Yale University graduate.
Ahmad Gamal Saad-Eddin is a science journalist based in Egypt. He graduated from the faculty of medicine at Zagazig University in Egypt, and worked as a psychiatrist before leaving medicine and beginning a career in science journalism, first as a head of the science section in Manshoor.com, then as an editor at Nature Arabic Edition. He is currently working as a script writer and the fact-checker of “El-Daheeh,” the leading science YouTube show in the Arab region. His writings have also appeared in several outlets including Scientific American Arabic Edition and Almanassa News. His main writing interest is the interaction between science, its history, and the human experience.
Bryce Hoye is a journalist with the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation in Winnipeg, Manitoba. He covers a range of topics, from courts and crime to climate, conservation, and more. His stories appear on TV, radio, and online, and he has guest-hosted CBC Manitoba’s “Weekend Morning Show” and “Radio Noon.” He has produced national documentaries for CBC Radio, including for the weekly science program “Quirks & Quarks.” He has won several Radio Television Digital News Association national and regional awards. He previously worked in wildlife biology monitoring birds for several field seasons with Environment and Climate Change Canada.
Jori Lewis writes narrative nonfiction that explores how people interact with their environments. Her reports and essays have been published in The Atlantic Magazine, Orion Magazine, and Emergence Magazine, among others, and she is a senior editor of Adi Magazine, a literary magazine of global politics. In 2022, she published her first book, “Slaves for Peanuts: A Story of Conquest, Liberation, and a Crop That Changed History,” which was supported by the prestigious Whiting Creative Nonfiction Grant and a Silvers Grant for Work in Progress. It also won a James Beard Media Award and the Harriet Tubman Prize.
Yarden Michaeli is a journalist serving as the science and climate editor of Haaretz, Israel’s sole paper of record. During his 10 years as a writer, reporter, and editor at Haaretz, he became best known for editing the newspaper’s science vertical during the Covid-19 pandemic and founding its climate desk. Among other things, Yarden served as Haaretz’s first reporter on the ground during the war in Ukraine, covered the war in Gaza, and was dispatched to report on the forefront of the climate crisis during storm Daniel in Greece. Yarden was born in Israel and he is based in Tel Aviv. He has a bachelor’s degree in American studies and economy from the Humboldt University in Berlin and he is a member of the Oxford Climate Journalism Network.
Tsvangirayi Mukwazhi is a two-time winner of the CNN Africa photojournalist award. He is currently with the Associated Press in Zimbabwe. Previously, he was the chief photographer at the Associated Newspapers of Zimbabwe. With an eye for detail and a passion for multi-format storytelling, he has managed to capture the essence of humanity in his photographs across Africa, Europe, and Asia. He instilled his dedication to his craft and hard work in other photojournalists in his past teaching role with the Norwegian Friedskorp, World Press Foundation in the Netherlands, the Pathshala Institute in South-East Asia, and in his pioneering gender and images work with SAMSO across the southern and East African region.
Aaron Scott is an award-winning multimedia journalist and the creator of the podcast Timber Wars, which was the first audio work to win the MIT Knight Science Journalism Program’s Victor K. McElheny Award, along with the National Headliner Award for Best Narrative Podcast and others. Most recently, he was a host of NPR’s science podcast “Short Wave.” Before that, he spent several years exploring the natural wonders of the Pacific Northwest as a reporter/producer for Oregon Public Broadcasting’s television show “Oregon Field Guide.” His stories have appeared on NPR, Radiolab, This American Life, Outside Podcast, Reveal, and elsewhere.
Evan Urquhart is a freelance journalist whose work has focused on science and medical questions relating to the transgender community. Based in Charlottesville, Virginia, his stories have appeared on Slate, Politico, the Atlantic, Vanity Fair, and many other outlets nationwide. In 2022, Evan founded Assigned Media, a news site devoted to fact-checking misinformation relating to trans issues. He has appeared as an expert on propaganda and misinformation relating to trans issues on radio shows and podcasts including NPR’s “St. Louis on the Air,” Slate’s “Outward,” The American Prospect’s “Left Anchor,” “What the Trans?,” and “It Could Happen Here.”
Jane Zhang is a technology reporter and the China representative of Bloomberg’s global AI squad based in Hong Kong. Over the years she has covered the Chinese internet and Beijing’s tensions with the United States over tech supremacy before jumping feet-first into reporting China’s historical crackdown on its largest corporations, including Alibaba. She has won awards for extensive on-the-ground reporting and exclusive interviews with industry heavyweights like Huawei founder Ren Zhengfei. Her current focus is on covering the incipient AI technology and the regulations around it. Zhang holds a master’s degree in journalism from the University of Hong Kong.
Sharon Muzaki joins KSJ as the 2024 recipient of the Fellowship for Advancing Science Journalism in Africa and the Middle East. She has been with UGStandard Media since 2019, reporting on the environment and climate change in Uganda. Muzaki graduated from Makerere University in 2019 with a degree in journalism and communication. While working for UGStandard Media, she has attended numerous trainings at the Aga Khan University Graduate School of Media and Communications, honing skills in storytelling, data journalism, and mobile storytelling. Muzaki will be the first recipient of the Africa and Middle East Fellowship. The fall semester fellowship, created in honor of the pioneering Egyptian science journalist Mohammed Yahia, is funded by Springer Nature. It is designed to enrich the training of a journalist working in Africa or the Middle East so they can contribute to a culture of high-quality science and health journalism in those regions.
Anil Oza is co-hosted by KSJ and Boston-based publication STAT as the 2024-25 Sharon Begley Science Reporting Fellow. Oza earned a bachelor’s degree in science from Cornell University, where he reported for the campus newspaper, The Cornell Daily Sun. Oza has interned at Nature, Science News, and NPR’s “Short Wave.” Oza also interned at STAT during summer 2023, helping produce the health-equity-focused podcast, “Color Code.” Oza will be the fifth recipient of the Sharon Begley Fellowship. This fellowship pays tribute to Sharon Begley’s outstanding career while paving the way for the next generation of science journalists and fostering better coverage of science that is relevant to all people.
More than 400 leading science journalists from six continents have graduated from the Knight Science Journalism Program at MIT. KSJ also publishes an award-winning science magazine, Undark, and offers programming to journalists on topics ranging from science editing to fact-checking.
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jcmarchi · 2 months
Text
Knight Science Journalism Program at MIT announces 2024-25 fellows
New Post has been published on https://thedigitalinsider.com/knight-science-journalism-program-at-mit-announces-2024-25-fellows/
Knight Science Journalism Program at MIT announces 2024-25 fellows
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The Knight Science Journalism Program at MIT (KSJ) will welcome 12 fellows in August. In addition to 10 Academic-Year Fellows, KSJ welcomes the inaugural Fellow for Advancing Science Journalism in Africa and the Middle East, and co-hosts a Sharon Begley Fellow with Boston-based publication STAT.
The Knight Science Journalism Program, established at MIT in 1983, is the world’s leading science journalism fellowship program. Fellows come to Cambridge, Massachusetts, to explore science, technology, and the craft of journalism in depth.
The class of 2025 represents the expansive media environment of today’s journalism. Together, the group has award-winning experience in a wide array of journalistic media, reaching the public through podcasts, documentaries, photographs, books, YouTube, TV, and radio.
“It is a privilege to welcome journalists to our programs who are so deeply aware of the importance of quality science coverage, who are eager to improve their craft, and who will continue to contribute positively to the public understanding of science once they leave here,” says Deborah Blum, KSJ director.
The fellows will spend their time in Cambridge studying at MIT and other leading research universities in the Boston area. They’ll also attend seminars by leading scientists and storytellers, take part in hands-on classes and workshops, and visit world-renowned research laboratories. Each journalist will also pursue an independent research project, focused on a topic of their choice, that advances science journalism in the public interest.
“Many of the biggest headlines of our era derive from science and technology — and the way we apply it to the world around us,” says Blum. “Our fellowship program recognizes the dedication and understanding required for stories that do justice to these issues. We bring fellows to MIT to provide them with an opportunity to enrich and deepen that understanding.”
Fabiana Cambricoli is an award-winning Brazilian journalist based in São Paulo, working as a senior health correspondent for Estadão newspaper, with a focus on in-depth and investigative stories. Before that, she contributed to major media outlets like Grupo Folha and was a fellow at ProPublica. She earned her bachelor’s degree in journalism and a master’s degree in public health from the University of São Paulo, receiving over 10 awards and grants for her work. Cambricoli’s reporting uncovered government negligence during epidemics, highlighted health disparities, and investigated funding behind scientific disinformation. She also co-founded Fiquem Sabendo, a nonprofit promoting transparency and supporting journalists in accessing public information.
Emily Foxhall is the climate reporter at The Texas Tribune, where she focuses on the clean energy transition and threats from climate change. She joined the Tribune in 2022 after two years at The Los Angeles Times and its community papers and seven years at The Houston Chronicle, where she covered the suburbs, Texas features, and the environment. She has won multiple Texas Managing Editors awards, including for community service journalism, and was part of the team named a 2018 finalist for the Pulitzer Prize for coverage of Hurricane Harvey. She is a Yale University graduate.
Ahmad Gamal Saad-Eddin is a science journalist based in Egypt. He graduated from the faculty of medicine at Zagazig University in Egypt, and worked as a psychiatrist before leaving medicine and beginning a career in science journalism, first as a head of the science section in Manshoor.com, then as an editor at Nature Arabic Edition. He is currently working as a script writer and the fact-checker of “El-Daheeh,” the leading science YouTube show in the Arab region. His writings have also appeared in several outlets including Scientific American Arabic Edition and Almanassa News. His main writing interest is the interaction between science, its history, and the human experience.
Bryce Hoye is a journalist with the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation in Winnipeg, Manitoba. He covers a range of topics, from courts and crime to climate, conservation, and more. His stories appear on TV, radio, and online, and he has guest-hosted CBC Manitoba’s “Weekend Morning Show” and “Radio Noon.” He has produced national documentaries for CBC Radio, including for the weekly science program “Quirks & Quarks.” He has won several Radio Television Digital News Association national and regional awards. He previously worked in wildlife biology monitoring birds for several field seasons with Environment and Climate Change Canada.
Jori Lewis writes narrative nonfiction that explores how people interact with their environments. Her reports and essays have been published in The Atlantic Magazine, Orion Magazine, and Emergence Magazine, among others, and she is a senior editor of Adi Magazine, a literary magazine of global politics. In 2022, she published her first book, “Slaves for Peanuts: A Story of Conquest, Liberation, and a Crop That Changed History,” which was supported by the prestigious Whiting Creative Nonfiction Grant and a Silvers Grant for Work in Progress. It also won a James Beard Media Award and the Harriet Tubman Prize.
Yarden Michaeli is a journalist serving as the science and climate editor of Haaretz, Israel’s sole paper of record. During his 10 years as a writer, reporter, and editor at Haaretz, he became best known for editing the newspaper’s science vertical during the Covid-19 pandemic and founding its climate desk. Among other things, Yarden served as Haaretz’s first reporter on the ground during the war in Ukraine, covered the war in Gaza, and was dispatched to report on the forefront of the climate crisis during storm Daniel in Greece. Yarden was born in Israel and he is based in Tel Aviv. He has a bachelor’s degree in American studies and economy from the Humboldt University in Berlin and he is a member of the Oxford Climate Journalism Network.
Tsvangirayi Mukwazhi is a two-time winner of the CNN Africa photojournalist award. He is currently with the Associated Press in Zimbabwe. Previously, he was the chief photographer at the Associated Newspapers of Zimbabwe. With an eye for detail and a passion for multi-format storytelling, he has managed to capture the essence of humanity in his photographs across Africa, Europe, and Asia. He instilled his dedication to his craft and hard work in other photojournalists in his past teaching role with the Norwegian Friedskorp, World Press Foundation in the Netherlands, the Pathshala Institute in South-East Asia, and in his pioneering gender and images work with SAMSO across the southern and East African region.
Aaron Scott is an award-winning multimedia journalist and the creator of the podcast Timber Wars, which was the first audio work to win the MIT Knight Science Journalism Program’s Victor K. McElheny Award, along with the National Headliner Award for Best Narrative Podcast and others. Most recently, he was a host of NPR’s science podcast “Short Wave.” Before that, he spent several years exploring the natural wonders of the Pacific Northwest as a reporter/producer for Oregon Public Broadcasting’s television show “Oregon Field Guide.” His stories have appeared on NPR, Radiolab, This American Life, Outside Podcast, Reveal, and elsewhere.
Evan Urquhart is a freelance journalist whose work has focused on science and medical questions relating to the transgender community. Based in Charlottesville, Virginia, his stories have appeared on Slate, Politico, the Atlantic, Vanity Fair, and many other outlets nationwide. In 2022, Evan founded Assigned Media, a news site devoted to fact-checking misinformation relating to trans issues. He has appeared as an expert on propaganda and misinformation relating to trans issues on radio shows and podcasts including NPR’s “St. Louis on the Air,” Slate’s “Outward,” The American Prospect’s “Left Anchor,” “What the Trans?,” and “It Could Happen Here.”
Jane Zhang is a technology reporter and the China representative of Bloomberg’s global AI squad based in Hong Kong. Over the years she has covered the Chinese internet and Beijing’s tensions with the United States over tech supremacy before jumping feet-first into reporting China’s historical crackdown on its largest corporations, including Alibaba. She has won awards for extensive on-the-ground reporting and exclusive interviews with industry heavyweights like Huawei founder Ren Zhengfei. Her current focus is on covering the incipient AI technology and the regulations around it. Zhang holds a master’s degree in journalism from the University of Hong Kong.
Sharon Muzaki joins KSJ as the 2024 recipient of the Fellowship for Advancing Science Journalism in Africa and the Middle East. She has been with UGStandard Media since 2019, reporting on the environment and climate change in Uganda. Muzaki graduated from Makerere University in 2019 with a degree in journalism and communication. While working for UGStandard Media, she has attended numerous trainings at the Aga Khan University Graduate School of Media and Communications, honing skills in storytelling, data journalism, and mobile storytelling. Muzaki will be the first recipient of the Africa and Middle East Fellowship. The fall semester fellowship, created in honor of the pioneering Egyptian science journalist Mohammed Yahia, is funded by Springer Nature. It is designed to enrich the training of a journalist working in Africa or the Middle East so they can contribute to a culture of high-quality science and health journalism in those regions.
Anil Oza is co-hosted by KSJ and Boston-based publication STAT as the 2024-25 Sharon Begley Science Reporting Fellow. Oza earned a bachelor’s degree in science from Cornell University, where he reported for the campus newspaper, The Cornell Daily Sun. Oza has interned at Nature, Science News, and NPR’s “Short Wave.” Oza also interned at STAT during summer 2023, helping produce the health-equity-focused podcast, “Color Code.” Oza will be the fifth recipient of the Sharon Begley Fellowship. This fellowship pays tribute to Sharon Begley’s outstanding career while paving the way for the next generation of science journalists and fostering better coverage of science that is relevant to all people.
More than 400 leading science journalists from six continents have graduated from the Knight Science Journalism Program at MIT. KSJ also publishes an award-winning science magazine, Undark, and offers programming to journalists on topics ranging from science editing to fact-checking.
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lboogie1906 · 3 months
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Willadele Givens (uly 1, 1962) in Chicago is a comedian, actress, and writer. Beginning her career during the late–1980s comedy, her television appearances include The Hughleys, Moesha, The Parkers, Comedy Central Presents, Def Comedy Jam, Russell Simmons Presents Def Poetry, Martin, Tracey Takes On... and The Steve Harvey Show.
She was the 1989 Grand Prize Winner of the Crown Royal Comedy Contest held at the Regal Theater in Chicago. The next year, she was a finalist in the Miller Lite Comedy Search, which was won by Bernie Mac. Her movie appearances include The Players Club and Beauty Shop. She and fellow African American female comedians Mo’Nique, Laura Hayes, and Sommore were the stars of The Queens of Comedy tour, filmed and shown on Showtime and released on DVD. In 2001, she hosted The Source’s Hip Hip Awards Preshow which was shown on UPN. On September 7, 2018, she was featured on Kanye West’s hit single, “I Love It”, featuring rapper Lil Pump; they performed the song on Saturday Night Live on September 29, 2018, however, she was not performing on the stage and was featured on the screen, wearing the same outfit as she wore in the music video. #africanhistory365 #africanexcellence
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brookstonalmanac · 5 months
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Events 4.16 (after 1940)
1941 – World War II: The Italian-German Tarigo convoy is attacked and destroyed by British ships. 1941 – World War II: The Nazi-affiliated Ustaše is put in charge of the Independent State of Croatia by the Axis powers after Operation 25 is effected. 1942 – King George VI awarded the George Cross to the people of Malta in appreciation of their heroism. 1943 – Albert Hofmann accidentally discovers the hallucinogenic effects of the research drug LSD. He intentionally takes the drug three days later on April 19. 1944 – World War II: Allied forces start bombing Belgrade, killing about 1,100 people. This bombing fell on the Orthodox Christian Easter. 1945 – World War II: The Red Army begins the final assault on German forces around Berlin, with nearly one million troops fighting in the Battle of the Seelow Heights. 1945 – The United States Army liberates Nazi Sonderlager (high security) prisoner-of-war camp Oflag IV-C (better known as Colditz). 1945 – More than 7,000 die when the German transport ship Goya is sunk by a Soviet submarine. 1947 – An explosion on board a freighter in port causes the city of Texas City, Texas, United States, to catch fire, killing almost 600 people. 1947 – Bernard Baruch first applies the term "Cold War" to describe the relationship between the United States and the Soviet Union. 1948 – The Organization of European Economic Co-operation is formed.[8] 1961 – In a nationally broadcast speech, Cuban leader Fidel Castro declares that he is a Marxist–Leninist and that Cuba is going to adopt Communism. 1963 – U.S. civil rights campaigner Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. writes his open letter from Birmingham Jail, sometimes known as "The Negro Is Your Brother", while incarcerated in Birmingham, Alabama, for protesting against segregation. 1972 – Apollo program: The launch of Apollo 16 from Cape Canaveral, Florida. 2001 – India and Bangladesh begin a five-day border conflict, but are unable to resolve the disputes about their border. 2003 – The Treaty of Accession is signed in Athens admitting ten new member states to the European Union. 2007 – Virginia Tech shooting: Seung-Hui Cho guns down 32 people and injures 17 before committing suicide. 2008 – The U.S. Supreme Court rules in the Baze v. Rees decision that execution by lethal injection does not violate the Eighth Amendment ban against cruel and unusual punishment. 2012 – The trial for Anders Behring Breivik, the perpetrator of the 2011 Norway attacks, begins in Oslo, Norway. 2012 – The Pulitzer Prize winners were announced, it was the first time since 1977 that no book won the Fiction Prize. 2013 – A 7.8-magnitude earthquake strikes Sistan and Baluchestan Province, Iran, killing at least 35 people and injuring 117 others. 2013 – The 2013 Baga massacre is started when Boko Haram militants engage government soldiers in Baga. 2014 – The South Korean ferry MV Sewol capsizes and sinks near Jindo Island, killing 304 passengers and crew and leading to widespread criticism of the South Korean government, media, and shipping authorities. 2016 – Ecuador's worst earthquake in nearly 40 years kills 676 and injures 6,274. 2018 – The New York Times and the New Yorker win the Pulitzer Prize for Public Service for breaking news of the Harvey Weinstein sexual abuse scandal.
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crowdvscritic · 8 months
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round up // NOVEMBER 23 + DECEMBER 23 + JANUARY 24: CROWD vs. CRITIC vs. CHRISTMAS!
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November and December push me to the limit—how many movies can I fit in before the end of the calendar year? In 2023 (plus a few bonus days), the answer was more than 130 new releases. And who wants to skip all of their favorite Christmas movies? Because I extend my holiday viewing into January, I fit in almost 90 this year, adding a few more to my all-time must-watch list. Once the Oscar noms were announced, I was already back to my usual shenanigans and had watched my 400th unique movie on Turner Classic Movies. Whether these statistics are cool or pathetic (erm, don’t tell me), I’m grateful for the slowness of Dump-uary and the depth that comes with thinking about the same Oscar-nominated films for several weeks. (Too bad we need to revisit Melissa Villaseñor’s Oscars snub song from SNL.)
To help sum up these three packed months, I’m resurrecting Crowd vs. Critic vs. Christmas: five crowd-pleasers, five critic picks, and five Christmas treats. Who says you can’t make these holiday recommendations part of your February entertainment?
Holiday Crowd-Pleasers
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1. SNL Round Up
Studio 8H is making up for lost time after those strikes: 
“Question Quest” (4906 with Emma Stone)
“Beep Beep” (4907 with Adam Driver) - #SoMidwest
“Weekend Update: Chloe Fineman’s Save the Last Dance Holiday Gift” (4907)
“Tiny A** Bag” (4907)
“Christmas Awards Cold Open” (4908 with Kate McKinnon)
"North Pole News: Killer Whale Attack” (4908)
“ABBA Christmas” (4908)
“Yankee Swap” (4908)
“Please Don't Destroy - Roast” (4910 with Dakota Johnson) - As one who still has yet to understand the appeal of the PDD guys, this resonated with me
“The Barry Gibb Talk Show: 2024 Election” (4910)
“Weekend Update: A Guy Named Ethan on the 2024 Oscars Snubs” (4910) - I am...probably only a few years away from turning into Ethan?
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2. Triple Feature - Big City Crime Thrillers: No Way Out (1987) + Cop Land (1997) + Widows (2018)
The stars aligned on all of these! In No Way Out (Crowd: 9/10 // Critic: 8/10), Kevin Costner is assigned to investigate the murder of his secret lover (Sean Young) in Washington D.C. The twist? The person who assigned him the case was also her lover, Secretary of Defense Gene Hackman. In Cop Land (9/10 // 7.5/10), Sylvester Stallone sheriffs a New Jersey town that houses a corrupt batch of New York City cops (including Harvey Keitel, Ray Liotta, and Robert Patrick) that Robert De Niro is investigating. In Widows (8.5/10 // 8.5/10), Viola Davis, Elizabeth Debicki, Cynthia Erivo, and Michelle Rodriguez are completing the heist that killed their husbands (including Liam Neeson) in a corrupt Chicago run by Robert Duvall, Colin Farrell, Brian Tyree Henry, and Daniel Kaluuya. All are twisty, gritty, and thrilling.
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3. Godzilla Minus One (2023)
Oh no, there goes Tokyo—but at least it’s going to a spectacle as fun and well-crafted as this one. Crowd: 8.5/10 // Critic: 7/10
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4. Double Feature - ‘90s Matt Damon Dramas: School Ties (1992) + The Rainmaker (1997)
Because Matt Damon has always been good! Though he’s not always been the good guy: In School Ties (Crowd: 8.5/10 // Critic: 8.5/10), Brendan Fraser must hide his Jewish identity to survive at a prep school in the ‘50s, and bullies like Damon are who he’s most afraid of. In The Rainmaker (9/10 // 8.5/10), Damon is the good guy as a baby-faced lawyer who wants to protect Claire Danes, Teresa Wright, and Mary Kay Place from villains like slick lawyer Jon Voight. Here’s hoping Damon has another coming-of-age movie (as a teacher) and legal thriller in his future.
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5. The Jerk (1979)
Not every moment of this movie would fly if made today, but Steve Martin’s episodic adventures in his first journey away from home gave me some of my biggest laughs in months. Crowd: 9.5/10 // Critic: 8/10
More Holiday Crowd-Pleasers: Three Men and a Little Lady (1990) reminds us how much fun it is to let three charismatic movie stars (Ted Danson, Steve Guttenberg, and Tom Selleck) cook // The Mrs. Doubtfire National Tour is fluffy fun // Maggie Moore(s) (2023) is a true crime story that makes me wish Tina Fey and Jon Hamm could become the new Myrna Loy and William Powell // Quiz Lady (2023) lets Will Ferrell live out his Alex Trebek dreams // John Mulaney in Concert Tour is making me count down till his next special is released to get memes about his grandfather, his bus driver, and his son // Reacher Season 2 is the perfect action show to watch with my dad // I’m not sure if Man of the Year (2006) was prescient about the future of politics or if it just understood human nature well enough to anticipate the populist movement and election fraud conversations we’re having today, but this Robin-Williams-as-Jon-Stewart comedy is underrated // The real-world implications of V for Vendetta (2005) are…confusing, but this literary-inspired adventure is still thrilling // Desperado (1995) is an over-the-top, shoot-'em-up Western
Holiday Critic Picks
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1. The Best of 2023
2023: a year of products, greed, put-upon employees, and artificial intelligence—and not just in the actors’ and writers’ strikes! It was also a great year for movies, which is why I couldn’t narrow down my list to just 10. Read my top 10 picks for 2023 movies, as well as 28 honorable mentions at ZekeFilm, and then check out the accompanying list on Letterboxd.
I also dug deeper into some of the films mentioned in my Best of 2023 in these reviews:
The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds & Snakes - ZekeFilm review
Maestro - ZekeFilm review
Priscilla -  ZekeFilm review, KMOV review, Do You Like Apples discussion, updated Letterboxd Sofia Coppola rankings
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2. Double Feature - New Baseball Documentaries: It Ain’t Over (2022) + The League (2023)
I am not a Yankees fan, so who would have guessed that the Yogi Berra documentary It Ain’t Over (Crowd: 8/10 // Critic: 8.5/10) would make me cry? And my baseball history knowledge always has room for improvement, so The League (8/10 // 9/10) is a phenomenal fix to many of my blind spots. Both are now inducted in my Baseball Movie Hall of Fame.
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3. Triple Billing - Come From Away + Tina: The Tina Turner Musical + Funny Girl National Tours
Looking for a true story turned into an excellent musical? Try Come From Away, which captures the chaos of flights rerouted on 9/11 with the pathos you expect (and the comedy you don’t). Or try Tina: The Tina Turner Musical, which is one of the best—if not the best—jukebox musical I’ve seen because the songs are integrated into the story instead of just as a musical revue of a a well-known career. Or catch Funny Girl, which captures comedienne Fanny Brice’s life with the help of a powerhouse singer channeling Barbra Streisand’s powers. Better yet, I recommend not skipping any of them when they come to town if you can swing it.
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4. Happiness Falls by Angie Kim (2023)
What do you do when your dad goes missing in the middle of a global pandemic and the only one who was with him when he disappeared is your non-verbal brother? That’s the central mystery of Angie Kim’s latest novel. Instead of an edge-of-your-seat-thriller, it’s a story that propels us forward with the questions that plague its characters.
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5. Hollywood Victory: The Movies, Stars, and Stories of World War II by Christian Blauvelt (2021)
The Turner Classic Movies Library has yet to miss. Hollywood Victory doesn’t just provide an in-depth overview of Hollywood from 1933 to 1945. It’s an exploration of Hollywood’s inextricable relationship with American politics, its contributions that helped the Allies win the war, and a unusual but informative lens of movies and the war itself. It’s also a long set of additions to my watchlist—of the 260+ films referenced, I’ve only seen a quarter. Thank goodness for TCM and a DVR with unlimited space!
More Holiday Critic Picks: American Symphony, Chevalier, Fallen Leaves, Freud’s Last Session, and Master Gardener were all films in consideration for my Best of 2023 // Wes Anderson’s Roald Dahl short film adaptations Poison, The Rat Catcher, The Swan, and The Wonderful Story of Henry Sugar (2023) are bite-sized, beautifully manicured delights // Debbie Reynolds paves the way the way for Kathy Bates’s Titanic role with her charismatic starring piece in the musical The Unsinkable Molly Brown (1964) // Barbara Stanwyck is wonderful as always in the melodrama All I Desire (1953) // Hail the Conquering Hero (1944) is filled with some of Preston Sturges’s most fun mixups and hijinks
Holiday Treats
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1. Ken The EP by Ryan Gosling and Mark Ronson
I don’t care if these are barely Christmas songs—let’s give Ryan Gosling seasonal updates of “I’m Just Ken” for all of 2024!
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2. Mixed Nuts (1994)
Hot take: Steve Martin has not been in enough rom-coms. A kookier—but nonetheless delightful—brand of Nora Ephron stars Martin and Rita Wilson as co-workers at a crisis hotline who are clearly meant for each other. If only they—and Madeline Kahn, Juliette Lewis, Adam Sandler, Liev Schreiber, and Garry Shandling— could get out of their own way. Crowd: 7.5/10 // Critic: 6.5/10  
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3. Fitzwilly (1967)
Christmas Ocean’s Eleven! Dick Van Dyke is as charming as ever and the vibes are as ‘60s as ever as he tries to pull off a heist at Gimbels on Christmas Eve. Crowd: 8.5/10 // Critic: 8/10
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4. Metropolitan (1990)
Before Chris Eigeman was Jason Stiles on Gilmore Girls, he was essentially playing the same character in Whit Stillman’s comedy riff on The Great Gatsby. A young, bougie group is attempting to survive debutante season (also the Christmas season), debating the pros and cons of wealth and falling in and out of romance. Crowd: 8/10 // Critic: 9/10
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5. The Miracle of Morgan’s Creek (1944)
Hollywood Victory informed me I’m not the only who can’t believe this was allowed to play for audiences in 1944! Betty Hutton marries a soldier on a whim, but the next morning she can’t remember which one. Her BFF with an unrequited crush (Eddie Bracken) is the only one who can help her figure out who her husband—and the father of her child—is before the scandal gets out and destroys her reputation. Because this is a Preston Sturges feature, it’s actually a hilarious quest. Crowd: 8.5/10 // Critic: 9/10
More Christmas Treats: Klaus (2019) is a hidden gem on Netflix // Okay, the ick factor in Susan Slept Here (1954) is real, but Dick Powell and Debbie Reynolds are just so darn charming! // 8-Bit Christmas (2021) is a better-than-it-needed-to-be update of A Christmas Story featuring a Nintendo instead of a BB gun // How did I never see Home Alone 2: Lost in New York (1992) all the way through before this year? Once I realized I’d missed some scenes in my umpteen cable watches over the years, it shot up on my John Hughes rankings // Pocketful of Miracles (1961) is a delightful Cinderella tale that proves Bette Davis always had it 
Also this Holiday Season…
I reviewed even more new movies, including Next Goal Wins (ZekeFilm), The Marvels (KMOV), and the new Mean Girls musical (ZekeFilm)
The St. Louis Film Critics Association nominated and voted on our Best of 2023 films. You can see every winner and every film we nominated on Letterboxd, and you can read my summary of how I voted here on Crowd vs. Critic. Keep scrolling if you’re on the home page to my last post, or read it here.
Photo credits: Funny Girl, Happiness Falls, Hollywood Victory. All others IMDb.com. 
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