#john paul hurley
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
politicaldilfs · 9 months ago
Text
Massachusetts Governor DILFs
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Michael Dukakis, Mitt Romney, Charlie Baker, Bill Weld, Endicott Peabody, Paul Celluci, Francis Sargent, Leverett Saltonstall, Edward J. King, Foster Furcolo, John A. Volpe, Christian Herter, Paul A. Dever, Charles F. Hurley
40 notes · View notes
theoriginalsupermodels · 2 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media
Jean Paul Gaultier - Spring 2000 Couture
31 notes · View notes
saintshigaraki · 10 months ago
Text
my reading list currently looks like....
frankenstein* (ill probably finish this one up in a day or two)
the salt grows heavy by cassandra khaw
dracula
wuthering heights
the death of jane lawrence by caitlin starling
the haunting of hill house by shirley jackson
howls moving castle by dianna wynne jones
the secret history by donna tartt
jane eyre
drive your plow over the bones of the dead by olga tokarczuk
dune by frank herbert
we have always lived in the castle by shirley jackson
birnam wood by eleanor catton
are prisons obsolete? by angela davis
a game of thrones* by grrm
daughter of smoke* and bone by laini taylor
a clash of kings* by grrm
days of blood and starlight by laini taylor
into the drowning deep by mira grant
dune messiah by frank herbert
their eyes were watching god by zora neale hurston
bunny by mona awad
a storm of swords* by grrm
the lottery and other stories by shirley jackson
a psalm for the wild-built by becky chamber
the poppy war by r.f. kuang
the ash family by molly dektar
project hail mary by andy weir
beartown by fredrik backman
a prayer for the crown shy by becky chamber
once there were wolves by charlotte mcconaghy
mother thing by ainslie hogarth
all’ s well by mona awad
the long way to a small and angry planet by becky chambers
the goblin emperor by katherine addison
the memory police by yoko ogawa
our wives under the sea by julia armfield
nightbitch by rachel yoder
the painter’s daughters by emily howes
the will of the many by james islington
a fig for all the devils by c.s. fritz
the devil and mrs davenport by paulette Kennedy
prophet song by paul lynch
our share of night by mariana enriquez
the unmaking of june farrow by adrienne young
the shadow of the gods by john gwynne
the other valley by scott alexander howard
whale fall by elizabeth o’connor
the sword of kaigen by m.l. wang
the cruel prince by holly black
the wicked king by holly black
the dragon republic by r.f. kuang
the burning god by r.f. kuang
starve acre by andrew michael hurley
the assassin's apprentice by robin hobb
the hunger of the gods by john gwynne
a secret history of witches by louisa morgan
the fury of the gods by john gwynne
geek love by katherine dunn
the god of endings by jacqueline holland
a feast for crows* by grrm
*rereads
351 notes · View notes
goryhorroor · 1 year ago
Note
Hi! No idea of this is your wheelhouse at all, but do you have any recs for horror novels? In particular more modern books. Not sure if this is your thing at all so no worries if the answer is no, just curious! Have a lovely day!!
sure! these are some of my favorites
Tell Me I'm Worthless by Alison Rumfitt
Whisper by Chang Yu-ko, but you can find the translation by Roddy Flagg
Our Share of Night by Mariana Enriquez, translation by Megan McDowell
Camp Damascus by Chuck Tingle
The Hole by Pyun Hye-Young, translation by Sora Kim-Russell
You've Lost a Lot of Blood by Eric LaRocca
My Heart is a Chainsaw by Stephen Graham Jones
A Head Full of Ghosts by Paul Tremblay
Bad Cree by Jessica Johns
Orpheus Builds a Girl by Heather Parry
The Shadow of Book of Ji Yun, translated by Yi Izzy Yu & John Yu Branscum
Cursed Bunny by Bora Chung, translated by Anton Hur
Manhunt by Gretchen Felker-Martin
The Book of Accidents by Chuck Wendig
A Good House for Children by Kate Collins
Motherthing by Ainslie Hogarth
The Dangers of Smoking in Bed by Mariana Enriquez, translated by Megan McDowell
The Grip of It by Jac Jemc
The Last House on Needless Street by Catriona Ward
Through the Woods by Emily Carroll
Our Wives Under the Sea by Julia Armfield
The Gingerbread Men by Joanna Corrance
Sisters by Daisy Johnson
The Lonely by Andrew Michael Hurley
Served by Scott Snyder, Scott Tuft & Attila Futaki
The Lost Ones by Anita Frank
Wilder Girls by Rory Power
Wylding Hall by Elizabeth Hand
From Below by Darcy Coates
The Fisherman by John Langen
167 notes · View notes
simptasia · 11 months ago
Text
LOST reading list
a list of books read by characters in lost for you to enjoy (or not). this isn't every book referenced in lost. for all that and more, see the "literary works" page on lostpedia, where im getting my info
no, my criteria for this list is that it's been read by a lost character. i'll tell you who (you'll see sawyers name a lot), and i'll add if it's somebody's fave book. this list will not include things like the bible or the qur'an or historical texts, as that while that can technically be recreational reading (it seems to be for ben), i'd rather not
Alice's Adventures In Wonderland by Lewis Carroll (read by Jack)
Are You There God? It's Me Margaret by Judy Blume (read by Sawyer)
A Brief History of Time by Stephan Hawking (read by Ben)
The Brothers Karamazov by Fyodor Dostoevsky (read by Ben)
Caravan of Dreams by Idries Shah (read by Ben)
Carrie by Stephen King (Read by Juliet, Ben and various other Others. This is Juliet's favourite book)
The Chosen by Chaim Potok (read by Sawyer)
Dark Horse by Tami Hoag (read by Jack)
The Dark Tower I: The Gunslinger by Stephen King (read by Ben)
Dirty Work by Stuart Woods (read by Jack)
Everything That Rises Must Converge by Flannery O'Connor (read by Jacob)
Evil Under The Sun by Agatha Christie (read by Sawyer)
Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury (read by Ben)
Flowers for Algernon by Daniel Keyes (read by Ben)
The Fountainhead by Ayn Rand (read by Sawyer)
Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban by JK Rowling (read by Jack)
Haroun and the Sea of Stories by Salmon Rushdie (read by Desmond)
Hotel by Arthur Hailey (read by Ben)
The Invention of Morel by Adolfo Bioy Casares (read by Sawyer)
Lancelot by Walker Percy (read by Sawyer)
Laughter in the Dark by Vladimir Nabokov (read by Hurley)
Notes from Underground by Fyodor Dostoevsky (read by Ilana)
The Oath by John Lescroart (read by Ben)
Of Mice and Men by John Steinbeck (read by Sawyer. This is Sawyer's favourite book and author)
Roots by Alex Haley (read by Ben)
A Separate Reality by Carlos Castaneda (read by Ben)
The Sheltering Shy by Paul Bowles (read by Ben)
Ulysses by James Joyce (read by Ben)
Valhalla Rising by Clive Cussler (read by Ben and Jack)
VALIS by Philip K. Dick (read by Ben)
Watership Down by Richard Adams (read by Boone and Sawyer)
A Wrinkle In Time by Madeleine L'Engle (read by Sawyer)
Every work by Charles Dickens other than Our Mutual Friend (read by Desmond. This is his favourite author)
I encourage you to speculate on the character implications put forth by these reading choices. This can raise such questions as: Jack is a Harry Potter fan? What is Desmond's favourite book by Charles Dickens? Boone can read??
Thank you for your time
52 notes · View notes
kwebtv · 7 months ago
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
From the Golden Age of Television
Series Premiere
Meet the Governor - NBC - October 5, 1955
A presentation of "Screen Directors Playhouse" Season 1 Episode 1
Comedy / Drama
Running Time: 30 minutes
Directed by Leo McCarey
Stars:
Herb Shriner as Clem Waters
Barbara Hale as Jane Waters
Rita Lynn as Mrs. Lamkin
Bobby Clark as Sonny Waters
Paul Harvey as Gov. John Dirks
Arthur Q. Bryan as Mr. Hurley
Hayden Rorke as Lawyer
Claud Allister as Cyril - the Butler
William Forrest as Mr. Green
Oliver Cliff as Decorator
Bill Baldwin as Newsman
John Breen as Courtroom Spectator
James Flavin as Governor Dirks Aide
John Hamilton as Mr. Campo
4 notes · View notes
ingek73 · 2 years ago
Text
Tumblr media
The allegations against Daily Mail’s parent company Associated Newspapers
Legal claims alleging illegal behaviour have been brought by Doreen Lawrence, Elton John, David Furnish, Prince Harry, Liz Hurley, Sadie Frost and Simon Hughes
Jim Waterson, Haroon Siddique, Ben Quinn and Lisa O'Carroll
Mon 27 Mar 2023 20.34 BST
Seven prominent individuals have brought legal claims alleging widespread illegal behaviour by individuals working for the Daily Mail and the Mail on Sunday between 1993 and 2018.
The Mail’s parent company strongly denies all the allegations and is seeking to stop the cases going to trial, arguing the individuals have waited too long to start legal proceedings and are relying on material provided by the Mail on a confidential basis to the Leveson inquiry into the British media industry.
On Monday night, a spokesperson for Associated Newspapers said that while “Mail’s admiration for [Doreen] Lawrence remains undimmed, we are profoundly saddened that she has been persuaded to bring this case”.
They added: “The Mail remains hugely proud of its pivotal role in campaigning for justice for Stephen Lawrence. Its famous ‘Murderers’ front page triggered the Macpherson report.”
They also highlighted how one of the private investigators cited by Lawrence has since provided a sworn statement that he did not carry out any illegal work for the Mail or Mail on Sunday.
Although the seven individuals’ cases are being dealt with collectively, each claim makes distinct allegations of illegal behaviour at Associated Newspapers, the parent company of the Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday – which are strenuously denied by the publisher.
This is what they allege.
Doreen Lawrence
Tumblr media
Doreen Lawrence leaves the high court. Photograph: Henry Nicholls/Reuters
Doreen Lawrence’s allegations are particularly damning for the Daily Mail. The mother of murdered schoolboy Stephen Lawrence, whose racially motivated killing shocked Britain, had long been seen as an ally of the Daily Mail and its former editor Paul Dacre.
She now alleges that while the paper was publicly campaigning to bring her son’s killers to justice – culminating in the newspaper’s famous front page accusing a group of men of being murderers – the Mail was also relying on private investigators to dig dirt on her.
Lawrence alleges journalists instructed private investigators to conduct illegal interception of her voicemail messages, tapping of her landline, “blagging” of personal records, the monitoring of her bank accounts and phone bills, covert electronic surveillance and corrupt payments to serving Metropolitan police officers working on the murder investigations.
Lawrence says she was targeted from “at least as early as 1993 (the year of Stephen’s murder) until 2007”.
She identifies four “unlawful articles”. The authors and date of each article have been redacted but there is a short description of each story, in addition to the information that one particular journalist wrote or co-wrote all four items.
The first article relates to the public inquiry into Stephen’s murder and “privileged information concerning the Lawrence family’s consideration of a second private prosecution and an action for damages against the murder suspects”. It is alleged this article was the result of the journalist who wrote it paying the private investigator for unlawfully obtained information.
The second article concerned the Lawrence family’s negligence action against the Metropolitan police and, it is claimed, included “confidential details about negotiations and settlement terms”.
The third article contained “sensitive and confidential” information about the murder investigation, including the decision not to bring charges against the suspects and communications with the Lawrence family about this. The particulars claim that – around the time this article was published – Associated paid a private investigator amounts of £1,777.50 and £600 for “confid enquiries” which “it is to be inferred were or included requests in relation to the claimant, and resulted and was exploited or published in the third unlawful article”.
The fourth article related to allegations behind details pertaining to the decision to bring new charges against the murder suspects, and the Met’s communications on this matter with the Lawrence family.
Lawrence alleges that none of the articles in question would have been published without “the direct misuse or exploitation of the information unlawfully or illegally obtained”. Her claim also says that the acts identified “represent only a fraction of the entirety of the separate unlawful acts committed in relation to her and her associates”.
As a result of the alleged acts, Lawrence is said to have “suffered considerable distress and harm, as well as the loss of her dignity or standing and her personal autonomy”.
The submissions state: “The claimant [Lawrence] feels anger, shock and upset, upon learning that the Daily Mail and targeted her through the unlawful acts and exploited her and her son’s murder through the unlawful articles, all of which was deliberately concealed from her both at the time and subsequently.
“Most of all, however, she feels a deep sense of betrayal. She finds it hard to believe the level of duplicity and manipulation that was clearly at play, knowing now as she does that the Daily Mail’s outward support for her fight to bring Stephen’s killers to justice was hollow, and worse, entirely false.
“The claimant now sees that the Daily Mail’s true interests were about self-promotion and using her and her son’s murder as a means to generate ‘exclusive’ headlines, sell newspapers and to profit. The claimant cannot think of any act or conduct lower than stealing and exploiting information from a mother who buried her son for this reason. She feels used and violated, and like she has been taken for a fool.”
Prince Harry
Tumblr media
Prince Harry leaving the court. Photograph: Henry Nicholls/Reuters
Prince Harry alleges that illegally obtained material was used by the Mail’s publishers for a number of articles on his personal life, including details of his relationship and feelings towards ex-girlfriends including Chelsy Davy, Natalie Pinkham and Cressida Bonas. He also alleges the Mail’s parent company obtained details of discussions with his brother Prince William about how to deal with the release of deathbed images of their mother, Princess Diana.
Harry has alleged that the unlawful activity used to obtain these stories meant “he was largely deprived of important aspects of his teenage years”. He said friends were lost or cut off as a result and everyone became a “suspect”. He adds the stories were written in a manner that led him to believe those close to him were the source of the information being provided to the Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday, rather than the alleged use of illegal reporting tactics.
He also claims that the publication of information relating to his private travel plans “caused a significant security risk” and amount to a “major betrayal” of the promises made by the media to improve its conduct after the death of his mother in 1997.
Harry says the Mail characterises itself to the British people as a “beacon of truth and integrity” but instead the company “widely and habitually carried out or commissioned illegal or unlawful information gathering activities” to report on some of the most intimate moments in his life, including relationships with three former girlfriends.
One man was allegedly paid “several hundred thousand pounds” to target celebrities, royals and other high-profile individuals including victims of violent crime.
Another company, he says, “was regularly used by journalists at the Sun and the News of the World to carry out unlawful searches for example in relation to the victims of the 7/7 terrorist bombings in London”.
Harry claims he and other members of the royal family – along with a string of celebrities – were targeted with a subsequent “cover-up”, and alleged repeated “false denials” by senior Mail executives at the Leveson inquiry into newspaper practices.
Harry said he “will refer to the unequivocal and categorical nature” of denials through the years “as well as the aggressive manner in which they were advanced”.
Revelations that Harry had been chosen to be godfather to the son of his former nanny Tiggy Legge-Bourke were also the result of unlawful activities by the Mail on Sunday, he alleges, as were numerous articles about his longstanding girlfriend, Chelsy Davy, who he dated on and off between 2004 and 2010.
These “unlawful acts” included phone hacking, phone tapping, the obtaining of confidential information through deception otherwise known as “blagging”, and the use of private investigators to commit these acts.
He also alleges “burglary to order” to obtain private information.
A two-page redacted document puts 14 articles published by the Mail on Sunday at the centre of his claims.
Elton John and David Furnish
Tumblr media
David Furnish is seen near to the Royal Courts of Justice. Photograph: Leon Neal/Getty Images
The pair allege a copy of their first child’s birth certificate was unlawfully obtained by Mail group reporters before it was even seen by the couple, who claim “priceless moments of privacy” were degraded.
When the birth certificate was used as the basis for an article, the singer and his partner, a producer, say that they were “heartbroken by the derogatory headline that Associated [Newspapers] attached to it”.
The couple go on in their claims against the publisher that the headline was “clearly calculated to profit and generate public sensation about an event that they had so carefully guarded to keep precious”.
Their claim adds: “They are also mortified to consider all their conversations, some of which were very personal indeed, were tapped, taped, packaged and consumed as a commercial product for journalists and unknown others to pick over, regardless of whether or not they were published.”
“The hurt remains the same, knowing that their lives have been treated as a commodity and their precious, priceless moments of privacy degraded in this way”.
Liz Hurley
Tumblr media
Elizabeth Hurley in 2022. Photograph: Lev Radin/Pacific Press/Shutterstock
Hurley alleges that a landline she used when she stayed at the home of Elton John and David Furnish was tapped, including when she stayed there immediately after the birth of her son in April 2002.
Hurley also claims that landline tapping and phone hacking was used to obtain information for a Mail on Sunday article about the fact that she had wanted a baby with her former husband, Arun Nayar, but only if they got married first.
A private investigator is alleged to have targeted both Hurley and Hugh Grant, her former boyfriend and still close friend and business partner, on behalf of the Mail on Sunday.
This included hacking their phones, tapping their landline phones, placing a sticky window mini-microphone on the exterior of her home window, bugging Grant’s car and undertaking other “blags”.
She was “particularly appalled” by Associated Newspapers’ targeting of her during her pregnancy and following the birth of her baby and recalls a feeling of vulnerability at that time in her life and the sense that, despite precautions taken, she was unable to protect her son.
“It left her sickened to see the snatched closeup picture of her baby’s face published by Associated when he was four months old with the new understanding that this intrusion was the exploitation of unlawful cts, deliberately directed at her with that intention,” her submission read.
Her claim goes on to add: “She now understands how very real the feeling of being trapped and surrounded on all sides by unknown enemies truly was.
Sadie Frost
Tumblr media
Sadie Frost leaves the high court. Photograph: Henry Nicholls/Reuters
Sadie Frost alleges she was targeted from at least as early as 2000 until at least as late 2010, when her relationship with actor Jude Law was regularly front page news. Her claim identifies 10 allegedly unlawful articles, written by five Daily Mail or Mail on Sunday journalists who are said to have regularly commissioned private investigators for stories.
With respect to an article about Frost and Jude Law’s divorce proceedings and financial arrangements, the claim says “Associated paid £2837.50 for ‘confid enquiries’ to JJ Services, which was for unlawfully obtained information and which it is to be inferred were or included requests in relation to the Claimant, and resulted or was exploited or published” in the article in question.
Unlawful acts allegedly carried out against Frost include phone hacking, landline tapping her home phones and other blags, through which information was obtained such as private communications, financial details and travel arrangements. Law’s landline was also allegedly tapped, including when he was having a conversation with a male member of his family to discuss the details of his divorce settlement with Frost, garnering information which was then used in a story.
Other articles which her claim relates to variously concerned her relationship with the supermodel Kate Moss, the welfare of her son and her health and wellbeing.
Simon Hughes
Tumblr media
Simon Hughes in 2006. Photograph: Martin Godwin/The Guardian
Simon Hughes alleges that, after he was outed in the Sun for being gay in January 2006, a private investigator began to look into his private life for information which might be of interest to the Mail on Sunday.
The former Lib Dem MP says that the investigator believed he was in a relationship with another man who Hughes refers to as “HJK” and the private investigator targeted him “including by phone hacking his voicemail messages and those of the people he was in contact with, ‘pinging’ [the triangulation of location through the use of mobile phone data], and the blagging of his bank records and phone records [subscriber information, itemised bills and voicemail PINs] relating to the claimant and those he was in contact with and other private information”.
Information allegedly unlawfully or illegally obtained included the identity and address of HJK, which was then passed on to the Mail on Sunday. The submissions allege that the Mail on Sunday then wanted a photograph of HJK (and Hughes) so the investigator then telephoned HJK on his mobile number which was unlawfully obtained, “and through means of deception managed to blag his home address and then ‘pinged’ HJK’s phone to confirm that this was correct”. The particulars of the claim say no article was published by the Mail on Sunday because a bigger story took priority.
18 notes · View notes
eemcintyre · 11 months ago
Text
@eemcintyre's top 113 favorite movies in alphabetical order
An admittedly random number that includes objectively "well-made" films with artistic merit, objectively considered-to-be-entertaining movies, and possibly questionable ones that I'm sentimental for or just like for whatever mysterious reason (usually a hot guy but not always). This is just what I like and the premier way to get to know me.
(Updated 09/07/24)
A Charlie Brown Christmas (1965), dir. Bill Melendez
A Few Good Men (1992), dir. Rob Reiner
A New Hope (1977), dir. George Lucas
Amelie (2001), dir. Jean-Pierre Jeunet
American Made (2017), dir. Doug Liman
AMY (2015), dir. Asif Kapadia
Annie (1982), dir. John Huston
Argylle (2024), dir. Matthew Vaughn
Arthur Christmas (2011), dir. Sarah Smith
Barbie as the Princess and the Pauper (2004), dir. William Lau
Barbie of Swan Lake (2003), dir. Owen Hurley
Black Swan (2010), dir. Darren Aronofsky
The Blair Witch Project (1999), dir. Eduardo Sanchez & Daniel Myrick
The Bodyguard (1992), dir. Mick Jackson
Borat (2006), dir. Larry Charles
The Breakfast Club (1985), dir. John Hughes
Camille (1936), dir. George Cukor
Casablanca (1943), dir. Michael Curtiz
Chinatown (1974), dir. Roman Polanski
Cocktail (1988), dir. Roger Donaldson
Con Air (1997), dir. Simon West
The Conjuring (2013), dir. James Wan
The Conjuring 2 (2016), dir. James Wan
The Crow (1994), dir. Alex Proyas
Cruel Intentions (1999), dir. Roger Kumble
Die Hard (1988), dir. John McTiernan
Eddie and the Cruisers (1983), dir. Martin Davidson
Elf (2003), dir. Jon Favreau
Eloise at Christmastime (2003), dir. Kevin Lima
The Empire Strikes Back (1980), dir. Irvin Kershner
Enchanted (2007), dir. Kevin Lima
Face/Off (1997), dir. John Woo
Far and Away (1992), dir. Ron Howard
Footloose (1984), dir. Herbert Ross
Galaxy Quest (1999), dir. Dean Parisot
The Great Muppet Caper (1981), dir. Jim Henson
Hannah Montana: The Movie (2009), dir. Peter Chelsom
Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets (2002), dir. Chris Columbus
Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire (2005), dir. Mike Newell
Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban (2004), dir. Alfonso Cuaron
Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone (2001), dir. Chris Columbus
Heathers (1988), dir. Michael Lehmann
Hereditary (2018), dir. Ari Aster
High School Musical (2006), dir. Kenny Ortega
The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy (2005), dir. Garth Jennings
Holes (2003), dir. Andrew Davis
The Holiday (2006), dir. Nancy Meyers
Hollow Point (1996), dir. Sidney J. Furie
Hotel Rwanda (2004), dir. Terry George
I Know What You Did Last Summer (1997), dir. Jim Gillespie
I, Tonya (2017), dir. Craig Gillespie
Ice Princess (2005), dir. Tim Fywell
Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade (1989), dir. Steven Spielberg
Indiana Jones and the Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981), dir. Steven Spielberg
In a Lonely Place (1950), dir. Nicholas Ray
Insidious (2010), dir. James Wan
Insidious: Chapter 2 (2013), dir. James Wan
Insidious: The Red Door (2023), dir. Patrick Wilson
Jackie (2016), dir. Pablo Larrain
Jerry Maguire (1996), dir. Cameron Crowe
JFK (1991), dir. Oliver Stone
The Karate Kid (1984), dir. John G. Avildsen
The Karate Kid Part II (1986), dir. John G. Avildsen
Knight and Day (2010), dir. James Mangold
Laggies (2014), dir. Lynn Shelton
The Last Samurai (2003), dir. Edward Zwick
Lawn Dogs (1997), dir. John Duigan
Lean on Me (1989), dir. John G. Avildsen
Leaving Las Vegas (1995), dir. Mike Figgis
Magnolia (1999), dir. Paul Thomas Anderson
Megamind (2010), dir. Tom McGrath
Minority Report (2002), dir. Steven Spielberg
Mission: Impossible (1996), dir. Brian De Palma
Mission: Impossible - Dead Reckoning Part One (2023), dir. Christopher McQuarrie
Mission: Impossible - Rogue Nation (2015), dir. Christopher McQuarrie
Mission: Impossible III (2006), dir. J.J. Abrams
Mr. Right (2015), dir. Paco Cabezas
National Lampoon's Christmas Vacation (1989), dir. Jeremiah S. Chechik
National Treasure (2004), dir. Jon Turteltaub
Natural Born Killers (1994), dir. Oliver Stone
Oklahoma! (1955), dir. Fred Zinnemann
The Outsiders (1983), dir. Francis Ford Coppola
The Pacifier (2005), dir. Adam Shankman
Planes, Trains and Automobiles (1987), dir. John Hughes
The Preacher's Wife (1996), dir. Penny Marshall
Pretty in Pink (1986), dir. John Hughes
Pride and Prejudice (2005), dir. Joe Wright
The Princess Diaries (2001), dir. Garry Marshall
Raising Arizona (1987), dir. Joel & Ethan Coen
Return of the Jedi (1983), dir. Richard Marquand
Roman Holiday (1953), dir. William Wyler
Sabrina (1954), dir. Billy Wilder
Scream (1996), dir. Wes Craven
Se7en (1995), dir. David Fincher
Sense and Sensibility (1995), dir. Ang Lee
The Shining (1980), dir. Stanley Kubrick
The Silence of the Lambs (1991), dir. Jonathan Demme
The Sound of Music (1965), dir. Robert Wise
Stretch (2014), dir. Joe Carnahan
The Talented Mr. Ripley (1999), dir. Anthony Minghella
Titanic (1997), dir. James Cameron
Tropic Thunder (2008), dir. Ben Stiller
The Trouble with Angels (1966), dir. Ida Lupino
Truly, Madly, Deeply (1990), dir. Anthony Minghella
Twin Peaks: Fire Walk with Me (1992), dir. David Lynch
Ulterior Motives (1992), dir. James Becket
Valkyrie (2008), dir. Bryan Singer
Vanilla Sky (2001), dir. Cameron Crowe
Vertigo (1958), dir. Alfred Hitchcock
The Way, Way Back (2013), dir. Jim Rash & Nat Faxon
West Side Story (1961), dir. Robert Wise & Jerome Robbins
White Christmas (1954), dir. Michael Curtiz
Zodiac (2007), dir. David Fincher
(500) Days of Summer (2009), dir. Marc Webb
5 notes · View notes
sometimesigif · 2 years ago
Text
⬇️ Tag drop ⬇️
Actors & Actresses
al st john
alan tudyk
aleksandr demyanenko
aleksandr trofimov
aleksei kuznetsov
alexandra yakovleva
alice lake
alice mann
alisa freindlich
alla demidova
anastasiya vertinskaya
anita page
andy whitfield
anne cornwall
barbara brylska
bartine burkett
ben barns
beulah booker
brown eyes
bruno ganz
buster keaton
conrad veidt
dmitri zolotukhin
dorothy christy
dorothy sebastian
edward norton
ekaterina savinova
eleanor keaton
evgeniy leonov
heath ledger
igor starygin
inna churikova
innokenty smoktunovsky
irene purcell
irina alfyorova
ivan pyryev
jack black
jason isaacs
joe keaton
joe roberts
karin boyd
kate beckinsale
kate price
kathleen myers
kathryn mcguire
klara luchko
klaus maria brandauer
larisa guzeeva
linda hamilton
liv tyler
luciena ovchinnikova
luke the dog
lyudmila gurchenko
marceline day
margaret leahy
margarita terekhova
marina dyuzheva
marion byron
marion mack
mikhail boyarsky
mikhail kozakov
mona maris
nadezhda rumyantseva
naomi watts
natalie talmadge
natalya krachkovskaya
natalya seleznyova
natalya varley
nora arnezeder
norman reedus
oleg menshikov
oleg tabakov
orson welles
paul bettany
paulette dubost
peter falk
phyllis barry
phyllis haver
renee adoree
rosalind byrne
roscoe arbuckle
ruth dwyer
ruth selwyn
sally eilers
sally o'neil
snitz edwards
sofiko chiaureli
sofiya pilyavskaya
sybil seely
tatyana lyutaeva
thelma todd
tilda swinton
tom hiddleston
valentin smirnitsky
veniamin smekhov
virginia fox
whitney houston
yanina zheymo
yelena ukrashchyonok
yuriy yakovlev
Characters
anne of austria
aramis
assol
athos
bagheera
baloo
buckingham
cardinal richelieu
constance bonacieux
d'artagnan
daryl dixon
edward rochester
geoffrey chaucer
grigori rasputin
king louis xiii
laura lyons
milady de winter
mowgli
peter the great
porthos
raksha
sarah connor
shere khan
van helsing
Origin
american cinema
american tv show
austrian cinema
barbie movies
behind the scenes
czech cinema
french cinema
german cinema
hungarian cinema
other peoplez edits
russian animation
russian cinema
silent cinema
soviet animation
soviet cinema
soyuzmultfilm
Directors
adolf trotz
aleksandr ptushko
aleksandr sery
alexander rowe
aleksey korenev
alla surikova
andrei tarkovsky
brian helgeland
don bluth
edward sedgwick
eldar ryazanov
gary goldman
georgi yungvald-khilkevich
gleb panfilov
igor maslennikov
istván szabó
james cameron
jim jarmusch
kirill mikhanovsky
leonid gaidai
mikhail shapiro
mikhail tsekhanovsky
nadezhda kosheverova
owen hurley
peter jackson
robert stevenson
sergey gerasimov
stephen sommers
svetlana druzhinina
vadim medzhibovskiy
vera tsekhanovskaya
vladimir menshov
wim wenders
Time Periods
1910s
1920s
1930s
1940s
1950s
1960s
1970s
1980s
1990s
2000s
2010s
Films & Shows
a cruel romance
a knight's tale
a man from boulevard des capucines
adventures of mowgli
anastasia
at the beginning of glorious days
back stage
barbie as rapunzel
barbie as the princess & the pauper
barbie in the 12 dancing princesses
barbie in the nutcracker
barbie of swan lake
battling butler
carnival night
cinderella 1947
clever dog sonya
college
coney island
convict 13
cops
d'artagnan and the three musketeers
dämen der frauen
daydreams
der himmel über berlin
doughboys
for family reasons
free and easy
gentlemen of fortune
give me liberty
go west
good night nurse!
hard luck
high sign
his wedding night
ivan vasilievich changes occupation
jane eyre 1943
le roi des champs-élysées
look for a woman
love and doves
maugli
midshipmen onwards!
mirror
moonshine
morozko
my wife's relations
musketeers twenty years after
neigbors
oh doctor!
one week
only lovers left alive
operation y and shurik's other adventures
our hospitality
out west
parlor bedroom and bath
pokrov gates
prince of foxes
prisoner of the caucasus or shurik's new adventures
scarlet sails
seven chances
sherlock jr
sidewalks of new york
spartacus: blood and sand
spartacus: gods of the arena
speak easily
spite marriage
steamboat bill jr
sweet november
terminator 2: judgement day
the adventures of sherlock holmes and doctor watson
the balloonatic
the beginning
the bell boy
the blacksmith
the boat
the bodyguard
the butcher boy
the cameraman
the cook
the electric house
the fellowhip of the ring
the frozen north
the garage
the general
the girls
the goat
the haunted house
the hayseed
the holiday
the hound of the baskervilles
the incredible hulk
the irony of fate or enjoy your bath!
the kuban cossacks
the lord of the rings
the love nest
the navigator
the painted veil
the paleface
the passionate plumber
the rough house
the saphead
the scarecrow
the walking dead
the wild swans
the words
this is your life
three ages
van helsing
watch out for the automobile
what - no beer?
wings of desire
young russia
7 notes · View notes
my-chaos-radio · 1 year ago
Text
youtube
Tumblr media
Release: November 7, 1983
Lyrics:
Living on free food tickets
Water in the milk from a hole in the roof where the rain came through
What can you do, hmm?
Tears from your little sister
Crying because she doesn't have a dress without a patch for the party to go
But you know she'll get by
'Cause she's living in the love of the common people
Smiles from the heart of a family man (a-ah-e-ah)
Daddy's gonna buy you a dream to cling to
Mama's gonna love you just as much as she can (It's so cold)
And she can
It's a good thing you don't have a bus fare (it's a good thing, ah-chh)
It would fall through the hole in your pocket and you'd lose it in the snow on the ground (a-ah-e-ah)
You got to walk into town to find a job (what's enough?)
Tryin' to keep your hands warm (it's so cold)
When the hole in your shoe let the snow come through and chill you to the bone (brr-cha)
Somehow you'd better go home where it's warm
Where you can live in the love of the common people
Smile from the heart of a family man (a-ah-e-ah)
Daddy's gonna buy you a dream to cling to
Mama's gonna love you just as much as she can (it's so cold)
And she can
Living on a dream ain't easy
But the closer the knit the tighter the fit (closer the knit)
And the chills stay away (a-ah-e-ah)
'Cause we take 'em in stride for family pride
You know that faith is in your foundation (ooh-na, ooh-na, ooh-na, ooh-na)
With a whole lot of love and a warm conversation
But don't forget to pray (forget to pray)
It's makin' it strong, where you belong
And we're living in the love of the common people
Smiles from the heart of a family man (good to know)
Daddy's gonna buy you a dream to cling to
Mama's gonna love you just as much as she can (it's so cold)
And she can
Yes, we're living in the love of the common people
Smile's from the heart of a family man (a-ah-e-ah)
Daddy's gonna buy you a dream to cling to
Mama's gonna love you just as much as she can (it's so cold)
Living in the love of the common people
Smiles from the heart of a family man (good to know)
Daddy's gonna buy you a dream to cling to
Mama's gonna love you just as much as she can (it's so cold)
Songwriter:
Living in the love of the common people
Smile's really hard on a family man (a-ah-e-ah)
Daddy's gonna buy you a dream to cling to
Mama's gonna love you just as much as she can
And she can
Ronnie Wilkins / John Hurley
SongFacts:
The song tells a bleak story of poverty and unemployment. The opening lines mention "free ration cards," a reference to government food stamp and welfare programs. The family described in the song wears clothes and shoes with holes in them. The final verse, however, is more optimistic as it calls for not losing faith and keeping hope for improvement.
However, it seems possible that the song as a whole is meant sarcastically, since the constant reference to the love of the family and the reference to the importance of religious faith are in stark contrast to the completely hopeless economic situation, which is subjectively more bearable through love and faith alone may appear, but is not actually improved in the least. A strong indication of this is also the obviously euphemistic claim that not having money for the bus would be a good thing because then you can't lose the money, which would be feared because of the hole in your clothes. This form of extreme social satire to point out obvious grievances and the euphemism of dealing with them has a long tradition in the Enlightenment in Anglo-Saxon-speaking countries.
In 1983, Paul Young recorded the song for his album 'No Parlez'. When his version was first released, the cover failed to chart. It was only after the hits 'Wherever I Lay My Hat (That's My Home)' and 'Come Back and Stay' that Young's version of the song achieved international chart success when it was re-released on November 7, 1983. The synth pop and soft rock number became a number one hit in Ireland, the Netherlands, Belgium and Italy. The trombone solo was played by Rico Rodriguez.
3 notes · View notes
theoriginalsupermodels · 2 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media
Jean Paul Gaultier - Spring 2000 Couture
29 notes · View notes
metalsongoftheday · 2 years ago
Video
youtube
Tuesday, January 10: Paul Di’Anno’s Battlezone, “Warchild”
None of Paul Di’Anno’s post-Maiden output could be said to have a real vision (and to be fair, this was probably something he took as a point of pride), but “Warchild” perhaps pointed to what the rest of Battlezone, especially guitarist and primary songwriter John Hurley, might’ve been aiming for, as it mostly offered up a supercharged take on Killers.  The track was a brisk headbanger that placed Di’Anno’s distinctive vocals in a musical setting that imagined what Maiden might’ve sounded like if they started in the mid ‘80s and didn’t have Steve Harris’ idiosyncratic approach to bass and composition. It wasn’t entirely inspiring, but Di’Anno sounded engaged and seemed ready to jump back into the fray, even growing a mullet to show he was with the times.  And “Warchild” was fun and energetic in a low-budget way, offering something earthbound and natural for its frontman.  On the other hand, there was no denying the bushleague aspects of Fighting Back’s writing and production, not to mention the general amateurishness of the Battlezone concept, such as it was.
5 notes · View notes
alexlacquemanne · 23 days ago
Text
Octobre MMXXIV
Films
Quartet (2012) de Dustin Hoffman avec Maggie Smith, Tom Courtenay, Billy Connolly, Pauline Collins, Sheridan Smith, Michael Gambon, Andrew Sachs et Gwyneth Jones
Bob le flambeur (1956) de Jean-Pierre Melville avec Roger Duchesne, Isabelle Corey, Daniel Cauchy, Guy Decomble, Simone Paris, André Garret, Claude Cerval et Colette Fleury
Indian Palace (The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel) (2011) de John Madden avec Judi Dench, Bill Nighy, Tom Wilkinson, Maggie Smith, Celia Imrie, Dev Patel, Ronald Pickup et Penelope Wilton
Grosse Fatigue (1994) de et avec Michel Blanc et aussi Carole Bouquet, Philippe Noiret, Josiane Balasko, Marie-Anne Chazel, Christian Clavier, Guillaume Durand, Charlotte Gainsbourg, David Hallyday, Estelle Lefébure et Gérard Jugnot
L'Air de rien (2012) de Grégory Magne et Stéphane Viard avec Grégory Montel, Fred Scotlande, Céline Milliat-Baumgartner, Michel Delpech, Martine Schambacher, Miossec, Jérôme Huguet, Benoît Belleville et Pauline Moulène
Code Mercury (Mercury Rising) (1998) de Harold Becker avec Bruce Willis, Miko Hughes, Alec Baldwin, Chi McBride, John Carroll Lynch, John Doman, Peter Stormare et Kim Dickens
Le Privé (The Long Goodbye) (1973) de Robert Altman avec Elliott Gould, Nina van Pallandt, Sterling Hayden, Mark Rydell, Henry Gibson, David Arkin, David Carradine et Arnold Schwarzenegger
Mon oncle Benjamin (1969) d'Édouard Molinaro avec Jacques Brel, Claude Jade, Bernard Alane, Paul Frankeur, Rosy Varte, Lyne Chardonnet, Robert Dalban, Bernard Blier et Armand Mestral
Le Tueur triste (1984) de Nicolas Gessner avec Guy Marchand, Edwige Feuillère, Michel Creton, Béatrice Agenin, Franck Olivier Bonnet, Jean Louis Richard, Jacques François, Amélie Gonin et Marcelle Barreau
Indian Palace : Suite royale (The Second Best Exotic Marigold Hotel) (2015) de John Madde avec Judi Dench, Maggie Smith, Bill Nighy, Dev Patel, Celia Imrie, Ronald Pickup, Diana Hardcastle, Richard Gere et Tina Desai
Gremlins 2 : La Nouvelle Génération (Gremlins 2: The New Batch) (1990) de Joe Dante avec Zach Galligan, Phoebe Cates, John Glover, Robert Prosky, Robert Picardo, Christopher Lee, Haviland Morris, Dick Miller, Jackie Joseph et Kathleen Freeman
L’Été meurtrier (1983) de Jean Becker avec Isabelle Adjani, Alain Souchon, Suzanne Flon, Jenny Clève, Maria Machado, Évelyne Didi, Jean Gaven, François Cluzet, Michel Galabru et Roger Carel
Baisers volés (1968) de François Truffaut avec Jean-Pierre Léaud, Claude Jade, Delphine Seyrig, Michael Lonsdale, Harry-Max, André Falcon, Daniel Ceccaldi, Claire Duhamel et Catherine Lutz
Key Largo (1948) de John Huston avec Humphrey Bogart, Lauren Bacall, Edward G. Robinson, Claire Trevor, Lionel Barrymore, Thomas Gomez, Harry Lewis et John Rodney
Soleil rouge (1971) de Terence Young avec Charles Bronson, Ursula Andress, Toshirō Mifune, Alain Delon, Capucine, Bart Barry et Lee Burton
Le Chien des Baskerville (The Hound of the Baskervilles) (1958) de Terence Fisher avec Peter Cushing, André Morell, Christopher Lee, Marla Landi, David Oxley, Francis De Wolff, Miles Malleson et Ewen Solon
L'Arnaque (The Sting) (1973) de George Roy Hill avec Paul Newman, Robert Redford, Robert Shaw, Charles Durning, Ray Walston, Eileen Brennan, Harold Gould, John Heffernan, Dana Elcar et Dimitra Arliss
Au service de Sara (Serving Sara) (2002) de Reginald Hudlin avec Matthew Perry, Elizabeth Hurley, Vincent Pastore, Bruce Campbell, Cedric the Entertainer, Amy Adams et Terry Crews
Tirez sur le pianiste (1960) de François Truffaut avec Charles Aznavour, Marie Dubois, Nicole Berger, Michèle Mercier, Serge Davri, Claude Mansard et Richard Kanayan
Séries
L'été rouge
Episode 1 - Episode 2 - Episode 3 - Episode 4 - Episode 5
Castle Saison 8
M. et Mme Castle - Meurtre a cappella - Témoin-clé - L'Espion qui venait du froid - Huis clos - Le Rêve américain - Escapade à L.A. - Le ver est dans le fruit - Le Cœur ou la Raison - Votre mort est un ordre - Trahisons - L'immortel - Beaucoup de bruit pour un meurtre - La Fin du monde - Tirs croisés
Psych Saison 1, 2, 3
Voyances et Manigances - T-R-I-C-H-E-U-R - Qu'il parle maintenant ou se taise à jamais - Esprit, es-tu là ? - 9 vies - Champ de bataille - La Maison hantée - Shawn chez les super-héros - Souvenirs, souvenirs - La Guerre de l'étoile - Coup de soleil - Avis de meurtre - Jeu, Set et Meurtre - Poker menteur - Esprits féminin - Les Nouvelles Stars - 65 Millions d'années plus tôt - Un médium de trop - Trop facile pour être possible - Petit… mais costaud - Un plat qui se mange froid - Les Petits Génies - Recherche nounous désespérément - Chasseurs de primes - Un mort au pied du sapin - Mariage en sursis - Coups de vieux - Un rôle de composition - Dans le secret de la loge - Fashion victimes - Une nuit au musée - Chasse aux fantômes - La Folle Soirée de Shawn - Le médium qui tombe à pic - La Chasse au trésor - Au pays de l'or noir - Henry les bons tuyaux - Comme sur des roulettes - Haut les mains !
Friends Saison 1, 2, 3
Celui qui avait un singe - Celui qui rêve par procuration - Celui qui a failli rater l'accouchement - Celui qui fait craquer Rachel - Celui qui a une nouvelle fiancée - Celui qui détestait le lait maternel - Celui qui est mort dans l'appart du dessous - Celui qui avait viré de bord - Celui qui se faisait passer pour Bob - Celui qui a oublié un bébé dans le bus - Celui qui tombe des nues - Celui qui a été très maladroit - Celui qui cassait les radiateurs - Celui qui se dédouble - Celui qui n'apprécie pas certains mariages - Celui qui retrouve son singe : première partie - Celui qui retrouve son singe : deuxième partie - Celui qui a failli aller au bal de promo - Celui qui a fait on ne sait quoi avec Rachel - Celui qui vit sa vie - Celui qui remplace celui qui part - Celui qui disparaît de la série - Celui qui ne voulait pas partir - Celui qui se met à parler - Celui qui affronte les voyous - Celui qui faisait le lien - Celui qui attrape la varicelle - Celui qui embrassait mal - Celui qui rêvait de la princesse Leia - Celui qui a du mal à se préparer - Celui qui avait la technique du câlin - Celui qui ne supportait pas les poupées - Celui qui bricolait - Celui qui se souvient - Celui qui était prof et élève - Celui qui avait pris un coup sur la tête - Celui pour qui le foot c'est pas le pied - Celui qui fait démissionner Rachel - Celui qui ne s'y retrouvait plus - Celui qui était très jaloux - Celui qui persiste et signe - Celui que les prothèses ne gênaient pas - Celui qui vivait mal la rupture - Celui qui a survécu au lendemain - Celui qui était laissé pour compte - Celui qui s'auto-hypnotisait
Affaires sensibles
La chute de Nicolas Hulot - Blur vs Oasis : la bataille d'Angleterre - Août 44, La Libération de Paris, Épisode 1/2 : Août 44, des Parisiens en armes - Août 44, La Libération de Paris, Épisode 2/2 : Eté 44, De Gaulle, la marche d’un président - Docteur Petiot, faux résistant, vrai tueur - Hitler l'insaisissable cadavre - Benito Mussolini, un cadavre en cavale - Le mystère des noyés de la Deûle - Les trois de West Memphis - "Naissance d’une nation" : Naissance d’une contestation - Little Rock, neuf lycéens noirs contre la ségrégation - Emmett Till, le lynchage de trop - Marseille 1973, quand le racisme tue en toute impunité - L'argent russe du Front National - Affaire Alstom : la guerre secrète - Le procès de Lady Chatterley - Les survivants de la Cordillère des Andes - "Tcherno-Blaye" : le scénario d'un Tchernobyl français ? - La tour Montparnasse ou la folie des grandeurs en direct des Rendez-vous de l'histoire de Blois - « Sans haine, sans arme, ni violence » : le casse du siècle de Nice - "La Grande Bouffe" ou le festin orgiaque - Taylor Swift, le phénomène total - L’abominable homme des neiges, une rencontre au sommet
Brokenwood Saison 9, 3
Comme chien et chat - En plein cœur - La mariée était en cuir - Le veuf noir
Le Coffre à Catch
#188 : La dernière avec UVA !
Les Brigades du Tigre : « Les Années-Folles » Saison 6
Les Princes de la nuit - Rita et le Caïd - La Grande Duchesse Tatiana - Les Fantômes de Noël - La Fille de l'air - Lacs et Entrelacs
Commissaire Moulin Saison 1
Le Diable aussi a des ailes - Intox - Fausses notes - Les Brebis égarées
Les Simpson Saison 3
Mon pote Michael Jackson - Lisa va à Washington - Le Palais du Gaucher - Le Petit Parrain - Une belle simpsonnerie - Tel père, tel clown - Simpson Horror Show II - Le Poney de Lisa - Un père dans la course - Un cocktail d'enfer - Burns Verkaufen der Kraftwerk - Vive les mariés - Un puits de mensonges - L'Enfer du jeu - Homer au foyer - Bart le tombeur - Homer la foudre - Le Flic et la Rebelle - Chienne de vie - Imprésario de mon cœur - La Veuve noire - Le Permis d'Otto Bus - Séparés par l'amour - Le Retour du frère prodigue
Belphégor ou le Fantôme du Louvre
Le Louvre - Le secret du Louvre
Nestor Burma saison 6
Panique à Saint-Patrick - Atout cœur
Rematch
Episode 1 - Episode 2 - Episode 3 - Episode 4 - Episode 5 - Episode 6
Brooklyn Nine-Nine Saison 1, 2, 3, 4, 5
Halloween - Halloween II - Halloween III - Halloween IV - Halloween V
Le tribunal de l'impossible
La Bête du Gévaudan
Spectacles
Pink Floyd: Live at Pompeii, Director's Cut (1972) d'Adrian Maben
Chers parents (2024) de Emmanuel Patron & Armelle Patron avec Elise Diamant, Bernard Alane, Emmanuel Patron, Rudy Milstein et Frédérique Tirmont
Stevie Wonder: Live at Last (2008)
R.E.M : Perfect Square (2004)
Bénabar : la tournée des indociles (2022)
Le Chien des Baskerville (1974) de Jean Marcillac avec Raymond Gerome, André Haber, Christian Alers, Jean Pierre Gernez, Bernard Musson, Christiane Moinet, Pierre Hatet, Colette Teissedre, Robert Bazil, Liliane Patrick et Jean Jacques Steen
Livres
Putzi de Thomas Snégaroff
Kaamelott, tome 10 : Karadoc et l'Icosaèdre d'Alexandre Astier et Steven Dupré
Lucky Luke, tome 28 : Le Pony Express de Morris, Xavier Fauche et Jean Léturgie
Philip Marlowe : Le Grand Sommeil de Raymond Chandler
OSS 117 : Agonie en Patagonie de Jean Bruce
Batman : Un long Halloween de Jeph Loeb et Tim Sale
0 notes
wankerwatch · 4 months ago
Text
Commons Vote
On: The draft Criminal Justice Act 2003 (Requisite and Minimum Custodial Periods) Order 2024
Ayes: 323 (96.9% Lab, 2.2% Ind, 0.9% Green) Noes: 81 (95.0% Con, 2.5% DUP, 2.5% RUK) Absent: ~246
Individual Votes:
Ayes
Labour (312 votes)
Adam Jogee Adam Thompson Afzal Khan Alan Campbell Alan Gemmell Alan Strickland Alex Baker Alex Ballinger Alex Barros-Curtis Alex Davies-Jones Alex Mayer Alex McIntyre Alex Norris Alex Sobel Alice Macdonald Alison Hume Alistair Strathern Allison Gardner Amanda Martin Andrew Cooper Andrew Lewin Andrew Pakes Andrew Ranger Andrew Western Andy MacNae Andy McDonald Andy Slaughter Angela Eagle Anna Dixon Anna Gelderd Anna McMorrin Anna Turley Anneliese Midgley Antonia Bance Bambos Charalambous Barry Gardiner Bayo Alaba Beccy Cooper Becky Gittins Bell Ribeiro-Addy Ben Coleman Ben Goldsborough Blair McDougall Brian Leishman Callum Anderson Calvin Bailey Carolyn Harris Cat Eccles Cat Smith Catherine Fookes Catherine McKinnell Catherine West Charlotte Nichols Chi Onwurah Chris Bloore Chris Curtis Chris Elmore Chris Hinchliff Chris Kane Chris McDonald Chris Murray Chris Vince Chris Ward Chris Webb Christian Wakeford Claire Hazelgrove Claire Hughes Clive Lewis Connor Naismith Connor Rand Damien Egan Dan Aldridge Dan Tomlinson Daniel Francis Daniel Zeichner Danny Beales Darren Jones Darren Paffey Dave Robertson David Baines David Burton-Sampson David Pinto-Duschinsky David Smith David Taylor David Williams Dawn Butler Debbie Abrahams Deirdre Costigan Douglas McAllister Elaine Stewart Emily Darlington Emma Foody Emma Hardy Emma Lewell-Buck Emma Reynolds Euan Stainbank Feryal Clark Frank McNally Fred Thomas Gareth Snell Gen Kitchen Georgia Gould Gill German Gordon McKee Graeme Downie Grahame Morris Gregor Poynton Gurinder Josan Hamish Falconer Harpreet Uppal Heidi Alexander Helen Hayes Helena Dollimore Henry Tufnell Ian Lavery Ian Murray Imogen Walker Irene Campbell Jack Abbott Jacob Collier Jade Botterill Jake Richards James Asser James Murray James Naish Janet Daby Jas Athwal Jayne Kirkham Jeevun Sandher Jeff Smith Jen Craft Jenny Riddell-Carpenter Jess Asato Jess Phillips Jessica Toale Jim Dickson Jim McMahon Jo Platt Jo White Joani Reid Jodie Gosling Joe Morris Joe Powell Johanna Baxter John Grady John Slinger John Whitby Jon Pearce Jon Trickett Jonathan Brash Jonathan Davies Jonathan Hinder Josh Dean Josh Fenton-Glynn Josh MacAlister Josh Newbury Josh Simons Julie Minns Juliet Campbell Justin Madders Kanishka Narayan Karin Smyth Karl Turner Kate Dearden Kate Osamor Kate Osborne Katie White Katrina Murray Kenneth Stevenson Kerry McCarthy Kevin Bonavia Kevin McKenna Kim Johnson Kim Leadbeater Kirith Entwistle Kirsteen Sullivan Kirsty McNeill Laura Kyrke-Smith Lauren Sullivan Lee Barron Lee Pitcher Leigh Ingham Lewis Atkinson Liam Byrne Liam Conlon Lillian Jones Linsey Farnsworth Liz Twist Lizzi Collinge Lloyd Hatton Lola McEvoy Lorraine Beavers Louise Jones Lucy Powell Lucy Rigby Luke Akehurst Luke Charters Luke Murphy Luke Myer Mark Ferguson Mark Tami Markus Campbell-Savours Marsha De Cordova Martin McCluskey Martin Rhodes Mary Creagh Mary Glindon Matt Bishop Matt Rodda Matt Turmaine Matt Western Matthew Patrick Matthew Pennycook Maureen Burke Maya Ellis Meg Hillier Melanie Ward Miatta Fahnbulleh Michael Payne Michael Shanks Michael Wheeler Michelle Scrogham Michelle Welsh Mike Kane Mike Reader Mike Tapp Mohammad Yasin Nadia Whittome Natalie Fleet Natasha Irons Naushabah Khan Naz Shah Neil Duncan-Jordan Nia Griffith Nicholas Dakin Nick Smith Nick Thomas-Symonds Noah Law Oliver Ryan Olivia Bailey Olivia Blake Pam Cox Pamela Nash Patricia Ferguson Patrick Hurley Paul Foster Paula Barker Paulette Hamilton Perran Moon Peter Lamb Peter Prinsley Peter Swallow Phil Brickell Polly Billington Rachael Maskell Rachel Blake Rachel Hopkins Rachel Taylor Richard Baker Richard Quigley Rosie Wrighting Rupa Huq Ruth Cadbury Sadik Al-Hassan Sally Jameson Sam Carling Sam Rushworth Samantha Dixon Samantha Niblett Sarah Champion Sarah Coombes Sarah Edwards Sarah Hall Sarah Jones Sarah Russell Sarah Sackman Satvir Kaur Scott Arthur Sean Woodcock Seema Malhotra Shabana Mahmood Sharon Hodgson Shaun Davies Simon Lightwood Simon Opher Sojan Joseph Sonia Kumar Stella Creasy Stephen Morgan Stephen Timms Steve Race Steve Witherden Steve Yemm
Sureena Brackenridge Taiwo Owatemi Terry Jermy Tim Roca Tom Collins Tom Hayes Tom Rutland Tonia Antoniazzi Tony Vaughan Torcuil Crichton Torsten Bell Tracy Gilbert Tristan Osborne Uma Kumaran Valerie Vaz Vicky Foxcroft Warinder Juss Will Stone Yuan Yang
Independent (7 votes)
Apsana Begum Ian Byrne Imran Hussain John McDonnell Rebecca Long Bailey Richard Burgon Zarah Sultana
Green Party (3 votes)
Adrian Ramsay Carla Denyer Ellie Chowns
Noes
Conservative (76 votes)
Alan Mak Alec Shelbrooke Alex Burghart Alicia Kearns Andrew Bowie Andrew Griffith Andrew Murrison Andrew Rosindell Andrew Snowden Aphra Brandreth Ashley Fox Ben Obese-Jecty Blake Stephenson Bob Blackman Bradley Thomas Caroline Dinenage Caroline Johnson Charlie Dewhirst Chris Philp Claire Coutinho David Davis David Reed David Simmonds Desmond Swayne Gagan Mohindra Gareth Davies Geoffrey Clifton-Brown Greg Smith Gregory Stafford Harriet Cross Harriett Baldwin Helen Whately Jack Rankin James Cleverly James Wild Jeremy Hunt Joe Robertson John Cooper John Glen John Hayes John Lamont John Whittingdale Katie Lam Kemi Badenoch Kieran Mullan Lewis Cocking Lincoln Jopp Louie French Mark Garnier Martin Vickers Matt Vickers Mel Stride Mims Davies Neil Hudson Neil Shastri-Hurst Nick Timothy Patrick Spencer Paul Holmes Peter Bedford Peter Fortune Priti Patel Rebecca Harris Rebecca Paul Rebecca Smith Richard Holden Robbie Moore Robert Jenrick Roger Gale Sarah Bool Shivani Raja Stuart Anderson Stuart Andrew Suella Braverman Tom Tugendhat Victoria Atkins Wendy Morton
Democratic Unionist Party (2 votes)
Gregory Campbell Jim Shannon
Reform UK (2 votes)
Lee Anderson Richard Tice
1 note · View note
mirandamckenni1 · 6 months ago
Text
youtube
What Jumping Spiders Teach Us About Color How jumping spiders reveal an entire secret world of colors. Let BetterHelp connect you to a therapist who can support you - all from the comfort of your own home. Visit https://ift.tt/6rXvN3T and enjoy a special discount on your first month. A massive thank you to everyone at Day’s Edge Productions for making this documentary happen. Check them out at https://daysedge.com/. You can watch the full-length documentary “The World According to Jumping Spiders” on Curiosity Stream - coming soon. ▀▀▀ Special thanks to our Patreon supporters! Join the community to help us keep our videos free, forever: https://ift.tt/DUItgGq Adam Foreman, Anton Ragin, Balkrishna Heroor, Bertrand Serlet, Bill Linder, Blake Byers, Bruce, Burt Humburg, Chris Harper, Dave Kircher, David Johnston, Evgeny Skvortsov, Garrett Mueller, Gnare, gpoly, I. H., John H. Austin, Jr., john kiehl, Josh Hibschman, Juan Benet, KeyWestr, Kyi, Lee Redden, Marinus Kuivenhoven, Martin, Matthias Wrobel, Max Paladino, Meekay, meg noah, Michael Krugman, Orlando Bassotto, Paul Peijzel, Richard Sundvall, Sam Lutfi, Stephen Wilcox, Tj Steyn, Toni, TTST, Ubiquity Ventures, wolfee If you’re looking for a molecular modeling kit, try Snatoms, a kit I invented where the atoms snap together magnetically - https://ift.tt/JluRkKp ▀▀▀ Directed by Neil Losin Written by Neil Losin Edited by Neil Losin, Andy Laub, and Alan Saunders Animated by Root House Studio and David Hutchinson Filmed by Neil Losin, Nate Dappen, Alex Wiles, Andy Laub, and Barend van der Watt Produced by Day’s Edge Productions Repurposed for YouTube by Derek Muller, Casper Mebius, Petr Lebedev, Peter Nelson, Trenton Oliver, Emily Zhang, Giovanna Utichi, Rob Beasley Spence, Emily Taylor, and Gregor Čavlović Thumbnail contributions by Ren Hurley and Peter Sheppard Video/photos supplied by Day’s Edge Productions and Storyblocks Music by Adrian Younge, PBS, Epidemic Sound, and Jonny Hyman via YouTube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nfAqTSjMBJk
0 notes
stmcdaily · 10 months ago
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
On behalf of the Chaplaincy Team, i would like to say a sincere 'thank you' for all your support during Catholic Schools Week (CSW) this week.
Please see below a review of the week.  Pictures are attached.  
MONDAY 22 Jan: After a windy start, CSW began with a special live-streamed prayer service in our college chapel with Fr. Paddy Moran.  2nd & 3rd Years were present at the service and Ms. Mullen’s choir provided the music.  At 10 am, First Year students were brought to Donnybrook Church for Mass with Monsignor Ciaran O’Carroll.  Monsignor O’Carroll gave a special mention to St. Michael’s College and wished all in the community the very best.  Fr. James Hurley from Merrion Church then visited our school in the afternoon to meet the 5th Year Ember Team.  This was a wonderful encounter where our students discussed their views on life and being a student today, and Fr. Hurley imparted his knowledge and wisdom on life as a priest.  At the end of the day, Callum Morris from Ember gave a video round-up on all that occurred. 
TUESDAY 23 Jan: On Tuesday, thirty 5th Year students attended mass in Merrion Church at 12 pm.  The mass was celebrated by Fr. James Hurley.  Fr. Hurley made a very special mention of St. Michael’s College and he also offered his blessings on the entire community.  David Willis (5th Year) recited the Readings at the mass.  Many of the parishioners were delighted to see St. Michael’s boys present.  In the afternoon, John O’Shea, the ex-CEO of GOAL, gave a very impassioned talk to all TY students.  He spoke about all the work he did while heading GOAL, the famous people he met during his life and those encounters he had with impoverished people who left an indelible mark on him.  John O’Shea encouraged the boys to become socially engaged regarding all the injustices happening in our world.  The invigorating talk inspired all present to become more aware of ‘social entrepreneurship’.   
WEDNESDAY 24 Jan: This was an extraordinary day where 3rd Year students’ grandparents were invited into our school for a special mass, celebrated by Fr. Paddy Moran.  Over sixty people were present in the chapel.  It was a very moving and intimate service.  Mr. Tim Kelleher, Fr. Paddy Moran and Mr. Robbie O’Flynn spoke.  Ms. Catherin Mullen’s choir sang exquisitely.  There was participation from students and their grandparents throughout.  The mass was also live-streamed for those who were unable to attend the event.  Afterwards, there was a reception of tea/coffee and cakes in the Assembly Hall where lots of photographs were taken and chats were had.  At 11 am, Fr. James Hurley spoke to fifty 6th Year students about his life as a priest and the conversion of St. Paul.  A special moment. 
THURSDAY 25 Jan: On Thursday, a class of TY students were brought on a walk around the ‘Donnybrook Block’.  It was refreshing to be out of class to spend time in conversation and laughter.  A group of 2nd Year students had a prayer service in the college chapel with Mr. Oliver Doolan.  The service dealt with themes of family, belonging, community and kindness.  In the afternoon, Fr. James Hurley returned to school to talk to the Student Council.  The boys told Fr. James about their role as Council Members - their tasks and their responsibilities.  It was a wonderful exchange which gave Fr. Hurley a great insight into the boys’ life in school.  Fr James spoke to them about faith and life as a priest - his tasks and responsibilities at many of the key moments in people’s lives.  At the end of the day, we had The 5th Year Parent Teacher Meeting.  We positioned our CSW pull-up banner at the entrance to the hall and Fr. Paddy Moran was present to speak to as many parents as possible during the time. 
FRIDAY 26 Jan:  On Friday, we had cake, biscuits and fruit for all staff as a gesture of thanks for all the support during the week.  A card of thanks from the Chaplaincy Team was also placed in teachers’ boxes in the staffroom.  At lunchtime, Ms. Mullen’s choir performed music on the corridor.   In the afternoon, all the 6th Year students were brought to Donnybrook Church to pray and reflect.  This was a special timeout from study for the 6th Year.  While there, they were introduced to the history of the church and particular attention was paid to many of the church’s fine architectural features.  This was a nice opportunity for the boys to experience the church where they will later celebrate their Graduation Mass in May.  
During the week all Religion Teachers used many of the resources provided by the Diocese for CSW in class.  The Religion Department also ran our annual Poster Competition for First Year and Essay Writing Competition for 2nd Year.  Winners will be announced next week.  The Chaplaincy Team would like to sincerely express their thanks to all staff members and families for making the week memorable.  Without your help and support, the week would simply not be possible to happen.  
With every good wish, 
Oliver Doolan
Chaplain
0 notes