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#johnny goodyear
kwebtv · 1 month
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Virginia Cathryn "Gena" Rowlands (/ˈdʒɛnə/; June 19, 1930 – August 14, 2024) Actress whose career in film, stage, and television spanned nearly seven decades. A four-time Emmy and two-time Golden Globe winner, she collaborated with her actor-director husband John Cassavetes in ten films.
Rowlands costarred with Paul Stewart in the 26-episode syndicated TV series Top Secret (1954–55). She guest-starred on such anthology television series as Robert Montgomery Presents, Armstrong Circle Theatre, Studio One, Appointment with Adventure, The United States Steel Hour, and Goodyear Television Playhouse, all in 1955. In 1959, Rowlands appeared in the Western series Laramie, alongside her husband John Cassavetes in the detective series Johnny Staccato, and in the Western series Riverboat, starring Darren McGavin. In 1961, she appeared in the adventure series The Islanders, set in the South Pacific, and in Target: The Corruptors!, starring Stephen McNally. She guest-starred in The Lloyd Bridges Show, the detective series 77 Sunset Strip, Kraft Suspense Theatre, the Westerns Bonanza and The Virginian, and Breaking Point, all in 1963. In 1964, she guest-starred in the medical drama Dr. Kildare and in two episodes of Burke's Law. She appeared in four episodes of Alfred Hitchcock Presents, three of which were after the series had been renamed The Alfred Hitchcock Hour. In 1967, she was cast as socialite Adrienne Van Leyden in the prime-time ABC soap opera Peyton Place.
In 1985, Rowlands played the mother in the critically acclaimed made-for-TV movie An Early Frost. She won an Emmy for her portrayal of former First Lady of the United States Betty Ford in the 1987 made-for-TV movie The Betty Ford Story
In 2002, Rowlands appeared in Mira Nair's HBO movie Hysterical Blindness, for which she won her third Emmy. Next year she appeared as Mrs. Hellman in an episode from the third season of Numb3rs. She played a Nazi survivor whose whole family was killed. The family owned a painting that the Nazis confiscated. Later on the painting reappeared. The new owner lent the painting to an art gallery in Los Angeles but while on display it was stolen. FBI. agent Don Eppes, played by Rob Morrow, tries to figure out what really happened.
In 2009, she appeared on an episode of Monk ("Mr. Monk and the Lady Next Door"). On March 2, 2010, she appeared on an episode of NCIS as lead character Leroy Jethro Gibbs's former mother-in-law, who is embroiled in a murder investigation. (Wikipedia)
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scotianostra · 2 years
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October 23rd 1921 saw the death of John Boyd Dunlop who re-invented the pneumatic tyre. 
There are, of course, many Americans who think that Charles Goodyear invented tyres – he didn’t, but he did invent and patent the process of vulcanisation which made solid rubber tyres and many other rubber products more viable.
Dunlop was a Scottish vet living in Belfast, he had carried out several scientific experiments with rubber, especially rubber tubing for veterinary usages, but it was a problem with his nine-year-old son Johnny’s tricycle that led Dunlop to his great breakthrough. Wee Johnny Dunlop complained that when he rode his bicycle to school the cobbled streets made his bottom sore. Dunlop solved his son’s problem by “inventing” a pneumatic tyre, but then it became clear that this tyre was faster - the lad kept winning cycle races. There was a famous cycle race on the Queen’s College playing fields on 18th May 1889 and Dunlop persuaded the cycle champion Willie Hume to use the new tyres. Willie won the race and everybody wanted the tyres, and so the Dunlop Rubber Company was formed.
What Dunlop did not realise was that 43 years earlier another Scot had patented almost the same thing. Robert Thomson  was given a workshop by his father where he invented all sorts of things. In 1845 Thomson patented what he called aerial wheels. There were no bicycles then, so it would not have been a bicycle tyre that he invented. There were no internal combustion engines either, just a few steam carriages, and otherwise horse-drawn carriages and carts. However, Thomson did some elegant experiments. He fitted his tyres to a carriage and, in Regent’s Park in London, had it pulled side by side with an ordinary carriage. He showed it was much easier to pull the one with pneumatic tyres.
All the watching journalists thought it would be slower because the tyres were soft. It was easier to pull and also silent - it did not make the noise of a carriage. The pneumatic tyres were a huge success but there was no market at the time - rubber was very expensive in the 1840s.
Dunlop’s patent was granted on 7th December 1888 though the existence of Thomson’s earlier patents in France and the USA meant he could not claim to have invented the idea – his process, however, was recognised in its own right and there soon came proof that Dunlop’s tyres were revolutionary, as the champion Irish cyclist Willie Hume won almost every race he entered. The days of solid bicycle tyres were numbered.
And so it was that Dunlop “reinvented ” the tyre, he gave one to the National Museum of Scotland (NMS) in 1910 and it has a place of honour in the museum in Edinburgh to this day as seen in the pic.
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I am in bits.
When we moved to Ireland, some things never made it into the shipping container. Some of those things were important to me and I’ve had to get used to the idea that they are gone forever.
Quinn went through a box of assorted stuff which somehow made it to the apartment in Tarrytown after we got onto that plane - and pulled out a handful of cassette tapes that as he said “Looked like things that might be important.”
He tossed these into his suitcase when he came to visit us a couple weeks ago.
I picked up this one yesterday afternoon when working up in the studio - and put it into the stereo.
It’s my dad talking to his mother, my grandma Alice - getting her to tell stories of her life. Stories I have never heard, voices from my own history - things that shaped my family from the 1920’s and ‘30’s. My dear grandma was orphaned by the age of 7, and had to look after her younger siblings while living with relatives. They were sharecroppers in Tennessee - they grew cotton, and she worked in the fields. She left school after fifth grade to help with the farming - and this was the extent of her education.
I never knew.
She told how my grandpa Johnny had a fast car, and she made him fried chicken and her famous chocolate pie on their first date. She doesn’t remember him proposing, but they got married - and took a train to Akron to look for work in the Goodyear factory. Johnny built dirigibles until the Depression took his job, and then it was back to Tennessee.
“I don’t know how we lived that year - Johnny couldn’t make any money at farming” - and he hitchhiked back to Akron because he’d heard they were hiring. They weren’t. And he couldn’t catch any good rides back to Tennessee - so he walked. “His feet were so swollen when he got home, I had him soaking in the washtub out on the porch to try and help...”
Dad pieced all of the conversation together with some of her favorite songs - and at the end of side “A” - tells her “Happy birthday mom. I love you.”
Side B
Dad talks about some songs he likes, and then plays them. Some cowboy songs, and he tells what they are about, who recorded them and when...I really enjoyed several of his choices, and it was so wonderful to hear my father’s voice again. I assumed that he was talking to Grandma, and the music was for her - on the back side of her birthday tape.
And then
At the very tail-end of the cassette - just before it clicks off
He says
“Take care of yourself Baba. Good night.”
He made the tape for me. I never heard it. I don’t know when he made it, and I don’t know why I’ve never listened to it. “Baba” was his pet name for me since I was a little girl. He made the tape to send to a young woman.
Me.
And an old woman listened to it for the first time yesterday afternoon.
He’s been gone for over 20 years. Grandma gone for nearly 30. But there they are, chatting quietly about the world as it was when they were young.
And I listened to them both - here in a country far away, I am probably older than he was when he recorded it.
Time and life and souls - I am in bits.....
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goalhofer · 2 years
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2022 Norfolk Tides Roster
Pitchers
#0 Kyle Bradish (Goodyear, Arizona)
#8 David Lebron (Homestead, Florida)
#10 Cody Sedlock (Rock Island, Illinois)
#14 Blaine Knight (Bryant, Arkansas)
#18 Joshua Garcia (Honolulu, Hawaii)
#21 Kyle Brnovich (Milton, Georgia)
#23 Cole Uvila (Port Angeles, Washington)
#24 Ryan Hartman (Anaheim, California)
#25 James Greene (Santa Monica, California)
#26 Nick Vespi (Miami, Florida)
#30 Grayson Rodriguez (Nacogdoches, Texas)
#32 Kevin Smith (Dunwoody, Georgia)
#34 Marcos Diplán (Santiago De Los Caballeros, Dominican Republic)
#46 Diogenes Almengo (Santiago De Los Caballeros, Dominican Republic)
#47 Ofelky Peralta (Bonao, Dominican Republic)
#66 Alexander Wells (Newcastle, Australia)
Catchers
#12 Chris Hudgins (San Diego, California)
#28 Matthew Cumberland (Turlock, California)
Infielders
#1 Mason McCoy (Peoria, Illinois)
#2 Jahmai Jones (Peachtree Corners, Georgia)
#3 Terrin Vavra (Menomie, Wisconsin)
#4 Rylan Bannon (Joliet, Illinois)
#5 Shed Long; Jr. (Jacksonville, Alabama)
#6 Cadyn Greiner (Las Vegas, Nevada)
#9 Patrick Dorrian (Kingston, New York)
Outfielders
#7 Kyle Stowers (El Cajon, California)
#17 Yusniel Díaz (Havana, Cuba)
#44 Robert Neustrom (Sioux City, Iowa)
#48 Johnny Rizer (Houston, Texas)
Coaches
Manager Buchanan Britton (Weatherford, Texas)
Pitching coach Justin Ramsey (San José, California)
Hitting coach Tim Gibbons (Bowie, Maryland)
Development coach Josh Rodrigues (Houston, Texas)
Fundamentals coach Ramón Sambo (La Romana, Dominican Republic)
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hi!!!! im kinda peripheral/trying to get into the sh fandom but I discovered recently something called "Joy To The World: A Celebration of Christmas" and apparently Jeremy Brett as Holmes + the rest of the gang are in it singing christmas carols??? it's quite lovely but I've not been able to find any other information about it, and I was curious if you maybe knew something about it!
Hi! hope you have a lovely time in this fandom, lots of nice people in it and lots of things to see. Now about your question: there’s barely any information about it, so I really don’t know much but so far this is what I’ve found: 
It aired on ITV on Christmas Eve, monday 24th December, 1984, at 10:50 pm just after ITN News.
Presented by David Pickering with Jean Alexander, Jeremy Brett, Johnny Briggs, David Burke, Kid Creole, Betty Driver, Jane Eaglen, Julie Goodyear, Don Henderson, David Pickering, Rosalie Williams
David Pickering, 12-year-old Chorister of the Year, takes you on a magical tour of Christmas past and present. Baker Street, Coronation Street, a stable and Granada's Studio One (a new studio complex) are shared by famous faces, students of the Royal Northern College of Music and local children in this joyous celebration of Christmas. (source)
This is the announcement thingy, from TV Times magazine:
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Here’s a magazine article of unknown provenance that provides a little bit more of information:
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And that’s all I was able to find, it’s still not much information but now we know who else was there, and now I really want to watch the rest of it, the video we have is just 6 minutes long and the next show, acording to the tv guide, started at 11:40, so that means the show was about 50 minutes!
Here are the aforementioned 6 minutes of the “joyous celebration of Christmas” if someone is interested :)
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dubsism · 4 years
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Sports Analogies Hidden In Classic Movies - Volume 101: "Johnny Be Good"
Sports Analogies Hidden In Classic Movies – Volume 101: “Johnny Be Good”
Today’s Movie: Johnny Be GoodYear of Release: 1988Stars: Anthony Michael Hall, Robert Downey Jr., Paul GleasonDirector: Bud Smith This movie is not on my list of essential films. NOTE: This installment of Sports Analogies Hidden In Classic Movies is being done as part of something called the The Third So Bad It’s Good Blog-A-Thon hosted by Taking Up Room. I’ve had the privilege of participating…
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sparkblooded-blog · 8 years
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overqualified-drummer
aw man and dante missed it
he’ll be ok
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kazcaldwell · 5 years
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i. ten years old, marie's diner.
johnnie grabbed the big gulp cup, a size reserved for the section of southern america that still laughed in the face of diabetes. he pushed it against each soda in rapid succession; pepsi on diet on mountain dew on sprite on rootbeer. “they call it a suicide,” he told kaz, gulping down the heinous potion of his own creation. he smacked his lips and smiled when he was done, a grin sticky around the edges, missing its two front teeth. daring. reckless. like romeo before juliet's stone tomb, kaz grabbed a cup of his own. a suicide pact, sugary delights met such sweet ends.
ii. twelve years old, kaz's bedroom.
mr. caldwell's old cds were strewn about the room. two boys sat amidst the sea, sorting through the cases to find music that sounded the way they felt. angry, urgent, alive. johnnie with bruises, a fierce black eye that scoured the floor until he found it. the perfect album. a punk rock manifesto they played at deafening volume. johnnie screamed along to songs he did not know, full of more hurt and rage than any poser band from the 80s could ever have hoped to be. he was a bright, blinding fire and kaz was all consumed. if music be the combustion of love, burn on.
iii. thirteen years old, the caldwell bathroom.
when johnnie had his first taste of a girl, he described it to kaz in vivid detail. his words were of peaks and valleys, salty marshes, and humid climates. he vowed to become an explorer; he would chase the adventure of teenage girls, searching for a treasure he could not yet name. something akin to the love of a mother. he would give most of himself to this studious pursuit, but not all. there were little things he saved for his best friend, a boy who was as lovely and temperate as eternal summer. johnnie's jacket hanging in his bathroom. his bike knocked over in the backyard. a bedroom window always left unlocked.
iv. fifteen years old, the front seat of a beatup cadillac.
a needle, an ink well, an ill-advised setting for permanent art. what better way to mar their virgin skin than by the hands of their best friend? kaz went first, pricking a slow pattern along johnnie's right hand. the shape of an anchor to keep him sturdy in the constant tempest of his life. then johnnie's turn. it stung and then ached and then burned, the skull and crossbones he tattooed onto kaz's wrist. “'cause these hands are deadly,” he'd said, his smile both beautiful and dangerous. it was the day kaz learned some cupids killed with arrows, some with tattoos.
v. sixteen years old, johnnie's white mustang.
the car was quintessential johnnie. sharp, rough, cool. born of questionable origin. their first joyride was down south normal's broken roads in the middle of the night. johnnie's foot was lead on the pedal and their hearts beat in unison with every miles per hour gained. he was the happiest kaz had ever seen him, finally going the speed of his own temperament. kaz could not bring himself to look at the road, bewitched by the dark magic of johnnie's expression, of his hair under the moon, of the way he smiled like the revv of an engine. if life was naught but sound and fury, let it signify this. the space between them in the car. their reckless trust in shitty goodyear tires and that love would be enough.
vi. seventeen years old, behind the baseball field.
their friendship was as ferocious and soft as both boys could be. a part of that town the way marie's was, the way baseball was, the way god was. kaz never planned for monsters to trickle in with whetted claws and snatch everything that was his normal. both brothers, in a way. johnnie watched the months make distance between them, but he would not be abandoned like a condemned trailer. if love could not withstand, he was determined to prove himself a villain. to hate the idle pleasures of those years. to regain control, to wreck with his hands what was falling apart.
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graemepark · 2 years
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THIS IS GRAEME PARK: LONG LIVE HOUSE RADIO SHOW 22APR22
In this week’s Long Live House Radio Show 22APR22:
David Morales & Lea-Lorién
The Sunburst Band
Kid Crème
Todd Terry & Sax
Lenny Fontana
Soul Central
Basement Jaxx
Shannon
First Choice
The Salsoul Orchestra
Paul Johnson and more.
For an extended and uninterrupted mix of the first hour of this show with extra tracks from Joe Ventura, Cerrone, Leee John, Ziggy Marley & The Melody Makers, Luther Vandross and more, that are not included here, check out Long Live House Extra every Monday which is exclusively available via Mixcloud Select.
THIS IS GRAEME PARK: LONG LIVE HOUSE RADIO SHOW 22APR22
Title (Mix), Artist
How Would U Feel? (Stereo Anthem Mix), David Morales with Lea-Lorién
Nowhere, Yazelles
Garden Of Love (Dam Swindle Remix), The Sunburst Band
Body Moves (Extended House Stepper's Mix), Mystic Bill
Austin's Groove, Kid Crème
Sable Sun, Ben Sun & John Sable
What I Want, Javi Frias
House Is A Feeling (Paola Shea Remix), Todd Terry & Sax
Believe (Club Mix), Lenny Fontana
The Destroyer (Moodena Remix), Soul Central
Do Your Thing (Tim Deluxe Club Mix), Basement Jaxx
Let The Music Play (Full Intention Remix), Shannon
Break 4 Love (Rob Made Disco Paul Goodyear Edit), Raze
Pump Up The Jam (Jo Manji's Beach Mix 2016), Jo Manji vs Technotronic
Doctor Love (WhiteNoize Remix), First Choice
Ooh I Love It (Love The Break) (Full Intention Mix), The Salsoul Orchestra
Make My Love, Shawn Christopher
Get Get Down (XXX Remix), Paul Johnson
Sunday Shoutin' (Dr Packer Extended Remix), Johnny Corporate
Playing With Knives (Jo Manji Mix), Bizarre Inc.
U Sure Do (Guest List Mix), Strike
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rjhamster · 3 years
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DONATE TO BENEFIT THE FAMILY OF FALLEN DEPUTY, JUAN "JOHNNY" RUIZ
DONATE TO BENEFIT THE FAMILY OF FALLEN DEPUTY, JUAN “JOHNNY” RUIZ
View this email in your browser Rewards Club | Unlimited Washes| Testimonials DONATE TO BENEFIT THE FAMILY OF FALLEN DEPUTY, JUAN “JOHNNY” RUIZ Purchase any car wash at our location off of Litchfield & Indian School, today (10/14) between 7am-3pm, and 100% of the proceeds will directly benefit Fallen Maricopa County Deputy Ruiz’s family.14031 West Indian School Road, Goodyear, AZ 85340 If you…
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kwebtv · 1 year
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Character Actress
Susan Oliver (born Charlotte Gercke, February 13, 1932 – May 10, 1990) Actress, television director, and aviator.
After working in summer stock and regional theater, and in unbilled bits in daytime and primetime television shows and commercials, she made her first major television appearance in a supporting role in the July 31, 1955, episode of the live drama series Goodyear TV Playhouse and quickly progressed to leading parts in other shows.
Oliver did numerous television shows in 1957, and appeared on stage. After she had larger roles in live television plays on Kaiser Aluminum Hour, The United States Steel Hour, and Matinee Theatre. Oliver then went to Hollywood, where she appeared in the November 14, 1957, episode of Climax!, one of the few live drama series based on the West Coast, as well as in a number of filmed shows, including one of the first episodes of NBC's Wagon Train, Father Knows Best, The Americans, and Johnny Staccato.
On April 6, 1960, the 28-year-old Oliver played a spoiled young runaway, Maggie Hamilton, who gets soundly spanked by scout Flint McCullough (Robert Horton), in "The Maggie Hamilton Story" on NBC's Wagon Train. On November 9, 1960, she was cast as the lead guest star in "The Cathy Eckhart Story" on Wagon Train, with husband-and-wife actors John Larch and Vivi Janiss as Ben and Sarah Harness.
Oliver was cast in the 1960 episode of The Deputy as the long-lost daughter of star Henry Fonda's late girl friend, and appeared in Dick Powell's Zane Grey Theatre episode "Knife of Hate" as Susan Pittman. In 1961, Oliver played the part of Laurie Evans in the episode "Incident of His Brother's Keeper" on CBS's Rawhide, and in 1963, she played Judy Hall in the episode "Incident at Spider Rock", Also in 1962, Oliver appeared as Jeanie in the television series Laramie in the episode "Shadows in the Dust".
Oliver was cast in episodes of Adventures in Paradise, Twilight Zone, Route 66, Dr. Kildare, The Naked City, The Barbara Stanwyck Show, Burke's Law, The Fugitive, Gomer Pyle, U.S.M.C., I Spy, The Virginian, The Name of the Game, Longstreet, and Mannix. She made one appearance on The Andy Griffith Show and ABC's family Western series, The Travels of Jaimie McPheeters. She also made two appearances in Quinn Martin's The Invaders (episodes: "Inquisition" and "The Ivy Curtain") on ABC,  In 1965 she  appeared in The Man from U.N.C.L.E. 
Oliver played the female lead guest character Vina in "The Cage" (1964), which was the first pilot of Gene Roddenberry's new show, Star Trek. Two years later, Oliver's performance was reused in the first season, two-part episode "The Menagerie" (1966).  
In 1970, she appeared as Carole Carson/Alice Barnes on the television Western The Men From Shiloh (rebranded name for The Virginian) in the episode titled "Hannah".
From 1975 to 1976, Oliver was a regular cast member of the television soap opera Days of Our Lives. In 1976, she received her only Emmy Award nomination (for "Outstanding Performance by a Supporting Actress") in the three-hour-long, made-for-TV movie Amelia Earhart, broadcast on October 15, 1976, on NBC-TV.  (Wikipedia)
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scotianostra · 3 years
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October 23rd 1921 saw the death of John Boyd Dunlop who re-invented the pneumatic tyre from the design of fellow Scot, Robert W Thomson. 
There are, of course, many Americans who think that Charles Goodyear invented tyres – he didn’t, but he did invent and patent the process of vulcanisation which made solid rubber tyres and many other rubber products possible.
Dunlop was a Scottish vet living in Belfast, he had carried out several scientific experiments with rubber, especially rubber tubing for veterinary usages, but it was a problem with his nine-year-old son Johnny’s tricycle that led Dunlop to his great breakthrough. Wee Johnny Dunlop complained that when he rode his bicycle to school the cobbled streets made his bottom sore. Dunlop solved his son’s problem by “inventing” a pneumatic tyre, but then it became clear that this tyre was faster - the lad kept winning cycle races. There was a famous cycle race on the Queen’s College playing fields on 18 May 1889 and Dunlop persuaded the cycle champion Willie Hume to use the new tyres. Willie won the race and everybody wanted the tyres, and so the Dunlop Rubber Company was formed.
What Dunlop did not realise was that 43 years earlier another Scot had patented almost the same thing. Robert Thomson, who had been to America, returned to Britain and was given a workshop by his father where he invented all sorts of things. In 1845 Thomson patented what he called aerial wheels. There were no bicycles then, so it would not have been a bicycle tyre that he invented. There were no internal combustion engines either, just a few steam carriages, and otherwise horse-drawn carriages and carts. However, Thomson did some elegant experiments. He fitted his tyres to a carriage and, in Regent’s Park in London, had it pulled side by side with an ordinary carriage. He showed it was much easier to pull the one with pneumatic tyres. 
On October 31st 188 Cunlop’s patent was granted though the existence of Thomson’s earlier patents in France and the USA meant he could not claim to have invented the idea – his process, however, was recognised in its own right and there soon came proof that Dunlop’s tyres were revolutionary, as the champion Irish cyclist Willie Hume began using them in 1889 and he won almost every race he entered. The days of solid bicycle tyres were numbered.
All the watching journalists thought it would be slower because the tyres were soft. It was easier to pull and also silent - it did not make the noise of a carriage. The pneumatic tyres were a huge success but there was no market at the time - rubber was very expensive in the 1840s.
And so it was that Dunlop “reinvented ” the tyre, he gave one to the National Museum of Scotland (NMS) in 1910 and it has a place of honour in the museum in Edinburgh to this day as seen in the pic. 
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hihaho · 3 years
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vimeo
Right on Tracks - Just Be You from Johnny Kelly on Vimeo.
One of Four films gently encouraging kids to be kinder to each other.
Cheerios and 72andSunny commissioned song-writer Walter Martin to write some lovely songs and I was given the task of directing them at Nexus Studios.
More info (and sheet music!) here: rightontracks.com
Links to the other films: vimeo.com/johnnykelly/stepup vimeo.com/johnnykelly/itsallfamily vimeo.com/johnnykelly/sitwithsomeonenew
Making of: vimeo.com/johnnykelly/rightontracks-makingof
I roped in illustration collective Nous Vous to design the characters and handed them over to model maker Andy Gent and his team to bring them to life, creating a cast of 98 crazy little puppets.
--
Credits:
Client: Cheerios Title: Right on Tracks Agency: 72andSunny
Executive Creative Director: Justine Armour Creative Director: Devon Hong Senior Writer: Eric Dennis Senior Writer: Hunter Fine Senior Designer: Gustavo Dao Senior Designer: Jon Randazzo Group Brand Director: Sveta Doucet Brand Director: Caitlin Patrick Brand Director: Alexia Schwartz Brand Manager: Dylan Levy Brand Manager: Blake Eisenberg Brand Coordinator: Anne MacKay Director of Production: Lora Schulson EP, Interactive: Vishal Dheiman EP, Film: Julia Lafferty Producer: Samira Mostofi Interactive Producer: Erica Kirsch Sr Partnerships & Legal: Marissa Burnett
Production Company: Nexus Studios ECD / Co-Founder: Chris O’Reilly Director: Johnny Kelly Senior Producer: Isobel Conroy Production Manager: Rebecca Archer Lead / Supervisor: Mark Davies Character Design: Nous Vous Environment Design: Callum Strachan 1st Assistant Director: George Cassavetti Director Of Photography: Matthew Day Camera Assistant: Toby Goodyear DIT: Matthew Hutchings Gaffer: Max Halstead Puppet and Set Fabrication: Andy Gent Art Department: Marina Ralph, Mich Chippington, Robin Jackson, Sofia Serrano, Nadine Patterson, Colin Armitage, Peter le Pard, Tom Sinden, Maggie Hayden, Nathalie Ellner, Jade Gerrard, Ola Kucharska
Lead Puppeteer: Matthew Cooper Assistant Puppeteer: Molly Freeman CRS Studio Managers: Elizabeth Day, Jen Newman
BTS Cameraman: James Alexander Catering: Konrad & Cissi Hammarborg 2D Animation: Alasdair Brotherston
Compositing / Tracking: Germán Díez, Ken Hau, Chris Glew, Ewelina Freuer, Gareth Tredrea, Gökçecan Gürsoy, Robin Yoojin Rhee, Peter Bailey Editor: David Slade
Music: Walter Martin Music Supervisor: Jessica Dierauer Sound Design And Mix: Mark Hills @ Factory
Special Thanks: Elizabeth Day
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lacharmante · 4 years
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Yuketen. Johnny - CC Black $704.00 Goodyear welt construction Full grain leather upper Cat's paw heel and tap sole Hand perforated cap toe and upper Benchmade
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full-imagination · 4 years
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Peggy O'Neal Rhinehart
Peggy O’Neal Rhinehart, 79, died Friday, December 11, 2020 at Spartanburg Regional Hospice Home. Born June 3, 1941 in Spartanburg, SC, she was the daughter of the late, Albert Rhinehart and Annie L. Sanders Rhinehart Swann. Mrs. Rhinehart was retired from Goodyear Tire and Rubber Company (Long Mile Rubber Company) and a member of Broad River Baptist Church in Rutherford County. Survivors include her sons, CSM U.S. Army Randy Gillespie (Shanan) of Honolulu, HI and Ronny Gillespie (Kari) of Greer, SC; grandchildren, Randi Shea O’Neill, Nicholas Gillespie (U.S. Navy); Caroline Gillespie, Dylan Gillespie, Cole Gillespie and Alexandra Gillespie; great-grandchildren, Vayda O’Neill, Collin O’Neill and Benjamin O’Neill; brothers, Roger Rhinehart of Cleveland, OH, and Michael Rhinehart of Chesnee, SC and sisters, Nancy Wilson of Fingerville, SC, Francine Gowan of Mayo, SC, Tina Byrd of Boiling Springs, SC and Carol Fowler of Chesnee, SC. In addition to her parents, she was predeceased by a brother, Johnny Swann. Visitation will be 1:00 – 2:30 PM Tuesday, December 15, 2020 at Floyd’s Boiling Springs Chapel, 4161 Hwy. 9 North, Boiling Springs, SC 29316. Graveside services will be held at 3:00 PM in Good Shepherd Memorial Park, 4164 Boiling Springs Rd., Boiling Springs, SC 29316, conducted by The Rev. David Anderson. Floyd’s Boiling Springs Chapel from The JF Floyd Mortuary via Spartanburg Funeral
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seprofcorp · 4 years
Video
Careless Whisper - Sax Cover by GABY SAX (FOR MYSELF): " TENOR SAX BY "SELMER" RULES THE WORLD OF MUSIC"< SHARING THE SPOTLIGHT WITH THE LATE " MS> MARILYN (DIMAGGIO)MONROE JEAN(NORMA), WITH "2ND" PLACE ="HELEN FOLSADE ADU(SADE & BAND MATES) & MS> GABBY RUZ< PAUL DESMOND(AITO), STEWART MATHEWMAN(TENOR & BARITONE "SELMERS) IN SADE";STAN GETZ(GAL FROM IPANEMA">"JOHN COLTRANE"<JOHNNY ALMOND(TENOR & ALTO & FLUTE(JOHN MAYALL AT THE FILLMORE LIVE="CALIFORNIA"< "ROXANNE" , " SO HARD TO SHARE"& "NEW YORK" WITH JOHN MARK="MARK ALMOND BAND")(TYING WITH THE "SELMER ALTO SAXOPHONE(LEARNED TO PLAY ON THIS IN 2 WEEKS FOR MY H.S. BAND AUDITION(PASSED_BECAME 1st CHAIR TENOR & JOINED THE "H.S.JAZZ BAND" TOO>WHAT A LIFE< EVEN HAD A CHEERLEADER FALL ALL OVER ME(CHARLOTTE)/SENIOR PROM & ALL(SHE STAYED CLOSE EVEN AFTER MY " SENIOR CUT OUT DAY" " AUTO ACCIDENT(FRONT END OF DAD'S 61' CHEVY IMPALA( BIG BLOCK ENGINE--MY FAULT< DEEMED INSURANCE " ASSIGNED RISK"($3000 PREMIUM FOR 3 YEARS.TOOK BUS TO HOFSTRA UNIVERSITY, BORROWED SAME REPAIRED CHEVY TOO< TILL " 63' BRITISH RACING GREEN THUNDERBIRD W/ 390 CUBIC 4 BARREL ENGINE(CABIN LENGTH CENTER CONSOLE< SWINGING STEERING WHEEL FOR ENTRY/EXIT/ TRIPLE RED STRIPE GOODYEAR WIDER TIRES & SHOCKS.EVEN " RAKED THE REAR FOR A BIT< TOOK "HER" A BIT OVER " 100 M.P.H. RETURNING FROM SOUTH HAMPTON SOLO DIVE, ON SOUTHERN STATE PKWY< WHEN IT WAS REAL DARK & LATE> LUCKY ME= NO POLICE ANYWHERE(DID NOT HAVE A RADAR DETECTOR THEN)> A VERY DUMB, RISKY<(MY DAD PROBABLY WOULD HAVE GROUNDED ME & TAKEN MY LICENSE AWAY>>>THOSE WERE INDEED " THE DAYS< MY FRIENDS" & THEY " DID END"
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