#johnson city ny
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never-was-has-been · 10 months ago
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TODAY 01/27/2024 In the Johnson City, NY area the Grand Opening for BJ's with "Dick's House of Sports" in the same mall as "BJ's", with the Oscar Meyer Wiener mobile as part of the celebration... This is what I'd call an advertising lesson in "Failed Optics", wouldn't you? 🤦🏼‍♂️ 🤷🏼‍♂️😳 🤯 😂 🤣 You cannot make this stuff up!!
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matthewdwhite · 11 months ago
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Johnson City, NY 10/18
The Red Robin 1959-2021
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curryvillain · 9 months ago
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.@RCity Share Visual For "Das My Pum"
Hailing from the US Virgin Islands, the duo of Theron and Timothy Thomas a.k.a. R. City have been big names in music thanks to their songwriting and hit-making skills, racking up Billions of streams over the years. In 2024, they still hold that power as Theron secured the award for Songwriter of the Year at the 66th GRAMMY Awards last night. With celebrations in the air currently, the duo made…
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Signs that your windows need replacement
Windows are a vital part of any home, providing natural light, ventilation, and insulation. However, like everything else in your home, windows can wear out over time, leading to various problems. Here are some signs that your windows may need replacement:
Drafts: If you feel a draft coming from your windows, it's a sign that they are not sealing properly. This can lead to energy loss, higher utility bills, and reduced comfort.
Condensation: Condensation between the panes of your windows indicates that the seal is broken, and moisture has entered the space between the glass panes. This can impair visibility, reduce insulation, and cause mold and mildew growth.
Difficulty opening and closing: If your windows are hard to open or close, it could be due to warped frames or damaged hardware. This can compromise security and ventilation.
Damage: Cracked, chipped, or broken windows should be replaced immediately for safety reasons.
If you notice any of these signs, it may be time to consider window replacement. New windows can improve energy efficiency, enhance your home's appearance, and provide better security and comfort.
So, if you are considering replacing your home’s windows? Window Town (Southern Tier) can help you choose new windows to enhance the style of your home. Our professional team is specialized in Replacement Window Installation services. Call 607-261-1110 or visit our website for more information: www.windowtownofsoutherntier.com
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mimi-0007 · 7 months ago
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FATHER & SON: James Earl Jones with his Father Robert Earl Jones on Stage in the 1962 Production "Moon on a Rainbow Shawl."
Robert Earl Jones (February 3, 1910 – September 7, 2006), sometimes credited as Earl Jones, was an American actor and professional boxer. One of the first prominent Black film stars, Jones was a living link with the Harlem Renaissance of the 1920s and 1930s, having worked with Langston Hughes early in his career.
Jones was best known for his leading roles in films such as Lying Lips (1939) and later in his career for supporting roles in films such as The Sting (1973), Trading Places (1983), The Cotton Club (1984), and Witness (1985).
Jones was born in northwestern Mississippi; the specific location is unclear as some sources indicate Senatobia, while others suggest nearby Coldwater. He left school at an early age to work as a sharecropper to help his family. He later became a prizefighter. Under the name "Battling Bill Stovall", he was a sparring partner of Joe Louis.
Jones became interested in theater after he moved to Chicago, as one of the thousands leaving the South in the Great Migration. He moved on to New York by the 1930s. He worked with young people in the Works Progress Administration, the largest New Deal agency, through which he met Langston Hughes, a young poet and playwright. Hughes cast him in his 1938 play, Don't You Want to Be Free?.
Jones also entered the film business, appearing in more than twenty films. His film career started with the leading role of a detective in the 1939 race film Lying Lips, written and directed by Oscar Micheaux, and Jones made his next screen appearance in Micheaux's The Notorious Elinor Lee (1940). Jones acted mostly in crime movies and dramas after that, with such highlights as Wild River (1960) and One Potato, Two Potato (1964). In the Oscar-winning 1973 film The Sting, he played Luther Coleman, an aging grifter whose con is requited with murder leading to the eponymous "sting". In the later 20th century, Jones appeared in several other noted films: Trading Places (1983) and Witness (1985).
Toward the end of his life, Jones was noted for his stage portrayal of Creon in The Gospel at Colonus (1988), a black musical version of the Oedipus legend. He also appeared in episodes of the long-running TV shows Lou Grant and Kojak. One of his last stage roles was in a 1991 Broadway production of Mule Bone by Hughes and Zora Neale Hurston, another important writer of the Harlem Renaissance. His last film was Rain Without Thunder (1993).
Although blacklisted by the House Un-American Activities Committee in the 1950s due to involvement with leftist groups, Jones was ultimately honored with a lifetime achievement award by the U.S. National Black Theatre Festival.
Jones was married three times. As a young man, he married Ruth Connolly (died 1986) in 1929; they had a son, James Earl Jones. Jones and Connolly separated before James was born in 1931, and the couple divorced in 1933. Jones did not come to know his son until the mid-1950s. He adopted a second son, Matthew Earl Jones. Jones died on September 7, 2006, in Englewood, New Jersey, from natural causes at age 96.
THEATRE
1945 The Hasty Heart (Blossom) Hudson Theatre, Broadway
1945 Strange Fruit (Henry) McIntosh NY theater production
1948 Volpone (Commendatori) City Center
1948 Set My People Free (Ned Bennett) Hudson Theatre, Broadway
1949 Caesar and Cleopatra (Nubian Slave) National Theatre, Broadway
1952 Fancy Meeting You Again (Second Nubian) Royale Theatre, Broadway
1956 Mister Johnson (Moma) Martin Beck Theater, Broadway
1962 Infidel Caesar (Soldier) Music Box Theater, Broadway
1962 The Moon Besieged (Shields Green) Lyceum Theatre, Broadway
1962 Moon on a Rainbow Shawl (Charlie Adams) East 11th Street Theatre, New York
1968 More Stately Mansions (Cato) Broadhurst Theatre, Broadway
1975 All God's Chillun Got Wings (Street Person) Circle in the Square Theatre, Broadway
1975 Death of a Salesman (Charley)
1977 Unexpected Guests (Man) Little Theatre, Broadway
1988 The Gospel at Colonus (Creon) Lunt-Fontanne Theatre, Broadway
1991 Mule Bone (Willie Lewis) Ethel Barrymore Theatre, Broadway
FILMS
1939 Lying Lips (Detective Wenzer )
1940 The Notorious Elinor Lee (Benny Blue)
1959 Odds Against Tomorrow (Club Employee uncredited)
1960 Wild River (Sam Johnson uncredited)
1960 The Secret of the Purple Reef (Tobias)
1964 Terror in the City (Farmer)
1964 One Potato, Two Potato (William Richards)
1968 Hang 'Em High
1971 Mississippi Summer (Performer)
1973 The Sting (Luther Coleman)
1974 Cockfighter (Buford)
1977 Proof of the Man (Wilshire Hayward )
1982 Cold River (The Trapper)
1983 Trading Places (Attendant)
1983 Sleepaway Camp (Ben)
1984 The Cotton Club (Stage Door Joe)
1984 Billions for Boris (Grandaddy)
1985 Witness (Custodian)
1988 Starlight: A Musical Movie (Joe)
1990 Maniac Cop 2 (Harry)
1993 Rain Without Thunder (Old Lawyer)
TELEVISION
1964 The Defenders (Joe Dean) Episode: The Brother Killers
1976 Kojak (Judge) Episode: Where to Go if you Have Nowhere to Go?
1977 The Displaced Person (Astor) Television movie
1978 Lou Grant (Earl Humphrey) Episode: Renewal
1979 Jennifer's Journey (Reuven )Television movie
1980 Oye Ollie (Performer) Television series
1981 The Sophisticated Gents (Big Ralph Joplin) 3 episodes
1982 One Life to Live
1985 Great Performances (Creon) Episode: The Gospel at Colonus
1990 True Blue (Performer) Episode: Blue Monday
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cartermagazine · 8 months ago
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Today In History
Clara “Mother” Hale, founded the Hale House, a sanctuary for drug-addicted and HIV/AIDS-infected babies in Harlem, NY—she was born in Elizabeth City, NC, on this date April 1, 1905.
Mother Hale was much more than a mother, a wife and businesswoman. She was a great humanitarian, a champion of the principles of self-determination and a caregiver of all caregivers.
Through her devotion to her own three children she was inspired to reach out to others in her community who were in need of nurturing.
“My daughter says she was almost sixteen before she realized all these other kids weren’t her real sisters and brothers. Everyone called me ‘Mommy.”‘
Hale was honored many times during her life. Despite the accolades, throughout the years, Mother Hale’s thoughts were always with the needy children who were brought to her for assistance. In 1986, she told Herschel Johnson of Ebony that, “I’d like for it to go down in history that we taught our children to be proud Black American citizens, and that they learned they could do anything, and that they could do it for themselves.”
CARTER™️ Magazine
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ARTIST BOOK DISPLAY OCTOBER 2024 🎃
The Ghost Box. Ed. Patton Oswalt. [Edmonton, Alberta] : Hingston & Olsen Publishing, 2017.
When I Go Out I Bleed Magic. Ingrid J. Torvund.[Oslo, Norway] : Torpedo Press, 2015.
Robot Control. Angela Mark. [Allston, MA] : American Living Press, 1991.
Horror Vacuum. Kalah Faye Allen. [Kansas City, KS] : K. Allen, 1996.
The Hardy Boys in A Ghost in the Closet. Mabel Maney. [San Francisco] : World O' Girls Books, 1991.
In the Event Anyone Disappears. Bisa Washington. [Rochester, NY] : Visual Studies Workshop Press, 1991.
The Dr. Frankenstein Option. David Robbins. [Graz, Austria] : Edition Forum Stadtpark, 1995.
More Satanic Verses. Russell Johnson. [New York] : Russ Johnson & Titanic Press, 1991.
Monster. Ronald Jones. [New York, NY] : Sonnabend Gallery, 1993.
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fashionfaguette · 1 year ago
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Fashion Faguette x Ultra Complex
Celebrate Pride Month with our exclusive collaboration featuring Fashion Faguette! This special edition product not only makes a bold style statement, but it also supports the LGBTQIA+ community in Palestine & New York City!
When purchasing this product, you're making a meaningful contribution, as all profits will be donated to Palestinian LGBTQIA+ organizations as well as the Ali Forney Center in NY & Marsha P Johnson Institute. Join us in championing diversity, equality, and inclusivity, while making a real difference in the lives of those who need it most.
In the current state of the economy we feel it's only right to give back to our trans brothers and sisters who have paved the way for us! We also want to bring attention to "pinkwashing" - using LGBTQIA+ rights to distract from human rights violations.
Together, let's address systemic challenges and fight for equality and justice.
Wear your pride with purpose and be part of the movement!
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emma-dennehy-presents · 2 years ago
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Celebrating Black Queer Icons:
Miss Major Griffin-Gracy
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Born on October 25, 1940, Major is a trans women well known as a leader in the broader trans community and an activist, with a particular focus on black and incarcerated trans women. Major grew up in Chicago's South Side and participated in the local drag scene, during her youth. Major described the experiences as glamorous, like going to the Oscars. While she did not have the contemporary language for it, Major has been out as a trans women since the late 1950s. This made her a target of criticism, mistreatment, and violence, even among her queer peers. Majors transition, especially getting her hands on hormones, was largely a black market affair. Given the lack of employment opportunities for black trans women at the time, she largely survived through sex work and other criminalized activities. At some point Major moved to New York City and established herself amongst the cities queer community, despite the prejudice against trans women. She participated in the 1969 Stonewall Uprising. Later, after getting convicted on a burglary charge, Major was imprisoned with men at Clinton Correctional Facility in Dannemora, NY. There she met Frank "Big Black" Smith, a participant in the 1971 Attica Uprising at Attica Correctional Facility. He treated Major, and her identity as a woman, with respect and the two built a friendship. Smith also taught Major a good bit about advocating for herself and other trans women being mistreated by the US Justice System. Major was released from Dannemora in 1974. Major moved to San Diego in 1978 and almost immediately began working on community efforts and participating in grassroots movements. Starting by working at a food bank, she would go on to provide services directly to incarcerated, addicted, and homeless trans women, and would provide additional services after the AIDS epidemic started. In the 1990s Major moved to the San Fransisco Bay Area, where she continued her work, alongside organizations like the Tenderloin AIDS Resource Center. In 2003 Major became the Director of the Transgender Gender Variant Intersex Justice Project, shortly after its founding by attorney and community organizer Alexander L Lee, a trans man. The group works to end human rights abuses in the California Prison System, with a focus on trans, intersex, and gender variant POC. The position has since been passed on to Janetta Johnson, a previously incarcerated trans woman who mentored under Major. She is the focus of the 2015, award winning, documentary Major!. Major has five sons, two biological and three runaways she adopted, after meeting them in a California park. Her oldest son, Christopher was born in 1978, and her youngest, Asiah (rhymes with messiah) in 2021. At 82 years old Miss Major Griffin-Gracy continues to be an active member of her community and an advocate for our rights as trans people.
Haven't settled on which yet, but Willmer "Little Ax" Broadnax or Victor J Mukasa will be next!
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fearsmagazine · 11 months ago
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SAW THE MUSICAL: THE UNAUTHORIZED PARODY OF SAW Extends Off-Broadway and Announces National Tour.
After an astonishing New York run this Fall, SAW The Musical The Unauthorized Parody of Saw has extended its run Off-Broadway at AMT Theatre (345 West 45th Street) through Jun 23, 2024. It will also kick off a national tour in LA with a six-week run beginning Feb 29 at the Hudson Theatres Mainstage (6539 Santa Monica Blvd, Los Angeles, CA 90038 in Hollywood) SAW The Musical: The Unauthorized Parody began performances Off-Broadway on Sept 16, 2023, with its New York Opening Night on Sunday, Oct 1, 2023, and was called "Hilariously Absurd" by NPR. The run is extended through Jun 23, 2024, in Midtown's Theater District.
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Danny Durr as Gordon and Jill Owen
The National Tour stops include Los Angeles, CA (Hudson Theatre Mainstage, Feb 29- Apr 7, 2024 ); San Diego, CA (Tenth Ave Arts Center, April 10 – 28, 2024), Las Vegas, NV (May 1 – 5, 2024), Portland, OR (Alberta Abbey, May 15 – Jun 9, 2024), Greely, CO (Union Colony Civic Center, June 2024), Chicago, IL (Jul 26 – Aug 18, 2024). Exact dates, locations, and tickets can be purchased by visiting www.sawthemusical.com/national-tour.
One of the most thought-provoking horror films of all time now is…a musical. SAW The Musical hilariously captures the events of the first movie, parodying the Saw that started it all, following from where Lawrence Gordon and Adam Stanheight find each other for the first time in the bathroom trap. Will they follow "the rules" as they discover each other's secrets? Will they escape the game in time and saw right through? A love story with fluidity (and lots more fluids), SAW The Musical: The Unauthorized Parody of Saw is Little Shop of Horrors meets Avenue Q, pushing the boundary on sexuality and how to love. [Parental Advisory: Explicit Content]
"SAW The Musical: The Unauthorized Parody of Saw brings the iconic horror film to life on stage with a wickedly funny twist. Now is the perfect time to laugh at the macabre as we blend horror and hair-raising laughter, creating a unique musical experience that's both hilarious and thrilling. Get ready for a love story entangled in traps, secrets, and unexpected humor, pushing the boundaries of entertainment with a dash of explicit fun." Cooper Jordan, Creator, and Producer
Created by Cooper Jordan (DEX! A Killer Musical, The Rat Pack Undead), SAW The Musical has a book by Award -Winning Writer Zoe Ann Jordan (Virtuoso - NYCHFF) and music & lyrics by Patrick Spencer & Anthony De Angelis (An Axemas Story), and directed & choreographed by Tony Award Winner Stephanie Rosenberg (Easter Bunny HOP! LIVE; Co-Producer: Moulin Rouge! The Musical, Anastasia) with music direction by Leigh Pomeranz (DEX! A Killer Musical) and fight direction by Dan Renkin (All My Sons, DEX! A Killer Musical). The Musical is produced by Cooper Jordan, Saw The Musical Parody LLC, Stephanie Rosenberg, Merciful Delusions Productions, Panit Chantranuluck, June Rachelson-Ospa, and more to be announced. Cooper Jordan is the Lead Producer.
SAW The Musical: The Unauthorized Parody of Saw (New York) stars Danny Durr (National Tour: A Christmas Carol, Tony-nominated War Paint) as Gordon, Adam Parbhoo (NY: Home's Kitchen) as Adam, Gabrielle Goodman (NY: Open, Stay) as Amanda/Alli/Jigsaw and Voiceover for Detective Tapp is by the late Donnell Johnson, with Swings & Understudies; Andrew Caira (New York: The Importance of Being Earnestly LGBTQ+, Regional/Tour: Atlantic City Blues Brothers), Patrick Voss Davis (Film: Lucky Louie. Regional: Newsies), James Lynch (New York: Baby Powder), Thomas Skea (Film: Out of Water), Morgan Traud (Regional: Mame), Jessica Morilak ("A Sketch of New York") and Keaton Barry. SAW The Musical's National Tour Casts will be announced in 2024.
For an updated schedule, National Tour tickets or to purchase tickets, please visit SawtheMusical.com.
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filmnoirfoundation · 2 months ago
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AND THE WINNER IS...
Here are the winners of the FNF's NOIR CITY Magazine #41 donation drive held August 29 - September 5, 2024:
Existing donors
★ Winner of the Criterion DVD of The Asphalt Jungle (1950): Larry Long, Hammond, IN. Winner of the Criterion Blu-ray release of Bound (1996): Lloyd Stires, Pittsburgh, PA. Winner of the Flicker Alley release of the FNF restoration Too Late for Tears (1949): Deanna Trainham, Fairfax, VA
★ Winner of the Criterion Blu-ray release of Thelma & Louise (1991) starring Susan Sarandon and Geena Davis, illustrator Graham Chaffee’s To Have and To Hold, and the NOIR CITY Experience book about the first twenty years of the NOIR CITY film festival: Andrew Hawkins, Wilmington, DE
★ Winner of the new release of Kino Lorber’s Film Noir: The Dark Side of Cinema XVII with Edward G. Robinson films Vice Squad (1953), Black Tuesday (1954), and Nightmare (1956); the Flicker Alley Blu-ray/DVD release of the FNF’s latest restoration No abras nunca esa puerta (1952 - Argentina); and a copy of Eddie Muller’s The Distance. Ruth Adar, San Leandro, CA
★ Winner of the Gloria Grahame trio: Human Desire (Kino Blu-ray Special Edition), Odds Against Tomorrow (Kino Blu-ray Special Edition), and In a Lonely Place (Criterion DVD); the Flicker Alley Blu-ray/DVD release of the FNF’s restoration El vampiro negro (1953 - Argentina); the about-to-be-published NOIR CITY Annual 16 (releasing September 2024); and the NOIR CITY Experience book – 20 years of the NOIR CITY film festival: Douglas Cablk, Oak Park, IL
★ EXTRA - Donors to receive the NOIR CITY Experience book Karen Meacham, Victoria, TX; Nicolas Consales, Fanwood, NJ; Michael Goswell, Pittsburgh, PA; Daniel Ferko, Lexington Park, MD; and Roberto Maragoni, San Jose, CA
New donors
★ The five new-subscriber winners of the five NOIR CITY Magazine back issues --   #16, #25, #28, #33, #38  -- are: Geoffrey Bickford, Freedom, NH; Jacqueline Davis, Akron, OH; Tommy Jansson, Sweden; Anthony Towle, New York, NY; and Anthony Martinez, Los Angeles, CA
★ The three new-subscriber winners of Flicker Alley Blu-ray/DVD releases of two FNF restorations -- Too Late for Tears (1949) with Lizabeth Scott and Dan Duryea and The Man Who Cheated Himself with Lee J. Cobb, Jane Wyatt, and John Dall: William Ardis, Frisco, TX; Doyle Bartlett, Ada, OK; and Danielle Johnson, Scottville, MI
Thank you to everyone who contributed to the Film Noir Foundation! A reminder that anyone who contributes $20 or more to the FNF and signs up our mailing list always receives a free year's subscription to NOIR CITY e-magazine. Contributors may receive additional FNF thank you gifts depending on the amount of the donation.
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joeinct · 1 year ago
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Waldorf Grill & Restaurant, Johnson City, NY, Photo by Bruce Wrighton, c. 1986
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2002slut · 8 months ago
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Betsey Johnson at her showroom in New York City, NY
(2000)
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earlycuntsets · 2 months ago
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pt. 2
parts (1, 3, 4)
earlycuntsets.org sourced - where I got all my mcr pictures
first of a series. due to tumblr limits on how many links you can post. this full idea will be continued on future posts. here is 2007-2010. this is pictures. will make a separate post for youtube/recordings.
been needing to fully source my website so here we go! wanted to share with other kool mcr fans.
old fansites/website appearances:
08/11/2007 tampa fl - ishotyourband.com
11/13/2007 sheffield england - blackvelvetmagazine.com
04/02/2008 san jose ca - cluelessdoll18
11/30/2010 - iheardradio
12/05/2010 tampa bay - 97x
12/12/2010 91x rex the halls san diego hollywood icon magazine
flickrs:
07/28/2007 san bernadino ca - joey malone & scarlet lark
07/29/2007 mountain view ca - lex
07/31/2007 kevin and beans breakfast hollywood ca - alex rausch
08/03/2007 san antonia tx - diana
08/04/2007 dallas tx - kenneth smith
08/07/2007 charlotte nc - brittany davis
08/11/2007 tampa fl - tracie stockwell, melissa turner, matt downham
08/15/2007 long island ny - maria newman, miles tsang, paul sherwood, carrie musgrave
08/17/2007 blossom music center cuyahoga falls oh - rachael barbash
08/19/2007 bristol va - kyle gustafson
08/21/2007 toronto ca - taylor christina
08/22/2007 detroit michigan - dominique canning
08/24/2007 mansfield boston - dan gonyea, allmyoxygen, ashleyspotlightrocks
08/25/2007 camden nj - steve trager, cary liao
08/31/2007 noblesville in - eatthislight
09/01/2007 tinley park il - april a taylor
09/03/2007 denver co - liz sawyer
11/03/2007 milano italy - fabrizio galeone & luca fill
11/15/2007 london uk - emma webb
11/30/2007 sydney australia - kate walton
12/09/2007 kuala lumpur malaysia - jin lim
12/11/2007 singapore - phook afg
1/27/2008 taipei, taiwan - jo
2/15/2008 rio de janeiro - charline messa
2/18/2008 sao paolo brazil - 115th dream, alexandra m, mariel g.m., fernanda, alfredoow
2/24/2008 santiago chile - sisforstph, felipebored, francisca
2/27/2008 caracas venezuela - natalia feliu, alxgt
03/30/2008 las vegas nv - sarah dope
04/08/2008 portland oregon - ciera walters
04/12/2008 mexico city - tony francois
04/17/2008 chicago il - sarah
04/27/2008 frisco tx - kenneth smith
05/09/2008 nyc ny - maura
08/01/2009 the roxy hollywood ca - jessxrevenge, lex, daniel rodriguez
10/23/2010 london uk - alessia cifali, justine trickett, lucy roth, justin ng, sarah tye, solange moreira-yeoell, emma webb, immy
10/24/2010 manchester uk - emilyisabelle, hayley johnson, sinead granger, frankie cooksie, paul
10/25/2010 edinburgh uk - emilyisabelle, hannah drake
10/30/2010 amsterdam - samantha, kimviciousphotography, stacey van shaik
10/31/2010 london uk - rikdom
11/01/2010 paris france - manuela, apoline mariotti, jem
11/11/2010 mcr in session for bbc radio maida vale - rhodri jones
11/22/2010 los angeles ca - andi tedesco
12/01/2010 nyc ny - ahorsewithnoname
12/03/2010 roseland ballroom nyc ny - kenny shin, rufus, jeremy wood, miwa sakulrat, ludovica ciccarelli,
12/08/2010 kansas city mo - todd zimmer, scott spychalski, wendy vong,
12/10/2010 101 not so silent night san jose ca - theowlmag, shannon gilb, scernea
livejournals:
08/10/2007 west palm beach - pookie_ray
part 3 here
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haggishlyhagging · 2 years ago
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Jan - Jun 2023 Reading List:
Adichie, Chimamanda Ngozi. Dear Ijeawele, or, A Feminist Manifesto in Fifteen Suggestions. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 2017.
Adichie, Chimamanda Ngozi. We Should All Be Feminists. New York: Vintage Books, 2014.
Bartky, Sandra Lee. Femininity and Domination: Studies in the Phenomenology of Oppression. New York: Routledge, 1990.
Bittel, Carla. Mary Putnam Jacobi & The Politics of Medicine in Nineteenth-Century America. Chapel Hill: The University of North Carolina Press, 2009.
Bolen, Jean Shinoda. Goddesses in Everywoman: A New Psychology of Women. Perennial Library, n.d.
Brownmiller, Susan. Femininity. New York: Open Road Media, 2013.
Chesler, Phyllis. Women and Madness. Chicago: Lawrence Hill Books, 2018.
Christ, Carol P., and Judith Plaskow. Womanspirit Rising: A Feminist Reader in Religion. San Francisco: Harper & Row, 1979.
Daly, Mary. The Church and the Second Sex. New York: Harper Colophon Books, 1975.
Davis, Elizabeth Gould. The First Sex. New York: G. P. Putnam’s Sons, 1971.
Doyle, Sady. Dead Blondes and Bad Mothers. Brooklyn: Melville House Publishing, 2019.
Dworkin, Andrea. Intercourse. New York: Basic Books, 2007.
Ehrenreich, Barbara, and Deirdre English. For Her Own Good: 150 Years of the Experts’ Advice to Women. Garden City, NY: Anchor Press, 1978.
Firestone, Shulamith. The Dialectic of Sex: The Case for Feminist Revolution. New York: William Morrow and Company, Inc., 1970.
Gowrinathan, Nimmi. Radicalizing Her: Why Women Choose Violence. Boston: Beacon Press, 2021.
Hawthorne, Susan. In Defence of Separatism. Mission Beach: Spinifex Press, 2019.
Jeffreys, Sheila. Anticlimax: A Feminist Perspective on the Sexual Revolution. Spinifex Press, 1990.
Jeffreys, Sheila. The Spinster and Her Enemies. Chicago: Spinifex Press, 1997.
Johnson, Sonia. Going Out of Our Minds: The Metaphysics of Liberation. Freedom: Crossing Press, 1987.
Johnson, Sonia. Wildfire Igniting the She/volution. Albuquerque: Wildfire Books, 1989.
Lerner, Gerda. The Creation of Patriarchy. New York: Oxford University Press, 1986.
Love Your Enemy? The Debate between Heterosexual Feminism and Political Lesbianism. London: Onlywomen Press, Ltd., 1981.
Miles, Rosalind. Who Cooked the Last Supper?: The Women's History of the World. New York: Three Rivers Press, 2001.
Reed, Evelyn. Woman’s Evolution: From Matriarchal Clan to Patriarchal Family. New York: Pathfinder Press, 1975.
Sjöö, Monica, and Barbara Mor. The Great Cosmic Mother: Rediscovering The Religion of the Earth. San Francisco: HarperSanFrancisco, 2013.
Smith, Joan. Home Grown: How Domestic Violence Turns Men Into Terrorists. London: Riverrun, 2019.
Solanas, Valerie. SCUM Manifesto: With an Introduction by Vivian Gornick. London: Olympia Press, 1971.
Spender, Dale. Women of Ideas and What Men Have Done to Them. London: Ark Paperbacks, 1983.
Srinivasan, Amia. The Right to Sex: Feminism in the Twenty-First Century. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2021.
Stone, Merlin. When God Was a Woman. San Diego: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1978.
Ussher, Jane. Women’s Madness: Misogyny or Mental Illness? Amherst: University of Massachusetts Press, 1992.
West, Lindy. The Witches are Coming. New York: Hachette Books, 2019.
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