#kelly richard nelson
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Hi! Had a kinda weird question, but is it ever mentioned how Matt paid for his education or any student loans?
Hi! This has been touched on a few times, yes. One good source of information is Daredevil volume 3 #12, in which Matt tells a story from his early days rooming with Foggy at Columbia.
Matt: "[Being the teacher's pet] wasn't enough to float me out of a hell of student-grant bureaucracy. Unlike Foggy, I was eternally one step ahead of the bursar's office." Daredevil vol. 3 #12 by Mark Waid, Chris Samnee, Javier Rodriguez, and Joe Caramagna
This story takes place in law school and doesn't mention Matt's undergrad experience, but we learn that he was receiving financial aid (which seems believable for a high-achieving disabled student from a single-parent, low-income household; the Battlin' Jack Murdock mini-series also mentions that Matt was on a scholarship, implied to be tied to his disabled status), but was still struggling to pay (also unsurprising; Jack was still alive at this point, but it's hard to say how much money he was making). By the end of the story, Matt reveals that Foggy's well-to-do family stepped in at a certain point and helped keep him afloat until graduation (also unsurprising; Foggy's parents also financed the first Nelson & Murdock office).
Another thing to keep in mind about Matt's college experience is that the continuity changed in the early 80s. He wasn't always a Columbia grad; originally, he and Foggy attended the vaguely-named State College in upstate New York, and one of the reasons Matt picked that school was because it was affordable.
Daredevil vol. 1 #-1 by Joe Kelly, Gene Colan, Christie Scheele, Matt Ryan, and Richard Starkings
At this point, the only concrete thing we know about Matt's financial situation is that the money was coming from his father. The main reason Jack kept boxing past his prime, and the main reason he settled for signing on with the corrupt manager who eventually murdered him, was to afford Matt's college education.
Daredevil vol. 1 #1 by Stan Lee, Bill Everett, and Sam Rosen
With the shift to a much more prestigious and expensive alma mater, with the cost of college having skyrocketed since 1964, and with the sliding timescale to take into account, it has definitely become harder to believe that Jack's boxing earnings would have been enough to pay for more than a semester-or-two. It wouldn't surprise me at all if some future retelling of Matt's origin at least put him in a work study program of some kind to make some extra cash.
As far as loans are concerned, I think a lot of people tend to forget that Nelson & Murdock were/are a very well-known and successful law firm. They've had their low points, sure, but there are plenty of key periods in their careers when they were making a ton of money. The Bendis/Maleev run (in which Matt is a high-profile public figure and goes to court wearing $2,000 suits) is an easy example, but we can look much earlier than that too. Matt is referred to as "one of the finest trial lawyers in the nation" as early as Daredevil volume 1 #20, and check out his swanky, tricked-out Sutton Place brownstone:
Daredevil vol. 1 #167 by David Michelinie, Frank Miller, Klaus Janson, Glynis Wein, and Joe Rosen
Given this, I tend to think that Matt hasn't had too much trouble paying off his loans.
Thanks for the great question!
#Daredevil#Matt Murdock#Jack Murdock#Foggy Nelson#Asks#Adventures in Continuity#ID in alt text#I just answered a question about money on my Iron Fist blog too. I love when that happens.
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The mission of the Blackbirds, the very essence of its life and breath, was the need for knowledge that was verified to keep us safe from enemy invasion. You must look back at history to understand why America rose to the challenge to create the incredibly fast and high-altitude Blackbirds(A-12 and SR-71 ) so technically advanced that our enemies could not shoot them down. It also helped that Kelly Johnson was an avionics genius who lived in the United States. Our very lives depended on knowing what the enemy was planning. Many men risked their lives. They understood the mission and were willing to put their lives at stake to protect their country; They volunteered for this duty. I am sure that my father, Colonel Richard “Butch” Sheffield, would’ve flown over Russia and China. It was the first question he was asked when being interviewed by Colonel Doug Nelson for his position as the first RSO in the SR 71.
On July 3, 1956, President Eisenhower approved a ten-day slot for the overfly of the Soviet Union. His decision was made not knowing about the A-100 radar, which provided early warning for the SA-1 guide surface-to-air ( SAM) missiles located around Moscow. It was thought the Russians could not have any capability above 60,000 feet.
President Eisenhower made it clear to Richard Bissell and Allen Dulles that He needed to be informed on any tracking or attempted interceptions. Bissell and Alan Dulles went to the White House and told them that it would be at least 36 hours after each mission before receiving the first reports of detection tracking and attempted interception and that it could be as long as several weeks! General Goodplaster, Eisenhower‘s aide, told them that he understood the President wanted the mission to go forward at the maximum rate until the first tracking evidence was received. On July 4, the Soviets did detect the U-2; it wasn’t until July 10 that Goodplaster informed Eisenhower about his meeting with Dulles and Bissell, adding that there had been some indication of tracking. Eisenhower, at this point, was still woefully uninformed. Later that day, the USSR delivered a protest note about the previous day's flights to the US Embassy in Moscow. It was clear that the Soviet air defense system had not only detected each flight but had tracked them for a considerable distance.
The President was extremely annoyed that the assurances given by Bissell and others were proven false. They had told him that the flights would hardly be detected, let alone tracked. Eisenhower never again gave the CIA carte blanche for a series of U-2 flights overflying Russia. Ironically, the CIA U-2 planners similarly implied to the President that if a U-2 crashed or were shot down over the Soviet Union, the pilot would not survive a claim, which they eventually came to regret to Eisenhower‘s embarrassment on May 1, 1960. According to Harvey Stockman‘s nephew ( Stockman flew the U-2 over the USSR), he was told to take the poison cyanide pill if his airplane was shot down.
Stockman was told that in 1956, by 1960, when Francis Gary Powers overflew and was shot down in the USSR, it was an option, not a command, to take the poison pill. According to Power's son in his book “Spy Pilot.”
On our Independence Day, July 4, 1956, Harvey Stockman of New Jersey took off on Mission 2013 in a U-2 from Wiesbaden, West Germany; he flew near Leningrad and Minsk, covering targets nearby. Stockman, looking through the aircraft site, saw MiG fighters climbing in unsuccessful attempts to intercept him. Undeterred, Stockman continued his mission as planned, passing over Soviet bomber bases in the Baltic states an eight-hour and 45-minute flight. What a fearless man Stockman was. Here is the link to learn more about his amazing life .roadrunnersinternationale.com/stockman.html
Written by Linda Sheffield
My sources are Paul Crickmore’s Lockheed Blackbird Beyond the Secret Missions, the missing chapters, see page 33
The Roadrunner associations webpage
@Habubrats71 via X
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So, with the end of the current hiatus nowhere in sight, the creators of Epic Rap Battles of History have been releasing short videos in which they respond to people's matchup ideas and talk about whether or not they'd do them. What follows are my thoughts on each suggestion.
Dog the Bounty Hunter vs Chris Hansen: Terrible; Dog stopped being relevant years ago and Hansen has no real valid matchups
Jack Sparrow vs Bilbo Baggins: They might be able to pull it off, but the connection is tenuous at best
Malcolm X vs Nelson Mandela: Perfect. Do it immediately
Dexter vs Punisher: Could work, though I prefer Punisher vs Peacemaker
The Wiggles v-NO
Marco Polo vs Zheng Yi Sao: Awesome; the show's always great at spotlighting obscure historical figures, so this would be fun
Sheldon Cooper vs Rick Sanchez: I don't really get their reasoning for passing this one up. "I don't wanna use Rick because his creator is problematic," they say seconds before suggesting Roseanne instead and three years after using Harry Potter
HP Lovecraft vs Mary Shelley: Could work, but Lovecraft might be better suited for a more prolific author
Captain America vs Mussolini: Could work, but I prefer Cap vs Batman
Black Panther vs Catwoman: Unique idea; would be cool to see which versions of the characters they use
Ethan Hunt vs Angus MacGyver: Meh
John Wilkes Booth vs Lee Harvey Oswald: I'm glad they turned this one down; it just sounds very insubstantial. The fact that they each killed Presidents is the only thing either of them are known for
Robin Hood vs Ned Kelly: Sounds awesome; I can’t fathom what Lloyd was talking about when he said Robin Hood can't be made "cool." Has he never heard of any of the non-Disney movies he was in?
Steve Harvey vs Dr. Phil: Meh
The Three Stooges vs The Three Musketeers: IT'S ALL I WANT AND I'VE WAITED FOR SO LONG
Patrick Bateman vs Andrew Tate: Bateman is worthy of a rap battle, but there is no fucking way a disgusting sack of shit like Andrew Fucking Tate deserves to be immortalized in this or any series. Not only is he a monstrous asshole, but since I'd never heard of him before he got arrested, he just comes off as too second-string and his image too fleeting to be remembered after the battle's release anyway. It's like how Sarah Palin and Napoleon Dynamite appeared in season 1; what's the point? Bateman would be better off facing another fictional character like Tyler Durden or Tommy Shelby or Rorschach or Homelander or any other member of the "you're missing the point by idolizing them" club
Miles Morales vs Dick Grayson: A great idea for a battle, but it irks me how they seem to only think of Dick Grayson as Robin, and even then only how he was portrayed in the 60s TV show. Since Dick Grayson's graduation to the solo hero Nightwing and his leadership of the Titans have been the status quo in the comics for decades, and even his TV and movie appearances as Robin clearly show him to be more than the hyperactive goofball that Lloyd portrayed him as in season 2, their lack of research here is jarring — especially considering how diligent they are with their other characters (remember, Peter read every issue of the Dragon Ball manga and watched every episode of Breaking Bad in preparation for the later half of season 3).
Garfield and Jon vs Calvin and Hobbes: Eh, I don't see it. No disrespect to their creators or fans, but they just ain't rap battle material
Metallica and AC/DC vs Slayer and Guns n Roses: I agree with them that a team battle between unrelated heavy metal acts would be unwieldy, but any combination of those four could totally be awesome in a straight 1v1 battle
Richard Nixon vs King John: Could work, but I'd rather have Nixon in a Presidential royale
Barbie vs He-Man: Another "meh" idea, but I'm not fond of Peter's assertion that He-Man is only known for the bad '90s movie when he's appeared in multiple media before and since that have all gained a far more positive reception and a strong fanbase
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EVILSPEAK (1981) – Episode 263 – Decades Of Horror 1980s
“By the four beasts before the throne. By the fire which is about the throne. By the most holy and glorious name, Satan. I, Stanley Coopersmith will return. I WILL RETURN!” Well, he’s Clint Howard. Of course, he will return! Join your faithful Grue Crew – Crystal Cleveland, Chad Hunt, Bill Mulligan, and Jeff Mohr – as they hang out in the church basement with young Cadet Coopersmith in Evilspeak (1981).
Decades of Horror 1980s Episode 263 – Evilspeak (1981)
Join the Crew on the Gruesome Magazine YouTube channel! Subscribe today! Click the alert to get notified of new content! https://youtube.com/gruesomemagazine
An outcast military cadet taps into a way to summon demons and cast spells on his tormentors through his computer.
Directed by: Eric Weston
Writing Credits: Joseph Garofalo, Eric Weston
Cinematography by: Irv Goodnoff
Selected Cast:
Clint Howard as Stanley Coopersmith
R.G. Armstrong as Sarge
Joe Cortese as Reverend Jameson (as Joseph Cortese)
Claude Earl Jones as Coach
Haywood Nelson as Kowalski
Don Stark as Bubba Caldwell
Charles Tyner as Colonel Kincaid
Hamilton Camp as Hauptman
Louie Gravance as Jo Jo
Jim Greenleaf as Ox
Lynn Hancock as Miss Friedemeyer
Loren Lester as Charlie Boy
Kathy McCullen as Kelly
Lenny Montana as Jake
Leonard D’John as Tony
Bennett James as Captain Merrill (credited as Bennett Liss)
Katherine Kelly Lang as Susie Baker
Richard Moll as Father Esteban
Robert Tafur as Old Priest
Sue Casey as Mrs. Caldwell
Evilspeak answers the question, “What happens when a bullied, military school cadet finds a Satanic tome written in Latin in the basement of the academy chapel?” Of course — with a helping hand from an early Apple PC — shenanigans ensue! Heads are lost, hearts are ripped out, and worst of all… the hogs are released! Yikes! Clint Howard, as Stanley Coopersmith, plays the bullied cadet transformed into a possessed Satanic priest with gusto and is expertly supported by a cast of experienced character actors. The story starts a bit slow, but the Grue-Crew promises you will be rewarded during the final act of Evilspeak. And never fear. The bullies get their just deserts.
At the time of this writing, Evilspeak is available to stream from Shudder, AMC+, and Plex.
Every two weeks, Gruesome Magazine’s Decades of Horror 1980s podcast will cover another horror film from the 1980s. The next episode’s film, chosen by Crystal, will be Parents (1989), a horror comedy featuring Randy Quaid, Mary Beth Hurt, and young Bryan Madorsky as the Laemles. The question is, what do Mr. And Mrs. Laemle serve for dinner?
Please let them know how they’re doing! They want to hear from you – the coolest, grooviest fans – so leave them a message or comment on the Gruesome Magazine Youtube channel, on the Gruesome Magazine website, or email the Decades of Horror 1980s podcast hosts at [email protected].
Check out this episode!
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MSR/TXF playlist con't (they get longer as we get into the later seasons, for... reasons. Sexy/relationshippy ones, hehe):
S8:
Today: Jefferson Airplane (S)
I’m Still Waiting: Jamie O’Neal (S)
Cry No More (album version): Arcade (S)
Un-Break My Heart: Toni Braxton (S)
Gone Away: The Offspring (S)
How Do I Live: Leann Rimes (S)
Without You: Niilson (S)
My Heart Will Go On: Celine Dion (S)
It Must Have Been Love: Roxette (S)
Who Wants To Live Forever (When Love Must Die): Queen (S)
Scully’s Theme: Mark Snow (S)
My Immortal: Evanescence (S)
Do What You Have To Do: Sarah McLachlan (S)
Always On My Mind: Willie Nelson (M)
Stranded: Heart (S)
Beautiful Disaster (live version): Kelly Clarkson (S)
Kiss From A Rose: Seal (S)
Blue In The Face: Alkaline Trio (M)
Best Of My Love: The Eagles (M)
Bent: Matchbox 20 (M)
Fields Of Gold: Sting (M)
Blood and Fire: Indigo Girls (M)
If I Could Turn Back Time: Cher (M)
I’ll Stand By You: The Pretenders (S)
Making Love Out of Nothing at All: Air Supply (M)
Can’t Let Go: Mariah Carey (S)
Can’t Find My Way Home: Steve Winwood (M)
I Will Follow You Into The Dark: Death Cab For Cutie (S)
If I Close My Eyes Forever: Ozzy Ozbourne and Lita Ford (M)
Good: Better Than Ezra (B)
Never: Heart (S)
I’m On Fire: Bruce Springsteen (M)
My Lover: Melissa Etheridge (S)
Full Of Grace: Sarah McLachlan (S)
Take Me For A Little While: Coverdale Page (M)
Out Of My Head: Fastball (M)
The Flame: Cheap Trick (B)
Here By Me: 3 Doors Down (B)
With Arms Wide Open: Creed (M)
The Reason: Hoobastank (M)
S9:
Save Tonight: Eagle-Eye Cherry (M)
Hands To Heaven: Breathe (M)
Against All Odds: Phil Collins (S)
Babe: Styx (M)
Every Little Kiss: Bruce Hornsby and the Range (B)
Every Time You Go Away: Paul Young / Hall and Oates (S)
Stranded: Heart (S)
If: Bread (B)
Now You’re Gone: Whitesnake (S)
Is This Love: Whitesnake (M)
Bed Of Roses: Bon Jovi (M)
Right Here Waiting: Richard Marx (S)
Somewhere: Within Temptation (S)
Time In A Bottle: Jim Croce (M)
Faithfully: Journey (M)
Send Her My Love Journey (M)
Silent Running: Mike and the Mechanics (M)
I Guess That’s Why They Call It The Blues: Elton John (S)
Human Hands: Elvis Costello (M)
I Remember You: Skid Row (M)
I Will Remember You: Amy Grant (S)
Back For Good: Take That (S)
Nobody Knows: The Tony Rich Project (S)
All Along: Blessid Union of Souls (S)
Twenty-Nine Palms: Robert Plant (M)
All Out Of Love: Air Supply (S)
Everything I Own: Bread (S)
Far Away: Nickelback (B)
Ordinary World: Duran Duran (S)
Constant Craving: KD Lang (B)
Season of Hollow Soul: KD Lang (B)
Seasons of Wither: Aerosmith (B)
When I’m Gone: 3 Doors Down (M)
Here Without You: 3 Doors Down (B)
Landing In London: 3 Doors Down (M)
Away From The Sun: 3 Doors Down (M)
As I Lay Me Down: Sophie B. Hawkins (S)
Eyes Like Twins: Wilson Phillips (S)
Day After Day: Badfinger (S)
Broken: Amy Lee / Seether (B)
Mental Picture: Jon Secada (M)
Breathe Again: Toni Braxton (S)
Full of Grace: Sarah McLachlan (S)
To My Valentine: SJ Tucker (M)
Epiphany: Staind (M)
Warm Safe Place: Staind (M)
It’s Been A While: Staind (M)
Sweet Dreams: Air Supply (B)
Another Rainy Night: Queensryche (S)
I’ll See You In My Dreams: Giant (B)
Upside-Down Roses: Bekah Kelso (S)
What I Know: Bekah Kelso (S)
Wishing You Were Here: Chicago (S)
The Letter (Ticket For An Airplane): The Box Tops (M)
TN1 Teaser / Piotr Tchaikovski: Mark Snow / Scully
Ghost: Indigo Girls (S)
Baby Come Back: Ambrosia (S)
Just Another Day: Jon Secada (B)
It Don’t Come Easy: Badfinger (B)
Mandolin Rain: Bruce Hornsby and the Range (B)
One Year Of Love: Queen (B)
The Promise: Tracy Chapman (M)
Just Remember I Love You: Firefall (M)
We Are Near (Scully’s Theme Extended): Mark Snow (S)
Unchained Melody: The Righteous Brothers (B)
Viva Forever: Spice Girls (S)
All Of My Love: Led Zeppelin (M)
(I ignore everything after Scary Monsters, because I refuse to accept that adoption bullshit or TLG dying (IT WAS A HOAX I TELL YOU!). Also, i will never accept the whole reboot 'CSM was the father' garbage. Not possible timing-wise (Mulder barely is if you do weird math with alien fetuses), and also, Just, NO.
I have more playlist for them, but it's very fanfic-centric and goes with my series on them, which departs after Scary Monsters to go AU, so i can post those if anyone wants me to.)
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Muppet Mainstage, April 19th, 2024
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“Don’t Sugar Me” was written by Norman Monath and Walt Kelly in 1956. The song was first performed on Sam and Friends, and performed again in season 1, episode 22 of The Muppet Show (1976). In the later rendition, the song is performed by a miniature Miss Mousey (Jerry Nelson) in a tea pot, who is being watched by Statler (Richard Hunt) and Waldorf (Jim Henson).
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Burke’s Law - List of Guest Stars
The Special Guest Stars of “Burke’s Law” read like a Who’s Who list of Hollywood of the era. Many of the appearances, however, were no more than one scene cameos. This is as complete a list ever compiled of all those who even made the briefest of appearances on the series.
Beverly Adams, Nick Adams, Stanley Adams, Eddie Albert, Mabel Albertson, Lola Albright, Elizabeth Allen, June Allyson, Don Ameche, Michael Ansara, Army Archerd, Phil Arnold, Mary Astor, Frankie Avalon, Hy Averback, Jim Backus, Betty Barry, Susan Bay, Ed Begley, William Bendix, Joan Bennett, Edgar Bergen, Shelley Berman, Herschel Bernardi, Ken Berry, Lyle Bettger, Robert Bice, Theodore Bikel, Janet Blair, Madge Blake, Joan Blondell, Ann Blyth, Carl Boehm, Peter Bourne, Rosemarie Bowe, Eddie Bracken, Steve Brodie, Jan Brooks, Dorian Brown, Bobby Buntrock, Edd Byrnes, Corinne Calvet, Rory Calhoun, Pepe Callahan, Rod Cameron, Macdonald Carey, Hoagy Carmichael, Richard Carlson, Jack Carter, Steve Carruthers, Marianna Case, Seymour Cassel, John Cassavetes, Tom Cassidy, Joan Caulfield, Barrie Chase, Eduardo Ciannelli, Dane Clark, Dick Clark, Steve Cochran, Hans Conried, Jackie Coogan, Gladys Cooper, Henry Corden, Wendell Corey, Hazel Court, Wally Cox, Jeanne Crain, Susanne Cramer, Les Crane, Broderick Crawford, Suzanne Cupito, Arlene Dahl, Vic Dana, Jane Darwell, Sammy Davis Jr., Linda Darnell, Dennis Day, Laraine Day, Yvonne DeCarlo, Gloria De Haven, William Demarest, Andy Devine, Richard Devon, Billy De Wolfe, Don Diamond, Diana Dors, Joanne Dru, Paul Dubov, Howard Duff, Dan Duryea, Robert Easton, Barbara Eden, John Ericson, Leif Erickson, Tom Ewell, Nanette Fabray, Felicia Farr, Sharon Farrell, Herbie Faye, Fritz Feld, Susan Flannery, James Flavin, Rhonda Fleming, Nina Foch, Steve Forrest, Linda Foster, Byron Foulger, Eddie Foy Jr., Anne Francis, David Fresco, Annette Funicello, Eva Gabor, Zsa Zsa Gabor, Reginald Gardiner, Nancy Gates, Lisa Gaye, Sandra Giles, Mark Goddard, Thomas Gomez, Pedro Gonzalez Gonzalez, Sandra Gould, Wilton Graff, Gloria Grahame, Shelby Grant, Jane Greer, Virginia Grey, Tammy Grimes, Richard Hale, Jack Haley, George Hamilton, Ann Harding, Joy Harmon, Phil Harris, Stacy Harris, Dee Hartford, June Havoc, Jill Haworth, Richard Haydn, Louis Hayward, Hugh Hefner, Anne Helm, Percy Helton, Irene Hervey, Joe Higgins, Marianna Hill, Bern Hoffman, Jonathan Hole, Celeste Holm, Charlene Holt, Oscar Homolka, Barbara Horne, Edward Everett Horton, Breena Howard, Rodolfo Hoyos Jr., Arthur Hunnicutt, Tab Hunter, Joan Huntington, Josephine Hutchinson, Betty Hutton, Gunilla Hutton, Martha Hyer, Diana Hyland, Marty Ingels, John Ireland, Mako Iwamatsu, Joyce Jameson, Glynis Johns, I. Stanford Jolley, Carolyn Jones, Dean Jones, Spike Jones, Victor Jory, Jackie Joseph, Stubby Kaye, Monica Keating, Buster Keaton, Cecil Kellaway, Claire Kelly, Patsy Kelly, Kathy Kersh, Eartha Kitt, Nancy Kovack, Fred Krone, Lou Krugman, Frankie Laine, Fernando Lamas, Dorothy Lamour, Elsa Lanchester, Abbe Lane, Charles Lane, Lauren Lane, Harry Lauter, Norman Leavitt, Gypsy Rose Lee, Ruta Lee, Teri Lee, Peter Leeds, Margaret Leighton, Sheldon Leonard, Art Lewis, Buddy Lewis, Dave Loring, Joanne Ludden, Ida Lupino, Tina Louise, Paul Lynde, Diana Lynn, James MacArthur, Gisele MacKenzie, Diane McBain, Kevin McCarthy, Bill McClean, Stephen McNally, Elizabeth MacRae, Jayne Mansfield, Hal March, Shary Marshall, Dewey Martin, Marlyn Mason, Hedley Mattingly, Marilyn Maxwell, Virginia Mayo, Patricia Medina, Troy Melton, Burgess Meredith, Una Merkel, Dina Merrill, Torben Meyer, Barbara Michaels, Robert Middleton, Vera Miles, Sal Mineo, Mary Ann Mobley, Alan Mowbray, Ricardo Montalbán, Elizabeth Montgomery, Ralph Moody, Alvy Moore, Terry Moore, Agnes Moorehead, Anne Morell, Rita Moreno, Byron Morrow, Jan Murray, Ken Murray, George Nader, J. Carrol Naish, Bek Nelson, Gene Nelson, David Niven, Chris Noel, Kathleen Nolan, Sheree North, Louis Nye, Arthur O'Connell, Quinn O'Hara, Susan Oliver, Debra Paget, Janis Paige, Nestor Paiva, Luciana Paluzzi, Julie Parrish, Fess Parker, Suzy Parker, Bert Parks, Harvey Parry, Hank Patterson, Joan Patrick, Nehemiah Persoff, Walter Pidgeon, Zasu Pitts, Edward Platt, Juliet Prowse, Eddie Quillan, Louis Quinn, Basil Rathbone, Aldo Ray, Martha Raye, Gene Raymond, Peggy Rea, Philip Reed, Carl Reiner, Stafford Repp, Paul Rhone, Paul Richards, Don Rickles, Will Rogers Jr., Ruth Roman, Cesar Romero, Mickey Rooney, Gena Rowlands, Charlie Ruggles, Janice Rule, Soupy Sales, Hugh Sanders, Tura Satana, Telly Savalas, John Saxon, Lizabeth Scott, Lisa Seagram, Pilar Seurat, William Shatner, Karen Sharpe, James Shigeta, Nina Shipman, Susan Silo, Johnny Silver, Nancy Sinatra, The Smothers Brothers, Joanie Sommers, Joan Staley, Jan Sterling, Elaine Stewart, Jill St. John, Dean Stockwell, Gale Storm, Susan Strasberg, Inger Stratton, Amzie Strickland, Gil Stuart, Grady Sutton, Kay Sutton, Gloria Swanson, Russ Tamblyn. Don Taylor, Dub Taylor, Vaughn Taylor, Irene Tedrow, Terry-Thomas, Ginny Tiu, Dan Tobin, Forrest Tucker, Tom Tully, Jim Turley, Lurene Tuttle, Ann Tyrrell, Miyoshi Umeki, Mamie van Doren, Deborah Walley, Sandra Warner, David Wayne, Ray Weaver, Lennie Weinrib, Dawn Wells, Delores Wells, Rebecca Welles, Jack Weston, David White, James Whitmore, Michael Wilding, Annazette Williams, Dave Willock, Chill Wills, Marie Wilson, Nancy Wilson, Sandra Wirth, Ed Wynn, Keenan Wynn, Dana Wynter, Celeste Yarnall, Francine York.
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Lillian Gish in Way Down East (D.W. Griffith, 1920)
Cast: Lillian Gish, Richard Barthelmess, Mrs. David Landau, Lowell Sherman, Burr McIntosh, George Neville, Edgar Nelson. Screenplay: Anthony Paul Kelly, based on a play by Lottie Blair Parker. Cinematography: G.W. Bitzer, Paul H. Allen, Charles Downs, Hendrik Sartov. Art direction: Clifford Pember, Charles O. Seessel. Film editing: James Smith, Rose Smith.
If Griffith's sententious title cards (e.g.,"Not by laws -- our Statutes are now overburdened by ignored laws -- but within the heart of man, the truth must bloom that his greatest happiness lies in his purity and constancy") don't have some viewers reaching for the remote, then the cornpone comic antics of his stereotypical rustics, such as the toothless constable (George Neville) and the hayseed Hi Holler (Edgar Nelson), certainly will. But stick with it to witness one of the greatest action sequences on film, Anna (Lillian Gish) adrift on the ice floe, as well as one of Gish's greatest moments as an actress, when she baptizes her dying baby. Yes, it's all hokum -- what do you expect from a melodrama more than a century old? But it's magnificent, enduring hokum, done brilliantly by a director who now seems more than just a pioneer but an artist of stature. And yes, that stature is tarnished by the man's racism in The Birth of a Nation (1915), but we don't have to endorse our artists to appreciate their artistry, and the great efficiency with which Griffith tells a story and keeps us on the edge of our seats -- even when we know that his sentimentality is antique and outworn -- is something to be appreciated. Credit, too, must go to G.W. Bitzer (known as Billy) and the other cinematographers (Paul H. Allen, Charles Downs, and Hendrik Sartov) who gave us images that seem well advanced beyond the years in which they were filmed. I do admit to some surprise that there are so many scenes in Way Down East that Griffith is content to film as if they were happening on a proscenium stage when one of his great contributions to the art of cinema is providing a fluidity and intimacy that are unavailable in the theater. Perhaps he was trying to do justice to his set designers, Clifford Pember and Charles O. Seessel, whose work is quite spectacular. But nothing before or since has quite equaled the ice floe sequence.
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LUCY’S THIN BLUE LINE
Lucy and Law Enforcement ~ Part 2
On “The Lucy Show,” Lucy Carmichael not only had multiple run-ins with the police - she actually became one for a couple of episodes! Here’s a look at Carmichael and Cops!
“Lucy and Viv Become Tycoons” (1963) ~ When Lucy and Viv open their own business at home, they are visited by Sergeant Robbins (Bern Hoffman) to check on their permits and operating practices. In 1960, Hoddman appeared in the Lucille Ball / Bob Hope film The Facts of Life.
“Lucy Drives a Dump Truck” (1963) ~ Driving a truck to a nearby town, Lucy and Viv are pulled over by a Brewster policeman played by Richard Reeves, a veteran of nine episodes of “I Love Lucy” including playing a policeman in “Equal Rights” (1953). This is his only appearance on “The Lucy Show.”
“Lucy and the Safe Cracker” (1963) ~ When Mr. Mooney gets locked in the safe (again), Lucy contacts a safe cracker (Jay Novello) and Sergeant Wilcox (James Flavin) is on the scene. Coincidentally, Flavin played the Immigration Officer searching for Mario Orsatti (Jay Novello) in “Visitor from Italy” (1956). He will return to “The Lucy Show” two episodes later to play Sgt. Wilcox again in another bank-themed episode. He appeared in four films with Lucille Ball, including playing a police sergeant in Without Love (1945). During his long career he played so many officers of the law that his IMDB photo is of him in a police uniform!
“Lucy and the Bank Scandal” (1963) ~ Sergeant Wilcox (James Flavin) investigates a case of embezzelment at the Danfield Bank. Lucy suspects Mr. Mooney and digs up his yard to find the stolen cash.
“Lucy is Her Own Lawyer” (1964) ~ Officer Joe (Joe Mell) the Baliff, swears in Lucy Carmichael as well as Mr. Mooney and Nelson the dog! Mell returns as a Baliff in “Lucy the Meter Maid” (1964) and a Bank Guard in “Lucy the Stockholder” (1965).
“Lucy the Meter Maid” (1964) ~ Lucy joins the Danfield Police Force as meter maid. When Viv doesn’t feed the meter, Lucy issues her a summons and they land up in court. Once again, Joe Mell plays the Baliff.
“Lucy Makes a Pinch” (1964) ~ Still on the Force, Lucy is recruited to be part of a stake out. The episode features three of Danfield’s finest (left to right): Murdock (Jack Searl), Captain Bradford (Alan Carney), and Detective Bill Baker (Jack Kelly). As a child actor, Jack Searl was featured in the 1932 film Officer Thirteen, about motorcyle cops. Alan Carney played a policeman in the 1963 comedy classic It’s a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World. In 1955, Jack Kelly appeared on a TV series titled “City Detective.”
“Lucy the Coin Collector” (1964) ~ When Lucy drops a rare coin down the sewar grate, she is consoled by a cop on the beat (Ray Kellogg). his is the second of his seven episodes of “The Lucy Show.” He also did two episodes of “Here’s Lucy.” Just as in his other screen credits, most most times he played policemen, as he does here.
“Lucy and the Ceramic Cat” (1965) ~ While Lucy breaks into Bigelow’s Department Store, Viv stands guard, diverting the cop on the beat (John J. ‘Red’ Fox). Fox was best known for playing policemen, which is what he did on five of his eight appearances on “The Lucy Show” as well as three of his five episodes of “Here’s Lucy.”
“Lucy, the Stockholder” (1965) ~ After buying a single share of the Danfield Bank for $32, Lucy the stockholder pays the bank a visit. She warns the lackadaisical guard (Joe Mell) that she has a nine year-old nephew who is quicker on the draw than him.
“Lucy and the Undercover Agent” (1965) ~ Trying to get access to performer Carol Channing, Lucy charms Military Police (MP) officer Sol Schwartz. The character name was specifically chosen so Lucy can sing “Hello, Solly” to the tune of “Hello, Dolly”.
“Salute to Stan Laurel” (1965) ~ In a special tributing the late comedian, Lucille Ball is part of a silent movie sketch featuring Buster Keaton and Harvey Korman as a policeman in the park.
“Lucy Meets Mickey Rooney” (1965) ~ A silent movie sketch based on Charlie Chaplin’s The Kid features the Keystone Kops (Sid Gould, above). Keystone Kops are fictional, humorously incompetent policemen featured in silent film slapstick comedies produced by Mack Sennett for his Keystone Film Company between 1912 and 1917.
“Lucy Goes to a Hollywood Premiere” (1966) ~ Mr. Mooney is questioned by Officer Collins (Robert Foulk) of the Beverly Hills Police Department. He doesn’t have a permit to sell maps to the movie stars’ homes and is hauled down to the police station. Foulk played the Brooklyn policeman on the subway platform in “Lucy and the Loving Cup” (1956). He will go on to play six characters on “Here’s Lucy,” two of them policemen.
“Lucy the Gun Moll” (1966) ~ Robert Stack plays Federal Agent Briggs in this satire on Desilu’s “The Untouchables.” Stack played G-Man Eliot Ness on the series and only agreed to the satire if the names were changed.
“Lucy and the Submarine” (1966) ~ Whe Lucy sneaks onto a submarine, she must get by a stoic Navy Shore Patrolman (SP) played by Steven Marlo. Marlo makes the first of his two appearances on “The Lucy Show.”
“Lucy and the Ring-a-Ding Ring” (1966) ~ Ray Kellogg plays the cop on the beat who discovers Mr. Mooney trying to get a nearly unconscious Lucy into his car because she has his wife’s ring stuck on her finger.
“Viv Visits Lucy” (1967) ~ To find a wayward Danfield boy, Lucy and Viv go to the Sunset Strip, where they are mistaken for hippie biker chicks by the police. Ray Kellogg plays the Motorcycle Officer (right) and John J. 'Red’ Fox plays Patrolman Harry McLeod (left).
“Lucy Puts Main Street on the Map” (1967) ~ Mel Torme is Mel Tinker, the deputy and Roy Barcroft plays his father, Police Chief Tinker, the law enforcement team in small town Bancroft. During his long career on screen, Barcroft played a sheriff 18 times between 1943 and 1966, including in Billy the Kid Versus Dracula (1966).
“Lucy Meets the Law” (1967) ~ Lucy thinks she’s being arrested for littering when she is actually being mistaken for a red-haired jewel thief. Claude Akins (Lieutenant Finch) is perhaps best remembered for playing Sheriff Lobo in “B.J. And the Bear” (1978-79) and its sequel “The Misadventures of Sheriff Lobo” (1979-81).
Jody Gilbert plays the jail matron aka ‘Tinkerbell’. Gilbert will also appear in two episodes of “Here’s Lucy,” in one of which she also plays a prison matron.
Ken Lynch (Officer Peters, left) started playing policemen on TV in 1950 and continued to do so for much of his career. Joseph Perry (Officer Miller, right) started his screen acting career in 1956. Perry played a policeman on “My Living Doll” (1965) filmed at Desilu. He appeared on the police-themed shows “Policewoman,” “Police Story,” “Barney Miller,” “Hill Street Blues,” “CHiPs,” “The Rookies” “The Mod Squad,” “87th Precinct,” “The FBI,” “The Rookies,” and “The Sheriff of Cochise” a Desilu Production.
“Lucy Sues Mooney” (1967) ~ Irwin Charone (Bailiff) makes the third of his five appearances on “The Lucy Show.”
Two uncredited background actors play Officers of the Court.
“Lucy and the Stolen Stole” (1968) ~ Lucy and Mr. Mooney go shopping for Mrs. Mooney's birthday and wind up being arrested for possession of a stolen fur stole. The boys in blue are played by Ray Kellogg, Roy Shapiro, and John J. 'Red' Fox as Officer Shapiro.
“Lucy Gets Involved” (1968) ~ At Phil’s Fat Boy Burgers, a policeman (John J. 'Red' Fox) interrogates motorcyclist Tommy Watkins (Phil Vandervoort) with Mr. Burton (Jackie Coogan) overhearing.
“Lucy and Sid Caesar” (1968) ~ A forger who looks like Sid Caesar is passing bad checks at the bank. Lucy and Mr. Mooney try to figure out how to tell the real Sid Caesar from the forger. They enlist the help of the authorities (left to right): Irwin Charrone, John J. ‘Red’ Fox, and Ben Gage. Gage was mentioned on “I Love Lucy” in 1955. He appeared on “Our Miss Brooks” (filmed at Desilu Studios) and in Desilu’s “Star Trek.” His last two screen appearances were in “Policewoman” and “Police Story.”
#Police#Lucille Ball#Lucy#The Lucy Show#TV#CBS#Sid Caesar#Ben Gage#Irwin Sharrone#John J. 'Red' Fox#Ray Kellogg#Roy Shapiro#Ken Lynch#Joseph Perry#Jody Gilbert#Claude Akins#Mel Torme#Roy Barcroft#Steven Marlo#Bern Hoffmann#Richard Reeves#James Flavin#Joe Mell#Jack Searle#Alan Carney#Jack Kelly#Robert Stack#Robert Foulk#Gale Gordon#Harvey Korman
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157: The Silver Mt. Zion Memorial Orchestra & Tra-La-La Band // "Born Into Trouble as the Sparks Fly Upward."
"Born Into Trouble as the Sparks Fly Upward." The Silver Mt. Zion Memorial Orchestra & Tra-La-La Band 2001, Constellation (Bandcamp)
22 years ago Montreal’s other iconic prodigiously-membered post-rock band released their second LP. It’s not easy keeping all of these pro-Zion-but-not-Zionists straight, so I’ve helpfully listed and ranked each of the musicians who have passed through this constantly shifting collective from first to least-first. Let’s go!
Members of A/The/e Silver Mt. Zion Memorial Orchestra & Tra-La-La Band, Ranked
1. Mike Garson - piano 2. Annie Clark - guitar, keyboards, backing vocals 3. Brian Teasley- percussion 4. Daniel Hart - violin 5. Szabolcs Szczur – accordion 6. Davey 'Crabsticks' Trotter – Mellotron 7. Timothy Matthews – mbira 8. Buffi Jacobs – cello 9. Bach Norwood – piano, keyboards, backing vocals 10. Harriet Ballance - triangle, backing vocals 11. Japhy Ryder – floristry 12. Stuart "Peebs" Peebles – piccolo 13. Chandler Petrino – natural horn, oboe 14. Jared Pechonis – theremin 15. Toby Halbrooks - theremin 16. Corn Mo - backing vocals 17. Patrick Hewitt – theremin 18. Darin Hieb – trumpet, backing vocals 19. Rachel Woolf – flute 20. Mark Beardsworth – claviola 21. Allen Halas – percussion 22. Edwin Mendoza – viola 23. Todd Beaupré – vibraslap 24. Thaddeus Ford – trumpet 25. Paul Deemer – trombone, trumpet 26. Mike St.Clair – trombone, synth effects 27. Josh Guyer – trombone, spoons 28. Chris Curiel – trumpet 29. Heather Test – French horn 30. Victoria Arellano – classical harp 31. Sean Redman – violin, mandolin 32. Kelly Test – percussion 33. Mike Mordecai – percussion 34. Jason Garner – drums 35. Audrey Easley – flute, piccolo, EWI 36. Rick G. Nelson – viola 37. Nick Groesch – piano, keyboards 38. Keith Hendricks – percussion 39. Evan Hisey – keyboards 40. Dylan Silvers – guitar 41. Daniel Hart – violin 42. John Lamonica – percussion 43. Marcus Lopez – percussion 44. Matt Bricker – trumpet, synth effects 45. Taylor Young – percussion 46. Joe Butcher – steel drum 47. Evan Jacobs – piano, keyboards 48. Todd Berridge ��� viola 49. Nick Earl – guitar 50. Evan Weiss – trumpet 51. Jay Jennings – trumpet 52. Tamara Brown – violin 53. Merritt Lota – steel drums 54. Daniel Huffman – guitar 55. Timothy Blowers – harp 56. Anthony Richards – steel drums 57. Louis Schwadron – French horn 58. Andrew Tinker – French horn 59. Nick Wlodarczyk – trombone 60. Paul Gaughran – flute 61. Isabelo Cruz – French horn 62. Bryan Wakeland – drums 63. Hayley McCarthy – viola 64. Dave Dusters – percussion, backing vocals 65. Billy Mills-Curran – flute 66. Logan Keese – trumpet 67. Ricky Rasura – classical harp 68. Tonya Hewitt – banjo 69. Daniel Poorman – slide whistle 70. Andy Parkerson – clarinet 71. Joseph Singleton – viola 72. Jenelle Valencia – violin 73. James Reimer – trombone 74. Regina Chellew – guitar, trumpet, backing vocals 75. Ryan Fitzgerald – guitar, backing vocals 76. Cory Helms – guitar, backing vocals 77. Jessica Jordan – backing vocals 78. Jenny Kirtland – backing vocals 79. Kristin Hardin – backing vocals 80. Elizabeth Evans – backing vocals 81. Neil Smith – backing vocals 82. Julie Doyle – backing vocals 83. Christine Bolon – backing vocals 84. Natalie Young – backing vocals 85. Constance Dolph – backing vocals 86. Elizabeth Brown – backing vocals 87. Apotsala Wilson – backing vocals 88. Jennie Kelley – backing vocals 89. Roy Thomas Ivy – backing vocals 90. Jamey Welch – backing vocals 91. Ethan Voelkers – backing vocals 92. Mark Pirro - bass 93. Frank Benjaminsen – backing vocals 94. Stephanie Dolph – backing vocals 95. Jennifer Jobe – backing vocals 96. Mike Elio – backing vocals 97. Kelly Repka – backing vocals 98. Jason Rees – backing vocals 99. Jeneffa Soldatic – backing vocals 100. Michael Turner – backing vocals 101. Don Congeler – backing vocals 102. Michael Musick – backing vocals 103. Melissa Crutchfield – backing vocals 104. Sandra Powers Giasson – backing vocals 105. Paul Hillery – backing vocals 106. Stephen Dix – backing vocals 107. Jessica Berridge – backing vocals 108. Melisma MacDonald – backing vocals 109. Ross Cink - backing vocals 110. Lucy Williams - choreography 111. Josh David Jordan – backing vocals 112. Brad Butler – backing vocals 113. Jason Rees – backing vocals 114. Andrew Aldenenotti – backing vocals 115. Getting hit by a bus wearing a flowing white robe 116. Tim DeLaughter - vocals, guitar, piano
Hold on. I’ve just received word that these musicians are actually members of some other band? Apologies for the confusion!
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#backing vocals#a silver mt. zion#efrim manuel menuck#defector#this is so stupid#montreal music#'00s music#post-rock#underexplained lists#music review#vinyl record#montreal
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Airspeed indicators were on one side, attitude indicators were on the other, altimeter gauges were in the middle, and we couldn’t even tell what time it was. It was a nightmare,’ Richard “Butch” Sheffield first SR-71 Blackbird RSO.
During its career, the SR-71 Blackbird gathered intelligence in some of the world’s most hostile environments.
The mission of the SR-71 was to take photographs, to use its sensors to pick up electronic surveillance. To safely navigate close to the enemy’s border. The Reconnaissance Systems Officer (RSO) handled all of that and more.
The RSO was the Officer in the SR-71 that, ran the checklist for the Pilot. He had to know his job and the Pilot’s job. He did the Navigation in the SR-71 if the Pilot had to make an emergency landing, which happened more often than you would think he would ask his RSO’s “Where am I landing?” and get the exact coordination from him.
Before the SR-71 was taken out for its first flight, the cockpit was rearranged. It was very expensive to rearrange this cockpit but simply it wasn’t functional. My father, then Captain Richard “Butch” Sheffield, was the first man picked for the SR-71 program. Colonel Doug Nelson hired him away from the B-58 program. He had a perfect bomb run record after flying the B-58 for five years. After leaving Little Rock Air Force Base (AFB) arriving at Beale AFB in California, my father was then sent down to Southern California. He went to flight test school at Skunk Works in Palmdale, CA the class was taught on the top floor by a Lockheed employee and Kelly Johnson and Ben Rich.
Dad, Coz Mallozzi and Tom Schmittou (the first three RSOs chosen for the program), did not like what they saw in the RSO Cockpit hence it was rearranged. It was very expensive to rearrange the cockpit but simply it wasn’t functional. So my father, Schmittou, and Mallozzi demanded that they had to redo the cockpit otherwise the program probably would’ve failed….and they did. This is part of an aviation geek club article that I wrote about a year ago new pictures from Paul Crickmore‘s new book shows what the back cockpit look like. Also what the dents in the nose of the SR 71 were they were antennas ~Linda Sheffield @Habubrats71
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Seen-it-all New York detective Frank Keller is unsettled – he has done twenty years on the force and could retire, and he hasn’t come to terms with his wife leaving him for a colleague. Joining up with an officer from another part of town to investigate a series of murders linked by the lonely hearts columns he finds he is getting seriously and possibly dangerously involved with Helen, one of the main suspects. Credits: TheMovieDb. Film Cast: Frank Keller: Al Pacino Helen Cruger: Ellen Barkin Sherman: John Goodman Terry: Michael Rooker Frank Keller Sr.: William Hickey Gruber: Richard Jenkins Serafino: Paul Calderon Struk: Gene Canfield Dargan: Larry Joshua Lieutenant: John Spencer Gina Gallagher / Lonelyheart: Christine Estabrook Miss Allen: Barbara Baxley Older Woman: Patricia Barry Murdered Man: Mark Phelan Raymond Brown: Michael O’Neill Doorman: Michael Fischetti Omar Maldonado: Luis Antonio Ramos Efram Maldonado: Rafael Báez Black Guy: Samuel L. Jackson Ernest Lee: Damien Leake Tommy: John Thaddeus Willie: Joshua Nelson Supermarket Manager: Christofer de Oni Supermarket Cashier: Dwayne McClary Helen’s Mother: Jacqueline Brookes Toastmaster: Thom Curley Cable Supervisor: Fred Sanders Clipboard Guy #2: Larry Mullane Clipboard Guy #3: Anthony Catanese Bartender: Thomas Wagner Doorman: Manny Alfaro James Mackey: Brian Paul Tense Woman: Deborah Taylor Sasha: Ferne Downey Raymond Brown’s Wife: Nancy Beatty Clipboard Guy #1: Tony De Santis Yuppie Detective #1: Jackie Laidlaw Yuppie Detective #2: Paul Hubbard Surveillance Team Member: James Kidnie Sherman’s Wife: Bridget O’Sullivan Criminal Type: Franz Fridal Hallway Cop: James O’Regan Hallway Cop: Wayne Best Young Cop: John Bourgeois Young Cop: Hugh Thompson Bride: Miranda de Pencier Groom: Ty Templeton Denice Gruber (scenes deleted): Lorraine Bracco Film Crew: Editor: David Bretherton Director: Harold Becker Director of Photography: Ronnie Taylor Unit Production Manager: Louis A. Stroller Producer: Martin Bregman Costume Design: Betsy Cox Script Supervisor: Blanche McDermaid First Assistant Camera: Yves Drapeau Second Assistant Director: Rocco Gismondi First Assistant Director: Michael E. Steele Second Assistant Director: David Sardi First Assistant Director: Thomas J. Mack Camera Operator: Andy Chmura Casting: Mary Colquhoun Production Design: John Jay Moore Second Assistant Director: Madeleine Henrié Additional Photography: Adam Holender Associate Producer: Michael Bregman Makeup Artist: Irving Buchman Hairstylist: Bryan Charbonneau Hairstylist: Bob Grimaldi Makeup Artist: Irene Kent Key Makeup Artist: Leslie A. Sebert Stunts: Dick Ziker Writer: Richard Price Stunts: Glenn R. Wilder Stunts: Buddy Joe Hooker Production Assistant: Liam Kiernan Stunts: Kenny Bates Stunts: Steve Boyum Stunts: Rick Parker Stunts: Shane Cardwell Production Manager: Barbara Kelly First Assistant Camera: Michael Hall First Assistant Camera: Horace Jordan Location Manager: Debra Beers Production Accountant: Dorothy Precious Production Coordinator: Toni Blay Sound Mixer: Keith A. Wester Boom Operator: Steve Switzer Gaffer: Rae Thurston Best Boy Grip: Howie Balbraith Grip: Randy Tambling Dolly Grip: Robert DaPrato First Assistant Art Direction: Lucinda Zak Set Decoration: Gordon Sim Set Dresser: Raman Majlath Property Master: Vic Rigler Wardrobe Master: Gail Filman Second Assistant Camera: Rick Perotto Assistant Location Manager: Anne Richardson Assistant Accountant: Karen Demontbrun Assistant Set Decoration: Richard Ferbrache Assistant Property Master: Jeff Poulis Wardrobe Assistant: Debi Weldon Production Secretary: Regina Robb Carpenter: Boyd Allen Scenic Artist: Reet Puhm Transportation Coordinator: Neil Montgomerie Unit Publicist: Joan Eisenberg Still Photographer: Rob McEwan Casting: Stuart Aikins Extras Casting: Scott Mansfield Additional Editing: John Wright Assistant Editor: Francine Fleishman Assistant Editor: Irvin Paik Assistant Editor: Charlene Olson Assistant Editor: Haydn Streeter Supervising Sound Editor: Norval D. Crutcher Supervising Sound Editor: Randle ...
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Birthdays 7.18
Beer Birthdays
Joseph Sedlmayr (1808)
Jan Albin Goetz-Okocimski (1864)
Peter Austin (1921)
Carol Stoudt (1949)
Glenn Payne (1954)
Peter Aldred (1959)
Alan Shapiro (1962)
Russ Wigglesworth (1957)
Jenny Voight Lewis (1983)
Five Favorite Birthdays
Kristen Bell; actor (1980)
John Glenn; astronaut, politician (1921)
Elizabeth McGovern; actor (1961)
Hunter S. Thompson; gonzo journalist, writer (1939)
Paul Verhoeven; Dutch film director (1938)
Famous Birthdays
Giacomo Balla; Italian painter (1871)
Saverio Bettinelli; Italian poet (1718)
Edward Bond; English director, playwright (1934)
Richard Branson; English businessman (1950)
James Brolin; actor (1940)
Dick Button; figure skater (1929)
Terry Chambers; rock drummer, "XTC" (1955)
Elizabeth Coblentz; Amish cookbook author (1936)
Hume Cronyn; actor (1911)
John Dee; English mathematician, astronomer, occultist (1527)
Vin Diesel; actor (1967)
Nick Faldo; English golfer (1957)
Bernd Fasching; Austrian painter (1955)
Immanuel Hermann Fichte; German philosopher (1796)
Elizabeth Gilbert; author (1969)
Screamin' Jay Hawkins; rock singer (1929)
Hermann of Reichenau; German composer, mathematician & astronomer (1013)
Roald Hoffmann; Polish chemist (1937)
Robert Hooke; physicist, mathematician, inventor (1635)
Glenn Hughes; pop singer, Village People biker (1950)
Machine Gun Kelly; gangster (1895)
Charles Kittel; physicist (1916)
Thomas Kuhn; philosopher (1922)
Audrey Landers; actor (1956)
Richard Leacoc;, English-French director (1922)
Hendrik Lorentz; Dutch physicist (1853)
Nelson Mandela; South African politician (1918)
Margo Martindale; actress (1951)
Shaun Micallef; Australian comedian (1962)
Hartmut Michel; German biochemist (1948)
Alan Morrison; British poet (1974)
Harriet Nelson; singer, actor (1909)
Clifford Odets; writer (1906)
Martha Reeves; pop singer (1941)
Hyacinthe Rigaud; French painter (1659)
Ricky Skaggs; country singer (1954)
Red Skelton; comedian, actor (1913)
William Makepeace Thackeray; English writer (1811)
Joe Torre; Milwaukee Braves C, NY Yankees manager (1940)
Lupe Velez; Mexican actor (1908)
Jessamyn West; writer (1902)
Gilbert White; English naturalist (1720)
Wendy Williams; talk show host (1964)
Yevgeny Yevtushenko; Russian poet (1933)
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Who has been nominated for a NTA Award?
The NTA longlist was unveiled on Tuesday 21st May.
New Drama
A Gentleman in Moscow
After The Flood
Baby Reindeer
Breathtaking
Coma
Criminal Record
Fallout
Fifteen-Love
Fool Me Once
Hijack
Interview with the Vampire
Mary & George
Masters of the Air
Mr Bates vs The Post Office
Murder Is Easy
One Day
Passenger
Red Eye
Renegade Nell
Shardlake
Shōgun
The Couple Next Door
The Long Shadow
The Marlow Murder Club
The Reckoning
The Sixth Commandment
The Tattooist of Auschwitz
The Woman in the Wall
Wilderness
Wolf
Drama Performance
Adeel Akhtar, DS Sami Kierce, Fool Me Once
Aidan Turner, Glenn Lapthorn, Fifteen-Love
Ambika Mod, Emma Morley, One Day
Anna Próchniak, Gita, The Tattooist of Auschwitz
Anne Reid, Ann Moore-Martin, The Sixth Commandment
Arthur Hughes, Matthew Shardlake, Shardlake
Ashley Jensen, DI Ruth Calder, Shetland
Ashley Walters, Dushane Hill, Top Boy
Austin Butler, Major Gale 'Buck' Cleven, Masters of the Air
Brenda Blethyn, DCI Vera Stanhope, Vera
Callum Turner, Major John 'Bucky' Egan, Masters of the Air
Cliff Parisi, Fred Buckle, Call the Midwife
Cosmo Jarvis, John Blackthorne, Shōgun
Cush Jumbo, DS June Lenker, Criminal Record
Danielle Macdonald, Helen Chambers, The Tourist
Daryl McCormack, Detective Colman Akande, The Woman In The Wall
David Tennant, The Fourteenth Doctor, Doctor Who
David Jonsson, Luke Fitzwilliam, Murder Is Easy
Dominic West, Charles, Prince of Wales, The Crown
Eleanor Tomlinson, Evie, The Couple Next Door
Ella Lily Hyland, Justine Pearce, Fifteen-Love
Ella Purnell, Lucy MacLean, Fallout
Emilia Fox, Nikki Alexander, Silent Witness
Ewan McGregor, Count Alexander Rostov, A Gentleman in Moscow
Gary Oldman, Jackson Lamb, Slow Horses
Gemma Whelan, Detective Sergeant Sarah Collins, The Tower
Georgie Glen, Miss Millicent Higgins, Call the Midwife
Idris Elba, Sam Nelson, Hijack
Imelda Staunton, Queen Elizabeth II, The Crown
Jacob Anderson, Louis de Pointe du Lac, Interview with the Vampire
Jamie Dornan, Elliot Stanley, The Tourist
Jared Harris, Hari Seldon, Foundation
Jason Watkins, Simon, Coma
Jenna Coleman, Liv Taylor, Wilderness
Jennifer Aniston, Alex Levy, The Morning Show
Jeremy Allen White, Carmen 'Carmy' Berzatto, The Bear
Jessica Gunning, Martha, Baby Reindeer
Jing Lusi, DC Hana Li, Red Eye
Joanne Froggatt, Dr Abbey Henderson, Breathtaking
Jonah Hauer-King, Lali, The Tattooist of Auschwitz
Julianne Moore, Mary Villiers, Mary & George
Kane Robinson, Gerald 'Sully' Sullivan, Top Boy
Katherine Kelly, Emily Jackson, The Long Shadow
Angela Van den Bogerd, Mr Bates vs The Post Office
Kris Marshall, Humphrey Goodman, Beyond Paradise
Leo Woodall, Dexter Mayhew, One Day
Lesley Sharp, DI Hannah Laing, Before We Die
Louisa Harland, Nell Jackson, Renegade Nell
Luke Newton, Colin Bridgerton, Bridgerton
Martin Short, Oliver Putnam, Only Murders in the Building
Michelle Keegan, Maya Stern, Fool Me Once
Monica Dolan, Jo Hamilton, Mr Bates vs The Post Office
Ncuti Gatwa, The Fifteenth Doctor, Doctor Who
Nicholas Galitzine, George Villiers, Mary & George
Nicholas Ralph, James Herriot, All Creatures Great and Small
Nicola Coughlan, Penelope Featherington, Bridgerton
Nicola Walker, DI Annika Strandhed, Annika
Oliver Jackson-Cohen, Will, Wilderness
Paapa Essiedu, George, The Lazarus Project
Peter Capaldi, DCI Daniel Hegarty, Criminal Record
Ralf Little, DI Neville Parker, Death in Paradise
Reese Witherspoon, Bradley Jackson, The Morning Show
Richard Armitage, Dr Matthew Nolan, Red Eye
Joe Burkett, Fool Me Once
Richard Gadd, Donny Dunn, Baby Reindeer
Robert Carlyle, Robert Sutherland, COBRA: Rebellion
Ruth Wilson, Lorna Brady, The Woman In The Wall
Sam Heughan, Danny, The Couple Next Door
Sam Reid, Lestat de Lioncourt, Interview with the Vampire
Samantha Bond, Judith Potts, The Marlow Murder Club
Selena Gomez, Mabel Mora, Only Murders in the Building
Siân Brooke, Grace Ellis, Blue Lights
Sonequa Martin-Green, Captain Michael Burnham, Star Trek: Discovery
Sophie Rundle, PC Joanna Marshall, After The Flood
Steve Coogan, Jimmy Savile, The Reckoning
Steve Martin, Charles-Haden Savage, Only Murders in the Building
Suranne Jones, Amy Silva, Vigil
Timothy Spall, Peter Farquhar, The Sixth Commandment
Toby Jones, Alan Bates, Mr Bates vs The Post Office
DCS Dennis Hoban, The Long Shadow
Tom Hiddleston, Loki, Loki
Ukweli Roach, DI Jack Caffery, Wolf
Vicky McClure, Lana Washington, Trigger Point
Wunmi Mosaku, DI Riya Ajunwa, Passenger
https://www.nationaltvawards.com:80/terms
Shows and individuals are nominated in the longlist for the 2024 National Television Awards. This year is so competitive 😉
Posted 22nd May 2024
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The Kids Just Don't Understand January 15, 2024
Image: The Cupid Car Club, MP
listen on Mixcloud
Carole King - Pleasant Valley Sunday (Demo) Sad Lovers & Giants - Alice (Isn't Playing)
Kraftwerk - Spacelab Dancer - International Birdman Bongi & Judy - Running Out
D.I. - Living in the USA Hutton School Choir - Don't Drink and Drive Armand Hammer - The Gods Must Be Crazy (feat. billy woods, E L U C I D & EL-P) Thee Headcoats - The Leader of the Sect The Shangri-Las - Heaven Only Knows Blue Oil - Sardine City
Chumbawamba - So Long, So Long Shirley Collins & Davy Graham - Pretty Saro The Shna - Rafaela Peach Kelli Pop - Do the Eggroll
The Rats - Gotta Get Away Yanti Bersaudara - Badminton Rondos - Tools Flipper - Life Pozi - Sea Song Exploding White Mice - Dangerous Holger Hiller - Chemische und physikalische Entdeckungen
Grrr - Scrape Essential Logic - The Order Form Violin Sect - Fit & Anxious Pretty in Pink - Library Card
Camille Bénâtre - Sans terre et sans roi Cupid Car Club, M.P. - Grape Juice Plus Robert Moran, Richard Thain and Brian Nelson - Action Beat - Improvised Piece for Two Xylophones And Drums
Candy Machine - Shining
#radio#community radio#punk#music#playlist#post punk#wprb#transistor sister#electronica#folk music#krautrock#girl group
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New Country 27e jaargang #T1215(S774) (C18)van 5 februari 2024 (wk 06) uitzending op Smelne fm & Crossroads Country Radio
Album van de week: Conner Smith - Smoky Mountains (2024)
Classic album : Glen Campbell – Wichita Line man 1968
Hits of the Year : 1978
Maandfavoriet : tim McGraw – One Bad Habit
Maandartiest : The Bellamy Brothers
The Bellamy Brothers - Let Your Love Flow *maandartiest
Diamond Rio – Unbelievable #1 25 jaar
Zach Bryan - Something In The Orange # 1 2023
Tyler Hubbard - Turn
Kacey Musgraves - Three Little Birds (From Bob Marley One Love).
Kameron Marlowe, Ella Langley - Strangers
Wyatt Flores - Milwaukee.
Morgan Wallen - Spin You Around
Nate Smith - World on Fire 7w #1.
Conner Smith - Roulette On The Heart Album vd week
Conner Smith – Creek Will Rise album
Little Big Town – Pontoon 2012
Margo Smith - Don’t Break the Heart That Loves- 1978 12
Travis Tritt – Anymore
Merle Haggard – Mama Tried
Tim McGraw – One Bad Habit favoriet
Olivia Lane - Woman At The Well - sofi
Glen Campbell – Wichita Lineman classic album
Glen Campbell - Reason To Believe /Dreams Of The Everyday Housewife
Corb Lund - Old Familiar Drunken Feeling.
Richard Lindgren - Argentinian Shoes
Alan Jackson – Freight Train (3 in 1)
Alan Jackson – Chattahoochee
Alan Jackson - Remember When
Conner Smith – Meanwhile In Carolina) Album van de week
Morgan Wallen – One Thing At A Time #1 album.
Dolly Parton – Wildflowers
To Love Somebody (Bee Gees cover) – Suzy & the Sissies
Claude King - Wolverton Mountain,
Little Big Town -Wine Beer Whiskey.
Brian Kelly - Trucks, Ducks, Bucks & Beer Trucksong
The Bellamy Brothers - Do You Love As Good As You Look_ maandartiest
Brett Kissel - Ten Years from Now juweeltje
Randall King - Coulda Been Love Album vorige week
Conner Smith – Smokey Mountains Album vd week .
Sommerset - Almost Persuaded Dutch corner
Country Trail Band - A Bible And A Bus Ticket Home.Dutch corner.
The Walkers - There's No More Corn On The Brasos ) Dutch corner
Willie Nelson & Mel Tillis - Texas On A Saturday Night
Paul Davis - Sweet Life 1978
Dolly Parton – Heartbreaker . #4
Chrystal Gayle -Talking In Your Sleep. #3
Olivia Newton-John - A Little More Love- #2
Waylon & Willie - Mammas, Dont Let Your Babies Grow Up To Be Cowboys #1
George Strait – Blue Clear Sky
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