#moulinier
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more details about "a very secret service" yay !
so, me and @thequeenofspies got bored and spend an unholy time founding what cigarettes they are all smoking; here you go :
moulinier - "Royale Rouge"
(it was actually the easiest to find bro is always smoking i have so many screenshot of his pack of cigarettes)
jacquard - "Algeria"
(possibly the hardest, there's only one scene when you can kinda see it and it's so blury)
moïse - "Celtiques"
(i think we can see them in other shots but i'm lazy)
merlaux - "Gauloises"
(it's funny bc it's the light version of the Celtiques also this one was very easy too)
for calot, we can't tell bc he uses a little box where you put your cigarettes in so eh
and for mercaillon well fuck him i don't want to know
and i find those little details so cool bc it weirdly actually tells a lot about them ? like merlaux smokes des gauloises and they're the classic french cigarettes, very basic, almost a french symbol. moises smokes des celtiques, very french but older than the gauloises, more nicotines, i think we could say it link him to merlaux like an older him (and since he's his father figures it's rlly cute). jacquard smokes des algeria which is very obvious, he probably buy them when he's in alger and they are (according to my mom) cheaper so it goes with his money oriented mindset (+ it also goes with his love for his work zone and you can't tell me jacquard doesn't actually deeply love algeria bc i will not believe u this man is in his element there i will not elaborate). moulinier smokes des royales, kinda expensive cigarettes, very classy, goes with his lifestyle (champagne, fancy bars like the darling club, fancy clothes as we can see him wearing a lot of different suits). and as for calot, the fact that he uses a metal box for his cigarettes also tells a lot, he is a mysterious and paranoid character, probably doesn't want anyone to know anything about him (and we actually don't know a lot about him compared to other characters).
i rlly love all the little details in this tv show, i could spend hours looking for them and talking about them tbh, it is just so smart and well done.
#a very secret service#au service de la france#arte#netflix#calot#jacquard#moulinier#moïse#merlaux#cigarettes#details#i will never stop analyse the whole show#not until i have something new about it to watch#(season 3 im looking at u)#(please)
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why is the au service de la france fandom almost non-existent :( I want to talk about my loser spies!!!
#jacquard moulinier and calot are my favourites#such pathetic little creatures#loser polycule#I'll make a post on why you all should watch au service de la france later
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boring sketches to figure these guys out
#my art#a very secret service#au service de la france#serviceposting#roger moulinier#jacky jacquard#jean-rene calot#i got moulinier down easiest and im happiest with him!#and idk. calot is unnecessarily hard to get right. rude
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Snuffbox of the Emperor Napoleon, circa 1812
Isabey, Jean-Baptiste (artists) Moulinie, Bautte and Moynier (maker)
#napoleon#napoleonic era#v&a#empire#french art#french empire#first french empire#1800s#19th century#isabey#moulinie#snuffbox#coronation#imperial#empire style#bonaparte#history#historical art#gold#painting#paintings#art#french#1812#napoleon bonaparte
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Me: Moulinier is babygirl
@averygayservice : Winnie is babygirl ?????
#so apparently Moulinier = Winnie the Pooh#We were in class#i nearly cried#a very secret service#au service de la france
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Estienne Moulinié (1599 - 1676). Dialogue: Souffrez beaux yeux pleins de charmes. [(ff.21v-22) Airs de cour avec la tablature de luth et de guitare, Troisiesme livre (Paris, Pierre Ballard, 1629)]
[L'Espagnol] Souffrez beaux yeux pleins de charmes / Qui me consommez le cœur / Que mes soupirs & mes larmes / Fléchissent votre rigueur. // Ce front couronné de gloire / Connu dans la cour des Roys : / Quoy ? N'avez-vous point mémoire / De l'avoir vu autrefois ? // Moy qui suant sous les armes / Ay triomphé en tous lieux, Invincible en tant d'alarmes, / Je suis vaincu par vos yeux.//
[La Français] Espagnol je te supplie / Laisse-moi vivre en repos : / Tes yeux pleurent de la suie, / Tes soupirs sentent les aulx. // Ouy, j’ai vu votre visage, / Il me souvient qu’à Paris / Vous sentiez plus le fourmage / Que le musc & l’ambre gris. // A pauvre Seignor “don cancre”, / C’est plustot le désespoir / Qui vous fit suer de l’encre : / Car vostre linge est bien noir.//
[L'Espagnol] Donc pour toute récompense, / Et prix de mon amitié, / Je vivray sans espérance / Et vous vivrez sans pitié. // La France qui me possède, / Dont tout le monde est jaloux : / Beaux yeux à qui le jour cède, / Ne me retient que pour vous. // Si vous rendez moins amère / La douleur dont je me plains, / L’Espagne qui me révère, / Vous en baisera les mains. //
[La Française] Votre amitié sans seconde, / Ressemblera le Soleil, / Qui fait tout le tour du monde / Sans rencontrer son pareil . // A voir vostre contenance, / Ce qui vous tient au collet / Vous a fait venir en France / Sans finance, & sans valés. // Le remède qu’on ordonne / Au mal qui vous fait mourir, / Ce n’est pas moy qui le donne, / C’est au Roy de vous guérir.//
Estienne Moulinié – L'Humaine Comédie. Le Poème Harmonique, Vincent Dumestre (2000, Alpha Productions – Alpha 005)
Estienne Moulinié ‘Dialogue: Espagnol, je te supplie!’ Le Poème Harmonique
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i need jacky jacquard from au service de la france and roman roy succession to meet so badly.
i was just a few hours ago looking at a video of jacquard and thinking : "wait who does he remind me of, in a very uncanny way ? oh, roman roy !!". which is funny since i watched au service de la france way before i first heard of succession.
they are both :
small little dogs (affectionate but also derogatory).
part of an iconic trio that sometimes become a quatuor (in this scenario merlaux has the role of connor).
when i looked up the fandom, apparently everyone called him gay despite the fact that i hadn't noticed (but i've been thinking a lot of times about the scene in prison with moulinier and yeah you all were right).
right winger/conservative.
classy and drippy to be honest.
played by an actor whose first name starts with "k".
obvious physical ressemblance and similar manierisms as well.
so, what would happen in that room ? gay ***, insults battle or both ? vote now at home and on your phones.
#sophia talks#au service de la france#a very secret service#jacky jacquard#succession#hbo succession#succession hbo#roman roy#kieran culkin#karim barras#french stuff#french side of tumblr#up the baguette
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13 Curious Legal Cases From Cincinnati's Historic Courtrooms
When the Cincinnati Bar Association was first organized in 1819, our city of 10,000 citizens supported the livelihoods of just 27 attorneys. Since then, the Cincinnati legal community produced some stellar lawyers including Chief Justice William Howard Taft, Nobel Peace Prize laureate Charles Dawes and Speaker of the House “Uncle Joe” Cannon. Over the years, our barristers have represented some curious cases. Here are a few:
Testy “Ass”-ociates Way back in Cincinnati legal history, at the ancient Hamilton County Court House erected in 1819, a lawyer named James W. Gazlay argued a motion before the court. The county bench back then comprised a presiding judge who was usually an actual attorney and three associate judges who were often not lawyers but respected members of the community. When the presiding judge ruled in favor of Gazlay’s motion and the associates voted it down, Gazlay objected. The court agreed to reconsider the motion the next day, and Gazlay showed up, ready to argue. This time, the associates favored Gazlay’s motion, but the presiding judge over-ruled them. Attorney Gazlay expressed his frustration at having to argue before a “Demerara Team.” The presiding judge asked what that meant. “This court is a Demerara Team composed of one mule and three jackasses; when the mule wants to go, the jackasses won't, and when the jackasses want to move, the mule won't budge a step!” The presiding judge found Gazlay in contempt but, true to their nature, the “ass”-ociates voted against the censure.
Spelling Leads To A Spell In Jail Attorney Edwin S. Morrissey was assigned to defend a young man accused of obtaining money under false pretenses. The principal evidence was a receipt given to the complaining witnesses in the case. Morrissey’s client provided a reasonable alibi, but the prosecution asked him to provide a writing sample to compare against the receipt in evidence. The suspect produced a sample in handwriting totally unlike the original receipt, but the prosecution noticed that the word “received” was misspelled identically on both documents, transposing the I and the E. The defendant was found guilty. He confessed to Morrissey that he had, in fact, forged the receipt. “He said that if he had a better education he could have put it over.”
Stamped For Blackmail While he served as Assistant United States Attorney in Cincinnati, Edward P. Moulinier investigated an attempt to blackmail a lawyer named Howard Douglass, who had received a dozen letters threatening to expose unsavory aspects of his legal work. The blackmailer ordered Douglass to pay $7,000. Moulinier suspected an inside job and had a postal inspector apply a barely noticeable mark to the stamps in Douglass’ office. Sure enough, the next threatening letter arrived bearing a marked stamp. Fred Horman, who had worked as a clerk in the Douglass office for 25 years, and Horman’s wife were arrested and convicted of blackmail. No record if they were charged with embezzling stamps.
How Much Moon In That Shine? One day during Prohibition, some Ohio liquor agents found a stash of bottles containing a clear liquid, presumed to be moonshine, in an abandoned building in downtown Cincinnati. As a crowd gathered to watch the contraband hauled out of the cellar, the agents realized they had evidence, but no culprit. They decided that a passing peddler who had paused his horse-drawn cart long enough to witness the raid was as good as any, so they charged him. Attorney Bernard C. Fox was assigned to defend the poor man and quickly realized that not one of the bottles found in the abandoned building had even been opened to determine its contents. Fox grilled the agents on the witness stand as to their ability to identify moonshine on sight alone. How much moon, he asked, is incorporated into moonshine? The agents were clearly befuddled. Well then, he asked, how much shine is necessary to constitute moonshine? Again befuddlement. Fox was shocked when the judge found the innocent peddler guilty anyway and only an appeal to a higher court cleared him.
A Wedding Guest Helped Hang The Groom In 1879, the National Association for the Promotion of Marriage concocted a “marriage picnic” at Cincinnati’s Inwood Park to encourage destitute young ladies to marry and avoid a life of shame. The whole idea, according to attorney Rufus B. Smith, was the brainchild of a mayor “who had more emotion and sentiment than common sense.” Because he lived in the neighborhood, Smith attended the picnic and watched three couples share their vows. A few years later, as Assistant Prosecuting Attorney, Smith was involved in convicting one of the grooms for the murder of his wife. “I think there are very few lawyers who have been guests at a wedding, as I was, and subsequently found it their duty to hang the groom for killing the bride.”
No Room In The Pen Captain Thomas H. Morrow, as U.S. District Attorney for Southern Ohio, handled a poison pen case involving one of the smaller towns in this area. More than 40 residents reported that they had received letters containing vulgar and obscene language and unfounded accusations against the recipients. An otherwise unassuming woman of 57 years of age was found guilty of the crime and sentenced to three years in the penitentiary, but which one? There were no federal penitentiaries for women in 1923. Southern Ohio had contracted with the State Penitentiary for Women in Missouri, but that contract had expired and Missouri was unwilling to renegotiate. The convict was actually delivered to the Minnesota Penitentiary for Women but was turned away at the door. She was then sent to the New Jersey Penitentiary for Women, where she was again refused until some hasty and heated negotiations by telephone secured her a three-year stint in that institution.
The Pocketed Deposition Isaac M. Jordan enjoyed a distinguished reputation among Cincinnati attorneys and once found himself in court, arguing a case against an attorney with a very much different character. Although Jordan had secured a deposition very much in his client’s favor, that document had mysteriously disappeared. Jordan’s counterpart vociferously regretted the loss of the deposition because, so he claimed, it would really have benefitted his client rather than Jordan’s. As the other lawyer expostulated, Jordan noticed, hanging from his pocket, the corner of a piece of paper. Jordan grabbed it as the shyster passed nearby and, amazingly, it was the “lost” deposition. The courtroom erupted in cheers, involving even the jury, who returned a verdict in favor of Jordan’s client.
The Difference Of Night And Day In the days before Hamilton County established a public defender office, the courts regularly drafted lawyers to defend the accused. Attorney Albert D. Alcorn was thus recruited to assist a man charged with burglary. Although otherwise entirely involved with civil cases, Alcorn emerged triumphant in this case. On reading the statutes, he saw that burglary was defined as illegally entering a house “in the night season.” While in court, Alcorn dialed the U.S. Weather Bureau and determined that sunrise on the day of his client’s arrest was at 4:56 a.m. while the arresting officers had testified they witnessed his client enter the house in question at 6:20 a.m., an hour and a half later. The accused burglar was released on that technicality, much to the displeasure of the judge, who began to chastise him. The now legally innocent man stopped the judge mid-sentence and declared, “You can’t tell me anything. The jury has said I am not guilty, and I don’t care to listen to you or anybody else lecture me. I bid you all good-by.”
A Premature Burial The legal intricacies of deeds and land titles rarely excite much public interest, but attorney Dudley C. Outcault had a doozy. Outcault was retained by a prominent Cincinnati developer who wanted to acquire a prime piece of real estate in O’Bryonville. The land was owned by a man whom no one in Cincinnati had seen for many years. He was presumed to be dead and negotiations were underway to determine which of his heirs were the rightful beneficiaries of the property in question. As the gears of legal machinery ground on, a substantial wrinkle emerged. The “dead” man returned to Cincinnati, in remarkably fine fettle, apologizing for not writing as he had made his 15-year jaunt around the country. He informed the court he had no intention to sell the land coveted by the developer, much to his relatives’ dismay.
The Pot Calls The Kettle Black During Prohibition, it was common for small Ohio municipalities to establish Liquor Courts to enforce the “dry” laws. Attorney Harry H. Shafer wrangled with many of these courts and eventually pursued a case to the United States Supreme Court to essentially outlaw them. Shafer was hired by a man who had been an agent for one of these liquor courts and had been fired, he believed, unjustly. Not only had the man been fired, but he had been charged with possessing and selling spiritous liquor. On investigation, Shafer was able to prove that the firing and the subsequent charges grew out of a disagreement between his client and his accusers, who were all liquor agents. Shafer was able to prove that the whole lot of them were involved in reselling the booze they had confiscated in their official capacities.
A Self-Fulfilling Prophecy Attorney William Thorndyke knew very well that he could not ethically advise a client to avoid appearing in court, but there was no ethical prohibition against prophecy. The client in question, named Francis, was charged with arson and the Fire Marshal wanted to know where Francis had lived before he moved to Cincinnati. Francis refused to tell and explained to Thorndyke that he had been convicted of setting two fires in that town, which the Fire Marshal would learn by telegram if he knew where to inquire. Francis asked the attorney if he should run away and Thorndyke told him he could not offer that advice but, if he stayed in Cincinnati, he would surely end up in the penitentiary. On the day of the trial, the accused was nowhere to be found and the judge asked Thorndyke if he had advised his client to disappear. “I didn’t tell Francis to run away,” Thorndyke said, “But I did tell him what would happen to him if he stayed in Cincinnati.” It took a few months to locate Francis and return him for trial, and he did end up in the pen, just as his attorney predicted.
Ain’t No Law Against It Cincinnati Police arrested a young woman in 1916 and hauled her into court on charges she had been clothed as a man. Forced into a dress for her arraignment, she refused to enter the courtroom until she had been draped in a floor-length overcoat. Attorney Harry W. Quitman was assigned to the case and secured a dismissal by pointing out a particularly salient fact: There was no law in Ohio prohibiting women from wearing clothing associated with men. “The law especially defends women in their right to wear any clothing they see fit if the women do so in an innocent and not objectionable manner.” Quitman’s client walked free although she was harassed enough to leave Cincinnati for Columbus, where she was arrested – and acquitted – again.
Leave Well Enough Alone Haveth E. Mau was an Assistant District Attorney who, at one point in his long career, prosecuted a man for burglary of an occupied house and the theft of a number of articles. Under Ohio law at the time, burglary of an occupied house carried a penalty of life in prison. The jury, after consideration, found the defendant guilty only of petit larceny. Attorney Mau was shocked to learn that the man was unsatisfied with this misdemeanor verdict and wanted a new trial to contest it. A new trial was set and the same evidence presented. This time, the jury found the man guilty of burglary of an occupied residence and the judge sentenced him to life in prison. Mau was still shaking his head years later.
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Oui bonjour ça va genre être mon premier post de ma vie sur Tumblr, mais c'est parce que quand même j'ai vu que ce fandom avait une petite communauté sur Tumblr alors voilà
J'ai écrit une fanfic sur Au service de la France, mais c'est ni sur Moulinier/Jacquard/Calot j'en suis désolé, c'est sur Moïse et les co-directeurs adjoints, parce que j'ai un problème avec Antoine Gouy
Pour donner une idée voici les ships : Moïse/Schmid et One-sided Moïse/Lechiot
Oui c'est chelou mais je suis heureux de ce que j'ai créé. Si vous voulez le résumé (pas ouf car je sais pas en faire) :
"Georges est maintenant directeur du service, faisant de Schmid son directeur adjoint.
Mais Schmid ne perd pas ses habitudes et, lorsque Georges reste tard au bureau pour terminer son travail, il lui emmène une tasse de thé.
S'ensuit une conversation avec son collègue et quelques souvenirs concernant ses anciens co-directeurs adjoints, et notamment le premier."
Voilà je poste ça ici pour ceux et celles qui seraient encore là concernant ce fandom et qui voudrait découvrir ça
#au service de la france#a very secret service#moise#schmid#fanfiction#Je sais pas ce que j'ai écrit mais j'en suis heureux
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The AM: May 6, 2024
It's a bit of a jumbled episode, sure, but this week's AM still has plenty worth tuning into. New-to-the-show musicians include Michel Moulinie, Discodor, and Unessential Oils, alongside AM favourites from Teen Daze to Juana Molina to Kraftwerk.
Wander from ambient electronics to Brazilian pop to doom-wop to oddball jazz. Does it all connect? No, but you can still trust in the ride.
Listen at CJSW, or stream with the embeds below.
Hour One:
It's Monday Morning Lee Hazelwood • The LHI Years
beauty respectfulchild • 更新 re:new
Lente Course Michel Moulinie • Chrysalide
Arpeggiare Steve Hauschildt • Where All Is Fled
Resonant World Nick Schofield • Ambient Ensemble
Flatland Buildings and Food • Echo the Field
Cluster B Soft Operator • Cluster B EP
Kilika Teen Daze • Themes for a New Earth
AndWillContinuteToGrow lokey • Eternal Bloom
appa wú wéi Liila • Soundness Of Mind
Hour Two:
The Arboretum David Boulter • St Ann's
Motorbike Journey Roman Angelos • Tropical Nites
Orange DISCODOR • DISCODOR EP 2
Orb Glass Beams • Mahal EP
Pushing Rocks El Michels Affair • Boy Kills World (Songs From The Original Motion Picture)
Banana Joyce • Visions of Dawn
Carnavalzinho Joyce • Visions of Dawn
Lugar Lau Ro • Cabana
Vive Solo Juana Molina • Un dia
The Fix Jon McKiel • Hex
Nic at the Museum Unessential Oils • Unessential Oils
Hour Three:
Through the Mosaic Tommy Guerrero • Amber of Memory
Cakewalk The Garrys • Single
Grimalkin Ghost Power • Ghost Power
A Man’s Wisdom Gives Him Patience Ray Barbee • In Full View
Divine Cadence No False Suns • Jubilee Me
Ohm Sweet Ohm Kraftwerk • Radio-Activity
Préparatifs dans la Salle de Rédaction Monroeville Music Center • Le Progress
Hiccups Amy Aileen Wood • The Heartening
No. 20 (Once Raw: The Aging G) Dun-Dun Band • Pita Parka Pt. 1 — Xam Egdub
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La Décarbonation maritime
Un panorama des solutions de décarbonation de l'industrie navale française développé par le GICAN, le syndicat de l'industrie navale française et présenté par Thimothée Moulinier du GICAN.
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just found some drawings i've done 3 years ago during lockdown when my hyperfixation with a very secret service was at its peak so here you go
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La semaine du ministre
Mercredi 10 avril - Participation à l’Assemblée générale de la Fédération professionnelle représentative des entreprises coopératives (Felcoop) - Entretien avec Mme Prisca THÉVENOT, ministre déléguée chargée du Renouveau démocratique, porte-parole du Gouvernement - Remise des insignes d’officier dans l’ordre de la Légion d’honneur à Alain MOULINIER, vice-président du Conseil Général de l’Alimentation, de l’Agriculture et des Espaces Ruraux
Jeudi 11 avril
Entretien avec M. Jean-Marc ZULESI, président de la commission du Développement durable et de l'Aménagement du territoire de l'Assemblée nationale, député des Bouches-du-Rhône
Entretien avec Mme Sandrine LE FEUR, députée du Finistère et rapporteure pour avis sur le projet de loi d'orientation pour la souveraineté agricole et le renouvellement des générations en agriculture
Vendredi 12 avril - Déplacement en Seine-Saint-Denis relatif à la sécurité sanitaire des aliments en vue des Jeux Olympiques et Paralympiques de Paris 2024
Crédits photos :
Cheick Saidou/agriculture.gouv.fr
Xavier Remongin/agriculture.gouv.fr
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My correct and accurate sexuality headcanons for The Guys
Jacquard - This man has never liked a woman
Moulinier - The most bisexual man in the entire service
Calot - Bi on account of it being two genders
#:V#au service de la france#a very secret service#serviceposting#yes i know bi is two or more but shh.#in his head it would be two#also: i dont think jacquard ever shows an interest towards a woman once in the whole show. correct me if im wrong tho#moulinier has the bi vibes and if what moïse implied in that one ep is what i think he was implying he has slept with men as well#the mans just a hopeless romantic#with merlaux im not sure. he could be the token het but i can see him being bicurious
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Roma: La Fondazione Bertugno-Moulinier invita a PLATEIA CLOSING EVENT
La Fondazione Bertugno-Moulinier invita a PLATEIA CLOSING EVENT Sabato 10 febbraio 2024 ore 15.00 – 20.00 Casa Khan (ex casa del custode, Scuola Pisacane)Via dell’Acqua Bullicante 28 – ROMA La Fondazione Bertugno-Moulinier invita all’appuntamento conclusivo del progetto PLATEIA – Comunità per la rigenerazione verde e urbana, un momento di condivisione e restituzione delle azioni realizzate,…
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pov you see Bruno Paviot (Moulinier's actor) in any other media
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