#richard yuri will be real
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idvxoc posting richard toxic yuri moment (theyre toxic to everyone else but themselves)
hes mad that you are looking at his wife.. how dare place ur poor eyes on his extravagantly thick wife
#artists on tumblr#digital art#original art#art#artwork#my art#oc art#i love them#idv fanart#identity v#richard sterling#idv x oc#yumeship#yumejoshi#non sharing yume#richard idv#i love you richard sterling so much#richard yuri will be real
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funny that tales of games continue to have gay coded protags but are too afraid of having 2 women the same age interact. where are my lesbians, bandai. where are they.
#.text#ive played like. 6 games. tales of vesperia has my back but is that all im gonna get. girl help they stole lesbianism#well asbel and richard are like lesbians. to me. so thats close enough#yuri is also like a lesbian to me but flynn isnt so isnt that the real problem here.#im speaking nonsense. its 7am and i havent slept yet.
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🕯🕊
We continue to talk about George Harrison. The floor is given to colleagues in the rock scene
"He is a great soul"


Bob Dylan
"He is a great soul, with all possible simplicity and empathy."

Jeff Lynne
"Maybe the happiest days of my life I spent in the studio with George."

Tom Petty
"George Harrison taught me a lot, and the songs were just the beginning"

Keith Richards
"George was, is and will be a real gentleman, in the full sense of the word. I hope they're having a little jam session with John right now, up there in heaven."

Julian Lennon
"He was someone who wanted to emulate."

Bob Geldof
"He said it himself once: How can you compare yourself to the brilliant John and Paul? But, in truth, they were on the same level."

Yuri Shevchuk
"If Lennon was a rebel in the Beatles, McCartney was a melodist, then George Harrison was a philosopher, and he gave this philosophy to the Beatles.'
And finally, a tribute to the work of George Harrison from his famous colleagues.
youtube
youtube
A great and not fully appreciated musician by his bandmates, a spiritual mentor and just a humble guy.

#the beatles#george harrison#Vibe Now#jeff lynne#bob dylan#tom petty#keith richards#memorial day#julian lennon#Yuri Shevchuk#music#my music#music love#musica#history music#spotify#rock music#rock#rock photography#pop#beat#Youtube
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dc4 could have been peak!!! richard and logan!!!! carnival setting!!! no krystal!! no yaoi couple being annoying! yuri!!!!!!!!! amelie! ted! isabel! all amazing potential villains! or just entertaining characters!!!!! and then two of them were in the first three booted! and isabel is being underutilized!!! i miss Amelie being so cool and pretty and seeing Ted do his thing and wondering when he’d become S1 Alec 2.0 (a good thing to me) ): if I had the patience I would rewrite the series to let those two go further but alas I have found every episode of Fresh PreCure and am having a yuri fix. anyways giving you and Ted 2 tickets to a high-end casino. enjoy the date!
Real... Can I blow him on there?
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Some DDLC headcanons, prog rock edition!
Sayori:
Has a pretty RYM-core taste in general, but her favorite prog group is most definitely Pink Floyd due to how atmospheric and sad they can get, which she can relate to quite well. As well as this, she also enjoys more poppy stuff within the prog space like Kate Bush, ELO, and Moody Blues.
Yuri:
You'd think the calm and more down to earth member of the literature club to listen to something nice and classical and nothing really rocking. However, I know she fw a lot of intense progressive black metal. Ὁπλίτης, Negură Bunget, Enslaved, Sigh, you name it! She doesn't share her taste much though.
Natsuki:
Natsuki is weirdly enough the opposite of Yuri. Instead of liking more intense, prog metal stuff, she listens to more folk prog stuff. The sounds of groups like Los Jaivas, Richard Dawson, and Gryphon makes her feel a sense of peace in her daily life. However...she is also quite eclectic in her tastes, and she also dabbles in more alternative prog stuff like The Mars Volta, Coheed & Cambria, and Thank You Scientists. Maybe not as much as folk music, but she does enjoy some pretty complex sounds.
Monika:
Lastly, of course, is Monika, who has the most untraditional of prog genres as her favorite, that being both progressive electronic and progressive house. They remind her a lot of her state of being, and how she feels as though she is surrounded by machines, and that she is the only real one out there. Klaus Schulze and Underworld are comfort acts for her.
#ddlc#doki doki literature club#headcanons#ddlc headcanons#monika#sayori#yuri#natsuki#progressive rock#progressive folk#progressive metal#progressive electronic#progressive house#black metal#alt rock
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Blacklist
Fandoms:
Cookie Run
Danganronpa
Dream SMP
Genshin Impact
Harry Potter
Hazbin Hotel
Helluva Boss
KinitoPet
Other Vivziepop shows
Qualia Automata(or however it’s spelled ;-;)
SCP
South Park
Warrior Cats
Characters:
Darkstalker(Wings Of Fire)
Whirlpool(Wings Of Fire)
Ships:
Ashedue(Ashe Ubert/Dedue Molinaro)
Caspashe(Caspar Von Bergliez/Ashe Ubert)
Chrisken(Christopher Pierre/Kennith Simmons)
Dimiashe(Dimitri Alexandre Blaiddyd/Ashe Ubert)
Dimiclaude(Dimitri Alexandre Blaiddyd/Claude Von Riegan)
Ferdibert(Ferdinand Von Aegir/Hubert Vin Vestra)
Michie(Maxwell Jagerman/Richard Lipshitz)
Papyton(Papyrus/Mettaton)
Yuriashe(Yuri Leclerc/Ashe Ubert)
Zelink(Zelda/Link)
Any ships involving the Fraggle Five from Fraggle Rock. However if you are polite enough about this one I do not mind doing ships like Redkey or whatever. This is the one item on the blacklist that if you request it and I have a good idea or like the themes you requested I might actually do
Other: Gore/fleshy and Body Horror Stims(blood stims that are just blood are ok though. Im alright w/ seeing gore stims i just dont want them on this blog)
Incest/Pedophillia/Etc ships
Hateful shit(Transphobic/Homophobic/Racist/etc content has no place on my blog
Horror Movies/TV shows(they make me very squeamish)(Horror Games and Musicals are fine)
Music videos(I’m just not interested. It’s not a squick or anything I just can’t be bothered)
Things with graphic/grotesque/fleshy gore and/or body horror, especially in visual mediums(once again makes me very squeamish. Most surreal shit is fine. If you’re wondering, if it’s Flesh Typical body horror it’s a hard no, but if it’s Stranger or Spiral Typical body horror it’s probably fine(Flesh, Stranger, and Spiral are Magnus Archives things. I am tentatively willing to make stimboards based around The Flesh from TMA but that is the only exception to this rule)
FnaF games post FFPS
Real People
The Hatchetfield story "Hey, Melissa!"
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2024
This year I visited 320 exhibitions, this is my top ten:

Francis Alÿs, Barbican, London
Superb show by Alys that is a real lesson in how to curate video art, visually, sonically, conceptually spatially and above all else seriously playful.

2. Donald G. Rodney, Nottingham Contemporary and Spike Island, Bristol
I was lucky to see this retrospective of Rodney’s work twice and was rewarded by seeing two different ways to tell a story of the artist’s work. Charged, chilling, poignant, poetic, humbling, angry, beautiful and so much more.

3.Martyn Cross, Hales Gallery, London
Best show of painting I saw all year, Cross is doing something that is anachronistic in that it feels like nothing I have ever seen before and reminiscent of much that is good in art from the past. Hugely refreshing and rewarding.

4. Lubna Chowdhary, Graves Gallery, Sheffield
A show with a smile on its face that made me gleeful and indeed put a bouncing smile on my face. Much richness beneath the surface of the work, but wowzers what surfaces on the work, is incredibly materially rich.

5. Pamela Phatsimo Sunstrum, Barbican, London
A show I had no expectations for, not having any knowledge of Sunstrum’s work before and actually only popping in to see it while also visiting the excellent The Imaginary Institution of India Art 1975–1998 exhibition. Sunstrum’s work was a real feat in bring the cinematic to painting through embedding the audience into the spatial time and space of an encounter with the narrative. Stunning and surprising.

6. Yelena Popova, Ione & Mann Gallery, London
Stepping into the gallery from the speakeasy-like entrance up the unassuming front door and staircase was like entering a completely different space from the bustling London streets – calm, contemplative, zen-like lessons in slowing down and paying attention.

7. Dan Rapley, Project Space Plus, Lincoln and Angear Visitor Centre, Nottingham
A lesson in how to look with fresh eyes, one body of photographs was displayed sculpturally in the middle of each space, inviting the viewer, like Rapley to look inwards at the materiality of the microscopic in his blown up photographs of details of slides he has sourced. The other body of work beautifully creates new mysterious and evocative compositions, collaged together by layering the found slides on a light box and rephotographing them.

8. We are the Monument, Graves Gallery, Sheffield
I don't think there is a better public gallery than the Graves Gallery at the moment who are considering how to re-energise their collection, largely by letting artists such as Yuen Fong Ling (and at the same time another brilliant show curated by Victoria Lucas. Clever, playful, dynamic in the way of curating, which feels as deft, elastic and magical as Houdini. It is truly an example that i wish others would take note of, not to copy but to see what can be done.

9. Hew Locke - What Have We Here?, British Museum, London
Superbly told through careful curation, excellent text panels that combined objectivity with subjectivity in a brilliant way to address multiple and complex colonial narratives.

10. Japanese Art History À La Takashi Murakami, Gagosian, London
I was expected to be too cynical but ended up completely bowled over, seduced and in love with Murakami’s new work that brilliantly balanced spectacle with nuance, attention to detail on such a huge scale.
This year I visited the following exhibitions
10th Jan, Zara Sands and Olly Centres, General Practice, Lincoln
12 Jan, Bodies for Practice, Project Space Plus, Lincoln
2nd Feb, Seasonal Strokes, General Practice, Lincoln
9 Fefb, Chris Ofilli and William Blake, Tate Britain, London
9 Feb, Chris Ofilli, Tate Britain, London
9 Feb, Woman in Protest, Tate Britain, London
9 Feb, Richard Hamilton, Tate Britain, London
9 Feb, Yuri Pattison and J M W Turner, Tate Britain, London
9 Feb, Zineb Saleh Tate Britain, London
9 Feb, Cat Flap Blink, Terrace Gallery, London
9 Feb, Victor Bengtsson, Public, London
9 Feb, Martin Aagaard Hansen, Tanja Nis-Hansen & Kazuyuki Takezaki , Union Pacific, London
9 Feb, Mao Yan, Pace Gallery, London
9 Feb, ,Ziping Wang, Unit, London
9 Feb, Zach lieberman, Unit, London
9 Feb, Conversation Galante, Pillar Corris, London
9 Feb, Frank Bowling ,Hauser and Wirth, London
9 Feb, Uman ,Hauser and Wirth, London
9 Feb, Willem Sasnal, Sadie Coles ,London
9 Feb, Anna Barriball, Frith St,London
9 Feb, Emi Otaguro, Masanori Tomita, Nobuya Hitsuda & Yutaka Nozawa , Sadie Coles,London
9 Feb, Come Home, Sadie Coles ,London
9 Feb, Zineb Sedira, Goodman Gallery,London
9 Feb, Marc Chagall, Alon Zakaim, London
9 Feb, Polymythologies, Tiwani Contemporary,London
9 Feb, Jeffrey Gibson, Stephen Friedman,London
9 Feb, Claire Gavronsky, Goodman Gallery ,London
9 Feb, Rose Shakinovsky, Goodman Gallery ,London
9 Feb, Olivia Flax, Holtermann ,London
9 Feb,Burri, Miró , Ermnst, Nahmad Projects,London
9 Feb, Gerhard Richter, David Zwirner ,London
9 Feb, Drawn into the Present, Thaddeus Ropac ,London
9 Feb, Andy Warhol, Thaddeus Ropac ,London
9 Feb, Pauline Boty, Gazelli, ,London
9 Feb, Karel Appel, Max Hetzler, ,London
9 Feb, Alexis Hunter, Richard Saltoun, ,London
9 Feb, Premiums 1, Royal Academy ,London
9 Feb, Entangled Pasts, Royal Academy ,London
16 Feb, Punk: Rage and Revolution, Northampton Museum & Art Gallery
16 Feb, Material Matters, Northampton Museum & Art Gallery
16 Feb, Elke Pollard, Northampton Museum & Art Gallery
21 Feb, Practice Research, Project Space Plus, Lincoln
22 Feb, Paul Mpagi Sepuya, Nottingham Contemporary
22 Feb, Dora Budor, Nottingham Contemporary
22 Feb, Danica Maier, Beam, Nottingham
1 March, Andrew Bracey, General Practice, Lincoln
8 March, Darren Diss and Brian Voce, The Hub, Sleaford
8 March, Jo Cope, The Hub, Sleaford
20 March, Mirrors Windows Portals, project space plus, Lincoln
23 March, Feng-Ru Lee, Weston Gallery, Nottingham
23 March, Dan Rapley, Angear Visitor Centre, Nottingham
23 March, Saad Qureshi, Djanogly Gallery, Nottingham
23 March, Fascinating Finds from Nottingham's Caves, University of Nottingham Museum
23 March,Peep Show, Bennington Gallery, Nottingham
23 March, Shahnawaz Hussain, Bennington Gallery, Nottingham
23 March, Osheen Siva, Bennington Gallery, Nottingham
23 March, Debsyo Bolaji, New Art Exchange, Nottingham
24 March, Jason Wilsher-Mills, Lincoln Museum
12 April, When Forms Come Alive, Hayward Gallery, London
12 April, Virginia Verran, Michael Richardson Contemporary Art, London
12 April, Secundino Hernández , Victoria Miro Gallery, London
12 April, Neal Rock, New Art Projects, London
12 April, Salvador Dali, Clarendon Fine Art, London
12 April, Unravel, Barbican, London
12 April, Soufiane Ababri, Barbican, London
12 April, Ibrahim Mahama, Barbican, London
12 April, Lobert Zandvilet, Grimm, London
12 April, Reina Sugihara, Arcadia Misa, London
12 April, Marria Pratts Carl Kostyal, London
12 April, Richard Serra,David Zwirner, London
12 April, Marcelina Akpojotor, Rele, London
12 April, Fathi Hassan,Richard Saltoun, London
12 April, Erwin Wurm,Thaddaeus Ropac, London
12 April, Harold Cohen, Gazelli Art House, London
12 April, Adam Pendleton, Galerie Max Hetzler, London
12 April, Nancy Haynes, Marlborough, London
12 April, Shizuko Yoshikawa, Marlborough, London
12 April, Shizuko Yoshikawa and Bridget Riley, Marlborough, London
12 April, Betty Parsons,Alison Jacques, London
12 April, Woody De Othello, Stephen Friedman Gallery, London
12 April, Peter Blake, Waddington Custot Galleries, London
12 April, Standing in the Gap, Goodman Gallery, London
12 April, Ulla von Brandenburg, Pilar Corrias, London
12 April, Lindokuhle Sobekwa, Goodman Gallery, London
12 April, The Leisure Centre, The Brown Collection, London
12 April, Shine On,Sadie Coles HQ Davies St, London
12 April, Albert Oehlen, Gagosian, London
12 April, Gavin Turk, Ben Brown Fine Arts, London
12 April, François Morellet,Annely Juda Fine Art, London
12 April, Thomas Allen, Ronchini Gallery, London
12 April, Darya Diamond, Pippy Houldsworth, London
12 April, Li Hei Di, Pippy Houldsworth, London
12 April, Florence Hutchings, Redfern Gallery, London
12 April, Marilyn Lerner, Spruth Magers, London
12 April, Barabara Kruger, Spruth Magers, London
12 April, Edward Burtynsky, Flowers, London
12 April, Terry Frost, Flowers, London
12 April, Cinthia Marcelle,Sprovieri, London
12 April, Matthias Groebel,Gathering, London
12 April, Raqs Media Collective, Frith Street Gallery, London
12 April, Kati Heck, Sadie Coles, London
17 April, Trim, Project Space Plus, Lincoln
26 April, Marking Time, General Practice, Lincoln
8 May, Cache 05, Anglia Storage, Lincoln
8 May, Sacred Spaces, St Peter and Gowt, Lincoln
8 May, Parting of the Minds, Project Space Plus, Lincoln
8 May, Paul Letchworth, Gallery St. Martin's, Lincoln
11 May, Anna Reading, Uffington Notice Board
12 May, Common Ground, Uffington Village Hall
15 Ma, Groundings, Project Space Plus, Lincoln
29 May, Caravaggio, St Johns Cathedral, Valletta
31 May, Durer, Mdina Cathedral Museum
31 May, Joe Pellegrini Petit Collection, Wignacourt Museum, Rabat
31 May, Anton Agius, Wignacourt Museum, Rabat
4 June, Now I'm Here, Later I'll be There, Cadman studios, Stoke on Trent
7 June, Come to Fruition, Peter de Wint Building, Lincoln
18 June, Meet the Future, Grosvenor Building, Manchester
18 June, A to Z and Back Again, Holden Gallery, Manchester
19 June, Counter Culture, Djnogoly Gallery, Nottingham
19 June, John Newling, Lakeside Gallery, Nottingham
2 July, Oliver Ventress, General Practice, Lincoln
10 July, Sense of Belonging, Project Space Plus, Lincoln
12 July, Donald G. Rodney, Spike Island, Bristol
12 July, Aperiodic, Kit Form Gallery, Bristol
20th July, Text and Texture, General Practice, Lincoln
24th July, Resonating Museum Walls, Lincoln Museum
6 August, The Time is Always Now, The Box, Plymouth
16 August, Al Held White Cube Bermondsey, London
16 August, Joe Bloom, Kristin Hjellegjerde Gallery, London
16 August, Muhammad Zeeshan, Kristin Hjellegjerde Gallery, London
16 August, Rahima Gambo, Gasworks, London
16 August, Steve Klee, WIP Space, London
16 August, Nudge it, Terrace Gallery, London
16 August, Guild, Fillet space, London
16 August, Francis Alÿs, Barbican, London
16 August, Meera Shakti Osborne, Peer, London
16 August, Steph Huang, Tate Britain, London
16 August, Alvaro Barrington, Tate Britain, London
16 August, Keith Piper and Rex, Tate Britain, London
16 August, Franciska Themerson, Tate Britain, London
16 August, Balraj Khanna, Tate Britain, London
16 August, Henry Moore and Francis Bacon, Tate Britain, London
17 August, Songs of the Open Road, Halycon, London
17 August, London Pictures, Gilbert and George Centre, London
17 August, Damien Hirst, Phillips, London
17 August, Supernova, Flowers, London
17 August, Asi Joy Samuel and Claudia Yu, Frieze no. 9, London
17 August, Yinka Shonibare, Serpentine Gallery, London
17 August, Judy Chicago, Serpentine Gallery, London
17 August, Minsuk Cho, Serpentine Gallery, London
17 August, Gerhard Richter, Serpentine Gallery, London
17 August, Agnes Scherer, Sadie Coles, London
17 August, Matthew Barney, Sadie Coles, London
17 August, Isabella Ducrot, Sadie Coles HQ, London
17 August, Bertolt Brecht, Raven Row, London
17 August, Phantom Hymn, Modern Art, London
17 August, Awaken Metamagical Hand, Gazelli Art House, London
7 August, Roe Ethridge Gagosian, Davies St, London
17 August, Minoru Nomata, White Cube Mason’s Yard, London
17 August, Dominique White, Whitechapel Gallery, London
17 August, Archipelago: Winds in Orbit, Whitechapel Gallery, London
17 August, Peter Kennard, Whitechapel Gallery, London
18 August, Yoko Ono, Tate Modern, London
18 August, Jannis Kounnelius, Tate Modern, London
18 August, Inside Job (the Tate Staff Biennale), Tate Modern, London
18 August, Art and Text, Tate Modern, London
18 August, Gillie and Marc, St. Pauls, London
18 August, Lina Iris Viktor, Sir John Soane Museum, London
23 August, Nick Simpson, General Practice, Lincoln
23 August, What? Now, Project Space Plus, Lincoln
31st August, The Kola Nut Cannot be Contained, Welcome Collection, London
31st August, Being Human, Welcome Collection, London
31st August, Jason Wilsher-Mills, Welcome Collection, London
31st August, Penny Slinger, Richard Saltourn, London
31st August, Grace Weaver, Max Hetzler, London
31st August, Rheim Alkadhi, ICA, London
31st August, Vanessa Bell, Courtauld Institute, London
31st August, Henry Moore, Courtauld Institute, London
31st August, Tavares Strachan, Hayward Gallery, London
31st August, Graham Crowley, Domobaal, London
31st August, Contemporary collecting David Hockney to Cornelia Parker, British Museum, London
31st August, Rembrandt and his Children, British Museum, London
31st August, Liorah Tchiprout, Pippy Houldsworth, London
31st August, Hockney and Piereo: A Longer Look, National Gallery, London
31st August, Discover Degas and Miss La La, National Gallery, London
31st August, Don Brown, Sadie Coles, London
1st September, Ed Clark, Turner Contemporary, Margate
1st September, Lynda Benglis, Turner Contemporary, Margate
1st September, Portfolio X Windmill Community Gardens, Turner Contemporary, Margate
9th September, MA Fine Art show, University of Northampton
11th September, MA Fine Art show, Staffordshire University
13 September, Take one A Day, Usher Gallery, Lincoln
14 September, Erica Eyres, Turntable Gallery, Grimsby
14 September, Dale Alcock, Unseen Arts, Grimsby
16 September, MA Design Degree Show, Project Space Plus, Lincoln
20 September, Lubna Chowdhary, Graves Gallery, Sheffield
20 September, PostNatures, Graves Gallery, Sheffield
20 September, Colour, Form and Line, Graves Gallery, Sheffield
20 September, A Passion for Prints, Graves Gallery, Sheffield
20 September, Odilon Redon, Graves Gallery, Sheffield
20 September, Art and Identity, Graves Gallery, Sheffield
20 September, We Are The Monument, Graves Gallery, Sheffield
20 September, Show Your Metal, Millennium Gallery, Sheffield
20 September, Tess Jaray, Millennium Gallery, Sheffield
20 September, Festival of the MindMillennium Gallery, Sheffield
20 September, Festival of the Mind, Persistence Works, Sheffield
20 September, Jack Grinno, Gloam, Sheffield
27 September, Jake Williams, General Practice, Lincoln
10 October, Dan Rapley, Project Space Plus, Lincoln
18 October, Joe Duggan, Russel Square Gardens, London
18 October, Braque, Matisse, Picasso, London
18 October, Elizabeth Magill, Anthony Wilkinson, London
18 October, Douglas Abdell, Ab-Anbar, London
18 October, Murray Clarke, Nahmad Projects, London
18 October, Kehinde Wiley, Stephen Friedman, London
18 October, Fabienne Verdier, Waddington Custot, London
18 October, Susie Hamilton, Paul Stolper Gallery, London
18 October, Hew Locke - What Have We Here?, British Museum, London
18 October, Mathew Cerletty, Herald St, London
18 October, 5 Years, Maximillian William, London
18 October, Pei Wang, Workplace, London
18 October, The Stars Fell on Alabama, Edel Assanti, London
18 October, Jonas Wood, Gagosian, London
18 October, Yelena Popova, IONE & MANN Gallery, London
18 October, Rirkrit Tiravanija, Pilar Corrias, London
18 October, Golds, Ordovas, London
18 October, Jack Whitten, Hauser & Wirth, London
18 October, George Rouy, Hauser & Wirth, London
18 October, Austin Lee, Carl Kostyal, London
18 October, Ella Walker, Pilar Corrias, London
18 October, Alison Wilding, Alison Jacques, London
18 October, Lygia Clark, Alison Jacques, London
18 October, Kapwani Kiwanga, Goodman Gallery, London
18 October, Gary Hume, Sprüth Magers. London
18 October, Anthony McCall, Sprüth Magers, London
18 October, Oscar Murillo, David Zwirner, London
18 October, Pouran Jinchi, Gazelli Art House, London
18 October, Ruba Salameh, Gazelli Art House, London
18 October, Libby Heaney, Gazelli Art House, London
18 October, Heemin Chung, Thaddaeus Ropac, London
18 October, Robert Longo, Thaddaeus Ropac, London
18 October, Danh Vo, White Cube Mason’s Yard, London
18 October, Magdalene Odundo, Thomas Dane, London
18 October, Ibrahim El-Salahi, Vigo gallery, London
18 October, Terry Adkins, Thomas Dane, London
18 October, René Daniëls, Modern Art Bury Street, London
18 October, Jordan Wolfson, Sadie Coles, London
18 October, Urs Fischer, Sadie Coles HQ Kingly St, London
18 October, Marlene Dumas, Frith Street Gallery, London
18 October, Freelands Painting Prize 2024, Freelands Foundation, London
18 October, Hew Locke, Hales Gallery, London
18 October, Helene Appel, The Approach, London
18 October, Germaine Kruip, The Approach, London
18 October, Gary Hume, Hazlitt Holland-Hibbert, London
18 October, Simryn Gill, Richard Saltourn, London
18 October, The Look, Transition Projects, London
24 October, Georgie Jones, Project Space Plus, Lincoln
25 October, Grayson Perry, Djanogly Gallery, Nottingham
25 October, Paula Rego, Djanogly Gallery, Nottingham
25 October, Race and the League of Nations, Djanogly Gallery, Nottingham
25 October, Donald G Rodney, Bonnington Gallery, Nottingham
25 October, After the End of History, Bonnington Gallery, Nottingham
25 October, Assunta Ruocco, TG, Nottingham
25 October, Mohammad Barrangi, New Art Exchange, Nottingham
25 October, Mailnish Harijan, New Art Exchange, Nottingham
25 October, Dorothy Bohm, Beam, Nottingham
25 October, The Last Horror Show, Backlit, Nottingham
1 November, Anne Stanfield, General Practice, Lincoln
8 November, The Distribution of Shapes in Space, Project Space Plus, Lincoln
12 November, Donald G. Rodney, Nottingham Contemporary
12 November, EM24: Escape Simplicity, Surface Gallery, Nottingham
12 November, Kolam (கோலம்), Primary, Nottingham
25 November, Small Encapsulations of Pleasure, Project Space Plus, Lincoln
10th December, Bodies of Practice, Project Space Plus, Lincoln
13th December, Zeinab Saleh, David Zwirner, London
13th December, On Kawara, David Zwirner, London
13th December, Peter Buggerhaut, Holbermann, London
13th December, Jan Fabre, Mucciacca, London
13th December, Joan Synder, Thaddeus Ropac, London
13th December, Jessica Wilson, Ranching, London
13th December, Enchanted Alchemie, Levy Gorvy Dayan, London
13th December, Susie Macmurray, Pangolin, London
13th December, Motion in Stillness: Dance and the Human Body in Movement, Victoria Miro, London
13th December, María Berrío, Victoria Miro, London
13th December, Gabriel Hartley, Seventeen, London
13th December, Martin Cross, Hales Gallery, London
13th December, Kenia Almaraz Murillo , Waddington Custom, London
13th December, Özgür Kar, Emalin, The Clerk's House, London
13th December, The Equal Right to Live and Blossom, Kate MacGarry, London
13th December, Merlin James, Studio M Maureen Paley, London
13th December, Sang Woo Kim, Herald St. Gallery, London
13th December, Parker Ito, Rose Easton, London
13th December, Merlin James, Maureen Paley, , London
13th December, Somaya Critchlow, Maximillian William, London
13th December, Kutluğ Ataman, Niru Ratnam, London
13th December, Nicholas Hatfull , Josh Lilley, London
13th December, William Wright, Josh Lilley, London
13th December, Sass Popoli, Lungley Gallery, London
13th December, David Nash, Annely Juda Fine Art, London
13th December, Candida Höfer, Ben Brown Fine Art, London
13th December, Takashi Murakami, Gagosian , London
13th December, Miguel Ybáñez, Grimm , London
13th December, Seth Price, Sadie Coles HQ Davies St, London
13th December, Anna Weyant, Gagosian, London
13th December, Salvo and Andreas Schulze, Spruth Magers, London
13th December, Lenore Tawney and Toshiko Takaezu, Alison Jacques , London
13th December, Hank Willis Thomas, Pace, London
13th December, Ernst Love, Goodman Gallery, London
13th December, Mary Ramsden, Pilar Corrias, London
13th December, Alice Barber, Luxembourg + Co, London
13th December, Ndayé Kouagou, Gathering, London
13th December, Daniel Silver, Frith Street Gallery, London
13th December, Klara Liden, Sadie Coles HQ Kingly St, London
13th December, George Shaw, Anthony Wilkinson Gallery, London
13th December, Paul Housley, Cedric Bardawil, London
13th December, Forrest Bess, a.Squire , London
13th December, Lubaina Himid, Hollbush Gardens , London
13th December, Pamela Phatsimo Sunstrum, Barbican, London
13th December, The Imaginary Institution of India: Art 1975-1998, Barbican , London
20th December, Joy, General Practice
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boring lesbians in tv and film (i do not see myself in them) vs morgan wade and kyle richards (real toxic yuri representation)
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BRO, FUCK SPENCER (/j he’s still a great character, and I still like him)
(I HAVE THINGS TO SAY ABOUT THIS MOTHERFUCKING EPISODE)
• Yeah ngl, didn’t really gaf about the recap lmao
• INTRO TIME WOOOOOO
• Oh damn, Nat’s plotting something with the guys
• “Am I one of her besties? Aw! That’s gives me the more fuzzies!” LOGAN ILY
• already said this before in my Ep 6 post, but I LOVE Logan & Richard’s bond sm
• I JUST FUCKING REALIZIED LOGAN SEARCHED THE FORTUNE TELLER THINGY WHERE HE FIRST TALKED TO ALESSIO. YOU CAN’T BE FUCKING SERIOUS
• “Jesus christ, I’m old.” Lmao yea
• YOU IDIOTS, ANA WAS STALKING YOU TWO. DON’T JUST- oop she got the treasure thingy. Good on her for using a hairclip(?) as a lock pick >:3
• An extra vote advantage? Fucking dope!
• Awwww she calls her Ana :D
• OH MY GOD WE GOT YURI TENSION LEZGOOOOO
• Ngl, it’s smart of Ana to not put whatever she & Marissa has going on first, and save the advantage for herself.
• Oop, Isabel clocked Nat. I can smell the besties’ tension from a mile away
• “Also, the whole gender war thing our team has been doing has been really regressive” FUCKING REAL
• “Natalia.” “Yes?” “I’m not mad” YOOOOOO
• OH SHIT, THEY’RE SCHEMING TOGETHER NOW
• Thanks for cleaning the laundry, Lynda, ig
• “Those are dry clean only” not to switch media, but that line instantly reminded me of quackity yelling “YOU FUCKING DRY-CLEANED IT” when he saw Pac bring out Fit’s robe. It’s been a day since the 1 year anniversary of that moment, what did ya expect
• MY FAVESSSSSSSS and also Spencer
• BENJI & HANNAH COMPLIMENTING TRISTAN FOR LAST EPISODE, I ONLY FUCKING WINNN
• OH BOY, IVY ANGST. SHE WANTS TO PROVE HERSELF AFTER WHAT HAPPENED LAST EPISODE
• She’s boutta crash out
• yayyyyyy Jade & Spencer are back in an alliance
• can you hear my sarcasm
• I CAN STILL SEE JADE DOUBLE-CROSSING SPENCER FROM A MILE AWAY AND I LOVE IT
• “Is it gay or straight to date a non-binary person” Dude I ask myself the same question. AND I’M NONBINARY
• “It ain’t that simple man, I mean, it’s a pretty big spectrum! There’s more than just 2 labels to choose from!” DAMN RIGHT! >:D
• “But um, why the question?” AND THEN FUCKNIG SPENCER INTERRUPTS
• “Does Spencer think we’re dumb enough to believe him? Good thing Benji & I aren’t buying it!” AND THEN IT FUCKING CUTS TO BENJI BELIEVING HIM IM CRYING
• TREVEK KEEPS FUCKING STARTING AT EACH OTHER THIS EPISODE. AGAIN /pos
• Also I’m still waiting for a double greeting where those two kiss btw. KAI & MAGGY GOT THEIR DOUBLE GREETING AND THEY KISSED. WHAT ABOUT TREVEK- (I AM DRAGGED OF THE STAGE)
• Damn this ferris wheel dodgeball game looks fun!
• Why do I have a feeling Ivy’s jinxing herself
• ofc Benji giggles at a balls joke
• Aw, Zaid’s joining her for support :D
• I know damn well Trevor & Derek are having fun w/ throwing the dodgeballs towards the contestants
• “Richard! Here!” “Thanks son!” I LOVE THEIR BOND SO MUCH OMGGGGG
• GIRL STOP MAKING EXCUSES FOR YOURSELF
• Zaid, I’m gonna be honest, you’re fucked
• Ofc, Zaid targets Nat. Did y’all forget episode 2? Natalia got his ass
• YOOOOOO HANNAH FIGHTING MARISSA FOR THE BALL
• “No one told me you’re allowed to dodge!” DO YOU KNOW WHAT THE FUCKING GAME IS CALLED????
• ZAID RLLY GOT HIS SHIT WRECKED CAUSE HE GOT DISTRACTED OVER A GIRL AGAIN
• Oh boy, Richard’s boutta hard carry blue team again. WOOOOOOOOOO
• OH BOY MORE RED TEAM DRAMA
• AYYYYY MY FAVE TRISTAN CALMING THEM DOWN
• YOOOOO IDC QUARTET IN THE FERRIS WHEEL
• GET FUCKED LYNDA
• Oh damn, this is NOT Ivy’s episode
• “Haha! Your team’s falling apart!” Lynda you’re right, but AT THE SAME TIME-
• Ayyyy Richard tossing to Logan
• TRISTANNAH CRUMBS! TRISTAN TOSSED A BALL TO HER
• SHE CLOCKED LOGAN WITH THE BALL THEY GAVE HER WOOOOOOO
• Oh shit, Marissa boutta take one for the team?
• YOOOOO TRISTAN HELPED RED TEAM WIN THE POINT LETS GO
• YEAH CELEBRATE THAT W TRISTAN U DESERVED IT
• Welp, now that we got Connor’s VA suggesting that the viewers should sub to ONC. I just wanna talk a bit about TomJake season 2
• I… AM REALLY FUCKING EXCITED FOR IT WOOOOOOOO
• Like yeah, people wanted spinoff’s for other characters (myself included, I’d love to see a gabellie and/or jaiden spinoff) but I can see why Jared & Robert decided to make another season for them; Tom & Jake are undoubtedly DC’s most popular characters with how many posts & greetings about them go viral. So hopefully, all the money & views that go towards their spinoff will make way for other spinoffs for other characters in the future! :D
• also JAYCE SAID THAT IF THEY GET JAMES’ VA FOR THE SPINOFF, THERE WOULD BE A JAIDEN & TOMJAKE DOUBLE DATE EPISODE. I WANT TO SEE THAT HAPPEN PLZ-
• aight back to the episode
• Richard’s hard carrying as always- OH SHIT ANA WHAT WAS THAT
• OH MY GOD WE GOT MORE ANARISSA TENSION LEZGO
• STOP ZAID IMMEDIATELY WENT TO HER SIDE
• oh shit, they paused the challenge for her dislocated shoulder
• “That is a shoulder, yeah.” “I KNOW THAT’S A SHOULDER! HOW DO WE PUT IT BACK IN!” IM CRYING, I LOVE THEIR BANTER
• AYYYYY HANNAH CLUTCH
• “My mom taught me when I was young.” OUGH
• DAMN IS BENJI GONNA THROW UP? VOMIT ON SPENCER IT’D BE FUNNY
• IVY, YOU LITERALLY DISLOCATED YOUR SHOULDER ALBEIT TEMPORARILY. YOU CAN SIT OUT STAHP PROVING YOURSELF
• OMG TRISTAN CLUTCH. THAT’S MY GUY
• THUMBNAIL SHOT. TRISTAN AVOIDED ALL THE DODGEBALLS IM SO PROUD OF THEM
• “What is this sorcery?” Dude, they have a roof-thingy on their head
• OH MY GOD THEY LOOK SO HAPPY WHILST WRECKING BLUE TEAM’S SHIT I’M SO HAPPY FOR THEM
• THEY TOOK OUT MARISSA AND LYNDA FUCK YEAH
• WAIT OH MY GOD THEY’RE MAKING A CALLBACK TO EPISODE 2. TRISTAN WAS TERRIFIED ABOUT FACING RICHARD. LOOK AT THEM NOW. THAT IS ONE OF MY THREE FUCKING FAVOURITES ABOUT TO TAKE ONE FOR THEIR TEAM
• I CANNOT STATE THIS ENOUGH. TRISTAN IS NOT ONLY A GREAT CHARACTER PERSONALITY WISE. BUT AS SOMEONE THAT IS ALSO NON-BINARY, I LOVE TO SEE THIS KIND OF REPRESENTATION WHERE SOMEONE ISN’T SOLELY CHARACTERIZED FOR THEIR LGBT IDENTITY
• I’m not even sad that they lost lmao. There’s nothing wrong with seeing Richard hard carry for blue team
• AWW, THEY HAD A SMALL CONVO AFTERWARDS
• “2 for 2. I’m gonna get ya next time though. Promise!” “You almost had me!” That would be so full circle for their character fr
• OH BOY WE GOT ZAIVY AND ANARISSA DRAMA. FUCKING WICKED
• “Red team, I’ll see ya toniiiiight, where someone will be the loser!” Trevor, your theatre kid is showing
• YEAAAAA MORE TRISTAN GLAZING
• OOOOOOOH THE RED TEAM’S FIGHTTTING
• Tristan’s right bro, lay off my guy
• NAW, WE GOT VIBE TRIBE ANGST TOO?
• Ohhhhhh, Ivy comes from a perfectionist household, and that’s what makes her want to prove herself, aight I get it
• Also Ivy tearing up over her never being enough for herself & her parents got me fucked up ;-;
• “I…I understand plenty. At least the uh… pleasing your parents part.” WAIT NO DON’T DO THIS ME. I’M NOT READY FOR TRISTAN ANGST TOO
• “I could never compete with the bottle. Dad he… still calls me a girl and um… he gets really aggressive if I say otherwise. And mom she… still drinks every night just to forget I exist. That’s the uh… that’s the gist of it, anyway!” NO MY SHAYLAAAAA (damn it feels weird saying that for the first time)
• TRISTAN IS LITERALLY GOD’S STRONGEST SHOULDER. WDYM THEY’RE SO UPBEAT, KIND, & OPTIMISTIC DESPITE HAVING GONE THROUGH ABSOLUTE FAMILIAL SHIT
• wait are characters that stay kind despite everything my type. I also like Sanji, and I’m not gonna spoil his backstory since it happens like 800+ episodes into One Piece but like-
• I keep forgetting Tristan’s 18 lmao, I’m only younger than them by a little bit!
• “Man dude, we’re all just like, a bunch of overgrown primates stumbling around trying to find meaning in this simulation called life!” “Why didn’t you tell me this earlier?” “I was afraid. I mean… I was afraid of giving my family more power over me, but um, a wise friend taught me that sometimes it’s better to sit in shit.” THEY QUOTED HANNAH. THEY QUOTE HANNAH OH MY GOD
• STOP IVY SEES THEM LIKE A YOUNGER SIBLING SHE NEVER HAD FUCK MY LIFEEEEE
• “Ivy, Ivy! Look at me Ivy! Shut the fuck up man!” WHY DID THAT MAKE ME LAUGH
• YOOOOO BENJI CLUTCH, SHE GOT JADE TO APOLOGIZE TO HANNAH OVER WHAT HAPPENED WITH AMELIE! THAT’S MY GUY
• Oh shit, Spencer’s having too much fun being a little shit
• FUCK MAN, I AM SCARED FOR THIS ELIMINATION
• NO FUCKING WAY
• SPENCER USED JADE’S TOTEM?
• EVERYONE VOTED FOR HIS BITCHASS LMAO
• wait, who did Spencer vote
• Oh my god, they’re both shocked about who got the boot who is-
• no
• NO
•NONONONONONONONONONONO WHAT THE FUCK
• SPENCER YOU BITCHASS MOTHERFUCKER, HOW DARE YOU VOTE THEM OUT. WHAT THE FUCK MAN
• I JUST FUCKING REALIZIED SPENCER ACTED LIKE A DICK ALL EPISODE SO THAT EVERYONE WOULD VOTE FOR HIM. YOU SMOOTH MOTHERFUCKER, THAT WAS ACTUALLY A GREAT POWER PLAY
• STOP, ZAID, IVY, BENJI, & HANNAH ARE ALL SAD ABOUT THEM GETTING ELIMINATED. THEY’RE JUST LIKE ME FR
• “Ivy, that’s not very vibe tribe of you! Come on! You got this, I believe in you!” “Take care for her.” “Promise.” BEST DC TRIO RIGHT HERE ARGUE WITH THE FUCKIG WALL
• “See you later Tris!” THEY FIST-BUMPED I AM NOT OKAY, MY OTPPPPPPP
• BENJI WAS BAWLING. I FELT THAT BRO
• “Benjiiiiii! Aw, it’s okay come here! I’m gonna miss you so much man. You always know how to make me laugh! Please keep that smile on your face! Okay man!” “I’m gonna miss you too!” I FELT THIS SO HARDDDDDD
• “When I came on this show, I was just expecting to make some friends! I wasn’t expecting to… find a family. So… Ivy & Zaid, I’m rooting for you guys! You guys got this dork in your corner!” I LOVE THEM SO MUCH
• ALSO HANNAH & BENJI ARE HONORARY VIBE TRIBE MEMBERS. TRY PRYING THIS HEADCANON FROM MY DEAD CORPSE YOU FUCKERS
• THEY’RE ALL WAVING GOODBYE TO THEM. THIS SHIT GOT ME FUCKED UP
• ONLY OTHER CONTESTANT BESIDES ALESSIO TO LEAVE WITH A SMILE. THAT’S MY GOAT RIGHT THERE
• “Ultimately, Tristan’s the biggest threat who had no quarrels due to their influence. Spencer may of had his moment, but I hid all ties of our partnership due to voting for him. So, all the blood will be on his hands! This is my win really.” GET HIS ASS JADE. DO IT FOR TRISTAN
• WAIT I JUST FUCKING REALIZED SOMETHING. DID TRISTAN JINX THEMSELVES WHEN THEY SAID THEY’D GET RICHARD NEXT TIME??? OR AM I LOOKING INTO THINGS TOO MUCH
• EITHER WAY, GREAT EPISODE DESPITE THAT ELIMINATION. IF JADE ISN’T THE SOURCE OF SPENCER’S DOWNFALL, I’LL BE VERY DISSAPOINTED
• Alrighty new Elimination ranking from “damn, alright” to “I WANT TO SHOOT SOMEBODY”
4th - Amelie
3rd - Ted
2nd - Alessio & Diego (Yeah looking back. It might be a tie lmao)
1st - Tristan (NO SHIT DUDE. DID YOU READ THE ENTIRE POST-)
• god, I love & hate that british motherfucker so much
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¡Estos son los nominados a los Oscars 2025!

Comienza la cuenta regresiva para los premios más esperados del cine y televisión; Los Oscars 2025.
Tras retrasar el anuncio en dos ocasiones debido a los incendios forestales que devastaron el sur de California, por fin se han dado conocer a los candidatos aspirantes al galardón más prestigioso del cine de la 97ª edición de los Premios de la Academia.
Debido a los últimos acontecimientos que llegó a poner en peligro el teatro Dolby, donde se celebra la gala, los nominados han sido revelados en una ceremonia virtual en el Teatro Samuel Goldwyn de la Academia de Artes y Ciencias Cinematográficas con la actriz Rachel Sennott y el actor y cómico Bowen Yang como presentadores.
Favoritas como The Brutalist, Emilia Pérez, y más están en estas nominaciones.
Mejor película
•Anora
•The Brutalist
•A Complete Unknown
•Conclave
•Dune: Part Two
•Emilia Pérez
•I'm Still Her
•Nickel Boys
•The Substance
•Wicked
Mejor director
•Sean Baker Anora
•Brady Corbet The Brutalist
•James Mangold A Complete Unknown
•Jacques Audiard Emilia Pérez
•Coralie Fargeat The Substance
Mejor actor
•Adrien Brody en The Brutalist
•Timothée Chalamet en A Complete Unknown
•Colman Domingo en Sing Sing
•Ralph Fiennes en Conclave
•Sebastian Stan en The Apprentice
Mejor actriz
•Cynthia Erivo en Wicked
•Karla Sofía Gascón en Emilia Pérez
•Mikey Madison en Anora
•Demi Moore en The Substance
•Fernanda Torres en I'm Still Here
Mejor actor de reparto
•Yuri Borisov, Anora
•Kieran Culkin, A Real Pain
•Edward Norton, A complete Unknown
•Guy Pearce, The Brutalist
•Jeremy Strong, The Apprentice.
Mejor actriz de reparto
•Monica Barbaro en A Complete Unknown
•Ariana Grande en Wicked
•Felicity Jones en The Brutalist
•Isabella Rossellini en Conclave
•Zoe Saldaña en Emilia Pérez
Mejor guion original
•A Complete Unknown James Mangold y Jay Cocks
•Conclave Peter Straugha
•Emilia Pérez Jacques Audiard en colaboración con Thomas Bidegain, Léa Mysius y Nicolas LivecchiNickel Boys RaMell Ross & Joslyn BarnesSing Sing Clint Bentley, Greg Kwedar Story by Clint Bentley, Greg Kwedar, Clarence Maclin, John "Divine G" Whitfield Sugarcane
Mejor corto documental
•Death by NumbersI Am Ready,
•Warden Incident Instruments of a Beating Heart The Only Girl in the Orchestra
Mejor película internacional
•I'm Still Here Brasil
•The Girl with the Needle Dinamarca
•Emilia Pérez Francia
•The Seed of the Sacred Fig Alemania Flow Letonia
Mejor sonido
•A Complete Unknown Tod A. Maitland, Donald Sylvester, Ted Caplan, Paul Massey y David GiammarcoDune: Part Two Gareth John, Richard King, Ron Bartlett y Doug Hemphill
•Emilia Pérez Erwan Kerzanet, Aymeric Devoldère, Maxence Dussère, Cyril Holtz y Niels Barletta
•Wicked Simon Hayes, Nancy Nugent Title, Jack Dolman, Andy Nelson y John MarquisThe Wild Robot Randy Thom, Brian Chumney, Gary A. Rizzo y Leff Lefferts
Diseño de producción
•The Brutalist
•Judy Becker Patricia Cuccia Conclave
•Suzie Davies Cynthia Sleiter Dune: Part Two Patrice Vermette Shane Vieau
•Nosferatu Craig Lathrop Beatrice Brentnerová
•Wicked Nathan Crowley Lee Sandales
Mejor canción original
•El Mal de Emilia Pérez Musica Clément Ducol y Camille Letra por Clément Ducol, Camille y Jacques Audiard
•The Journey de The Six Triple Eight Diane Warren'Like A Bird' de Sing Sing Abraham Alexander y Adrian Quesada
•Mi Camino de Emilia Pérez Camille y Clément Ducol
•Never Too Late de Elton John: Never Too Late Elton John, Brandi Carlile, Andrew Watt y Bernie Taupin
Mejor fotografía
•The Brutalist Lol Crawley
•Dune: Part Two Greig Fraser
•Emilia Pérez Paul Guilhaume Maria Ed Lachman
•Nosferatu Jarin Blaschke
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While planet Earth poises on the brink of nuclear self-destruction, a team of Russian and American scientists aboard the Leonov hurtles to a rendezvous with the still-orbiting Discovery spacecraft and its sole known survivor, the homicidal computer HAL. Credits: TheMovieDb. Film Cast: Dr. Heywood Floyd: Roy Scheider Dr. Walter Curnow: John Lithgow Tanya Kirbuk: Helen Mirren Dr. R. Chandra: Bob Balaban Dr. David Bowman: Keir Dullea HAL 9000 (voice): Douglas Rain Caroline Floyd: Madolyn Smith Osborne Dr. Vladimir Rudenko: Savely Kramarov Christopher Floyd: Taliesin Jaffe Victor Milson: James McEachin Betty Fernandez: Mary Jo Deschanel Maxim Brailovsky: Elya Baskin Dimitri Moisevitch: Dana Elcar Dr. Vasili Orlov: Oleg Rudnik Irina Yakunina: Natasha Shneider Yuri Svetlanov: Vladimir Skomarovsky Nikolaj Ternovsky: Victor Steinbach SAL 9000: Candice Bergen Commercial Announcer: Gene McGarr Jessie Bowman: Herta Ware Film Crew: Director of Photography: Peter Hyams Production Design: Albert Brenner Costume Design: Patricia Norris Novel: Arthur C. Clarke Set Decoration: Rick Simpson Original Music Composer: David Shire Costume Supervisor: Bruce Walkup Editor: Mia Goldman Costume Supervisor: Nancy McArdle Casting: Penny Perry Editor: James Mitchell Visual Effects Supervisor: Gregory L. McMurry Set Designer: Greg Papalia Sound Designer: Dale Strumpell Stunt Coordinator: M. James Arnett Sound Re-Recording Mixer: Ray O’Reilly Camera Operator: Ralph Gerling Sound Re-Recording Mixer: Michael J. Kohut Transportation Coordinator: Randy Peters Supervising Sound Editor: Richard L. Anderson Sound Re-Recording Mixer: Aaron Rochin Music Editor: William Saracino Still Photographer: Bruce McBroom Location Manager: Mario Iscovich Set Designer: Gregory Pickrell Sound Re-Recording Mixer: Carlos Delarios Conceptual Design: Paul Huston Property Master: Marty Wunderlich Makeup Supervisor: Michael Westmore Chief Lighting Technician: John Baron Hairstylist: Vivian McAteer Script Supervisor: Marshall Schlom First Assistant Director: William S. Beasley Stunts: John C. Meier Stunts: Mic Rodgers Movie Reviews: Wuchak: _**Another trip to Jupiter to find answers**_ After the mysterious failure of the Discovery One mission to Jupiter in 2001, Dr. Heywood Floyd (Roy Scheider) resigned his position as head of the National Council for Astronautics. Several years later, the Soviets send the spacecraft Leonov & crew to Jupiter along with three Americans, including Floyd, to help investigate Discovery and the malfunction of the vessel’s sentient computer, HAL 9000. Keir Dullea returns as the missing astronaut David Bowman while Helen Mirren plays the captain of the Leonov. Bob Balaban and John Lithgow also appear as the other two American astronauts. “2010: The Year We Make Contact” (1984) is realistic science-fiction that’s less artsy and more dramatically compelling compared to its predecessor, “2001: A Space Odyssey” (1968). That doesn’t make it better, of course, just different. “2001” raised questions while this one provides answers, which some people inevitably won’t like. The questions include: Why did HAL malfunction? What was the real reason for Discovery’s original mission, unknown to Floyd? What happened to Bowman? What is the purpose of the colossal monolith orbiting Jupiter? Both films compliment and counterbalance each other. This one’s more of a straightforward space adventure in the near future. Unlike Star Wars, which is space fantasy, “2010” is space-oriented adult science-fiction. Star Trek is too, but “2010” is far more realistic, which I appreciate. In other words, don’t expect any Klingons or spacecraft dogfights. This is more along the lines of “Mission to Mars” (2000) and “The Martian” (2015). The film runs 1 hours, 56 minutes. GRADE: B r96sk: A much more standard affair compared to its predecessor. Given that’s the case, I honestly enjoyed this more than ‘2001: A Space Odyssey’ – if only because it’s more closer to what I’d personally want from a film than what that 1968 ...
#astronaut#ghost ship#jupiter#monolith#near future#sequel#Space#space mission#space opera#space travel#super computer#Top Rated Movies
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Hehdhdhd
Lmaoo wait
Maybe Tom and Carmen have a enemies to lovers romance—toxic yuri real /j
HAHAHHAHA
"Carmen please stop falling for the babysitter" - Richard /J
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#everything you need to know about rock

Keith Richards.
The whale had to literally "grow up to be an instrument." Grandpa Gus, a jazz musician, teased his grandson's interest by hanging an acoustic guitar on a higher wall with the words : "When you get it, I'll let you play."

UK rock musicians are a friendly community where everyone knows each other. Every talented guitarist became famous two or three weeks after his appearance in London. John Wetton did not stay idle for long after the collapse of King Crimson. One day he received an envelope with an invitation to attend a rehearsal of the famous band "Jurai Hip", which needed a professional bass guitarist. In early 1975, Yuri Hip lost one of its musicians, Gary Thane, who died of a drug overdose. John Wetton replaced him, and very successfully. The appearance of an experienced musician in the band changed the atmosphere radically. John, a powerful generator of new ideas, became the real leader of the group.


John Anderson's most famous project after the Yes band was the duo Jon and Vangelis — with the legendary keyboardist and film composer. They first crossed paths back in the mid-70s, and then we'll give the floor to John:
So, I got Vangelis's phone number, he lived in Paris, I went and called him. He said (feigning a rude Greek accent) "Hello." I said, "My name is John Anderson." He asked: "What?" I replied: "I sing in a band called Yes." He said: "Are you a singer? Well, come on over." And I came. I was greeted by a tall and sturdy man in a long caftan. He had a bow and arrows slung over his shoulder. I followed him to a luxurious apartment that was located near the Champs-Elysees. We walked down the long hallway leading to the living room. And then Vangelis took out a bow, pulled the string and shot an arrow along the corridor — it hit the open window exactly. I said: "Vangelis, you could have killed someone." He said, "Oh, don't worry, I'm Greek." I said: "I know you're Greek, but damn..." And he was already busy at the stove. In general, I was crazy about this reaction."

The story of the song "The End" by The Doors.
According to the band members, this song was conceived as an ordinary farewell song after Jim Morrison broke up with his girlfriend Mary Werbelow. During the creative process, however, it gradually became more complicated and modified, overgrown with universal images.
The album version consists of two glued parts. The second, which appeared later, the "Oedipus" part was added to the first directly from the words "The killer awoke before dawn", which can be detected by changing the sound when listening carefully. The song was recorded the morning after Morrison's next "frenzy", possibly still under the influence of drugs. Morrison replaced the censored "fuck you" in the "oedipal" part with an inarticulate mumble.
The song is included in the list of the top five hundred according to Rolling Stone magazine (No. 328); the guitar solo of the song is ranked 93rd in the list of the 100 best guitar solos according to Guitar World magazine.

Richie Blackmore.
During his school years, Richie was actively involved in javelin throwing and swimming. Richie hated his studies and teachers for their formalism and suppression of non-standard thinking among students.

Roger Taylor and his mini-replica, drawn using words from his songs.
#everything you need to know about rock#Spotify#uriah heep#john anderson#Jon and Vangelis#roger taylor#music#my music#music love#musica#history music#spotify#rock music#rock#rock photography#my spotify#keith richards#the rolling stones#the doors#jim morrison#richie blackmore#deep purple
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WHAT I READ IN JAN/FEB/MAR 2023:
This wasn't originally meant to include March but I procrastinated so long that it can! Anyway, here we go!
LIGHT NOVELS/NOVELS:
The Case Files of Jeweler Richard by Vol. 2
I like these light novels, but I don't have a ton to say. Would recommend if you're REAL into jewelry, or you like descriptions of pretty boys.
Star Trek: The Next Generation - Sins of Commission by Susan Wright
This ended up being a really enjoyable book! I read it mostly because I wanted info about one random minor character, (Jono Endar - star of a single TNG episode) and I heard he was mentioned in this one. He was, there was a touch of lore for him, loved all of that, but I ended up really loving the plot of this book, as well. It's a very tense story about the Enterprise going to assist a planet with an environmental crisis, which all gets worse when aliens who have an uncomfortable control over emotions come to stay on the Enterprise. It's a great book, with really good characterization of Riker and Beverly. Also at one point Geordi is pissed at Data and Data calls this experience "exhilarating". Hoo-boy.
Star Trek: The Next Generation - The Q Continuum by Greg Cox
I enjoyed this one as well. Set post-finale, this is a trio of novels (I read it all in an omnibus) about a foe from Q's past returning to plague the universe once again. The Picard/Q relationship here really shines, but I think Beverly gets a lot of great character moments too.
Star Trek: Deep Space Nine - A Stitch in Time by Andrew Robinson
Not to hardcore flex on anyone, but I've got a physical copy of this one. Thank you to my brother who got it for me.
Anyway, Andrew Robinson's famed chronicle of Garak's life, told in his own words. I think I'm gonna need more time to digest this one properly, but I really enjoyed it. (Also, Garak's slams on Dukat were funny. I clapped when the Cardassian with the super long neck was introduced.)
MANGA/COMICS:
Killing Me by Akiyama, Vol. 1
A fun vampire yuri comedy. A vampire hunter finds herself entangled with a vampire that goes to school with her, unable to kill her, no matter how hard she tries. Short 'n sweet. I don't think I'm going to pick up volume 2, but volume 1 ends on a nice note, so that's fine.
Phantom of the Idol by Hijiki Isoflavone, Vol. 4
Another volume of my favorite current comedy manga! POTI consistently manages to bring in great new elements and evolve relationships in interesting ways. Huge recommend.
On or Off by A1
This is a Korean webtoon, adapted to print form. A manager of a company that's creating an app for a much larger company ends up sexually and then romantically involved with the Large Company's CEO. A cute story, good art, and notable for BL, features lots of women, which always makes me super happy.
Ordinary Crush by Hyouta Fujiyama, Vol. 1
A BL anthology. It kinda sucks, as a lot of the old JUNE manga kinda does. I don't know why I keep buying these.
Oshi no Ko by Aka Akasaka
The story of a gynecologist who ends up doctoring to his favorite idol during her pregnancy. This story, however, goes so off the fucking rails I can't even describe it. Don't look this one up, just read it. It's insane.
Requiem of the Rose King by Aya Kanno
A weird manga, a historical fiction about the Real War of the Roses that Really Took Place. I enjoyed this manga, the art was beautiful, but perhaps the most interesting element was learning that the author was the creator of one of my roommate's favorite shoujo manga, Otomen. Cool!
Sotus by Bittersweet
A BL about a Thai university which features hazing as a major part of it's culture. This was a little uninspired, so we'll see if I read more.
Tokyo Alien by NAOE, Vol. 2
Pretty generic shonen sci-fi action, but I'm gonna keep reading! It's got enough there to keep me hooked.
Witch Hat Atelier by Kamone Shirahama, Vol. 4
Another volume of Witch Hat Atelier! This story is always fantastic, and I really enjoyed the character development in this one.
NOVELS/LIGHT NOVELS:
The Case Files of Jeweler Richard by Vol. 2
I like these light novels, but I don't have a ton to say. Would recommend if you're REAL into jewelry, or you like descriptions of pretty boys.
Star Trek: The Next Generation - Sins of Commission by Susan Wright
This ended up being a really enjoyable book! I read it mostly because I wanted info about one random minor character, (Jono Endar - star of a single TNG episode) and I heard he was mentioned in this one. He was, there was a touch of lore for him, loved all of that, but I ended up really loving the plot of this book, as well. It's a very tense story about the Enterprise going to assist a planet with an environmental crisis, which all gets worse when aliens who have an uncomfortable control over emotions come to stay on the Enterprise. It's a great book, with really good characterization of Riker and Beverly. Also at one point Geordi is pissed at Data and Data calls this experience "exhilarating". Hoo-boy.
Star Trek: The Next Generation - The Q Continuum by Greg Cox
I enjoyed this one as well. Set post-finale, this is a trio of novels (I read it all in an omnibus) about a foe from Q's past returning to plague the universe once again. The Picard/Q relationship here really shines, but I think Beverly gets a lot of great character moments too.
Star Trek: Deep Space Nine - A Stitch in Time by Andrew Robinson
Not to hardcore flex on anyone, but I've got a physical copy of this one. Thank you to my brother who got it for me.
Anyway, Andrew Robinson's famed chronicle of Garak's life, told in his own words. I think I'm gonna need more time to digest this one properly, but I really enjoyed it, if only for Garak's slams on Dukat.
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Anyway, that's the wrap-up for these three months! Feels really good to get that all accomplished! I still wonder if I should change up the review format somewhat, or maybe just start doing actual "what I read this month" vids on YouTube or something, but for now this is good.
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Some cool insights on Joan and Berengaria making decisions and navigating tight political situations at Cyprus on their own and with limited info (Yuri is real)

Bee pretty much being locked out of being able to do any meaningful networking bc of lack of dower access and Richard specifically not making any space for her to exercise any authority over her supposed lands, also being physically distant from her place of origin and support from Sancho, leaving her in a tight spot after Richard died (king of procrastinating so hard)

Her post-queen life is very interesting how she actively moves to distance herself from that aspect of her life and managed to connect with the structures in Le Mans and negotiate a favorable vassalship under Philip Augustus basically on her own--noted by Storey as quite an achievement for a widow with, as mentioned above, very little in terms of established networks earlier

SHE'S HERE!!!!!!!!!
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THE BOOKS I READ IN 2022, in the order in which I read them (*books I read before, that I was reading again):
Alexandra Chang, Days of Distraction
Elizabeth Miki Brina, Speak, Okinawa
Cynthia Dewi Oka, Fire Is Not a Country
Hanif Abdurraqib, Go Ahead in the Rain: Notes to A Tribe Called Quest
*Cathy Park Hong, Minor Feelings
Victoria Chang, Dear Memory
*Etel Adnan, Of Cities & Women (Letters to Fawwaz)
Sun Yung Shin, The Wet Hex
traci kato-kiriyama, Navigating With(out) Instruments
Raquel Gutiérrez, Brown Neon
Solmaz Sharif, Customs
*Etel Adnan, Journey to Mount Tamalpais
Lucille Clifton, Generations: A Memoir
Emerson Whitney, Heaven
Kim Thúy, em, tr. Sheila Fischman
Angel Dominguez, Desgraciado (the collected letters)
Janice Lee, Separation Anxiety
*Theresa Hak Kyung Cha, Dictee
*Cathy Park Hong, Translating Mo’um
Kyoko Hayashi, From Trinity to Trinity, tr. Eiko Otake
Lao Yang, Pee Poems, tr. Joshua Edwards & Lynn Xu
Yuri Herrera, A Silent Fury: The El Bordo Mine Fire, tr. Lisa Dillman (
Mai Der Vang, Yellow Rain
Chuang Hua, Crossings
José Watanabe, Natural History, tr. Michelle Har Kim
Walter Lew, Excerpts from: ∆IKTH 딕테/딕티 DIKTE, for DICTEE (1982)
*Bhanu Kapil, The Vertical Interrogation of Strangers
Vasily Grossman, An Armenian Sketchbook, tr. Robert & Elizabeth Chandler
Hiromi Kawakami, Parade, tr. Allison Markin Powell
Lynn Xu, And Those Ashen Heaps That Cantilevered Vase of Moonlight
*Etel Adnan, Sitt Marie Rose, tr. Georgina Kleege
Jennifer Soong, Suede Mantis/Soft Rage
*James Baldwin, No Name in the Street
*Hilton Als, The Women
Dot Devota, >She
V.S. Naipaul, The Return of Eva Perón
Yasushi Inoue, The Hunting Gun, tr. Sadamichi Yokoo and Sanford Goldstein
Molly Murakami, Tide goes out
Adrian Tomine, Shortcomings
Hisham Matar, A Month in Siena
Leia Penina Wilson, Call the Necromancer
Gabriel García Márquez, News of a Kidnapping, tr. Edith Grossman
Amitava Kumar, Bombay-London-New York
Elizabeth Alexander, The Trayvon Generation
Ryan Nakano, I Am Minor
Constance Debré, Love Me Tender, tr. Holly James
Hilton Als, My Pin-up
Victoria Chang, The Trees Witness Everything
Leslie Kitashima-Gray, The Pink Dress: A Story from the Japanese American Internment
Emmanuel Carrère, Yoga, tr. John Lambert
Ronald Tanaka, The Shino Suite: Sansei Poetry
Patricia Y. Ikeda, House of Wood, House of Salt
Soichi Furuta, to breathe
Kiki Petrosino, Bright
Sueyeun Juliette Lee, Aerial Concave Without Cloud
Nanao Sakaki, Real Play
Esmé Weijun Wang, The Collected Schizophrenias
Francis Naohiko Oka, Poems
Geraldine Kudaka, Numerous Avalanches at the Point of Intersection
Steve Fujimura, Sad Asian Music
Augusto Higa Oshiro, The Enlightenment of Katzuo Nakamatsu, tr. Jennifer Shyue
Julie Otsuka, The Swimmers
Salman Rushdie, The Jaguar Smile: A Nicaraguan Journey
Margo Jefferson, Constructing a Nervous System
Hua Hsu, Stay True
Barbara Browning, The Miniaturists
Kate Zambreno, Drifts
*Julie Otsuka, When The Emperor Was Divine
Louise Akers, Elizabeth/The Story of Drone
Wong May, In the Same Light: 200 Poems for Our Century from the Migrants & Exiles of the Tang Dynasty
Gabrielle Octavia Rucker, Dereliction
Trung Le Nguyen, The Magic Fish
Jessica Au, Cold Enough for Snow
Tongo Eisen-Martin, Blood on the Fog
Lucas de Lima, Tropical Sacrifice
*Like a New Sun: New Indigenous Mexican Poetry, ed. Víctor Terán & David Shook
Billy-Ray Belcourt, A Minor Chorus
Kazim Ali, Silver Road
*Sadako Kurihara, When We Say Hiroshima, tr. Richard Minear
Simone White, or, on being the other woman
*James Baldwin, The Devil Finds Work
Christina Sharpe, Ordinary Notes
*Raquel Gutiérrez, Brown Neon
Marguerite Duras, The Man Sitting in the Corridor
Gayl Jones, Corregidora
*Bhanu Kapil, The Vertical Interrogation of Strangers
*Etel Adnan, Seasons
Gwendolyn Brooks, to disembark
Cristina Rivera Garza, The Taiga Syndrome, tr. Suzanne Jill Levine and Aviva Kana
Gwendolyn Brooks, In the Mecca
Nona Fernández, The Twilight Zone, tr. Natasha Wimmer
Selva Almada, Dead Girls, tr. Annie McDermott
*Theresa Hak Kyung Cha, Dictee
Valerie Hsiung, To Love an Artist
*Theresa Hak Cha, Exilée and Temps Morts
Dao Strom, We Were Meant To Be a Gentle People
Randa Jarrar, Love Is An Ex-Country
*Dao Strom, Instrument
Osamu Dazai, Early Light, tr. Ralph McCarthy and Donald Keene
Osamu Dazai, The Setting Sun, tr. Donald Keene
Rachel Aviv, Strangers To Ourselves: Unsettled Minds and the Stories That Make Us
Mahmoud Darwish, Journal of an Ordinary Grief, tr. Ibrahim Muhawi
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