#ross draws Faye
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djwaglmuffin · 1 year ago
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I work very hard.
The last one is @bleaksqueak​‘s character Maia Pyxis from her webcomic Solivaga which can be read here:
https://solivaga.net/
If you're an artist and are having trouble building followers, especially if you're new on tumblr or back after leaving, reblog this with some of your art. It will be visible to everyone checking the notes. Everyone keep checking the notes and follow whoever puts their cool art in them. People keep telling me I'm Tumblr famous so maybe this helps!
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byneddiedingo · 1 year ago
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Jack Nicholson and Faye Dunaway in Chinatown (Roman Polanski, 1974)
Cast: Jack Nicholson, Faye Dunaway, John Huston, Perry Lopez, John Hillerman, Darrell Zwerling, Diane Ladd, Roy Jenson, Roman Polanski, Richard Bakalyan, Joe Mantell. Screenplay: Robert Towne. Cinematography: John A. Alonzo. Production design: Richard Sylbert. Film editing: Sam O'Steen. Music: Jerry Goldsmith.
Where there's money, there's murder, and where the sun shines brightest, the shadows are darkest. That's why film noir was invented in Hollywood, and why California's greatest contribution to American literature may have been the pulp fiction of James M. Cain and the detective novels of Dashiell Hammett, Raymond Chandler, and Ross Macdonald. Chinatown, which draws on that tradition, has a kind of valedictory quality about it, harking back to the 1930s roots of noir, although the genre's heyday was the postwar 1940s and paranoia-filled early 1950s. (Curtis Hanson would exploit that latter era in his 1997 film L.A. Confidential.) But it's also very much a film of the 1970s, which is to say that 42 years have passed and Chinatown is showing its age. The revelation that Katherine (Belinda Palmer) is both the daughter and the sister to Evelyn Mulwray (Faye Dunaway) no longer has the power to shock that it once did, incestuous rape having become a standard trope of even TV drama. Nor does the "dark" ending, which director Roman Polanski insisted on, despite screenwriter Robert Towne's preference for a more conventionally hopeful resolution, seem so revolutionary anymore. It remains a great film, however, thanks to those quintessential '70s stars, Dunaway and Jack Nicholson, in career-defining performances, the superb villainy of John Huston's Noah Cross, and Roman Polanski's deft handling of Towne's intricate screenplay, carefully keeping the film limited to the point of view of Nicholson's Jake Gittes. Production designer Richard Sylbert and costume designer Anthea Sylbert (Richard's sister-in-law), aided by cinematographer John A. Alonzo, are responsible for the stylish evocation of 1930s Los Angeles. The atmospheric score is by Jerry Goldsmith.
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st4rl1ghtg1rl · 4 months ago
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Blog Intro !!
Hi there im fairly new to tumblr but have a pretty good understanding of it from being chronically online for years but let’s get started on the intro!
name: Bee/Chocco
age: Minor so pls dont be weird
pronouns: She/They
gender: Demi-Girl(?)
sexuality: Sapphic or Omni with a fem pref (im questioning really but mainly attracted to women 😭)
Fav artist: Mitski!!
other fav artists: Tally Hall/Miracle Musical, Chappell Roan, Nxdia, Laufey, Frankie Cosmos, Big Theif, Rainbow Kitten Surprise, Kimya Dawson, Beabadoobee, Beach Bunny, Cavetown, Leith Ross, Dazey and the Scouts, Weezer, Clairo, Faye Webster, TV girl
hobbies: Digital Art (learning), VA (also learning) drawing, writing, fashion, Crocheting, baking, painting
some other stuff i like also includes: TMA/TMAGP (obviously), WTNV, Omori, Indie Games, JELLYFISH!!,
fun facts!!!
my favorite color is lavender (ironically)
my favorite food is french fries
my favorite drink is strawberry soda or other fruit sodas
my favorite movies are Lisa Frakenstein and But im a cheerleader my favorite tv shows are Adventure time, Bee and puppycat, Smiling Friends, MLP, TOH, almost any shoujo/magical girl anime, NGE, Saiki K
i also love studio ghibli movies with my favorite being Spirited away
I have 7 animals (2 of which are actually mine) i have a black cat named bento and a dog named athena and they are my babies
I LOVE collecting random stuff and have a very large collection of stuff i find cool or interesting as well as lots of miku figures
My special interests include Miku, TMA, WTNV, Adventure Time, NGE, IHNMAIMS, MLP, Jellyfish and i will NOT shut up abt them if someone brings them up (im sorry)
dni!!!
basic dni like homophobic, transphobic, ableist, racist, pro-isreal, islamophobic, etc
shipping irl people unless its a joke
Terfs
people who think racism, pedophila, abuse or anything generally bad or illegal is funny- i deal with it enough irl im not gonna deal with it here 💀
other stuff:
I dont need tonetags but they are helpful
i use emojis and emoticons a LOT
I love dressing in many different styles and experimenting with things
Im going to try to be active on here as much as possible but im a student so i might not be as active 24/7
I will probably edit this as needed but this is js a general get to know me
you can also view the carrd in my desc
Instagram:@Dead_grls (im very active here)
Discord: Sewer__Rat
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raidesart · 2 years ago
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Hi everyone ^^ Here is my entry for RossDraws #truecolorsdtiys <3 Will post this on Instagram soon!
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majuandrad · 4 years ago
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Faye coming up from the clouds was a LOT 🌠 Character from @rossdraws
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linacorninaart · 5 years ago
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My version of rossdraw's original character, Faye!
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fearsmagazine · 4 years ago
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SACRILEGE - Review
DISTRIBUTOR: Devilworks
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SYNOPSIS: Four young women head out from the city to a countryside weekend retreat during the Summer solstice. On the way they pick up a hitchhiker who tells them about a local festival close to where they are staying. The girls attend the festivities and take part in the local rituals, but are unaware that they are offered up as a sacrifice to a mysterious pagan goddess. The spirit possesses the ability to sense their greatest fears and use it against them. She turns their nightmares into a horrifying reality in order to make them sacrifice themselves. As the weekend draws to close the young girls must muster their courage to face their fears if they are to survive their ordeal.
REVIEW: I enjoyed this wickedly delightful British horror film. What I found extraordinary is that any genre fan can easily perceive the filmmaker's influences, but it never overshadows the story that they are telling. They’re not trying to reinvent the genre/ They tell a solid and convincing supernatural thriller. They do an excellent job of creating effects that work within the narrative and scope of their budget. Plus they utilize visual effects to enhance the practical ones that nicely add to the tension and terror.
What makes SACRILEGE worth the watch is a solid script, skilled direction and editing, and four solid actresses. The cast does a fine job of creating intelligent and likeable characters. Given the context of their friendships the dialogue can be a bit kitschy at times, but never out of character. It feels like witty banter among friends. I enjoyed the fact that they were serious about the perils and drama. They weren’t running around aimlessly screaming as if they were auditioning to be the next “Scream Queen” of the cinema. There is some common sense to their actions that keeps the viewer immersed in the story and enjoying the ride.
The film has an excellent location. Their cottage looks more like Bruce Wayne’s second little hideaway in the country. A bit more posh than a cottage. The filmmakers do a nice job of covering the location and utilizing its assets that keeps the film moving.
SACRILEGE has a solid score that accentuates the tension, drama, and horror. They never employ it for an easy scare or to over emphasize a horrific moment. It’s subtle and often works to lull the viewer into a state of false security so the scares feel heightened.
There is one moment in the film, as the girls arrive at their destination, where a visual element feels like they are telegraphing it for use later in the film, which they do. You can’t help notice it, and they make a joking reference to it, but it is insignificant in the grand scheme of the film's enjoyment or distract the viewer from the narrative.
SACRILEGE is not a film that redefines the genre or is it a trend setter for genre films to come. It is a solid horror film that is a lot of fun, wonderfully directed, features a talent cast, and sets a shining example for American horror filmmakers as to what they could be doing instead of trying to retell the films from their youth. Filmmaker David Creed’s work here proves he has the skills to put him on my short list of genre filmmakers to keep an eye out for. SACRILEGE is well worth the view.
CAST: Tamaryn Payne, Emily Wyatt, Sian Abrahams, Naomi Willow, Emma Spurgin Hussey, Rory Wilton, & Sian Abrahams. CREW: Director/Screenplay - David Creed; Producer - Mark Kenna; Cinematographer - Sarah Smither; Score - Colin McGinness; Editor - Ross McFall; Costume Supervisor - Layan Nourouz; Production Designers - Faye Freeman & Rosa Hughes; Special Makeup Effects Supervisor - Michaela Bayley; VFX Supervisors - Gaga Nugraha & Anup Kulung Rai. OFFICIAL: www.badbloodfilms.com/sacrilege FACEBOOK: N.A. TWITTER:. N.A. TRAILER: https://youtu.be/JsJR7CX2pgc RELEASE DATE: DVD and Premium TVOD day-and-date on March 16th, 2021
**Until we can all head back into the theaters our “COVID Reel Value” will be similar to how you rate a film on digital platforms - 👍 (Like), 👌 (It’s just okay),  or 👎 (Dislike)
Reviewed by Joseph B Mauceri
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Anime/Game: None Character: Faye Artstation’s artist: Ross Draws ——–
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laurence-guillerm · 2 years ago
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Here are Nima and Faye, wonderful characters created by Rossdraw for his Nimaverse.
I drew this illustration from the original made by Ross (if you don't know him yet, you should really check out his insta page!) I had so much fun doing it! As always, art challenges are such a great way to improve my skills. It is the first time I drew two characters on the same drawing and I find that it creates different kinds of composition. It was really interesting!
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architectnews · 4 years ago
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Ten architecture and design events this November and December from Dezeen Events Guide
Design Shanghai, Design Miami and Dubai Design Week are among the architecture and design events listed in Dezeen Events Guide taking place this winter, alongside a host of virtual programmes including an Archigram symposium and the Dezeen Awards ceremonies.
Other events taking place in November and December include an Enzo Mari exhibition in Milan curated by Hans Ulrich Obrist, the Quito Pan-American Architecture Biennial in Ecuador, Barcelona Design Week and Contemporary Istanbul.
Above: the iconic illustration of the coronavirus virion is one of the designs on show at the Beazley Designs of the Year exhibition. Top: Walking illustration by Drawing Architecture Studio for the M+ museum's Archigram Cities symposium
Beazley Designs of the Year exhibition 21 October 2020 to 28 March 2021
The nominees for the 2020 Designs of the Year awards are currently on show at the London Design Museum until March of next year, allowing visitors to reflect on the state of the world in the months leading up to the coronavirus pandemic.
Exhibits are arranged in chronological order, starting with Jack and Huei's proposal for naming Bleached Coral as colour of the year at the start of 2019 and leading all the way up until January of this year, when the CDC released its 3D rendering of the novel coronavirus.
About Time: Fashion and Duration exhibition 29 October 2020 to 7 February 2021
In celebration of the 150th anniversary of New York's Metropolitan Museum of Art, the annual exhibition put on by its Costume Institute is this year sharing a retrospective of seminal fashion pieces from 1870 until the present day.
The show, which is usually launched with the Met Gala in May, highlights the cyclical nature of fashion by mixing up styles from throughout the decades in two clock-like gallery spaces created by set designer Es Devlin.
M+ Matters: Archigram Cities Online Symposium 4 to 21 November
In a virtual event organised by Hong Kong's M+ museum, scholars and architects will come together to reconsider the work of British architecture collective Archigram and its enduring influence on modern architectural discourse.
Over a series of three Zoom presentations, speakers will include architects Liam Young and Mark Wigley as well as Atelier Bow-Wow's Tsukamoto Yoshiharu.
Dubai Design Week 9 to 14 November
Dubai is one of the few design weeks to take place not just virtually by also in real life this year, spanning more than 200 events across the second week of November focused on how we can reimagine the way we live in light of the pandemic.
This includes the Global Grad Show, exhibiting projects by students from around the world, and the trade fair Downtown Design alongside the city's inaugural d3 Architecture Festival.
Dezeen Awards ceremonies 23 to 25 November
The winners of this year's Dezeen Awards will be announced via a three hour-long livestreams, hosted by Saatchi Gallery's poet in residence LionHeart.
Set on three consecutive days, each ceremony will be dedicated to a different category from architecture to interiors and design, with their respective key judges Norman Foster, Michelle Ogundehin and Paola Antonelli each sharing an address reflecting on this year's entries.
Combo chair by Frank Chou, one of the designers exhibiting at Design Shanghai
Design Shanghai 26 to 29 November
Postponed from its original date in March, China's preeminent design fair Design Shanghai will now take place at the end of November, highlighting local designers and brands alongside exhibitors from 30 other countries.
The highly-anticipated Norwegian Presence showcase, which is normally exhibited at Salone del Mobile, will be presented as part of the Chinese trade fair instead, alongside a speaker programme featuring Ini Archibong, Ross Lovegrove and Hong Kong designer André Fu.
Design Miami 28 November to 6 December
For its 16th edition, the Design Miami fair will supplement its regular programme with a new curated exhibition series called Podium, in which pieces of collectable design and craft will be not just on display but also for sale.
In the wake of a tumultuous year in US history and the divisive 2020 election, the showcase will highlight pieces that question what it means to be American, from a 19th-century Navajo tribe textile to ceramics by Puerto Rican "ghetto potter" Roberto Lugo.
World Architecture Festival 30 November to 4 December
The WAF is going virtual this year, with a series of talks, panel discussions and special prize ceremonies being live-streamed for free.
Speakers including UNStudio's Ben Van Berkel, Archigram founder Peter Cook and Jeanne Gang of Chicago firm Studio Gang will discuss everything from recent technical innovations to the ever-present topic of how we can learn to live with pandemics.
Contemporary Istanbul 16 to 20 December
Turkey's leading contemporary art fair will this year offer both virtual and physical events, including its recurring Plugin exhibition, which this year is focusing on human-machine communication and artificial intelligence.
The event's online version will act as a platform for visitors to interact with the fair in real-time, during its actual opening hours.
National Gallery of Victoria Triennial 19 December 2020 to 18 April 2021
The second triennial from Melbourne's NGV will showcase projects from around the globe that blur the line between art, design, architecture, science and technology.
More than 80 artists and designers will take part in this year's edition, including up-and-coming talent alongside stalwarts such as Kengo Kuma, Faye Toogood, Jeff Koons and Patricia Urquiola.
Patricia Urquiola presents an installation titled Recycled Woollen Island at NGV Triennial 2020
About Dezeen Events Guide
Dezeen Events Guide is our guide to the best architecture and design events taking place across the world each year.
The guide is updated weekly and includes virtual events, conferences, trade fairs, major exhibitions and design weeks, as well as up-to-date information about what events have been cancelled or postponed due to the ongoing coronavirus pandemic.
Inclusion in the guide is free for basic listings, with events selected at Dezeen's discretion. Organisers can get enhanced or premium listings for their events, including images, additional text and links, by paying a modest fee.
In addition, events can ensure inclusion by partnering with Dezeen. For more details on inclusion in Dezeen Events Guide and media partnerships with Dezeen, email [email protected].
The post Ten architecture and design events this November and December from Dezeen Events Guide appeared first on Dezeen.
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cieascheligeman · 4 years ago
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New character design for the world of Ayer!
Name: Avada Mitchell.
Personality: Brave, hardcore, independent.
Inspired by Faye made by Ross Draws!
Everyday is a color dodge day!
NOTE: The galaxy background is from google where i download it a long time ago. If you recognize the background please please contact me and i will credit it/change it for ya!😃
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nonsimsical · 7 years ago
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whomping..whooshing..
She wheeled the machine to the elevators and sighed. She really hoped that she could give these people some good news. And for the first time in 13 years, Amelia sent up a silent prayer. When the elevators opened, she pushed the cart in and hit number 4 and the button to close the doors. She was very impatient and anxious. When she was finally settled on the fourth floor, the doors opened and a flurry of activity was underway. She tried to steer clear, holding onto the machine tightly. In moments like these, her fellow attending’s and trainees could be vultures and if they saw need for the machine they would try to grab onto it.
As she jogged with the machine around the corner, she noted the FBI Agent stationed outside Ms. Ross’s hospital room. She pulled out her badge, even though by now he was familiar with her face, but she understood protocol and respected it. “They’re saying their goodbye’s now.”
“What?” she asked, confused.
“Their daughter that they lost? Hinkle brought her up just shortly after you took Faye up to get MRI’s so that my partner and Faye could say goodbye.”
“Wait, your partner?”
“Freeman? He’s my partner.”
“And he’s also Ms. Ross’s ex?”
“Well..” Julian looked behind him. “I always knew they’d end up back together. One day.”
“So he’s an FBI agent?”
“That’s right. Damn good one, too.”
“And he was the one who showed up to the house when…”
“Yes.”
“I see. Guess I owe him a handshake.”
Julian grinned, holding the door open for her as she pushed the ultrasound machine into the room first. The sounds of Faye’s heart broken sobs assaulted her as she entered the room. “Ms. Ross.” Amelia called. “I need you to calm down, ok?”
Suddenly Faye started hyperventilating. Freeman took their daughter back in his hands, carefully placing her back in the incubator that had been wheeled over by Faye’s bedside. “Faye, I need you to breath for me, ok?”
Faye doubled over, clutching at her lower abdomen. “Ok, ok, Faye.. here we go. We’re going to lay you back onto your bed.” She grabbed the oxygen mask and put it on her face, turning it on. “I need you to take deep breaths for me, ok?” She lifted her blanket and checked between her legs for any signs of blood. There was some spotting, but nothing that would cause for concern. She pulled up her dressing gown, folding her blanket just under her rounded belly and grabbed the KY Jelly and squirted it on her stomach.
“Are you having any cramping right now?” Amelia asked, looking down at Faye who was nodding her head emphatically.
“Ok, I need you to try and calm down now, ok?” She nodded her head as she said this. “Fa-Faye, I need you to listen to me. Ok? We need you to breath for us.”
Freeman grabbed her hand and squeezed it tightly. “Look at me, baby, look at me. Breath with me, ok? In slowly and out slowly.” Within three minutes of Faye mimicking Freeman, her heart rate lowered and her blood pressure, though still pretty high, wasn’t in the danger zone any longer. Amelia sucked in a breath of air, clicking a few buttons and turning a knob. The room was suddenly filled with a whomping-whooshing sound, drawing Freeman’s attention away from Faye to look at the Doctor.
She cleared her throat, but when she spoke you could hear the strain on her voice. The tears that fell down her cheeks. “Faye, do you hear that?”
Faye tore her eyes away from Freeman to look at Dr. Hernandez. “That.. that is the sound of your baby’s heartbeat.”
Freeman gasped, choking back tears as Faye shook her head from side to side, pointing to where her daughter laid. Amelia moved to the side and turned the monitor towards the both of them. “Do you see this right here? This is the baby’s head, and this is the baby’s body.” She clicked a few keys and then moved the wand pressing against Faye’s abdomen to get a different angle. “And this is. This is a penis.”
Amelia turned to look at both of them, a huge smile on her face as fresh tears fell from her eyes. “This is your son.”
@charsimatic
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fifiweihao-blog · 5 years ago
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That Was the Year That Was – 2006
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whale swimming in the River Thames
On 20th January 2006, people in London thought they were hallucinating when they could’ve sworn they’d seen a whale swimming in the River Thames. Their hallucinations were confirmed to be, in fact, reality when TV cameras captured a juvenile female Northern bottlenose whale who was five metres long and weighed about seven tonnes. Her normal habitat would have been near the coasts of the far north of Scotland and Northern Ireland, and in the seas around the Arctic Ocean but she appeared to have lost her way. Rescue teams attempted to get the whale (affectionately named Diana) back into the Atlantic but she later died from convulsions as she was being rescued at around 19:00 GMT on 21 January.
Saddam Hussein, was found guilty of crimes against humanity and sentenced to death by hanging
On 5 November 2006 Iraq’s leader, Saddam Hussein, was found guilty of crimes against humanity and sentenced to death by hanging. On 30 December 2006, the first day of Eid-ul-Adha, Saddam was hanged. Mobile phones captured the execution and the video was leaked to the media and posted on the Internet within hours, becoming the subject controversy across the globe. Prior to his execution he was captured by Americans in 2003 after they invaded Iraq. During this period Saddam was held in a Baghdad detention facility and was interrogated by FBI agent George Piro. In 2004 he was charged with crimes committed against residents of Dujail in 1982, following a failed assassination attempt on his life. This included the murder of 148 people, torture of women and children and the illegal arrest of 399 others. Following the execution, Saddam’s body was buried in his birthplace of Al-Awja in Tikrit, Iraq on 31 December 2006.
world’s first partial face transplant on a living human
While the world’s first partial face transplant on a living human happened on 27 November 2005, the patient, Isabelle Dinoire, appeared in public in early 2006 for a media conference with her new face. She underwent surgery to replace her nose, mouth and chin, which had been mauled by her dog. The operation on Isabelle’s face was carried out by Professor Bernard Devauchelle, assisted by Professor Jean-Michel Dubernard at the Centre hospitalier Universitaire Nord in Amiens, France. The surgery requires the patient to take the drugs for the rest of her life so that her body doesn’t reject her new face. Isabelle later bought another dog to help in her recovery after the surgery.
another year of hurt for England
It was another year of hurt for England (and it still is in 2016) when Italy came, saw and conquered the 2006 FIFA World Cup. England’s shot at the World Cup ended in quarter-finals when they lost on penalties (what a surprise) to Portugal after a goalless match. Italy won the tournament on 9th July 2006 after they defeated France 5–3 in a penalty shootout when extra time had finished in a 1–1 draw. Germany defeated Portugal 3–1 to finish in third place. It was also Italy’s first world title in 24 years, and their fourth world title overall. This made them the second most successful World Cup team ever.
Google, bought video streaming site, YouTube
In October 2006 tech giant, Google, bought video streaming site, YouTube, in 2006 for $1.65 billion. The price tag would’ve seemed massive at the time – especially as YouTube only started up in 2005 but YouTube continued to grow year after year. At that time it was Google’s second largest buy. YouTube now has 1 billion unique users using the service every month. Starting from 2010 Alexa (a commercial web traffic data and analytics service) ranked YouTube as the third most visited website on the Internet after Google and Facebook – this still continues today.
Suffolk Strangler Steve Wright: A real Jekyll and Hyde
Sick Steve Wright carried out the “fastest serial killing spree in British history” when he murdered five prostitutes in just 10 days.
The forklift truck driver strangled his victims before stripping and dumping their bodies in rural spots near Ipswich in 2006.
Wright was jailed for life in 2008 for the murders of Tania Nicol, 19, Gemma Adams, 24, Anneli Alderton, 24, Annette Nicholls, 29 and Paula Clennell, 24.
To his fellow golfers at Seckford golf club near Ipswich, he was “the most boring bloke in the world”, but Steve Wright had for years hidden a secret life of domestic violence, cross-dressing, petty theft, failed suicide bids and an obsession with prostitutes.
He had even tried to strangle an ex-wife on several occasions during a turbulent relationship 20 years before he went on to murder five women in the space of six weeks.
2006 UK Timeline
January
1 January – BBC One airs The Queen by Rolf, a documentary following artist Rolf Harris as he paints a portrait of the Queen.
3 January – Channel 4 quiz show Countdown celebrates its 4000th edition.
6 January – ITV debuts Soapstar Superstar, a singing talent contest in which soap actors compete to become series champion.
7 January – Charles Kennedy, resigns as leader of the Liberal Democrats, admitting that he has a drinking problem.
14 January – Coronation Street actor Richard Fleeshman wins the first series of ITV’s Soapstar Superstar.
15 January – The BBC announces details of Just the Two of Us, a singing contest following the Strictly Come Dancing format that will air in February and March. Vernon Kay and Tess Daly will present the series which will pair celebrities with professional singers, who will then compete to become series champion.
Debut of ITV’s Dancing on Ice.
20 January – River Thames whale: a whale is discovered swimming in the River Thames in London.
24 January – Sven-Göran Eriksson announces that he will quit as manager of the England national football team after this summer’s World Cup in Germany. Eriksson, 57, has been in charge of the England team for five years and, as a Swede, is the first non-English manager of the England team.
27 January – Chantelle Houghton, a model from Essex wins the fourth series of Celebrity Big Brother after entering the series as a "fake" celebrity. In order to remain as a contestant she was required to convince the other participants that she was a famous singer.
February
3 February – Islamist demonstration outside Danish Embassy in London in response to the Jyllands-Posten Muhammad cartoons controversy.
8 February – Channel 4 confirms that its pay-per-view movie channel FilmFour will go Free-to-air from July, when it will launch on Freeview.
9 February – Dunfermline and West Fife by-election: Willie Rennie of the Liberal Democrats wins the seat from Labour.
The Government announces that the Child Support Agency is to be abolished.
10–26 February – Great Britain competes at the Winter Olympics in Turin, Italy, and wins one silver medal (Shelley Rudman for women’s skeleton).
14 February – Coronation Street bosses defend their decision to film a storyline involving a car breaking down on Saddleworth Moor, scene of the 1960s Moors murders, saying the plot has nothing to do with the events that occurred there.
15 February – BBC One debuts Davina, a chat show presented by Davina McCall. Guests on the first edition include Charlotte Church, Tess Daly and Vernon Kay. The show proves to be a disaster, with The Guardian’s Gareth Maclean noting that McCall "found herself floundering and foundering, struggling through the interviews, and exposing herself in a way from which even the hardiest flasher would recoil", while Jonathan Ross blames a poor guest line up. The 8 March edition gives BBC One its worst ever peak time ratings of 2.75 million. By the time the show ends on 12 April ratings have fallen to below 2.5 million. It is axed shortly afterwards.
16 February – the BRIT Awards take place.
18 February – The Rolling Stones give a free concert to two million people in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
19 February – the BAFTA awards take place in London.
22 February – The one billionth song is downloaded on iTunes; the song is "Speed of Sound" by Coldplay.
22 February – Securitas depot robbery: around £53 million (US$92 million) is stolen from a Securitas depot at Tonbridge, Kent, in the largest cash robbery in British crime history.
The Prince of Wales’s court case continues in the High Court against The Mail on Sunday as he tries to prevent the publication of his journals. Various revelations have been made such as that he considers himself to be a dissident, and his opinion of government officials in People’s Republic of China whom he described as "appalling old waxworks".
23 February – Just the Two of Us debuts on BBC One.
27 February – writers Michael Baigent and Richard Leigh sue Random House in the High Court of Justice claiming that the best selling novel The Da Vinci Code by Dan Brown contains ideas stolen from their 1982 book The Holy Blood and the Holy Grail.
28 February – L!VE TV is moved to the adult section of Sky’s EPG, and is rebranded as "Babeworld" two days later. This is because the channel has moved to broadcasting an increasingly adult themed content.
March
1 March – the Senedd, debating chamber of the National Assembly for Wales on Cardiff Bay, designed by Richard Rogers is opened by the Queen.
2 March – Sir Menzies Campbell is elected leader of the Liberal Democrats following an election caused by the resignation of previous leader, Charles Kennedy.
Four people are injured in an explosion in a GlaxoSmithKline factory in Irvine, North Ayrshire.
3 March – Disgraced glam rock singer Gary Glitter is convicted of sexually abusing two young girls at his villa in Vietnam and is sentenced to three years in jail.
4 March – Actress Gaynor Faye and professional skating partner Daniel Whiston win the first series of Dancing on ice.
5 March – Siân Reeves and Russell Watson win the first series of Just the Two of Us.
7 March – the President of Brazil, Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, makes a state visit to the UK.
10 March – David Gilmour begins his first world tour since Pink Floyd’s 1994 world tour, in support of his On an Island album.
11 March – James Blunt, with his single "You’re Beautiful", becomes the first British artist to top the US Billboard Hot 100 chart since Elton John with "Candle In The Wind 1997".
11 March – ITV launches a CITV channel, which broadcasts during the downtime hours of ITV4, replacing the ITV News Channel.
13 March – six men taking part in a clinical trial for a new anti-inflammatory drug TGN1412 are placed in intensive care, some in a life-threatening condition, after suffering adverse side-effects.
18 March – Christopher Napier, performing as George Formby wins the fourth and final junior series of Stars in Their Eyes. The programme continues with a number of special editions during 2006, before a final celebrity special on 23 December.
19 March – the Prince of Wales and the Duchess of Cornwall begin a two-week foreign tour to Egypt, Saudi Arabia and India.
20 March – the British Press Awards are held at The Dorchester, Park Lane, London.
21 March – Labour’s hopes of a unique fourth successive term in office at the next general election (by which time Tony Blair says he will have resigned as prime minister) are given a boost when an Ipsos MORI opinion poll puts them 11 points ahead of the Conservatives on 42%.
23 March – 2005-2006 Christian Peacemaker hostage crisis: British peacemaker, Norman Kember, and three Canadians rescued by SAS troops.
23 March – Coronation Street bosses dismiss as untrue media reports that the child actress who plays the soap’s Amy Barlow is being replaced because her parents felt her storylines were "too harrowing", and her workload too heavy.
24 March – ITV announces plans to air World of Chat, a show on ITV2 featuring the best from chatshows around the world.
25–26 March – UKTV Gold presents its Mitchells Weekend to coincide with the return of Grant Mitchell (Ross Kemp) to EastEnders. The weekend includes The Mitchells – The Full Story, a documentary about the soap family presented by actress Kim Medcalf.
28 March – Council workers across the UK strike over pension rights.
Royal Regiment of Scotland created.
April
3 April – Graham Norton will present How Do You Solve a Problem Like Maria?, a TV talent search for an actress to play Maria in a stage production of The Sound of Music, it is announced.
7 April – 12.6 million viewers watch long-running Coronation Street character Mike Baldwin die in the arms of his long-time rival, Ken Barlow. Baldwin, played by Johnny Briggs, had been in the show for 30 years.
17 April – Peter Bayless wins the 2006 series of MasterChef Goes Large.
19 April – ITV launch ITV Play, a new 24/7 participation TV channel, on Freeview in the United Kingdom. It will launch on other platforms later in the year.
21 April – The Queen celebrates her 80th birthday at Windsor. The Prince of Wales makes a televised address in tribute.
Denis Norden announces his retirement from his two ongoing ITV shows It’ll Be Alright on the Night and spin-off show Denis Norden’s Laughter File, after 30 years with ITV.
ITV secures the terrestrial television screening rights to Casino Royale, the new James Bond film that will be released in November. The film receives its terrestrial television premiere on 19 September 2009.
24 April – Cartoon Network Too and Nick Jr. 2 are launched in the UK.
25 AprilThe BBC announces that Grandstand, its flagship sports TV programme, will be phased out within the next year after nearly 50 years on air.
5 April – discovery of a swan with avian influenza in Scotland.
7 April – Mr Justice Peter Smith delivers judgment in the copyright case over The Da Vinci Code finding that Dan Brown had not breached the copyright of Michael Baigent and Richard Leigh. The judgment itself contained a coded message on the whim of the judge.
12 April – Prince Harry passed out as a commissioned officer during the Sovereign’s Parade at the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst.
18 April – Peugeot announces plans to close the 60-year-old car factory at Ryton near Coventry, which it bought from Chrysler in 1979, within the next year.
21 April – Elizabeth II celebrates her 80th birthday at Windsor. The Prince of Wales makes a televised address in tribute.
25 April – the BBC announces that Grandstand, its flagship sports TV programme, will be phased out within the next year after nearly 50 years on air.
26 April – the Duke of Edinburgh visits the Republic of Ireland.
27 April – by-election in the Moray constituency of the Scottish Parliament. Richard Lochhead holds the seat for the Scottish National Party.
May
4 May – Local government elections take place in some areas of England.
Steve McClaren, manager of Middlesbrough F.C., agrees to become the next manager of the England national football team after the World Cup.
5 May – The BBC’s local election coverage goes off air shortly before 3:00 am, due to a power failure at their Millbank studios. For the next hour coverage relocates to The Counting House pub, with results being read out using handwritten pieces of paper.
5 May – Tony Blair reshuffles his cabinet. Charles Clarke is dismissed as Home Secretary. Jack Straw is replaced as the Foreign Secretary by Margaret Beckett. John Prescott remains as Deputy Prime Minister, but loses responsibility for the Office of the Deputy Prime Minister.
8 May – Guy Goma, a graduate from the Congo who went to the BBC to attend a job interview, appears on BBC News 24 in place of an IT expert after a mix-up. Guy Kewney had been scheduled to comment on the subject of Apple Computer’s court case with The Beatles’ record label, Apple Corps, but a producer collected the wrong man from the wrong reception at BBC Television Centre.
10 May – Former supermarket cashier Michelle Dewberry wins the second series of The Apprentice and a £100,000 a year job working for Sir Alan Sugar.
14 May – Producers of Coronation Street confirm that Debra Stephenson, who plays Frankie Baldwin, will be leaving the soap at the end of the year.
15 May – BBC High Definition Television Trial commences.
20 May – Just minutes before the live Eurovision Song Contest final begins, BBC One’s live National Lottery draw is invaded by Fathers 4 Justice protestors. The show is temporarily taken off air, leaving just a programme logo and announcer Alan Dedicoat’s voice until the problems are resolved.
20 May – Finnish monster rock band Lordi win the Eurovision Song Contest 2006. The UK entry, "Teenage Life" by Daz Sampson, finishes in 19th place with 25 points.
20 May – campaigners "Fathers 4 Justice" invade the set of the National Lottery.
Finland’s Lordi win the 2006 Eurovision Song Contest with "Hard Rock Hallelujah".
22 May – BSkyB launch High-definition television in the UK under the brand Sky HD.
27 May – The BBC’s first scheduled HDTV broadcast on BBC HD.
30 May – Scottish and Grampian are rebranded as STV Central and STV North respectively.
30 May – an Ipsos MORI opinion poll shows the Conservatives back in the lead with 36% of the vote, two points ahead of Labour.
June
4 June – Coronation Street confirms that Richard Fleeshman, who plays Craig Harris, will be leaving the soap to follow a singing career.
5 June – Actress Lucy Benjamin wins The X Factor: Battle of the Stars, a celebrity version of the ITV music talent contest.
6 June – ITV announces that Central News South’s existence as a news region will end after 17 years when the eastern half of the region (the area served by the Oxford transmitter) merges its operations with Meridian West’s output, forming a new news region named ITV Thames Valley.
9 June–9 July – Live coverage of the 2006 FIFA World Cup is aired by the BBC and ITV.
9–11 June – the British Grand Prix is held at the Silverstone Circuit and is won by reigning world champion Fernando Alonso ahead of Michael Schumacher and Kimi Räikkönen, while local hero Jenson Button retired earlier in the race with an engine oil leak.
10 June – the England football team’s World Cup campaign begins with a 1–0 win over Paraguay.
15 June – The BBC announces that Billie Piper will leave her role as Rose Tyler on Doctor Who at the end of the second series the following month.
15 June – England beat Trinidad and Tobago 2-0 in their second World Cup group game.
19 June – BBC One Controller Peter Fincham announces that They Think It’s All Over will not be recommissioned for a new series, ending a run of eleven years on air.
20 June – The BBC announces that Top of the Pops will be axed, the final show airing on 30 July.
18.46 million watch England vs Sweden in the 2006 FIFA World Cup, the highest rated programme of the year.
20 June – England go through to the knockout stages of the World Cup with a 2–2 draw against Sweden in their final group game.
23 June – An interview with Conservative leader David Cameron on Friday Night with Jonathan Ross causes controversy when presenter Ross asks Cameron whether he ever had sexual fantasies about former Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher as a teenager. The BBC later bans repeats of the interview.
25 June – Children’s Party at the Palace held in honour of The Queen’s 80th birthday.
The Lord Chancellor, Lord Falconer, rejects calls from families of murder victims for all convicted murderers to be sentenced to no less than a minimum of 25 years in prison.
England go through to the World Cup quarter-finals for the second tournament in succession by beating Ecuador 1–0 with a goal from captain David Beckham.
29 June – Blaenau Gwent by-elections: independent candidates defeat Labour Party in parliamentary and Welsh Assembly by-elections.
Bromley and Chislehurst by-election won by Bob Neill for the Conservative Party.
July
July – European heat wave affects the UK, resulting in July 1983’s record for the hottest month in the CET series being beaten with a mean monthly CET of 19.7 °C or 67.5 °F.
1 July – CITV broadcasts its last Saturday morning regular-based show Holly and Stephens Saturday Showdown for the last time after 40 years of broadcasting Saturday morning shows on ITV until Scrambled was broadcast in 2014.
1 July – England’s World Cup quest ends in the quarter-finals when they lose on penalties to Portugal after a goalless draw.
4 July – Sheridan v News International: Scottish Socialist Party MSP, Tommy Sheridan begins legal action against the News of the World for libel at the Court of Session in Edinburgh.
5 July – Actress Freema Agyeman is announced as the new Doctor Who companion Martha Jones replacing Billie Piper’s Rose Tyler.
11 July – It is announced that actress Wendy Richard will leave EastEnders at Christmas. She is one of the only remaining cast members from the show’s 1985 launch.
16 July – Sarah Lang wins one million pounds in the final of the ITV1 gameshow PokerFace. As she had also won £32,500 on the BBC One gameshow In It to Win It the previous year, this makes her the biggest known female gameshow winner in UK television history, and second overall behind Ian Woodley.
17 July – George W. Bush greets Tony Blair with the phrase “Yo, Blair”.
18 July – 180 British citizens evacuated from the Lebanon due to growing crisis between Hizbollah militants and Israel.
20 July – HMS Bulwark prepares to evacuate British nationals from the Lebanon.
21 July – James Dreyfus takes over from Ardal O’Hanlon as George Sunday AKA Thermoman in the sixth and final series of My Hero the series ended in September due to low viewing figures.
22 July – Arsenal F.C. move into the Emirates Stadium, named after the airline company as part of a 15-year sponsorship deal, after 93 years at nearby Highbury. The 60,000-seat stadium is the largest club stadium to have been built in English football since Maine Road, which was home of Manchester City from 1923 to 2003.
23 July – FilmFour is relaunched as a free-to-air channel. It had originally been a subscription service, but this had ended four days previously.
29 July – Debut of How Do You Solve a Problem Like Maria? on BBC One.
30 July – Top of the Pops airs its final regular edition after being axed earlier in the year. However, the show returns for a Christmas special.
30 July – The last ever weekly edition of the British television chart show, Top of the Pops, is broadcast.
August
1 August – Steve McClaren is officially appointed as manager of the England national football team.
6 August – While anchoring from Israel during the Israel-Lebanon war, Sky News presenter Anna Botting famously interviews the British MP, George Galloway about the conflict. During the nine-minute heated discussion Galloway criticises Sky News, News Corporation, and even Botting herself for being biased towards Israel.
10 August – police make many arrests in relation to a transatlantic aircraft plot, and tight security measures are instigated at airports.
14 August – The One Show first broadcasts on BBC One.
18 August – Pete Bennett wins series seven of Big Brother.
23 August – ITV secures a deal to sell its 45% stake in Ireland’s TV3 for £70m.
Central Tonight presenter Joanne Malin apologises after swearing during a live broadcast from Trentham Gardens in Stoke-on-Trent. Central subsequently claims to have received no viewer complaints as a result of her description of the inclement weather, but Trentham says several people contact them offering the presenter their support.
28 August – Bianca Gascoigne and model Calum Best win the second and final series of Love Island.
August – the first modern solely Gaelic-medium school to offer secondary education, Sgoil Ghàidhlig Ghlaschu, is opened at Woodside in Glasgow.
September
1 September – BBC Entertainment replaces BBC Prime in global markets.
2 September – Royal Air Force Nimrod crash in Afghanistan: fourteen personnel are killed in Britain’s worst single military loss since the Falklands war.
9 September – Helen Mirren awarded best actress at the Venice Film Festival for her role in The Queen, portraying Elizabeth II following the death of Diana, Princess of Wales.
13 September – Ingram Wilcox, a civil servant and quiz show fanatic, has become the fifth person to win the £1 million prize on Who Wants to Be a Millionaire?, it is reported. The episode showing his win, the first in two and a half years, is aired on 16 September.
16 September – Connie Fisher wins BBC One’s How Do You Solve a Problems Like Maria?. She will make her debut in the role in a revival of The Sound of Music at London’s Palladium Theatre on 14 November.
20 September – television presenter Richard Hammond suffers a serious brain injury when he crashes a jet-powered car whilst filming for Top Gear.
20 September – BBC One’s daytime soap Doctors celebrates its 1000th episode with a one-hour special.
25 September – Copmanthorpe rail crash: One man dies when the 14:25 from Plymouth to Edinburgh operated by Virgin Trains hits a car at about 20:55.
25 September – Lianna Fowler wins Cycle 2 of Britain’s Next Top Model.
29 September – Matt Dawson wins the 2006 series of Celebrity MasterChef.
30 September – It is announced that Des Lynam will leave Countdown at the end of 2006.
October
1 October – regulatory Reform (Fire Safety) Order 2005 comes into effect, requiring a Fire Risk Assessment for all non-domestic premises in England and Wales.
5 October – Rt. Hon. Elish Angiolini, QC, appointed as Lord Advocate in Scotland. She is the first woman and the first solicitor to be appointed to the post.
5 October – QI publishes its first book: The Book of General Ignorance. The book becomes a No. 1 best-seller for amazon.co.uk.
6 October – The BBC defends presenter Graham Norton after he admits to having taken recreational drugs, including ecstasy in an interview for Marie Claire magazine. Of Norton’s revelation the broadcaster says: "The issues that Graham discusses in this interview are aimed at an adult audience and reflect the frank and open nature of his personality".
7 October – After four and a half years, the BBC ‘Rhythm & Movement’ idents are shown for the final time on BBC One at 1:10 am, as part of a special montage (2:55 am on BBC One Northern Ireland). Their replacements, the ‘Circle’ idents, debut at 10 am.
9 October – opening of the Beetham Tower, Manchester, a landmark 168-metre 47-storey skyscraper with oversailing upper floors designed by Ian Simpson of SimpsonHaugh and Partners, the tallest building in the UK outside London, and with its penthouse apartments (above the Hilton Hotel) being the highest residential addresses in the country.
10 October – Justin Hawkins, lead singer of The Darkness announces he is leaving the band.
12 October – ITV announce that Where the Heart Is will not be commissioned for a new series.
13 October: European Home Retail plc and its subsidiary Farepak go into administration, leaving tens of thousands of people out of pocket for Christmas 2006.
15 October – Five Life is launched.
16 October – Five US is launched.
25 October – Guitarist Brian May announces on his website that Queen is returning to the studio for recording sessions. The new lineup, Queen + Paul Rodgers, features May, Paul Rodgers (the former lead vocalist of Free) and former Queen drummer Roger Taylor.
26 October – Duran Duran lead guitarist Andy Taylor once again leaves the band after a series of disagreements surrounding their latest album, which was still incomplete by the year’s end. Reasons given are his disapproval of the usage of both Timbaland and Justin Timberlake in the creation of the band’s album. The band hires an interim guitarist to supplant Taylor, with no real replacement being announced.
26 October – the Duke of Edinburgh officially opens Arsenal’s new stadium.
26 October – ITV confirms the axing of its prison drama, Bad Girls after eight series.
29 October – After a six-year absence from television, The Royle Family returns for what is billed as its final episode, an hour-long show titled "The Queen of Sheba".
30 October – the Stern Review on the Economics of Climate Change is published by the UK government.
31 October – The Who release Endless Wire, their first studio album for 24 years.
November
5 November – 53 year old Ronald Castree arrested in connection with the murder of eleven year old Lesley Molseed in 1975. He was convicted in November 2007.
7 November – Dhiren Barot sentenced to life imprisonment for plotting large scale terrorist attacks in Britain and abroad. The Court of Appeal noted that Barot’s "businesslike" plans would have caused carnage on a "colossal and unprecedented scale" if they had been successful.
8 November – three men of Pakistani origin sentenced to life imprisonment for the racist murder of Kriss Donald in Glasgow.
13 November – BBC Parliament broadcasts in full screen format for the first time on the Freeview service, having previously only been available in quarter screen format. The BBC eventually found the bandwidth to make the channel full-screen after receiving "thousands of angry and perplexed e-mails and letters", not to mention questions asked by MPs in the Houses of Parliament itself.
14 November – Cadbury announces its intention to end its £10m a year sponsorship deal with Coronation Street after a decade. The current sponsorship contract is due to expire at the end of 2007, but Cadbury says it would end the deal earlier if another sponsor is found.
16 November – the 21st James Bond film – Casino Royale – is released in British cinemas. Daniel Craig makes his debut as Bond in the film.
16 November – Snow Patrol become the first British rock band in 13 years to reach the top five of the US Billboard Hot 100.
19 November – Home Secretary John Reid attacks the Chancellor of the Exchequer Gordon Brown for being ‘presumptuous’ and ‘disloyal’ for openly campaigning to replace Tony Blair as Prime Minister.
23 November – Alexander Litvinenko dies in London having been poisoned by Polonium-210.
24 November – Loyalist Michael Stone attempts to bomb the Northern Ireland Assembly on the day nominations for first and deputy first minister are to be made. Ian Paisley indicates his willingness to serve as First Minister.
December
1 December – Matt Willis, a former member of boy band Busted wins the sixth series of I’m a Celebrity…Get Me Out of Here!.
2 December – a young woman’s body is found in a brook near Ipswich; her death is initially treated as "unexplained".
3 December – The last edition of Central News South is aired. From tomorrow the Central South region will cease to exist. The east of the region including Oxford becomes part of ITV Thames Valley, the west half of the region, covering Cheltenham and Gloucester is absorbed into the ITV West region, while Herefordshire rejoins the Central West region.
4 December – The ITV Thames Valley region, a composite of the old Meridian West and eastern part of the Central South regions, goes on air with a new regional news programme Thames Valley Tonight.
4 December – the woman whose corpse was found in Ipswich two days ago is identified as Gemma Adams, a 25-year-old local prostitute. Her death is reported to be suspicious and police launch a murder inquiry. There are also concerns about another Ipswich prostitute, 19-year-old Tania Nicol, who went missing on 30 October.
7 December – a tornado hits London.
8 December – the body of missing Ipswich prostitute Tania Nicol is found on the outskirts of the town.
9 December – police in Ipswich launch a murder investigation into the death of Tania Nicol and admit that it is likely she met her death at the hands of the same person or people who killed Gemma Adams.
10 December – a third prostitute’s body is found in the Ipswich area.
10 December – Equestrian Zara Phillips is named as this year’s BBC Sports Personality of the Year, following her mother, Anne, Princess Royal, who won the title in 1971.
14 December – two more women are found dead in Ipswich and it is confirmed that both are prostitutes, meaning that the police are now investigating five murders.
12 December – the Ryton car factory closes and Peugeot 206 production is transferred to Slovakia, several months ahead of the scheduled closure date. 2,300 jobs are lost.
16 December – Leona Lewis wins the third series of The X Factor, becoming the ITV show’s first female winner.
18 December – a man is arrested near Felixstowe on suspicion of murdering the five Ipswich prostitutes. He is named as Tom Stephens, a 37-year-old Tesco supermarket worker.
19 December – a second man, 48-year-old Forklift truck driver Steve Wright, is arrested in connection with the Ipswich serial murders, while police are given more time to question the first suspect.
19 December – Following the success of How Do You Solve a Problem Like Maria?, BBC One announces plans for Any Dream Will Do, a follow up series that will search for someone to play Joseph in the West End musical, Joseph and the Amazing Technicolour Dreamcoat.
21 December – Steve Wright is charged with the Ipswich prostitute murders, while Tom Stephens is released on bail pending further inquiries.
23 December – Cricketer Mark Ramprakash and his dancing partner Karen Hardy win the fourth series of Strictly Come Dancing.
Stars in Their Eyes is axed after the last special episode.
25 December – Actress Wendy Richard makes her final appearance in EastEnders after her character, Pauline Fowler, is killed off in a dramatic storyline. She had been in the show since its inception in 1985.
Launch of Emmerdale’s whodunit storyline involving the murder of Tom King (played by Ken Farrington). Tom is hit over the head and falls through a window to his death on his wedding day.
29 December – the British government pays off the Anglo-American loan made in 1946.
31 December – Hogmanay celebrations in Glasgow and Edinburgh are cancelled due to poor weather conditions.
Football in England – Season 2005–06
Premier League Chelsea Championship Reading League One: Southend United League Two: Carlisle United Conference Premier: Accrington Stanley FA Cup: Liverpool League Cup: Manchester United Community Shield: Chelsea
Posted by brizzle born and bred on 2018-04-20 15:52:40
Tagged: , That Was the Year That Was – 2006
The post That Was the Year That Was – 2006 appeared first on Good Info.
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ekoi-the-monkey · 5 years ago
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rossdraws I tried! It was challenging and fun! Faye is such an awesome character! Drawing humans is hard for me. I remember Ross mentioned that Faye had those lightning fire and water powers. So I kinda add those elemental textures as the orbs' aura.
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ladyea-lor · 5 years ago
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My Faye redraw from Ross Draws.
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jenniferfaye34 · 5 years ago
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#Excerpt 3 ~ Her #Christmas Pregnancy Surprise by Jennifer Faye... #books #ContemporaryRomance #Holidays #RescueDog
Welcome to another edition of Weekend Sneak Peek! 🙂 
Imagine a warm cozy bakery with the most delicious aroma of coffee and the dreamiest guy staring across the counter at the heroine. That’s what happens at the Polka Dotted Bakery, where they’re baking up romance in HER CHRISTMAS PREGNANCY SURPRISE.
 Back Cover Blurb:
A festive reunion… …with an unexpected gift! When Pepper Kane’s home and bakery are burned down in the weeks before Christmas, billionaire CEO Simon Ross—the man she spent one unforgettable night with—comes to the rescue! Pepper knows this playboy doesn’t do relationships, but staying with him in his penthouse and caring for an abandoned puppy, their spark is rekindled… And then comes a festive surprise that shocks them both: she’s carrying his baby!
 Note: If You Missed The Prior Excerpt(S), Click HERE
EXCERPT / Prologue – Part 3
The longer she talked to him, the more she’d noticed that he had something weighing on his mind. Pain flared in his eyes. It touched her, and though they were strangers, with her staff handling things in the kitchen, she’d invited him to sit and drink his coffee with her.
He hadn’t said much at first, but as one thing led to another, their conversation deepened. And then he’d revealed that he’d just received news that a childhood friend had died. Pepper never thought anything good would come from losing her mother and grandmother, but she was able to draw upon that experience to give some sort of comfort to Simon. It was as though that morning they’d formed a bond—a bond forged in loss and wrapped in hope.
And so for the past five months, Simon had been stopping by the bakery at least once a week early in the morning for two large black coffees and two cherry turnovers. Pepper looked forward to those mornings as they chatted about current events, the bakery or whatever was on their minds. She had made a new friend—a good friend.
  Pre-Order Your Copy (Print/Digital):
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