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brokehorrorfan · 2 years
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Rob Zombie’s House of 1000 Corpses will celebrate its 20th anniversary with two new Blu-ray editions - a premium box (above) and a Steelbook (below) - on April 11 via Lionsgate.
The premium box features artwork by Graham Humphreys. It comes with a poster illustrated by David Hartman, a photo book curated by Zombie, and six art cards by Hartman. The Steelbook features artwork by Vance Kelly with a semi-transparent slipcover.
The 2003 horror film stars Sid Haig, Bill Moseley, Sheri Moon, Karen Black, Rainn Wilson, Chris Hardwick, Tom Towles, Erin Daniels, Jennifer Jostyn, Walton Goggins, and Dennis Fimple.
House of 1000 Corpses is presented in high definition with 7.1 DTS-HD Master Audio and 5.1 Dolby Surround EX Audio. Both editions include two discs with identical special features, which are detailed below.
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Disc 1:
Audio commentary by writer-director Rob Zombie
Making-of featurette
Cast and crew interviews
Casting footage
Rehearsal footage
Theatrical trailer
Disc 2:
Never-before-seen interviews:
Writer-director Rob Zombie
Actor Sid Haig
Actor Bill Moseley
Actress Sheri Moon
Actress Karen Black
Actor Rainn Wilson
Actor Chris Hardwick
Actress Erin Daniels
Actor Irwin Keyes
Actress Jennifer Jostyn
Special makeup effects artist Wayne Toth
5 behind-the-scenes on-set featurettes
Dr. Satan test
Professor test
Electronic press kit
Teaser trailer
Digital platforms only:
Audio commentary by writer-director Rob Zombie (new)
When Rob Zombie’s House of 1000 Corpses slashed its way into theaters 20 years ago, 1970s-style horror – and camp – returned with bone-snapping, scream-inducing vengeance. Zombie’s directorial debut, this first film of a trilogy introduces the Firefly family, backwoods sadists who plunge two young couples into a nightmare world of torture, satanic ritual, and cannibalism.
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yabagofmilfs · 1 year
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A non-exhaustive list of players I think should be given to us because I want them in my collection:
TK - imagining Geno reluctantly adopting him as he does all the feral assholes is very special to me. The chaos he would bring to Jason and G’s line would be BEAUTIFUL.
Brandon Tanev - serious lack of freak diversity in our biome. We have hidden depths freaks and benign what mental illness is that freaks but not freak for the sake of freak.
Ryan Graves - he’s very pretty and almost certainly haunted. Perhaps whatever victorian child has possessed him has amassed enough power to counteract our cursed amulet.
Juuse Saros - this needs no explanation, but also as someone who was groomed by a more established goalie himself perhaps he can give Jarry the “structure” and “discipline” he so obviously craves. It takes a village.
Ryan Hartman - I think he’s the guy who eats the paper. This is the energy we need. Plus reuniting him with his boyfriend would be very special. We could do with more slutty behavior from our princess.
Mitchell Marner - not enough people sexually harassing sid in the locker room anymore. He needs to be called juicy on a daily basis.
Matt Reilly - don’t know anything about him, who cares, but I do very much want to incorporate Tessa Virtue into our ecosystem.
Kirill Kaprizov - I don’t want to take him from his husband, but if we could get like joint custody or even a short loan that would be great because I think it would be very funny to watch G react to someone following him around like a cherubic hero worshipping duckling.
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fearsmagazine · 2 years
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HOUSE OF 1000 CORPSES - 20th Anniversary Blu-ray Box Set & Steelbook
HOUSE OF 1000 CORPSES 20th Anniversary Blu-ray Premium Box Set and Best Buy Blu-ray Exclusive Steelbook!
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When Rob Zombie’s “House of 1000 Corpses” slashed its way into theaters 20 years ago, 1970s-style horror – and camp – returned with bone-snapping, scream-inducing vengeance. Zombie’s directorial debut, this first film of a trilogy introduces the Firefly family, backwoods sadists who plunge two young couples into a nightmare world of torture, satanic ritual, and cannibalism. With a killer cast including horror legends Sheri Moon Zombie, Bill Moseley, Sid Haig, and Karen Black, “House of 1000 Corpses” is both a homage to a golden era and a scary good time from an innovative, unrivaled shock-master.
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Cast:                                      Sheri Moon Zombie, Sid Haig, Bill Moseley, Karen Black, Rainn Wilson, and Chris Hardwick Writer:                                  Rob Zombie Directed by:                           Rob Zombie Produced by:                         Andy Gould Executive Producers:            Andy Given, Guy Oseary Director of Photography:     Alex Poppas, Tom Richmond Production Designer:            Gregg Gibbs Art Director:                          Michael Krantz Edited by:                              Kathryn Himoff, Robert K. Lambert, Sean Lambert Costume Designer:               Amanda Friedland Composers:                           Rob Zombie, Scott Humphrey
Blu-ray Format: 1080p High Definition • 16x9 (1.85:1) Presentation Blu-ray Audio: English 7.1 DTS-HD Master Audio™ • English 5.1 Dolby Surround EX™ Audio Premium Box Set SRP: $44.99 Steelbook SRP: $27.99 Purchase link: www.lionsgate.com/movies/house-of-1000-corpses
Premium Box Artists: • Graham Humphreys – illustrated outerbox, photo book illustrations, disc art • David Hartman – illustrated poster, illustrated art cards
Steelbook Artist: • Vance Kelly
Special Features: • Premium Box EXCLUSIVELY includes • Illustrated outerbox by Graham Humphreys • Illustrated poster by David Hartman • 0-page photo book curated by Rob Zombie with illustrations by Graham Humphreys • 6 Illustrated Art Cards by David Hartman
DISC 1 • Director Commentary • Making-of Featurette • Casting Footage • Rehearsal Footage • Cast and Crew Interviews • Theatrical Trailer
DISC 2 – Bonus Disc of Never-Before-Seen Special Features from Rob Zombie • Cast & Director Interviews • Rob Zombie • Sid Hai • Bill Moseley • Sheri Moon • Karen Black • Rainn Wilson • Chris Hardwick • Erin Daniels • Irwin Keyes • Jennifer Jostyn • Wayne Toth
• Behind The Scenes • Includes 5 On-Set BTS Segments • Dr. Satan Test • Professor Test • Electronic Press Kit • Teaser Trailer
EXCLUSIVELY ON DIGITAL PLATFORMS: New Director’s Commentary
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dstrachan · 10 months
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'VIEWS FROM THE EDGE' - w/c 4th December 2023
Steve Grantly & the Zed Hedz ‘My Bombshell Baby From The USA’
Don Powell’s Occasional Flames ‘Never Mind The Baubles’
Elvis Presley, Jerry Lee Lewis, Carl Perkins, and Johnny Cash ‘Paralyzed’
Taped Live ‘Telephone’
Kornastone ‘Taxi Rank’
Dan Hartman ‘Instant Replay’
The Soap Girls ‘White Flag’
Village People ‘YMCA’
Debra Lyn ‘Brown Dog’
Matt Andersen ‘Coal Mining Blues’
Sunburn ‘Thunder’
The Catholic Girls ‘Hear My Prayer (Dance Version)’
Sid Ozalid & Jimmy Jazz feat. Happy Cat ‘I’m No A Daftie’
Jesse Rae ‘Chainsaw’
The Snake Charmer ‘Mehndi Da Bagpipes’
Issin In Bloom ‘The Gamekeeper’
Blazin’ Fiddles ‘Gamekeepers’
Capercaillie ‘Claire In Heaven’
Emeli Sande ‘Heaven (Alpine’s Remix)’
The Cocteau Twins ‘Heaven Or Las Vegas’
Neocracy ‘Torment’
Neocracy ‘Run’
Steven Stills ‘So Begins The Task’
Catapilla ‘Thank Christ For George’
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usagirotten · 2 years
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House of 1000 Corpses Gets 20th Anniversary Box Set
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To celebrate the 20-year anniversary of the release of Rob Zombie’s feature-length directorial debut, House of 1000 Corpses, Lionsgate will be dropping a very special Blu-ray and digital release. With a slew of new artwork, curated by the master of gore himself, the must-have collection comes with a scare-tastic cover that will stand out in your horror compilation. Included inside the case are a number of colorful and eye-catching illustrations with an animated poster crafted by David Hartman that depicts the bloodthirsty Firefly family with their house of horrors looming in the background. Also included are six special art cards, again drawn by Hartman, to show off the infamous members of the chilling favorite. Throwing in a bit of his own flare, Zombie has teamed up with outer box artist Graham Humphreys to completely deliver on a 60-page photo book with shots of the team that brought the terrifying feature to life. the 20th-anniversary edition of Rob Zombie's House of 1000 Corpses will be available to purchase on April 11th Take a look at the special features (via Bloody Disgusting): DISC ONE: Director Commentary Making-of Featurette Casting Footage Rehearsal Footage Cast and Crew Interviews Theatrical Trailer DISC TWO: Bonus Disc of Never-Before-Seen Special Features from Rob Zombie Cast & Director Interviews: Rob Zombie, Sid Haig, Bill Moseley, Sheri Moon, Karen Black, Rainn Wilson, Chris Hardwick, Erin Daniels, Irwin Keyes, Jennifer Jostyn, Wayne Toth Behind The Scenes: Includes 5 On-Set BTS Segments – Dr. Satan Test, Professor Test Electronic Press Kit Teaser Trailer In addition to the above, be aware that if you purchase this new edition of House of 1000 Corpses on your preferred digital platform, you'll also get access to an all-new director's commentary that will be exclusive to that version of the release.
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dadsinsuits · 2 years
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Sid Hartman
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Oh man, RIP Sid 😔
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hclib · 4 years
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Sid Hartman and the Minneapolis Daily Times
Legendary Star Tribune sports reporter Sid Hartman passed away this week at the age of 100. Hartman was a staple at the newspaper, writing for the Minneapolis Tribune since the late 1940s. Before joining the Tribune staff, however, Sid worked for another local paper -- the Minneapolis Daily Times.
The Daily Times was a short-lived evening paper. It was this paper that gave Sid Hartman his first column byline on September 11, 1945 and promoted him as it’s go-to reporter for college sports. When the Daily Times ceased publication in 1948, Sid moved to the Minneapolis Tribune where he stayed for the next 72 years. His final column appeared in the Star Tribune on the day he died.
Sid Hartman was not the only famous local columnist to start at the Minneapolis Daily Times. Barbara Flanagan began her career at the Times, too.
Explore thousands of photos that appeared in the Minneapolis Daily Times in the Minneapolis Newspaper Photograph Collection in the Hennepin County Library Digital Collections.
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a scribble or two that aren’t really serious
There’s a rather amusing (albeit anxiety inducing) episode of “Ren and Stimpy” where Stimpy gets a “pet clown” named Sid that was voiced by Phil Hartman, who also voiced Paddywhack, so since TeenNick airs “Ren and Stimpy” during the NickRewind watershed hours, I thought it would probably make sense that Jacky probably stays up later than he probably should sometimes. “Ren and Stimpy” is a program that just seems like a fever dream at anytime after 3 AM.
Added fridge horror to his POV: “What’s shakin’, Sparky?” is a phrase uttered throughout that episode. I’m sure that Jacky probably has “sparky” on the list of words he doesn’t want to hear in anything remotely related to Paddywhack whatsoever. 👀
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krissywendell · 6 years
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i was talking to my orchestra director yesterday and i offhandedly mentioned the north stars and then she was like “oh yeah i dont like hockey but Fuck The Dallas Stars” which really brings new life to this picture
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buzzdixonwriter · 4 years
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Another Pointless Top Ten List (But You’ll Keep Reading, Anyway)
My brother Rikk recently mailed me another top ten list of his, in this instance being his top ten favorite TV comedy shows (which he defines as 30 minutes or less, no movies).
The Three Stooges
M*A*S*H
The Andry Griffith Show 
The Beverly Hillbillies
Hogan’s Heroes
I Love Lucy 
The Honeymooners 
All In The Family
Get Smart 
Gilligan’s Island
His honorable mentions include F Troop, The Patty Duke Show, My Three Sons, Gomer Pyle USMC, Batman, Petticoat Junction, Mr. Ed. Bewitched, and I Dream Of Jeanie.
Again, one of those personal favorite lists that you really can’t argue with because it reflects personal tastes and / or fond nostalgia (though I am calling shenanigans on The Three Stooges; they were theatrical shorts shown in movie theaters, not a TV show, and besides, Laurel & Hardy are soooooo much better…).
But of course we’re going to play the game, so I’ll respond, first throwing in a caveat:  No skit comedy shows such as Monty Python’s Flying Circus, The Marty Feldman Show, Benny Hill, Second City TV, The Kids In The Hall, or Love, American Style.
I’m also omitting programs like The Gong Show and Jackass because while hilarious and under 30 minutes, they weren’t scripted or story driven.
So here’s my list:
The Dick Van Dyke Show -- the sitcom art form at peak perfection.  Carl Reiner’s insight into what writing for a mercurial TV star is like (in his case, Sid Caesar on Your Show Of Shows, for Van Dyke’s Rob Petrie it was Carl Reiner as Alan Brady).  If you’ve never seen the show, start off with their two best episodes, “Coast To Coast Big Mouth” and “October Eve” (though they’re all good).  “October Eve” is the one where Sally (Rose Marie) finds a nude painting of Laura (Mary Tyler Moore playing Dick Van Dyke’s wife) in an art gallery.  SALLY:  “There’s a painting here you should know about.”  LAURA: “If it’s what I think it is, I can explain.”  SALLY:  “If you need to explain, it’s what you think it is.”
The Mary Tyler Moore Show – this is the first American novel for television.  It’s a novel of character, not plot, and it traces the growth of Mary Richards, a 30 year old woman-child who realizes she needs to grow up, as she blossoms into a mature, self-reliant adult.  You can select two episodes at random and by comparing her character growth determine not only which season they were filmed but when in that season.
I Love Lucy -- eking out a bronze medal for its longevity and pioneering of the art form.  The first sitcom shot on film, it led the way in the rerun market.  Not just a historical icon but consistently funny.
WKRP In Cincinnati -- as crazy as a sitcom could get and still be within the realm of plausibility.  Never loved by its network, they bounced it around for four seasons until it faded away (it made a syndicated comeback a decade later, of which we shall not speak).  Great supporting staff, dynamite writing.  While they never steered away from serious subject matters (such as an actual rock concert tragedy in Cincinnati where several fans were crushed when rushing the stage), they will be forever and justly remembered for the beloved “Turkey Drop” episode.
Fawlty Towers – only two seasons and a mere 12 episodes and yet more comedic bang for the buck than anything else on this list.  John Cleese as a frustrated, short-tempered, conniving hotelier practically writes itself.  SYBIL FAWLTY:  “You know what I’ll do if I find you’ve been gambling again, don’t you, Basil?”  BASIL:  “You’ll have to sew them back on first, m’dear.”
That Girl -- looking back it can sometimes be hard to judge just how groundbreaking certain shows were.  Marlo Thomas as a struggling young actress finding romance and success in Manhattan seems positively wholesome today, but in the mid-1960s it was considered quite daring and progressive.  The Mary Tyler Moore Show took their opening credits inspiration from Marlo Thomas’ character exploring Manhattan in the opening credits of That Girl.
He & She -- a one season wonder from 1967.  Another daring and progressive show for its era.  Richard Benjamin and Paula Prentiss played a young married couple, he being a cartoonist who drew a superhero strip (the actor playing the superhero on TV in the series was Jack Cassidy at his manic best).  Another show with a dynamite supporting cast…and just too hip for the room at the time (honorable mention to Love On A Rooftop, a similar show from the previous season that also proved too advanced for audiences at that time).  
Green Acres -- started out silly but quickly took a turn into the surreal, breaking the fourth wall, commenting on the opening credits as they ran by, all sorts of oddball stuff.  Dismissed as a hayseed comedy, the truth is the supporting cast possessed dynamite comedic chops and their sense of timing is a joy to behold.  Forms a loose trilogy with The Beverly Hillbillies and Petticoat Junction since all three referenced the same small towns of Hooterville and Pixley  as well as occasional crossovers (honorable mention to the first season of Petticoat Junction which is as pure an example of Americana as one could hope to find and could easily be distilled into a feature film remake).
The Young Ones -- another two season / twelve episode wonder from the UK.  Four stereotypical English college students go through increasing levels of insanity as the series progressed.  Unlike most shows of the era where there was no continuity episode to episode, damage done in an early episode would still be seen for the rest of the series.  (They also would simply end a show when they ran out of time, not resolving that episode’s plot.)  Their random / non sequitur style proved a tremendous influence on shows like Family Guy.
Fernwood 2 Nite / America 2-Nite -- a spin off from the faux soap opera Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman, this presented itself as a cable access variety show for Mary Hartman’s hometown of Fernwood.  With Martin Mull as the obnoxious host, Fred Willard as his incurably dense second banana, and TV theme song composer Frank De Vol as the band leader.  Because it’s so rooted in 1970s pop culture it doesn’t age as well as some other shows on the list, but many of the gags still land solidly today.  For the second season the show-within-a-show went nationwide and became America 2-Nite. Very funny, very well written, and all the more remarkable because these guys were doing five episodes a week!
Okay, so what can this list tell us?
Buzz is old.  Like really, really, really old.
Buzz stopped watching sitcoms in the mid-1980s.
There’s a reason for that.  By that time I was writing for TV and trying to get my own work done.  I didn’t have time to sit and watch TV on a regular basis (still don’t), and too often I could see the gears turning and guess where the episode was heading by the end of the first scene (still do).
I’ve veered away from “must watch” TV, especially shows that require the audience to keep track of what’s gone on before.
Tell me I have to see the first six seasons of a show to appreciate what happens in the seventh and you’ve just lost me as a potential viewer.  I’m strictly a one & done kinda guy now (though I will binge watch if a mini-series has a manageable number of episodes, say six).
My list represents a time capsule for what caught my interest and attention during a very formative period of my life, i.e., from the early 1960s as I became more and more aware that writing was where my future lay, to the mid-1980s when I hit a good peak stretch.
I don’t doubt there are great and wonderful hilarious comedies out there that I haven’t seen, I’m just listing what I have seen that did make an impression on me.
Your mileage may vary.*
    © Buzz Dixon
  *  It should vary!  Be your own person!
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androfiles · 4 years
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Sid Oudainia Beaulieu by Remi Ferrante Hartman for Casablanca A/W 2020 Campaign
(via @chr-stos)
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deviantartdramanow · 4 years
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here's silent-sid getting salty because some youtubers have opinions he doesn't like. silent-sid/status-update/21390095 silent-sid/status-update/21347596 silent-sid/status-update/21007549 (the first statuses are about rebeltaxi's podcast, the last one is sid saying saberspark is anti-christian for criticizing butch hartman's christian cartoon the garden)
https://www.deviantart.com/silent-sid/status-update/21390095 ( https://archive.is/0vbON )
https://www.deviantart.com/silent-sid/status-update/21347596 ( https://archive.vn/yNZ6X )
https://www.deviantart.com/silent-sid/status-update/21007549 ( https://archive.is/gtiMs )
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David Arquette and Sid Haig  as Purvis and Buddy, in a scene from Bone Tomahwak (2015).
David was born in Winchester, Virginia, and has 141 acting credits, from 13 episodes of The Outsiders (1990), his first feature in 1992, to nine projects currently in various stages of production.  His notable acting credits include Buffy the Vampire Slayer, episodes of Blossom and Beverly Hills 90210, Dead Man’s Walk (as Augustus McCrae from Lonesome Dove), an episode of Friends, Scream, Scream 2, Scream 3, and Scream 4.
Sid was born in Fresno and had 146 acting credits, from a 1960 short, his first feature in 1962, to a posthumous film currently in post-production.  His other notable credits include an episode of The Lucy Show as a mummy, Beach Ball (as the drummer for The Righteous Brothers), two episodes of Batman, episodes of Star Trek, The Flying Nun and Here’s Lucy, four episodes of Gunsmoke, three episodes of Get Smart, nine episodes of Mission Impossible, THX 1138, The Big Doll House, Diamonds are Forever, The Big Bird Cage, Coffy, Foxy Brown, episodes of The Six Million Dollar Man and The Rockford Files, 55 episodes of Mary Hartman Mary Hartman, episodes of Police Woman, Charlie’s Angels, and The Dukes of Hazzard, three episodes of Fantasy Island, episodes of The A Team and Hill Street Blues, two episodes of MacGyver, Jackie Brown and Kill Bill Vol. 2, 
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shawnvanbriesen · 6 years
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‘Haunted Hollywood Stuff’ part 6: For the last of his four theaters, Sid Grauman planned a theater so unique and opulent that it would out do all other theaters in Los Angeles. He and architect Raymond Kennedy chose a Chinese temple as inspiration and created a soaring 90-foot pagoda adorned with a 30-foot dragon and ceremonial masks and topped with an ornate copper roof. But it is the forecourt that makes this the most famous movie theater in the world. That’s where Grauman displayed his most ingenious idea—concrete blocks with the hand and foot prints of the stars. Actor Victor Kilian, best known as the Fernwood Flasher on Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman, is said to haunt the forecourt at the Chinese. Kilian lived near the theater and was beaten to death in his home in 1979; some stories say it was burglars, others say he invited up a man from a nearby bar. Grauman also built salons for private parties after a premiere or the Oscars where he and his famous friends could celebrate privately. He hid buzzers near lamps in the lobby to signal people inside to open the secret panel. These rooms have long been sealed and all buzzers disconnected; but for some, that doesn’t matter. For weeks, an employee heard buzzers in his upstairs office. He thought it was an errant office intercom. Eventually, he realized it was the buzzers for the secret salons coming from inside the sealed rooms. And the theater has a resident ghost, Fritz. Fritz, it seems, worked for the theater, though no one’s sure when. Apparently despondent, he hanged himself inside, behind the movie screen. Since then, his presence has been felt throughout the theater. Everybody knows him and no one is frightened. #oldhollywood #vintage #hollywood #actress #classichollywood #cinema #film #movie #retro #classic #actor #vintagehollywood #hauntedlosangeles #icon #roosevelthotel #fashion #glamour #love #moviestar #movies #beauty #montgomeryclift #blackandwhite #oldhollywoodglamour #art #graumanschinese #oasis #beautiful #legend #instagood #marilynmonroe #haunted #creepy #horror #ghost #paranormal #scary #losangeles #heartbreakcity #shawnvanbriesen (at TCL Chinese Theatres) https://www.instagram.com/p/BtV6qHyBV6p/?utm_source=ig_tumblr_share&igshid=1j85y21tbml54
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megafrankenstein · 2 years
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Sid Hartman Net Worth
Sid Hartman Net Worth
Let’s figure out more about sid hartman net worth in our next segments. Sid Hartman was born on March 15, 1920, in Minneapolis, Minnesota, to parents who were both teachers. He is most known for his sports journalistic work for Minnesota’s Star Tribune, but he also managed the Minneapolis Lakers professional basketball club (which subsequently became the famed Los Angeles Lakers franchise) and…
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