#thomas golubic
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finally got around to watching nimona. first impression: the trans allegory is so so so textual. i saw that trans flag in the background you CANNOT convince me thats an accident ok. im so feral about the lighting design (the credits list 18 lead lighting artists!!! and an additional 21 shot lighting artists and 2 technical lighting artists!!!!). i literally cried at that one shot with the spotlight from the top right down to center on one person and the other person unlit in the left side of the frame bc Augh The Symbolism
anygays time to appreciate the lighting artists!
lead lighting artists: v balaji, george barbour, mathilde fleury-dufour, sabaribalaji harishankar, benoit lecailtel, suraj makhija, laszlo mandi, jacob mann, thenmanirajan paulpandian, r irwin prathap, sanjay rai, balaganesh s, debora sangermano, elisa sanguin, ragul sathyan s, murray truelove, khai tuck wong, jia zhang
shot lighting artists: afaque ahmed, sai avinash alam, pradeep kumar anand, sameer ansari, abhinaba basak, paul burton, sujeesh c, kane chang, julie chapelle, deepak omprakash chauhan, louise chevrier, valerie constant, arnabi daw, ivan de frias, paul deroche, ashokkumar devadiga, léo frison-roche, boyan georgiev, dixita ghosh, krishna reddy gujjula, gunderao m h, benjamin hattenberger, jakka harikrishna, bhavesh jat, dinetto jose, syed mohd junaid, ramisetty krishna, savadesh kumar, manoj kumar talanki, facundo lavenia, aditya more, valérie morel, nikhil rupesh namdev, noyal norbert, akula pavankumar, pavuluri srinivasa phanindra, daniel alberto santana pineda, naveen prabhu, manikanta rayavaram, vishal raj gaddam, grandhi venkata sai ram, kuppili neelima rani, thirumalasetty madhusudhan rao, basava sai krishna rayapureddy, nagapuri sanjay, diego sernande, suraj sunil shinde, sooraj sreedharan, abhishek g singh, conor smith, rohit srivastava, samiksha suvarna, matu talukdar, vishal ramesh tayade, thumati sai teja, sarath thomas, upinderjeet singh, guruprasad v, abhijith vazhayil, anim venkatesh, kunal yadav
technical lighting artists: evgenii golub, jayesh makwana
if you’ve made it this far, have some nachos! (hold the olives, he’s allergic.) can we take a moment to appreciate the absolutely gorgeous end credits (design by dneg animation). go watch the whole end credits btw it’s so worth it. 10/10 movie i was soooooo invested the whole entire time
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Congrats to Emil on his third straight European title.
Short Program
Emil Nekola - CZE - 105.36
Adam Loughton - GBR - 100.48
Paul Kuan Yim Han - FRA - 94.13
Andrin Caspari - SUI - 91.17
Maskim Semenjov - EST - 90.05
Giovanni Schiavone - ITA - 83.51
Nikolais Januais - LAT - 82.34
Alessandro Rinaldi - ITA - 80.43
Dean Langlois - FRA - 78.59
Magnar Holberg - SWE - 77.62
Issak Ashenkazi - ISR - 77.50
Ambrosi Lomidze - GEO - 77.00
Thomas Marek - SVK - 74.97
Dante Sebastini - ITA - 72.78
Leonid Rodchenko - CZE - 72.74
Zakhar Plotnikov - GER - 71.99
Carlos-Emiliano Serrano Aguado - ESP - 71.93
Simeon Chernov - POL - 71.05
Ivan Gusev - FIN - 70.40
Avel Romanchuk - UKR - 69.95
Aleksander Hasanov - AZE - 69.72
Artur Barshegyan - ARM - 68.51
Christiano Tedesco - AUT - 65.47
Nikolai Vinogradov - HUN - 65.08
Gabriel Aaron Martin - MON - 65.06
Joshua Allen - GBR - 63.69
Hakan Matarci - TUR - 63.00
Kreo Zupan - CRO - 62.44
Georgi Astapalov - BUL - 61.94
Bohadan Chernish - LAT - 60.97
Jevgeni Semenjov - EST - 60.09
Brian Cartier - FRA - 57.33
Filip Golub - SLO - 51.10
Free Program
Emil Nekola - CZE - 212.13
Adam Loughton - GBR - 202.76
Paul Kuan Yim Han - FRA - 182.04
Alessandro Rinaldi - ITA - 170.44
Maskim Semenjov - EST - 166.94
Giovanni Schiavone - ITA - 162.58
Simeon Chernov - POL - 159.12
Ambrosi Lomidze - GEO - 156.16
Nikolais Januais - LAT - 155.08
Leonid Rodchenko - CZE - 153.98
Dante Sebastiani - ITA - 153.10
Andrin Caspari - SUI - 151.29
Thomas Marek - SVK - 145.85
Avel Romanchuk - UKR - 140.70
Issak Ashenkazi - ISR - 140.06
Zakhar Plotnikov - GER - 139.86
Aleksander Hasanov - AZE - 139.46
Christiano Tedesco - AUT - 137.44
Dean Langlois - FRA - 131.97
Carlos-Emiliano Serrano Aguado - ESP - 130.67
Artur Barshegyan - ARM - 128.93
Ivan Gusev - FIN - 122.35
Nikolai Vinogradov - HUN - 118.68
Magnar Holberg - SWE - 111.80
Overall
Emil Nekola - CZE - (1, 1) - 317.49
Adam Loughton - GBR - (2, 2) - 303.24
Paul Kuan Yim Han - FRA - (3, 3) - 276.17
Maskim Semenjov - EST - (5, 5) - 256.99
Alessandro Rinaldi - ITA - (8, 4) - 250.87
Givoanni Schiavone - ITA - (6, 6) - 246.09
Andrin Capsari - SUI - (4, 12) - 242.46
Nikolais Januais - LAT - (7, 9) - 237.42
Ambrosi Lomidze - GEO - (12, 8) - 233.16
Simeon Chernov - POL - (18, 7) - 230.17
Leonid Rodchenko - CZE - (15, 10) - 226.67
Dante Sebasitani - ITA - (14, 11) - 225.88
Thomas Marek - SVK - (13, 13) - 220.82
Issak Ashenkazi - ISR - (11, 15) - 217.56
Zakhar Plotnikov - GER - (16, 16) - 211.85
Avel Romachuk - UKR - (20, 14) - 210.65
Dean Langlois - FRA - (9, 19) - 210.56
Aleksander Hasanov - AZE - (21, 17) - 209.21
Christiano Tedesco - AUT - (23, 18) - 202.91
Carlos-Emiliano Serrano Aguado - ESP - (17, 20) - 202.60
Artur Barshegyan - ARM - (22, 21) - 197.44
Ivan Gusev - FIN - (19, 22) - 192.75
Magnar Holberg - SWE - (10, 24) - 189.42
Nikolai Vinogradov - HUN - (24, 23) - 183.76
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MIT Corporation elects 10 term members, two life members
New Post has been published on https://thedigitalinsider.com/mit-corporation-elects-10-term-members-two-life-members/
MIT Corporation elects 10 term members, two life members
The MIT Corporation — the Institute’s board of trustees — has elected 10 full-term members, who will serve one-, two-, or five-year terms, and two life members. Corporation Chair Mark P. Gorenberg ’76 announced the election results today.
The full-term members are: Nancy C. Andrews, Dedric A. Carter, David Fialkow, Bennett W. Golub, Temitope O. Lawani, Michael C. Mountz, Anna Waldman-Brown, R. Robert Wickham, Jeannette M. Wing, and Anita Wu. The two life members are: R. Erich Caulfield and David M. Siegel. Gorenberg was also reelected as Corporation chair.
As of July 1, the Corporation will consist of 80 distinguished leaders in education, science, engineering, and industry. Of those, 24 are life members and eight are ex officio. An additional 25 individuals are life members emeritus.
The 10 new term members are:
Nancy C. Andrews PhD ’85, executive vice president and chief scientific officer, Boston Children’s Hospital
Andrews is a biologist and physician noted for her research on iron diseases and her roles in academic administration. She currently serves as executive vice president and chief scientific officer at the Boston Children’s Hospital and professor of pediatrics in residence at Harvard Medical School. She previously served for a decade as the first female dean of the Duke University School of Medicine. After graduating from medical school, she completed residency and fellowship at BCH, joining the faculty at Harvard as an assistant professor in 1993. From 1999 to 2003, Andrews served as director of the Harvard-MIT Health Sciences and Technology MD-PhD program, and then was appointed professor of pediatrics and dean for basic sciences and graduate studies at Harvard Medical School. Andrews currently serves on the boards of directors of Novartis, Charles River Laboratories, and Maze Therapeutics.
Dedric A. Carter ’98, MEng ’99, MBA ’14, chief innovation officer, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Carter currently serves as the vice chancellor for innovation, entrepreneurship, and economic development and chief innovation officer at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. He has cabinet-level responsibility for the entrepreneurship, innovation, economic development, and commercialization portfolios at the university through Innovate Carolina and the Innovate Carolina Junction, a new hub for catalyzing innovation and accelerating entrepreneurial invention located in Chapel Hill, North Carolina, among other oversight and engagement roles. Prior to his appointment, he was the vice chancellor for innovation and chief commercialization officer at Washington University in St. Louis. Before that, he served as the senior advisor for strategic initiatives in the Office of the Director at the U.S. National Science Foundation, in addition to serving as the executive secretary to the U.S. National Science Board executive committee.
David Fialkow, co-founder and managing director, General Catalyst Partners
Fialkow currently serves as managing director of General Catalyst Partners, a venture capital firm that makes early-stage and transformational investments in technology and consumer companies. His areas of focus include financial services, digital health, artificial intelligence, and data analytics. With business partner Joel Cutler, Fialkow built and sold several companies prior to founding General Catalyst Partners in 2000. Early in his career, he worked for the investment firm Thomas H. Lee Company and the venture capital firm U.S. Venture Partners. Fialkow studied film at Colgate University and continues to produce documentaries with his wife, Nina, focused on health care and social justice.
Bennett W. Golub ’79, SM ’82, PhD ’84, co-founder and senior policy advisor, BlackRock
In 1988, Golub was one of eight people to start BlackRock, Inc., a global asset management company. In March of 2022, he stepped down from his day-to-day activities at the company to assume a part-time role of senior policy advisor. Formerly, he served as chief risk officer with responsibilities that included investment, counterparty, technology, and operational risk, and he chaired BlackRock’s Enterprise Risk Management Committee. Beginning in 1995, he was co-head and founder of BlackRock Solutions, the company’s risk advisory business. He also served as the acting CEO of Trepp, LLC. a former BlackRock affiliate that pioneered the creation and distribution of data and models for collateralized commercial-backed securities, beginning in 1996. Prior to the founding of BlackRock, Golub served as vice president at The First Boston Corporation (now Credit Suisse).
Temitope O. Lawani ’91, co-founder, Helios Investment Partners, LLP
Lawani, a Nigerian national, is the co-founder and managing partner of Helios Investment Partners, LLP, an Africa-focused private investment firm based in London. He also serves as co-CEO of Helios Fairfax Partners, an investment holding company. Prior to forming Helios in 2004, Lawani was a principal at the San Francisco and London offices of TPG Capital, a global private investment firm. Before that, he worked as a mergers and acquisitions and corporate development analyst at the Walt Disney Company. Lawani serves on the boards of Helios Towers, Pershing Square Holdings, and NBA Africa. He is also a director of the Global Private Capital Association and The END Fund, and has served on the boards of several public and private companies across various sectors.
Michael C. Mountz ’87, principal, Kacchip LLC
Michael “Mick” Mountz is a logistics industry entrepreneur and technologist known for inventing the mobile robotic order fulfillment approach now in widespread use across the material handling industry. In 2003, Mountz, along with MIT classmate Peter Wurman ’87 and Raffaelo D’Andrea co-founded Kiva Systems, Inc., a manufacturer of this mobile robotic fulfillment system. After Kiva, Mountz established Kacchip LLC, a technology incubator and investment entity to support local founders and startups, where Mountz currently serves as principal. Before founding Kiva, Mountz served as a director of business process and logistics at online grocery delivery company Webvan, and before that he served as a product marketing manager for Apple Computer working on the launch of the G3 and G4 series Macintosh desktops. Mountz holds over 40 U.S. technology patents and was inducted into the National Inventors Hall of Fame in 2022.
Anna Waldman-Brown ’11, SM ’18, PhD ’23
Through her work with the Fab Lab network, which spun off from the MIT Center for Bits and Atoms, Waldman-Brown has worked with international policymakers and grassroots innovators across more than 60 countries to foster creative problem-solving and sustainable development. She helped build up and connect fab labs across dozens of countries, co-organized two week-long fab lab conferences and developed the ongoing Fab Festival, curated open-source development of an early Maker Map and several lists of academic articles related to the Maker Movement, and finalized an official collaboration with Autodesk and the international Fab Lab network. In addition to providing informal mentorship and support for students across the Institute, Waldman-Brown became involved in the burgeoning MIT Grad Student Union (GSU)/UE Local 256 around 2019 to advocate for practical solutions to improving graduate student life and health and safety. Her current work as an industrial strategy policy analyst is through the Made in America Office, which is part of the Executive Office of the President’s Office of Management and Budget.
R. Robert Wickham ’93, SM ’95, president, MIT Alumni Association
Skilled in building go-to-market teams, strategic planning, operational management, and delivering results, Wickham has held leadership roles at Salesforce and Oracle, and gained foundational experiences in management consulting and entrepreneurship. As the former general manager of Tableau Asia Pacific, a Salesforce business unit, Wickham spearheaded significant growth initiatives. He also served as chief of staff for Asia Pacific and led specialized teams in Platform and Emerging Technologies, which included pivotal technologies such as the Lightning Platform and Einstein Analytics, and drove the launch of Salesforce’s $50M Australian venture fund and its regional program for startups. Before joining Salesforce, Wickham led Oracle’s Engineered Systems business across Australia and New Zealand, and the System Management business in North America. He joined Oracle through its acquisition of Empirix Web Division, where he ran sales for North America.
Jeannette M. Wing ’78, SM ’79, PhD ’83, executive vice president for research, Columbia University
Wing is the executive vice president for research and professor of computer science at Columbia University, and previously served as Avanessians Director of the Data Science Institute. Wing’s current research interests are in trustworthy AI, and her areas of research expertise include security and privacy, formal methods, programming languages, and distributed and concurrent systems. Prior to Columbia, Wing worked at Microsoft, where she served as corporate vice president of Microsoft Research, overseeing research labs worldwide. Before joining Microsoft, she was on the faculty at Carnegie Mellon University, where she was the head of the Department of Computer Science and associate dean for academic affairs of the School of Computer Science. During a leave from Carnegie Mellon, she served at the National Science Foundation as assistant director of the Computer and Information Science and Engineering Directorate.
Anita Wu MBA ’16, partner, AlixPartners
Wu is a partner in the retail practice at AlixPartners, a global consultancy specializing in management advisory, business performance improvement, and corporate turnarounds. Outside of client services, she is the global leader for AlixPartners’ Women’s Empowerment Network. Prior to moving to the U.S. for MIT, Wu led smart cities design in Sydney, Australia, and implemented various initiatives that improved commuter usage of public transportation. She has also previously led the operations for a nonprofit, Light the Way, where she fundraised and delivered education curriculum and microfinancing programs for farming villages in Nepal. She currently resides in New York City.
The two life members are:
David M. Siegel SM ’86, PhD ’91, co-founder and co-chairman, Two Sigma
Siegel is a computer scientist, entrepreneur, and philanthropist. Before co-founding the financial sciences company Two Sigma, he was chief technology officer and managing director at Tudor Investment Corporation. Prior to that, he was a senior leader at D.E. Shaw, where he ultimately rose to be the firm’s first chief information officer. Siegel is currently an active investor and advisor, and serves as a board member for Re:Build Manufacturing, a family of industrial businesses. He is co-founder of the Scratch Foundation, with MIT Professor Mitchel Resnick ’88. He founded the Siegel Family Endowment in 2011 to support organizations and leaders that will understand and shape the impact of technology on society, and as the organization’s chairman devotes significant time and energy to actively engaging with this work.
R. Erich Caulfield SM ’01, PhD ’06, founder and president, The Caulfield Consulting Group
Since 2013, Caulfield has served as the founder and president of The Caulfield Consulting Group, a management consulting firm that specializes in improving organizations’ performance through strategic and operational support. Between 2011 and 2013, he was the New Orleans federal team lead for the White House’s Strong Cities, Strong Communities (SC2) Initiative and, from 2010 to 2011, was a White House Fellow at the Domestic Policy Council. Between 2008 and 2010, Caulfield served as chief policy advisor to Newark, New Jersey, Mayor Cory Booker. Before entering government service, Caulfield worked in management consulting as an associate at McKinsey and Company, focusing on process design and public sector-related projects. Caulfield is also a member of the board of directors for the New Orleans Business Alliance.
#2022#acquisitions#Administration#affiliate#Africa#ai#Alumni/ae#America#Analytics#apple#approach#Articles#artificial#Artificial Intelligence#Asia#atoms#Australia#BlackRock#board#boards#Building#Business#career#Carnegie Mellon University#catalyst#Center for Bits and Atoms#CEO#Chancellor#chief information officer#Chief Innovation Officer
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Birthdays 2.29
Beer Birthdays
Jessica Jones (1984)
Five Favorite Birthdays
Jimmy Dorsey; jazz saxophonist, bandleader (1904)
Tim Powers; sci-fi author (1952)
Gioacchino Rossini; Italian composer (1792)
Paolo Eleuteri Serpieri; Italian illustrator (1944)
Tempest Storm; stripper (1928)
Famous Birthdays
Fyodor Abramov; Russian author (1920)
Joss Ackland; actor (1928)
Jean Adamson; British writer and illustrator (1928)
John Byrom; English poet (1692)
Balthasar "Balthus" de Rola; Polish-French artist (1908)
Dennis Farina; actor (1944)
Phyllis Frelich; actress (1944)
Gene H. Golub; mathematician (1932)
Vance Haynes; archaeologist, geologist (1928)
John Philip Holland; invented first true submarine (1841)
Herman Hollerith; inventor (1860)
Naoko Iijima; Japanese actress and model (1968)
Rica Imai; Japanese model and actress (1984)
Jaguar; Brazilian cartoonist (1932)
Ann Lee; founded Shakers (1736)
Hermione Lee; English author, critic (1948)
Jack R. Lousma; astronaut (1936)
Sylvie Lubamba; Italian showgirl (1982)
Pepper Martin; baseball player (1904)
Patricia McKillip; writer (1948)
James Mitchell; actor and dancer (1920)
Michèle Morgan; French-American actress and singer (1920)
Howard Nemerov; poet (1920)
Antonio Neri, Florentine priest and glassmaker (1576)
Seymour Papert; South African mathematician and computer scientist (1928)
Bryce Paup; Green Bay Packers LB (1968)
Pope Paul III (1468)
Dickey Pearce; baseball player (1836)
Tony Robbins; motivational speaker, new age personality (1960)
Alex Rocco; actor (1936)
Ja Rule; rapper, actor (1976)
Antonio Sabato, Jr.; actor (1972)
Sugar Sammy; comedian (1976)
Augusta Savage; sculptor (1892)
Peter Scanavino; actor (1980)
Leonard Shoen; founder of U-Haul (1916)
Dinah Shore; actress and singer (1916)
Superman
Jan Svatopluk; Czech poet (1864)
Louie Myfanwy Thomas; Welsh writer (1908)
Howard Tayler; author and illustrator (1968)
Rakhee Thakrar; English actress (1984)
Karl Ernst von Baler; Russian naturalist (1792)
William A. Wellman; actor and director (1904)
Frank Woodley; Australian actor (1968)
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*IN SYNC Podcast Premieres: First Episode Sia’s “Breathe Me” from Six Feet Under
*IN SYNC is a podcast for anyone who loves a perfect on-screen needle-drop. With their extensive experience in music and podcasting, cultural critic Rachel Brodsky and filmmaker/podcaster Aviv Rubinstien have joined forces to create the brand-new *IN SYNC Podcast.
The show launched April 11 via Gotham West Studios. The first episode centers around Sia’s “Breathe Me” closing out cult TV show, Six Feet Under followed by classic needle-drop moments in Do Revenge, Empire Records, Wednesday, The Last Of Us and Cruel Intentions. Guests will include music supervisors Rob Lowry, Gary Calamar and Thomas Golubic as well as Jordan Ross Schindler, Creator of Cruel Intentions the Musical.
Each episode looks at one great song-to-screen sync and breaks down the cultural impact. With their extensive experience in music and podcasting, cultural critic Rachel Brodsky and filmmaker/podcaster Aviv Rubinstien have unveiled the first episode, centered around Sia’s “Breathe Me” closing out cult TV show, Six Feet Under. Brodsky and Rubinstien are often joined by guests such as the music supervisors behind these highly memorable music moments. Initial guests include music supervisors Rob Lowry, Gary Calamar and Thomas Golubic as well as Jordan Ross Schindler, Creator of Cruel Intentions the Musical and That Thing You Do! actor Tom Everett Scott.
If the first episode is indicative of the quality of the season, this is a must-listen for music and TV fans. Brodsky and Rubinstien make a strong team, especially considering this is the first episode. They’re both knowledgeable about music and media arts in general, and they mesh well conversationally. They don’t talk over each other. Likewise, they listen well and respond, and they try to add to the flow of the show, not steal the spotlight.
Finally, the first episode laid out a simple yet effective format for the show. First, they review the history of the TV or film in which the music is sourced. In this premiere episode, it was Six Feet Under from HBO. The hosts carefully explained the plot, the story arc, and the history of the show. Then, they played the song — in this case, Breath Me — and then discussed the artist (Sia) and her wild and peripatetic journey. Finally, the interview with the music supervisors is fascinating and informative.
Check out *IN SYNC. It’s another in a long line of excellent music podcasts.
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Very interesting and insightful discussion with Thomas Golubic, the Music Supervisor for Better Call Saul. (he mentions a little nugget about Gus Fring that gets debated by fans a lot)
"As Jimmy began to realize that the true version of himself is this guy who does cut corners – who revels in destroying things – we go much more towards funk. We were sort of celebrating his self-destruction, in a sense. One of the moments that was really key in his development was a sequence where Jimmy is putting on the flashy suits for the first time. He’s trying to get himself fired from Davis & Main. We had a really fun song called Scorpio by Dennis Coffee, which was one of the more gritty sounds. We realized that was the sound of Saul Goodman, or someone turning into Saul Goodman. So, we’ve moved much more towards a mix of funk and disco as we’ve gotten further along in Jimmy’s story and left a lot of the sort of more elegant jazz behind. The classical and jazz is the more sophisticated version of Jimmy he presented to the world – what he thought he could be. As he began to realize who he really is, it got grittier, it got funkier, it got darker."
- Better Call Saul Music Supervisor, Thomas Golubic (August 28, 2019)
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BCS 4x07: “Something Stupid” by Israeli indie pop group Lola Marsh
On the Better Call Saul Insider podcast, Thomas Golubic goes into great detail about the process of soliciting a new cover version of the Frank & Nancy Sinatra original. Fascinating story, so check it out.
#better call saul#bcs 4x07#music#soundtrack#something stupid#lola marsh#cold open#teaser#thomas golubic#better call saul insider#podcast
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I love you rhea seehorn. I love you bob odenkirk. I love you tom schnauz. I love you better call saul <3
#i also love you thomas golubic and everyone else in post production who was nominated and didn't win#and everyone who was never nominated but would have deserved it a thousand times#i love you#❤️❤️❤️
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2017 EMMY AWARDS NOMINATIONS – Better Call Saul (Season 3)
Outstanding Drama Series – Better Call Saul Outstanding Lead Actor in a Drama – Bob Odenkirk Outstanding Directing for a Drama – Vince Gilligan "Witness" Outstanding Writing for a Drama – Gordon Smith "Chicanery" Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Drama – Jonathan Banks Outstanding Editing for a Drama – 1) Skip Macdonald & Kelley Dixon "Witness," 2) Skip Macdonald "Chicanery" Outstanding Music Supervision – Thomas Golubic "Sunk Costs" Outstanding Sound Mixing – Larry Benjamin, Kevin Valentine, Philip W. Palmer “Witness”
#emmys#better call saul#bcs season 3#vince gilligan#odenkirk#jonathan banks#gordon smith#kelley dixon#skip macdonald#thomas golubic#chicanery#witness#sunk costs#happy...but no michael mckean is a crime#....they're saying 10 noms so i'm missing one?
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#music supervisor#nora felder#zach cowie#thomas golubic#better call saul#songs#stranger things#master of none#girls#big little lies#manish raval#tim greiving#washington post#emmy#award
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Guild Of Music Supervisors Awards: FIFA 19, Halt And Catch Fire + Love, Simon Receive Nominations!
Guild Of Music Supervisors Awards: FIFA 19, Halt And Catch Fire + Love, Simon Receive Nominations!
Lakeshore Records congratulates soundtrack partners EA Games (FIFA 19), Halt And Catch Fire Season 4, and Love, Simon on their Guild of Music Supervisors Awards nominations! Lakeshore Records released the soundtrack to The Journey: Champions (score by Hans Zimmer & Lorne Balfe), the story mode game within FIFA 19, Halt And Catch Fire Season 4 (Lakeshore released the series score by Paul…
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#EA Games#FIFA 19#Halt And Catch Fire#Love Simon#Season Kent#Steve Shnur#The Journey: Champions#Thomas Golubic
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Jagged Little Pill - Broadway - February, 2020 (StarCuffedJeans's master) FORMAT: MP4 (HD) CAST: Elizabeth Stanley (Mary Jane Healy), Celia Gooding (Frankie Healy), Sean Allan Krill (Steve Healy), Derek Klena (Nick Healy), Ezra Menas (u/s Jo), Kathryn Gallagher (Bella), Antonio Cipriano (Phoenix), Logan Hart (Andrew Montefiore), Nora Schell (Pharmacist/Therapist), Kelsey Orem (s/w Jill/Teacher), Heather Lang (Courtney), Jane Bruce (Denise), Ebony Williams (Barista), Zach Hess (Drug Dealer), Max Kumangai (Doctor), Annelise Baker (Kelsey), John Cardoza, Kei Tsuruharatani, Kelsey Orem, Ken Wulf Clark, Nora Schell, Yeman Brown NOTES: Begins in the middle of the opening number. Clear picture and good sound throughout. Jagged Little Pill - Broadway - November, 2019 (Preview) (StarCuffedJeans's master) FORMAT: MP4 (HD) CAST: Elizabeth Stanley (Mary Jane Healy), Celia Gooding (Frankie Healy), Sean Allan Krill (Steve Healy), Derek Klena (Nick Healy), Lauren Patten (Jo), Kathryn Gallagher (Bella), Antonio Cipriano (Phoenix), Logan Hart (Andrew Montefiore), Annelise Baker, Ebony Williams, Ezra Menas, Heather Lang, Jane Brusch, John Cardoza, Kei Tsuruharatani, Ken Wulf Clark, Laurel Harris, Logan Hart, Max Kumangai, Nora Schell NOTES: Stunning HD capture of the Alanis Morrisette musical in Broadway Previews. Filmed from the left orchestra with a mix of wides, mediums, and closeups. Fantastic performances all around with the action well-followed. Jekyll and Hyde - Broadway - December 19, 1999 (Major's master) FORMAT: VOB (with smalls) (SD) CAST: Joseph Mahowald (u/s Henry Jekyll/Edward Hyde), Coleen Sexton (u/s Lucy Harris), Christy Tarr (u/s Lisa/Emma Carew), Stuart Marland (u/s Gabriel John Utterson) Jekyll and Hyde - Broadway - 2000 (Pro-Shot's master) FORMAT: MP4 (HD) CAST: Rob Evan (Henry Jekyll/Edward Hyde), Coleen Sexton (Lucy Harris), Andrea Rivette (Lisa/Emma Carew), George Merritt (Gabriel John Utterson), Robert Jensen (Simon Stride), Corinne Melançon (Lady Beaconsfield), Martin Van Treuren (Lord Savage), Stuart Marland (General Lord Glossop), Bill E Dietrich (Sir Archibald Proops/Spider), David Chaney (Bisset) Jekyll and Hyde - Dortmund - October 18, 2019 (Rumpel's master) FORMAT: VOB (with smalls) (SD) CAST: David Jakobs (Henry Jekyll/Edward Hyde), Bettina Mönch (Lucy Harris), Milica Jovanovic (Lisa/Emma Carew), Morgan Moody (Gabriel John Utterson), Tom Zahner (Sir Danvers Carew), Florian Sigmund (Simon Stride), Johanna Schoppe (Lady Beaconsfield), Mario Ahlborn (Bishop von Basingstoke), Georg Kirketerp (Lord Savage), Georg Kirketerp (General Lord Glossop), Jessica Troncha (Nellie) Jekyll and Hyde - Lancaster, Pennsylvania - 2020 (Pro-Shot's master) FORMAT: MP4 (HD) CAST: Randy Jeter (Henry Jekyll/Edward Hyde), Molly Grace B (Lucy Harris), Madison Paige Buck (Lisa/Emma Carew) NOTES: A special 90 minute version made with the collaboration of MTI and Wildhorn, streamed officially due to the novel Coronavirus. Jersey Boys - Las Vegas - December 22, 2007 FORMAT: VOB (no smalls) (SD) CAST: Rick Faugno (Frankie Valli), Bryan McElroy (Tommy Devito), Jeff Leibow (Nick Massi), Andrew Rannells (Bob Gaudio), Joyce Chittick (Mary Delgado), Jonathan Hadley (Bob Crewe), Ken Krugman (Gyp De Carlo), Jonathan Gerard Rodriguez (Joey), Jason Martinez (Norm Waxman), Julia Krohn (Lorraine), Lauren Tartaglia (s/w Lorraine), Natalie Bradshaw (Francine), John Salvatore (Billy Dixon), Michael James Scott (Hal Miller), Kristofer McNeeley (Hank Majewski) NOTES: A little shaky at times, and a little obstruction from some heads downstage. Great energy from this cast, which became the original Las Vegas cast, from master. A- Jersey Boys - The Netherlands - 2013-, 2014 (Highlights) FORMAT: MP4 (SD) CAST: Maarten Smeele (Frankie Valli), Martijn Vogel (Frankie Valli), René van Kooten (Tommy Devito), Robbert van den Bergh (Nick Massi), Dieter Spileers (Bob Gaudio) NOTES: Minimal highlights includes: Walk Like a Man (Martijn), Walk Like a Man (Maarten), Sherry (Maarten) and Big Girls don't Cry (Maarten). Jersey Boys - The Netherlands - July 27, 2014 (Closing Night) (Highlights) FORMAT: MP4 (HD) CAST: Tim Driesen (Frankie Valli), René van Kooten (Tommy Devito), Robbert van den Bergh (Nick Massi), Dieter Spileers (Bob Gaudio), Barry Beijer (Bob Crewe), Hugo Haenen (Gyp De Carlo), Willemijn de Vries (Lorraine), Myrthe Maljers (Francine) NOTES: Highlights from the last show in The Netherlands. Highlights include Beggin, Bye Bye Baby, Cant take my eyes of you, Dawn, Oh what a night, Sherry, Working my way back to you. No good quality at all, heads in the way, sometimes focused on the heads )the obstruction ones' instead of the stage, no zoom at all Jesus Christ Superstar - 50th Anniversary Tour - February 18, 2020 (screechout's master) FORMAT: MTS CAST: Aaron LaVigne (Jesus Christ), James Delisco Beeks (Judas Iscariot), Jenna Rubaii (Mary Magdalene), Tommy Sherlock (Pontius Pilate), Alvin Crawford (Caiaphas), Tyce Green (Annas), Paul Louis Lessard (King Herod), Eric A Lewis (Simon Zealotes), Tommy McDowell (Peter), Brian Golub, Brittany Rose Hammond, Chelsea Williams, David André, Erick Patrick, Garfield Hammonds, Jacob Lacopo, Jasmine Schmenk, Keirsten Nicole Hodgens, Pepe Nufrio, Sandyredd, Sara Andreas, Sarah Parker, Sheila Jones, Wesley Barnes NOTES: Some blurriness and washout, especially when not zoomed in, but mostly complete and unobstructed. Jesus Christ Superstar - Live In Concert (NBC) - April 1, 2018 (Pro-Shot's master) FORMAT: MP4 (HD) CAST: Jason Tam (Peter Patrone), John Legend (Jesus Christ), Brandon Victor Dixon (Judas Iscariot), Sara Bareilles (Mary Magdalene), Ben Daniels (Pontius Pilate), Norm Lewis (Caiaphas), Jin Ha (Annas), Alice Cooper (King Herod)
Jesus Christ Superstar - UK Arena Tour (2012) - 2012 (Pro-Shot's video master) Format: MP4(SD) CAST: Ben Forster (Jesus Christ), Tim Minchin (Judas Iscariot), Melanie C (Mary Magdalene), Alexander Hanson (Pontius Pilate), Pete Gallagher (Caiaphas), Gerard Bentall (Annas), Chris Moyles (King Herod), Giovanni Spano (Simon Zealotes) NOTES: Proshot of the UK Arena Tour at Arena Birmingham. It was broadcasted to cinemas worldwide on the 29th October and 1st November 2012 Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat - Los Angeles, California - February 16, 2002 (House-Cam's master) FORMAT: VOB (with smalls) (SD) CAST: Roger Befeler (Joseph), Eden Espinosa (Narrator), John LaLonde (Pharaoh), Matt Logan (Simeon), Jennifer Rias NOTES: Single camera house-cam recording Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat - Tecklenburg, Germany - 2014 FORMAT: VOB (no smalls) (SD) CAST: Alexander Klaws (Joseph), Sandy Mölling (Narrator), Julian Looman (Pharaoh), Reinhard Brussmann (Jacob), Alexander Bellinkx (Reuben), Marco Herse Foti (Napthali), Thomas Hohler (Simeon), Andrew Hill (Levi), Sebastian Brandmeir (Gad), Jürgen Brehm (Issachar), Benjamin Witthoff (Asher), Jan Altenbockum (Dan), Florian Theiler (Zebulun), Sebastian Smulders (Judah), Cihan Demir (Benjamin), Sebastian Brandmeir (Butler), Jürgen Brehm (Baker), Juliane Bischoff (Mrs Potiphar), Benjamin Witthoff (Potiphar) Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat - The Netherlands - 2009 (Pro-Shot's master) FORMAT: VOB (no smalls) (SD) CAST: Hein Gerrits (u/s Joseph), Renée van Wegberg (Narrator), Paul Walthuis (Pharaoh), Leo Hogeboom (Jacob), Robin van den Akker (Issachar), Mathijs Pater (Zebulun), Yves Adang (Benjamin) Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat - The Netherlands - March 4, 2009 FORMAT: VOB (with smalls) (SD) CAST: Freek Bartels (Joseph), Renée van Wegberg (Narrator), Leo Hogeboom (Jacob) NOTES: Recorded from the mezzanine. Restricted view due to some heads in the way and wandering by master. Wide shot on an angle. Audio is good. Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat - The Netherlands - April 14, 2009 (Highlights) FORMAT: VOB (with smalls) (SD) CAST: Freek Bartels (Joseph), Renée van Wegberg (Narrator), Leo Hogeboom (Jacob) NOTES: Good zooms but sometimes the camera is a bit unstable and there are some heads in the way. It's recorded between two seats so you cannot see the full stage. Unfortunately, it's only Act 1. Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat - The Netherlands - April 14, 2009 (Highlights) FORMAT: VOB (with smalls) (SD) CAST: Freek Bartels (Joseph), Renée van Wegberg (Narrator), Leo Hogeboom (Jacob) NOTES: Good zooms but sometimes the camera is a bit unstable and there are some heads in the way. It's recorded between two seats so you cannot see the full stage. Unfortunately, it's only Act 1. Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat - The Netherlands - July 26, 2009
FORMAT: video CAST: Mathijs Pater (Joseph), Renée van Wegberg (Narrator), René van Kooten (Pharaoh), Leo Hogeboom (Jacob), Robin van den Akker (Issachar), Mathijs Pater (Zebulun), Yves Adang (Benjamin) NOTES: Recorded from the left balcony. Decent quality, decent audio. Some zooms but restricted. Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat - Vienna - June 17, 2000 FORMAT: VOB (with smalls) (SD) CAST: Hannes Muik (Joseph), Lucy Thoulds (Narrator), Uwe Kröger (Pharaoh), Peter Faerber (Jacob), Peter Faerber (Potiphar) Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat - Vienna - June 17, 2000 FORMAT: VOB (with smalls) (SD) CAST: Hannes Muik (Joseph), Lucy Thoulds (Narrator), Uwe Kröger (Pharaoh), Peter Faerber (Jacob), Peter Faerber (Potiphar) & Juliet - Manchester Opera House - September 14, 2019 (Matinee) (Preview) (Highlights) (queenofthedead's master) FORMAT: MP4 (SD) CAST: Miriam-Teak Lee (Juliet), Cassidy Janson (Anne Hathaway), Oliver Tompsett (William Shakespeare), Jordan Luke Gage (Romeo), Tim Mahendran (Francois), Arun Blair-Mangat (May), Melanie La Barrie (Nurse "Angelique"), David Bedella (Lance), Jocasta Almgill (Lady Capulet/Nell), Ivan de Freitas (Lord Capulet/Sly), Kirstie Skivington (Eleanor/Benvolio), Antoine Murray-Straughan (Augustine), Nathan Lorainey-Dineen (Gregory), Alex Tranter (Henry), Rhian Duncan (Imogen), Grace Mouat (Judith), Kieran Lai (Kempe), Danielle Fiamanya (Lucy), Dillon Scott-Lewis (Richard), Kerri Norville (Susanna) NOTES: This is PARTIAL. Only a few minutes are missing from act 1 but video ends mid-way through act 2. An hour and a half of footage split into 8 mp4 files. Minimal heads obstructing view, however has problems with focus and washout. This was the show’s 5th ever performance in Manchester. & Juliet - West End - January 2, 2020 (Matinee) (wheredidtherockgo's master) FORMAT: AVI (SD) CAST: Miriam-Teak Lee (Juliet), Cassidy Janson (Anne Hathaway), Oliver Tompsett (William Shakespeare), Jordan Luke Gage (Romeo), Tim Mahendran (Francois), Arun Blair-Mangat (May), Melanie La Barrie (Nurse "Angelique"), David Bedella (Lance), Jocasta Almgill (Lady Capulet/Nell), Ivan de Freitas (Lord Capulet/Sly), Kirstie Skivington (Eleanor/Benvolio), Antoine Murray-Straughan (Augustine), Christopher Parkinson (s/w Fletcher), Nathan Lorainey-Dineen (Gregory), Sophie Usher (s/w Gwynne), Alex Tranter (Henry), Rhian Duncan (Imogen), Grace Mouat (Judith), Kieran Lai (Kempe), Kerri Norville (Susanna) NOTES: 28 files. I was seating next to a speaker so the sound isn't great especially during the songs. filmed with a spycam so not a good quality. Filmed blindly and I was holding the cam near my face so you can hear my ugly laugh. Date stamp wrong. & Juliet - West End - December, 2019 (queenofthedead's master) FORMAT: AVI (SD) CAST: Miriam-Teak Lee (Juliet), Cassidy Janson (Anne Hathaway), Ivan de Freitas (u/s William Shakespeare), Jordan Luke Gage (Romeo), Tim Mahendran (Francois), Arun Blair-Mangat (May), Melanie La Barrie (Nurse "Angelique"), David Bedella (Lance), Jocasta Almgill (Lady Capulet/Nell), Christopher Parkinson (u/s Lord Capulet/Sly), Kirstie Skivington (Eleanor/Benvolio), Antoine Murray-Straughan (Augustine), Nathan Lorainey-Dineen (Gregory), Alex Tranter (Henry), Rhian Duncan (Imogen), Grace Mouat (Judith), Kieran Lai (Kempe), Danielle Fiamanya (Lucy), Dillon Scott-Lewis (Richard), Kerri Norville (Susanna) NOTES: Video occasionally has minor obstructions at the bottom of the screen but no action is missed. Doesn't include the ‘can’t stop this feeling’ finale. & Juliet - West End - February, 2020 (hitmewithyourbethshot's master) FORMAT: MTS CAST: Grace Mouat (u/s Juliet), Cassidy Janson (Anne Hathaway), Oliver Tompsett (William Shakespeare), Jordan Luke Gage (Romeo), Tim Mahendran (Francois), Arun Blair-Mangat (May), Melanie La Barrie (Nurse "Angelique"), Ivan de Freitas (u/s Lance), Jocasta Almgill (Lady Capulet/Nell), Christopher Parkinson (s/w Lord Capulet/Sly), Kirstie Skivington (Eleanor/Benvolio), Antoine Murray-Straughan (Augustine), Sophie Usher (s/w Gwynne), Alex Tranter (Henry), Rhian Duncan (Imogen), Kieran Lai (Kempe), Danielle Fiamanya (Lucy), Dillon Scott-Lewis (Richard), Kerri Norville (Susanna), Josh Baker (s/w Thomas) & Juliet - West End - March, 2020 (queenofthedead's master) FORMAT: MP4 (SD) CAST: Grace Mouat (u/s Juliet), Cassidy Janson (Anne Hathaway), Oliver Tompsett (William Shakespeare), Alex Tranter (u/s Romeo), Dillon Scott-Lewis (u/s Francois), Nathan Lorainey-Dineen (u/s May), Melanie La Barrie (Nurse "Angelique"), David Bedella (Lance), Jocasta Almgill (Lady Capulet/Nell), Ivan de Freitas (Lord Capulet/Sly), Antoine Murray-Straughan (Augustine), Billy Nevers (s/w Cuthbert), Sophie Usher (s/w Gwynne), Josh Baker (s/w Henry), Rhian Duncan (Imogen), Kieran Lai (Kempe), Kerri Norville (Susanna) NOTES: Lots of wide shots with some nice close-ups too. A good video for seeing the set and choreography. Grace has really grown into the role since her debut! & Juliet - West End - March, 2020 (2) (Highlights) (queenofthedead's master) FORMAT: MP4 (HD) CAST: Miriam-Teak Lee (Juliet), Kirstie Skivington (u/s Anne Hathaway), Oliver Tompsett (William Shakespeare), Jordan Luke Gage (Romeo), Tim Mahendran (Francois), Arun Blair-Mangat (May), Melanie La Barrie (Nurse "Angelique"), David Bedella (Lance), Jocasta Almgill (Lady Capulet/Nell), Billy Nevers (s/w Lord Capulet/Cuthbert), Jaye Marshall (Margaret/Benvolio), Antoine Murray-Straughan (Augustine), Nathan Lorainey-Dineen (Gregory), Rhian Duncan (Imogen), Grace Mouat (Judith), Kieran Lai (Kempe), Danielle Fiamanya (Lucy), Kerri Norville (Susanna), Josh Baker (s/w Thomas) NOTES: 2.53GB in mp4 files/1:06:55 Notes: Mostly very obstructed but a fun cover show with Kirstie as Anne, Billy’s Debut as Lord Capulet, Josh as the bathroom attendant and Jaye as Benvolio. & Juliet - West End - November, 2019 (queenofthedead's master) FORMAT: MTS CAST: Grace Mouat (u/s Juliet), Cassidy Janson (Anne Hathaway), Oliver Tompsett (William Shakespeare), Jordan Luke Gage (Romeo), Tim Mahendran (Francois), Arun Blair-Mangat (May), Melanie La Barrie (Nurse "Angelique"), David Bedella (Lance), Jocasta Almgill (Lady Capulet/Nell), Ivan de Freitas (Lord Capulet/Sly), Kirstie Skivington (Eleanor/Benvolio), Antoine Murray-Straughan (Augustine), Nathan Lorainey-Dineen (Gregory), Sophie Usher (s/w Gwynne), Alex Tranter (Henry), Rhian Duncan (Imogen), Kieran Lai (Kempe), Danielle Fiamanya (Lucy) NOTES: First video released of the show in London and Grace’s amazing Juliet debut! Sophie swings on in her track. Video wanders a little bit in the first 5 mins but then great. Not obstructed by any heads. Includes HQ bows. Nft until 1st april 2020 & Juliet - West End - November, 2019 (2) (hitmewithyourbethshot's master) FORMAT: MTS CAST: Miriam-Teak Lee (Juliet), Cassidy Janson (Anne Hathaway), Oliver Tompsett (William Shakespeare), Jordan Luke Gage (Romeo), Tim Mahendran (Francois), Arun Blair-Mangat (May), Melanie La Barrie (Nurse "Angelique"), David Bedella (Lance), Jocasta Almgill (Lady Capulet/Nell), Ivan de Freitas (Lord Capulet/Sly), Kirstie Skivington (Eleanor/Benvolio), Antoine Murray-Straughan (Augustine), Nathan Lorainey-Dineen (Gregory), Sophie Usher (s/w Gwynne), Alex Tranter (Henry), Rhian Duncan (Imogen), Kieran Lai (Kempe), Danielle Fiamanya (Lucy), Dillon Scott-Lewis (Richard), Kerri Norville (Susanna)
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Congrats to Emil on his second European title. Wish I was there.
Short Program
Emil Nekola - CZE - 103.96
Adam Loughton - GBR - 99.15
Paul Kuan Yim Han - FRA - 96.53
Alessandro Rinaldi - ITA - 86.46
Nikolais Januais - LAT - 84.81
Brian Cartier - FRA - 83.75
Andrin Caspari - SUI - 79.26
Simeon Chernov - POL - 78.26
Giovanni Schiavone - ITA - 77.35
Carlo Bonacci - ITA - 77.03
Magnar Holberg - SWE - 75.98
Zakhar Plotnikov - GER - 74.75
Jevgeni Semenjov - EST - 73.74
Ambrosi Lomidze - GEO - 73.96
Christiano Tedesco - AUT - 72.57
Carlos-Emiliano Serrano Aguado - ESP - 71.65
Ethan Hamilton - GBR - 70.85
Nazar Kozak - UKR - 70.41
Henrik Hatala - FIN - 68.33
Kreo Zupan - CRO - 67.87
Gabriel Aaron Martin - MON - 66.07
Thomas Marek - SVK - 65.15
Issak Ashenkazi - ISR - 64.94
Hakan Matarci - TUR - 64.33
Nikolai Vinogradov - HUN - 62.49
Filip Adamchik - CZE - 60.24
David Heshowitz - BUL - 53.26
Thomas McLaughlin - IRL - 48.07
Filip Golub - SVK - 46.28
Free Program
Emil Nekola - CZE - 212.16
Adam Loughton - GBR - 200.98
Alessandro Rinaldi - ITA - 173.46
Paul Kuan Yim Han - FRA - 171.24
Andrin Caspari - SUI - 168.75
Brian Cartier - FRA - 157.21
Carlo Bonacci - ITA - 157.17
Nikolais Januais - LAT - 151.54
Ambrosi Lomidze - GEO - 147.69
Jevgeni Semenjov - EST - 144.56
Issak Ashenkazi - ISR - 137.40
Magnar Holberg - SWE - 136.97
Christiano Tedesco - AUT - 135.11
Giovanni Schiavone - ITA - 134.27
Carlos-Emilliano Serrano Aguado - ESP - 133.54
Henrik Hatala - FIN - 129.95
Tomas Marek - SVK - 124.57
Zakhar Plotnikov - GER - 123.27
Hakan Matarci - TUR - 118.49
Kreo Zupan - CRO - 114.96
Gabriel Aaron Martin - MON - 113.47
Simeon Chernov - POL - 113.33
Nazar Kozan - UKR - 111.57
Ethan Hamilton - GBR - 103.79
Overall
Emil Nekola - CZE - (1, 1) - 316.58
Adam Loughton - GBR - (2, 2) - 300.13
Paul Kuan Yim Han - FRA - (3, 4) - 267.77
Alessandro Rinaldi - ITA - (4, 3) - 259.92
Andrin Caspari - SUI - (7, 5) - 248.01
Brian Cartier - FRA - (6, 6) - 240.92
Nikolais Januais - LAT - (5, 8) - 236.35
Carlo Bonacci - ITA - (10, 7) - 230.83
Ambrosi Lomidze - GEO - (14, 9) - 220.65
Jevgeni Semenjov - EST - (13, 10) - 218.30
Magnar Holberg - SWE - (11, 12) - 212.95
Giovanni Schiavone - ITA - (9, 14) - 211.62
Christiano Tedesco - AUT - (15, 13) 207.68
Carlos-Emilliano Serrano Aguado - ESP - (16, 15) - 205.19
Issak Ashenkazi - ISR - (23, 11) - 202.34
Henrik Hatala - FIN - (19, 16) - 198.28
Zakhar Plotnikov - GER - (11, 18) - 197.97
Simeon Chernov - POL - (8, 22) - 191.59
Thomas Marek - SVK - (22, 17) - 189.72
Kreo Zupan - CRO - (20, 20) - 182.83
Hakan Matarci - TUR - (24, 19) - 182.82
Nazar Kozak - UKR - (18, 23) - 181.98
Gabriel Aaron Martin - MON - (21, 21) - 179.54
Ethan Hamilton - GBR - (17, 24) - 174.64
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The 1619 Project https://nyti.ms/2Hjvu0L
The 1619 Project is a major initiative from The New York Times observing the 400th anniversary of the beginning of American slavery. It aims to reframe the country’s history, understanding 1619 as our true founding, and placing the consequences of slavery and the contributions of black Americans at the very center of the story we tell ourselves about who we are.
"We asked 16 writers to bring consequential moments in African-American history to life. Here are their poems and stories:"
Published August 14, 2019 | "1619 Project" New York Times | Posted August 16, 2019 |
⬤ August 1619
A poem by Clint Smith
In Aug. 1619, a ship arrived in Point Comfort, Va., carrying more than 20 enslaved Africans, the first on record to be brought to the English colony of Virginia. They were among the 12.5 million Africans forced into the trans-Atlantic slave trade, their journey to the New World today known as the Middle Passage.
Over the course of 350 years,
36,000 slave ships crossed the Atlantic
Ocean. I walk over to the globe & move
my finger back & forth between
the fragile continents. I try to keep
count how many times I drag
my hand across the bristled
hemispheres, but grow weary of chasing
a history that swallowed me.
For every hundred people who were
captured & enslaved, forty died before they
ever reached the New World.
I pull my index finger from Angola
to Brazil & feel the bodies jumping from
the ship.
I drag my thumb from Ghana
to Jamaica & feel the weight of dysentery
make an anvil of my touch.
I slide my ring finger from Senegal
to South Carolina & feel the ocean
separate a million families.
The soft hum of history spins
on its tilted axis. A cavalcade of ghost ships
wash their hands of all they carried.
Clint Smith is a doctoral candidate at Harvard University and the author of the poetry collection “Counting Descent,” as well as a forthcoming nonfiction book, “How the Word Is Passed.” Photo illustration by Jon Key. Diagram: Getty Images.
⬤ March 5, 1770
A poem by Yusef Komunyakaa
In 1770, Crispus Attucks, a fugitive from slavery who worked as dockworker, became the first American to die for the cause of independence after being shot in a clash with British troops.
African & Natick blood-born
known along paths up & down
Boston Harbor, escaped slave,
harpooner & rope maker,
he never dreamt a pursuit of happiness
or destiny, yet rallied
beside patriots who hurled a fury
of snowballs, craggy dirt-frozen
chunks of ice, & oyster shells
at the stout flank of redcoats,
as the 29th Regiment of Foot
aimed muskets, waiting for fire!
How often had he walked, gazing
down at gray timbers of the wharf,
as if to find a lost copper coin?
Wind deviled cold air as he stood
leaning on his hardwood stick,
& then two lead bullets
tore his chest, blood reddening snow
on King Street, March 5, 1770,
first to fall on captain’s command.
Five colonists lay for calling hours
in Faneuil Hall before sharing a grave
at the Granary Burying Ground.
They had laid a foundering stone
for the Minutemen at Lexington
& Concord, first to defy & die,
& an echo of the future rose over
the courtroom as John Adams
defended the Brits, calling the dead
a “motley rabble of saucy boys,
negroes & mulattoes, Irish
teagues & outlandish jacktars,”
who made soldiers fear for their lives,
& at day’s end only two would pay
with the branding of their thumbs.
Yusef Komunyakaa is a poet whose books include “The Emperor of Water Clocks” and “Neon Vernacular,” for which he received the Pulitzer Prize. He teaches at N.Y.U. Photo illustration by Jon Key. Boston Massacre: National Archives. Attucks: Getty Images.
⬤ 1773
A poem by Eve L. Ewing
In 1773, a publishing house in London released “Poems on Various Subjects, Religious and Moral,” by Phillis Wheatley, a 20-year-old enslaved woman in Boston, making her the first African-American to publish a book of poetry.
Pretend I wrote this at your grave.
Pretend the grave is marked. Pretend we know where it is.
Copp’s Hill, say. I have been there and you might be.
Foremother, your name is the boat that brought you.
Pretend I see it in the stone, with a gruesome cherub.
Children come with thin paper and charcoal to touch you.
Pretend it drizzles and a man in an ugly plastic poncho
circles the Mathers, all but sniffing the air warily.
We don’t need to pretend for this part.
There is a plaque in the grass for Increase, and Cotton.
And Samuel, dead at 78, final son, who was there
on the day when they came looking for proof.
Eighteen of them watched you and they signed to say:
the Poems specified in the following Page, were (as we verily believe)
written by Phillis, a young Negro Girl, who was but a few Years since,
brought an uncultivated Barbarian from Africa
and the abolitionists cheered at the blow to Kant
the Negroes of Africa have by nature no feeling that rises above the trifling
and the enlightened ones bellowed at the strike against Hume
no ingenious manufacturers amongst them, no arts, no sciences
Pretend I was there with you, Phillis, when you asked in a letter to no one:
How many iambs to be a real human girl?
Which turn of phrase evidences a righteous heart?
If I know of Ovid may I keep my children?
Pretend that on your grave there is a date
and it is so long before my heroes came along to call you a coon
for the praises you sang of your captors
who took you on discount because they assumed you would die
that it never ever hurt your feelings.
Or pretend you did not love America.
Phillis, I would like to think that after you were released unto the world,
when they jailed your husband for his debts
and you lay in the maid’s quarters at night,
a free and poor woman with your last living boy,
that you thought of the Metamorphoses,
making the sign of Arachne in the tangle of your fingers.
And here, after all, lay the proof:
The man in the plastic runs a thumb over stone. The gray is slick and tough.
Phillis Wheatley: thirty-one. Had misery enough.
Eve L. Ewing is the author of “1919,” the “Ironheart” series, “Ghosts in the Schoolyard: Racism and School Closings on Chicago’s South Side” and “Electric Arches.” She is a professor at the University of Chicago.
⬤ Aug. 30, 1800
Fiction by Barry Jenkins
In 1800, Gabriel Prosser, a 24-year-old literate blacksmith, organized one of the most extensively planned slave rebellions, with the intention of forming an independent black state in Virginia. After other enslaved people shared details of his plot, Gabriel’s Rebellion was thwarted. He was later tried, found guilty and hanged.
As he approached the Brook Swamp beneath the city of Richmond, Va., Gabriel Prosser looked to the sky. Up above, the clouds coalesced into an impenetrable black, bringing on darkness and a storm the ferocity of which the region had scarcely seen. He may have cried and he may have prayed but the thing Gabriel did not do was turn back. He was expecting fire on this night and would make no concessions for the coming rain.
And he was not alone. A hundred men; 500 men; a thousand men had gathered from all over the state on this 30th day of August 1800. Black men, African men — men from the fields and men from the house, men from the church and the smithy — men who could be called many things but after this night would not be called slaves gathered in the flooding basin armed with scythes, swords, bayonets and smuggled guns.
One of the men tested the rising water, citing the Gospel of John: “For an angel went down at a certain season into the pool, and troubled the water: whosoever then first after the troubling of the water stepped in was made whole of whatsoever disease he had.” But the water would not abate. As the night wore on and the storm persisted, Gabriel was overcome by a dawning truth: The Gospel would not save him. His army could not pass.
Gov. James Monroe was expecting them. Having returned from his appointment to France and built his sweeping Highland plantation on the periphery of Charlottesville, Monroe wrote to his mentor Thomas Jefferson seeking advice on his “fears of a negro insurrection.” When the Negroes Tom and Pharoah of the Sheppard plantation betrayed Gabriel’s plot on a Saturday morning, Monroe was not surprised. By virtue of the privilege bestowed upon him as his birthright, he was expecting them.
Gabriel Prosser was executed Oct. 10, 1800. Eighteen hundred; the year Denmark Vesey bought his freedom, the year of John Brown’s and Nat Turner’s births. As he awaited the gallows near the foot of the James River, Gabriel could see all that was not to be — the first wave of men tasked to set fire to the city perimeter, the second to fell a city weakened by the diversion; the governor’s mansion, James Monroe brought to heel and served a lash for every man, woman and child enslaved on his Highland plantation; the Quakers, Methodists, Frenchmen and poor whites who would take up with his army and create a more perfect union from which they would spread the infection of freedom — Gabriel saw it all.
He even saw Tom and Pharoah, manumitted by the government of Virginia, a thousand dollars to their master as recompense; a thousand dollars for the sabotage of Gabriel’s thousand men. He did not see the other 25 men in his party executed. Instead, he saw Monroe in an audience he wanted no part of and paid little notice to. For Gabriel Prosser the blacksmith, leader of men and accepting no master’s name, had stepped into the troubled water. To the very last, he was whole. He was free.
Barry Jenkins was born and raised in Miami. He is a director and writer known for his adaptation of James Baldwin’s “If Beale Street Could Talk” and “Moonlight,” which won the Academy Award for Best Picture. Photo illustration by Jon Key. House: Sergey Golub via Wikimedia. Landscape, right: Peter Traub via Wikimedia.
⬤ Jan. 1, 1808
Fiction by Jesmyn Ward
In 1808, the Act Prohibiting Importation of Slaves went into effect, banning the importation of enslaved people from abroad. But more than one million enslaved people who could be bought and sold were already in the country, and the breaking up of black families continued.
The whisper run through the quarters like a river swelling to flood. We passed the story to each other in the night in our pallets, in the day over the well, in the fields as we pulled at the fallow earth. They ain’t stealing us from over the water no more. We dreamed of those we was stolen from: our mothers who oiled and braided our hair to our scalps, our fathers who cut our first staffs, our sisters and brothers who we pinched for tattling on us, and we felt a cool light wind move through us for one breath. Felt like ease to imagine they remained, had not been stolen, would never be.
That be a foolish thing. We thought this later when the first Georgia Man come and roped us. Grabbed a girl on her way for morning water. Snatched a boy running to the stables. A woman after she left her babies blinking awake in their sack blankets. A man sharpening a hoe. They always came before dawn for us chosen to be sold south.
We didn’t understand what it would be like, couldn’t think beyond the panic, the prying, the crying, the begging and the screaming, the endless screaming from the mouth and beyond. Sounding through the whole body, breaking the heart with its volume. A blood keen. But the ones that owned and sold us was deaf to it. Was unfeeling of the tugging the children did on their fathers’ arms or the glance of a sister’s palm over her sold sister’s face for the last time. But we was all feeling, all seeing, all hearing, all smelling: We felt it for the terrible dying it was. Knowed we was walking out of one life and into another. An afterlife in a burning place.
The farther we marched, the hotter it got. Our skin grew around the rope. Our muscles melted to nothing. Our fat to bone. The land rolled to a flat bog, and in the middle of it, a city called New Orleans. When we shuffled into that town of the dead, they put us in pens. Fattened us. Tried to disguise our limps, oiled the pallor of sickness out of our skins, raped us to assess our soft parts, then told us lies about ourselves to make us into easier sells. Was told to answer yes when they asked us if we were master seamstresses, blacksmiths or lady’s maids. Was told to disavow the wives we thought we heard calling our names when we first woke in the morning, the husbands we imagined lying with us, chest to back, while the night’s torches burned, the children whose eyelashes we thought we could still feel on our cheeks when the rain turned to a fine mist while we stood in lines outside the pens waiting for our next hell to take legs and seek us out.
Trade our past lives for new deaths.
Jesmyn Ward is the author of “Sing, Unburied, Sing,” which won a National Book Award. She was a 2017 MacArthur fellow. Photo illustration by Jon Key. Landscape: Peter Traub via Wikimedia.
⬤ July 27, 1816
A poem by Tyehimba Jess
In 1816, American troops attacked Negro Fort, a stockade in Spanish Florida established by the British and left to the Black Seminoles, a Native American nation of Creek refugees, free black people and fugitives from slavery. Nearly all the soldiers, women and children in the fort were killed.
They weren’t headed north to freedom —
They fled away from the North Star,
turned their back on the Mason-Dixon line,
put their feet to freedom by fleeing
further south to Florida.
Ran to where ’gator and viper roamed
free in the mosquito swarm of Suwannee.
They slipped out deep after sunset,
shadow to shadow, shoulder to shoulder,
stealthing southward, stealing themselves,
steeling their souls to run steel
through any slave catcher who’d dare
try stealing them back north.
They billeted in swamp mud,
saw grass and cypress —
they waded through waves
of water lily and duckweed.
They thinned themselves in thickets
and thorn bush hiding their young
from thieves of black skin marauding
under moonlight and cloud cover.
Many once knew another shore
an ocean away, whose language,
songs, stories were outlawed
on plantation ground. In swampland,
they raised flags of their native tongues
above whisper smoke
into billowing bonfires
of chant, drum and chatter.
They remembered themselves
with their own words
bleeding into English,
bonding into Spanish,
singing in Creek and Creole.
With their sweat
forging farms in
unforgiving heat,
never forgetting scars
of the lash, fighting
battle after battle
for generations.
Creeks called them Seminole
when they bonded with renegade Creeks.
Spaniards called them cimarrones,
runaways — escapees from Carolina
plantation death-prisons.
English simply called them maroons,
flattening the Spanish to make them
seem alone, abandoned, adrift —
but they were bonded,
side by side,
Black and Red,
in a blood red hue —
maroon.
Sovereignty soldiers,
Black refugees,
self-abolitionists, fighting
through America’s history,
marooned in a land
they made their own,
acre after acre,
plot after plot,
war after war,
life after life.
They fought only
for America to let them be
marooned — left alone —
in their own unchained,
singing,
worthy
blood.
Tyehimba Jess is a poet from Detroit who teaches at the College of Staten Island. He is the author of two books of poetry, “Leadbelly” and “Olio,” for which he received the 2017 Pulitzer Prize. Photo illustration by Jon Key. Cypress: Ron Clausen via Wikimedia
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Pod-Alization: *In SYNC's Preview Clip; D.C.'s First Serial Killer; Pro Football Reintegrated
*IN SYNC releases first episode preview clip *IN SYNC is a podcast for anyone who loves a perfect on-screen needle-drop. With their extensive experience in music and podcasting, cultural critic Rachel Brodsky and filmmaker/podcaster Aviv Rubinstien have joined forces to create the brand-new *IN SYNC Podcast.
The show will launch April 11 via Gotham West Studios. The first episode centers around Sia’s “Breathe Me” closing out cult TV show, Six Feet Under followed by classic needle-drop moments in Do Revenge, Empire Records, Wednesday, The Last Of Us and Cruel Intentions. Guests will include music supervisors Rob Lowry, Gary Calamar and Thomas Golubic as well as Jordan Ross Schindler, Creator of Cruel Intentions the Musical.
LISTEN + SHARE: Exclusive Episode 1 Preview Clip
Good stories and good music are two things everyone wants more of, especially in their podcast feeds. Subscribe now everywhere you listen to podcasts.
Freeway Phantom podcast on D.C.'s first serial killer to be released on May 17
Between 1971 and 1972, six Black girls ages 12 to 18 went missing in the Washington D.C. area: Their names are Carol Spinks; Darlenia Johnson; Brenda Crockett; Nenomoshia Yates; Brenda Woodard; and Diane Williams.
Each girl was found murdered and discarded alongside D.C. highways; local media began to call the killer The Freeway Phantom.
The “Phantom,” Washington D.C.’s first serial killer, taunted police with a chilling note claiming responsibility, and terrorized victims’ families with calls to their homes. Five decades later, their killer has never been brought to justice. From iHeartPodcasts, Tenderfoot TV, and Black Bar Mitzvah, Freeway Phantom will share the stories of the six victims and explore new evidence which could crack these cold cases wide open.
The ten-episode series is hosted by journalist and public radio veteran Celeste Headlee (NPR, PBS, TEDx), who’s spent the past two years sifting through boxes of documents and interviewing investigators and family members who are still haunted by these murders. One of Headlee’s most notable contributors throughout the podcast is retired D.C. police detective Romaine Jenkins, who spent a great deal of her career working on the Freeway Phantom murders.
The series also explores racial disparities, how strategies for solving murders have evolved over time, the lack of trust between law enforcement and local communities — a theme that persists today — and the role of community action in bringing forth justice.
From the creators of Atlanta Monster, Monster: D.C. Sniper, and The MLK Tapes, Freeway Phantom premieres on May 17.
Blackballed Podcast examines the "reintegration" of pro football in 1946
The Ringer Podcast Network—a Spotify Studio— has launched Blackballed, a new four-part narrative podcast hosted by Chelsea Stark-Jones examining the “Forgotten Four” Black players who reintegrated professional football in 1946.
Kenny Washington, Woody Strode, Bill Willis, and Marion Motley reintegrated professional football in 1946. They are known as the Forgotten Four. The burying of their story, and the secret ban on Black players that came before, is a critical piece of the history of the NFL’s complicated relationship with race. Episode One, featuring commentary from Keyshawn Johnson, Michael Bennett, and Ringer Staff Writer Lex Pryor, examines the early days of football in America, leading up to a "Gentlemen's Agreement" among white NFL owners to exclude all Black players from the league. This is later contrasted with Colin Kaepernick protesting the murders of Black men by police during the national anthem before NFL games in 2016 and as a result being effectively blackballed from the league. Episode Two will be released on Thursday, March 23rd, Episode Three on Tuesday, March 28th, and the series will conclude with Episode Four on Thursday, March 30th. Listen to the trailer for Blackballed HERE. Follow Blackballed HERE, part of “The Ringer NFL Show” feed.
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Interesting Papers for Week 5, 2019
The Claustrum Supports Resilience to Distraction. Atlan, G., Terem, A., Peretz-Rivlin, N., Sehrawat, K., Gonzales, B. J., Pozner, G., … Citri, A. (2018). Current Biology, 28(17), 2752–2762.e7.
Predictable Events Enhance Word Learning in Toddlers. Benitez, V. L., & Saffran, J. R. (2018). Current Biology, 28(17), 2787–2793.e4.
Risk-Constrained Reinforcement Learning with Percentile Risk Criteria. Chow, Y., Ghavamzadeh, M., Janson, L., & Pavone, M. (2018). Journal of Machine Learning Research, 18(167), 1–51.
Global Determinants of Navigation Ability. Coutrot, A., Silva, R., Manley, E., de Cothi, W., Sami, S., Bohbot, V. D., … Spiers, H. J. (2018). Current Biology, 28(17), 2861–2866.e4.
The effects of expected reward on creative problem solving. Cristofori, I., Salvi, C., Beeman, M., & Grafman, J. (2018). Cognitive, Affective, & Behavioral Neuroscience, 18(5), 925–931.
Synaptic Transfer between Rod and Cone Pathways Mediated by AII Amacrine Cells in the Mouse Retina. Graydon, C. W., Lieberman, E. E., Rho, N., Briggman, K. L., Singer, J. H., & Diamond, J. S. (2018). Current Biology, 28(17), 2739–2751.e3.
Accounting for Taste: A Multi-Attribute Neurocomputational Model Explains the Neural Dynamics of Choices for Self and Others. Harris, A., Clithero, J. A., & Hutcherson, C. A. (2018). Journal of Neuroscience, 38(37), 7952–7968.
Surprising properties of dropout in deep networks. Helmbold, D. P., & Long, P. M. (2018). Journal of Machine Learning Research, 18(200), 1–28.
Constraints on neural redundancy. Hennig, J. A., Golub, M. D., Lund, P. J., Sadtler, P. T., Oby, E. R., Quick, K. M., … Chase, S. M. (2018). eLife, 7, e36774.
Different mechanisms underlie stress-induced changes in plasticity and metaplasticity in the prefrontal cortex of juvenile and adult animals: Emotional-induced metaplasticity in the prefrontal cortex. Khazen, T., Shrivastava, K., Jada, R., Hatoum, O. A., & Maroun, M. (2018). Neurobiology of Learning and Memory, 154, 5–11.
Hyperband: A Novel Bandit-Based Approach to Hyperparameter Optimization. Li, L., Jamieson, K., DeSalvo, G., Rostamizadeh, A., & Talwalkar, A. (2018). Journal of Machine Learning Research, 18(185), 1–52.
Maximum Principle Based Algorithms for Deep Learning. Li, Q., Chen, L., Tai, C., & E, W. (2018). Journal of Machine Learning Research, 18(165), 1–29.
The human pain system exhibits higher-order plasticity (metaplasticity). Magerl, W., Hansen, N., Treede, R.-D., & Klein, T. (2018). Neurobiology of Learning and Memory, 154, 112–120.
Sex Differences in Visual Motion Processing. Murray, S. O., Schallmo, M.-P., Kolodny, T., Millin, R., Kale, A., Thomas, P., … Tadin, D. (2018). Current Biology, 28(17), 2794–2799.e3.
On the Stability of Feature Selection Algorithms. Nogueira, S., Sechidis, K., & Brown, G. (2018). Journal of Machine Learning Research, 18(174), 1–54.
On the importance of precise electrode placement for targeted transcranial electric stimulation. Opitz, A., Yeagle, E., Thielscher, A., Schroeder, C., Mehta, A. D., & Milham, M. P. (2018). NeuroImage, 181, 560–567.
Robustness of Spike Deconvolution for Neuronal Calcium Imaging. Pachitariu, M., Stringer, C., & Harris, K. D. (2018). Journal of Neuroscience, 38(37), 7976–7985.
Autophosphorylated CaMKII Facilitates Spike Propagation in Rat Optic Nerve. Partida, G. J., Fasoli, A., Fogli Iseppe, A., Ogata, G., Johnson, J. S., Thambiaiyah, V., … Ishida, A. T. (2018). Journal of Neuroscience, 38(37), 8087–8105.
Intrinsically regulated learning is modulated by synaptic dopamine signaling. Ripollés, P., Ferreri, L., Mas-Herrero, E., Alicart, H., Gómez-Andrés, A., Marco-Pallares, J., … Rodriguez-Fornells, A. (2018). eLife, 7, e38113.
Memory-Related Synaptic Plasticity Is Sexually Dimorphic in Rodent Hippocampus. Wang, W., Le, A. A., Hou, B., Lauterborn, J. C., Cox, C. D., Levin, E. R., … Gall, C. M. (2018). Journal of Neuroscience, 38(37), 7935–7951.
#science#Neuroscience#computational neuroscience#Brain science#research#neurobiology#cognition#psychophysics#machine learning#cognitive science#scientific publications
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