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babyitsmagic · 2 years
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@ofviolentdeath continued from { x }
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He didn't tighten his grip, but he didn't loosen it either, eying the other for a long moment. There was something demonic in the stranger, but... off, somehow. "Are you connected to hell?"
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thepeoplesrose · 3 days
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Mormon Wives, Golden Bachelorette, BB26, and much more - EP 46 (00:00:00) Intro Better late than never! We're back to cover all things reality TV the last two weeks. (00:02:28) The Golden Bachelorette Premiere We discuss Joan, her guys and what the golden years must be like (00:21:00) Big Brother 26 The long slow march to an eventual Angela win continues. We cover the jankie week. (00:43:37) First Brooke's Buzz Mormon Wives Update, Villains Cast, Whitney Leavitt, Real Housewives of Salt Lake City and more! (00:58:46) The Circle S7 We discuss the first 6 episodes of The Circle on Netflix season seven (01:14:57) BONUS Brooke's Buzz Brooke gives her full review of Secret Lives of Mormon Wives, and Chimp Crazy Instagram: ⁠@ThePeoplesRose⁠ (https://ift.tt/4mMzqVZ) TikTok: ⁠@ThePeoplesRose⁠ (https://ift.tt/5n1hAck) Youtube: ⁠@ThePeoplesRose (https://www.youtube.com/@ThePeoplesRose) Threads: ⁠@ThePeoplesRose (https://ift.tt/PXEqOiU) www.peoplesrose.com (https://ift.tt/7DYpV2L)
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the-book-queen · 3 years
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Hide your wallets, it’s that time again! #TBQsBookDeals
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corkcrab7-blog · 5 years
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With Respect: Remembering Aretha Franklin
In 1965, Otis Redding wrote and recorded the song "Respect," which became one of his biggest hits, reaching the Top 5 of the R&B charts and crossing over to the Pop Top 40. Two years later, Aretha Franklin released her version of Redding's song, and after he heard it for the first time, Otis said, "I just lost my song. That girl took it away from me." Redding was hardly alone in that. Aretha Franklin didn't write "(You Make Me Feel Like) A Natural Woman," "Chain of Fools," "I Never Loved a Man (The Way I Love You)," "Baby I Love You," or "The Weight," either, but once she recorded them, those songs were hers. It wasn't just that Aretha outsang the folks who originally recorded those tunes, though she could and often did do that -- she also put a part of herself into them that no one could take from her. When Otis Redding sang "Respect," it was the story of a man who wanted his woman to treat him right after a long, hard day. In Aretha's hands, it became something larger, a demand that she be given her due both as a woman and as a person of color. In the year that the Black Panther Party for Self Defense began making headlines and race riots tore through through many major American cities, Franklin's version of "Respect" became a rallying cry, not just another R&B hit but a demand from the larger culture that she and her brothers and sisters were owed much more than they received.
Aretha Franklin, who died after a long battle with pancreatic cancer on Thursday, was one of the true icons of soul music, an artist whose superb command of her instrument and the unforced but passionate impact of her vocals at once defined the genre and transcended it. Franklin grew up in the Baptist church, and gospel music was a cornerstone of her musical approach. Franklin never truly walked away from it, periodically recording spiritual material throughout her career, and the echoes of the hymns she recorded in her teens were clearly audible in her most celebrated work. Franklin's best work was also steeped in the traditions of Southern soul, which was a bit more of a surprise. She grew up in Detroit, and didn't truly embrace that sound until she struck a deal with Atlantic Records in 1967 and went to Muscle Shoals, Alabama, then a major center in R&B recording, to cut her first tracks for the label with producer Jerry Wexler at the controls. While the sessions would prove contentious and she would never record in Muscle Shoals again, with "I Never Loved a Man (The Way I Love You)" and "Do Right Woman, Do Right Man," Franklin cracked the code of a sound that had previously eluded her, finding a musical environment where she truly seemed at home, and from that point on, she was an unstoppable force.
Aretha Franklin was born on March 25, 1942, and like many soul music greats, her musical roots were in gospel, with her connection to the music running deeper than most. Her father was the Reverend C.L. Franklin, pastor of the New Bethel Baptist Church in Detroit and one of the best known African-American evangelists of his day. In addition to preaching at his own church, Rev. Franklin traveled across the country, earning hefty honorariums for speaking on the gospel and recording a successful series of albums that documented his powerful oratory and what was described as his "million dollar voice." Rev. Franklin was very much a celebrity in the African-American community in the 50s, and through him young Aretha met the likes of Sam Cooke, Jackie Wilson, James Cleveland and Clara Ward. Emboldened by her experiences, Aretha, who was notoriously shy among family and friends, began singing, and her father quickly recognized that she had an exceptional talent. Aretha was only 10 when she began singing solos in her father's church, and at 14 she was performing alongside her dad on the road. That same year, she recorded several sides for a small gospel label, and a successful career as a spiritual artist seemed assured.
However, Aretha had greater ambitions than that. Having known Sam Cooke, she had seen him go from a member of the Soul Stirrers to a secular star who conquered the pop and R&B charts, and she wanted a similar chance to grab the brass ring. At 18, with her father's blessings, she cut a demo tape of pop material, and soon she was fielding offers from RCA (at the behest of Sam Cooke, an RCA artist) and the fledgling Motown label. But John Hammond, the legendary Columbia Records A&R man who had previously discovered Billie Holiday, Count Basie, and Lionel Hampton (and would later sign Bob Dylan, Leonard Cohen, and Bruce Springsteen), was knocked out by Aretha's voice and signed her to the label in 1960, declaring she had talent on a par with Holiday. Fans are strongly divided on the merits of Franklin's recordings for Columbia, and while they were of the the most successful and prestigious labels in the world in 1960, they weren't a great fit for Aretha. Notoriously late to the game in signing rock and R&B acts, Columbia sought to groom Aretha into an entertainer who would wow nightclub audiences, rather than young or black listeners. Aretha did cut some fine sides for Columbia, and scored three R&B Top Ten hits between 1960 and 1961 (and even cracked the lower reaches of the Top 40 with "Rock-a-Bye Your Baby With a Dixie Melody"), but when she and Columbia amicably parted ways at the end of 1966, some questioned Atlantic's judgment in signing an act who had seemingly failed to live up to expectations.
By the end of 1967, those thoughts had been brushed aside, as Franklin put five singles in the Top Ten that year, four of which went gold. Franklin was now one of the most successful and talked-about artists in popular music, and as the '60s gave way to the '70s, she proved herself to be a versatile talent, able to bend her glorious voice to anything from soulful interpretations of Beatles tunes ("Eleanor Rigby") to the proto-funk of "Rock Steady." She also scored a critical, commercial, and personal triumph with 1972's Amazing Grace, a live album in which she delivered a program of gospel classics. However, 1973's "Until You Come Back To Me (That's What I'm Gonna Do)" would prove to be her last Top Ten hit of the decade, and while she remained a potent live draw and one of soul's peerless artists, like many R&B stars of the '60s she seemed to be fading from the spotlight as funk and disco came to dominate African-American music.
Once again, a change in labels helped change that. In 1980, Franklin signed with Arista Records, and the label helped give her music a makeover, still putting her voice front and center but adding a more contemporary spin in the production and arrangements. Aretha also got some unexpected help from John Belushi and Dan Aykroyd; the comedians cast her in their 1980 film The Blues Brothers, playing a no-nonsense waitress married to fry cook and guitarist Matt "Guitar" Murphy. The role wasn't much, but Franklin all but stole the movie with her sassy, brooking-no-jive performance and her energetic delivery of a new version of "Think." Critics cited her performance as one of the highlights of The Blues Brothers, and it's surprising she never landed another acting role. (Perhaps she wasn't interested.)
With the movie putting Franklin back on the pop culture radar, in 1982 she went into the studio with top-selling soul belter Luther Vandross, who co-produced the album Jump To It and helped write four of its songs. The album went gold, and she fared even better with 1985's Who's Zoomin' Who, produced by Narada Michael Walden. Walden give the album a sleek pop sheen and a radio friendly sound, and combined with Franklin's powerhouse vocals, the album went platinum and produced three major hit singles -- "Freeway of Love," "Sisters are Doin' It For Themselves," and the title cut. Arista prexy Clive Davis was a strong believer in using cameo appearances from current pop stars to boost the visibility of veteran acts, and "Sisters Are Doin' It For Themselves" found Aretha trading verses with Annie Lennox of the Eurythmics. This would become a common feature on Franklin's albums of the '80s and '90s, as she found herself paired up with George Michael ("I Knew You Were Waiting (For Me)"), Whitney Houston ("It Isn't, It Wasn't, It Ain't Never Gonna Be"), Elton John ("Through the Storm"), and Lauryn Hill ("A Rose is Still a Rose"), among others. However, Franklin never played second fiddle to her guest stars, singing with her usual authority and confidence, and it often seemed she was doing them the favor, not the other way around. Aretha also used her renewed success to persuade Arista to let her cut another live gospel set, 1987's One Lord, One Faith, One Baptism.
Franklin's tenure with Arista came to an end with 2007's Jewels in the Crown: All Star Duets With the Queen, and while she continued to perform and record in the last decade of her life -- making memorable appearances at Barack Obama's 2009 inauguration and a Thanksgiving Day Detroit Lions game in 2016 -- rumors of poor health began to circulate. Franklin and her representatives usually refused to share details about her condition, but she regularly cancelled concert bookings due to medical issues in her last years, and had publicly acknowledged her struggles with alcohol, smoking, and obesity. (She had already stopped performing outside of North America in 1984 after developing a strong fear of flying.) It wasn't until Franklin went into hospice care in mid-August 2018 that it was confirmed she was living with pancreatic cancer, which claimed her on August 16.
While American music has lost one of its greatest stars and most memorable talents with the passing of Aretha Franklin, we've also lost something more than that. Franklin was a singular artist, but she also represented something unique, bringing together several threads of African-American musical tradition into a style that was all her own. And while more than a few singers can mimic the effects of her tremendous vocal range, practically none of them could match the emotional depth of her best work, and her ability to make a song her own regardless of its context. And her contribution as a cultural force and a symbol of strength and independence cannot be underestimated. Aretha Franklin was the Queen of Soul, but more importantly, she was a voice who deserved and demanded respect … and she got it.
Source: https://www.allmusic.com/blog/post/with-respect-remembering-aretha-franklin
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faunceblaze · 7 years
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JMT 2017: Part I - Trip Prep
This is the first of three  two installments recounting our trip to hike the John Muir Trail, a long-distance trail through the Sierra Nevada Mountain Range (you can find part II here). The trail extends 210.4 miles from Mount Whitney (the highest point in the contiguous United States) to Happy Isles in Yosemite Valley. With the additional approach hike to Mount Whitney, we hiked around 240 - 250 miles. This first post will provide some background information and our preparation for the trip, the second post will cover our day-to-day experiences on the trail, and the third post will have some post-hike thoughts and data.
Typically, most people hike the JMT southbound (SOBO) from Yosemite NP to Mount Whitney. Hiking SOBO is generally seen as an “easier” hike due to: starting at a lower elevation allowing one to slowly acclimate to the increasing elevation as you head south, having more resupply points in the north allowing for a lighter pack to start, and generally an “easier” trail condition allowing for one to build conditioning as you head south. 
Well, after our AT adventure, we are pretty much “NOBO 4 LYFE!” (AKA crazy) and decided to take the unconventional northbound (NOBO) route. Hiking the JMT requires permits (something that is uncommon on the east cost), and getting permits for a NOBO hike is much easier than a SOBO hike. Due to the increasing crowds of hikers wanting to hike the JMT, Yosemite NP has implemented lottery style permitting system along with a daily quota that makes it tough to get a permit. As a result, we decided to start at the Cottonwood Pass Trail Head that is about 30+ miles south of Mount Whitney (what’s an extra 30 miles, right?!). We were easily able to reserve a permit for this trail head for our planned dates back in February, and it even includes a permit to summit Mount Whitney (the official terminus of the JMT). Now the planning begins...
This trip required quite a bit more logistical planning than our AT journey. On the AT we had an open ended schedule, so it really didn’t matter where we were in 2, 3, or 6 weeks. The JMT required actual planning to make sure we could finish on time, but also to figure out our food resupply situation. After studying our trusty guide book, I came up with a sample itinerary that had us completing the trip in 18 days: 2 days to approach Mount Whitney, and 16 days to hike the JMT. Starting in the south meant we had to carry a significant number of days of food with us before we could reach our first resupply point. There are only a few resupply points on the JMT (unless you want to spend a day hiking out to a trail head along with a potentially long hitchhike), and each had their pros and cons. We knew from our experience on the AT that there is a certain amount of “town inertia” that is difficult to overcome when you go in for a resupply. The pull of all those burgers, beers, and beds can make it difficult to leave. For that reason, we chose a resupply point (Red’s Meadow) that was basically on the trail (0.3 miles off trail to a general store) and forced ourselves to not linger too much while there. As a result of that decision we needed about 14 days worth of food to get there (yikes!). We each had a large bear canister (they’re required along most of the JMT), and we could only fit 8 days of food in each of them - and that was working on a calorie deficit too. It looked like we were going to need some help.
The next logistical move ended up killing two birds with one stone. First, how are we going to get to the trail head? We needed to start and end in San Francisco, because we were also attending a wedding there at the end of the trip (all the more reason why we needed to schedule it just right). Getting from San Fran down to the closest town, Lone Pine, is a pretty long trip. A whole day of public transit, or if only we could rope someone else into this party... That’s where our backpacking buddy from the AT, Indie, stepped up. She was able and willing to come out to San Francisco, drive us out to the trail head, and join us at the beginning of our trip in summiting Mount Whitney! She came out with her boyfriend and they also graciously agreed to help carry a few days of food for us during the beginning (thanks Indie and PP!). Win, win, win! 11 days worth of food. 3 more to go. 
As I mentioned above, we were tagging this hike on to a trip to San Francisco for a wedding. Our best friend, Kelly, was getting married over Labor Day Weekend. Kelly, her fiancé, and a few of their friends planned on taking a long weekend trip to the Rae Lakes area of the JMT. We were able to work it out to where we would meet them on the JMT on day 5 and hike a few days with them and enjoy some of the beautiful alpine lakes!. They also graciously agreed to pack in a few days of food for us, which now got us to our magic number of 14 days of food (thanks Drewbot for carrying all the food in!). Thankfully, due to the popularity of the region, there were some bear boxes around the Rae Lakes region that allowed us to store this extra food each night, so we didn’t have to worry about having room in our bear canisters. 
The last hurdle was planning out how we would get back to the San Francisco when we finished our hike. Although we had a sample itinerary, one thing I know from experience is that they are most often subject to change. We decided to go with good old fashioned public transportation on this one. There are buses that you can catch in Yosemite Valley that take you out to the nearby town of Merced. From there you can catch the Amtrak train up to the bay area, and finally hop on the San Francisco BART to get into the city. Practically a rehashing of Planes, Trains, and Automobiles to get back. 
Now we have the logistics set. We have our permit, our sample itinerary, transportation to the trail head, food resupply planned, and transportation back to civilization. Next up is the packing.
We’re not the minimalist of backpackers, but I also think we have a pretty good system for our needs that balances weight, durability, and comfort. Below is what we packed (the clothing list is just for me, not everything was in my backpack):
Backpack: Gregory Z55
Sleeping Bag: EMS Mountain Light 20 - Long
Sleeping Pad: Exped SynMat UL 7
Sleeping Pillow (they’re amazing!): Exped Air Pillow
Tent: MSR Hubba Hubba NX
Bear Canister: BearVault BV500 
Clothing (including what I was wearing):
Quick Dry T-Shirt
Shorts (with liner)
Sun Shirt: REI Co-op Sahara Tech
Hiking Socks: Wright Socks - 2 pair
Compression Socks: Sockwell 
Rain Jacket: Marmot PreCip
Mid-weight Wool Layer
Smartwool Beanie
Wool boxer-shorts
Baseball Cap
Sunglasses
Bandanna/Kerchief 
Shoes: Brooks Ghosts
Cook-set:
Stove: MSR MicroRocket
Fuel Canister: 8 oz.
Pot: MSR Titan Kettle 
Spork 
Cleaning Rag 
Water: 
Bladder: Platypus 2L Big-Zip
Filter: Sawyer Squeeze (in-line with bladder)
Clean Bottles: Platy 1 L
Miscellaneous:
Guidebook: JMT Pocket Atlas
Journal pages + Pen
Compass
Headlamp
Multi-tool: Leatherman Squirt PS4
First-Aid/Toiletries:
Toothpaste
Floss
Toothbrush 
First-aid kit (ibuprofen, band-aids, pepto, antibiotic ointment, tweezers, nail clippers, needle, thread)
Trowel: Deuce of Spades
Toilet paper, hand sanitizer, wet wipes
I think that about covers most everything. There may be a few other small incidental items I forgot to mention in the Misc. or First-Aid categories. 
Our food was pretty much the same the entire trip (and not all that exciting). We supplemented a few different dinners (Mountain House or instant potatoes) on a few of the days that our friends carried in food, but otherwise this is pretty much what we ate the entire time: 
Breakfast:
Oatmeal - packaged at home with nuts, flax, and brown sugar.
Lunch:
Tuna packets, peanut butter
Dinner:
Ramen (Sapporo Ramen is the best!)
Protein powder
Snacks:
Clif Bars, Snickers (a few per day)
I think that about wraps up our pre-trip planning. Next up will be a (big) post covering our the actual hiking!
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