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William J Connolly's Instagram Stories (January 22, 2025)
#derek klena#broadway#ashley loren#benjamin rauhala#william j connolly#solo performance: feinstein's 54 below#solo performances#social media#photos#video#instagram
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CABIN IN THE WOODS (2011)
An excellent and rather thoughtful film to add to any horror fan's bag of tricks. It questions tropes you might not have even realized you’ve seen tens of times over and is a very satisfying movie. Perfect mix of horror and comedy, light and dark, yin and yang. This was our group pick for Halloween this year but this can be watched in any sort of situation or season (ya know, after the kiddos go to bed, this movie can get pretty gory).
⭐⭐⭐⭐.5
(Trigger Warning Suicide, Projectile Vomiting)
Our unsuspecting gang pile into their own little mystery van and head off to their murder cabin. On the way they meet a very unfriendly gas station attendant who clearly doesn’t like people or money. There is a moment of dramatic irony when a bird is destroyed by a force field just as the gang go through the mountain tunnel, letting us (the audience) know about the deadly force field that will come up later, but not letting our ill-fated friends know (until it is much too late). The little touches in the beginning are very good if you can see past the cute girl in underwear (and then the cute boy in his underwear).
The idea, given to us directly from the good folks down in the facility, is that the kids need to “transgress” and that will cause them to “deserve punishment.” But here is the thing. Them going in an open door of a cabin they have ownership of for the weekend isn’t punishable by… anything… They didn’t do anything wrong. Unless there was a big “DO NOT TOUCH” sign (hello, TAROT) even touching the stuff in the basement isn’t a transgression. But as our innocent little redhead will point out later in the movie, they pick the object of their demise. In this case they chose the diary of Patience Buckner (from The Zombie Redneck Torture Family) and that is who get unleashed upon them.
We quickly find out the people in the facility (namely Richard Jenkins and Bradley Whitford) are in control of a lot of the components of the evening (other than The Zombie Redneck Torture Family, they act on their own accord and are very violent). With help from guiding forces below the gang is split up and our first victim loses her head over the whole affair! They call her a whore but apparently before they started pumping chemicals into her she was a pretty normal gal, either way, the whore has to die first (for some reason).
Suddenly they are all getting picked off quickly, our stoner Shaggy is dragged off, Chris Hemsworth blew up (and I knew him when), our nerd (just a guy with glasses) gets something very sharp stuck in his throat, and all that is left is our “virgin” who isn’t even a virgin. Shaggy comes back from the dead though, he has been on that good good so he knows what is up and gets him and the redheaded “virgin” into the elevators for the amazing scene of seeing all the little critters the facility has captured to kill the kids. (Wack)
The next amazing scene is also an elevator scene, it is when Shaggy and the Redhead open all the cages and set everything free. A glorious gory scene of every nightmare creature coming for these ill-prepared little army men. A classic to be watched on repeat. A feast for the eyes and heart! Seriously, it is so good.
Finally when all the little workers have been ate up, Sigourney Weaver shows up as the director and is all, “Kill the stoner, kill the lush!” and our redhead almost does but a werewolf comes in to stop her (ha). Then Shaggy and Sigourney struggle while little Patience Buckner shuffles her little zombie feet on over to axe our ALIEN survivor in the head. She goes down and we are left again with our Shaggy and Red who hold hands as the world ends.
Maybe it was selfish for them to chose to let the world end, but let us be fair, if once a year multiple groups of people all over the world have to go through literal torture from demons just so the world keeps on turning, maybe the world is better off being over? I mean I think back to the footage from Tokyo being of a ghost in an elementary school classroom. It was funny because they turned the spirit into a frog and none of the kids got hurt, but the whole idea of the simulation was so that one or all the kids would die, and that is heavy.
#C#Cabin in the Woods#4.5 stars#Cabin in the woods review#cabin in the woods 2011#zombie movie#zombie movie review#horror comedy review#rewatch review#supernatural horror#fran kranz#kristen connolly#chris hemsworth#anna hutchison#jesse williams#bradley whitford#richard jenkins#sigourney weaver#amy acker#brian J. White#horror comedy#comedy review#horror review#horror#comedy#dark comedy#horror movie review#horror movie#movie review#horror films
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Preparing the soil
Removal of Weeds Before Digging Introduction and Definition of Spiritual Accompaniment Nutt set out to define Spiritual Direction (Spiritual Accompaniment) and did not accomplish this.[1] However Barry and Connolly have a helpful definition, We define Christian spiritual direction, then, as help given by one believer to another that enables the latter to pay attention to God’s personal…
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#Alister E. McGrath#Andre Louf#Dallas Willard#Diarmuid O’Murchu#Gibbon Bogatsu#Harry Ingham#Jacci Turner#Jos Moons#Joseph Luft#Maurice J. Nutt#segullah#soul care#Spiritual accompaniment#Spiritual direction#William A. Barry and William J. Connolly
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Jonathan and Alexis Forte with Jeremy Jordan after Jeremy’s final performance in ‘The Great Gatsby’, posted by William J Connolly (@wjconnolly).
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Birthdays 11.15
Beer Birthdays
Grant Wood (1962)
Five Favorite Birthdays
J.G. Ballard; English writer (1930)
Daniel Barenboim; Argentinian-Israeli pianist & conductor (1942)
Georgia O'Keeffe; artist (1887)
Wayne Thiebaud; artist (1920)
Sam Waterson; actor (1940)
Famous Birthdays
Franklin Pierce Adams; journalist & author (1881)
Eusebius Amort; German poet (1692)
Edward Asner; actor (1929)
Gemma Atkinson; actor, model (1984)
Joanna Barnes; actress (1934)
Cynthia Breazeal; computer scientist (1967)
Kevin S. Bright; director (1954)
Carol Bruce; singer & actress (1919)
Mary E. Byrd; astronomer (1849)
Văn Cao; Vietnamese composer, poet & painter (1923)
Jimmy Choo; Malaysian fashion designer (1948)
Petula Clark; country singer (1928)
Gerry Connolly; Australian comedian & actor (1957)
Beverly D'Angelo; actress (1951)
Emma Dumont; actress and model (1994)
Tibor Fischer; English author (1959)
Gloria Foster; actress (1933)
Felix Frankfurter; U.S. Supreme Court justice (1882)
Judy Gold; comedian and actress (1962)
René Guénon; French-Egyptian philosopher (1886)
Arthur Haulot, Belgian journalist and poet (913)
Gerhart Hauptmann; German writer (1862)
William Herschel; German-English astronomer (1738)
Joe Hinton; singer (1929)
Rick Kemp; English singer-songwriter, bass player (1941)
Yaphet Kotto; actor (1937)
Emil Krebs; German polyglot (1867)
Johann Kaspar Lavater; Swiss poet & physiognomist (1741)
Virginie Ledoyen; French actress (1976)
Joe Leeway; English pop singer-songwriter (1955)
Curtis LeMay; air force general (1906)
Anni-Frid Lyngstad; pop singer (1945)
Mantovani; Italian composer (1905)
C.W. McCall; country singer (1928)
Clyde McPhatter; singer (1932)
Bill Melendez; Mexican-American animator & director (1916)
Jonny Lee Miller; English-American actor (1972)
Marianne Moore; poet (1887)
Kevin J. O'Connor; actor (1963)
Ol' Dirty Bastard; rapper and producer (1968)
Daniel Pinkwater; author & illustrator (1941)
William Pitt "the Elder"; English politician (1708)
Alvin Plantinga; philosopher (1932)
Seldon Powell; jazz saxophonist, flautist (1928)
Joseph Quesnel; French-Canadian poet, playwright & composer (1746)
Erwin Rommel; German field marshall (1891)
Randy Savage; wrestler (1952)
Madeleine de Scudéry; French author (1607)
Johannes Secundus; Dutch poet & author (1511)
Sacheverell Sitwell; English author (1897)
Antoni Słonimski; Polish journalist, poet & playwright (1895)
Randy Thomas; singer-songwriter, guitarist (1954)
Rachel True; actress (1966)
Joseph A. Wapner; television judge (1919)
James Widdoes; actor & director (1953)
Thomas Williams; author (1926)
Shailene Woodley; actress (1991)
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Police Informant Work (NSA, ArcticMUD)
Daniel Monahan, transferred from McDonald's, to industrial engineering.
Daniel Rodrigues, transferred from Israeli narcotraffic, to American Lodge protection.
Chris Dumais, right hand broken at thumb, to refuse Hebrew, instead pistol hand.
Carlin Sarkesian, refused shooting of Respite Center for developmentally disabled, Narcodan recipe taken from post-mortem corpse.
Greg Connolly, transferred from local poster work, to Code Orange, Philip J. Morris, Bombardier Lear.
Nicholas Maynard, transferred from mechanical engineering inventor's program, External Security, to fetish and nightclub, models.
Matthew Lennox, transferred from Hopkinton Sheriffs, to German New Line Cinema.
Allison Haimes, transferred from Cajun Accadian Korean, to Catholic North Korean mission program.
External Security pimping of marijuana arrested women as marriages, to overseas study program, MoveOn.
South Park Studios, transitioned from study of Jews as Cartman, to Romalians.
Jon Willis, given John Phillips Lodge of Boston, for Los Angeles Triads, as undercover police investigators.
Richard Passan, Arnold Lodge, given full disclosure of accounts, from identification of MI-6 betrayed and turned Provo; Irish support of War on Terror.
Ivan Tomasic, Russian Denmark, transitioned to Croat Irish, Yugoslav Catholic.
Justin Walsh, United States Marine Corps, given State Police housing and backing, as hunter of Joshua Golden.
Andrew Donson, assumed alias Joshua Golden, Jim Shooter, Sid Meier, and others, taken from cashier's status of drafted prostitute or priest, based on cashier's mechanical flaw, to reduction in staff to St. Cyr Mossad, Sharon Massachusetts; German Sheriff's fund, repealed.
Jeff Niemera, recruited as Officer of Essex County, through NSA access; data mining of corporate and local government breaches of systems, as medication access, for CVS repealed; resistance against Scientology, Scientology being Adolf Hitler's method of governance, for illiterate psychologists and doctors, the pharmacy major at a school.
Joshua Moen, ATF agent, contacted through Brian Monaghan; "nil", David Charlebois, resumes hacker's alias, alongside, "b-rock", and "null", for breach access to Bridgewater South Shore, illicit psychiatric programs for election rigs on Canadian intelligence social networking; Blizzard, View Askew, and Nick Gammon.
Melinda O'Deele, Grant Rotary Association, contacted through Obama Lodge, in operations in Plainville; cocaine traffic from Barack Obama's personal contacts, leads to break in social volunteer cases; individuals paid under state minimum, under law of waitresses, revealed as Unitarian; pedophiles, having refused Communion, as if marked ritual indicates actual profession of faith. Pedophiliac diagnosis, intended for middle schoolers, if exceptionally bright. Refusal of parents logic, noted, lack of job future marked in system of non-governmental organizations, through Church non-profits for their children and Church attendance.
William Morgan Jr., attends campus at SNHU, for returning degree; noted of several CIA lookalikes, actually Mossad Marines. SIS teams are reactivated, from 2004, and scrambled; NSA David Charlebois, FBI Lloyd Ahlquist, CIA Kara Williamson, NPC Shelley Gagnon, and IDF Daniel Monahan, scramble dozens of Freemasonic Temple stalkers, for Paul Revere Lodge, resulting in arrests and seizures of property, as having consorted with Britain and Israeli Likud elements.
Michael Charlebois, notes disparity in boycotts claimed Rabbinical, and Islamic elements of Republican Party, under Bush; interdiction, of transgender surgeries, attempted and failed, revealed to be ignorant parents under police rumor. Full Twitter disclosure of the Jewish origin of 9/11 given, as pork and ham boycott, against black culture, African-Americans preferring pork and veal and meat on Ramadan, to maintain health, interdicted by white supremacist authorities out of South.
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Trent’anni fa moriva l'attore americano, interprete di film quali Il giardino della violenza e L’uomo di Alcatraz di John Frankenheimer, Il promontorio della paura di Jack Lee Thompson, La battaglia dei giganti di Ken Annakin, La vita corre sul filo e Joe Bass l’implacabile di Sydney Pollack, Quella sporca dozzina di Robert Aldrich, I guerrieri di Brian G. Hutton, Città violenta di Sergio Sollima, Una ragione per vivere e una per morire di Tonino Valerii, Operazione Siegfried di Peter Duffell, e noto per la serie tv poliziesca Kojak. Nato a Garden City - nello stato di New York - nel gennaio 1922 da genitori emigrati dalla Grecia, dopo aver combattuto durante la Seconda guerra mondiale si laurea in Psicologia. Giornalista dell’Abc, arriva alla recitazione in tv alla fine degli anni Cinquanta. Al cinema esordisce due/tre anni dopo. E’ un tenente di polizia in Il giardino della violenza (1961) di John Frankenheimer, con Burt Lancaster, un detenuto amico di B. Lancaster nel carcerario L’uomo di Alcatraz (1962), anch’esso di J. Frankenheimer, tratto dal libro di Tom Gaddis The Birdman of Alcatraz ed interpretato anche da Karl Malden, un detective nel thriller Il promontorio della paura (1962) di Jack Lee Thompson, con Gregory Peck, Robert Mitchum, Polly Bergen e Martin Balsam, un militare in La battaglia dei giganti (1965) di Ken Annakin, con Henry Fonda e Robert Shaw, un folle fanatico nel celebre Quella sporca dozzina (1967) di Robert Aldrich, con Lee Marvin, Charles Bronson, John Cassavetes, Jim Brown, Donald Sutherland, Clint Walker, Richard Jaeckel, Robert Ryan, Ernest Borgnine, Robert Webber e George Kennedy, il capo dei banditi nel western Joe Bass l’impacabile (1968) di Sydney Pollack, con B. Lancaster e Ossie Davis, un militare in I guerrieri(1970) di Brain G. Hutton, con Clint Eastwood e D. Sutherland. Tuttavia, il vero successo arriverà solo in televisione, come protagonista della celebre serie poliziesca Kojak (1973-78, oltre novanta episodi). A partire da fine anni Settanta/inizio Ottanta lavora soprattutto per il piccolo schermo. Fra gli altri film ricordiamo Gangster contro gangster (1961) di Burt Balaban, La pelle che scotta (1962) di David Swift, Il piede più lungo (1963) di Frank Tashlin, Il granduca e Mister Pimm (1963) di D. Swift, con Glenn Ford, Johnny Cool, messaggero di morte (1963) di William Asher, Squadra d’emergenza(1964) di John Rich, A braccia aperte (1965) di Jack Lee Thompson, Gengis Khan il conquistatore (1965) di Henry Levin, La vita corre sul filo (1965) di Sydney Pollack (al suo esordio alla regia), Con le spalle al muro (1968) di Brian G. Hutton, Buonasera signora Campbell (1968) di Melvin Frank, Assassination Bureau (1969) di Basil Dearden, L’oro di MacKenna (1969) di J. L. Thompson, con Gregory Peck e Omar Sharif, Gangster tuttofare (1969) di Jim O’ Connolly, Bruciatelo vivo! (1969) di Nathan Juran, Agente 007 - Al servizio segreto di Sua Maestà (1969) di Peter R. Hunt, Una città chiamata bastarda (1971) di Robert Parrish, Il piccione d’argilla (1971) di Lane Slate e Tom Stern, I tre del mazzo selvaggio (1972) e Horror Express (1972) di Eugenio Martin, Operazione Siegrid (1975) di Peter Duffell, Killer Commando - Per un pugno di diamanti (1976) di Val Guest, Capricorn One (1977) di Peter Hyams, Amici e nemici (1979) di George Pan Cosmatos, L’inferno sommerso(1979) di Irwin Allen, Ecco il film dei Muppet (1979) di James Frawley, Border Crossing (1980) di Christopher Leitch, La truffa (1982) di Matt Cimber, Lacorsa più pazza d’America n. 2 (1984) di Hal Needham, Ipnosi morbosa (1994) di Fred Olen Ray, Backfire! (1995) di A. Dean Bell, uscito postumo. All’inizio degli anni Settanta lavora anche in Italia, diretto da registi come Sergio Sollima - Città violenta (1970) -, Alberto De Martino - L’assassino... è al telefono (1972), I familiari delle vittime non saranno avvertiti (1972) -, Sergio Corbucci - La banda J. & S. - Cronaca criminale del Far West (1972) -, Tonino Valerii
- Una ragione per vivere e una per morire (1972), con Bud Spencer e James Coburn -, Alfredo Leone - Lisa e il diavolo (1972) -, Silvio Narizzano - Senza ragione (1973). Fa anche un’esperienza dietro alla macchina da presa, dirigendo (e interpretando) Al di là della ragione (1977), con Diana Muldaur.Attivo anche in televisione, è apparso in vari film tv - Morte sui binari (1973) di Herchel Daugherty, La legge di Hellinger (1981) di Leo Penn, Donna di cuori (1984) di Rod Holcomb, Quella sporca dozzina - Missione mortale(1987) e Quella sporca dozzina - Missione nei Balcani (1988) di Lee H. Katzin, Hollywood Detective (1989) di Kevin Connor - ed in alcuni episodi di serie e miniserie - oltre al già citato Kojak, anche in Ai confini della realtà (1961), Indirizzo permanente (1963), Dakota (1963), La legge di Burke (1963-65, tre episodi), Gli inafferrabili (1964), L’ora di Hitchcock (1964), Bonanza (1965), I giorni diBryan (1965), Il virginiano (1966), Il transatlantico della paura(1979) di Douglas Heynes, Alcatraz (1980) di Paul Krasny, Il brivido dell’imprevisto (1981), Love Boat (1985
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Please check out the fabulous @elevenpodcast (IG) hosted by @wjconnolly (IG). William recently interviewed our Benjamin Rauhala, and it was so much fun. This is just a tiny snippet.
The full interview can be heard on Spotify.
ElevenPodcast.com
@broadwaypodcastnetwork (IG)
#benjamin rauhala#ben rauhala#eleven podcast#spotify#william j connolly#podcast#fairy godfairy#musical director#music director
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Benjamin Rauhala’s Instagram Story (January 22, 2025)
#derek klena#broadway#benjamin rauhala#ashley loren#solo performance: feinstein's 54 below#solo performances#social media#photos#william j connolly
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The Cabin In The Woods (2011) by Tony Sklepic
Directed by Drew Goddard
Starring Kristen Connolly, Chris Hemsworth, Ann Hutchison, Jesse Williams, Fran Kranz, Bradley Whitford, Richard Jenkins, Amy Acker, Brian J. White, & Sigourney Weaver
#the cabin in the woods#2011#drew goddard#tony sklepic#kristen connolly#chris hemsworth#anna hutchison#jesse williams#fran kranz#bradley whitford#richard jenkins#amy acker#brian j. white#sigourney weaver#movie poster
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Supreme Court, U.S FILED In The OCT 2 2022 Supreme Court ofthe United States RALAND J BRUNSON, Petitioner,
Named persons in their capacities as United States House Representatives: ALMA S. ADAMS; PETE AGUILAR; COLIN Z. ALLRED; MARK E. AMODEI; KELLY ARMSTRONG; JAKE AUCHINCLOSS; CYNTHIA AXNE; DON BACON; TROY BALDERSON; ANDY BARR; NANETTE DIAZ BARRAGAN; KAREN BASS; JOYCE BEATTY; AMI BERA; DONALD S. BEYER JR.; GUS M. ILIRAKIS; SANFORD D. BISHOP JR.; EARL BLUMENAUER; LISA BLUNT ROCHESTER; SUZANNE BONAMICI; CAROLYN BOURDEAUX; JAMAAL BOWMAN; BRENDAN F. BOYLE; KEVIN BRADY; ANTHONY G. BROWN; JULIA BROWNLEY; VERN BUCHANAN; KEN BUCK; LARRY BUCSHON; CORI BUSH; CHERI BUSTOS; G. K. BUTTERFIELD; SALUD 0. CARBAJAL; TONY CARDENAS; ANDRE CARSON; MATT CARTWRIGHT; ED CASE; SEAN CASTEN; KATHY CASTOR; JOAQUIN CASTRO; LIZ CHENEY; JUDY CHU; DAVID N. CICILLINE; KATHERINE M. CLARK; YVETTE D. CLARKE; EMANUEL CLEAVER; JAMES E. CLYBURN; STEVE COHEN; JAMES COMER; GERALD E. CONNOLLY; JIM COOPER; J. LUIS CORREA; JIM COSTA; JOE COURTNEY; ANGIE CRAIG; DAN CRENSHAW; CHARLIE CRIST; JASON CROW; HENRY CUELLAR; JOHN R. CURTIS; SHARICE DAVIDS; DANNY K. DAVIS; RODNEY DAVIS; MADELEINE DEAN; PETER A. DEFAZIO; DIANA DEGETTE; ROSAL DELAURO; SUZAN K. DELBENE; Ill ANTONIO DELGADO; VAL BUTLER DEMINGS; MARK DESAULNIER; THEODORE E. DEUTCH; DEBBIE DINGELL; LLOYD DOGGETT; MICHAEL F. DOYLE; TOM EMMER; VERONICA ESCOBAR; ANNA G. ESHOO; ADRIANO ESPAILLAT; DWIGHT EVANS; RANDY FEENSTRA; A. DREW FERGUSON IV; BRIAN K. FITZPATRICK; LIZZIE LETCHER; JEFF FORTENBERRY; BILL FOSTER; LOIS FRANKEL; MARCIA L. FUDGE; MIKE GALLAGHER; RUBEN GALLEGO; JOHN GARAMENDI; ANDREW R. GARBARINO; SYLVIA R. GARCIA; JESUS G. GARCIA; JARED F. GOLDEN; JIMMY GOMEZ; TONY GONZALES; ANTHONY GONZALEZ; VICENTE GONZALEZ; JOSH GOTTHEIMER; KAY GRANGER; AL GREEN; RAUL M. GRIJALVA; GLENN GROTHMAN; BRETT GUTHRIE; DEBRA A. HAALAND; JOSH HARDER; ALCEE L. HASTINGS; JAHANA HAYES; JAIME HERRERA BEUTLER; BRIAN HIGGINS; J. FRENCH HILL; JAMES A. HIMES; ASHLEY HINSON; TREY HOLLINGSWORTH; STEVEN HORSFORD; CHRISSY HOULAHAN; STENY H. HOYER; JARED HUFFMAN; BILL HUIZENGA; SHEILA JACKSON LEE; SARA JACOBS; PRAMILA JAYAPAL; HAKEEM S. JEFFRIES; DUSTY JOHNSON; EDDIE BERNICE JOHNSON; HENRY C. JOHNSON JR.; MONDAIRE JONES; DAVID P. JOYCE; KAIALPI KAHELE; MARCY KAPTUR; JOHN KATKO; WILLIAM R. KEATING; RO KHANNA; DANIEL T. KILDEE; DEREK KILMER; ANDY KIM; YOUNG KIM; RON KIND; ADAM KINZINGER; ANN KIRKPATRICK; RAJA KRISHNAMOORTHI; ANN M. KUSTER; DARIN LAHOOD; CONOR LAMB; JAMES R. LANGEVIN; RICK LARSEN; JOHN B. LARSON; ROBERT E. LATTA; JAKE LATURNER; BRENDA L. LAWRENCE; AL LAWSON JR.; BARBARA LEE; SUSIE LEE; TERESA LEGER FERNANDEZ; ANDY LEVIN; MIKE LEVIN; TED LIEU; IV ZOE LOFGREN; ALAN S.LOWENTHAL; ELAINE G. LURIA; STEPHEN F. LYNCH; NANCY MACE; TOM MALINOWSKI; CAROLYN B. MALONEY; SEAN PATRICK MALONEY; KATHY E. MANNING; THOMAS MASSIE; DORIS 0. MATSUI; LUCY MCBATH; MICHAEL T. MCCAUL; TOM MCCLINTOCK; BETTY MCCOLLUM; A. ADONALD MCEACHIN; JAMES P. MCGOVERN; PATRICK T. MCHENRY; DAVID B. MCKINLEY; JERRY MCNERNEY; GREGORY W. MEEKS; PETER MEIJER; GRACE MENG; KWEISI MFUME; MARIANNETTE MILLER-MEEKS; JOHN R. MOOLENAAR; BLAKE D. MOORE; GWEN MOORE; JOSEPH D. MORELLE; SETH MOULTON; FRANK J. MRVAN; STEPHANIE N. MURPHY; JERROLD NADLER; GRACE F. NAPOLITANO; RICHARD E. NEAL; JOE NEGUSE; DAN NEWHOUSE; MARIE NEWMAN; DONALD NORCROSS; ALEXANDRIA OCASIO-CORTEZ; TOM O'HALLERAN; ILHAN OMAR; FRANK PALLONE JR.; JIMMY PANETTA; CHRIS PAPPAS; BILL PASCRELL JR.; DONALD M. PAYNE JR.; NANCY PELOSI; ED PERLMUTTER; SCOTT H. PETERS; DEAN PHILLIPS; CHELLIE PINGREE; MARK POCAN; KATIE PORTER; AYANNA PRESSLEY; DAVID E. PRICE; MIKE QUIGLEY; JAMIE RASKIN; TOM REED; KATHLEEN M. RICE; CATHY MCMORRIS RODGERS; DEBORAH K. ROSS; CHIP ROY; LUCILLE ROYBAL-ALLARD; RAUL RUIZ; C. A. DUTCH RUPPERSBERGER; BOBBY L. RUSH; TIM RYAN; LINDA T. SANCHEZ; JOHN P. SARBANES; MARY GAY SCANLON; JANICE D. SCHAKOWSKY; ADAM B. SCHIFF; BRADLEY SCOTT SCHNEIDER; KURT SCHRADER; KIM SCHRIER; AUSTIN SCOTT; DAVID SCOTT; ROBERT C. SCOTT; TERRI A. SEWELL; BRAD SHERMAN; MIKIE SHERRILL; MICHAEL K. SIMPSON; ALBIO SIRES; ELISSA SLOTKIN; ADAM SMITH; CHRISTOPHER H. V SMITH; DARREN SOTO; ABIGAIL DAVIS SPANBERGER; VICTORIA SPARTZ; JACKIE SPEIER; GREG STANTON; PETE STAUBER; MICHELLE STEEL; BRYAN STEIL; HALEY M. STEVENS; STEVE STIVERS; MARILYN STRICKLAND; THOMAS R. SUOZZI; ERIC SWALWELL; MARK TAKANO; VAN TAYLOR; BENNIE G. THOMPSON; MIKE THOMPSON; DINA TITUS; RASHIDA TLAIB; PAUL TONKO; NORMA J. TORRES; RITCHIE TORRES; LORI TRAHAN; DAVID J. TRONE; MICHAEL R. TURNER; LAUREN UNDERWOOD; FRED UPTON; JUAN VARGAS; MARC A. VEASEY; FILEMON VELA; NYDIA M. VELAZQUEZ; ANN WAGNER; MICHAEL WALTZ; DEBBIE WASSERMAN SCHULTZ; MAXINE WATERS; BONNIE WATSON COLEMAN; PETER WELCH; BRAD R. WENSTRUP; BRUCE WESTERMAN; JENNIFER WEXTON; SUSAN WILD; NIKEMA WILLIAMS; FREDERICA S. WILSON; STEVE WOMACK; JOHN A. YARMUTH; DON YOUNG; the following persons named are for their capacities as U.S. Senators; TAMMY BALDWIN; JOHN BARRASSO; MICHAEL F. BENNET; MARSHA BLACKBURN; RICHARD BLUMENTHAL; ROY BLUNT; CORY A. BOOKER; JOHN BOOZMAN; MIKE BRAUN; SHERROD BROWN; RICHARD BURR; MARIA CANTWELL; SHELLEY CAPITO; BENJAMIN L. CARDIN; THOMAS R. CARPER; ROBERT P. CASEY JR.; BILL CASSIDY; SUSAN M. COLLINS; CHRISTOPHER A. COONS; JOHN CORNYN; CATHERINE CORTEZ MASTO; TOM COTTON; KEVIN CRAMER; MIKE CRAPO; STEVE DAINES; TAMMY DUCKWORTH; RICHARD J. DURBIN; JONI ERNST; DIANNE FEINSTEIN; DEB FISCHER; KIRSTEN E. GILLIBRAND; LINDSEY GRAHAM; CHUCK GRASSLEY; BILL HAGERTY; MAGGIE HASSAN; MARTIN HEINRICH; JOHN HICKENLOOPER; MAZIE HIRONO; JOHN HOEVEN; JAMES INHOFE; RON VI JOHNSON; TIM KAINE; MARK KELLY; ANGUS S. KING, JR.; AMY KLOBUCHAR; JAMES LANKFORD; PATRICK LEAHY; MIKE LEE; BEN LUJAN; CYNTHIA M. LUMMIS; JOE MANCHIN III; EDWARD J. MARKEY; MITCH MCCONNELL; ROBERT MENENDEZ; JEFF MERKLEY; JERRY MORAN; LISA MURKOWSKI; CHRISTOPHER MURPHY; PATTY MURRAY; JON OSSOFF; ALEX PADILLA; RAND PAUL; GARY C. PETERS; ROB PORTMAN; JACK REED; JAMES E. RISCH; MITT ROMNEY; JACKY ROSEN; MIKE ROUNDS; MARCO RUBIO; BERNARD SANDERS; BEN SASSE; BRIAN SCHATZ; CHARLES E. SCHUMER; RICK SCOTT; TIM SCOTT; JEANNE SHAHEEN; RICHARD C. SHELBY; KYRSTEN SINEMA; TINA SMITH; DEBBIE STABENOW; DAN SULLIVAN; JON TESTER; JOHN THUNE; THOM TILLIS; PATRICK J. TOOMEY; HOLLEN VAN; MARK R. WARNER; RAPHAEL G. WARNOCK; ELIZABETH WARREN; SHELDON WHITEHOUSE; ROGER F. WICKER; RON WYDEN; TODD YOUNG; JOSEPH ROBINETTE BIDEN JR in his capacity of President of the United States; MICHAEL RICHARD PENCE in his capacity as former Vice President of the United States, and KAMALA HARRIS in her capacity as Vice President of the United States and JOHN and JANE DOES 1-100.
https://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/22/22-380/243739/20221027152243533_20221027-152110-95757954-00007015.pdf
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"Eddie arrives at the "WhatsOnStage Awards 2022" 💙
Credit: William J. Connolly on Twitter
#eddie redmayne#eddieredmayne#redmayne#cabaret2021#whatsonstage#red carpet#february 2022#whats on stage awards
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a very thorough list of all biographies I have because I am very normal
this will update
COMEDY
Monty Python
A Liar's Autobiography - Graham Chapman Always Look On The Bright Side of Life - Eric Idle So Anyway - John Cleese
FILM
Old Hollywood
The Contender: The Story of Marlon Brando - William J. Mann James Dean: Boulevard of Broken Dreams - Paul Alexander
MUSIC
'50s
Cash: The Autobiography - Johnny Cash
'60s
Chronicles: Volume One - Bob Dylan Eric Clapton: The Autobiography - Eric Clapton
'70s
Born to Run - Bruce Springsteen Broken Music: A Memoir - Sting Me - Elton John
The Beatles
A Cellarful of Noise - Brian Epstein Being John Lennon - Ray Connolly John - Cynthia Lennon Paul McCartney: The Biography - Philip Norman The Quiet One - Alan Clayson Who Killed John Lennon? - Fenton Bresler
The Rolling Stones
Life - Keith Richards Ronnie - Ronnie Wood The Stones - Philip Norman
The Who
Thanks A Lot Mr Kibblewhite: My Story - Roger Daltrey Who I Am - Pete Townshend
JOURNALISM
The Beatles, Football and Me - Hunter Davies
TRAVEL
Around the World in 80 Days - Michael Palin Into Iraq - Michael Palin
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100 libros que me gustan mucho (y II).
1. Ruido de fondo, Don DeLillo.
2. Empresas y tribulaciones de Maqroll el Gaviero, Álbaro Mutis
3. Nada, Carmen Laforet.
4. El asesinato de Roger Akroyd, Agath Christie.
5. Almas muertas, Nikolai Gogol.
6. Crematorio, Rafael Chirbes.
7. La mancha humana, Phillip Roth
8. El expreso de Tokio, Seicho Matsumoto.
9. Falsa identidad, Sarah Waters.
10. El mal de Montano, Enrique Vila-Matas
11. El extranjero, Albert Camus.
12. El husar en el tejado, Jean Giano.
13. Desde el jardín, Jerzi Kosinski.
14. El ruido y la furia, William Faulkner.
15. Un millón de muertos, José María Ginorella.
16. La vida instrucciones de uso, George Perec.
17. Suave es la noche, Scott Fitzgerald.
18. Otra vuelta de tuerca, Henry James.
19. El desierto de los tártaros, Dino Buzzati.
20. Ficciones, Jorge Luís Borges.
21. La tregua, Mario Benedetti.
22. Días contados, Juan Madrid.
23. Lord Jim, Joseph Conrad.
24. Manhattan Transfer, John Dos Passos.
25. Moravagine, Blaise Cendras.
26. El general del ejército muerto, Ismail Kadaré.
27. La muerte ronda a Maigret, George Simenon.
28. Todo lo que muere, John Connolly.
29. El delator, Liam O´Flagerty.
30. El filo de la navaja, William S. Maugham.
31. El diablo cojuelo, Luis Vélez de Guevara.
32. Trilogía, Eduardo de Guzman.
33. Mr. Vértigo, Paul Auster.
34. El gatopardo, Tomasso di Lampedussa.
35. El barón rampante, Italo Calvino.
36. Los fantasmas, Cesar Aira.
37. Pedro Páramo, Juan Rulfo.
38. El americano tranquilo, Grahan Greene.
39. Tocarnos la cara, Belén Gopegui.
40. El túnel, Ernesto Sábato.
41. Últimas tardes con Teresa, Juan Marsé.
42. Tormenta de verano, Juan García Hortelano.
43. Metro 2033, Dimitri Glujoski.
44. Réquiem por un sueño, Selby Jr., Hubert
45. El loco del zar, Jaa Kross.
46. El hombre que amaba a los perros, Leonardo Padura.
47. Meridiano de sangre, Cormac MacCarthy
48. Requiem por un campesino español, Ramón J. Sender.
49. La cuadratura del círculo, Álvaro Pombo.
50. El hereje, Miguel Delibes.
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here’s my giant leftist to-read list for the next few years!!!
if a little (done!) it written next to the book, it means i’ve finished it! i’m gonna try to update this as i read but no promises on remembering haha
Economics/Politics
Property by Karl Marx
Communist Manifesto by Karl Marx (done!)
Wages, Price, and Profit by Karl Marx (done!)
Wage-Labor and Capital by Karl Marx (done!)
Capital Volume I by Karl Marx
The 1844 Manuscripts by Karl Marx
Socialism: Utopian and Scientific by Fredrich Engles
Synopsis of Capital by Fredrich Engels
The Principles of Communism by Fredrich Engles
Imperialism, The Highest Stage Of Capitalism by Vladmir Lenin
The State And Revolution by Vladmir Lenin
The Revolution Betrayed by Leon Trotsky
Fascism: What is it and How to Fight it by Leon Trotsky
In Defense Of Marxism by Leon Trotsky
The Accumulation of Capital by Rosa Luxemborg
Reform or Revolution by Rosa Luxemburg
Discipline and Punish by Michel Foucault
The Conquest of Bread by Peter Kropotkin
On Anarchism by Noam Chomsky
Profit over People by Noam Chomsky
An Introduction to Marxist Economic Theory by Ernest Mandel
The Affluent Society by John Kenneth Galbraith
The Postmodern Condition by Jean François Lyotard
Capitalist Realism by Mark Fisher
The Socialist Reconstruction of Society by Daniel De Leon
Anarchism and Other Essays by Emma Goldman
Socialism Made Easy by James Connolly
Race
Biased: Uncover in the Hidden Prejudice That Shapes What We See, Think, and Do
Blindspot by Mahzarin R. Banaji
Racism Without Racists: Color-blind Racism And The Persistence Of Racial Inequality In America by Eduardo Bonilla-Silva
How To Be Less Stupid About Race: On Racism, White Supremacy And The Racial Divide by Crystal M. Flemming
This Book is Anti-Racist: 20 Lessons on How To Wake Up, Take Action, And Do The Work by Tiffany Jewell & Aurelia Durand
The Next American Revolution: Sustainable Activism For The Twenty-First Century by Grace Lee Boggs
Tell Me Who You Are by Winona Guo & Priya Vulchi
The Fire This Time: A New Generation Speaks About Race by Jesymn Ward
Class, Race, and Marxism by David R. Roediger
America for Americans: A History Of Xenophobia In The United States by Erica Lee
The Politics Of The Veil by Joan Wallach Scott
A Different Mirror A History Of Multicultural America by Ronald Takaki
A People’s History Of The United States by Howard Zinn
Black Theory
The Wretched Of The World by Frantz Fanon
Black Marxism by Cedric J Robinson
Malcolm X Speaks by Malcolm X
Women, Culture, and Politics by Angela Davis
Women, Race, & Class by Angela Davis (done!)
Freedom is a Constant Struggle by Angela Davis (done!)
The Meaning of Freedom by Angela Davis
Sister Outsider by Audre Lorde
Ain’t I A Woman? by Bell Hooks
Yearning by Bell Hooks
Dora Santana’s Works
An End To The Neglect Of The Problems Of The Negro Women by Claudia Jones
I Am Your Sister by Audre Lorde
Women’s Liberation And The African Freedom Struggle by Thomas Sankara
W.E.B. DuBois Essay Collection
Black Reconstruction by W.E.B. DuBois
Lynch Law by Ida B. Wells
The Bluest Eye by Toni Morrison
Sula by Toni Morrison
Song Of Solomon by Toni Morrison
Beloved by Toni Morrison
Paradise by Toni Morrison
A Mercy by Toni Morrison
This Bridge Called My Back by Cherríe Moraga
Stamped from the Beginning: The Definitive History of Racist Ideas in America
So You Want to Talk About Race by Ijeoma Oluo
The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness by Michelle Alexander
Black Feminist Thought by Patricia Hill Collins
Eloquent Rage: A Black Feminist Discovers Her Superpower by Dr. Brittney Cooper
I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings by Maya Angelou
Black Skins, White Masks and The Wretched of the Earth by Frantz Fanon
Killing of the Black Body
Revolutionary Suicide by Huey P Newton
Settlers; The myth of the White Proletariat
Fearing The Black Body; The Racial Origins of Fatphobia
Freedom Dreams; The Black Radical Imagination
How Capitalism Underdeveloped Black America
How Europe Underdeveloped Africa
An Argument For Black Women’s Liberation As a Revolutionary Force by Mary Anne Weathers
Voices of Feminism Oral History Project by Frances Beal
Ghosts In The Schoolyard: Racism And School Closings On Chicago’s South Side by Eve L. Ewing
Tears We Cannot Stop: A Sermon To White America by Michael Eric Dyson
Why We Can’t Wait by Martin Luther King, Jr.
Fatal Invention: How Science, Politics, Big Business, Re-create Race In The 21st Century by Dorothy Roberts
We Gon’ Be Alright: Notes on Race & Resegregation by Jeff Chang
They Can’t Kill Us All: Ferguson, Baltimore, and a New Era In America’s Racial Justice Movement by Wesley Lowery
The Common Wind by Julius S. Scott
Black Is The Body: Stories From My Grandmother’s Time, My Mother’s Time, And Mine by Emily Bernard
We Were Eight Years In Power: An American Tragedy by Ta-Nehisi Coates
American Lynching by Ashraf H. A. Rushdy
Raising Our Hands by Jenna Arnold
Redefining Realness by Janet Mock
When Affirmative Action Was White: An Untold History of Racial Inequality in Twentieth-Century America by Ira Katznelson
Whistling Vivaldi: How Stereotypes Affects Us and What We Can Do
Citizen: An American Lyric by Claudia Rankine
Left of Karl Marx: The Political Life Of Black Communist Claudia Jones by Carole Boyce Davies
Black Studies Manifesto by Darlene Clark
The Hate U Give by Angie Thomas
The Souls Of Black Folk by W.E.B. Du Bois
Darkwater by W.E.B. Du Bois
The Education Of Blacks In The South, 1860-1935 by James D. Anderson
The Half Has Never Been Told: Slavery And The Making Of American Capitalism by Edward E. Baptist
The Color Of Money: Black Banks And The Racial Wealth Gap by Mehrsa Baradaran
A Black Women’s History Of The United States by Daina Ramey Berry & Kali Nicole Gross
The Price For Their Pound Of Flesh: The Value Of The Enslaved, From Womb to Grave, In The Building Of A Nation by Daina Ramey Berry
North Of Slavery: The Negro In The Free States, 1780-1869 by Leon F. Litwack
Black Stats: African Americans By The Numbers In The Twenty-First Century by Monique M. Morris
Pushout: The Criminalization of Black Girls in Schools by Monique M. Morris
40 Million Dollar Slaves: The Rise, Fall, And Redemption of The Black Athlete by William C. Rhoden
From #BlackLivesMatter To Black Liberation by Keeanga-Yamahtta Taylor
A More Beautiful And Terrible History: The Uses And Misuses Of Civil Rights History by Jeanne Theoharis
Medical Apartheid: The Dark History Of Medical Experimentation On Black Americans From Colonial Times To The Present by Harriet A. Washington
Working At The Intersections: A Black Feminist Disability Framework” by Moya Bailey
Theory by Dionne Brand
Black Women, Writing, And Identity by Carole Boyce Davies
Slavery By Another Name: The Re-enslavement Of Black Americans From The Civil War To World War II by Douglass A. Blackmon
Black Like Me by John Howard Griffin
The Fire Next Time by James Baldwin
Some Of Us Are Very Hungry Now by Andre Perry
The Origins Of The Urban Crisis: Race and Inequality In Postwar Detroit by Thomas Surgue
They Can’t Kill Us Until They Kill Us by Hanif Abdurraqib
Beyond Containment: Autobiographical Reflections, Essays and Poems by Claudia Jones
The Black Woman: An Anthology by Toni McCade
Double Jeopardy: To Be Black and Female by Frances Beal
How We Get Free: Black Feminism and the Combahee River Collective by Keeanga-Yamahtta Taylor
Indigenous Theory
Colonize This! by Daisy Hernandez and Bushra Rehman
As We Have Always Done
Braiding Sweetgrass
Spaces Between Us
The Sacred Hoop by Paula Gunn Allen
Native: Identity, Belonging, And Rediscovering God by Kaitlin Curtice
An Indigenous People’s History Of The United States by Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz
Why Indigenous Literatures Matter by Daniel Heath Justice
Highway of Tears: A True Story of Racism, Indifference, And The Pursuit Of Justice For Missing And Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls by Jessica McDiarmid
The Other Slavery by Andrés Reséndez
Seven Fallen Feathers by Tanya Talaga
All Our Relations: Indigenous Trauma In The Shadow Of Colonialism by Tanya Talaga
All Our Relations: Finding The Path Forward by Tanya Talaga
Everything You Wanted To Know About Indians But Were Afraid To Ask by Anton Treuer
Rez Life: An Indian’s Journey Through Reservation Life by David Treuer
Latine Theory
Borderlands/La Frontera by Gloria Anzaldúa
Open Veins of Latin America: Five Centuries of Pillage of A Continent by Eduardo Galeano
Inventing Latinos: A New Story of American Racism by Laura E. Gomez
De Colores Means All Of Us by Elizabeth Martinez
Middle Eastern And Muslim Theory
How Does It Feel To Be A Problem? Being Young And Arab In America by Moustafa Bayoumi
We Too Sing America: South Asian, Arab, Muslim, and Sikh Immigrants Shape Our Multiracial Future by Deepa Iyer
Alligator and Other Stories by Dima Alzayat
API Theory
Orientalism by Edward Said
The Making Of Asian America by Erika Lee
On Gold Mountain by Lisa See
Strangers From A Different Shore: A History of Asian Americans by Ronald Takaki
They Called Us Enemy (Graphic Novel) by George Takei
Yellow Peril!: An Archive of Anti-Asian Fear by Edited by John Kuo Wei Tchen and Dylan Yeats
Yellow: Race In America Beyond Black And White by Frank H. Wu
Alien Nation: Chinese Migration In The Americas From The Coolie Era Through World War II by Elliott Young
The Good Immigrants: How The Yellow Peril Became The Model Minorities by Madeline H. Ysu
Asian American Dreams: The Emergence Of An American People by Helen Zia
The Myth Of The Model Minority: Asian Americans Facing Racism by Rosalind S. Chou & Joe R. Feagin
Two Faces Of Exclusion: The Untold Story Of Anti-Asian Racism In The United States by Lon Kurashige
Whiteness
White Fragility by Robin Di Angelo (done!)
White Kids: Growing Up With Privilege In A Racially Divided America by Margaret A. Hagerman
Waking Up White by Deby Irving
The History of White People by Nell Irvin Painter
White Like Me: Reflections On Race From A Privileged Son by Tim Wise
White Rage by Carol Anderson
What Does It Mean To Be White: Developing White Racial Literacy by Robin DiAngelo
The Invention of The White Race: Volume 1: Racial Oppression and Social Control by Theodore W. Allen
The Invention of The White Race: Volume 2: The Origin of Racial Oppression in Anglo-America by Theodore W. Allen
Immigration
Call Me American by Abdi Nor Iftir
Create Dangerously: The Immigrant Artist At Work by Edwidge Danticat
My Family Divided by Diane Guerrero
The Devil’s Highway: A True Story by Luis Alberto Urrea
The Undocumented Americans by Karla Cornejo Villavicencio
Enrique’s Journey by Sonia Nazario
Tell Me How It Ends: An Essay In Forty Questions by Valeria Luiselli
Voter Suppression
One Person, No Vote: How Voter Suppression Is Destroying Our Democracy by Carol Anderson
Give Us The Vote: The Modern Struggle For Voting Rights In America by Ari Berman
Prison Abolition And Police Violence
Abolition Democracy by Angela Davis
Are Prisons Obsolete? by Angela Davis
The Prison Industrial Complex by Angela Davis
Political Prisoners, Prisons, And Black Liberation by Angela Davis
Just Mercy by Bryan Stevenson (done!)
The End Of Policing by Alex S Vitale
Invisible No More: Police Violence Against Black Women and Women of Color by Andrea J. Ritchie
Choke Hold: Policing Black Men by Paul Butler
From The War On Poverty To The War On Crime: The Making Of Mass Incarceration In America by Elizabeth Hinton
Feminist Theory
The Second Sex by Simone de Beauvoir
A Vindication of the Rights of Women by Mary Wollstonecraft
Bad Feminist by Roxanne Gay
7 Feminist And Gender Theories
Race, Gender, And Class by Margaret L. Anderson
African Gender Studies by Oyèrónkẹ́ Oyěwùmí
The Invention Of Women by Oyèrónkẹ́ Oyěwùmí
What Gender Is Motherhood? by Oyèrónkẹ́ Oyěwùmí
Feminism Without Borders: Decolonizing Theory, Practicing Solidarity by Chandra Talpade Mohanty
I Am Malala by Malala Youssef
LGBT Theory
Gender Trouble by Judith Butler
Performative Acts and Gender Constitution by Judith Butler
Imitation and Gender Insubordination by Judith Butler
Bodies That Matter by Judith Butler
Excitable Speech by Judith Butler
Undoing Gender by Judith Butler
The Roots Of Lesbian And Gay Opression: A Marxist View by Bob McCubbin
Compulsory Heterosexuality And Lesbian Existence by Adrienne Rich
Decolonizing Trans/Gender 101 by B. Binohan
Gay.Inc: The Nonprofitization of Queer Politics by Merl Beam
Pronouns Good or Bad: Attitudes and Relationships with Gendered Pronouns
Transgender Warriors
Whipping Girl; A Transsexual Woman on Sexism and the Scapegoating of Femininity
Stone Butch Blues by Lesie Feinberg (done!)
The Stonewall Reader by Edmund White
Sissy by Jacob Tobia
Gender Outlaw by Kate Bornstein
Butch Queens Up In Pumps by Marlon M. Bailey
Black On Both Sides: A Racial History Of Trans Identities by C Riley Snorton
Go Tell It On The Mountain by James Baldwin
Ezili’s Mirrors: Imagining Black Queer Genders by Omise’eke Natasha Tinsley
Lavender and Red by Emily K. Hobson
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wjconnolly: #TheatreCampLive has raised $3,700 for @covenant_house + @switchboardlgbt. Thank you to everybody for supporting our two important charities + this group of wonderful people for giving their time to help others 💙💙
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