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Roots of Blues Willie Newbern „Roll And Tumble Blues Hambone
Roll And Tumble Blues Hambone (W. Newbern) 'Little is known about blues songster Hambone Willie Newbern; a mere half-dozen sides comprise the sum of his recorded legacy, but among those six is the first-ever rendition of the immortal Delta classic "Roll and Tumble Blues." Reportedly born in 1899, he first began to make a name for himself in the Brownsville, TN area, where he played country dances and fish fries in the company of Yank Rachell; later, on the Mississippi medicine show circuit, he mentored Sleepy John Estes (from whom most of the known information about Newbern originated). While in Atlanta in 1929, Newbern cut his lone session; in addition to "Roll and Tumble," which became an oft-covered standard, he recorded songs like "She Could Toodle-Oo" and "Hambone Willie's Dreamy-Eyed Woman's Blues," which suggest an old-fashioned rag influence. By all reports an extremely ill-tempered man, Newbern's behavior eventually led him to prison, where a brutal beating is said to have brought his life to an end around 1947.' ~ Jason Ankeny, All Music Guide
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NEWBERN, Ala. — There’s a power struggle in Newbern, Alabama, and the rural town’s first Black mayor is at war with the previous administration who he says locked him out of Town Hall.
After years of racist harassment and intimidation, Patrick Braxton is fed up, and in a federal civil rights lawsuit he is accusing town officials of conspiring to deny his civil rights and his position because of his race.
“When I first became mayor, [a white woman told me] the town was not ready for a Black mayor,” Braxton recalls.
The town is 85% Black, and 29% of Black people here live below the poverty line.
“What did she mean by the town wasn’t ready for a Black mayor? They, meaning white people?” Capital B asked.
“Yes. No change,” Braxton says.
Decades removed from a seemingly Jim Crow South, white people continue to thwart Black political progress by refusing to allow them to govern themselves or participate in the country’s democracy, several residents told Capital B. While litigation may take months or years to resolve, Braxton and community members are working to organize voter education, registration, and transportation ahead of the 2024 general election.
But the tension has been brewing for years.
Two years ago, Braxton says he was the only volunteer firefighter in his department to respond to a tree fire near a Black person’s home in the town of 275 people. As Braxton, 57, actively worked to put out the fire, he says, one of his white colleagues tried to take the keys to his fire truck to keep him from using it.
In another incident, Braxton, who was off duty at the time, overheard an emergency dispatch call for a Black woman experiencing a heart attack. He drove to the fire station to retrieve the automated external defibrillator, or AED machine, but the locks were changed, so he couldn’t get into the facility. He raced back to his house, grabbed his personal machine, and drove over to the house, but he didn’t make it in time to save her. Braxton wasn’t able to gain access to the building or equipment until the Hale County Emergency Management Agency director intervened, the lawsuit said.
“I have been on several house fires by myself,” Braxton says. “They hear the radio and wouldn’t come. I know they hear it because I called dispatch, and dispatch set the tone call three or four times for Newbern because we got a certain tone.”
Not only has he been locked out of the town hall and fought fires alone, but he’s been followed by a drone and unable to retrieve the town’s mail and financial accounts, he says. Rather than concede, Haywood “Woody” Stokes III, the former white mayor, along with his council members, reappointed themselves to their positions after ordering a special election that no one knew about.
Braxton is suing them, the People’s Bank of Greensboro, and the postmaster at the U.S. Post Office.
For at least 60 years, there’s never been an election in the town. Instead, the mantle has been treated as a “hand me down” by the small percentage of white residents, according to several residents Capital B interviewed. After being the only one to submit qualifying paperwork and statement of economic interests, Braxton became the mayor.
Stokes and his council — which consists of three white people (Gary Broussard, Jesse Leverett, Willie Tucker) and one Black person (Voncille Brown Thomas) — deny any wrongdoing in their response to the amended complaint filed on April 17. They also claim qualified immunity, which protects state and local officials from individual liability from civil lawsuits.
The attorneys for all parties, including the previous town council, the bank, and Lynn Thiebe, the postmaster at the post office, did not respond to requests for comment.
The town where voting never was
Over the past 50 years, Newbern has held a majority Black population. The town was incorporated in 1854 and became known as a farm town. The Great Depression and the mechanization of the cotton industry contributed to Newbern’s economic and population decline, according to the Encyclopedia of Alabama.
Today, across Newbern’s 1.2 square miles sits the town hall and volunteer fire department constructed by Auburn’s students, an aging library, U.S. Post Office, and Mercantile, the only store there, which Black people seldom frequent because of high prices and a lack of variety of products, Braxton says.
“They want to know why Black [people] don’t shop with them. You don’t have nothin’ the Black [people] want or need,” he says. “No gasoline. … They used to sell country-time bacon and cheese and souse meat. They stopped selling that because they say they didn’t like how it feel on their hands when they cuttin’ the meat.”
To help unify the town, Braxton began hosting annual Halloween parties for the children, and game day for the senior citizens. But his efforts haven’t been enough to stop some people from moving for better jobs, industry, and quality of life.
Residents say the white town leaders have done little to help the predominantly Black area thrive over the years. They question how the town has spent its finances, as Black residents continue to struggle. Under the American Rescue Plan Act, Newbern received $30,000, according to an estimated funding sheet by Alabama Democratic U.S. Rep. Terri Sewell, but residents say they can’t see where it has gone.
At the First Baptist Church of Newbern, Braxton, three of his selected council members — Janice Quarles, 72, Barbara Patrick, 78, and James Ballard, 76 — and the Rev. James Williams, 77, could only remember two former mayors: Robert Walthall, who served as mayor for 44 years, and Paul Owens, who served on the council for 33 years and mayor for 11.
“At one point, we didn’t even know who the mayor was,” Ballard recalls. “If you knew somebody and you was white, and your grandfather was in office when he died or got sick, he passed it on down to the grandson or son, and it’s been that way throughout the history of Newbern.”
Quarles agreed, adding: “It took me a while to know that Mr. Owens was the mayor. I just thought he was just a little man cleaning up on the side of the road, sometimes picking up paper. I didn’t know until I was told that ‘Well, he’s the mayor now.’”
Braxton mentioned he heard of a Black man named Mr. Hicks who previously sought office years ago.
“This was before my time, but I heard Mr. Hicks had won the mayor seat and they took it from him the next day [or] the next night,” Braxton said. “It was another Black guy, had won years ago, and they took it from.”
“I hadn’t heard that one,” Ballard chimes in, sitting a few seats away from Braxton.
“How does someone take the seat from him, if he won?” Capital B asked.
“The same way they’re trying to do now with Mayor Braxton,” Quarles chuckled. “Maybe at that time — I know if it was Mr. Hicks — he really had nobody else to stand up with him.”
Despite the rumor, what they did know for sure: There was never an election, and Stokes had been in office since 2008.
The costs to challenging the white power structure
After years of disinvestment, Braxton’s frustrations mounted at the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, when he says Stokes refused to commemorate state holidays or hang up American flags. When the COVID-19 pandemic hit, the majority-white council failed to provide supplies such as disinfectant, masks, and humidifiers to residents to mitigate the risks of contracting the virus.
Instead of waiting, Braxton made several trips to neighboring Greensboro, about 10 miles away, to get food and other items to distribute to Black and white residents. He also placed signs around town about vaccination. He later found his signs had been destroyed and put in “a burn pile,” he said.
After years of unmet needs of the community, Braxton decided to qualify for mayor. Only one Black person — Brown Thomas, who served with Stokes —has ever been named to the council. After Braxton told Stokes, the acting mayor, his intention to run, the conspiracy began, the lawsuit states.
According to the lawsuit, Stokes gave Braxton the wrong information on how to qualify for mayor. Braxton then consulted with the Alabama Conference of Black Mayors, and the organization told him to file his statement of candidacy and statement of the economic interests with the circuit clerk of Hale County and online with the state, the lawsuit states. Vickie Moore, the organization’s executive director, said it also guided Braxton on how to prepare for his first meeting and other mayoral duties.
Moore, an Alabama native and former mayor of Slocomb, said she has never heard of other cases across the state where elected officials who have never been elected are able to serve. This case with Braxton is “racism,” she said.
“The true value of a person can’t be judged by the color of their skin, and that’s what’s happening in this case here, and it’s the worst racism I’ve ever seen,” Moore said. “We have fought so hard for simple rights. It’s one of the most discouraging but encouraging things because it encourages us to continue to move forward … and continue to fight.”
Political and legal experts say what’s happening in Newbern is rare, but the tactics to suppress Black power aren’t, especially across the South. From tampering with ballot boxes to restricting reading material, “the South has been resistant to all types of changes” said Emmitt Riley III, associate professor of political science and Africana Studies at The University of the South.
“This is a clear case of white [people] attempting to seize and maintain political power in the face of someone who went through the appropriate steps to qualify and to run for office and by default wins because no one else qualified,” Riley added. “This raises a number of questions about democracy and a free and fair system of governance.”
Riley mentioned a different, but similar case in rural Greenwood, Mississippi. Sheriel Perkins, a longtime City Council member, became the first Black female mayor in 2006, serving for only two years. She ran again in 2013 and lost by 206 votes to incumbent Carolyn McAdams, who is white. Perkins contested the results, alleging voter fraud. White people allegedly paid other white people to live in the city in order to participate in the election and cast a legal vote, Riley said. In that case, the state Supreme Court dismissed the case and “found Perkins presented no evidence” that anyone voted illegally in a precinct, but rather it was the election materials that ended up in the wrong precincts.
“It was also on record that one white woman got on the witness stand and said, ‘I came back to vote because I was contacted to vote by X person.’ I think you see these tactics happening all across the South in local elections, in particular,” Riley said. “It becomes really difficult for people to really litigate these cases because in many cases it goes before the state courts, and state courts have not been really welcoming to overturning elections and ordering new elections.”
Another example: Camilla, Georgia.
In 2015, Rufus Davis was elected as the first Black male mayor of rural, predominantly Black Camilla. In 2017, the six-person City Council — half Black and half white — voted to deny him a set of keys to City Hall, which includes his office. Davis claimed the white city manager, Bennett Adams, had been keeping him from carrying out his mayoral duties.
The next year, Davis, along with Black City Council member Venterra Pollard, boycotted the city’s meetings because of “discrimination within the city government,” he told a local news outlet. Some of the claims included the absence of Black officers in the police department, and the city’s segregated cemetery, where Black people cannot be buried next to white people. (The wire fence that divided the cemetery was taken down in 2018). In 2018, some citizens of the small town of about 5,000 people wanted to remove Davis from office and circulated a petition that garnered about 200 signatures. In 2019, he did not seek re-election for office.
“You’re not the mayor”
After being the only person to qualify and submit proper paperwork for any municipal office, Braxton became mayor-elect and the first Black mayor in Newbern’s history on July 22, 2020.
Following the announcement, Braxton appointed members to join his council, consistent with the practice of previous leadership. He asked both white and Black people to serve, he said, but the white people told him they didn’t want to get involved.
The next month, Stokes and the former council members, Broussard, Leverett, Brown Thomas, and Tucker, called a secret meeting to adopt an ordinance to conduct a special election on Oct. 6 because they “allegedly forgot to qualify as candidates,” according to the lawsuit, which also alleges the meeting was not publicized. The defendants deny this claim, but admit to filing statements of candidacy to be elected at the special election, according to their response to an amended complaint filed on their behalf.
Because Stokes and his council were the only ones to qualify for the Oct. 6 election, they reappointed themselves as the town council. On Nov. 2, 2020, Braxton and his council members were sworn into office and filed an oath of office with the county probate judge’s office. Ten days later, the city attorney’s office executed an oath of office for Stokes and his council.
After Braxton held his first town meeting in November, Stokes changed the locks to Town Hall to keep him and his council from accessing the building. For months, the two went back and forth on changing the locks until Braxton could no longer gain access. At some point, Braxton says he discovered all official town records had been removed or destroyed, except for a few boxes containing meeting minutes and other documents.
Braxton also was prevented from accessing the town’s financial records with the People’s Bank of Greensboro and the city clerk, and obtaining mail from the town’s post office. At every turn, he was met with a familiar answer: “You’re not the mayor.” Separately, he’s had drones following him to his home and mother’s home and had a white guy almost run him off the road, he says.
Braxton asserts he’s experienced these levels of harassment and intimidation to keep him from being the mayor, he said.
“Not having the Lord on your side, you woulda’ gave up,” he told Capital B.
‘Ready to fire away’
In the midst of the obstacles, Braxton kept pushing. He partnered with LaQuenna Lewis, founder of Love Is What Love Does, a Selma-based nonprofit focused on enriching the lives of disadvantaged people in Dallas, Perry, and Hale counties through such means as food distribution, youth programming, and help with utility bills. While meeting with Braxton, Lewis learned more about his case and became an investigator with her friend Leslie Sebastian, a former advocacy attorney based in California.
The three began reviewing thousands of documents from the few boxes Braxton found in Town Hall, reaching out to several lawyers and state lawmakers such as Sen. Bobby Singleton and organizations such as the Southern Poverty Law Center. No one wanted to help.
When the white residents learned Lewis was helping Braxton, she, too, began receiving threats early last year. She received handwritten notes in the mail with swastikas and derogatory names such as the n-word and b-word. One of theletters had a drawing of her and Braxton being lynched.
Another letter said they had been watching her at the food distribution site and hoped she and Braxton died. They also made reference to her children, she said. Lewis provided photos of the letters, but Capital B will not publish them. In October, Lewis and her children found their house burned to the ground. The cause was undetermined, but she thinks it may have been connected.
Lewis, Sebastian, and Braxton continued to look for attorneys that would take the case. Braxton filed a complaint in Alabama’s circuit court last November, but his attorney at the time stopped answering his calls. In January, they found a new attorney, Richard Rouco, who filed an amended complaint in federal court.
“He went through a total of five attorneys prior to me meeting them last year, and they pretty much took his money. We ran into some big law firms who were supposed to help and they kind of misled him,” Lewis says.
Right now, the lawsuit is in the early stages, Rouco says, and the two central issues of the case center on whether the previous council with Stokes were elected as they claim and if they gave proper notice.
Braxton and his team say they are committed to still doing the work in light of the lawsuit. Despite the obstacles, Braxton is running for mayor again in 2025. Through AlabamaLove.org, the group is raising money to provide voter education and registration, and address food security and youth programming. Additionally, they all hope they can finally bring their vision of a new Newbern to life.
For Braxton, it’s bringing grocery and convenience stores to the town. Quarles wants an educational and recreational center for children. Williams, the First Baptist Church minister, wants to build partnerships to secure grants in hopes of getting internet and more stores.
“I believe we done put a spark to the rocket, and it’s going [to get ready] to fire away,” Williams says at his church. “This rocket ready to fire away, and it’s been hovering too long.”
Correction: In Newbern, Alabama, 29% of the Black population lives below the poverty line. An earlier version of this story misstated the percentage
#alabama#Newbern Alabama#A Black Man Was Elected Mayor in Rural Alabama#but the White Town Leaders Won’t Let Him Serve#Patrick Braxton#AlabamaLove.org#black lives matter
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Norty Blues 20240630 Episode 71
https://www.podbean.com/media/share/pb-w79m2-16569a3 Welcome to this week’s Norty Blues.I’m Archie Archive and the entertainment this week is from Hambone Willie Newbern, Gertrude ‘Ma’ Rainey, Skip James, Lucille Bogan, Blue Lu Barker, The Teskey Brothers, Minnie Marks, Charlie Parker, Lightnin’ Hopkins, Roy Bookbinder, Lead Belly and Larkin Poe
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Hambone Willie Newbern - Roll and Tumble Blues (1929) William "Hambone Willie" Newbern from: "Roll and Tumble Blues" / "Nobody Knows What the Good Deacon Says"
Recorded March 14th, 1929 in Atlanta, Georgia
William "Hambone Willie" Newbern
#Roll and Tumble Blues#Hambone Willie Newbern#Hambone Willie#Rollin' and Tumblin'#20's#Pre-War Blues#Acoustic Blues#Slide-Guitar#Okeh Records#021
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Noticias de series de la semana: 'Pose' renovada
Renovaciones de series
FX ha renovado Pose por una segunda temporada
BBC One ha renovado Still Game por una novena y última temporada
Starz ha renovado Sweetbitter por una segunda temporada
Noticias cortas
El Tribunal Supremo de California ha rechazado revisar el caso de Olivia de Havilland contra Ryan Murphy y FX por su representación en Feud.
La película de Downton Abbey, escrita por Julian Fellowes y dirigida por Brian Percival, se grabará este verano.
Annabelle Attanasio (Cable McCrory) no volverá en la tercera temporada de Bull.
La cuarta y última temporada de Crazy Ex-Girlfriend tendrá dieciocho episodios.
La quinta y última temporada de Jane the Virgin tendrá dieciocho episodios.
Incorporaciones y fichajes de series
Christina Applegate (Married with Children, Samantha Who?) protagonizará Dead to Me. Será Jen, una mujer con problemas de ira y un sentido del humor más oscuro desde que su marido murió en un atropello y fuga.
Hayley Atwell (Agent Carter) y Tamara Lawrance (Undercover) protagonizarán The Long Song, adaptación de la novela de Andrea Levy (2010) sobre los últimos días de la esclavitud en Jamaica en 1838. Serán July, una esclava que se convierte en madre de un caballero y su odiosa señora Caroline Mortimer. Les acompañarán, entre otros, Jack Lowden (War and Peace, Dunkirk), Lenny Henry (Broadchurch, Harry Potter) y Jordan Bolger (Peaky Blinders, The 100).
Vera Farmiga (Bates Motel, Up in the Air), John Leguizamo (Bloodline, Moulin Rouge) y Michael K. Williams (The Wire, The Night Of) protagonizarán Central Park Five. Serán la fiscal del caso y los padres de dos de los acusados.
Jason Momoa (Aquaman, Game of Thrones) protagonizará See. Será Baba Voss, un audaz guerrero, líder y guardián. No se conocen más detalles de la serie.
Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio (The Color of Money, Robin Hood) se une a la cuarta temporada de Blindspot. Se desconocen detalles.
Barry Keoghan (Dunkirk, The Killing of a Sacred Deer), Diane Lane (Under the Tuscan Sun, Unfaithful), Imogen Poots (Roadies, 28 Weeks Later), Marin Ireland (Sneaky Pete, Homeland), Lashana Lynch (Still Star-Crossed, Bulletproof) y Juliana Canfield (Succession) protagonizarán el piloto de Y: The Last Man, la adaptación del cómic de DC de Brian K. Vaughan y Pia Guerra, sobre un mundo en el que todos los mamíferos machos, excepto un humano llamado Yorick (Keoghan), han muerto. Lane y Poots interpretan a la madre y la hermana de Yorick. Escrita para FX por Michael Green (American Gods, Blade Runner 2049) y Aida Mashaka Croal (Luke Cage, Turn).
Tami Roman (Moonlight) será regular en Are You Sleeping como Lillian, la madrastra de Poppy (Octavia Spencer). Annabella Sciorra (The Sopranos, The Hand That Rocks the Cradle), Nic Bishop (Body of Proof, Snowfall) y Molly Hagan (Jane the Virgin, iZombie) serán recurrentes como Chuck, Erin y Susan, los padres y la tía de las mellizas Josie y Lanie (Lizzy Caplan).
George Newbern (Scandal, Father of the Bride) será recurrente en la vigésima temporada de Law & Order: SVU como Al Pollack, interés amoroso de Rollins (Kelli Giddish).
Julia Garner (Ozark, The Americans) y Juno Temple (Atonement, Vinyl) interpretarán a las hijas de Debra (Connie Britton) en Dirty John.
Charles Esten (Nashville, The Office) y Kat Willis (Friday Night Lights, Queen of the South) serán recurrentes en Tell Me Your Secrets como Saul Barlow, marido de Mary (Amy Brenneman); y Diana Lord, una mujer que trata de equilibrar su trabajo de caridad con la educación de una hija malcriada.
Grace Song será recurrente en Kidding como Eliza, una estudiante universitaria vecina de Jeff (Jim Carrey).
Punam Patel (Kevin from Work, Adam Ruins Everything) será recurrente en la segunda temporada de Alone Together como Tara, compañera de clase de actuación de Esther (Esther Povitsky).
Jeffrey Bowyer-Chapman (UnREAL, SGU Stargate Universe) y Kyle Allen (The Path) participarán como invitados en la octava temporada de American Horror Story.
April Bowlby (Drop Dead Diva, Two and a Half Men) será Elasti-Girl, además de en Titans, en Doom Patrol.
Julie Ann Emery (Preacher, Fargo) será Marion, esposa de Scheisskopf (George Clooney), en Catch-22.
Stephanie Beatriz (Brooklyn Nine-Nine) y Melissa Fumero (Brooklyn Nine-Nine) participarán como invitadas en la tercera temporada de One Day at a Time interpretando a Pilar y Estrellita, primas de Penelope (Justina Machado).
Ariyon Bakare (Rogue One, Life) será Lord Boreal en His Dark Materials.
Davi Santos (Power Rangers Dino Charge), Zabryna Guevara (Gotham, The Get Down) y Dorian Missick (Animal Kingdom, Luke Cage) serán Gabe, hermano de Hannah (Dania Ramirez), la detective Renee Garcia y el líder de una banda criminal en Tell Me a Story.
Rich Sommer (Mad Men, GLOW) sustituye a Austin Nichols en In the Dark en el papel de Dean, un policía con una hija ciega.
Stephen Full (Dog With a Blog, I'm in the Band) será recurrente en la tercera temporada de Santa Clarita Diet como Janko, trabajador del consulado serbio.
Chris McNally (Altered Carbon) y Kevin McGarry (Heartland, Saw VII) se unen a la sexta temporada de When Calls the Heart. Serán Lucas Bouchard, el dueño de un saloon, y Nathan Grant, de la policía montada.
Belle Shouse (Secrets & Lies) protagonizará Queen America junto a Catherine Zeta-Jones. Será la ignorante e insegura Samantha, que espera que Vicki (Zeta-Jones) pueda convertirla en reina de la belleza. Completan el reparto Teagle F. Bougere (The Path), Rana Roy (Life Sentence, Switched at Birth), Isabella Amara (The Tale, Alex Strangelove), Molly Price (Bloodline, Feud) y Megan West (How to Get Away with Murder, This Is Us).
Pósters de series
Nuevas series
ITV emitirá la adaptación en ocho episodios de Sandition, la última novela (inacabada) de Jane Austen (1817). Escrita por Andrew Davies (War and Peace, Mr. Selfridge).
Luz verde directa en Sony a diez episodios de Reckoning, thriller psicológico rodado en Australia y ambientado en California. Creado por David Hubbard (Noel) y David Eick (Falling Skies), explora los rincones más oscuros de la mente humana a través de los ojos de dos padres, de los cuales uno es un asesino en serie Mike (Aden Young, Rectify) y Leo (Sam Trammell, True Blood) intentan hacer lo mejor para su familia y ambos luchan por suprimir sus demonios internos, pero el asesinato de un adolescente les lleva a intentar destruir al otro.
Julie Delpy desarrolla para AMC el remake de la israelí Confess, que explorará la intimidad actual y cómo los medios digitales están cambiando las vidas privadas. Producida por Delpy y los creadores de la original.
Netflix desarrolla Three Wishes, adaptación de la novela de Liane Moriarty (Big Little Lies) sobre el escandaloso secreto que prueba la unión de tres hermanas en una boda que acaba en tragedia.
Netflix encarga Puerta 7, su tercera serie original argentina. Creada por Martin Zimmerman (Ozark, Narcos) y escrita por Patricio Vega (Los simuladores), es un thriller sobre las barras bravas, los peligrosos hinchas de fútbol. En la serie, una mujer quiere limpiar la corrupción de un equipo y limpiar el nombre de su familia, un joven se convierte en barra brava para salvar a su familia de la pobreza y diferentes facciones del mismo club se enfrentan en una guerra civil.
Sky Rojo, drama de acción con mucha presencia femenina, será el primer proyecto de Álex Pina (La casa de papel, Vis a vis) en su nuevo acuerdo exclusivo con Netflix.
Luz verde directa en HBO a The Nevers, drama de ciencia ficción escrito, dirigido y producido por Joss Whedon (The Avengers, Buffy the Vampire Slayer). Ambientado en la época victoriana, trata sobre un grupo de mujeres con habilidades inusuales, enemigos implacables y una misión que podría cambiar el mundo.
SundanceTV ha encargado diez episodios de diez minutos de duración de State of the Union, sobre los encuentros semanales de una pareja en un bar antes de sus sesiones de terapia de pareja. Protagonizada por Rosamund Pike (Gone Girl, Pride & Prejudice) y Chris O'Dowd (The IT Crowd, Girls), escrita por Nick Hornby (About a Boy, Brooklyn) y dirigida por Stephen Frears (The Queen, A Very English Scandal).
Fechas de series
Los primeros cuatro episodios de la segunda temporada de Alone Together se podrán ver en Hulu y plataformas digitales el 25 de julio
La segunda temporada de Sick Note llega a Sky One el 26 de julio
Insatiable llega a Netflix el 10 de agosto
La segunda temporada de The Deuce llega a HBO el 9 de septiembre
La decimosegunda temporada de The Big Bang Theory se estrena en CBS el 24 de septiembre
La segunda temporada de Young Sheldon se estrena en CBS el 24 de septiembre
Magnum P.I. llega a CBS el 24 de septiembre
La tercera temporada de Bull se estrena en CBS el 24 de septiembre
La decimosexta temporada de NCIS se estrena en CBS el 25 de septiembre
FBI llega a CBS el 25 de septiembre
La quinta temporada de NCIS: New Orleans llega a CBS el 25 de septiembre
La vigesimosegunda temporada de South Park llega a Comedy Central el 26 de septiembre
La sexta temporada de Mom se estrena en CBS el 27 de septiembre
La undécima temporada de Murphy Brown llega a CBS el 27 de septiembre
La segunda temporada de SWAT llega a CBS el 27 de septiembre
La tercera temporada de MacGyver llega a CBS el 28 de septiembre
La novena temporada de Hawaii Five-0 se estrena el CBS el 28 de septiembre
La novena temporada de Blue Bloods se estrena en CBS el 28 de septiembre
God Friended Me llega a CBS el 30 de septiembre
The Neighborhood se estrena en CBS el 1 de octubre
Happy Together llega a CBS el 1 de octubre
La segunda temporada de SEAL Team se estrena en CBS el 3 de octubre
La decimocuarta temporada de Criminal Minds llega a CBS el 3 de octubre
La quinta temporada de Madam Secretary llega a CBS el 7 de octubre
Tráilers de series
Insatiable
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Orange Is the New Black - Temporada 6
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Castle Rock
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Casual - Temporada 4 y última
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Vintage Circle-Track 1968 Dodge Charger Rescue!
Mike Finnegan has had Charger lust since his childhood exposure to the General Lee on “The Dukes of Hazzard,” so he recently bought a 1968 Dodge Charger that had been wrecked when new, then hacked into a circle-track race car, all highlighted here on this episode of “Roadkill,” powered by Dodge.
The car was abandoned in 1970 before ever making a lap and has lasted 48 years in as-built condition, complete with giant Ford truck drum brakes, eight-lug wheels, a Willys rear end, a water-pipe roll cage setup, and a freaky suspension configuration.
After securing the time-capsule beater at his Georgia wrenching facility, Finnegan went to work alongside buddies Tony Angelo, David Newbern, and Daniel Boshears as they installed a fresh 383 big-block and a Silver Sport Transmissions’ six-speed swap along with plenty of other stuff required to drive the Charger to Indianapolis to visit the car’s original builder!
Then, to finally fulfill the car’s destiny, Finnegan and Angelo wrap up the revival with some hot laps at a homemade circle track.
The post Vintage Circle-Track 1968 Dodge Charger Rescue! appeared first on Automobile Magazine.
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Vintage Circle-Track 1968 Dodge Charger Rescue!
Mike Finnegan has had Charger lust since his childhood exposure to the General Lee on “The Dukes of Hazzard,” so he recently bought a 1968 Dodge Charger that had been wrecked when new, then hacked into a circle-track race car, all highlighted here on this episode of “Roadkill,” powered by Dodge.
The car was abandoned in 1970 before ever making a lap and has lasted 48 years in as-built condition, complete with giant Ford truck drum brakes, eight-lug wheels, a Willys rear end, a water-pipe roll cage setup, and a freaky suspension configuration.
After securing the time-capsule beater at his Georgia wrenching facility, Finnegan went to work alongside buddies Tony Angelo, David Newbern, and Daniel Boshears as they installed a fresh 383 big-block and a Silver Sport Transmissions’ six-speed swap along with plenty of other stuff required to drive the Charger to Indianapolis to visit the car’s original builder!
Then, to finally fulfill the car’s destiny, Finnegan and Angelo wrap up the revival with some hot laps at a homemade circle track.
The post Vintage Circle-Track 1968 Dodge Charger Rescue! appeared first on Automobile Magazine.
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Norty Blues Episode 13
https://www.podbean.com/media/share/pb-ppew9-141d527 Close to an hour of Blues from the 20’s to the present. Including tracks from Charlie Patton, Memphis Minnie, Hambone Willie Newbern, Howlin Wolf, the very norty Julia Lee, Dave Hole, Georgia Lee, Matt Taylor & Chain, Oscar Peterson Frank Sultana
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Muddy Waters - Rollin' and Tumblin' (Part 1) (1950) William "Hambone Willie" Newbern / McKinley Morganfield from: "Rollin' and Tumblin' (Part 1)" / "Rollin' and Tumblin' (Part 2)"
Muddy Waters: Vocals / Guitar Ernest "Big" Crawford: Bass
#Rollin' and Tumblin' (Part 1)#Rollin' and Tumblin'#Muddy Waters#50's#Aristocrat Records#Hambone Willie Newbern#Blues#Chicago Blues
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Muddy Waters - Rollin' and Tumblin' (Part 2) (1950) William "Hambone Willie" Newbern / McKinley Morganfield from: "Rollin' and Tumblin' (Part 1)" / "Rollin' and Tumblin' (Part 2)"
Muddy Waters: Vocals / Guitar Ernest "Big" Crawford: Bass
#Rollin' and Tumblin' (Part 2)#Rollin' and Tumblin'#Blues#Slide Guitar#Aristocrat Records#Chess Records#Muddy Waters#Kiwi6
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