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#Jameson Wilkins
altpick · 1 year
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Spring is in the Air!
The weather is warming up, the spring flowers are blooming and spirits are lifting. To celebrate, Altpick highlighted several members’ portfolios this past week including illustrators Joey Feldman, Davide Bonazzi, and Jameson Wilkins; in addition to photographer Brian Smale. Here’s a taste of their work, but for more, please visit their portfolios on Altpick.com. Illustrator Joey Feldman ©Joey…
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miahasahardname · 6 months
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i’ve had this long list of td surname headcanons (and i guess some of them are nationality headcanons) for a while and haven’t done much about them, so…
here are each generation’s surnames! (except for rr since i’m not too confident about them)
gen 1:
harold norbert cheever doris mcgrady V
cody emmett jameson anderson
lindsay tyson
noah könig (german)
eva barta (czech)
izzy clark
owen fraser
trent evans-grant
gwen kennedy
heather ryeo
bridgette summers
leshawna simelane (south african iirc)
beth spring
devon ‘dj’ joseph
alejandro burromuerto (spanish)
sierra kauffman (german)
tyler wilson
ezekiel miller
courtney cortez (spanish, or from somewhere where they speak spanish primarily)
duncan butcher
katie wan (malaysian)
sadie peterson (originally was gonna give her a romanian surname but here is peterson)
justin kāne (hawaiian)
geoff jasper
gen 2:
josef ‘jo’ kaczmarek (Polish)
brick macarthur
anne-maria chahuán (chilean)
michele ‘mike’ russo
cameron corduroy wilkins
rudolph ‘lightning’ jackson
staci sterling
zoey gates
dawn oakwood
scott brackin (irish)
dakota milton
sam stevens
beverly ‘b’ jones
gen 3:
ella ito-courtemanche (japanese and french)
scarlett montgomery
max mayhem (yes. i’m actually giving him that as his surname. get sillyed)
jasmine reynolds
shawn tremblay
dave korrapati (indian, more commonly in telugu-speaking areas)
sky sanderson (i was a bit uhm. stuck with this one. i looked up ‘cree surnames’ but found only three. i went for this one but i’m still uncertain.)
amy martin
samantha ‘samey’ martin
topher mccann
rodney rogers
sugar silo
beardo mbomio (equatoguinean)
leonard howe
gen 4:
nichelle ladonna (italian)
bowie davis
emma fletcher
julia hartwell-hughes
priya khan (indian)
millie carter
chase boonmee (thai. it means ‘reliable, generous, loyal’. ironic)
raj ghosh (indian)
wayne watterson
mary-kate ‘mk’ yí (chinese. in honour of fai yí, my beloved)
damien reid
hezekias ‘zee’ guzman (argentinian (it means ‘good man’ which is what he is!!!))
rhinffrew ‘ripper’ bowen (welsh (WELSH RIPPER REAL))
caleb garcia (hispanic)
axel sanchez-guðmundsdóttir (hispanic(?) and icelandic. yes, apparently ‘axel’ is an icelandic name!)
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burymeinmelodies · 2 years
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Camp Half-Blood Rules (an evolution of the list for the purpose of a fic I’m writing)
From an old piece of paper tacked to the inside of the door to the sleeping barracks:
Rules September 14, 1840 Compiled by Chiron, Clara Aigler, Phebe Wilkins, and Elbert Jameson
1. Demigods under the tutelage of Chiron are not permitted to intentionally kill or maim any other demigod under the tutelage of Chiron.
2. Demigods under the tutelage of Chiron are not permitted to harm naiads, dryads, or any other nature spirit unless strictly necessary for self-defense.
3. Demigods under the tutelage of Chiron are not permitted to steal or damage the personal property of Chiron or any other demigod under his tutelage.
In a different hand, scribbled at the bottom: January 29, 1845 4. Lamp oil may no longer be kept inside the sleeping barracks.
(to be added to as the fic progresses)
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mangora · 2 years
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I like seeing people’s headcanons for the characters’ full names so here’s my post (+ my hc ethnicities bc why not.)
Note: I’m mostly basing last names on like online research and not all last names correlate with ethnicity for a variety of reasons, so sorry if they’re not like accurate. And I didn’t have super strong opinions on some characters. Also nonwhite people can live in and originate from predominantly white countries for reasons like immigration or carriers of recessive traits for skin color, so when I say things like Alejandro and Mike are from Europe I’m not saying they’re white swearsies)
Gen 1:
Gwen: Gwendolyn Addams (German/British)
Duncan: Duncan O’Doherty (Scottish)
Courtney: Courtney Barbosa-Gonzales (Filipino/Puerto Rican)
Lindsay: Lindsay Beaudrie (French)
Heather: Heather Himura (Japanese)
Beth: Elizabeth Blaine (German/Polish)
Leshawna: Leshawna Ndiaye (African Canadian, family mostly has roots from Senegal)
DJ: Devon Joseph* Wright (Jamaican)
Cody: Cody Emmett Jameson Anderson (...duh)* (Idk British or something)
Noah: Noah Mudaliar (Tamil)
Harold: Harold Norbert Cheever Doris McGrady V* (Irish/Japanese)
Eva: Eva Bortsov (Siberian)
Izzy: Isabella Kennedy (Greek/Irish)
Owen: Owen Ellis (Mixed Western European)
Tyler: Tyler Cain (German [Hebrew])
Justin: Justin Alika (Hawaiian)
Ezekiel: Ezekiel Rudd (Norse/Dutch)
Sadie: Sadie Byun (Korean)
Katie: Katelynn Pakhrin (Nepali)
Geoff: Geoffrey Sawyer (Mixed Americanized Western European, mostly British)
Bridgette: Bridgette Langley (Same as Geoff)
Trent: Trenton Loveridge (Greek/Romani & Israeli)
Sierra: Sierra Wilde (Métis/Angolan)
Alejandro: Alejandro Burromuerto* (Spanish, ancestors are from various parts of Latin America)
Gen 2:
Mike: Michael Chiarelli (Italian [Sicilian with Western Asian ancestors]/Peruvian)
Mal: Mal Grimoire (Mixed indigenous Mexican, chose his own last name)
Svetlana: Svetlana Berezovsky (Russian)
Vito: Vito Valentino (Italian)
Manitoba: Manitoba Smith* (Murri/Koori)
Chester: Chester Young (Lithuanian/Mexican)
Zoey: Zoey Ahn (Korean)
Cameron: Cameron Corduroy Wilkins* (Mixed African Canadian, no clear roots)
Lightning: Rudolph “Lightning” Jackson* (Same case as Cameron)
Brick: Brick McArthur* (Scottish/Mexican)
Jo: Joanna Gryffon (Welsh)
Sam: Samuel Croft (Mixed Western European)
Dakota: Dakota Milton* (Venezuelan/British/French)
Staci: Staci Sweet (British & Swedish/German)
Scott: Scott Baur (Austrian/Scottish)
Dawn: Dawn Orion (Norse/Greek)
B: B. Keen (Egyptian/Ethiopian & Sudanese)(Adopted, canon dead name omitted)
Anne Maria: Anne Maria Ortega (Argentinian)
Gen 3:
Sky: Sky Oxendine (Cree)
Shawn: Shawn Torres-Vidal (Mexican)
Jasmine: Jasmine Maguire (Wangkatha)
Sammy: Samantha Lafitte (French)
Amy: Amy Lafitte (French)
Dave: Dave Shukla (Indian)
Max: Maxwell Delaney (Chinese/Welsh)(Adopted)
Sugar: Reese “Sugar” Houston (Mixed Western European)
Topher: Christopher Fitzroy (Mostly French and British)
Scarlett: Scarlett Fernsby (British)
Beardo: Badru “Beardo” Mohamed (Kenyan)
Leonard: Leonard Hart (Mixed African Canadian)
Ella: Eleanor Darling (British/Scottish)
Rodney: Rodney Feldman (German/Irish)
Gen 4:
Sanders: Jasper Elizabeth Sanders (Mixed African Canadian/Angolan)
MacArthur: Marsha MacArthur (I think the Valentina Escobar thing was total BS that’s just her mom’s name)(Scottish & Irish/Colombian & Mexican)
Dwayne: Dwayne Turner (Mixed Western European)
Junior: Dwayne “Junior” Turner Jr. (Same as Dwayne)
Brody: Brody García-Santos (Mixed Latino)
Mary: Maryam Yitzhaki (Israeli/Afghan)
Ellody: Ellody Mahir (Maldivian)
Emma: Emma Ozaki (Japanese)
Kitty: Kit Ozaki (Japanese)
Josee: Josee Lachance (French Canadian)
Jacques: Jacques Laurent (French Canadian)
Carrie: Caroline Lubomir (Bulgarian/Swedish)
Devin: Devin Linyang (Taiwanese)
Tammy: Tamara Burnside (Scottish)
Jay: Jason Durand (French Canadian)
Mickey: Michael Durand (French Canadian)
Crimson: Sarah “Crimson” Murphy (Mixed Eastern European)
Ennui: Simon “Ennui” Mayer (Romanian)
Miles: Miles Deniz (Turkish)
Laurie: Lauren “Laurie” Soleil (Turkish & French/Dominican)
Stephanie: Stephanie Armstrong (Mixed African Canadian)
Ryan: Ryan Mathura (Trinidadian)
Gerry: Gerald LaPointe (French Canadian)
Pete: Peter Manh (Vietnamese)
Lorenzo: Lorenzo Bandara-Whitaker (Sri Lankan/British)
Chet: Chet Frances (French/British)
Rock: Evan “Rock” Manson (Mixed Western European)
Spud: Andrew “Spud” Cooper (Mixed Western European)
Kelly: Kelly Fournier (French Canadian)
Taylor: Taylor Fournier (French Canadian)
Tom: Thomas Hemingway (British/French)
Jen: Jennifer Carrillo (Chilean/Laotian)
Notes: Chet and Lorenzo keep their last names the same, B and Max's last names are based on that of their adopted parents. Also, my headcanons change a lot. Also also, I'm really interested in world cultures but mostly self-taught on them so if you disagree for some reason or see something inaccurate/stereotypical lmk. Also depending on the character, they either use a nickname or chose their name themselves, in which case I don't want to give out their dead name/s. Also before someone corrects me on Bridgette and Geoff the creators have said they are both from California and came to Canada.
Edit 2: Edited recently because I realized I got some of the canon ethnicities wrong, also I’ve just changed some opinions or learned more about the etymology of names.
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lyledebeast · 2 years
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In doing further research (for fic), I discovered that Jameson Price (Captain Bordon) is American, and I was afraid that I’d rewatch today and find that Bordon has, in fact, been American all this time!
Now I’ve concluded that this is why he says about a dozen words in the whole movie, and in a low voice.  His British accent is not very British, but the filmmakers didn’t want to call attention to that because apparently Wilkins has to be The Only Loyalist in the Whole Wide Colony..
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razieltwelve · 4 years
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Quarantine Post #1
Quarantine: Day 17
We're running low on toilet paper. I might have no choice but to make another supply run. I can only hope it goes better than the last one. Twelve of us went out on that last supply run. Only seven of us made it back. Those bastards from up north have started hoarding supplies, and they're in no mood to share. They've got some real firepower too. I don't know where the hell they got a grenade launcher, but I was damn lucky not to be on the wrong end of it.
Quarantine: Day 19
The toilet paper convoy got hit on its way to the supermarket. It must have been the northern crew. A couple of our scouts say there is still some toilet paper in the wreckage. Maybe they didn't have enough trucks to carry it all off. We'll wait until nightfall and then make a run for it. If we're lucky, we can snag a couple of rolls each.
Jameson suggested using leaves. After all, there are plenty of gum trees. I'd almost forgotten he only joined us around Day 10. I told him what happened to Simmons. The damn drop bears got him. With the fires burning so much down, they haven't got anything to eat out in the bush, so they've been getting closer and closer to the cities. Simmons, the poor bastard, was wiping his ass with some eucalyptus leaves when they caught him with his pants down. By the time the screaming stopped, the only thing left was his pants.
Quarantine: Day 20
It was a trap. Those jerks from up north were waiting for us. They let us get right up to the toilet paper before giving us both barrels. We lost Wilkins and Chan to snipers before we even knew what was happening. Felton and Hassan went down a couple of seconds later when they opened fire from all sides.
I don't know how I got out of there. I grabbed as much toilet paper as I could, threw it in my backpack, and screamed for everyone to fall back. It was chaos, and then they started shooting that damn grenade launcher. My ears are still ringing. Somehow, I made it out of there, along with half a dozen others. We're all pretty banged up, and we've been picking shrapnel out of Cuthbert all night. I don't know if he's going to make it. I hope he does. He's a good man, and he's handy with a rifle too.
Quarantine: Day 27
I don't know what the hell those northern bastards have been smoking, but they just torched the Coles. That was one of the biggest supermarkets in the area, and one of the only ones still getting regular supply drops. Now, the damn thing is on fire, and we can see the smoke from kilometres away.
Patel thinks it's a power struggle. He says the northern group has gotten big enough to support multiple factions. He might be right. There were a damn lot of them shooting at us when they sprang that trap with the toilet paper. If it is a power struggle, I'm hoping they wipe each other out. It means more toilet paper for us and less trouble all around.
Quarantine: Day 30
I begged Smith not to go out at night. I begged him. I said it was too dangerous. There are a lot of trees out here, and night time is drop bear time. But he wouldn't listen. He figured he could hit the supermarket around midnight, maybe sneak out some extra supplies.
He'd only been gone five minutes when I heard the screaming. It was... it was awful. He must have screamed and wailed for at least an hour before they finally put him out of his misery. That's what drops bears are like. They know how people think. They know if they hurt one person that others will come running to see what's going on. One person can't feed a pack of drops bears - but a whole group of people? That'll do nicely for them.
There wasn't anything we could do for him. All we could do was listen until finally they must have realised we weren't going to come. Poor bastard. I wish I'd been close enough to put a bullet in him to make it quick. Hopefully, nobody else tries anything at night. There are a lot of trees here. Too many.
Quarantine: Day 37
We got a bunch of refugees from down south near the centre of the city. We had to check them all for any sign of infection. There have been rumours the Infected aren't just getting sick anymore. We've heard they're changing. We got lucky. Far as we can tell, none of them are Infected.
I talked to their leaders, a man and a woman. Claire said they'd come from one of the hotels near the harbour where they've been putting people in quarantine. It worked well enough the first few days, but she said once the Infected started changing it all went to hell. She and her husband, Rob, got out of there as quick as they could and grabbed anyone else who could keep up.
She couldn't really describe what the Infected looked like, but she told me I'd know when I saw them. After what happened to Smith, I figure there's not a lot left in this world that can scare me. But, hey, what do I know? I figured this whole thing was going to blow over in a couple of weeks, and here we are.
Quarantine: Day 40
We finally got word back from the Old Folks Home. I was worried they'd been wiped out, but apparently, they've got a militia going. Good for them. I went over there with a few other people to talk. I know their leader, a tough, old fella who cut his teeth fighting in Vietnam. I used to drop by and help with the garden down there, so I was hopeful he'd hear me out.
It went pretty well. It turns out they've been self-isolating, trying to keep clean of the infection and everything, but they're running low on supplies. We made a deal. They've got a generator and access to washing machines, and we've gotten good at hitting up supermarkets and other depots after supply drops. We get them the supplies they need, and they get all of our stuff clean. It's a good deal. I can't wait to sleep on clean sheets that don't have blood all over them.
Quarantine: Day 45
Someone tried to raid the Old Folks Home. They gave us a call over the radio, and we came running. There was a whole bunch of them in cars. I didn't recognise them. They must have come from someplace else. I think a few of them were flying Vaucluse colours, though. They were about to break through when we got there.
We gave them a good beating, and the old folks did their bit too. I've never seen a granny with a flamethrower before, but damn if she wasn't good with it. We took a couple of prisoners. It turns out things in the city are way worse than we thought.
The Infected are everywhere. Surry Hills is gone. Bondi is burning. And that last they saw of it, Darling Harbour was being overrun. There's nothing left down there, so they're heading north, trying to get someplace safe, and most of them don't care who they have to kill to get there. It's a damn shame. If they'd just told us they were planning on passing through, we'd have let them go, so long as they didn't try to take any of our supplies.
Quarantine: Day 48
We got a message for the military today. They're pulling back to defend Canberra. Sydney, Melbourne, everywhere else... they're lost causes. We're on our own. It sucks. But they've got to defend the capital and what's left of our government. On their way out though, they left us some satellite communications equipment.
It's pretty grim.
We got into contact with them, and they told us about the situation overseas. Italy is gone. The Infected just overran the place. Spain is fighting, but they've got a week, maybe less, before they go under too. China claims they've fought back the tide, but I don't think any of us believe that. They wouldn't be buying up every weapon they could find if things were okay.
Britain is... we don't know. We haven't gotten much word from them in more than a week, apparently, and the last we heard the Prime Minister was one of the Infected. As for the United States, well, they're still fighting. I figure if anyone can fight off the Infected, they can. We'll have to hope they can manage it. If they go down, I think we're just about finished.
Author's Notes
In all seriousness, it isn't actually this bad in Australia although the toilet paper shortage is a real thing. Anyway, I hope everyone is staying safe. Take care of each other.
If you’re interested in my thoughts on writing and other topics, you can find those here.
You can find my original fiction on Amazon here
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wazafam · 3 years
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Mark Grayson is an average 17-year-old, except for the fact that he is half-alien, and his dad is one of the most famous superheroes in the world. His average life is turned upside down when he finally gets superpowers of his own, but as the saying goes - with great power comes great responsibility.
RELATED: 5 Prime Originals We're Looking Forward To In 2020 (& 5 We're Not)
Based on a comic series penned by the brilliant and imaginative creator of The Walking Dead, Robert Kirkman, Amazon Prime's hit animated series Invincible is not only chock full of action-packed fun, but it features a broad array of famous guest stars including Jon Hamm, Seth Rogen, Mahershala Ali, Clancy Brown, and Ezra Miller. The main cast is just as star-studded with familiar and beloved voice actors, many of them a nod to other superhero franchises as well as The Walking Dead.
10 Sandra Oh (Debbie Grayson)
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Sandra Oh is a Canadian-American actress best known for her portrayal of Cristina Yang in Grey's Anatomy. More recently, she stars as Eve Polastri, a security services operative that gets caught up in the tangled web of a unique cat and mouse game with an assassin in Killing Eve.
Oh takes on the role of Debbie Grayson, a firm but loving wife and mother. She often serves as a rock for her family when things fall apart. She doesn't have superpowers, but she does have good advice and kind words for her husband and her son.
9 Steven Yeun (Mark Grayson/Invincible)
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Steven Yeun's first, major claim to fame was from his work as the lovable and brave Glenn Rhee on AMC's The Walking Dead. Since he met his fateful end at the hands of Negan, Yeun has been busy. He can be found voicing in Voltron, appearing in Sorry To Bother You, and he recently made Academy Award history with his Best Actor nomination for his role in Minari.
RELATED: Steven Yeun's 10 Best Roles Outside The Walking Dead, Ranked (According To IMDb)
Yeun plays Mark Grayson, an average high schooler who desperately wants to be a hero like his father. When he gets his wish, he realizes that the life of a hero is not as simple as he thought it would be.
8 Zazie Beetz (Amber Bennett)
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Playing Domino in Deadpool 2, and Sophie Dumond in Joker, Zazie Beetz is not a stranger to comic book adaptations. Outside of the superhero world, Beetz has also worked with Donald Glover on his hit series, Atlanta.
Amber Bennet is a headstrong, young high schooler who doesn't need anyone to take care of her...but she finds it kind of cute when Mark makes an effort. Amber is Mark's friend and love interest, though currently, their relationship is strained because of his superhero work and his friendship with Atom Eve.
7 J.K. Simmons (Nolan Grayson/Omni-Man)
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J.K. Simmons has also been an important part of the superhero universe. He expertly brought J.J. Jameson to life, the fast-talking editor-in-chief of the Daily Bugle in both the Marvel Cinematic Universe and in the Sam Raimi Spiderman franchise. An Oscar-winning actor for his work in Whiplash, Simmons has also been in Oscar-nominated films such as Juno and La La Land.
RELATED: J.K. Simmons' 10 Most Memorable Roles, Ranked (According to IMDb)
Nolan Grayson is Mark's father, also known as Omni-Man, one of the most famous superheroes in the world. He protects the innocent and upholds justice...or does he?
6 Andrew Rannells (William Clockwell)
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Andrew Rannells is a man of many talents whose work has spanned from Broadway to film to television. He has voice acted in various popular animated series such as Big Mouth, Yu-Gi-Oh, and Pokemon. He also played a recurring role in HBO's Girls, and led Trey Parker and Matt Stone's comic musical, The Book Of Mormon.
William is one of Mark's high school friends who tries to keep him out of trouble, but with Mark's new super-powered life, he's bitten off a bit more than he can chew.
5 Zachary Quinto (Robot)
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Zachary Quinto is a talented actor who first began to receive notice from his sinister portrayal of the superpowered villain, Sylar, in NBC's Heroes. He has gone on to helm the incredible role of Spock in JJ Abram's Star Trek franchise and has also had recurring roles in American Horror Story.
Quinto lends his voice to the character of "Robot" in six episodes of Invincible season one. After the Guardians meet their demise in the first episode, a new band of superheroes must be created, and Robot is ready to help form a team.
4 Mark Hamill (Art Rosebaum)
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Mark  Hamill will always be Luke Skywalker to Star Wars fans young and old, but his experience spans far outside that galaxy far, far away. Mark Hamill first voiced the Joker in the early 90s and continued to play the chaotic Batman villain for 19 years. Hamill hasn't thrown in the towel for voice acting.
RELATED: 10 Of Mark Hamill's Most Iconic Roles (Outside Of Star Wars)
He recently voiced the killer doll, Chucky, in the popular horror reboot, and also had a role in The Dark Crystals: Age Of Resistance. Art Rosebaum is the Edna Mode of Invincible. He is the man that superheroes go to for their costume needs, and he is more than happy to find the perfect one for Mark.
3 Gillian Jacobs (Samantha Eve Wilkins/Atom Eve)
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Gillian Jacobs has had starring roles in Community and Love, as well as a recurring role as Mimi-Rose Howard in HBO's Girls. Prior to that, she showed off her voice-acting chops in the Monsters vs. Aliens animated series.
Jacobs takes flight in Invincible as the amazing Atom Eve, a fellow high schooler and a part-time superhero. Friends and partners in world-saving, Eve catches Mark's eye, but her tumultuous relationship with Rex Sloan keeps a potential romance out of arm's reach.
2 Jason Mantzoukas (Rex Splode/Rex Sloan)
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Known for playing loud, brash, and politically incorrect characters, Jason Mantzoukas is a big name in comedy. He has been featured in live-action television series including The Good Place, Brooklynn Nine-Nine, Parks and Recreation, and The League. He can currently be heard as the voice of Jay in Netflix's adult animated series, Big Mouth. 
True to his name, Rex Splode has the ability to make objects explode with just his touch. Cocky and a bit of a playboy, Rex gets himself into hot water with his big mouth, and when his girlfriend catches him in a compromising situation with another super.
1 The Walking Dead Cast (Various Superheroes)
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Robert Kirkman wrote the graphic novels for The Walking Dead and later helped bring the series to life on television. He is doing it once again with his dark yet hopeful superhero series, Invincible.  The cast of AMC's hit, dystopian drama is clearly near and dear to his heart, because many of them are featured in his new show.
Fans of The Walking Dead should listen carefully when watching because guest stars include The Walking Dead alums such as Khary Payton, Lauren Cohan, Ross Marquand, Lennie James, Chad L. Coleman, Sonequa Martin-Green, and Michael and Cudlitz.
NEXT: The Walking Dead: Top 10 Celebrity Guests On AMC's Ride With Norman Reedus
Invincible: Where You Know The Voice Actors From | ScreenRant from https://ift.tt/39JWapv
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docrotten · 3 years
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Tales of Terror (1962) – Episode 92 – Decades of Horror: The Classic Era
"Haven't I convinced you of my sincerity yet? I'm genuinely dedicated to your destruction." Yup. Got it. Join this episode’s Grue-Crew - Whitney Collazo, Chad Hunt, Daphne Monary-Ernsdorff, and Jeff Mohr - as they revisit a cast and crew that, by now, seem like old friends in Tales of Terror (1962).
Decades of Horror: The Classic Era Episode 92 – Tales of Terror (1962)
Join the Crew on the Gruesome Magazine YouTube channel! Subscribe today! And click the alert to get notified of new content! https://youtube.com/gruesomemagazine
Three tales of terror involve a grieving widower and the daughter he abandoned; a drunkard and his wife's black cat; and a hypnotist who prolongs the moment of a man's death.
IMDb
  Director: Roger Corman
Writers: Richard Matheson (screenplay), Edgar Allan Poe (based on the stories by)
Cast
"Morella"
Vincent Price as Locke
Maggie Pierce as Lenora Locke
Leona Gage as Morella Locke
Edmund Cobb as Driver
"The Black Cat"
Vincent Price as Fortunato
Peter Lorre as Montresor Herringbone
Joyce Jameson as Annabel Herringbone
Wally Campo as Barman Wilkins
Alan DeWitt as Chairman of Wine Society (as Alan DeWit)
John Hackett as the Policeman
"The Case of M. Valdemar"
Vincent Price as Valdemar
Debra Paget as Helene Valdemar
Basil Rathbone as Mr. Carmichael
David Frankham as Dr. James (Valdermar's physician)
Scott Brown as the Servant
Your Decades of Horror Classic Era Grue-Crew make another trip to the land of Roger Corman, Richard Matheson, and Vincent Price in Tales of Terror, the fourth of the eight films in the AIP-Corman-Edgar Allan Poe group of movies.  This one is Whitney’s pick and in support of that pick, she says, “I mean, it’s Vincent Price!” She also appreciates the comedic center segment, “The Black Cat” and even more so because comedy is hard. You can’t go wrong with Matheson is Chad’s first take and he loves being able to see these legends in the same film. This is a first time viewing of Tales of Terror for Daphne, here for a repeat appearance after joining us for our episode on The Phantom Carriage (1920). She loves the variations she sees from Vincent Price as he portrays three different characters and is impressed with the strong and well-developed characters throughout, even though they are in short segments. Jeff also agrees that Tales of Terror is an excellent showcase for Price’s acting talents and absolutely loves Peter Lorre, one of his favorite actors.
This is a fun entry in the AIP-Corman-Poe canon, made even more enjoyable with the supporting cast of Peter Lorre, Basil Rathbone, Joyce Jameson, Debra Paget, David Frankham, Maggie Pierce, and Leona Gage. Tales of Terror is currently available to stream from Amazon Prime and EPIX, and on a Blu-ray disc from Kino Lorber Studio Classics. Check it out!
Gruesome Magazine’s Decades of Horror: The Classic Era records a new episode every two weeks. In the next episode, they will discuss a movie chosen by Jeff which will be Hammer’s Quatermass and the Pit (1967), written by Nigel Kneale and directed by Terence Fisher. You’ll want to be there for that one!
Please let them know how they’re doing! They want to hear from you – the coolest, grooviest fans: leave them a message or leave a comment on the site or email the Decades of Horror: The Classic Era podcast hosts at [email protected]
To each of you from each of us, “Thank you so much for listening!”
Check out this episode!
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burnedxpoet · 4 years
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Nihilist Blues
0.1
Addressed to Marlon Cristobal Jameson
155 Foch blvd, Queens, New York
Dear Marlon,
Interesting how a midlife crisis can make you do crazy things. Well, I guess it wouldn’t be a midlife crisis for me, more like a midcentury crisis, but I think you get it. You must’ve known when we ran into each other in Manhattan fifty years after our last rendezvous. Plastic surgery was not that advanced back then, so how could a supposedly seventy year old woman still look like she’s twenty? Here’s the catch; she was never twenty to begin with.
I ran into your great great grandson a couple weeks back. Or maybe it was years, I sometimes have trouble keeping track. He was born in 1986. When I talked to him last I believe he just had his second child. An adorable baby girl named Elvina. He has a son who looks so much like you it’s crazy. Well, maybe not because Cedric looks so much like you. That’s his name by the way. Your family really has a thing for weird names, huh Marlon? His son’s name is Kingston, named after your son. He told me that he has to raise his children on his own now. His late wife was anemic and it was very risky for her to get pregnant even the first time. But she was determined. She believed her life’s goal was to be a mother. She risked her life for small little creatures that are being made every day and that could be replaced easily. I wouldn’t have the selflessness for that; people like her amaze me.
Cedric doesn’t know we were lovers before you met Ramona. I think he thought I could’ve been a potential lover or new mother to his children. On the outside, he doesn’t appear to be struggling but on the inside he is. His smile spoke positivity and happiness, yet his brown eyes seemed to be crying for help. Kind of like the way you didn’t want anyone to know that you were struggling. Your great grandson passed away before his first child was born and his wife is on the rocks too. He has no one to help him. I saw him with both kids on the subway and I mentioned how he had his hands full. He agreed and opened up to me. I wonder why he did though. Maybe deep down he knew to trust me because we were together. Or maybe I just have one of those faces.
This whole incident urged me to write to you, even though I know you’re long gone. I’ve spent a lot of time on this earth and you are one of few whom I’ve enjoyed my company with. When we last talked, in 1956, you told me how you lived life to the fullest and that you were eternally grateful for me. I never understood why as I was only in your life for less than a year. But now, as I’ve grown wiser and more self-aware, I realize that I was the one who lead you to Ramona. At our first gathering, at that bar down in Little Italy, she was there too. The tavern owners daughter who poured our drinks with the dark curly hair, green eyes, and red lipstick: that was her. She was so young back then, maybe about seventeen. Yes, I remember because when we met for the last time, you were seventy-five that year. You mentioned Ramona and I asked how old she was. You said that she would’ve been sixty-seven that last sunday. I never grasped the concept of time until now. And I’m sorry to all the lives I’ve ruined for being insensitive about it.
If there is an afterlife, I hope you’re enjoying it, Marlon. Enjoy it for me too because I won’t be able to experience it.
Warmly,
Clea Toni Wilkins
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clubofinfo · 6 years
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Expert: They called in [Roy] Wilkins; they called in [A. Philip] Randolph; they called in these national Negro leaders that you respect and told them, ‘Call it off.’ Kennedy said, ‘Look, you all are letting this thing go too far.’ And Old Tom said, ‘Boss, I can’t stop it, because I didn’t start it.’… And that old shrewd fox, he said, ‘If you all aren’t in it, I’ll put you in it. I’ll put you at the head of it.’… — Malcolm X on the 1963 “Farce on Washington”) Liberals and Democrat party connected organizations and networks have been quite adept at getting out in front of movements to pre-empt their radical potential and steer them back into the safe arms of liberal conformism. Before resistance to the election of Donald Trump could be developed into a radical rejection of the neoliberal order, the new alignment of ruling class forces that coalesced around the candidacy of Hilary Clinton launched a pre-emptive strike against Trump with the two-fold objective of preventing him from governing and ensuring that opposition to Trump did not take on an anti-system character. A similar thing happened after the 2006 massive marches of undocumented migrant workers that had a militant anti-capitalist component. It was quickly marginalized and transformed into something called “immigrant rights” with the highest demand being a demand to become legalized settlers. Then, on the 50th anniversary of the historic 1963 March on Washington when Black people were still experiencing the devastating and disproportionate impact of the capitalist crisis of 2007-08, members of the Black Mis-leadership class warmly welcomed the first Black president to join in the day’s festivities ensuring that the gathering would be devoid of any meaningful politics. Unfortunately, for the young people who sincerely want to understand and confront gun violence, the opportunism of the democrats made these students and their pain easy targets to advance the agenda of the democrat party that sees this issue as one that will advance their electoral agenda. While the democrat party and liberals pretend to respect and celebrate the young people, they know that the narrow focus on largely irrelevant gun control reforms like more background checks, banning certain ammunition clips, and sale of assault weapons will do nothing to confront what Dr. King referred to as the deep malady at the heart of U.S. culture that makes it so fundamentally violent. Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz, points out in lavish detail on the subject in her new book Loaded: A Disarming History of the Second Amendment.  She reminds the reader of the central role of violence and the reason why the second amendment was seen by the ruling elite of the U.S. settler state as a fundamental right, second only to freedom of speech. She argues that the gun control and the normalization of violence was essential to how white nationalism, racialized dominance, and social control through systematic violence operated in the U.S. It was the method in which white settlers appropriated Native land and controlled their massive enslaved population. So the young people will need to understand that this normalization of violence is reflected in the social institutions, values, and ethical framework of their society. The violent, white male shooters that are now turning their guns on the society at large are not an aberration but a logical, almost inevitable consequence of a culture in which people are degraded and de-humanized as instruments for others pleasure and exploitation, made into things, through what Dr. King called the process of “thingingfication.” A respectful engagement with these young people is one in which you struggle with their understanding of the terms of their culture, its history and reality. We must be honest with them and help them to understand the role of violence not only as a cultural product but as the main instrument that created their nation.  That violence is systemic to the system and history of their settler-colonial nation and for the maintenance of the U.S. empire. Judging from some of the statements, many of these young people are close to making the right connections. That it is the “thingingfication” of the racialized “other” that more people cannot see the moral contradiction between the concern for gun violence in the U.S. and their continued support for U.S. militarism abroad. Radical politicization means that they and the public at large come to terms with the fact that the arms industry and the proliferation of arms/weapons is not just a problem domestically but that it is a billion-dollar industry in which representatives from both parties are implicated. And if the NRA is a terrorist organization, what does that make the arms industries and the U.S. state? However, as long as those young people are ensnared by the morally challenged liberal democrats, their ideological development will be arrested, and a few will emerge as “new leaders” given salaries, awards for being in the struggle for two weeks and will become weapons used to block authentic radicalization among their constituency.  That is how hegemony works. Fredrick Jameson reminds us of the lesson that these young people will have to learn that they will not learn from their liberal benefactors: “The lesson is this, and it is a lesson about systems: one cannot change anything without changing everything.” So, it was a good week for both bourgeois parties. The democrats didn’t get called out for their collaboration with Trump and the republicans on the budget. The Trump folks have more ammunition to use to mobilize their supporters in opposition to what they will frame as efforts to violate the constitution and take away their guns and give more power to a repressive government. Even the intelligence agencies benefited from the week’s events with attention being shifted away from the FBI scandal that is threatening to blow the cover off of official criminal activity to undermine the electoral process, not by the Russians, but unelected forces in the U.S. state. But for those of us from the colonized Black and Brown zones of non-being, we can never allow ourselves to be distracted by the diversionary and accommodationist politics of the latest carefully crafted spectacle, especially one that proports to be advancing a superior moral politics. We must always remind ourselves that some can march with the confidence that “their” government might be trusted with regulating weapons and protecting their lives but that the protection of our fundamental human rights rest with our ability to defend our collective rights, and no one else. Through our painful lived experiences, we understand and must live by the insight provided by our dear brother, James Baldwin, who counseled us that we must be vigilant when our oppressors speak of morality and the sanctity of life: The “civilized” have created the wretched, quite coldly and deliberately, and do not intend to change the status quo; are responsible for their slaughter and enslavement; rain down bombs on defenseless children whenever and wherever they decide that their “vital interests” are menaced, and think nothing of torturing a man to death; these people are not to be taken seriously when they speak of the “sanctity” of human life, or the conscience of civilized world. Distraction can be deadly, let’s us get and stay woke! http://clubof.info/
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altpick · 2 years
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This Week's Member Focus Round-Up
This Week’s Member Focus Round-Up
Altpick.com highlights this week’s Member Focus artists: Illustrators Alicia Buelow and Jameson Wilkins; Photographers Karen Ollis and Lisa Powers. Check out more of their work on Altpick. Illustrator/Designer: Alicia Buelow Alicia Buelow’s illustrations combine found objects with text, drawings, photographs, and other surprises to create provocative, richly-textured images. Alicia is happy to…
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junker-town · 6 years
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The top 100 games of the 2017-18 college football season
We start off the week with 100-71.
We did it. After 834 regular season games, 40 bowl games, 4,376 Nick Saban scowls, and one hell of a national championship game, the college football season is over. To remember and honor the season that was, I (along with a little help from the rest of the SB Nation college football crew) am going to count down the best 100 games of the season. We’ll unveil 30 games at a time on Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday, then count down the top 10 on Friday.
100 - 71
70 - 41 (Wed.)
40 - 11 (Thurs.)
10 - 1 (Fri.)
Let’s get to the list:
100. Jan. 1: Notre Dame 21, LSU 17
When a one-handed catch-and-run decides a battle of two famous helmets, it’s on the list.
99. Oct. 7: Southern Miss 31, UTSA 29
UTSA was Conference USA’s best team in September and entered 3-0. Southern Miss was 2-2 and coming off of a disappointing loss to North Texas.
UTSA led, 13-7, at half, but USM opened up the spigot. Keon Howard hit Quez Watkins for a 48-yard score late in the third, then Ito Smith erupted for an 89-yard TD run. The Roadrunners responded with 16 fourth-quarter points. They needed 18. After a touchdown from Dalton Sturm to Marquez McNair with 48 seconds left, Sturm’s two-point attempt failed.
98. Dec. 24: Fresno State 33, Houston 27
Fresno State flipped from 11 losses to 10 wins in Jeff Tedford’s first season, winning the MWC West and coming three points short of the conference title. They capped with a Hawaii Bowl full of twists.
You had Houston blocking a 24-yard field goal and returning it 94 yards, turning a likely 23-13 Fresno lead into a 20-20 tie. With the Bulldogs up 26-20 and under four minutes left, UH was nearing midfield with a chance to lead when Jaron Bryant had a 44-yard pick six for the clincher.
97. Nov. 24: Buffalo 31, Ohio 24
Buffalo broke through in Lance Leipold’s third year. After winning seven games in his first two years, the Bulls went 6-6 and won their final three games to finish bowl eligible (albeit bowl-free).
The last win was the most impressive. Against an eventual nine-win Ohio, the Bulls raced to a 24-7 first-quarter lead thanks to two Tyree Jackson touchdown passes and a Chuck Harris fumble return. The Bobcats came back, but KJ Osborn returned a punt to the Ohio 6-yard line midway through the fourth, and Emmanuel Reed punched the ball in. Ohio drove to the UB 5 with under 90 seconds left, but a Khalil Hodge interception sealed the deal.
96. Sept. 30: Troy 24, LSU 21
Under Neal Brown, Troy had its first 10-win FBS season in 2016, then its first 11-win FBS season in 2017. And the Trojans knocked off the big boys in Baton Rouge.
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95. Sept. 23: Arizona State 37, Oregon 35
ASU was 1-2 and in desperate need of a turnaround. They scored 17 first-quarter points and took a 31-14 lead. But the Ducks went on a 21-3 run midway through the fourth quarter.
No worries! ASU responded with an 11-play, four-minute drive, and a 41-yard Brandon Ruiz field goal. Oregon turned the ball over on downs twice, and the Sun Devils hung on.
94. Nov. 4: Arkansas 39, Coastal Carolina 38
Arkansas fans won’t rank this among their favorite comebacks, but it was fun for a neutral party. CCU took an 11-point lead on Nicholas Clark’s 31-yard fumble return and led by 13 in the fourth quarter.
Arkansas’ T.J. Hammonds ripped off an 88-yard run with 10 minutes left, however, and Cole Kelley capped an 11-play touchdown drive with a one-yard score with 1:55 remaining. This upset bid only lasted 58 minutes, and Bret Bielema got to keep his job for a couple more weeks.
93. Nov. 9: North Carolina 34, Pitt 31 92. Nov. 18: Virginia Tech 20, Pitt 14
Pitt wrecked Miami’s plans for an unbeaten season, and the Panthers used a freshman quarterback to do it. To make matters even more impressive? They did so after gut-wrenching losses.
They came back from down double digits to lead UNC at home in the fourth quarter, only to fall back behind, punt with three minutes left, then fail to make a stop.
Then, they took a fourth-quarter lead at Virginia Tech, only to fall victim to Cam Phillips’ 23-yard TD reception. This time, the offense responded. Jester Weah took a slant 74 yards to the VT 1 with under a minute left ... and VT got three stuffs.
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91. Nov. 25: Ohio State 31, Michigan 20
J.T. Barrett won approximately 11 million games as Ohio State’s quarterback, but we got a glimpse of a post-Barrett future when he left The Game with injury.
Blue-chipper Dwayne Haskins came in for his first meaningful action and went 6-for-7 for 94 yards, adding three carries for 24 yards. His 22-yard run set up the go-ahead, and the Buckeyes scored 17 in his four drives.
Photo by Lon Horwedel/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images
90. Dec. 30: Mississippi State 31, Louisville 27
In Lamar Jackson’s final game at Louisville, a younger quarterback — MSU freshman Keytaon Thompson — stole the show.
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89. Nov. 25: Duke 31, Wake Forest 23
It’s hard to lose six straight and still make a bowl, but that’s what Duke did, falling from 4-0 to 4-6 and then rallying. They were 5-6 when they went to Winston-Salem, and they spotted Wake Forest a 17-3 lead.
Rally, they did. Daniel Jones’ one-yard run gave the Blue Devils the lead in the fourth, and Brittain Brown’s four-yard score made it 31-23. Mark Gilbert’s midfield interception sealed a bowl bid, and Duke took advantage with a romp over NIU in the Quick Lane Bowl.
88. Sept. 16: Texas Tech 52, Arizona State 45 87. Oct. 7: Texas 40, Kansas State 34 86. Oct. 21: West Virginia 38, Baylor 36 85. Nov. 4: Kansas State 42, Texas Tech 35 84. Nov. 11: Oklahoma State 49, Iowa State 42
Every year sees a batch of Big 12 shootouts. There are a few further up the list, too.
In Week 3, Tech’s Nic Shimonek threw for 543 yards and six touchdowns, and the Red Raiders needed every bit to survive an ASU comeback. Tech led 35-17 at halftime, but two Manny Wilkins touchdown passes in six minutes tied it before Dylan Cantrell capped a 90-yard drive with the winning score.
In Week 6, Texas beat Kansas State for just the third time in 10 tries. The Longhorns were down by 10, but Joshua Rowland’s late field goal forced overtime, and the UT offense caught fire. Sam Ehlinger hit Jerrod Heard for a 25-yard score in the first OT, then Chris Warren III bulled for the winner.
In Week 8, Baylor nearly pulled of an insane comeback. The then-winless Bears trailed 38-13, but Trestan Ebner scored on a 52-yard catch and a 40-yard run to make it 38-27. It was 38-30 in the closing seconds when Ebner scored on a nine-yard pass from Charlie Brewer. WVU swallowed up the two-point conversion, however.
In Week 10, KSU found overtime redemption, coming back from 35-24 down in the fourth and tying on a Skylar Thompson score and a Dalton Schoen conversion. In OT, Thompson found Pringle for the go-ahead score, and Shimonek’s fourth-and-goal pass fell incomplete. Shimonek threw for 405 in a loss.
In Week 11, ISU nearly pulled a third upset of a top-15 opponent, leading 42-34 with under six minutes left. But Mason Rudolph and Marcell Ateman connected for a 30-yard score, a Justice Hill conversion tied it, and Rudolph found Dillon Stoner for the go-ahead two minutes later. ISU drove to the OSU 4 with 32 seconds left, but A.J. Green picked it off in the end zone.
83. Oct. 21: Oklahoma State 13, Texas 10
For a changeup, one of the best games of the Big 12 season was an anti-shootout. And it ended with one terrible dose of miscommunication.
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82. Oct. 7: Kentucky 40, Missouri 34 81. Nov. 24: Missouri 48, Arkansas 45
Former Big 12 member Missouri did its best to bring the spirit to the SEC, averaging nearly 38 per game and rallying from 1-5 to 7-6. They only played in two particularly close games, but both were shootouts.
In Lexington, the Tigers spotted Kentucky a 13-0 lead before trading a barrage: Drew Lock threw touchdowns of 50, 58, and 75 yards, while UK scored on a 71-yard Benny Snell run and a 64-yard pass to Garrett Johnson. Mizzou was driving with a chance at the lead, but Lock couldn’t find tight end Albert Okwuegbunam on the final play.
Mizzou got its road shootout win a few weeks later. In Bielema’s final game, the Tigers again spotted their hosts a lead (21-7) but took a 31-28 lead at halftime. Lock broke the SEC’s single-season touchdowns record, and with the game tied at 45, Mizzou went on a five-minute drive and sealed with a field goal.
80. Sept. 30: Ohio 58, UMass 50 79. Sept. 16: Toledo 54, Tulsa 51
A week after beating EMU in overtime, Ohio survived a wild shootout. It was 27-27 at halftime, and the Bobcats went on a 21-2 run, but UMass kept coming back, and it wasn’t until Dorian Brown’s 42-yard run with 1:42 left that Ohio escaped.
The most MACtion-worthy game happened two weeks earlier. Eventual conference champ Toledo spotted Tulsa a 28-7 lead. Two long Diontae Thompson touchdowns gave Toledo the lead, but the Golden Hurricane tied it with 2:47 left, until Jameson Vest’s field goal at the buzzer.
78. Oct. 26: NIU 30, EMU 27
The Eagles’ hopes of a second straight bowl were dashed by gut-wrenching losses. After a 2-0 start, they lost to Ohio in OT, at Kentucky by four, at Toledo by five, at Army by one, and to WMU in OT.
In desperate need of a win, they took a 24-10 lead early in the fourth quarter ... and gave up two touchdown drives. A field goal gave the Eagles a lead in OT, but Marcus Jones’ run gave NIU the win. You won’t ever see another six-game losing streak this competitive.
77. Oct. 14: Memphis 30, Navy 27 76. Oct. 19: Memphis 42, Houston 38 75. Oct. 21: USF 34, Tulane 28 74. Nov. 11: Navy 43, SMU 40
Y’all noticed that the AAC was fun as hell again, right? UCF dominated headlines, and the Knights’ final two conference wins are further up the list. But those weren’t the only doozies.
In Week 7, Memphis scored its second win of the year against a ranked team, falling behind 19-17 but finding a 13-0 run. Navy’s Zach Abey cut Memphis’ lead to three with 3:25 left, but Austin Hall picked him off to bag the win.
Five days later in Houston, the Tigers were down 24-7 with 21 minutes left. But Tony Pollard’s 93-yard kickoff return and three Patrick Taylor touchdowns got them within 38-35. And after Memphis stuffed a third-and-1 rush, Riley Ferguson drove the Tigers 80 yards in eight plays, finding Sean Dykes for the win.
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Two days after that, USF took its foot off the gas against a resilient Tulane. The Bulls led 34-7 midway through the third, but Sherman Badie’s 34-yard run cut it to 20, and two Dontrell Hilliard scores cut to six with 2:45 left. But on third-and-3 with the game on the line, USF’s Darius Tice raced 30 yards to end it.
Navy has a comeback-proof offense, but SMU whittled away at a 34-11 halftime lead. Courtland Sutton’s 29-yard touchdown catch with 3:32 left tied the game at 40, but Navy got one last chance, milking every second and riding two big Anthony Gargiulo runs to set up a winning kick by J.R. Osborn.
73. Nov. 4: UCF 31, SMU 24
Of the Knights’ first 10 games, only one was particularly challenging. The big plays started early — SMU’s James Proche scored on an 86-yard catch-and-run six minutes in, and UCF responded with an 80-yard pass 15 minutes later.
Adrian Killins’ 64-yard score gave UCF a 28-17 lead in the third, but SMU cut it to 28-24. The Mustangs worked into Knight territory twice in the fourth but couldn’t break through.
72. Sept. 2: Liberty 48, Baylor 45 71. Sept. 2: Howard 43, UNLV 40
Every season features fun FCS-over-FBS upsets, and we saw a wild duo in Week 1.
Soon-to-be-FBS Liberty ruined Matt Rhule’s Baylor debut by posting 585 yards and going on a 21-7 second-half run to take a 48-38 lead. Baylor made it 48-45, but Brandon Tillmon ended it with a last-second interception.
Later that night, we saw technically the biggest upset of all time. UNLV was somehow a 45-point favorite over Howard — UNLV should not have been a 45-point favorite over anybody — but fell victim to one hell of a debut by Caylin Newton. Cam’s little brother rushed for 190 yards and threw for 140 more. The Bison withstood a 24-0 run and came back from 33-21 down to score 22 of the final 29 points. This was a thriller, even if “biggest upset ever!” might oversell it.
Photo by Ethan Miller/Getty Images
Caylin Newton (3)
Check back all this week for the rest of the Top 100.
100 - 71
70 - 41 (Wed.)
40 - 11 (Thurs.)
10 - 1 (Fri.)
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suarezart · 11 years
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 - Pixxel Stixxers -
Me and Jameson Wilkins have been throwing around some wall decals and stickers so you turn your room into a video game! Guess who's idea that was (hint: he makes video games!)
These are just samples and prototypes, we want to make sure they hold up with time and are easy to use! Stay tuned!
/ Suarez / Jameson /
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nationofwind-blog · 12 years
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TONIGHT! New game announcement!
I'm currently going through a bit of downtime in terms of my freelance. This isn't a particularly bad thing since I've been doing quite a bit of it up until now, and I expect some more to come in in the near future.
In the meantime, I've been doing some work on a personal project of my own design that's been growing in my head for nearly 2 years. I really like the art I've done for it so far, and unlike ANoW, I think I'm going to try to document most of its development, rather than just the tail end.
Expect a link to the dedicated tumblr tonight, along with some screenshots!
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