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#Jason Weisberger
geezerwench · 2 years
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Walgreens allows employees to pick and choose who gets birth control
Jason Weisberger 11:32 am Wed Jul 13, 2022
When asked about the incident, a Walgreens spokesperson said, "Our company policy allows team members to step away from completing a transaction to which they have a moral objection and refer the transaction to a fellow team member or manager who will complete the customer's request."
The policy is troubling considering that Walgreens, the second-largest pharmacy chain in the U.S., may serve as the only source for contraceptives in some communities.
--
So some pimply faced little trollish incel can decide if he wants to sell you birth control or not.
Fuck Walgreens.
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Read Alikes: Carrie Soto is Back by Taylor Jenkins Reid
The Singles Game by Lauren Weisberger
Charlotte “Charlie” Silver has always been a good girl. She excelled at tennis early, coached by her father, a former player himself, and soon became one of the top juniors in the world. When she leaves UCLA - and breaks her boyfriend’s heart - to turn pro, Charlie joins the world’s best athletes who travel eleven months a year, competing without mercy for Grand Slam titles and Page Six headlines. After Charlie suffers a disastrous loss and injury on Wimbledon’s Centre Court, she fires her longtime coach and hires Todd Feltner, a legend of the men’s tour, who is famous for grooming champions. Charlie is his first-ever female player, and he will not let her forget it. He is determined to change her good-girl image - both on the court and off - and transform her into a ruthless competitor who will not only win matches and climb the rankings, but also score magazine covers and seven-figure endorsement deals. Her not-so-secret affair with the hottest male player in the world, sexy Spaniard Marco Vallejo, has people whispering, and it seems like only a matter of time before the tabloids and gossip blogs close in on all the juicy details. Charlie’s ascension to the social throne parallels her rising rank on the women’s tour - but at a major price.
The Second Season by Emily Adrian
Ruth Devon starred for Georgetown Basketball back in college - until she injured her knee, married her coach, and found a new career calling games on the radio. Twenty years later, Ruth and her now-ex-husband, Lester, are two of the most famous faces in sports media. When Lester decides to retire from the announcers’ booth, Ruth goes after his job. If she gets it, she will be the first woman to call NBA games on national television. For now, Ruth is reporting from the sideline of the NBA finals, immersed in the high-pressure spectacle of the post-season. But in a deserted locker room at halftime, Ruth makes a discovery that shatters her vision of her future. Instantly, she is torn between the two things she has always wanted most: the game and motherhood.
The Cactus League by Emily Nemens 
Jason Goodyear is the star outfielder for the Los Angeles Lions, stationed with the rest of his team in the punishingly hot Arizona desert for their annual spring training. Handsome, famous, and talented, Goodyear is nonetheless coming apart at the seams. And the coaches, writers, wives, girlfriends, petty criminals, and diehard fans following his every move are eager to find out why - as they hide secrets of their own. Humming with the energy of a ballpark before the first pitch, Emily Nemens' The Cactus League unravels the tightly connected web of people behind a seemingly linear game. Narrated by a sportscaster, Goodyear's story is interspersed with tales of Michael Taylor, a batting coach trying to stay relevant; Tamara Rowland, a resourceful spring-training paramour, looking for one last catch; Herb Allison, a legendary sports agent grappling with his decline; and a plethora of other richly drawn characters, all striving to be seen as the season approaches. It's a journey that, like the Arizona desert, brims with both possibility and destruction.
Evvie Drake Starts Over by Linda Holmes
In a sleepy seaside town in Maine, recently widowed Eveleth “Evvie” Drake rarely leaves her large, painfully empty house nearly a year after her husband’s death in a car crash. Everyone in town, even her best friend, Andy, thinks grief keeps her locked inside, and Evvie doesn’t correct them. Meanwhile, in New York City, Dean Tenney, former Major League pitcher and Andy’s childhood best friend, is wrestling with what miserable athletes living out their worst nightmares call the “yips”: he can’t throw straight anymore, and, even worse, he can’t figure out why. As the media storm heats up, an invitation from Andy to stay in Maine seems like the perfect chance to hit the reset button on Dean’s future. When he moves into an apartment at the back of Evvie’s house, the two make a deal: Dean won’t ask about Evvie’s late husband, and Evvie won’t ask about Dean’s baseball career. Rules, though, have a funny way of being broken - and what starts as an unexpected friendship soon turns into something more. To move forward, Evvie and Dean will have to reckon with their pasts - the friendships they’ve damaged, the secrets they’ve kept - but in life, as in baseball, there’s always a chance - up until the last out.
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real-estate2022 · 2 years
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Boing Boing
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Boing Boingis a website, first established as azinein 1988, later becoming agroup blog. Common topics and themes includetechnology,futurism,science fiction,gadgets,intellectual property,Disney, andleft-wing politics. It twice won theBloggiesfor Weblog of the Year, in 2004 and 2005. The editors areMark Frauenfelder,David Pescovitz,Carla Sinclair, andRob Beschizza,[1]and the publisher isJason Weisberger.
One report named Boing Boing as the most popular blog in the world until 2006, when Chinese-language blogs became popular,[2][3]and it remained among the most widely linked and cited blogs into the 2010s.[4][5][6]
Boing Boingfeatured a "guest blogger" sidebar, then stopped the series in summer of 2004. In 2008, the "guest blogger" series was resumed, with guests posting in the main blog for two-week periods. Guests have includedCharles Platt,John Shirley,Mark Dery,Tiffany Lee Brown, Karen Marcelo ofSurvival Research Laboratories,Johannes Grenzfurthnerofmonochrom,Rudy Rucker,Gareth Branwyn,Wiley Wiggins,Jason Scottoftextfiles.com,Jessamyn Westoflibrarian.net, journalistsDanny O'BrienandQuinn Nortonand comedianJohn Hodgman.
In September 2006,Boing Boingintroduced a weeklypodcast, "Boing Boing Boing", intended to cover the week's posts and upcoming projects. The show's cast consists of theBoing Boingeditors, accompanied by a weekly guest. In the same month,Boing Boingintroduced a second podcast called "Get Illuminated", which features interviews with writers, artists, and other creatives.
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c3355156-blog · 2 years
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FULL BIBLIOGRAPHY
WEEK 1
Brown, T., & Katz, B. (2019). The New Blueprint. Fortune, 179(3), 92–95.
Solomon, A., & Kelley, D. (2012, September 22). Design Thinking for Social Good: An Interview with David Kelley. BoingBoing. other, Jason Weisberger. Retrieved February 23, 2022, from https://boingboing.net/2012/09/22/design-thinking-for-social-goo.html.   
Liedtka, J., & Chin, M. (2018). Innovation. Harvard Business Review, 72–79.
WEEK 2
Rowe, P 2017, Design thinking in the digital age, , p. 101, Harvard University Graduate School of Design
Brown, T & Wyatt, J 2003, ‘Design Thinking for Social Innovation’, Stanford Social Innovation Review, vol. Winter, pp. 30–35
Brown, T 2008, ‘Design thinking’, Harvard Business Review, vol. 86, no.6, pp. 84–92
WEEK 3
Thomas, P. (2018, March 23). "what's the difference between design thinking and making?". Medium. Retrieved March 9, 2022, from https://medium.com/@parkerthomas/what-s-the-difference-between-design-thinking-and-making-614cb089bc5e
WEEK 4:
The Rules of Brainstorming Change When Artificial Intelligence Gets Involved.pdf
Stolzoff, S. (2020, June 30). How would you reimagine learning? 5 visions for our post-COVID future. IDEO Blog. Retrieved June 10, 2022, from https://www.ideo.com/blog/how-would-you-reimagine-learning-5-visions-for-our-post-covid-future
Syverson, B. (2020, October 19). The rules of brainstorming change when artificial intelligence gets involved. here's how. IDEO Blog. Retrieved June 10, 2022, from https://www.ideo.com/blog/the-rules-of-brainstorming-change-when-ai-gets-involved-heres-how
WEEK 6
Esposito, E. (2018, October 22). 4 types of research methods all designers should know. Inside Design Blog. Retrieved March 30, 2022, from https://www.invisionapp.com/inside-design/research-methods-designers/
Entrepreneurship.org. (2011). Field Observations with Fresh Eyes - Tom Kelley (Ideo). YouTube. Retrieved March 31, 2022, from https://youtu.be/tvkivmyKgEA.
WEEK 7
Thomas, P. (2018, March 23). "what's the difference between design thinking and making?". Medium. Retrieved April 7, 2022, from https://medium.com/@parkerthomas/what-s-the-difference-between-design-thinking-and-making-614cb089bc5e
WEEK 8
Pozzi, N., & Zimmerman, E. (2016). Donʼt follow these rules! A Primer for Playtesting. Retrieved April 27, 2022, from https://static1.squarespace.com/static/579b8aa26b8f5b8f49605c96/t/5962a494bebafbc89ca001b6/1499636884792/A+Primer+for+Playtesting.pdf
WEEK 10:
Flaherty, C. (2022, May). DESN2002 A2: Research to prototype. SurveyMonkey Dashboard. Retrieved 2022, from https://www.surveymonkey.com/stories/SM-BBnOCSCtwwB9k3ECP13bsQ_3D_3D/
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the-forest-library · 2 years
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December 2021 Reads
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Matrix - Lauren Groff
Who is Maud Dixon - Alexandra Andrews
Finlay Donovan is Killing It - Elle Cosimano
Where the Grass is Green and The Girls Are Pretty - Lauren Weisberger
Ancillary Justice - Ann Leckie
Life’s Too Short - Abby Jimenez
Satisfaction Guaranteed - Karelia Stetz-Waters
The Duchess Deal - Tessa Dare
Trans Wizard Harriet Porber - Chuck Tingle
The Nobleman’s Guide to Scandal and Shipwrecks - Mackenzi Lee
Tokyo Ever After - Emiko Jean
Jay’s Gay Agenda - Jason June
Enna Burning - Shannon Hale
Wolf Tower - Tanith Lee
I Think I am in Friend Love with You - Yumi Sakugawa
Adulthood is a Myth - Sarah Andersen
Big Mushy Happy Lump - Sarah Andersen
How to Fake a Moon Landing - Darryl Cunningham
Change Sings - Amanda Gorman
Against White Feminism - Rafia Zaharia
Bring Your Baggage and Don’t Pack Light - Helen Ellis
Next Level Basic - Stassi Schroeder
The Wreckage of My Presence - Casey Wilson
Bravey - Alexi Pappas
Entangled Life - Merlin Sheldrake
Wintering - Katherine May
Bold = Highly Recommend Italics = Worth It Crossed out = Nope
Thoughts: 2021 was a productive and satisfying reading year. I was glad to close it out with Wintering. Such a powerful and impactful book that will stay with me for a while. 
Goodreads Goal: 283/200
2017 Reads | 2018 Reads | 2019 Reads | 2020 Reads | 2021 Reads
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mayamusicltd · 2 years
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| 12th Annual Guild of Music Supervisors Awards Nominations Announced The Guild of Music Supervisors today announced the nominations for its 12th annual awards ceremony, which will take place virtually on Sunday, March 20, 2022. The awards will recognize outstanding Music Supervisors representing Motion Picture, Television, Games, Trailers and Advertising. Below are the nominations for the major categories. Also check out the nominations announcement presentation after the jump. For more information nominations, visit the organization’s official website. Best Music Supervision for Film Budgeted Over $25 Million : Mary Ramos – Being the Ricardos Tom MacDougall – Encanto Michelle Silverman – The Harder They Fall Linda Cohen – The Tender Bar Steven Gizicki – Tick, Tick… Boom! Best Music Supervision for Film Budgeted Under $25 Million : Pierre-Marie Dru – Annette Julianne Jordan, Justine von Winterfeldt – Barb and Star Go to Vista Del Mar Becky Bentham – Everybody’s Talking About Jamie John Houlihan – The Eyes Of Tammy Faye Tracy McKnight – Flag Day Best Music Supervision for Film Budgeted Under $10 Million ; Victoria Beard, Sean Mulligan – Blue Bayou Katie Colley, Sean Mulligan – The Hating Game Alexandra Eckhardt – Passing Mandi Collier, Frankie Pine – Sylvie’s Love Rob Lowry – The Ultimate Playlist of Noise Best Music Supervision for Film Budgeted Under $5 Million: Andrea von Foerster – Happily Jen Malone – Malcolm & Marie Matthew Hearon-Smith – Red Rocket Henrik Hawor, Silje Katralen, Goran Obad, Emilie Sørensen – The Worst Person in the World Mandi Collier, Jen Malone, Nicole Weisberg – Zola Best Song Written and/or Recorded for a Film: “Guns Go Bang” from The Harder They Fall Songwriters: Jeymes Samuel, Scott Mescudi, Shawn Carter Performers: Kid Cudi, Jay-Z Music Supervisor: Michelle Silverman “My Father’s Daughter” from Flag Day Songwriters: Glen Hansard, Eddie Vedder Performers: Eddie Vedder, Glen Hansard, Olivia Vedder Music Supervisor: Tracy McKnight “Dos Oruguitas” from Encanto Songwriter: Lin-Manuel Miranda Performer: Sebastián Yatra Music Supervisor: Tom MacDougall “Fire In The Sky” from Shang-Chi And The Legend Of The Ten Rings Songwriters: Anderson .Paak, Bruno Mars, Son Tzu, Rogét Chahayed, Wesley Singerman, Taylor Dexter, Alissia Benveniste Performer: Anderson .Paak Music Supervisor: Dave Jordan “Be Alive” from King Richard Songwriters: Beyoncé, Dixson Performer: Beyoncé Music Supervisor: Susan Jacobs Best Music Supervision – Television Drama: Sarah Bridge – The Crown – Season 4 Kevin Edelman – Cruel Summer – Season 1 Jen Ross – Genius: Aretha – Season 3 Liza Richardson – Lovecraft Country – Season 1 Iain Cooke – It’s A Sin – Season 1 Best Music Supervision – Television Comedy or Musical: Jason Alexander, Justin T. Feldman – Dave – Season 2 Matt Biffa – Sex Education – Season 3 Janet Lopez – The White Lotus – Season 1 Jen Ross – Zoey’s Extraordinary Playlist – Season 2 Jonathan McHugh – Blindspotting – Season 1 Best Music Supervision – Reality Television: Peter Davis – The Challenge: All Stars – Season 1 Sarah Bromberg, Stephanie Diaz-Matos, Eric Medina – Sweet Life: Los Angeles – Season 1 Jason Markey – Fboy Island – Season 1 Jon Ernst – Siesta Key – Season 4 Best Music Supervision – Television Movie: Nicki Richards – American Pie Presents: Girls’ Rules Laura Webb, Lindsay Wolfington – To All The Boys: Always And Forever Mikki Itzigsohn, Willa Yudell – The Voyeurs Best Song Written and/or Recorded for Television: Title: “Look At Us” Songwriters: Mike Aaberg, Joseph Epperson, Lauren Evans, Mounir Ghantous, Tony Ghantous, Goapele K. Mohlbane, Faraji Wright Performers: Goapele (feat. Rexx Life Raj) Program: Homeroom Music Supervisor: Julie Glaze Houlihan Title: “Fuck The Pain Away” Songwriter: Merrill Nisker Performers: The Moordale Singers and Oli Julian Program: Sex Education Episodes 302 and 307 Music Supervisor: Matt Biffa Title: “Beginning Middle End” Songwriters: Leah Nobel, Quinn Redmond Performer: Leah Nobel Program: To All The Boys: Always And Forever Music Supervisors: Laura Webb, Lindsay Wolfington Title: “Change” Songwriters: Ronald Colson, Jeff Gitelman, David Harris, Maxx Moore, Gabriella Wilson Performer: H.E.R. Program: We The People Episode 101 – “Active Citizenship” Music Supervisor: Jen Ross Title: “Anyone” Songwriters: Badriia Ines Bourelly, Dayyon Alexander Drinkard, Demi Lovato, Eyelar Mirzazadeh, Jay Mooncie, Samuel Elliot Roman Performers: Cast of Zoey’s Extraordinary Playlist (Skylar Astin) Program: Zoey’s Extraordinary Playlist Episode 209 – “Zoey’s Extraordinary Mystery” Music Supervisor: Jen Ross Best Music Supervision for a Documentary: Jonathan Hecht – Dear Rider Tracy McKnight – Rebel Hearts Maureen Crowe, Janet Billig Rich – Sisters On Track Gary Welch – The Sparks Brothers Angela Asistio – Val Best Music Supervision in a Docuseries: Ian Broucek, Kevin Writer – Amend: The Fight For America Aminé Ramer – HBO Music Box Series: “Mr. Saturday Night,” “Woodstock 99: Peace, Love, And Rage,” “Juice WRLD: Into the Abyss,” “DMX: Don’t Try To Understand,” “Jagged,” “Listening to Kenny G” James Cartwright – The Lady And The Dale Jon Ernst – Last Chance U: Basketball Iain Cooke – 1971: The Year Music Changed Everything http://mvnt.us/m1294939
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Boing Boing is 20 (or 33) years old today
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Mark Frauenfelder:
Today is the twentieth anniversary of Boing Boing in its current incarnation. It looked like this in 2000.
Here's a brief history of Boing Boing, which actually goes back 33 years.
Carla and I conceived of it as a print zine in 1987. The first issue of bOING bOING came out in 1988. We printed 100 copies on a Xerox machine. I sent a copy to Factsheet Five, which was a zine that reviewed zines. Based on the review that ran in Factsheet Five, we sold all the copies. We also got an order from a newsstand distributor for 100 copies of the next issue. So we printed 200 copies of the second issue, sending 100 to the distributor and 100 to people sending $3 cash to us in the mail. We basically followed a Moore’s law style growth curve. The final issue of bOING bOING, number 15, had a print run of 17,500. Unfortunately it was our last print issue because our two major newsstand distributors went bankrupt, owing us tens of thousands of dollars.
In 1995 I was an editor at Wired and one of my friends who worked at Hotwired, the magazine's online spinoff, registered boingboing.com for us and we started running occasional articles on the website.
In 2000 I wrote an article for a magazine called the Industry Standard, about web logs. To learn about how web logs worked, I got a Blogger account and started posting things on boingboing.net (I forgot to register boingboing.com so a design firm with the same name took it). 
The first item I posted to Boing Boing was on January 21, 2000, 20 years ago today. My early blog posts didn’t have headlines or photos. The posts were just links and short descriptions to things that I found interesting.
One of the first people to discover the blog was Cory Doctorow, and he would send me lots of ideas of things to write about. After a few months I asked Cory if he would like to have an account on Boing Boing and post directly. He agreed, and I was surprised to see him post seven or eight or more items every day. This was an order of magnitude more than I had been posting. I typically posted two or three items a week!
As a result of Cory's prolific posting, the traffic shot through the roof. Soon after that my friend and a bOING bOING print zine editor, David Pescovitz joined, and shortly after that Xeni Jardin became one of our editors as well. A few years later Rob Beschizza joined as an editor and Jason Weisberger came on board as publisher. Carla, the cofounder of bOING bOING magazine also writes and edits for Boing Boing. Another bOING bOING editor, Gareth Branwyn continues to write for us. And Ken Snider keeps the whole thing running with his exemplary technical chops.
It's incredible to me that Boing Boing still has the original band line-up. I’m always excited to see what my co-editors post every day, and Boing Boing remains my favorite place on the Web, because I love their points of view. Even when I don’t agree with what they have to say 100% of the time, I always find what they have to say interesting and worthy of consideration. Carla and I would like to thank Cory, David, Gareth, Jason, Rob, and Xeni for joining us on what has become a life journey. We'd also like to thank everyone who has been reading Boing Boing over the decades, because your interest in what we do is what motivates us to keep this up.
https://boingboing.net/2020/01/21/boing-boing-is-20-or-33-year.html
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V I D E O S
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Dear Evan Hansen | June 2018
Taylor Trensch (Evan Hansen), Alex Boniello (Connor Murphey), Sky Lakota-Lynch (Jared Kleinman), Laura Dreyfuss (Zoe Murphy), Jennifer Laura Thompson (Cynthia Murphy), Asa Somers (u/s Larry Murphy), Rachel Bay Jones (Heidi Hansen), Phoenix Best (Alana Beck)
Waitress | May 2018
Katherine McPhee (Jenna), Drew Gehling (Dr. Pomatter), Christopher Fitzgerald (Ogie), Caitlin Houlahan (Dawn), NaTasha Yvette Williams (Becky), Benny Allege, Steve Vinovich, Ben Thompson, Keri Rene Fuller, Matt DeAngelis, Tiffany Mann, Stephanie Torns, Victoria Collett, Katie Grober, Kayla Davion, Law Terrell Dunford
The Play That Goes Wrong | May 2018
Akron Watson, Mark Evans, Quinn Van Antwerp, Preston Truman Boyd, Harrison Unger, Amelia McClain, Alex Mandell, Ashley Bryant 
Charlie and The Chocolate Factory 1NT | 10/2/19
Noah Weisberg (Willy Wonka) Collin Jeffery (Charlie Bucket) Daniel Quadrino (Mike TeeVee) Madeleine Doherty (Mrs TeeVee) Matt Wood (Augustus Gloop) Kathy Fitzgerald (Mrs Gloop) Brynn Williams (Violet Beauregarde) David Samuel (Mr Beauregarde) Jessica Cohen (Veruca Salt) Nathaniel Hackman (Mr Salt) Amanda Rose (Mrs Bucket) James Young (Grandpa Joe)
The Phantom of The Opera | September 2018
Ben Crawford, Ali Ewoldt, Jay Armstrong Johnson, Raquel Suarez Groen, Laird Mackintosh, Craig Bennett, Maree Johnson, Ted Keegan (u/s), Polly Baird, Carrington Vilmont, Jason Forbach, Jim Weitzer (u/s), Kenneth Kantor, Richard Poole, Jeremy Stolle, Justin Peck, Kfir, Katharine Heaton, Chris Georgette, Patricia Phillips, Satomi Hofmann, Elizabeth Welch, Kelly Jeanne Grant, Janinah Burnett, Paul A. Schefer, Giselle O. Alvarez, Jessica Bishop, Ashlee Dupre, Jolina Javier, Carly Blake Sebouhian, Erica Wong, Joelle Gates
Newsies | August 23rd 2014
Corey Cott (Jack Kelly), Liana Hunt (Katherine), Ben Fankhauser (Davey), Andy Richardson (Crutchie), John Dossett (Joseph Pulitzer), Capathia Jenkins (Medda), Zachary Unger (Les)
Newsies | July 29th 2013
Jeremy Jordan (Jack Kelly), Ben Fankhauser (Davey Jacobs), Kara Lindsay (Katherine Plumber), Andrew Keenan-Bolger (Crutchie), John Dossett (Joseph Pulitzer), Capathia Jenkins (Medda Larkin), Matthew Schechter (Les Jacobs)
Spongebob Squarepants | 8/29/18
Ethan Slater (Spongebob Squarepants), Danny Skinner (Patrick Star), Christina Sajous (Sandy Cheeks), Gavin Lee (Squidward Tentacles), Brian Ray Norris (Eugene Krabs), Wesley Taylor (Sheldon Plankton), Jai'len Christine Li Josey (Pearl), Brandon Espinoza (Patchy the Pirate), Kelvin Moon Loh (Perch Perkins), Catherine Ricafort (Karen)
Beetlejuice | March 2018 (Previews)
Alex Brightman (Beetlejuice), Sophia Anne Caruso (Lydia), Kerry Butler (Barbara), Rob McClure (Adam), Adam Dannheisser (Charles), Leslie Kritzer (Delia), Jill Abramovitz (Maxine Dean/Juno), Kelvin Moon Loh (Otho), Danny Rutigliano (Maxie Dean), Dana Steingold (Girl Scout), Tessa Alves (Ensemble), Gilbert L. Bailey II (Ensemble), Johnny Brantley III (Ensemble), Ryan Breslin (Ensemble), Abe Goldfarb (Ensemble), Eric Anthony Johnson (Ensemble), Elliott Mattox (Ensemble), Mateo Melendez (Ensemble), Ramone Owens (Ensemble)
Beetlejuice | July 27th, 2019
Alex Brightman (Beetlejuice), Sophia Anne Caruso (Lydia Deetz), Kerry Butler (Barbara Maitland), Rob McClure (Adam Maitland), Leslie Kritzer (Delia Deetz), Adam Dannheisser (Charles Deetz), Kelvin Moon Loh (Otho), Jill Abramovitz (Maxine Dean/Juno), Danny Rutigliano (Maxie Dean), Dana Steingold (Girl Scout)
Hello Dolly! (Revival, Unknown Date)
Bette Midler (Dolly Gallagher Levi), David Hyde Pierce (Horace Vandergelder), Kate Baldwin (Irene Molloy), Christian Dante White (u/s Cornelius Hackl), Taylor Trensch (Barnaby Tucker), Beanie Feldstein (Minnie Faye), Will Burton (Ambrose Kemper), Melanie Moore (Ermengarde), Jennifer Simard (Ernestina)
Charlie and The Chocolate Factory | April 20th, 2017
Christian Borle (Willy Wonka), Ryan Foust (Charlie Bucket), John Rubinstein (Grandpa Joe), Emily Padgett (Mrs. Bucket), Ben Crawford (Mr. Salt), Kathy Fitzgerald (Mrs. Gloop), Alan H. Green (Mr. Beauregarde), Jackie Hoffman (Mrs. Teavee), Trista Dollison (Violet Beauregarde), F. Michael Haynie (Augustus Gloop), Emma Pfaeffle (Veruca Salt), Michael Wartella (Mike Teavee)
Please direct ALL inquires to [email protected]. Any messages sent to this tumblr WILL NOT be opened.
Wants, Ratios & Pricing are located at the bottom of the page and will be reblogged occasionally ⇩
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awardseason · 5 years
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2019 Producers Guild Awards Nominations
MOTION PICTURES NOMINATIONS
Outstanding Producer for Theatrical Motion Pictures (The Darryl F. Zanuck Award)
“Black Panther”, Kevin Feige
“BlacKkKlansman”, Sean McKittrick, Jason Blum, Raymond Mansfield, Jordan Peele, Spike Lee
“Bohemian Rhapsody”, Graham King
“Crazy Rich Asians”, Nina Jacobson & Brad Simspon, John Penotti
“The Favourite”, Ceci Dempsey, Ed Guiney, Lee Magiday, Yorgos Lanthimos
“Green Book”, Jim Burke, Charles B. Wessler, Brian Currie, Peter Farrelly, Nick Vallelonga
“A Quiet Place”, Michael Bay, Andrew Form, Brad Fuller
“Roma”, Gabriela Rodríguez, Alfonso Cuarón
“A Star Is Born”, Bill Gerber, Bradley Cooper, Lynette Howell Taylor
“Vice”, Dede Gardner, Jeremy Kleiner, Kevin Messick, Adam McKay
Outstanding Producer for Animated Theatrical Motion Pictures
“Dr. Seuss’ The Grinch”, Chris Meledandri, Janet Healy
“Incredibles 2″, John Walker, Nicole Grindle
“Isle of Dogs”
“Ralph Breaks the Internet”, Clark Spencer
“Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse”, Avi Arad, Phil Lord & Christopher Miller, Amy Pascal, Christina Steinberg
Outstanding Producer of Documentary Motion Pictures
“The Dawn Wall”, Josh Lowell, Peter Mortimer, Philipp Manderla
“Free Solo”, Elizabeth Chai Vasarhelyi, Jimmy Chin, Evan Hayes, Shannon Dill
“Hal”, Christine Beebe, Jonathan Lynch, Brian Morrow
“Into the Okavango”, Neil Gelinas
“RBG”, Betsy West, Julie Cohen
“Three Identical Strangers”, Becky Read, Grace Hughes-Hallett
“Won’t You Be My Neighbor?”, Morgan Neville, Nicholas Ma, Caryn Capotosto
Outstanding Producer of Streamed or Televised Motion Pictures
“Fahrenheit 451”, Sarah Green, Ramin Bahrani, Michael B. Jordan, Alan Gasmer, Peter Jeysen, David Coatsworth
“King Lear”
“My Dinner with Hervé”
“Paterno”, Barry Levinson, Jason Sosnoff, Tom Fontana, Edward R. Pressman, Rick Nicita, Lindsay Sloane, Amy Herman
“Sense8: Together Until the End”
TELEVISION NOMINATIONS
Outstanding Producer of Episodic Television - Drama (The Norman Felton Award)
“The Americans” (Season 6), Joe Weisberg, Joel Fields, Chris Long, Graham Yost, Justin Falvey, Darryl Frank, Stephen Schiff, Mary Rae Thewlis, Tracey Scott Wilson, Peter Ackerman, Joshua Brand
“Better Call Saul” (Season 4), Peter Gould, Vince Gilligan, Mark Johnson, Melissa Bernstein, Thomas Schnauz, Gennifer Hutchison, Nina Jack, Diane Mercer, Gordon Smith, Alison Tatlock, Ann Cherkis, Bob Odenkirk, Robin Sweet
“The Handmaid’s Tale” (Season 2), Bruce Miller, Warren Littlefield, Elisabeth Moss, Daniel Wilson, Fran Sears, Mike Barker, Sheila Hockin, Eric Tuchman, Kira Snyder, Yahlin Chang, Frank Siracusa, John Weber, Joseph Boccia, Dorothy Fortenberry, Margaret Atwood, Ron Milbauer
“Ozark” (Season 2), Jason Bateman, Chris Mundy, Bill Dubuque, Mark Williams, David Manson, Alyson Feltes, Ryan Farley, Patrick Markey, Matthew Spiegel, Erin Mitchell
“This Is Us” (Season 3), Dan Fogelman, Isaac Aptaker, Elizabeth Berger, John Requa, Glenn Ficarra, Ken Olin, Charles Gogolak, Jess Rosenthal, Steve Beers, KJ Steinberg, Kevin Falls, Julia Brownell, Vera Herbert, Bekah Brunstetter, Shukree Hassan Tilghman, Cathy Mickel Gibson, Nick Pavonetti
Outstanding Producer of Episodic Television - Comedy (The Danny Thomas Award)
“Atlanta” (Season 2)
“Barry” (Season 1), Alec Berg, Bill Hader, Aida Rodgers, Emily Heller, Liz Sarnoff
“GLOW” (Season 2), Jenji Kohan, Liz Flahive, Carly Mensch, Tara Herrmann, Mark A. Burley, Nick Jones, Kim Rosenstock, Sascha Rothchild, Leanne Moore
“The Good Place” (Season 3), Michael Schur, David Miner, Morgan Sackett, Drew Goddard, Josh Siegal, Dylan Morgan, Joe Mande, Megan Amram, David Hyman, Jen Statsky
“The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel” (Season 2), Amy Sherman‐Palladino, Daniel Palladino, Dhana Rivera Gilbert, Sheila Lawrence
Outstanding Producer of Limited Series Television (The David L. Wolper Award)
“The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story” (Season 2), Ryan Murphy, Nina Jacobson, Brad Simpson, Alexis Martin Woodall, Tom Rob Smith, Daniel Minahan, Brad Falchuk, Scott Alexander, Larry Karaszewski, Chip Vucelich, Maggie Cohn, Eric Kovtun, Lou Eyrich, Eryn Krueger Mekash
“Escape at Dannemora”, Ben Stiller, Nicholas Weinstock, Michael De Luca, Bryan Zuriff, Brett Johnson, Michael Tolkin, Bill Carraro, Adam Brightman, Lisa M. Rowe
“Maniac”, Patrick Somerville, Cary Joji Fukunaga, Michael Sugar, Doug Wald, Jonah Hill, Emma Stone, Pal Kristiansen, Anne Kolbjørnsen, Espen Huseby, Carol Cuddy, Mauricio Katz, Caroline Williams, Ashley Zalta, Jessica Levin, Jon Mallard
“The Romanoffs”
“Sharp Objects”
Outstanding Producer of Non-Fiction Television
“30 for 30” (Season 9), Connor Schell, John Dahl, Libby Geist, Erin Leyden, Adam Neuhaus, Jenna Anthony, Gentry Kirby, Marquis Daisy, Deirdre Fenton
“Anthony Bourdain: Parts Unknown” (Season 11, Season 12), Anthony Bourdain, Christopher Collins, Lydia Tenaglia, Sandra Zweig
“Leah Remini: Scientology and the Aftermath” (Season 3)
“Queer Eye” (Season 1, Season 2), David Collins, Michael Williams, Rob Eric, Jennifer Lane, Jordana Hochman, Mark Bracero, Rachelle Mendez
“Wild Wild Country” (Season 1), Mark Duplass, Jay Duplass, Josh Braun, Dan Braun, Juliana Lembi
Outstanding Producer of Live Entertainment & Talk Television
“The Daily Show with Trevor Noah” (Season 24), Trevor Noah, Steve Bodow, Jennifer Flanz, Jill Katz, Justin Melkmann, David Kibuuka, Zhubin Parang, Max Browning, Eric Davies, Pamela DePace, Ramin Hedayati, Elise Terrell, Dave Blog, Adam Chodikoff, Jimmy Donn, Jeff Gussow, Kira Klang Hopf, Allison MacDonald, Ryan Middleton
“Last Week Tonight with John Oliver” (Season 5)
“The Late Show with Stephen Colbert” (Season 4), Stephen Colbert, Chris Licht, Tom Purcell, Jon Stewart, Barry Julien, Denise Rehrig, Tanya Michnevich Bracco, Paul Dinello, Matt Lappin, Opus Moreschi, Emily Gertler, Aaron Cohen, Michael Brumm, Paige Kendig, Jake Plunkett
“Real Time with Bill Maher” (Season 16), Bill Maher, Scott Carter, Sheila Griffiths, Marc Gurvitz, Billy Martin, Dean E. Johnsen, Chris Kelly, Matt Wood
“Saturday Night Live” (Season 44)
More.
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maxwellyjordan · 5 years
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Friday round-up
At The Economist’s Democracy in America blog, Steven Mazie covers the court’s decision Tuesday in Timbs v. Indiana, in which the justices ruled unanimously “that the constitution protects people accused of crimes from having outlandish sums seized by city or state authorities.” Subscript Law offers a graphic explainer for the decision. At Bloomberg Law, Jordan Rubin and Kimberly Robinson report that in separate concurrences, Justices Clarence Thomas and Neil Gorsuch supported “incorporating the Eighth Amendment’s excessive fines clause to the states by way of the privileges or immunities clause instead of via the Fourteenth Amendment’s due process clause,” “a view of the Constitution that could be incredibly consequential were it to eventually find favor with a majority of justices.” Commentary comes from Jason Snead and Elizabeth Slatter at The Daily Signal and Alan Kaplinsky at The National Law Review. At Stanford Law School’s Legal Aggregate blog, Sharon Driscoll discusses the decision with law professor Robert Weisberg.
At Rewire.News’ Boom! Lawyered podcast, Imani Gandi and Jessica Mason Pieklo weigh in on Thomas’ solo concurrence this week in the denial of review in defamation case McKee v. Cosby, calling it an “alarming … opinion that may signal the start of a prolonged attack on the First Amendment.” At The Daily Caller, Kevin Daley covers reactions to the opinion, in which Thomas “urg[ed] the high court to reconsider a landmark freedom of the press decision called New York Times v. Sullivan,” which “generally shields reporters and news platforms from libel or defamation lawsuits provided they were acting in good faith”; Thomas argued that “the high court was wrong to usurp the role of states in regulating libel.”
Briefly:
In the latest episode of the Heritage Foundation’s SCOTUS 101 podcast, “Jason Snead joins Elizabeth Slattery to talk about Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s return and the Court’s ruling in” Timbs.
For The Wall Street Journal, Katy Strech Ferek reports that in Mission Product Holdings Inc. v. Tempnology LLC, which was argued on Wednesday, the “justices are weighing whether trademark users should have more protections in licensing disputes that break out in corporate bankruptcy cases,” and that “[d]isputes over broken licensing deals have split courts across the country.” [Disclosure: Goldstein & Russell, P.C., whose attorneys contribute to this blog in various capacities, is among the counsel on an amicus brief in support of the petitioner in this case.]
For Education Week, Mark Walsh revisits a landmark school-speech decision, Tinker v. Des Moines Community Independent School District, on its 50th anniversary.
At The National Law Review, Richard Davis and others look at the newest addition to next term’s docket: County of Maui, Hawaii v. Hawaii Wildlife Fund, which asks whether the Clean Water Act covers pollution that moves through groundwater before reaching a federal waterway.
For the Constitutional Law Prof Blog, Ruthann Robson previews Monday’s oral argument in Manhattan Community Access Corp. v. Halleck, in which the justices will consider whether a private operator of a public-access TV channel is a “state actor” who can be sued for violations of the First Amendment.
We rely on our readers to send us links for our round-up. If you have or know of a recent (published in the last two or three days) article, post, podcast, or op-ed relating to the Supreme Court that you’d like us to consider for inclusion in the round-up, please send it to roundup [at] scotusblog.com. Thank you!
The post Friday round-up appeared first on SCOTUSblog.
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paper--planes · 6 years
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My Emmy’s 2018 Predictions
Below the cut are MY Emmy’s predictions.  These are not made to win anything, just what I hope to win.  I have another list of predictions on another site that are made to win LOL. If you use my list to make your predictions, TAG ME! I want to see who gets the most winners.  If you haven’t seen my blank copyable list of nominees, CLICK HERE!
Anyways, let’s get to what you actually want to see.  Click the Keep Reading to open my FULL LIST of my Emmy 2018 predictions, my choices are in bold.  HAPPY EMMY DAY!
COMEDY
Best Comedy Series “Atlanta” “Barry” “Black-ish” “Curb Your Enthusiasm” “GLOW” “The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel” “Silicon Valley” “Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt”
Best Comedy Actor Anthony Anderson (“Black-ish”) Ted Danson (“The Good Place”) Larry David (“Curb Your Enthusiasm”) Donald Glover (“Atlanta”) Bill Hader (“Barry”) William H. Macy (“Shameless”)
Best Comedy Actress Pamela Adlon (“Better Things”) Rachel Brosnahan (“The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel”) Allison Janney (“Mom”) Issa Rae (“Insecure”) Tracee Ellis Ross (“Black-ish”) Lily Tomlin (“Grace and Frankie”)
Best Comedy Supporting Actor Louie Anderson (“Baskets”) Alec Baldwin (“Saturday Night Live”) Tituss Burgess (“Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt”) Tony Shalhoub (“The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel”) Kenan Thompson (“Saturday Night Live”) Henry Winkler (“Barry”)
Best Comedy Supporting Actress Zazie Beetz (“Atlanta”) Alex Borstein (“The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel”) Aidy Bryant (“Saturday Night Live”) Betty Gilpin (“GLOW”) Leslie Jones (“Saturday Night Live”) Kate McKinnon (“Saturday Night Live”) Laurie Metcalf (“Roseanne”) Megan Mullally (“Will and Grace”)
Best Comedy Directing “Atlanta” (Episode: “FUBU”), directed by Donald Glover “Atlanta” (Episode: “Teddy Perkins”), directed by Hiro Murai “Barry” (Episode: “Chapter One: Make Your Mark”), directed by Bill Hader “The Big Bang Theory” (Episode: “The Bow Tie Asymmetry”), directed by Mark Cendrowski “GLOW” (Episode: “Pilot”), directed by Jesse Peretz “The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel” (Episode: Pilot”), directed by Amy Sherman-Palladino “Silicon Valley” (Epiosde: “Initial Coin Offering”, directed by Mike Judge
Best Comedy Writing “Atlanta” (Episode: “Alligator Man”), written by Donald Glover “Atlanta” (Episode: “Barbershop”), written by Stefani Robinson “Barry” (Episode: “Chapter One: Make Your Mark”), written by Alec Berg and Bill Hader “Barry” (Episode: “Chatper Seven: Loud, Fast, and Keep Going), written by Liz Sarnoff “The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel” (Episode: “Pilot”), written by Amy Sherman-Palladino “Silicon Valley” (Episode: “Fifty-One Percent”), written by Alec Berg
DRAMA
Best Drama Series “The Handmaid’s Tale” “Game of Thrones” “This is Us” “The Crown” “The Americans” “Stranger Things” “Westworld”
Best Drama Actor Jason Bateman (“Ozark”) Sterling K. Brown (“This is Us”) Ed Harris (“Westworld”) Matthew Rhys (“The Americans”) Milo Ventimiglia, (“This is Us”) Jeffrey Wright (“Westworld”)
Best Drama Actress Claire Foy (“The Crown”) Tatiana Maslany (“Orphan Black”) Elisabeth Moss (“The Handmaid’s Tale”) Sandra Oh (“Killing Eve”) Keri Russell (“The Americans”) Evan Rachel Wood (“Westworld”)
Best Drama Supporting Actor Nikolaj Coster-Waldau (“Game of Thrones”) Peter Dinklage (“Game of Thrones”) Joseph Fiennes (“The Handmaid’s Tale”) David Harbour (“Stranger Things”) Mandy Patinkin (“Homeland”) Matt Smith (“The Crown”)
Best Drama Supporting Actress Alexis Bledel (“The Handmaid’s Tale”) Millie Bobby Brown (“Stranger Things”) Ann Dowd (“The Handmaid’s Tale”) Lena Headey (“Game of Thrones”) Vanessa Kirby (“The Crown”) Thandie Newton (“Westworld”) Yvonne Strahovski (“The Handmaid’s Tale”)
Best Drama Directing “The Crown” (Episode: “Paterfamilias”), directed by Stephen Daldry “Game of Thrones” (Episode: “Beyond the Wall”), directed by Alan Taylor “Game of Thrones” (Episode: “The Dragon and the Wolf”), directed by Jeremy Podeswa “The Handmaid’s Tale” (Episode: “After”), directed by Kari Skogland “Ozark” (Episode: “The Toll”), directed by Jason Bateman “Ozark” (Episode: “Tonight We Improvise”), directed by Daniel Sackheim “Stranger Things” (Episode: “Chapter Nine: The Gate”), directed by the Duffer Brothers
Best Drama Writing “The Americans” (Episode: “START”), written by Joel Fields and Joe Weisberg “The Crown” (Episode: “Mystery Man”), written by Peter Morgan “Game of Thrones” (Episode: “The Dragon and the Wolf”), written by David Benioff and D. B. Weiss “The Handmaid’s Tale” (Episode: “June”), written by Bruce Miller “Killing Eve” (Episode: “Nice Face”), written by Phoebe Waller-Bridge “Stranger Things” (Episode: “Chapter Nine: The Gate”), written by the Duffer Brothers
MOVIE/MINI
Best Limited Series “The Alienist” “The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story” “Genius: Picasso” “Godless” “Patrick Melrose”
Best TV Movie “Fahrenheit 451” “Flint” “Paterno” “The Tale” “USS Callister: Black Mirror”
Best Movie/Mini Actor Antonio Banderas (“Genius: Picasso”) Darren Criss (“The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story”) Benedict Cumberbatch (“Patrick Melrose”) Jeff Daniels (“The Looming Tower”) John Legend (“Jesus Christ Superstar”) Jesse Plemons (“USS Callister: Black Mirror”)
Best Movie/Mini Actress Laura Dern (“The Tale”) Jessica Biel (“The Sinner”) Michelle Dockery (“Godless”) Edie Falco (“The Menendez Murders”) Regina King (“Seven Seconds”) Sarah Paulson (“American Horror Story: Cult”)
Best Movie/Mini Supporting Actor Jeff Daniels (“Godless”) Brandon Victor Dixon (“Jesus Christ Superstar”) John Leguizamo (“Waco”) Ricky Martin (“The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story”) Edgar Ramirez (“The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story”) Michael Stuhlbarg (“The Looming Tower”) Finn Wittrock (“The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story”)
Best Movie/Mini Supporting Actress Sara Bareilles (“Jesus Christ Superstar Live In Concert”) Penelope Cruz (“The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story”) Judith Light (“The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story”) Adina Porter (“American Horror Story: Cult”) Merritt Wever (“Godless”) Letitia Wright (“Black Museum: Black Mirror”)
Best Movie/Mini Directing “The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story” (Episode: “The Man Who Would Be Vogue”), directed by Ryan Murphy “Godless,” directed by Scott Frank “Jesus Christ Superstar Live in Concert,” directed by David Leveaux and Alex Rudzinski “The Looming Tower” (Episode: “9/11”), directed by Craig Zisk “Paterno,” directed by Barry Levinson “Patrick Melrose,” directed by Edward Berger “Twin Peaks,” directed by David Lynch
Best Movie/Mini Writing “American Vandal” (Episode: “Clean Up”), written by Kevin McManus and Matthew McManus “The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story” (Episode: “House by the Lake”), written by Tom Rob Smith “Black Mirror: USS Callister,” written by William Bridges and Charlie Brooker “Godless,” written by Scott Frank “Patrick Melrose,” written by David Nicholls “Twin Peaks,” written by Mark Frost and David Lynch
REALITY/VARIETY
Best Reality Competition Program The Amazing Race” “American Ninja Warrior” “Project Runway” “RuPaul’s Drag Race” “Top Chef” “The Voice”
Best Variety Sketch Series “At Home with Amy Sedaris” “Drunk History” “I Love You, America” “Portlandia” “Saturday Night Live” “Tracey Ullman’s Show”
Best Variety Talk Series “The Daily Show With Trevor Noah” “Full Frontal With Samantha Bee” “Jimmy Kimmel Live” “Last Week Tonight with John Oliver” “Late Late Show with James Corden Late Show with Stephen Colbert”
Best Variety Special, Directing “Dave Chappelle: Equanimity,” directed by Stan Lathan “Jerry Seinfeld: Jerry Before Seinfeld,” directed by Michael Bonfiglio “Steve Martin & Martin Short: An Evening You Will Forget For The Rest Of Your Life,” directed by Marcus Raboy “Super Bowl LII Halftime Show Starring Justin Timberlake,” directed by Hamish Hamilton “The Oscars,” directed by Glenn Weiss
Best Variety Special, Writing “Full Frontal with Samantha Bee: The Great American* Puerto Rico (*It’s Complicated),” written by Samantha Bee, Pat Cassels, Mike Drucker, Eric Drysdale, Mathan Erhardt, Miles Kahn and Nicole Silverberg “John Mulaney: Kid Gorgeous” at Radio City, written by John Mulaney “Michelle Wolf: Nice Lady,” written by Michelle Wolf “Patton Oswalt: Annihilation,” written by Patton Oswalt “Steve Martin & Martin Short: An Evening You Will Forget for the Rest of Your Life,” written by Steve Martin and Martin Short
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thearabkhaleesi · 6 years
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2018 Emmy Nominations - Full List
Outstanding Comedy Series
Atlanta
Barry
Black-ish
Curb Your Enthusiasm
Glow
The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel
Silicon Valley
Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt
Outstanding Drama Series
The Americans
The Crown
Game of Thrones
The Handmaid’s Tale
Stranger Things
This Is Us
Westworld
Lead Actor in a Limited Series or Movie
Antonio Banderas, Genius: Picasso
Darren Criss, The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story
Benedict Cumberbatch, Patrick Melrose
Jeff Daniels, The Looming Tower
John Legend, Jesus Christ Superstar
Jesse Plemons, Black Mirror: USS Callister
Lead Actress in a Limited Series or Movie
Jessica Biel, The Sinner
Laura Dern, The Tale
Michelle Dockery, Godless
Edie Falco, Law and Order True Crime: The Menendez Murders
Regina King, Seven Seconds
Sarah Paulson, America Horror Story: Cult
Lead Actor in a Comedy Series
Anthony Anderson, Black-ish
Ted Danson, The Good Place
Larry David, Curb Your Enthusiasm
Donald Glover, Atlanta
Bill Hader, Barry
William H. Macy, Shameless
Supporting Actor in a Comedy Series
Brian Tyree Henry, Atlanta
Henry Winkler, Barry
Louie Anderson, Baskets
Alec Baldwin, Saturday Night Live
Kenan Thompson, Saturday Night Live
Tony Shalhoub, The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel
Tituss Burgess, Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt
Lead Actress in a Comedy Series
Pamala Adlon, Better Things
Rachel Brosnahan, The Marvelous Ms, Maisel
Allison Janney, Mom
Issa Rae, Insecure
Tracee Ellis Ross, Black-ish
Lily Tomlin, Grace and Frankie
Supporting Actress in a Comedy Series
Zazie Beetz, Atlanta
Laurie Metcalf, Roseanne
Betty Gilpin, Glow
Aidy Bryant, Saturday Night Live
Leslie Jones, Saturday Night Live
Kate McKinnon, Saturday Night Live
Alex Borstein, The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel
Megan Mullally, Will & Grace
Lead Actor in a Drama Series
Jason Bateman, Ozark
Matthew Rhys, The Americans
Sterling K. Brown, This Is Us
Milo Ventimiglia, This Is Us
Ed Harris, Westworld
Jeffrey Wright, Westworld
Supporting Actor in a Drama Series
Nikolaj Coster-Waldau, Game of Thrones
Peter Dinklage, Game of Thrones
Mandy Patinkin, Homeland
David Harbour, Stranger Things
Matt Smith, The Crown
Joseph Fiennes, The Handmaid’s Tale
Lead Actress in a Drama Series
Sandra Oh, Killing Eve
Tatiana Maslany, Orphan Black
Keri Russell, The Americans
Claire Foy, The Crown
Elisabeth Moss, The Handmaid’s Tale
Evan Rachel Wood, Westworld
Supporting Actress in a Drama Series
Lena Headey, Game of Thrones
Millie Bobby Brown, Stranger Things
Vanessa Kirby, The Crown
Ann Dowd, The Handmaid’s Tale
Yvonne Strahovski, The Handmaid’s Tale
Alexis Bledel, The Handmaid’s Tale
Thandie Newton, Westworld
Guest Actress - Drama
Diana Rigg, “Game of Thrones”
Viola Davis, “Scandal”
Kelly Jenrette, “The Handmaid’s Tale”
Cherry Jones, “The Handmaid’s Tale”
Cicely Tyson, “How To Get Away With Murder”
Samira Wiley, “The Handmaid’s Tale”
Guest Actor - Drama
F. Murray Abraham, “Homeland”
Cameron Britton, Mindhunter”
Ron Cephas Jones, “This Is Us”
Matthew Goode, “The Crown”
Gerald McRaney, “This Is Us”
Jimmi Simpson, “Westworld”
Guest Actress - Comedy
Tina Fey, “Saturday Night Live”
Tiffany Haddish, “Saturday Night Live”
Jane Lynch, “The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel”
Maya Rudolph, “The Good Place”
Molly Shannon, “Will & Grace”
Wanda Sykes, “black-ish”
Guest Actor - Comedy
Sterling K. Brown, “Brooklyn Nine-Nine”
Bryan Cranston, “Curb Your Enthusiasm”
Donald Glover, “Saturday Night Live”
Bill Hader, “Saturday Night Live”
Lin-Manuel Miranda, “Curb Your Enthusiasm”
Katt Williams, “Atlanta”
Outstanding Reality Competition Series
The Amazing Race
American Ninja Warrior
Project Runway
RuPaul’s Drag Race
Top Chef
The Voice
Outstanding Variety Sketch Series
At Home with Amy Sedaris
Drunk History
I Love You America with Sarah Silverman
Portlandia
Saturday Night Live
Tracey Ullman’s Show
Outstanding Variety Talk Series
The Daily Show with Trevor Noah
Full Frontal with Samantha Bee
Jimmy Kimmel Live
Last Week Tonight with John Oliver
The Late Late Show with James Corden
The Late Show with Stephen Colbert
Outstanding Limited Series
The Alienist
The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story
Genius: Picasso
Godless
Patrick Melrose
Outstanding Reality Host
W. Kamau Bell, “United Shades Of America With W. Kamau Bell”
Ellen DeGeneres, “Ellen’s Game Of Games”
Heidi Klum & Tim Gunn, “Project Runway”
Jane Lynch, “Hollywood Game Night”
RuPaul, “RuPaul’s Drag Race
Outstanding Structured Reality Program
“Antiques Roadshow” (PBS)
“Fixer Upper” (HGTV)
“Lip Sync Battle” (Paramount Network)
“Queer Eye” (Netflix)
“Shark Tank” (ABC)
“Who Do You Think You Are?” (TLC)
Outstanding Unstructured Reality Program
Born This Way (A&E)
Deadliest Catch (Discovery Channel)
Intervention (A&E)
Naked And Afraid (Discovery Channel)
RuPaul’s Drag Race: Untucked (VH1)
United Shades Of America With W. Kamau Bell (CNN)
Documentary or Nonfiction Series
“American Masters” (PBS)
“Blue Planet II” (BBC America)
“The Defiant Ones” (HBO)
“The Fourth Estate” (Showtime)
“Wild Wild Country” (Netflix)
Animated Program
“Baymax Returns: Big Hero 6: The Series” (Disney XD)
“Bob’s Burgers” (FOX)
“Rick And Morty” (Adult Swim)
“South Park” (Comedy Central)
“The Simpsons” (FOX)
Writing for a Comedy Series
Alec Berg, “Silicon Valley” (“Fifty-One Percent”)
Alec Berg and Bill Hader, “Barry” (“Chapter One: Make Your Mark”)
Donald Glover, “Atlanta” (“Alligator Man”)
Stefani Robinson, “Atlanta” (“Barbershop”)
Liz Sarnoff, “Barry” (“Chapter Seven: Loud, Fast And Keep Going”)
Amy Sherman-Palladino, “The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel” (“Pilot”)
Writing for a Drama Series
David Benioff & D.B. Weiss, “Game Of Thrones” (“The Dragon And The Wolf”)
The Duffer Brothers, “Stranger Things” (“Chapter Nine: The Gate”)
Joel Fields & Joe Weisberg, “The Americans” (“Start”)
Peter Morgan, “The Crown” (“Mystery Man”)
Bruce Miller, “The Handmaid’s Tale” (“June”)
Phoebe Waller-Bridge, “Killing Eve” (“Nice Face”)
ADVERTISEMENT
Writing for a Limited Series, Movie or Drama
William Bridges & Charlie Brooker, “Black Mirror: USS Callister”
Scott Frank, “Godless”
David Lynch & Mark Frost, “Twin Peaks”
Kevin McManus & Matthew McManus, “American Vandal” (“Clean Up”)
David Nicholls, “Patrick Melrose”
Tom Rob Smith, “The Assassination Of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story” (“House By The Lake”)
Directing for a Comedy Series
Donald Glover, “Atlanta” (“FUBU”)
Bill Hader, “Barry” (“Chapter One: Make Your Mark”)
Hiro Murai, “Atlanta” (“Teddy Perkins”)
Mike Judge, “Silicon Valley” (“Initial Coin Offering”)
Jesse Peretz, “GLOW” (“Pilot”)
Amy Sherman-Palladino, “The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel” (“Pilot”)
Directing for a Drama Series
Jason Bateman, “Ozark” (“The Toll”)
Stephen Daldry, “The Crown” (“Paterfamilias”)
The Duffer Brothers, “Stranger Things” (“Chapter Nine: The Gate”)
Jeremy Podeswa, “Game Of Thrones” (“The Dragon And The Wolf”)
Daniel Sackheim, “Ozark” (“Tonight We Improvise”)
Kari Skogland, “The Handmaid’s Tale” (“After”)
Alan Taylor, “Game Of Thrones” (“Beyond The Wall”)
Directing for a Limited Series
Edward Berger, “Patrick Melrose”
Scott Frank, “Godless”
David Leveaux & Alex Rudzinski, “Jesus Christ Superstar Live In Concert”
Barry Levinson, “Paterno”
David Lynch, “Twin Peaks”
Ryan Murphy, “The Assassination Of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story” (“The Man Who Would Be Vogue”)
Craig Zisk, “The Looming Tower” (“9/11”)
Directing for a Variety Series
Andre Allen, “Full Frontal With Samantha Bee” (“Episode 2061”)
Carrie Brownstein, “Portlandia” (“Riot Spray”)
Jim Hoskinson, “The Late Show With Stephen Colbert” (“Episode 438”)
Don Roy King, “Saturday Night Live” (“Host: Donald Glover”)
Tim Mancinelli, “The Late Late Show With James Corden” (“Episode 0416”)
Paul Pennolino, “Last Week Tonight With John Oliver” (“Episode 421”)
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20 years of blogging at Boing Boing
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Twenty years ago today, Boing Boing became a blog. Mark Frauenfelder's first post linked to Street Tech, a now-dormant gadget blog. Now there are 160,000 more posts just like it and the impossible task of summarizing the best of them in yet another.
Founded as a print zine in 1988 by Mark and Carla Sinclair, Mark's personal retrospective posted earlier today is a must-read; following are a few of our greatest hits, proudest accomplishments, clickiest traffic monsters, and best features of all time.
Despite the tens of millions of words in our database – mostly wonderful things – it's oftentimes the shortest posts that get the most attention.
So it was with Xeni Jardin's Ralph Lauren opens new outlet store in the Uncanny Valley, a single-sentence reblog of a now-vanished post at another site highlighting the incompetently dysmorphic photomanipulations in one of the fashion house's ads.
Ralph Lauren tried to force us to remove the post, to no avail.
That wasn't our first rodeo, either. In 2008, were were sued by MagicJack, makers of a VoIP dongle, after criticizing its terms of service. We stood our ground and beat them in court. Ten years later, Playboy sued us for posting about someone else's uploaded cover collection, claiming that linking to things is a form of copyright infringement. We beat them too, with the help of able friends at the Electronic Frontier Foundation.
It's not all law and chaos, though.
Mark Frauenfelder says he's most proud of his two-part series on the fortified residential mailboxes of Los Angeles, Survival of the fittest mailbox and Fortified mailboxes, part 2. Readers, though, say his greatest gift to the world of letters is the gentlemen of Boing Boing.
A trilogy of Cory Doctorow's most incisive writing on technology, policy and freedom is found in Lockdown, based on his keynote speech to the Chaos Computer Congress in 2011, The Coming Civil War over General Purpose Computing, and Anodyne Anonymity. Also, would you just look at that banana. Furthermore, Christ, what an asshole.
David Pescovitz is a collector of unpopular culture with an affinity for haunted ontology, mall nostalgia and cryptids (more!, with a Grammy on the shelf for his part in reissuing the Voyager Golden Record.
But it's his touching obituary for Mark, his older brother, that will not be forgotten.
Xeni Jardin's posted countless articles about cutting-edge tech and light-hearted nods to the wonders of the web, and more seriously about politics, but it's her writing about cancer, hers and others', that sticks with readers. The Diagnosis; When life hands you cancer, make cancer-ade; Obamacare saved my life; Cancer and cannabis: How I learned to stop worrying and love medical marijuana; A medal for completing breast cancer treatment; and We should be worried that science has not yet brought us closer to understanding cancer.
Rob Beschizza's The Weird of Wendy Pini profiles one of America's most successful women cartoonists. His random generators include the Psygnosis Game Generator, the North Korean Press Release Generator and the Audiophile Hardware Review Generator. (For those who don't revile them, Rob's disturbing mouth-eyed politician shoops are collected in the gallery item Corinthian Leather). Fissure opens in Chess AI scene is a deep dive into a code-plagiarism scandal. He once reviewed a loaf of snot.
He eulogized his mother, Mandy Johnson, in 2016.
Did you know Boing Boing publisher Jason Weisberger was namechecked in a saucy romance novel?
Jason has also written obituaries for his close friends Molly, Lucy, Calliope and Nemo.
We published critical games writing under the aegis of Offworld, edited by Leigh Alexander: All the women I know in video games are tired and Why Silent Hill mattered. Zoë Quinn's call to creative arms, Punk Games, remains as relevant now as it was five years ago.
Laura Hudson's Women take a place at the pinball table is a deep look at a unique competetive area, complemented by her excellent reviews of games as different as Undertale — choose to kill monsters or understand them — and Bloodborne — In Bloodborne's brutal world, I found myself.
Our longtime science editor Maggie Koerth-Baker's analysis of the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear disaster was featured in the anthology The Best Science Writing Online 2012. Don't miss her profile of James Watson, either.
Though known for chaingun blogging, we pioneered the trend toward Fancy Lookin' Features on the web, such as Maggie's Cassini Trip Reset, highlighting the astonishing imagery from NASA's probe, and Rob Beschizza's Friendly Darkness in the Palace of Utopian Fantasy, linking rare threads of modern and Victorian fantasy.
Here's just a few more of the nice features we've published over the years:
1906: Vintage Photographs by Mike Shaughnessy Leaking Secrets, leaking Blood by Raul Gutierrez Death in Space, by Maggie Koerth-Baker Ghost Babies, by Mark Dery A Season in Hell, by Mark Dery Hajj for Heathens, by Omar Chatriwala Maps, by Simon Parkin
Other guests are too many to mention – there are more than five hundred contributors in our archives now – but they account for many of our finest posts. Among the best are Sawyer Rosenstein's Don't tell me the sky is the limit when there are footprints on the moon and the many annual iterations of David Ng and Ben Cohen's Halloween Candy Hierarchy.
Glenn Fleishman's Domo Arigato, Mr. Roboto is typeset in the then-new Google typeface it was about, and What it's like to be on Jeopardy is about his brief but impressive stint on the game show.
Unseen World War I photos: German Trenches reveals a unique collection of photographs inherited by Dean Putney, our longtime developer, from his great-grandfather Walter Koessler.
Carl Malamud is well-known for Liberating America's secret, for-pay laws, and we're immensely proud to have helped him make his stand.
We've also published loads of fiction over the years, including our own, such as Cory's By His Things Will You Know Him and The Man Who Sold The Moon, Jason's Kevin's List, and Rob's Mixtape of the Lost Decade, Such Bravery and Nomen Ludi.
Finally, here are our top traffic posts since we started counting: a master key for winning at blogging. But only if you have a time machine, because the web, as they say, is dead.
1. Nigerian astronaut lost in space
2. Rickrolling is sexist, racist and often transphobic in context
3. 'To Donald Trump,' by Leland Melvin, former NASA Astronaut and NFL Player
4. 16-year-old girl who took nude selfie photos faces adult sex charges
5. Campus rapist given lenient sentence to avoid "severe impact on him"
6. Man stole $122m from Facebook and Google by sending them random bills, which the companies dutifully paid
7. Climate change denier Rupert Murdoch just bought National Geographic, which gives grants to scientists
8. Trump is angry at NBC News for using this photo of him, so please don't use this enhanced, enlarged version of it for anything
9. I'm married. I'm a woman. I'm addicted to porn.
10. For sale: (1) California ghost town
https://boingboing.net/2020/01/21/20-years-of-blogging-at-boing.html
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biglisbonnews · 1 year
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Fugitive, once chief-of-staff to a Maryland governor, Roy McGrath shot dead by the FBI Wanted on charges of embezzlement and wire fraud, Roy McGrath failed to show up for court last month and had been on the run. Spotted by FBI agents in Tennessee, the former chief-of-staff to former governor Larry Hogan of Maryland, McGrath was shot by an FBI agent, hospitalized, and later died of the wound. — Read the rest https://boingboing.net/2023/04/04/fugitive-once-chief-of-staff-to-a-maryland-governor-roy-mcgrath-shot-dead-by-fbi.html
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johnmartin0366 · 4 years
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4 Spy Thriller TV Shows To Watch If You Love The Bourne Franchise
The spy thriller genre is one of the most exciting movie genres among fans. The storyline of these films is outstanding and more interesting as it includes mysteries, deception, suspense, and exhilaration. One of the best spy thriller movie franchises is Jason Bourne. It is a blockbuster film series, and the famous actor Matt Damon is in the lead role portraying the character of Jason Bourne. There are many other movies and TV shows that are identical to the Jason Bourne film series. In this article, we have discussed some of the best spy thriller TV shows that you should watch if you love the Jason Bourne film series.
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Homeland
Homeland is a famous spy thriller TV series developed by Howard Gordon and Alex Gansa. It was broadcast on Showtime channel in the year 2011. Its eighth and final season premiered earlier this year. The actress Claire Danes is playing the character of Carrie Mathison, and the actor Damian Lewis portrays the character of Nicholas Brody in this series. Both of them have performed brilliantly in this series. It is a fantastic television series that shares a similar theme to the Jason Bourne film series in various ways.
The Americans
The Americans is another popular spy thriller TV series created by Joe Weisberg and released on the FX television network in the year 2013. Keri Russell and Matthew Rhys are in the lead role in this series. Keri portrays the character of Elizabeth Jennings, and Matthew portrays the character of Phillip Jennings in this series. They both are Soviet intelligence officers and live with their children, Paige and Henry, in Falls Church. The story of the series takes place at the time of the Cold War. There are a number of things to explore in The Americans, along with some stunning performances. Some plots of this series relate to the Jason Bourne film series.
Killing Eve
Killing Eve is a black comedy, spy thriller TV series produced by Sid Gentle Films for BBC America in 2018. Sandra Oh portrays the character of Eve Polastri as an agent of the MI6 intelligence agency, and Jodie Comer portrays the character of Oksana Astankova/Villanelle as a psychopathic skilled assassin. The story of the series shows great chemistry between Eve and Oksana and the stylized murder that will blow your mind. It is a very mysterious series, and some of its mysteries have not been solved yet, even after the three seasons. There are various suspenseful and mysterious scenes in this series, and it is a must-watch spy thriller TV series for you if you love the Jason Bourne film series.
Chuck
Chuck is another brilliant spy thriller TV series created by Josh Schwartz and Chris Fedak for NBC television networks in the year 2007. This series has five seasons so far. Zachary Levi portrays the character of Chuck Bartowski, who has some good knowledge about computers. He receives an encoded email from his friend, who is now working with the CIA. It is a great series that revolves around the talented Chuck. It relates to the Jason Bourne film series in various ways and if you are a fan of Jason Bourne. This spy thriller series is a must-watch series for you.
After discussing some of the spy thriller television series that share a similar theme to Jason Bourne’s film series, we have concluded that all of the above-discussed television series have different plots. Still, some of them can be compared with the Jason Bourne film series.
John Martin is a Microsoft Office setup expert and has been working in the technical industry since 2002. As a technical expert, John has written technical blogs, manuals, white papers, and reviews for many websites such as office.com/setup.
 Source URL - 4 Spy Thriller TV Shows To Watch If You Love The Bourne Franchise
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kittyshiwa · 4 years
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Crítica de ‘Away’, primera temporada: algo más que llorones en el espacio#algo #critica #espacio #llorones #más #primera #temporada[penci_related_posts dis_pview="no" dis_pdate="no" title="También te puede interesar" background="" border="" thumbright="no" number="4" style="list" align="none" withids="" displayby="tag" orderby="date"]
Para los espectadores a los que les maravillan los misterios del espacio exterior y plantearse a qué rincones del mismo podremos llegar los seres humanos en un futuro más o menos próximo, las aventuras de naves que se adentran en esos enigmas de la ficción cinematográfica pueden resultar cautivadoras. Y, si uno alucina con series documentales como las tres entregas que nos han regalado hasta el momento de Cosmos (Carl Sagan, Ann Druyan y Steven Soter, 1980, 2014, 2020), es más que probable que le interese Away, la propuesta marciana de Netflix para este 2020 con el estadounidense Andrew Hinderaker a la cabeza.
El comienzo de Away nos hace querer saber qué diantres le ha sucedido en la travesía a esta tripulación de astronautas rumbo al planeta rojo
Su aún escasa trayectoria incluye guiones para Penny Dreadful (John Logan, 2014-2016), Puro genio (Jason Katims y Sarah Watson, 2016-2017) y The Path (Jessica Goldberg, 2016-2018). Esta última es escritora tan principal que no se comprende que no la señalen como corresponsable de Away, y en su currículum encontramos, por otra parte, la escritura de capítulos para Parenthood (Katims, 2010-2015), la dirección del largometraje Refuge (2012) y más letra para el filme Alex of Venice (Chris Messina, 2014), en el que comparte crédito con los novatos Katie Nehra y Justin Shilton.
Además, el episodio “Go” (1x01) lo ha realizado Edward Zwick, que también ejerce de productor ejecutivo y estuvo tras las cámaras de películas como Tiempos de gloria (1989), Leyendas de pasión (1994) o El último samurái (2003). En él y pese a que se trata de un recurso típico a estas alturas del séptimo arte, los guionistas tienen las luces necesarias para poner el inicio de la historia de Away en mitad de los acontecimientos, lanzarnos a la cara veloces flashes de un incidente ocurrido con anterioridad y, a continuación, llevarnos dos semanas antes del comienzo. Todo en escasos minutos; y listo, ya estamos enganchados.
Netflix
Uno se pregunta si en el casting de Away pidieron a los actores unas lágrimas tan fáciles como las de estos terrícolas llorones
Lo suficiente al menos como para querer saber qué diantres le ha sucedido en la travesía a esta tripulación de astronautas rumbo al planeta rojo. Más adelante nos topamos con alguna otra triquiñuela narrativa, y con montajes paralelos al son de canciones, alguno con elementos imprevistos, y otros muy oportunos para los clímax. Y los flashes no constituyen algo excepcional en el primer capítulo, sino un ingrediente de tipo impresionista. Lo malo es que no se repite en ninguno de los otros nueve, conque esta licencia estilística quizá podamos achacársela a Zwick y agrieta un poco la cohesión visual de Away.
Hay un sentido del humor mundano que, por serlo, da credibilidad a ciertas conversaciones; y preguntas de sobra conocidas acerca de la exploración espacial que se responden bien. Sin embargo, el nivel más frecuente no destaca por su elocuencia. Nunca cae hasta lo vergonzoso, por supuesto, pero no pocos diálogos y algunos discursitos de cara a la galería se sustentan en tópicos evidentes. Y, por su reverso lacrimógeno de la fuerza espacial, uno se pregunta si lo primero que le solicitaron a los actores poco conocidos en el casting de Away fue demostrar que pueden hacer que se les salten las lágrimas con la facilidad de estos terrícolas llorones.
Away parece ser un poco melodramática y hasta un pelín cursi en ocasiones
Y es indiscutible que no les fue mal, ya que casi todos cumplen con ese requisito, desde Hilary Swank (Million Dollar Baby) como Emma Green, Josh Charles (El club de los poetas muertos) y Talitha Bateman (Annabelle: Creation) en la piel de Matt y Alexis Logan hasta Ray Panthaki (Gangs of London) como Ram Arya, Mark Ivanir (La lista de Schindler) encarnando a Misha Popov, Vivian Wu (El último emperador) como Lu Wang o Atto Essandoh (Girls) en los zapatos de Kwesi Weisberg-Abban. Por fortuna, la composición musical de Will Bates (Otra Tierra) no se dedica al subrayado sentimentaloide.
Netflix
Pero Andrew Hinderaker ha colocado el foco y el corazón de Away donde deben estar: en los personajes y su drama
La serie se revela tan interesada en el drama familiar y en las vicisitudes psicológicas de sus protagonistas como, salvando las distancias, ese filme estupendo que es First Man (Damien Chazelle, 2018). Con toda lógica, pues no hay emoción en el cine si los espectadores no sienten una empatía férrea por los personajes, sin ahondar en su interior convulso y en las relaciones íntimas que les atan y condicionan su conducta. El problema es que Away parece ser un poco melodramática y hasta un pelín cursi en ocasiones; no hasta el punto de resultar alarmante, claro, pero tampoco debemos hacer la vista gorda con ello.
De todas maneras, Andrew Hinderaker ha colocado el foco y el corazón donde deberían directores del calibre de Christopher Nolan, por ejemplo, en películas tan esperadas como Tenet (2020): en los personajes. Y lo mueve de uno a otro en cada capítulo a la forma de Lost (J. J. Abrams, Damon Lindelof, Jeffrey Lieber, 2004-2010), pero con el entorno de Emma Green en el centro de la escena. Y hay tramas personales en Away con cierto encanto y capacidad de conmovernos, como la de “Half the Sky” (1x03); y se apuesta por inquietantes componentes clásicos de las aventuras espaciales en “Excellent Chariots” (1x04).
El palique se vuelve persuasivo, se atenúa el melodrama y la cursilería, los contratiempos y disensiones y la conexión humana logran interesarnos
Uno halla tensión genuina en un par de secuencias de peligro, una de las cuales hasta reviste cierta hermosura, pero tampoco produce inquietud como para tirarse de los pelos. Y nos complace descubrir que Away mejora conforme transcurren los episodios: la escala del tono dramático se asienta, el palique se vuelve un poco más persuasivo, se atenúa el melodrama y la cursilería, los contratiempos a los que se enfrenta la tripulación del Atlas I logran interesarnos tanto como sus disensiones y momentos de conexión humana. Y al fin nos brinda algo más que llorones en el espacio sideral o con los ojos puestos en él.
Netflix
El artículo Crítica de ‘Away’, primera temporada: algo más que llorones en el espacio se publicó en Hipertextual.
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