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#Richard Greenberg
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80smovies · 10 months
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frontmezzjunkies · 2 years
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Take Me Out on Broadway Unpacks Discomfort Beautifully
#frontmezzjunkies reviews: #Broadway's #TakeMeOut a play by #RichardGreenberg directed by #ScottEllis starring #JessieWilliams #JesseTylerFerguson #PatrickJAdams #BroadwayRevival #TakeMeOutBroadway @2STNYC #2STBroadway #HelenHayesTheater
The Broadway Theater Review: 2ST’s Take Me Out By Ross In big Broadway news, the release of someone stealing a video of Take Me Out‘s celebrated shower scene is unwrapping itself all over the web, right alongside Patti LuPone giving it to one selfish overly-entitled audience member who refused to wear her mask properly, even when LuPone asked her directly from the stage during a now infamous…
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felicebelle · 2 years
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KIPPY: You’ve named yourself, Darren—you’ve put yourself into words—which means you’re free in a way you’ve never been before.
Take Me Out, Richard Greenberg
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shanksfan1 · 9 months
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Happy 26th Birthday Stargate SG1
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may8chan · 2 years
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Barbarian - Zach Cregger 2022
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waugh-bao · 9 months
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deadpresidents · 1 year
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What are you currently reading?
I've been having trouble getting into just one book lately, so I've currently been reading parts of several books, hoping one of them hooks me. Guess what? That's literally never worked any time I've ever tried it, and yet, I still do it constantly. It always ends up taking me longer to read everything than if I just read the books one after the other.
Anyway, this is what I'm in the middle of right now, all of which are too interesting to keep me from focusing on just one at a time:
•Lady First: The World of First Lady Sarah Polk (BOOK | KINDLE) by Amy Greenberg •The Victorian Internet: The Remarkable Story of the Telegraph and the Nineteenth Century's On-Line Pioneers (BOOK | KINDLE) by Tom Standage •King Faisal of Saudi Arabia: Personality, Faith and Times (BOOK | KINDLE) by Alexei Vassiliev
I'm also still on the Richard Francis Burton kick that I mentioned last year, so I've been reading these too: •Captain Sir Richard Francis Burton: The Secret Agent Who Made the Pilgrimage to Mecca, Discovered the Kama Sutra, and Brought the Arabian Nights to the West by Edward Rice •The City of the Saints: Among the Mormons and Across the Rocky Mountains to California (BOOK/PUBLIC DOMAIN LINK) by Sir Richard Francis Burton
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mariocki · 1 year
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Man in a Suitcase: Man from the Dead (1.6, ITC, 1967)
"Mac, don't go."
"I have to. I have to, I just... have to."
"Where're you going?"
"To Southampton. I gotta get my suitcase and my car."
"Are they so important?"
"Yes ma'am. They're all I own."
#man in a suitcase#man from the dead#blood tw#itc#1967#stanley r. greenberg#pat jackson#richard bradford#john barrie#angela browne#stuart damon#lionel murton#timothy bateson#fabia drake#dandy nichols#david nettheim#gerry wain#arthur howell#clifford earl#fred haggerty#i was absolutely certain this episode was first in both production AND transmission order bc it just... makes sense. this is the lore#episode! this is the setup! we learn about McGill‚ why he lives and works the way he does‚ why he left the CIA (albeit unspecified beyond#'intelligence agency' here). it's essentially a pilot for the series but on first transmission was actually shown sixth in the run#in fact this was a last minute change; this WAS the intended pilot (filmed as an episode called Man in a Suitcase when the series was still#planned to be titled McGill) but ATV decided to open with Brainwash as a more visually compelling ep.. maybe the right call maybe not.#having watched so much of The Saint recently i was immediately struck by just how much location work there was here; perhaps an#indicator of technological advancements (outside broadcasting developed massively throughout the decade) or just extra money thrown at a#pilot episode. Bradford refused to perform a lengthy exposition speech at the end of the episode‚ having decided it was out of character#angering producers and beginning the somewhat tricky working relationship he'd find himself in throughout the series. it was probably the#right call on his part‚ but the quality of the scripts would become a recurring issue of contention between star and producers
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aidede-camp · 2 years
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I feel absolutely awful for Jesse Williams and it just should not have happened at all, but why is no one else talking about his co-star (Michael Oberholtzer, I believe) that had to be nude for the same exact scene (according to the script and SEVERAL sources)? They had to have been caught by the camera too and they deserve just as much outrage. Just because he isn’t from Greys Anatomy doesn’t mean he should get shoved into the dark about being wrongfully disrespected as well.
Side note: this show is incredible.
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autumncalls · 1 year
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Love that the fiction novel I'm currently reading just had a character say how much he likes bitcoin for crime because it's virtually impossible to track, while the nonfiction audiobook i am also working through atm is literally about how tracking bitcoin is actually easier than most people think
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facesofcinema · 1 year
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Little Monsters (1989)
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germanpostwarmodern · 27 days
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Greenberg House (1949) in Los Angeles, CA, USA, by Richard Neutra. Photo by Julius Shulman.
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transmutationisms · 1 year
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i think you do a really impressive job balancing comprehensive/concise while referencing a lot of complex frameworks(contexts? schools of thought? lol idk what to call that. big brain ideas) but if you have any readings specifically on the institution of psychiatry topic that you would recommend/think are relevant, I'd be interested. it's absolutely not a conversation that's being had enough and I want to be able to articulate myself around it
yes i have readings >:)
first of all, the anti-psychiatry bibliography and resource guide is a great place to start getting oriented in this literature. it's split by sub-topic, and there are paragraphs interspersed throughout that give summaries of major thinkers' positions and short intros to key texts.
it's from 1979, though, so here are some recs from the last 4 decades:
overview critiques
mind fixers: psychiatry's troubled search for the biology of mental illness, by anne harrington
psychiatric hegemony: a marxist theory of mental illness, by bruce m z cohen
desperate remedies: psychiatry's turbulent quest to cure mental illness, by andrew scull
psychiatry and its discontents, by andrew scull
madness is civilization: when the diagnosis was social, 1948–1980, by michael e staub
contesting psychiatry: social movements in mental health, by nick crossley
the dsm & pharmacy
dsm: a history of psychiatry's bible, by allan v horwitz
the dsm-5 in perspective: philosophical reflections on the psychiatric babel, by steeves demazeux & patrick singy
pharmageddon, by david healy
pillaged: psychiatric medications and suicide risk, by ronald w maris
the making of dsm-iii: a diagnostic manual's conquest of american psychiatry, by hannah s decker
the myth of the chemical cure: a critique of psychiatric drug treatment, by joanna moncrieff
the book of woe: the dsm and the unmaking of psychiatry, by gary greenberg
prozac on the couch: prescribing gender in the era of wonder drugs, by jonathan metzl
the creation of psychopharmacology, by david healy
the bitterest pills: the troubling story of antipsychotic drugs, by joanna moncrieff
psychiatry & race
the protest psychosis: how schizophrenia became a black disease, by jonathan metzl
administrations of lunacy: racism and the haunting of american psychiatry at the milledgeville asylum, by mab segrest
the peculiar institution and the making of modern psychiatry, 1840–1880, by wendy gonaver
what's wrong with the poor? psychiatry, race, and the war on poverty, by mical raz
national and cross-national contexts
mad by the millions: mental disorders and the early years of the world health organization, by harry yi-jui wu
psychiatry and empire, by sloan mahone & megan vaughan
ʿaṣfūriyyeh: a history of madness, modernity, and war in the middle east, by joelle m abi-rached
surfacing up: psychiatry and social order in colonial zimbabwe, 1908–1968, by lynette jackson
the british anti-psychiatrists: from institutional psychiatry to the counter-culture, 1960–1971, by oisín wall
crime, madness, and politics in modern france: the medical concept of national decline, by robert a nye
reasoning against madness: psychiatry and the state in rio de janeiro, 1830–1944, by manuella meyer
colonial madness: psychiatry in french north africa, by richard keller
madhouse: psychiatry and politics in cuban history, by jennifer lynn lambe
depression in japan: psychiatric cures for a society in distress, by junko kitanaka
inheriting madness: professionalization and psychiatric knowledge in 19th century france, by ian r dowbiggin
mad in america: bad science, bad medicine, and the enduring mistreatment of the mentally ill, by robert whitaker
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why-i-love-comics · 8 months
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Doom Patrol info page
written by Robert Greenberger art by Richard Case & Tom McCraw
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non-fic to-do list
hello, gamers! I'm trying uuuh something similar to my to-read public shaming, but with a slightly nicer name and a tiny bit more incentive than normal.
here's the short version: Judith Butler has a new book out! it's called Who's Afraid of Gender? and I'm very excited to read it! however I also know how Judith Butler writes, and how I digest their work, and I'm definitely going to have an easier time if I have a copy of the book that I can highlight and take notes in.
but first: despite my general objections to acquiring more books than I can read, I have managed to acquire QUITE A FEW nonfiction books that I have not yet managed to read. some I've purchased, some were gifted or loaned to me, one I downloaded for free and printed in its entirety.
and now they all have to go, by which I mean get read, and only once I've read them all am I allowed to buy Butler's new book. if this takes long enough it might even be out in paperback and slightly cheaper, although I'm not holding out too much hope for that.
so, without further ado, here's a reading list that is absolutely all over the place:
From Here to Eternity: Traveling the World to Find the Good Death (Caitlin Doughty)
Prairie Fires: The American Dreams of Laura Ingalls Wilder (Caroline Fraser)
Superfreaks: Kink, Pleasure, and the Pursuit of Happiness (Arielle Greenberg)
Necropolitics (Achille Mbembe)
How to Taste: A Guide to Discovering Flavor and Savoring Life (Mandy Naglich)
Dude, You're a Fag: Masculinity and Sexuality in High School (C.J. Pascoe)
Orientalism (Edward W. Said)
Mummies, Cannibals and Vampires: The History of Corpse Medicine from the Renaissance to the Victorians (Richard Sugg)
The Caped Crusade: Batman and the Rise of Nerd Culture (Glen Weldon)
Orientalism is already in progress, and Doughty and Weldon's books will both be rereads, if that's interesting to anybody. anyone have any suggestions about where to start?
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