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#Whitbread 1985
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Skip Novak and Simon Le Bon in the 1985-86 Whitbread Race
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brookstonalmanac · 5 months
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Birthdays 1.18
Beer Birthdays
Samuel Whitbread II (1764)
Jamie Emmerson (1963)
Jeff Alworth (1967)
Chris Cohen (1974)
Jeff Moakler (1985)
Five Favorite Birthdays
Jacob Bronowski; mathematician, historian, physicist, poet (1908)
Cary Grant; actor (1904)
A.A. Milne; writer, "Winnie the Pooh" (1842)
Peter Mark Roget; lexicographer, "Roget's Thesaurus" (1779)
Robert Anton Wilson; science fiction writer (1932)
Famous Birthdays
Dave Attell; comedian (1965)
Dave Bautista; wrestler, mixed martial artist, and actor (1969)
David Bellamy; English botanist (1933)
John Boorman; film director (1933)
Raymond Briggs; cartoonist, "The Snowman" (1934)
Randolph Bromery; geologist (1926)
Kevin Costner; actor (1955)
Jonathan Davis; singer-songwriter (1971)
Henry Austin Dobson; English poet and author (1840)
Ray Dolby; inventor (1933)
C. M. Eddy Jr.; author (1896)
Curt Flood; baseball player (1938)
Paul Freeman; English actor (1943)
Bobby Goldsboro; pop singer (1941)
Jorge Guillén; Spanish poet (1893)
Oliver Hardy; actor, comedian (1892)
Jane Horrocks; actor (1964)
Danny Kaye; actor (1913)
Sharon Mitchell; porn star (156)
Baron de Montesquieu; French philosopher (1689)
Peter Moon; Australian comedian and actor (1953)
Yoichiro Nambu; Japanese-American physicist (1921)
Joanna Newsom; pop musician (1982)
Sylvia Panhurst; English suffragist (1882)
Julius Peppers; Carolina Panthers DE (1980)
Hargus "Pig" Robbins; session keyboard and piano player (1938)
David Ruffin; pop singer (1941)
Mark Rylance; English actor, director, and playwright (1960)
Louis Claude de Saint-Martin; French mystic and philosopher (1743)
Arno Schmidt; German author (1914)
Jason Segel; actor (1980)
Thomas Sopworth; British aviation pioneer (1888)
Jon Stallworthy; English poet (1935)
Vassilis Tsitsanis; Greek bouzouki player (1915)
Thomas A. Watson; assistant to Alexander Graham Bell (1854)
Daniel Webster; politician, writer (1782)
Charlie Wilson; businessman and politician (1943)
Vitomil Zupan; Slovene author, poet, and playwright (1914)
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nautexinternational · 3 years
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[ATN by #nautex] Etienne Giroire a fondé ATN en 1985 après 15 ans de course au large en participant à la Whitbread 89-90, à l’Ostar 92,96 et 2005, au double Round Britain Race 2006 ou encore la Route du Rhum 2010. Il s’est rendu compte au fil du temps qu’il n’y avait pas de système d’utilisation de spi efficace après avoir utilisé tous ceux disponibles sur le marché à l’époque qui restaient peu fiables même lorsqu’ils étaient manipulés par un équipage expérimenté. À ce jour, chaque vainqueur du Vendée Globe Race a embarqué une chaussette de spinnaker ATN, ainsi que des milliers de plaisanciers à travers le monde. https://www.nautex-international.com/en/atn-products/snuffer.html
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nprfreshair · 5 years
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With An All-Female Crew, 'Maiden' Sailed Around The World And Into History
In the 1980s, Tracy Edwards dreamed of racing a sailboat around the world. But at the time, open ocean sailboat racing was a male-dominated sport. She was only able to sign on as a cook for an all-male team in the 1985-86 Whitbread Round the World Race, a grueling 33,000 mile endeavor.
Afterward, when she still wasn't able to crew, she decided to take matters into her own hands: "My mom always told me, 'If you don't like the way the world looks, change it,'" she says. "So I thought, OK, I will."
In 1989, Edwards, then 26-years-old, assembled an all-female crew to enter the Whitbread Round the World Race. The idea was unthinkable to many of the men in the world of yacht-racing, and backlash was intense.
"We had so much obstruction and criticism and anger," she says. "Guys used to say to us, with absolute certainty, 'You're going to die.'"
But Edwards didn't back down: "We all became very aware, as a crew, as a team, that we were fighting for all women, and actually anyone who's been told they can't do anything," she says.
Edwards and her 12-woman crew restored an old racing yacht, which they christened Maiden, and finished the nine-month race second in their class. Now, a new documentary, Maiden, retraces their voyage.
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callmehawkeye · 5 years
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53. Grace and Frankie (Season 5) :This is always a good time for me. I love watching this show when I want to take a break from more dedicated watches. I love these actresses with all my heart. June Diane Raphael is goals. 54. Midsommar (2019): This was such a fun aesthetic to watch. I was so uncomfortable throughout. 55. Toni Morrison: The Pieces I Am (2019): Ugh, my hearrrrrtt. 56. Maiden (2019): Documentary about the first all-female crew who competed in the 1985-86 Whitbread Round the World Race. The woman next to me in the theater was the same age as the women featured in old footage and modern day talking head interviews – and she was just sobbing by the end. Solidarity. 57. Frankenstein’s Monster’s Monster, Frankenstein (2019): 30 minutes well spent. Fucking hilarious. 58. Stranger Things (Season 3): God, what a fun season. I am still Steve. 59. Queer Eye (Season 4): I need 54 more seasons, kthx. 60. Spider-Man: Far From Home (2019): My absolute favorite battle sequence in a Marvel movie. Such a good time. 61. Hobbs & Shaw (2019): My first and last Fast movie. Goddamn I was so bored. 62. Bring the Soul: The Movie (2019): Wow, this was brutal. I get it wasn’t all of the footage, but they seemed to mostly focus on members being sick and injured and miserable. I didn’t understand the love for this movie when all it did was highlight how exhausted the boys are. I suppose it was meant to be inspiring, but I only felt bad for them. I just ranted about them needing a break and thank god they finally have one – apt timing! 63. Burn the Stage: The Movie (2018): I went back to the earlier film with the hopes of… Higher hopes. And they were fulfilled. Such cute and uplifting footage.
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danaaltaffer · 3 years
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Roald Dahl’s Awards & Achievements:
Roald Dahl's books have won numerous awards over the years, these include:
1954 - Edgar Allen Poe award and Mystery Writers of America award
1959 - Second Edgar Allen Poe award and Mystery Writers of America award
1972 - New England Round Table of Children's Librarians award for CHARLIE AND THE CHOCOLATE FACTORY
1973 - Surrey School award for CHARLIE AND THE CHOCOLATE FACTORY
1975 - Surrey School award for CHARLIE AND THE GREAT GLASS ELEVATOR
1978 - The Nene award for CHARLIE AND THE GREAT GLASS ELEVATOR
1978 - Surrey School award for DANNY THE CHAMPION OF THE WORLD
1979 - California Young Reader Medal for DANNY THE CHAMPION OF THE WORLD
1980 - Third Mystery Writers of America award
1982 - The Federation of Children's Book Groups award  for THE BFG
1982 - Massachusetts Children's award for JAMES AND THE GIANT PEACH
1983 - New York Times Outstanding Book award for THE WITCHES
1983 - The Federation of Children's Book Groups award for THE WITCHES
1983 - The Whitbread award for THE WITCHES
1983 - World Fantasy Convention Lifetime Achievement Award for his work as a children's author
1984 - Deutsche Jugendliteraturpreis for THE BFG
1985 - Kurt Maschler award runner-up for THE GIRAFFE AND THE PELLY AND ME
1985 - Boston Globe nonfiction honour citation for BOY: TALES OF CHILDHOOD
1986 - West Australian award for THE WITCHES
1986 - International Board of Books for Young People awards for Norwegian and German translations for THE BFG
1988 - The Federation of Children's Book Groups award for MATILDA
1990 - Smarties award for ESIO TROT
1997 - Good Book Guide "Best Books of the Past 20 Years" for THE BFG
1998 - BBC Bookworm Poll, MATILDA voted for Nation's Favourite Children's Book
2000 - Millennium Children's Book award for CHARLIE AND THE CHOCOLATE FACTORY
2000 - Blue Peter Book award for CHARLIE AND THE CHOCOLATE FACTORY
https://roalddahlpresentation.weebly.com/awards--achievements.html
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Drum: An Extraordinary Adventure
(Simon Le Bon and Drum in the 1985-86 Whitbread Race. Much more polished than the gritty, swear-y account Skip Novak gives in his book One Watch at a Time.)
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brookstonalmanac · 7 months
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Beer Events 11.26
Events
Emperor Franz Joseph I awarded Austrian brewer Anton Dreher the Knight's Cross of the Franz Joseph Order (1861) 
Otto Schinkel Jr. married Ida Baruth, both of their parents were Anchor brewers (1890)
Harry’s New York Bar opened (Paris, France; 1911)
Berghoff Brewing 1st released their beer in cans (1935)
Guinness patented a Hop Picking Machine (1940)
Frank Konwonski and Stephen Wanderski patented a Beer Drawing Device (1940)
Ballantine & Sons patented a Beer Keg Fitting with Annular Check Valve for Air (1968)
Ludwig Gerhards patented a Beer Mug (1985)
Bad Santa premiered (2003)
BrewDog released Tactical Nuclear Penguin (Scotland; 2009)
Breweries Opened
Whitbread Beer Co. (England; 1742)
Gorsuch's Brewery (Baltimore, Maryland; 1792)
Warsteiner Brauerei (Germany; 1753)
Granite City Brewery (North Dakota; 2001)
El Toro Brewpub (California; 2006)
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lewisjblake · 3 years
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Complete 4 page APA formatted essay: Whitbread Analysis.company has utilized co
Complete 4 page APA formatted essay: Whitbread Analysis.company has utilized co
Complete 4 page APA formatted essay: Whitbread Analysis.company has utilized cost leadership is in the use of the technology, particularly iPhone Apps, and Mobile websites to ensure that it cuts prices (Porter, 1985). In the same context, the company has managed to realize success in the cost leadership strategy through innovation. As such, the company has focused on a unique Christmas campaign,…
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serenexanon · 3 years
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Complete 4 page APA formatted essay: Whitbread Analysis.company has utilized co
Complete 4 page APA formatted essay: Whitbread Analysis.company has utilized co
Complete 4 page APA formatted essay: Whitbread Analysis.company has utilized cost leadership is in the use of the technology, particularly iPhone Apps, and Mobile websites to ensure that it cuts prices (Porter, 1985). In the same context, the company has managed to realize success in the cost leadership strategy through innovation. As such, the company has focused on a unique Christmas campaign,…
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Honestly, One Watch at a Time just made me think of how scary Whitbread 1985 blogging would be because you would go to the #Whitbread-Race tag and scroll past 5 discourse posts about whether Duran Duran fans who had never been into sailing before were bandwagoners and whether calling them bandwagoners meant you hated teenage girls, interspersed with 5 other posts arguing about who on the Drum crew to slash Simon le Bon with, and two other posts ranting that there was nothing on Tumblr about any other teams besides Drum before you actually saw any real news or photos.
And I’m just not brave enough for that. I’m not. Thank Neptune no One Direction guy ever did the VOR in like 2014.
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brookstonalmanac · 2 years
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Beer Events 11.26
Events
Emperor Franz Joseph I awarded Austrian brewer Anton Dreher the Knight's Cross of the Franz Joseph Order (1861) 
Otto Schinkel Jr. married Ida Baruth, both of their parents were Anchor brewers (1890)
Harry’s New York Bar opened (Paris, France; 1911)
Berghoff Brewing 1st released their beer in cans (1935)
Guinness patented a Hop Picking Machine (1940)
Frank Konwonski and Stephen Wanderski patented a Beer Drawing Device (1940)
Ballantine & Sons patented a Beer Keg Fitting with Annular Check Valve for Air (1968)
Ludwig Gerhards patented a Beer Mug (1985)
Bad Santa premiered (2003)
BrewDog released Tactical Nuclear Penguin (Scotland; 2009)
Breweries Opened
Whitbread Beer Co. (England; 1742)
Gorsuch's Brewery (Baltimore, Maryland; 1792)
Warsteiner Brauerei (Germany; 1753)
Granite City Brewery (North Dakota; 2001)
El Toro Brewpub (California; 2006)
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scotianostra · 7 years
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Novelist William McIlvanney was born on November 25th 1936 in Kilmarnock.
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He graduated from Glasgow University and worked as an English teacher between 1960 and 1975. His first book, Remedy is None, was published in 1966 and won the Geoffrey Faber Memorial Prize. Docherty, a moving portrait of a miner whose courage and endurance is tested during the depression, won the Whitbread Novel Award. The Big Man (1985), is the story of Dan Scoular, an unemployed man who turns to bare-knuckle fights to make a living. Both novels feature typical McIlvanney characters - tough, often violent, men locked in a struggle with their own nature and background. The Kiln, is the story of Tam Docherty, the grandson of the hero of Docherty. It won the Saltire Society Scottish Book of the Year Award. The Big Man was made into a film starring Liam Neeson. Laidlaw and The Papers of Tony Veitch my favourite, are both crime novels.
William McIlvanney was also an acclaimed poet, and was the author of The Longships in Harbour: Poems and Surviving the Shipwreck , which also contains pieces of journalism, including an essay about T. S. Eliot. His short story 'Dreaming' was filmed by BBC Scotland in 1990 and won a BAFTA. His brother is the sports journalist Hugh McIlvanney.
William McIlvanney died on 5 December 2015 at the age of 79, after a short illness. n hearing of his death, a number of public figures, including Nicola Sturgeon, Ian Rankin and Irvine Welsh, paid tribute noting both his inspirational writing and his likeable and gentlemanly personality. The Telegraph obituary noted: "Many authors are admired. Many are respected. Few are loved as he was, for what they are as well as for what they have written."
The video clip of McIlvanney talking about his character Laidlaw, I think he had a wonderful rich Scottish accent. 
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whiteladysmuses · 4 years
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Watch the official film of Whitbread round the world race in 1985 FOR FREE!⠀ The Whitbread Round the World Race 1985-86 Official Film https://buff.ly/3efuQQI⠀ #untoldnewsuk https://www.instagram.com/p/B-454pgAPI_/?igshid=uv0k7i4fa0d1
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callmehawkeye · 5 years
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Watched in 2019
Big Little Lies (Season 1): This is such a solid cast and story, albeit predictable. I loved it as a mini-series and do not understand why it needs a second season; but I’ll be watching regardless. 
Taylor Swift Reputation Stadium Tour (2018): IIIIIIIIIII don’t think this setting is the best for Taylor. I go back and forth on her as a person often, but dig over half her catalog. The big theatrical show doesn’t quite suit her particular stage presence. She is great when just talking to the crowd with her guitar or piano. Regardless, she was definitely having fun, it was entertaining enough, and it’s cool she put this up on Netflix so I don’t have to amputate a body part to afford a ticket.
If Beale Street Could Talk (2018): Without a doubt, this is perhaps the most genuine and fulfilling depiction of a (hetero) romantic love story put to film I’ve witnessed in recent memory. The actors and their chemistry were breathtaking. 
Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse (2018): Hands down the best Spider-Man movie to date. Soundtrack was perfection. Story was great. Characters were amazing. I want to protect Miles with my dying breath. Unique animation. Deservedly kicked Disney’s ass this award season.
Bumblebee (2018): Oddly endearing? Easily the best Transformers movie, and the only one I’ll recognize.
A Star is Born (2018): I’m sure I’d like this more if I weren’t a fan of the other 3. Lacked subtlety. Overhyped. It’s fine. The only best part was the rehab scene.
Fyre Fraud (2019): The Hulu documentary about the disastrous Fyre Festival. Superior of the two, in production and scope.
Abducted in Plain Sight (2017): WHAT. THE. FUCK. A must-see for true crime enthusiasts. 
Conversations with a Killer: The Ted Bundy Tapes (2019): This is more or less the same thing if you have already spent a little more time on this case than the average person. Good content for first-timers.
Girlfriends Day (2017): A nice, fast watch to pass the time.
Fyre Festival (2019): The other Fyre Festival documentary. To me, the lesser because it is produced from people who were on the inside. Which you’d think, “Oh so then they’d know.” But their bias and attempts to scrub themselves from the narrative are obvious.
The Favourite (2018): This made my little queer heart so happy. Great characters. 
Everybody Knows (2019): A little on the nose in the mystery itself (just watch the actors in the background). But the performances were great. Loved the setting. Appropriate ending. Good job.
Isn’t It Romantic (2019): I loved this. I feel like I’ve written something exactly like this before. Very endearing and satisfying to watch.
How to Train Your Dragon: The Hidden World (2019): It felt a little long, unsatisfying at some parts and rushed. But it’s a great bookend to a great series.
They Shall Not Grow Old (2019): Very impressive filmmaking and editing. I loved learning how they accomplished it in the featurette at the end of the screening.
Arctic (2019): Now THIS is how you make a survival movie. 90 minutes. No romance. Brutal reality without becoming melodramatic. Mads Mikkelsen cast in the lead...
Don’t Knock Twice (2016): Pleh. I hated the pacing and editing. Called out the “twist” immediately as a joke because I didn’t expect this movie to be that nuanced (magic done without permission, even with the intent to be good, is bad magic).
Captain Marvel (2019): My god this was so much fun and rejuvenated my interest in the MCU. I’m absolutely dreading Endgame and not for the reasons you think.
Greta (2019): Great performances, absolutely tense, very creepy and fun.
1922 (2017): What a great fucking motif.
Climax (2019): This was quite the sit. A literal 90 minute bad LSD trip from an up-close perspective. God I hated it.
Michael Che Matters (2016): I’ve never seen a standup special start so strong and progressively get weaker like this before...
Us (2019): As I said on Twitter --  it seems to me primarily casual or non-horror fans think Us is the greatest horror film of all time and is going to rejuvenate or “save” the genre. Then primarily veteran fans think it’s weak and vague. I think both viewpoints are shortsighted and formed from either category being stuck in their perspectives. For me, the movie was neither. (I loved it).
The Beach Bum (2019): Another movie I can’t believe I sat all the way through.
Leaving Neverland (2019): I stand with Wade and James.
Queer Eye (Season 3): Who needs antidepressants? Not me!
Homecoming: A Film By Beyoncé (2019): Beychella reigns once again!!
Dancing Queen (Season 1): This was very sweet. I never thought I could sit through anything with insufferable dance moms, but Justin/Alyssa makes it so engaging and watchable. Stupid to end on a cliffhanger, however.
Avengers: Endgame (2019): ..............B+ At least it was a million times better than Infinity War. And I had fun.
Booksmart (2019): This hit so close to home. Sure, the coming of age movie is nothing new. But there was something liberating about the characters in this one that were terribly stereotypical and much more relatable. To me, anyway.
Long Shot (2019): Great music, great relationship, great laughs. This was a fun, solid watch of a romcom.
Hail Satan? (2019): I want to inject this documentary directly into my veins.
Amazing Grace (2019): The live footage of Aretha Franklin recording her Amazing Grace album at the church in Watts.
Meeting Gorbachev (2019): I got to see this documentary at a theater where Wener Herzog himself was hosting a Q&A and introduced this film. Maybe it made me more biased to liking it. But I honestly felt like I learned a lot.
Missing Link (2019): First movie of the year I didn’t complete/walked out of. I let it have an hour. First time I’ve ever been disappointed in Laika. I can’t believe it. It was so dull and I kept waiting for something to happen.
Little (2019): This was sweet. Issa Rae is dipped in gold. BUT it felt like there was an outline, not a script. Lots of dropped threads. And a weirdly out of place, glaring, punching-down trans joke??!
Tolkien (2019): Wow. I really liked this. Great pacing, shifting between time frames. Even better performances and relationships. Made me think of my own fellowship a lot. This is how biopics should be done.
The Biggest Little Farm (2019): WONDERFUL documentary covering the years of building up a sustainable farm from less than scratch.
The Hustle (2019): God, this was a long, humorless sit. At least Anne looked stunning.
The Sun is Also a Star (2019): This isn’t more realistic than romantic comedies, or teen love films. But it’s more enjoyable than most. The leads are great and have electric chemistry. New York is framed beautifully.
John Wick: Chapter 3 – Parabellum (2019): I am blessed by this Keanu Reevessance.
Fleabag (Season 1): This is probably going to be the best thing I watch this year.
Fleabag (Season 2): Yup. Confirmed. Something very special would need to come along from June to December to change this mindset. I highly recommend this. Watch it. Go in blind. Watch it!!
Pavarotti (2019): I enjoy documentaries where I feel I really learn about the subject. Beautiful music, beautiful memories, beautiful life.
Rocketman (2019): I wish more biopics were like this. It was wonderful and such a grand time.
Lorena (2019): A deep dive into the Bobbitt case, including the woman herself. I have such empathy and love for Lorena. You should watch it and learn about the incident yourself.
The Last Man in San Francisco (2019): Go in blind. Don’t look it up. Just go. it’s the most beautiful film I’ve seen so far this year. I wish there were more male protagonists like this.
Toy Story 4 (2019): I was so skeptical. It more than exceeded my expectations. Just go in prepared to have your heart ripped in two.
Godzilla: King of the Monsters (2019): They’re learning. Out of the newer films, this one has the less amount of people. Now make another film like this, only extend the monster fight scenes. Less. People.
Child’s Play (2019): This was fun. Not much more to say. More Aubrey in things!
Men in Black International (2019): Honestly, this was better than the second or third ones. I legitimately enjoyed myself. It was funny. The cast was charming. The otherworldly aliens were interesting. And I’m so proud of Les Twins.
Grace and Frankie (Season 5) :This is always a good time for me. I love watching this show when I want to take a break from more dedicated watches. I love these actresses with all my heart. June Diane Raphael is goals.
Midsommar (2019): This was such a fun aesthetic to watch. I was so uncomfortable throughout.
Toni Morrison: The Pieces I Am (2019): Ugh, my hearrrrrtt.
Maiden (2019): Documentary about the first all-female crew who competed in the 1985-86 Whitbread Round the World Race. The woman next to me in the theater was the same age as the women featured in old footage and modern day talking head interviews -- and she was just sobbing by the end. Solidarity.
Frankenstein’s Monster’s Monster, Frankenstein (2019): 30 minutes well spent. Fucking hilarious.
Stranger Things (Season 3): God, what a fun season. I am still Steve.
Queer Eye (Season 4): I need 54 more seasons, kthx.
Spider-Man: Far From Home (2019): My absolute favorite battle sequence in a Marvel movie. Such a good time.
Hobbs & Shaw (2019): My first and last Fast movie. Goddamn I was so bored.
Bring the Soul: The Movie (2019): Wow, this was brutal. I get it wasn’t all of the footage, but they seemed to mostly focus on members being sick and injured and miserable. I didn’t understand the love for this movie when all it did was highlight how exhausted the boys are. I suppose it was meant to be inspiring, but I only felt bad for them. I just ranted about them needing a break and thank god they finally have one -- apt timing!
Burn the Stage: The Movie (2018): I went back to the earlier film with the hopes of... Higher hopes. And they were fulfilled. Such cute and uplifting footage.
Blinded by the Light (2019): God I love Springsteen. This movie is a great homage to his music. It’s not a straight-up musical, and that’s lovingly the point. Some things never change.
It: Chapter Two (2019): This was a slog compared to the first part. Much like the miniseries. Much like the book.
Parasite (2019): I, a college student with very little free time -- let alone free time to go to the movies -- saw this in theaters twice. I tried to go a third time but then finals happened. Go see it. Go see it blind. I'm not really doing end-year lists anymore but this is without a doubt my favorite film from 2019.
BTS World Tour: Love Yourself (2019): Most fun I've had in a theater in some time. I feel like I curled up into the tiniest ball at some point out of pure joy that couldn't be contained.
Frozen II (2019): This was quite plot-heavy for a sequel. I loved how many songs they were. It's an acceptable sequel. A lot of weak themes and choices, however, if you think about it for more than a few minutes. Overall delightful. 
Jojo Rabbit (2019): Speaking of delightful. Taika Waititi continues to be my favorite living writer-director. This is such a solid portrayal of Nazism without glorifying it. Always go the Mel Brooks route and make it a comedy; they can't turn it around and make the imagery propaganda. I have high hopes for Roman Griffin Davis and his future career.
Knives Out (2019): This was quite fun. I love a good mystery with a large ensemble cast like this. It didn't blow my mind of anything -- I saw every turn coming -- but that's just because I credit it to being such a lonely kid who read so many mystery novels.
2018 | 2017 | 2016 | 2015 | 2014
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