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missfilmnoir · 6 months
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Blast of Silence (1961) - dir. Allen Baron
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eemcintyre · 9 months
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The definitive autumn playlist 🍁🍂
From the jazzy and nostalgic to the hardcore Halloween and horror vibes- these are the best of the best
🧸🍄☕️🫖👡🥐🐈🪵🥞👜🎃🕯️🌻🧺🧋🎞️
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"'Tis Autumn," The Nat King Cole Trio
"The a Team," Ed Sheeran
"willow," Taylor Swift
"I've Never Been There," Yann Tiersen
"Time of the Season," The Zombies
"You Sent Me Flying," Amy Winehouse
"Axman Jazz (Don't Scare Me Papa)," Squirrel Nut Zippers
"Hello My Baby," Don Meehan and the Dave Carey Orchestra
"Season of the Witch," Donovan
"Tonight You Belong to Me," Patience & Prudence
"I Put a Spell on You," She & Him
"From the Start," Laufey
"Cinnamon Girl," Lana Del Rey
"cardigan," Taylor Swift
"Orchid," Vasily Andreyev, Nikolai Nazarov
"Sweet Pumpkin," Samara Joy and Pasquale Grosso
"Jitterbug Waltz," Vince Guaraldi
"Portable Television," Death Cab for Cutie
"Little Bird," Ed Sheeran
"Baby, You're a Haunted House," Gerard Way
"Ghostbusters," Ray Parker, Jr.
"Howlin' For You," The Black Keys
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"Kill of the Night," Gin Wigmore
"Absinthe," I DON'T KNOW HOW BUT THEY FOUND ME
"Hungry Like the Wolf," Duran Duran
"Bloodletting (The Vampire Song)," Concrete Blonde
"T'aint No Sin (To Take Off Your Skin and Dance Around in Your Bones)," Lee Morse and Her Bluegrass Boys
"The Man Comes Around," Johnny Cash
"Ophelia," The Lumineers
"Jack's Lament," Danny Elfman
"Autumn Leaves," Doris Day
"Sleep Walk," Betsy Brye
"In the Room Where You Sleep," Dead Man's Bones
"Spellbound," Siouxsie and the Banshees
"Afire Love," Ed Sheeran
"My Man's an Undertaker," Dinah Washington
"Dancing in the Moonlight," King Harvest
"Autumn Dream," Archibald Joyce, Victor Makarov
"September in the Rain," Sarah Vaughan
"October Song," Amy Winehouse
"Begin Again," Taylor Swift
"Something's Haunting You," She & Him
"Dead Man's Party," Oingo Boingo
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*I do not own any of these photos/gifs*
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byneddiedingo · 5 months
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Allen Baron in Blast of Silence (Allen Baron, 1961)
Cast: Allen Baron, Mollie McCarthy, Larry Tucker, Peter Clune, Danny Meehan, Howard Mann, Lionel Stander (voice). Screenplay: Allen Baron, Waldo Salt (voiceover narration). Cinematography: Merrill S. Brody. Art direction: Charles Rosen. Film editing: Merrill S. Brody, Peggy Lawson. Music: Meyer Kupferman. 
A very late film noir, Blast of Silence strips the genre to its bleak essence. A hitman (Allen Baron) comes to New York at Christmastime to whack a guy, falls in love, carries out his job, and pays the consequences for his decision that this would be his last hit. Made on a shoestring with equipment that had been smuggled out of Cuba after Baron appeared in Errol Flynn's last movie, Cuban Rebel Girls (Barry Mahon, 1959), it's a tightly assembled sleeper of a movie that wonderfully milks its New York location and ends with a memorable scene shot on Long Island during Hurricane Donna. Baron had wanted his friend Peter Falk to play the melancholy gunman, but took over the role himself when Falk was unavailable. It's a great one-off of a performance: Baron has no other acting credits besides this one and the Flynn movie, and his directing credits were mostly in TV on shows ranging from Surfside 6 to The Love Boat. The atmosphere of New York in the late 1950s and early '60s is wonderfully captured: That beatnik-era accoutrement the bongo drum makes its appearance at a party and again as the accompaniment to some mopey ballads with titles like "Dressed in Black" and "Torrid Town," sung by Dean Sheldon at the Village Gate nightclub. A voiceover narrative, written by Waldo Salt under his nom de blacklist "Mel Davenport" and read by uncredited fellow blacklistee Lionel Stander, was added after the film was assembled to cover some expository gaps. It's more effective than most voiceovers are at setting the mood and tone of the film, although I find it occasionally too portentous.  
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47-motorsports · 9 months
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We DID IT!! Finally Parked it in Victory LaneAlbany-Saratoga Speedway This one goes out Danny Ody I know you have been watching from upstairs and looking down so wish you could of been here for this! Thank you to everyone who has made this possible! Ben Balzer thank you brother for everything keeping us on Track! Jarron youve been by my side all summer putting in a lot of learning and work Glad we get to share this together Dan Humes Matt Humes Clayton Racing The Crew: Kaelyn Cameron Ben Kaylee Rae and Mike. Ghetto Child Motorsports Dave Critter Chelsea and Char Tommy DAngelo Racing Tommy Jason Jeremy James Meehan Racing Patrick James Tim Peckham Motorsports HICO Fabrication Dick Hicks All our Great Marketing Partners: Lia Nissan of Saratoga JGS Recycling and Hauling Primeau's Autobody DAB Towing & Recovery C EZ Keys T.C.E Inc. DH Graphx Scrubs. Partners in Grime Empire Automotive Solutions LLC. Ideal Nutrition The Nutrition Hive Stinger Autosport Teo Pro Car To anyone I may have missed Thank you!! Thank you Charlene for the Clip!
We DID IT!! Finally Parked it in Victory Lane🏁Albany-Saratoga Speedway This one goes out Danny Ody I know you have been watching from upstairs and looking down so wish you could of been here for this! Thank you to everyone who has made this possible! Ben Balzer thank you brother for everything keeping us on Track! Jarron you’ve been by my side all summer putting in a lot of learning and work, Glad we get to share this together Dan Humes Matt Humes Clayton Racing The Crew: Kaelyn, Cameron, Ben, Kaylee, Rae and Mike. Ghetto Child Motorsports Dave, Critter, Chelsea and Char Tommy D’Angelo Racing Tommy, Jason, Jeremy James Meehan Racing Patrick, James Tim Peckham Motorsports HICO Fabrication Dick Hicks All our Great Marketing Partners: Lia Nissan of Saratoga JGS Recycling and Hauling Primeau's Autobody DAB Towing & Recovery C EZ Keys T.C.E Inc. DH Graphx Scrubs. Partners in Grime Empire Automotive Solutions, LLC. Ideal Nutrition The Nutrition Hive Stinger Autosport Teo Pro Car 🏁To anyone I may have missed Thank you!!🏁 Thank you Charlene for the Clip! August 26, 2023 at 05:39PM
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filmes-online-facil · 2 years
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Assistir Filme Penalidade Máxima Online fácil
Assistir Filme Penalidade Máxima Online Fácil é só aqui: https://filmesonlinefacil.com/filme/penalidade-maxima/
Penalidade Máxima - Filmes Online Fácil
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Danny Meehan (Vinnie Jones) é um verdadeiro ídolo do futebol inglês. Capitão do seu time e dono de carros possantes, ele aproveita ao máximo seu dinheiro e sua fama. Entretanto, Danny perde tudo o que conquistou em sua carreira após ter sido acusado de manipular o resultado de um jogo, tendo sido expulso do time por tal atitude. Para piorar ainda mais a situação, ele é condenado a 3 anos de prisão por ter agredido um policial quando estava bêbado. Sensibilizado com a situação, o Governador (David Hemmings) consegue fazer com que Danny fique em uma penitenciária que esteja sob sua administração, onde propõe que Danny treine o time de guardas local para que ele seja o campeão da liga nacional.
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letterboxd-loggd · 4 years
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Blast of Silence (1961) Allen Baron
November 18th 2020
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thingsmk1120sayz · 3 years
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fel-i-fod · 4 years
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Welsh, Scottish, and Irish Writers
This isn’t a definitive list by the way, so please add names if you think I missed someone important (which I probably have).
WELSH WRITERS
Dannie Abse: poet, playwright and physician. A Doctor’s Register; Ghosts; Funland; Song For Pythagoras.
Gillian Clarke: poet, playwright and lecturer.  A Difficult Birth; The Sundial; Catrin.
Roald Dahl: author. Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, 1964; The Twits, 1980; Fantastic Mr Fox, 1970; Danny, Champion of the World, 1975; The Witches, 1983. (I’m not going to list every book he’s ever written so these are just my childhood favourites.)
Ken Follett: author - thriller and historical fiction. The Century Trilogy, 2010-14; Kingsbridge Series, 1989-2020.
George Herbert: poet and priest. The Altar; Easter Wings.
Cynan Jones: author. The Dig, 2014.
Diana Wynne Jones: Welsh-English author. Howl’s Moving Castle, 1986-2008; Dalemark, 1979-93; Chrestomanci novels and short stories, 1977-2006; Derkholm, 1998-2000.
Philip Pullman: Welsh-English author. His Dark Materials, 1995-2000; The Book of Dust, 2017-; Sally Lockhart, 1985-94.
Kate Roberts: author. Traed mewn Cyffion (Feet in Chains/Feet in Stocks), 1936; Te yn y Grug (Tea in the Heather), 1959.
Bernice Rubens: author. The Elected Member, 1969; Madame Sousatzka, 1962; A Solitary Grief, 1991.
Owen Sheers: poet, author, playwright and presenter. Farther; Y Gaer/The Hill Fort; The Dust Diaries, 2004; Resistance, 2007; The Green Hollow (”film-poem”), 2016.
Dylan Thomas: poet, author and scriptwriter. Do not go gentle into that good night; And death shall have no dominion; Portrait of the Artist as a Young Dog, 1940; A Child’s Christmas In Wales, 1955; Under Milk Wood, 1954.
Gwyn Thomas: author, playwright, columnist, and broadcaster. All Things Betray Thee, 1949.
Sarah Waters: Welsh-English author. Tipping the Velvet, 1998. Fingersmith, 2002.
Hedd Wyn: poet. Yr Arwr; Rhyfel; Plant Trawsfynydd.
SCOTTISH WRITERS
Iain Banks (sometimes Iain M. Banks): author - mainstream and sci-fi. The Wasp Factory, 1984; Walking On Glass, 1985; Culture novels, 1985-2012 (can be read as standalones - I recommend Excession).
Robert Burns: poet. Auld Land Syne; To a Mouse; Scots Wha Hae; Tom o’ Shanter; O, Wert Thou in the Cauld Blast.
Arthur Conan Doyle: author, poet, playwright and physician. Sherlock Holmes stories.
Jenni Fagan: author and poet. The Panopticon, 2012; The Sunlight Pilgrims, 2016.
Janice Galloway: author and poet. The Trick is to Keep Breathing, 1989.
Alasdair Gray: author, artist, poet and playwright. Lanark, 1981; Poor Things, 1992.
James Kelman: author and playwright. How Late It Was, How Late, 1994; Greyhound For Breakfast, 1987.
Val McDermid: author - crime and thriller. Tony Hill and Carol Jordan, 1995-2019; A Place of Execution, 1999.
Denise Mina: crime and comic author and playwright. Conviction, 2019; Garnethill, 1998-2001; Paddy Meehan, 2005-07; John Constantine, Hellblazer, #216-228
Maggie O’Farrell: Irish-Scottish author. The Vanishing Act of Esme Lennox, 2007; After You’d Gone, 2000; I Am, I Am, I Am: Seventeen Brushes With Death, 2017.
James Robertson: author and poet. The Testament of Gideon Mack, 2006; And the Land Lay Still, 2010.
Walter Scott: author, poet and playwright. The Lady of the Lake, 1810; Ivanhoe, 1820; The Bride of Lammermoor, 1819.
Ali Smith: author. How to Be Both, 2014; Seasonal 2017-20; There but for the, 2011.
Muriel Spark: author, poet and essayist. The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie, 1961; The Ballad of Peckham Rye, 1960; A Far Cry from Kensington, 1988.
Robert Louis Stevenson: author. Treasure Island, 1883; Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde, 1886; Kidnapped, 1886.
Alan Warner: author. Morvern Callar, 1995.
Irvine Welsh: author and screenwriter. Trainspotting, 1993; Skagboys, 2012.
Louise Welsh: author - psychological thriller. The Cutting Room, 2002.
IRISH WRITERS
John Banville: author, critic and scriptwriter. The Sea, 2005; The Frames Trilogy, 1989-95.
Samuel Beckett: author, director, playwright, poet and translator. Waiting For Godot, 1954; Molloy, 1951; Malone Meurt, 1951;  L’innommable, 1953.
Maeve Binchy: author, playwright and columnist. Tara Road, 1998; Circle of Friends, 1990; A Week in Winter, 2012.
Elizabeth Bowen: author. The Last September, 1929; Eva Trout, 1968; The Death of the Heart, 1938.
John Boyne: author. The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas, 2006; The Heart’s Invisible Furies, 2017.
Emma Donoghue: Irish-Canadian author, playwright, screenwriter and literary historian. Room, 2010; Slammerkin, 2000.
Anne Enright: author. The Gathering, 2007; The Green Road, 2015.
Josephine Hart: author, producer and presenter. Damage, 1991.
Seamus Heaney: poet, playwright and translator. Digging; Strange Fruit; In Memoriam Francis Ledwidge; Beowulf: A New Verse Translation, 1999.
James Joyce: author, critic, poet and teacher. Ulysses, 1922; A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man, 1916.
Molly Keane: author and playwright. Good Behaviour, 1981; Devoted Ladies, 1934; Time After Time, 1983.
C. S. Lewis: author. The Chronicles of Narnia, 1950-56.
Iris Murdoch: author and philosopher. Under the Net, 1954; The Sea, the Sea, 1978.
Edna O’Brien: author, poet and playwright. The Country Girls Trilogy, 1960-64; August is a Wicked Month, 1965; A Pagan Place, 1970.
Frank O’Connor: author. Guests of the Nation, 1931; My Oedipus Complex, 1952; The Majesty of Law, 1936.
Nuala O’Faolain: author, journalist, producer, critic and teacher. Almost There: The Onward Journey of a Dublin Woman, 2003; Are You Somebody? The Accidental Memoir of a Dublin Woman, 1996.
Bram Stoker: author. Dracula, 1897.
Jonathan Swift: author, satirist, essayist, poet and cleric. Gulliver’s Travels, 1726; A Modest Proposal, 1729.
Oscar Wilde: author, poet and playwright. The Picture of Dorian Gray, 1890; The Importance of Being Earnest, 1895.
W. B. Yeats: poet and playwright. The Lake Isle of Innisfree, 1890; Adam’s Curse, 1903; Easter 1916, 1916; The Second Coming, 1920; Cathleen Ní Houlihan, 1902.
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tvmoviechristmas · 4 years
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Deck the Halls (TNT, 2011)
All I want is to be prettier than my best friend Monica. She’s so full of herself.
Starring: Kathy Najimy, Scottie Thompson, Larry Miller, Eric Johnson
Plot Synopsis: Detective Regan Reilly and cleaning-woman-turned-private-eye Alvirah Meehan, investigate the kidnapping of Regan's father and a young female driver just before the holidays. The race is on to rescue the pair and get them home in time for Christmas. (x)
In My Humble Opinion: “For the most part, Deck the Halls is the kind of mystery movie that would seem to easily slot into Hallmark Movies and Mysteries’ line-up. With its quirky crime solving duo featuring a cleaning woman and a ballsy FBI agent and its lower stakes case, it’s actually amazing that this movie works as well as it does.
(Random Side Note: If you were wondering how TNT’s Deck the Halls compares to the other films with the same title, I would say that it is easily the best of the bunch. Sorry Danny DeVito & Matthew Broderick’s decorating movie! Sorry Gabrielle Carteris’s 2006 Lifetime romcom! You lose in this incredibly important battle!)”
That’s all I had drafted in this section of the review when I started writing it in August 2016. Yes, August 2016. That’s two American elections ago. That was before Lifetime decided to get into the 30-films-a-year arms race with Hallmark. That was before diversity was a thought in any executive’s minds. We were different people when I started this review. As a society.
It is an absurdly long time to come back to a draft of something, especially a review. I think a part of me thought that I never would have to come back to these drafts to clear them out. That they would languish there forever, even after the blog closed its doors. That the new content would just kept getting more and more overwhelming and as a result nobody would ever find out that I quite enjoyed TNT’s Deck the Halls.
Sure, I found the mystery’s conclusion to be rushed and the title nonsensical. Still the genre was different than the usual small town romantic comedy fare, the marriage of the cleaning woman “sidekick” and her husband was heartwarming and the soundtrack was so bizarre it was fascinating such as the opening credit sequence set to a song titled “Santa, You Suck”. 
Now I’m making a commitment to clear out the rest of my drafts once and for all because I don’t want to leave any of my very important films thoughts on the shelf. I made these extensive notes on Deck the Halls (2011) so that one day I could tell the people about it. And so I am telling you now. It’s a fun time! I seemed to have enjoyed myself when I watched this over four years ago! Hooray!
Anyway, it’s very important that you take extensive notes when you have a writing project, so that if you ever come back to a made-for-TV Christmas movies four years after you originally started it you are still able to remember what you wanted to say. That’s advice you can grow on.
Watch If: You think your birth experience was naturally one of the most exciting moments of your existence, if you are well known for recording every conversation you hear on a fancy broach or if you are over 30 and get into pillow fights with your parents all the time.
Skip If: You think Irish people can remember things besides grudges, if you are a parent who wouldn’t nag your daughter about her dating life if she was busy making national headlines as a serial killer catcher, or if you think going to the dentists is better than being kidnapped for a week.
Final Rating: ★ ★ ★ (★) ☆
If you like this blog, please consider donating to my Kofi page! You can also donate money to [email protected] through either Venmo or CashApp. Thank you!
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2019 Hugo Award finalists announced
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The 2019 Hugo Award nominees have been announced; the Hugos will be presented this summer at the 2019 World Science Fiction Convention in Dublin, Ireland.
Normally, I find that I've read and reviewed a huge slice of the year's finalists, but this year is different; I've done a lot less reading lately, partly because I wrote two books in 2018 and partly because the new EU Copyright Directive ate my life for about 10 months in the past year.
I was a little sad to be so far behind the curve when I saw the new list, but then I realized that this meant that I had a bunch of really exciting books to add to my to-be-read pile!
One notable inclusion: the Archive of Our Own fanfic archive -- a project of the Organization for Transformative Works (for whose advisory board I volunteer) -- is up for "Best Related Work."
Congrats to all the nominees!
Best Novel * The Calculating Stars, by Mary Robinette Kowal (Tor) * Record of a Spaceborn Few, by Becky Chambers (Hodder & Stoughton / Harper Voyager) * Revenant Gun, by Yoon Ha Lee (Solaris) * Space Opera, by Catherynne M. Valente (Saga) * Spinning Silver, by Naomi Novik (Del Rey / Macmillan) * Trail of Lightning, by Rebecca Roanhorse (Saga)
Best Novella * Artificial Condition, by Martha Wells (Tor.com Publishing) * Beneath the Sugar Sky, by Seanan McGuire (Tor.com Publishing) * Binti: The Night Masquerade, by Nnedi Okorafor (Tor.com Publishing) * The Black God’s Drums, by P. Djèlí Clark (Tor.com Publishing) * Gods, Monsters, and the Lucky Peach, by Kelly Robson (Tor.com Publishing) * The Tea Master and the Detective, by Aliette de Bodard (Subterranean Press / JABberwocky Literary Agency)
Best Novelette * “If at First You Don’t Succeed, Try, Try Again,” by Zen Cho (B&N Sci-Fi and Fantasy Blog, 29 November 2018) * “The Last Banquet of Temporal Confections,” by Tina Connolly (Tor.com, 11 July 2018) * “Nine Last Days on Planet Earth,” by Daryl Gregory (Tor.com, 19 September 2018) * The Only Harmless Great Thing, by Brooke Bolander (Tor.com Publishing) * “The Thing About Ghost Stories,” by Naomi Kritzer (Uncanny Magazine 25, November- December 2018) * “When We Were Starless,” by Simone Heller (Clarkesworld 145, October 2018)
Best Short Story * “The Court Magician,” by Sarah Pinsker (Lightspeed, January 2018) * “The Rose MacGregor Drinking and Admiration Society,” by T. Kingfisher (Uncanny Magazine 25, November-December 2018) * “The Secret Lives of the Nine Negro Teeth of George Washington,” by P. Djèlí Clark (Fireside Magazine, February 2018) * “STET,” by Sarah Gailey (Fireside Magazine, October 2018) * “The Tale of the Three Beautiful Raptor Sisters, and the Prince Who Was Made of Meat,” by Brooke Bolander (Uncanny Magazine 23, July-August 2018) * “A Witch’s Guide to Escape: A Practical Compendium of Portal Fantasies,” by Alix E. Harrow (Apex Magazine, February 2018)
Best Series * The Centenal Cycle, by Malka Older (Tor) * The Laundry Files, by Charles Stross (most recently Tor.com Publishing/Orbit) * Machineries of Empire, by Yoon Ha Lee (Solaris) * The October Daye Series, by Seanan McGuire (most recently DAW) * The Universe of Xuya, by Aliette de Bodard (most recently Subterranean Press) * Wayfarers, by Becky Chambers (Hodder & Stoughton / Harper Voyager)
Best Related Work * Archive of Our Own, a project of the Organization for Transformative Works * Astounding: John W. Campbell, Isaac Asimov, Robert A. Heinlein, L. Ron Hubbard, and the Golden Age of Science Fiction, by Alec Nevala-Lee (Dey Street Books) * The Hobbit Duology (documentary in three parts), written and edited by Lindsay Ellis and Angelina Meehan (YouTube) * An Informal History of the Hugos: A Personal Look Back at the Hugo Awards, 1953- 2000, by Jo Walton (Tor) * www.mexicanxinitiative.com: The Mexicanx Initiative Experience at Worldcon 76 (Julia Rios, Libia Brenda, Pablo Defendini, John Picacio) * Ursula K. Le Guin: Conversations on Writing, by Ursula K. Le Guin with David Naimon (Tin House Books)
Best Graphic Story * Abbott, written by Saladin Ahmed, art by Sami Kivelä, colours by Jason Wordie, letters by Jim Campbell (BOOM! Studios) * Black Panther: Long Live the King, written by Nnedi Okorafor and Aaron Covington, art by André Lima Araújo, Mario Del Pennino and Tana Ford (Marvel) * Monstress, Volume 3: Haven, written by Marjorie Liu, art by Sana Takeda (Image Comics) * On a Sunbeam, by Tillie Walden (First Second) * Paper Girls, Volume 4, written by Brian K. Vaughan, art by Cliff Chiang, colours by Matt Wilson, letters by Jared K. Fletcher (Image Comics) * Saga, Volume 9, written by Brian K. Vaughan, art by Fiona Staples (Image Comics)
Best Dramatic Presentation, Long Form * Annihilation, directed and written for the screen by Alex Garland, based on the novel by Jeff VanderMeer (Paramount Pictures / Skydance) * Avengers: Infinity War, screenplay by Christopher Markus and Stephen McFeely, directed by Anthony Russo and Joe Russo (Marvel Studios) * Black Panther, written by Ryan Coogler and Joe Robert Cole, directed by Ryan Coogler (Marvel Studios) * A Quiet Place, screenplay by Scott Beck, John Krasinski and Bryan Woods, directed by John Krasinski (Platinum Dunes / Sunday Night) * Sorry to Bother You, written and directed by Boots Riley (Annapurna Pictures) * Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse, screenplay by Phil Lord and Rodney Rothman, directed by Bob Persichetti, Peter Ramsey and Rodney Rothman (Sony)
Best Dramatic Presentation, Short Form * The Expanse: “Abaddon’s Gate,” written by Daniel Abraham, Ty Franck and Naren Shankar, directed by Simon Cellan Jones (Penguin in a Parka / Alcon Entertainment) * Doctor Who: “Demons of the Punjab,” written by Vinay Patel, directed by Jamie Childs (BBC) * Dirty Computer, written by Janelle Monáe, directed by Andrew Donoho and Chuck Lightning (Wondaland Arts Society / Bad Boy Records / Atlantic Records) * The Good Place: “Janet(s),” written by Josh Siegal & Dylan Morgan, directed by Morgan Sackett (NBC) * The Good Place: “Jeremy Bearimy,” written by Megan Amram, directed by Trent O’Donnell (NBC) * Doctor Who: “Rosa,” written by Malorie Blackman and Chris Chibnall, directed by Mark Tonderai (BBC)
Best Professional Editor, Short Form * Neil Clarke * Gardner Dozois * Lee Harris * Julia Rios * Lynne M. Thomas and Michael Damian Thomas * E. Catherine Tobler
Best Professional Editor, Long Form * Sheila E. Gilbert * Anne Lesley Groell * Beth Meacham * Diana Pho * Gillian Redfearn * Navah Wolfe
Best Professional Artist * Galen Dara * Jaime Jones * Victo Ngai * John Picacio * Yuko Shimizu * Charles Vess
Best Semiprozine * Beneath Ceaseless Skies, editor-in-chief and publisher Scott H. Andrews * Fireside Magazine, edited by Julia Rios, managing editor Elsa Sjunneson-Henry, social coordinator Meg Frank, special features editor Tanya DePass, founding editor Brian White, publisher and art director Pablo Defendini * FIYAH Magazine of Black Speculative Fiction, executive editors Troy L. Wiggins and DaVaun Sanders, editors L.D. Lewis, Brandon O’Brien, Kaleb Russell, Danny Lore, and Brent Lambert * Shimmer, publisher Beth Wodzinski, senior editor E. Catherine Tobler * Strange Horizons, edited by Jane Crowley, Kate Dollarhyde, Vanessa Rose Phin, Vajra Chandrasekera, Romie Stott, Maureen Kincaid Speller, and the Strange Horizons Staff * Uncanny Magazine, publishers/editors-in-chief Lynne M. Thomas and Michael Damian Thomas, managing editor Michi Trota, podcast producers Erika Ensign and Steven Schapansky, Disabled People Destroy Science Fiction Special Issue editors-in-chief Elsa Sjunneson-Henry and Dominik Parisien
Best Fanzine * Galactic Journey, founder Gideon Marcus, editor Janice Marcus * Journey Planet, edited by Team Journey Planet * Lady Business, editors Ira, Jodie, KJ, Renay & Susan * nerds of a feather, flock together, editors Joe Sherry, Vance Kotrla and The G * Quick Sip Reviews, editor Charles Payseur * Rocket Stack Rank, editors Greg Hullender and Eric Wong
Best Fancast * Be the Serpent, presented by Alexandra Rowland, Freya Marske and Jennifer Mace * The Coode Street Podcast, presented by Jonathan Strahan and Gary K. Wolfe * Fangirl Happy Hour, hosted by Ana Grilo and Renay Williams * Galactic Suburbia, hosted by Alisa Krasnostein, Alexandra Pierce, and Tansy Rayner Roberts, produced by Andrew Finch * Our Opinions Are Correct, hosted by Annalee Newitz and Charlie Jane Anders * The Skiffy and Fanty Show, produced by Jen Zink and Shaun Duke, hosted by the Skiffy and Fanty Crew
Best Fan Writer * Foz Meadows * James Davis Nicoll * Charles Payseur * Elsa Sjunneson-Henry * Alasdair Stuart * Bogi Takács
Best Fan Artist * Sara Felix * Grace P. Fong * Meg Frank * Ariela Housman * Likhain (Mia Sereno) * Spring Schoenhuth
Best Art Book * The Books of Earthsea: The Complete Illustrated Edition, illustrated by Charles Vess, written by Ursula K. Le Guin (Saga Press /Gollancz) * Daydreamer’s Journey: The Art of Julie Dillon, by Julie Dillon (self-published) * Dungeons & Dragons Art & Arcana: A Visual History, by Michael Witwer, Kyle Newman, Jon Peterson, Sam Witwer (Ten Speed Press) * Spectrum 25: The Best in Contemporary Fantastic Art, ed. John Fleskes (Flesk Publications) * Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse – The Art of the Movie, by Ramin Zahed (Titan Books) * Tolkien: Maker of Middle-earth, ed. Catherine McIlwaine (Bodleian Library)
John W. Campbell Award for Best New Writer * Katherine Arden (2nd year of eligibility) * S.A. Chakraborty (2nd year of eligibility) * R.F. Kuang (1st year of eligibility) * Jeannette Ng (2nd year of eligibility) * Vina Jie-Min Prasad (2nd year of eligibility) * Rivers Solomon (2nd year of eligibility)
Lodestar Award for Best Young Adult Book * The Belles, by Dhonielle Clayton (Freeform / Gollancz) * Children of Blood and Bone, by Tomi Adeyemi (Henry Holt / Macmillan Children’s Books) * The Cruel Prince, by Holly Black (Little, Brown / Hot Key Books) * Dread Nation, by Justina Ireland (Balzer + Bray) * The Invasion, by Peadar O’Guilin (David Fickling Books / Scholastic) * Tess of the Road, by Rachel Hartman (Random House / Penguin Teen)
https://boingboing.net/2019/04/02/dublin-worldcon.html
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kwebtv · 4 years
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Ghost Bomber The Laby Be Good -  CBS  -  February 3, 1960
Historical Drama
Running Time:  60 minutes
A presentation of The Armstrong Circle Theatre
Stars:
Conard Fowkes as 1st Lt. William J. Hatton
Donald Gantry as 2nd Lt. Robert E. Toner 
Danny Meehan as 2nd Lt. D. P. Hayes
Mark Lenard as Major Bennett
George Segal as 1st Lt. Paul Fallon
Richard Bright as Tech Sgt. Robert La Motte
Nicholas Pryor as a Lieutenant
Gene Rupert as a Lieutenant
Michael Kray as a Major
David Kitchen as an English Sergeant
Douglas Edwards as Host and Narrator
In February 1960, the United States Army conducted a formal search of the area for the remains of the crew. Five were found (Hatton, Toner, Hayes, LaMotte and Adams) on February 11. The team concluded that other bodies were likely buried beneath sand dunes after finding evidence that at least three of the surviving crew members had continued walking northward. With the news that five bodies had been recovered, the U.S. Air Force and U.S. Army started an expanded search called Operation Climax in May 1960. The joint operation used a USAF C-130 cargo plane and two Army Bell H-13 helicopters. The next body was found by a British Petroleum exploration crew. They found the remains of Staff Sergeant Shelley on May 12, 1960, 38 km (24 mi) northwest of the recovered five bodies. A U.S. helicopter found Technical Sergeant Ripslinger on May 17, 1960. His remains were located 42 km (26 mi) northwest of Shelley over 320 km (200 mi) from the crash site but still 160 km (99 mi) from Soluch airbase. These two bodies were the only ones found during Operation Climax. Another British Petroleum oil exploration crew discovered the remains of 2nd Lieutenant Woravka in August 1960. His body was then recovered by the U.S. Air Force. The only crewman not to be found was the last gunner, Staff Sergeant Moore.  (Wikipedia)
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filmnoirfoundation · 5 years
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Join FNF prez and Noir Alley host Eddie Muller at the Alamo Drafthouse Austin Ritz for the final screenings of #NoirCityAustin: THE CRIMSON KIMONO (4:45) and BLAST OF SILENCE (7:15). http://bit.ly/NCAustin2019
THE CRIMSON KIMONO(1959, Columbia [Sony Pictures]. 82 min.) Scr. & Dir. Samuel Fuller
As the classic noir era waned, director Sam Fuller came out blasting with the first of a series of wildly original crime thrillers. This one starts as a pulpy policier, with a pair of L.A. cops (Glenn Corbett, James Shigeta) hunting the killer of a stripper. It twists into a heated romantic triangle with both cops falling for a key witness (Victoria Shaw). The rare film to explore the nisei experience in America, featuring a compassionate take on the Japanese cop's torment at falling for a Caucasian. As usual, Fuller's kinetic inspirations sometimes collide with stilted exposition--watch out for flying shrapnel. 
Presented in 35mm courtesy of Sony Pictures Cast: James Shigeta (Joe Kojaku), Glenn Corbett (Charlie Bancroft), Victoria Shaw (Christine Downs), Anne Lee (Mac), Paul Dubov (Casale)
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BLAST OF SILENCE(1961, Universal. 77 min.)Scr. & Dir. Allen Baron
This maverick independent production from the end of the classic noir era, shot entirely on location in New York, tracks a stoic hit-man (played by director Baron himself) returning to his home turf for what's meant to be a quick, efficient assignment. Fate, guilt, and double-crosses intervene. One of the bleakest crime films ever, highlighted by a unique, omniscient "second person" voice-over narration. Like Kubrick's “The Killing” and Wendkos' “The Burglar”, this represented the transition from studio noir to independently produced "neo-noir." 
Presented in 35mm courtesy of Universal Pictures Cast: Allen Baron (Frankie Bono), Molly McCarthy (Lori), Larry Tucker (Big Ralph), Peter H. Clune (Troiano), Milda Memenas (Troiano's girl), Danny Meehan (Petey), Charles Creasap (contact man on ferry), Don Saroyan (Lori's boyfriend), Ruth Kaner (building superintendent), Lionel Stander (narrator) 
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fotballdraktbaby · 3 years
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messi drakt barn av en skyldig nytelse. Det er bare
messi drakt barn av en skyldig nytelse. Det er bare en Jimmy Grimble (2000) Alle unger drømmer om å bli speidet etter sin elskede klubb, og det er tilfelle for Manchester City-fan Jimmy Grimble. Jimmys drøm om å spille på Citys stadion blir oppfylt etter at han får et par magiske støvler som en gang tilhørte til en av Citys største spillere. Alt endrer seg for Jimmy fra det tidspunktet. Han er ikke lenger den nervøse gutten
som har det vanskelig med mobbere og sliter med å snakke med sin forelskelse, men blir i stedet en stjerne på banen. Men var det virkelig støvlene, eller hadde han det hele tiden? 8. Mean fotballdrakt Machine (2001) Vinnie Jones spiller den vanære England-kapteinen Danny Meehan,
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ao3feed-janeausten · 3 years
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uwu
read it on the AO3 at https://ift.tt/3d7ihYU
by orphan_account
Words: 107866, Chapters: 3/3, Language: Dansk
Fandoms: Once Upon a Time (TV), A Song of Ice and Fire - George R. R. Martin, A Song of Ice and Fire & Related Fandoms, Rogue One: A Star Wars Story (2016), InuYasha - A Feudal Fairy Tale, ダイヤのA | Daiya no A | Ace of Diamond, Dream Daddy: A Dad Dating Simulator, The A-Team (TV), Magnum P.I. (TV 2018), Jeeves - P. G. Wodehouse, House of Night - P. C. Cast & Kristin Cast, LOVECRAFT H. P. - Works, K-pop, K (Anime), Kong: Skull Island (2017), Christian Bible, Fall Out Boy, Prinsessen paa Ærten | The Princess and the Pea - Hans Christian Andersen, The Siege of Thebes - John Lydgate, GIRLSブラボー | Girls Bravo - All Media Types, Gilmore Girls, Pocket Monsters: X & Y | Pokemon X & Y Versions, The Man From U.N.C.L.E. (2015), KISS (US Band), The Who (Band), Star Wars Legends: X-Wing Series - Aaron Allston & Michael Stackpole, Legally Blonde - Hach/O'Keefe/Benjamin, Legally Blonde - All Media Types, Legally Blonde (Movies), Newsies!: the Musical - Fierstein/Menken, Adam Lambert (Musician), Heathers: The Musical - Murphy & O'Keefe, Kris Allen (Musician), Taylor Swift (Musician), Music RPF, W.I.T.C.H., Raffles - E. W. Hornung, Hardy Boys - Franklin W. Dixon, 古剑奇谭 | Gujian Qitan (Video Games), 秦时明月 | Qín Shí Míngyuè | The Legend of Qin - All Media Types, Persona Q: Shadow of the Labyrinth, The Lord of the Rings - J. R. R. Tolkien, The Silmarillion and other histories of Middle-Earth - J. R. R. Tolkien, Wings of Fire - Tui T. Sutherland, Green Creek Series - T.J. Klune, Old Possum's Book of Practical Cats - T. S. Eliot, Hoshi no Kaabii | Kirby: Right Back at Ya!, Harry Potter - J. K. Rowling, L'appart du 5e (TV), Despacito - Luis Fonsi feat. Daddy Yankee (Song), Only The Brave - Louis Tomlinson (Song), The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde - Robert Louis Stevenson, Danny Phantom, Deryni Chronicles - Katherine Kurtz, Nancy Drew - Carolyn Keene, Nancy Drew (Video Games), Overwatch (Video Game), Undertale (Video Game), Video Blogging RPF, Dragon Age (Video Games), Sackett Series - Louis L'Amour, Dracula: l'amour plus fort que la mort - Ouali, L'amica geniale | The Neapolitan Novels - Elena Ferrante, The Closet of the Eminently Learned Sir Kenelme Digbie Kt. Opened - Kenelm Digby, Black Closet (Video Game), American Dad!, Dungeons and Daddies (Podcast), Daddy-Long-Legs - Jean Webster, How I Met My Mommy Series - Calliope St. James, Panic! at the Disco, mommy long legs - Fandom, My Chemical Romance, Set It Off (Band), BLACKPINK (Band), annie leblanc - Fandom, Annie (1982), Annie - Strouse/Charnin/Meehan, Little Mix (Band), Only You - Cheat Codes & Little Mix (Song), Lv2からチートだった元勇者候補のまったり異世界ライフ | Lv2 kara Cheat datta Motoyuusha Kouho no Mattari Isekai Life (Manga), Ariana Grande (Musician), Camila Cabello (Musician), hollstein carmilla, Selena Gomez (Musician), Zendaya (Musician), Emma - Jane Austen, War for the Oaks - Emma Bull, Emma Chamberlain - Fandom, loren gray, loren grey, New Rules - Dua Lipa (Music Video), dialipa, Dua Lipa (Musician), Riverdale (TV 2017), Riverdale (TV 2017) RPF, Dove Cameron - Fandom, millie bobby brown - Fandom, Stranger Things (TV 2016), 僕のヒーローアカデミア | Boku no Hero Academia | My Hero Academia, DOGS - Fandom, golden retriever - Fandom, tampax - Fandom, Pocket Monsters: Ultra Sun & Ultra Moon | Pokemon Ultra Sun & Ultra Moon Versions, ultra - Fandom, Blood - Fandom, period - Fandom, fat load, pad - Fandom, diva cup - Fandom, 反派白化光环 - 好大一卷卫生纸 | The Villain's White Lotus Halo - A Big Roll of Toilet Paper, 聲の形 | Koe no Katachi | A Silent Voice (Manga), Charlie and Lola, Lola (Song), Logan Paul - Fandom
Rating: General Audiences
Warnings: No Archive Warnings Apply
Categories: F/F, F/M, Gen, M/M, Multi, Other
Characters: Mad Hatter | Jefferson, Captain Hook | Killian Jones, Emma Swan
Additional Tags: SO, mah, jd - Freeform, d - Freeform, F, H - Freeform, T, e - Freeform, A - Freeform, s, c - Freeform, jfds, v - Freeform, HR, w - Freeform, z - Freeform, jdjc, sjx, SI, mamy, fhd, aiciskaokJzuxj, Gay, i hipster, Dress, rehearsal
read it on the AO3 at https://ift.tt/3d7ihYU
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foodreceipe · 4 years
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Many kitchens in the restaurant industry are toxic, but few deserve the description quite so literally as Los Angeles jam destination Sqirl. Over the weekend, back-of-house workers at Sqirl took to social media to recount horror stories of their time in the kitchen, the most notorious involving the use of a “mold bucket” to ready jams for commercial consumption. The moldy jam grabbed all the headlines, but the real story was in the allegations from kitchen employees that Sqirl owner Jessica Koslow had used their work without proper credit or compensation and had created a hostile environment for Black workers and people of color.
This aspect of the story received far less attention. Meanwhile, other stories in recent days detailing similar abuses in other critically lauded restaurants across the country have also passed largely unnoticed. Last week, Angela Dimayuga, former executive chef at Mission Chinese Food in New York City, posted a statement on Instagram detailing the abusive, misogynistic workplace fostered by chef-owner Danny Bowien during her six years at the restaurant. On Monday, Trigg Brown, chef and co-founder of Brooklyn hipster restaurant Win Son, told Eater that he was stepping back from day-to-day operations after several former employees of the restaurant, also on Instagram, claimed that Brown “ran a kitchen rife with verbal abuse and intimidation.”
Reading the testimonies of these brave employees on social media, it was impossible for me not to wonder: Why didn’t food journalists already know about these abuses? Or if they did know, why hadn’t they reported on them?    
In May 2017 I was hired by Dimayuga as a line cook in the kitchen at Mission Chinese Food. I stayed for almost three years, eventually becoming the head chef of Mission Chinese’s Brooklyn location, where I remained until Covid-19 forced the restaurant to close in March. I have no reason to doubt Dimayuga when she claims that Bowien was a “verbally abusive, deeply manipulative,” and “tyrannical” boss. This should be a huge story, especially since Dimayuga has been credited as a principal creative force in the Mission Chinese Food franchise. Instead, the response from food media has been an uncomfortable silence.
It’s all the more curious since Bowien is, after all, an authentic food-world celebrity. He has published a cookbook, hosted a season of the documentary series Mind of a Chef, and collaborated with many figures outside the food world, such as designer Alexander Wang. Surely the allegation from a high-ranking former employee that he ran an abusive and misogynistic workplace should be of interest to food writers. The most recent story about Mission Chinese Food published in the mainstream food media was a piece a few weeks ago in which Eater gave Bowien free rein to issue a long, indulgent statement about the evolution of his thinking on workplace harassment (tl;dr it’s bad).
For years now, the New York food media has returned to Bowien again and again, seeking his perspective, offering him a platform, knowing that, whatever happens, at the very least it can expect good copy. Like many chefs, he is a creation of the media, including even general-interest magazines like this one. But now that serious allegations have surfaced about him, the response from the same journalists who’ve invested years in boosting his profile? Nothing.
In its consistent, uncritical celebration of chefs and owners later revealed to be bad bosses, and in its refusal to reckon with its own role in facilitating their rise to the top, the food media has failed us.
Consider the recent case of chef Abe Conlon, whose Chicago restaurant Fat Rice was garlanded with awards and critical acclaim, then forced to shut down after employees exposed Conlon on social media as a torrential asshole. Where was the reporting on the restaurant’s toxic kitchen culture when Fat Rice was being showered with accolades and praise? Mainstream food media perpetuates the dysfunction rampant in the restaurant industry by refusing to report on the “who” behind the “what.” Either the media glosses over its own role in creating kitchen monsters, or it busies itself with a studied silence, steadfastly refusing to address the sins of its imperiled darlings.
Take Momofuku founder David Chang. Chang is a longtime friend and collaborator of food writer Peter Meehan, who recently resigned from his post as food editor of the Los Angeles Times after several colleagues came forward to describe an abusive newsroom culture that flourished under Meehan’s watch, both at the Times and, earlier, at Lucky Peach, the now-defunct food magazine that Meehan co-founded in 2011 with Chang and Chris Ying. Meehan’s resignation from the Times was the biggest story in the food world for much of this summer. He and Chang are close: They have worked on cookbooks together, and in 2018 Meehan featured extensively in several episodes of the first season of Ugly Delicious, Chang’s popular Netflix series.
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https://newrepublic.com/article/158520/food-media-created-monsters-kitchen?utm_source=pocket-newtab
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apparelsuit-blog · 4 years
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(via MACHINE 22 T-SHIRT The Longest Yard Danny Meehan Martial Arts)
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