Tumgik
#david henrie icon
ecnmatic · 3 months
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
WIZARDS OF WAVERLY PLACE (2009) Night at the Lazerama - 3x5 dir. Victor Gonzalez.
20 notes · View notes
sahind · 28 days
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
First Looks At Live Action SUPERMEN Brandon Routh (2006) Henry Cavill (2013) Tyler Hoechlin (2016) David Corenswet (2024)
19 notes · View notes
louiaffairs · 2 years
Text
★ . . . Reminds me of being a kid !?! 💭🧸
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
161 notes · View notes
swxxtgxfs · 1 year
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
CSI: Crime Scene Investigation 7x20 Lab Rats
16 notes · View notes
Text
Tumblr media
Crosby Stills and Nash at Balboa Stadium, 1969. Photo by Henry Diltz
11 notes · View notes
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
17 notes · View notes
vicemirrored-a · 2 years
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media
there’s that fucked up bastard man
3 notes · View notes
aworldofpattern · 4 months
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media
David Tennant at the 2024 BAFTAs, wearing Henry suit in Orion jacquard, by Joshua Kane
'The fabric is uniquely designed by Joshua Kane and woven in England... featuring motifs of zodiacs, mythical creatures and iconic Joshua Kane characters... Finished with fabric covered buttons and our signature tonal black '3 Tailors' jacquard lining.'
1K notes · View notes
usnatarchives · 10 months
Text
Cabin Fever! How the log cabin shaped American history 🪓
Cabins have long been a symbol of the American frontier spirit, a testament to self-reliance and ingenuity. They played a vital role in the early settlement of the United States and have become an enduring symbol of the nation's pioneering past.
Tumblr media
Early Colonial Period
Cabins were an essential form of shelter for European settlers in the 17th and 18th centuries. Built from logs with notched corners, cabins were relatively simple to construct, allowing settlers to establish shelter quickly. This design, known as the log cabin, became synonymous with frontier life.
Tumblr media Tumblr media
Abraham Lincoln's Birthplace
One of the most famous cabins in American history is the one where Abraham Lincoln was born on February 12, 1809, in Hardin County, Kentucky. The symbolic importance of Lincoln's log cabin birthplace reflects the "log cabin to White House" narrative that emphasizes his rise from humble beginnings. Though the authenticity of the existing cabin at the Abraham Lincoln Birthplace National Historical Park is disputed, it still stands as a symbol of American perseverance and determination.
Tumblr media
Western Expansion
As pioneers moved westward, log cabins continued to play a vital role in American expansion. The log cabin's simplicity made it an ideal choice for settlers needing to build shelter quickly. Many of these cabins became the nucleus of burgeoning communities.
Tumblr media
Thoreau's Cabin at Walden Pond
In the 19th century, cabins also began to symbolize a return to nature and simple living. Henry David Thoreau's cabin at Walden Pond, where he lived from 1845 to 1847, became an emblem of deliberate, contemplative living. Thoreau's experiment was not only a personal retreat but also a critique of modern society, and his cabin remains an iconic representation of the American transcendentalist movement.
Tumblr media
Presidential Retreats
Cabins have also served as retreats for American presidents. Camp David, officially known as the Naval Support Facility Thurmont, is the country's premier presidential retreat, featuring rustic cabins. It has been used by presidents for rest and diplomatic meetings since Franklin D. Roosevelt's administration.
Tumblr media Tumblr media
Cabins in Modern Culture
In modern times, cabins continue to symbolize simplicity and a connection to nature. They are often associated with vacation retreats and are emblematic of a desire to return to a less complicated way of life. Check out the hundreds of photographs of cabins in our Catalog!
280 notes · View notes
brehaaorgana · 5 months
Text
I'm devastated. They just announced that PAFA is closing their college (degree earning programs) after this academic year.
While they're continuing the museum, certificate programs, commitment to K-12 arts programs and continuing education classes —the college and graduate degrees are ending.
Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts is the first and oldest art school in the United States. And the college is closing.
So so many famous artists attended or taught at PAFA!! All kinds of them too! Thomas Eakins. Mary Cassatt!!!!! Mike Berenstain (son of Stan and Jan, who took on illustrating the Berenstain Bears!). Apparently David Lynch? Don Martin! Howard Pyle!! Barkley L. Hendricks! James Metcalf, Henry O. Tanner, William Rush, Sarah Peale, Anna Peale, Jessie Willcox Smith, Maxfield Parrish, Henrietta Myers Miller (known professionally as Peter Miller). Thomas Cole. Robert Henri. Cecelia Beaux.
(it is also the first and oldest museum in the US, which thankfully isn't also being closed).
I wish the US funded the arts better. The college deserves to be saved as an iconic and immensely influential american institution, similar to the Smithsonian network of museums — with government funding. Hell, congress people should be FIGHTING to bail out PAFA, sustain it and treat it as a PAFA-Smithsonian arts institute funded by the government. Or SOMETHING. :(
It's going to close after reaching 220 years.
69 notes · View notes
coffeeandacig · 6 months
Text
HUGE M*A*S*H NEWS!
Direct of the MASH Matters Facebook Page
Tumblr media
M*A*S*H: THE COMEDY THAT CHANGED TELEVISION, AN ALL-NEW TWO-HOUR CELEBRATION OF TELEVISION’S MOST INFLUENTIAL SITCOM
NEW ORIGINAL SPECIAL AIRS MONDAY, JANUARY 1, ON FOX
Featuring New Interviews with Cast Members Alan Alda, Gary Burghoff,
William Christopher, Jamie Farr, Mike Farrell, Wayne Rogers and Loretta Swit,
as well as Original Series Executive Producers Gene Reynolds and Burt Metcalfe
Plus Rarely-Seen Archival Interviews with Writer/Producer Larry Gelbart,
and Stars Larry Linville, Harry Morgan, McLean Stevenson and David Ogden Stiers
In the all-new two-hour special, M*A*S*H: The Comedy That Changed Television, premiering Monday, January 1 (8:00-10:00 PM ET/PT) on FOX, join the men and women who made M*A*S*H as they celebrate one of the most beloved, enduringly popular, often quoted and influential comedies ever created.
As the definitive look at the 14-time Emmy-winning television classic, the special centers around new interviews with original cast members Alan Alda (Capt. Benjamin Franklin "Hawkeye" Pierce), Gary Burghoff (Cpl. Walter "Radar" O'Reilly), William Christopher (Father Francis Mulcahy), Jamie Farr (Cpl./Sgt. Maxwell Q. "Max" Klinger), Mike Farrell (Capt. B.J. Hunnicutt), Wayne Rogers (Capt. "Trapper" John McIntyre) and Loretta Swit (Maj. Margaret "Hot Lips" Houlihan) and series executive producers Gene Reynolds and Burt Metcalfe. In these intimate, highly personal remembrances, the creation and evolution of the show’s iconic characters are revealed, alongside rare and never-before-seen behind-the-scenes footage, photos and stories.
Writer/producer Larry Gelbart, as well as additional series stars Larry Linville (Maj. Frank Burns), Harry Morgan (Col. Sherman T. Potter), McLean Stevenson (Lt. Col. Henry Blake) and David Ogden Stiers (Maj. Charles Emerson Winchester III) are remembered through a vibrant collection of clips from the series as well as in rarely-seen archival interviews. With unique experiences, observations and memories from 11 seasons of M*A*S*H, this special will make audiences laugh, touch their heartstrings, and leave them on a nostalgic high while celebrating the sustained brilliance of the iconic sitcom.
“M*A*S*H is not only a great television series, it is a cultural phenomenon. It has made multiple generations of viewers laugh, cry and think, often in the same episode,” said Executive Producers John Scheinfeld and Andy Kaplan. “We are excited to team with FOX to create this unprecedented window into an innovative television classic.”
"M*A*S*H is among the most iconic sitcoms in the annals of television history. It's a timeless show that comedically captures the 4077th medical corps and how they managed to maintain their sanity while saving lives on the front lines of the Korean War,” said Dan Harrison, EVP, Program Planning & Content Strategy, FOX Entertainment. “Larry Gelbart, Gene Reynolds and Burt Metcalfe brought this incredible comedy to life thanks to their ensemble cast led by the incomparable Alan Alda. FOX is proud to celebrate the landmark achievements of one of the best comedies ever created."
The M*A*S*H two-and-a-half-hour series finale that first aired on CBS in 1983 remains the highest rated telecast in television history, delivering an incredible 77 audience share and 60.2 rating. To-date, the show has never left the air, continuously running in syndication, on basic cable and now streaming on Hulu. The series was produced by 20th Television.
M*A*S*H: The Comedy That Changed Television is directed by John Scheinfeld (Reinventing Elvis: The ’68 Comeback, The U.S. vs. John Lennon and What The Hell Happened To Blood, Sweat & Tears?) with Scheinfeld and Andy Kaplan as Executive Producers.
Viewers can watch M*A*S*H: The Comedy That Changed Television next day on Hulu, Fox.com, On Demand and FOX Entertainment’s streaming platform, Tubi. On Demand is available for customers of Cox Contour TV, DIRECTV, DISH, fuboTV, Hulu + Live TV, Optimum, Spectrum, Verizon FiOS, XFINITY, YouTube TV and many more.
86 notes · View notes
Text
RED, WHITE & ROYAL BLUE HENRY’S CHAPTER SPOILERS!!!
YOU HAVE BEEN WARNED!
So MANY things happened and I want to scream about all of them, but like, im going to make a list (Alex would be proud of me rn)
-June and Nora kiss!! IN CANON!!
-Bea is married???
-Shaan and Zahra have a kid!
-And Shaan is a househusband
-THEY’RE MOVING TO TEXAS
-Pez you will forever remain iconic
-COWBOY HAT! SCREAMING CRYING THROWING UP
-DAVID IS CANONICALLY A THERAPY DOG. LIKE, WE ALL KNEW IT BUT ITS CANON.
-Henry learnt how to cook omg
-Also, 12 year old Henry microwaved a sausage until it exploded. Slay.
-ANGUS
-Pez is lactose intolerant!
-Alex broke his two front teeth when he got his first bike
-8 year old henry wanting a journal and sea view for Christmas!!
-Arthur taking little Henry to Rome for 2 weeks to go to the set of his movie omg
-“Alex child-of-divorce anxiety” me too Alex, me too
-“Whoever you marry, Henry, make sure they think your mum is a laugh, because she is. She really is.”
-Rafael Luna has a partner. An “astonishingly fit” partner. AND THEY WEAR MATCHING SWEATERS.
-HENRY’S COLLECTION OF “POETRY-ISH, SHORT-FICTION-ISH, ESSAY-ISH” SCRIPTS.
-Henry shook the hands of all 5 Spice Girls. As he should.
-Henry grew out his hair and cut it all off???
-Henry canonically has PTSD
-Alex’s childhood quilt!!!
- “A quieter life” SOBBING
901 notes · View notes
insecuregodcomplex · 11 months
Text
my thoughts as I watched the trailer for the like fourth time
Ellen’s southern accent
Alex being a shit IMMEDIATELY
taKEs tHe CaKE??2?2???
signet ring <3
Zahra icon and love how significant she is already from the trailer
my NDA shut up Alex
also the lifts I laughed bc the bts video
SWEETHEART
CORNETTOS
hospital scenes. Hospital. Scenes.
the teary eyed Henry at the New Year’s party is already SO GOOD
THE FUCKING FIRST KISS SCENE!!!!!!
karaoke I cannot wait I will be dead
YOUR MAJESTY CALLBACK
polo king!!!!!
I have been wondering about the way they’re gonna do the emails and I AM SO EXCITED
I CANT BELIEFE WE ARE GETTING DNC CLOSET HIDING
the plane scene <3
DAVID DAVID DAVID
Prince Henry belongs to Britain!!!!
Stephen Fry I am yelling
I fucking love you okay will kill me
LAKE LAKE LAKE
again the plane!!!!!!
don’t show me Henry’s face here I will cry!!!!! I am crying!!!!!
WHAT THE HELL YOU LITTLE SHIT ALEX I am laughing so much
109 notes · View notes
Text
I find it amusing how people react to David corenswet superman suit. And the actor cuz
"He's not Henry cavill!"
I remember when people hated the man of steel suit and Henry being "too skinny" to play superman. People criticize Ben Affleck because of his failed daredevil movie.
People talk smack when Christian bale was chosen to be batman, heath ledger as joker.
In the 80s people hated Michael Keaton as batman because he was a comedian.
But every time when the trailer hits, people clamor to see the films they once had doubts on.
The image got good and bad and mixed reactions. But its trending. And I know that like the pervious actors who played these iconic superheros will love the trailer, and David corenswet is their superman.
Typical reaction. Rinse and repeat.
The only ones who are deadset on hating everything from gunn is the snyderbros.
Honestly I've watched every batman and superman movie and I'll be watching this. I hope David will have a better time as the character with many sequels to come.
I imagine some kid will grow up with this superman and it'll be his superman he'll grow up with.
Honestly I think it's great superman has a resurgence in popularity.
With the last season of superman and Lois and my adventures with superman season which 2 coming may 25th
(it introduce superman to a younger generation)
and a new superman movie coming next year
(the summer of superman!)
It's a good time being a superman and DC fan.
Tumblr media
21 notes · View notes
rjzimmerman · 25 days
Text
youtube
Excerpt from this story from Audubon:
The night of June 10 was warm, but not too much so. After days of rain, Concord, Massachusetts, wrung itself dry. The moon edged toward fullness. Rarely in need of an excuse to wander, Henry David Thoreau took it anyway. He followed Concord’s train tracks out of town and into a moonlit meadow. There, he encountered an iconic bird of the United States: the Eastern Whip-poor-will.
With their cryptic plumage and nocturnal habits, Eastern Whip-poor-wills are rarely seen, but the male’s loud, rhythmic songis hard to miss. Thoreau heard them that evening—five or six at once. A few nights later, when the moon was full, he encountered a dozen or more. “Perhaps this is the Whip-poor-will’s Moon,” he wrote in his journal in 1851.
Into the early 20th century, whip-poor-wills were sheer magic to those who inhabited their breeding range and awaited the species’ return each April and May. An important seasonal sign, the first whip-poor-will’s call signaled an end to frosts and marked the moment to plant sensitive crops, like corns and beans. Farmers let cattle out to pasture. Children knew they could play outside barefoot.
Quirkier and more personal rituals developed around their appearance. One could make a wish on his song, roll on the ground three times for a year without backpain, or shake a pocket full of coins for a year of financial success. Some people believed the repetitions of his name, which he can sing for many hours, predicted how many years they would live or, if they were unmarried, how many until they’d wed. In an article that circulated widely in 1941 and 1942, the United Press reported that an Alabama man—known to friends and family as “Uncle Rip”—waited to have one of his two annual haircuts until whip-poor-wills returned.
The whip-poor-wills’ tune was also part of the nation’s emotional landscape. To 19th century poets, whip-poor-wills might sound mournful, plaintive, and grieving. To John James Audubon, the “cheering voice” of the whip-poor-will was his “only companion” on nights alone in the woods. Others heard the sound of loneliness. When Hank Williams wanted to convey that emotion, he sang of a whip-poor-will who “sounds too blue to fly” in his often-covered 1949 classic, “I’m So Lonesome I Could Cry.”
Yet in the decades since Williams belted those classic opening lines, much has changed for the whip-poor-will—and for our own relationship with the species.
While many kinds of birds are experiencing population declines, whip-poor-wills are especially vulnerable to habitat loss, pesticide use, loss of prey, car strikes, and predation. Ornithologists estimate that the Eastern Whip-poor-will population decreased by nearly 70 percent between 1970 and 2014. But their decline may have begun sooner. After World War II, agricultural and suburban development swallowed great swaths of woodlands. As early as the 1950s, writers like Knoxville News-Sentinel’s Lucy Templeton, whose “A Country Calendar” often included reports and lore about whip-poor-wills, worried over their disappearance from local landscapes.
We’ve changed, too. Many people moved away from the rural towns where they grew up amid birdsong. In the suburbs that replaced bird habitats, we homogenized landscapes with decorative plants unwelcoming to whip-poor-wills. If whip-poor-wills seemed to abandon our world, we also abandoned theirs.
To describe the human consequences of species decline, the lepidopterist Robert Michael Pyle coined the term “extinction of experience,” an ecological insight gained through his own moments of loss. 
26 notes · View notes
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
15 notes · View notes