Indian Handmade Bohemian Printed Long Sleeve Top - Boho Floral Shirt For Women - Mexican Style Summer Blouse - Short Kurti For Women
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Amuzgo women, Mexico, by Bienestar
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• Traditional Mexican Ballet Folklorico Chiapaneco Dress.
Date: ca. 1967
Materials: Silk, embroidery thread, netting.
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I was watching a Youtube video of all the Cinematic from the new Overwatch Invasion update (cause heaven knows I ain't buying it) and I noticed at the end Ramattra has this like.. Burn? Mark?? On his chest that goes through his cape
So I downloaded Overwatch on my PC to get a look at the Wandering/Traveling Monk skins this scene is using and I noticed..
Traveling and Wandering have a lot of visual differences, most notably in the burn the originally got my attention.
Wandering has been used canonically to show Ramattra's monk days previously, in his origin story and in the Developer commentary, but interestingly the artwork in those videos is lacking that very burn
Overwatch character designers are very good at visual storytelling, especially with Omnics (I could write an essay on what they've done with Zenyatta), so I believe this burn may very well be what became the Last Straw for Ramattra, what pushed him to leave the Shambali, what caused his fall into violence and eventually Talon.
Was he attacked? Or was he attempting to protect someone else? Despite his best efforts to shield them, the shot fired right past him, scorching his metal, cutting through his cape, and taking their life...
I hope we learn more about it.
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🌵 Louis was wearing a Neil Barrett Cactus print T-shirt at Monterrey airport (29 March 2024) that he had worn at Lokerse Feesten on 14 August 2022.
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"Detail of farmer's blue jeans, boots and spurs. This man was once a cowboy and still prefers the cowboy's dress. Pie Town, New Mexico." Russell Lee, 1940. Library of Congress.
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¡Feliz Día de Muertos!
Photograph: Sergio Carrasco
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Floral Print Embroidery Style Mexican Blouse Traditional Mexican Top Long Sleeve Blouse Mexican Printed Tunic Latina Style Formal Blouse
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Mazahua women, Mexico, by suarezixtlamas
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This one goes out to my bf
He knows nothing about hetalia but he really wanted to see his country as a character
This guy was made under his supervision so only he knows how accurate to the real country this guy is
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I've started watching Rian Johnson and Natasha Lyonne's new detective programme, Poker Face, and I think it's highly enjoyable and very much in the spirit of Columbo (allowing for the fact that, as protagonist Charlie repeatedly points out or has pointed out to her, she is not a cop, also there are lots of swears). Indeed, I'm on episode three and the murderer of the week is actually reusing a classic Columbo villain move, indeed a Robert Culp villain move, playing a pre-recorded speech during his radio show so everyone will think he was live on the air (he takes a call from his sister-in-law before starting the speech to establish that he was there at the beginning) while he was actually sneaking out of the studio to murder his brother.
What slightly threw me off at first was that the show doesn't quite follow the straightforward Columbo structure of "we meet some people, we realise who is going to murder whom, they murder them and do as they think best to conceal or destroy evidence and establish an alibi, and only after that does Columbo roll up (looking like an unmade bed and mumbling unintelligibly, with pockets full of eggs and raisins) and proceed to figure out and prove what the audience already knows."
Each episode does begin by introducing us to a group of characters and showing us the murder and immediate aftermath, but then there is a slight time skip backwards to a day or two before the murder, so the first time you watch one of these you could be excused for thinking, "Hold on, didn't that woman get murdered the night before? Was it a mistaken identity thing? Twin sister? The heck?" The backward skip is used to show us how Charlie met these people (or establishes that she already knew them) and hence why she takes an interest in the murder.
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