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Scott Pickett Masterlist
none yet!
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allysah · 1 month
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shoutout to dan sickles for not being in gettysburg (1993) maybe it’s for the better
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viellohi · 10 days
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Gettysburg (1993) as Vines because this fandom has NONE, not anymore now though!!! so enjoy
Most of them have Pickett, Tom, and Longstreet in them?? I wanted to have more characters in there but the majority of Vines I could think of fit those three (Uncle Longstreet trope is strong in this comp). Not enough Buford, Reynolds, Hancock, and Lofield Hanistead in this one imo but I'm bound to make another one at some point so :D
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antvnger · 2 years
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Oh heck yeah! Let’s go!
🎵I was working in the lab, late one night when my eyes beheld an eerie sight. For my monster from his slab, began to rise and suddenly to my surprise, he did the monster mash!
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zwedexx · 3 months
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where CanXNT and other Canadians play
WSL
Arsenal
Sabrina D’Angelo
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Aston Villa
Adriana Leon
Bristol City
Sarah Stratigakis
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deadcactuswalking · 7 months
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REVIEWING THE CHARTS: 04/11/2023 (Taylor Swift's '1989' TV/Halloween/The Beatles' Final Single)
Content warning: some language
…Taylor Swift. Welcome back to REVIEWING THE CHARTS!
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Rundown
It’s an interesting week this week, for sure. It’s kind of both more and less busy than it appears at first glance. A lot of that is to do with Taylor Swift but we won’t be talking about her for a long time - instead, we start our episode always with the notable dropouts - oh, Taylor’s other songs dropped out to make room for her new ones? Of course they did. We do bid a brief farewell to “Style”, “Cruel Summer” (from the top 10 as well!) and “Anti-Hero”, but the latter two will be back in no time and otherwise, we have plenty of songs dropping out of the UK Top 75 - which is what I cover - after spending at least five weeks in the region or peaking in the top 40. We bid adieu to “Angry” by the Rolling Stones, “Got Me Started” by Troye Sivan, Nines’ “Daily Duppy” freestyle video, “I KNOW ?” by Travis Scott, “Cheat on Me” by Burna Boy featuring Dave, “Used to be Young” by Miley Cyrus and “Riptide” by Vance Joy - that one’ll be back soon enough, not sure about the others.
There’s no need to concern though because we have a disproportionate amount of returns, especially consider there is a singular notable gain, “Lil Boo Thang” by Paul Russell at #52. As for our returns, we have “Kill Bill” by SZA back at #70 and the typical Halloween re-entries, which seemed to perform a bit better this year for whatever reason, maybe because the charts are weak, and we do actually have two new Halloween songs debuting, but as for the re-entries we have “Somebody’s Watching Me” by Rockwell featuring uncredited guest vocals from Michael Jackson at #44, “Monster Mash” by Bobby “Boris” Pickett and the Crypt-Kickers at #29, “Ghostbusters” by Ray Parker, Jr. at #21 and of course “Thriller” at #20. We also have the bizarre return of “Teenage Dirtbag” by Wheatus at #38, which thanks to a TikTok trend and a recent 20th anniversary tour, as well as a sped-up version being released last year, has finally gained enough traction to come back to the top 40. It’s a great song… kind of, so I’m not really complaining about it. In fact, I say this is revenge for when it was stuck at #2 for two weeks in 2001, blocked off by Atomic Kitten’s “Whole Again”, which is a fine enough song but really could have given Wheatus one week.
As for our top five, well, this is a family show,  but Taylor Swift doesn’t want it to be, clearly. Her re-recording of 2014’s 1989 of course hits #1 as you’d expect, and we have three songs from her in the top five, starting with “Slut!” at #5. Thankfully there are no re-recordings that charted, instead these are all the new “From the Vault” tracks. Sure, “Strangers” by Kenya Grace is at #4 and “Prada” by casso, RAYE and D-Block Europe is at #3 but then we’re back to Taylor with “Now that We Don’t Talk” debuting at #2 and “Is it Over Now?” at the very top, becoming Taylor’s third #1. It’s the Taylor show way later on however as we have one of the more interesting batches of new songs I think we’ve ever had. Try and put these songs together in one room and see what happens.
NEW ARRIVALS
#74 - “Heart Still Beating” - Nathan Dawe and Bebe Rexha
Produced by Nathan Dawe and Punctual
So we start with a pretty normal introduction to our list of new songs, that being a pretty typical house track with Bebe Rexha on vocals and for what it’s worth, it’s pretty well done. The chill-out atmosphere with the looming synth bass and beeping is designed damn well, especially with the trickling patter of keys against the 90s house percussion that builds up into a really fascinating pre-drop, that creates a strange tension with itself so you don’t expect it when the hurricane actually makes landfall on that ugly but undeniable synth flourish. I would have probably gone for a vocalist who isn’t as annoying as Bebe Rexha can be, especially when her vocals are taken to weird lengths and inflections in the second verse, but she can belt as effectively as she needs to when she does need to, and the song’s ultimately a pretty simple copy-and-paste trick even if that one trick is done very well, so it’s in and out. It’s far from an unpleasant experience when it’s in, though, I’ll give it that.
#73 - “MONEY ON THE DASH” - Elley Duhé and Whethan
Produced by Whethan and Dru DeCaro
Whethan is one of those artists that I think we probably touched upon on this show but I have no real way of knowing because he seems to be nowhere and everywhere at once, and he doesn’t often make appearances on the pop charts. Regardless, he’s an EDM producer that has remix and production credits for days and out of his solo work, I’m pretty sure I’ve only heard his song with Yeat so I have no idea how he’ll work with… someone’s favourite Tate McRaesque singer, Elley Duhé, who has definitely charted before, although not in much capacity. This song is actually from the start of this year but has just charted and what the Hell is that vocal inflection? I don’t know who told Ms. Duhé she could do a deadpan semi-rap where she decides to have an episode whenever she says the words, “control”, “high”, “dice” or “slow”, but it’s so incessantly annoying that it basically just goes full circle and becomes catchy. Whethan’s production helps here given that he and DeCaro have an almost deceitfully simple slap house bass track that seems to show all its tricks to you in the first verse - or hook, she doesn’t actually say anything else - but there’s something else there, specifically this weird respite with flubbing synths and a soaring acoustic guitar line that just continues to develop on itself with a very tropical-feeling build-up that is rendered absolutely irrelevant by the fact it returns to the plodding bass drop with no fanfare at all and no elements of that mix remaining. I can’t tell if it’s a genius way of playfully implementing the attitude of a DJ mix set into a track or if it’s just a troll but either way… I kind of groove with this one. I don’t know to what capacity, but I feel like it’s just weird enough to get a pass. Watch this space, I could see it growing on me.
#55 - “Spooky, Scary Skeletons” - Andrew Gold
Produced by Andrew Gold
Alright, so this year we get two new songs added into the recurring Halloween canon, making their first entry into the top 75, starting with Andrew Gold’s 1996 novelty single “Spooky, Scary Skeletons”. The late Andrew Gold was already long past his prime when this was released. He had his intermittent top 40 hits in the 70s and 80s but this song is taken straight from a children’s novelty album he made specifically for the holiday. Gold wanted the nine songs on that album to fill a void that hadn’t been filled for Halloween songs that were both fun and scary. Interpolating a piece of classical music by Chopin, the song has always just been a bit of a goof. There’s a little narrative at play at least, with the skeletons who just want to socialise, and the melodies are cute if a bit incessant and jabbering. Now the story of the song’s success is a really nice one, mostly because it originates in a really cute place: a 1998 throw-away Halloween VHS by Disney that adorably paid up the song with their iconic 1920s short The Skeleton Dance. Hilariously, the Disney version didn’t go viral - a recreation by a YouTuber who could not find the original did, and thanks to its memehood, the song took on a new life in the 2010s that it never really had before, partly because of just how well the song fit the video but also it fits with the quirky, random sense of 2010s humour that emerged around this time. It also fit electronic beats, as an EDM remix of the track by The Living Tombstone is probably the more well-known version nowadays. It’s terrible, but of course it is, and it helped propel the song to where it is now: frankly, a Halloween classic. Just as cute as the Disney video is the one of a man dressed up in some kind of pumpkin-fitted morph suit that is from a very obscure Nebraskan local broadcast and just ended up in the hands of the Internet who fused it with the viral track and made something incredibly special with it. I may not really like the song, but the story of its success is a pretty fun oddity and whilst it’s a shame Gold didn’t live to see it, it has granted more attention to his work especially in recent years due to TikTok and a vinyl re-release of said Halloween album, now including the remix. Now, perhaps, quite unfittingly after a song about skeletons, a posthumous single.
#42 - “Now and Then” - The Beatles
Produced by Paul McCartney and Giles Martin
Now check this: not only are we getting a song from the Goddamn Beatles, but we’re getting it only a day after it released, thanks to great streaming and expected but still impressive sales. This song has only been out for around a day and a band like The Beatles has flourished on the longevity of their music, so it almost feels wrong to comment this early, even if the song in some form has been around for a while. Lennon wrote this very simple song in the late 1970s. It’s a wispy hiss of a ballad that he never developed on during his lifetime. In 1994, Paul McCartney found himself in possession of Lennon demo tapes, and the three then-remaining Beatles recorded a couple songs using them. “Now and Then” never made the light of day, mostly because George Harrison wasn’t a fan, but decades later, the main problem of vocal quality has largely been fixed thanks to AI technology they’d already used to isolate conversations in their 2021 Get Back documentary. You can vaguely tell that machine learning was used, sure, but it was not to create a synthetic recording and rather improve the quality of an already existing one. There’s also a level of love-letter attention to detail here that really convinces me this isn’t just a cash-in: Paul starts the song with a countdown like he starts the first song in their catalogue, but he doesn’t have the energetic 1-2-3-4 this time around, just a steady 1-2 and a faint 3-count. The bridge actually takes harmonies from dense vocal takes George Harrison did for some of their classic tracks, ones you wouldn’t really be able to notice in their original form because of the sheer amount of layers and takes a lot of those songs have, and places them on top of each other in this new recording to make sure he had extra presence on the track, including a tribute to Harrison in the form of a George-style slide guitar solo from Paul. This song definitely feels special, even if it doesn’t really feel like much of a song. It’s a fleeting final moment, ending The Beatles with a feathery ballad, but it’s still a beautiful one. The core “song” is essentially still in demo form here, with Lennon’s frail, depressed vocal take standing out as particularly sad when it has the reverb and echo against a backdrop of melancholy pianos and an absolutely gorgeous string section. I have already listened to this song a LOT and this has been what’s grown on me the most: just the absolute despair in this insecure, paranoid love song. Ringo Starr’s drums click with little oomph until the first chorus, where they finally ramp up alongside the strings, and Paul starts harmonising with his long-passed friend, “now and then, I miss you - now and then, I want you to be there for me, always to return to me”. Whilst never meant to be, the lyrics find themselves easily re-contextualised in the context of the legacy of The Beatles, and it’s pretty damn heartbreaking, especially with a much older Paul having his voice back up a literal dead man’s final recordings. That soaring solo is also astonishing in how it slides off the baroque instrumentation, and the strings roll back into the harmonies that sound like they were made for the song even if Harrison had originally recorded them for other sessions. It all lines up incredibly well - for an after-the-fact job, the mixing work is intricate, and there’s something profound about it ending with Ringo in the distance appreciating that it was a good take. I expect this to gain next week but after that, I doubt this’ll stick around, or give them an 18th #1 for that matter, but it’s an excellent little joy to have while it’s here, so let’s savour every moment of it.
#14 - “This is Halloween” - Danny Elfman
Produced by Danny Elfman, Bob Badami and Richard Kraft
Now this is the second Halloween song newly entering, and frankly the story is a lot less interesting. It’s the opening theme for a Halloween movie. It’s an incessantly catchy song performed by the citizens of the film’s zany setting conceived by Tim Burton in 1993’s The Nightmare Before Christmas which I have not seen since I was a child. I mean, it’s more accessible than the songs from The Rocky Horror Picture Show, I guess, but it’s kind of funny how this is the highest-peaking Halloween song this week given that it’s the most on-the-nose of the Halloween tracks but also the one perhaps least understandable if you don’t know the context given the amount of characters performing and to me, this has always been a fun novelty wherein I’m just not in on the joke. The song that the Official Charts Company credits also doesn’t really exist. There is not a version credited to Danny Elfman anywhere - there’s the version by “the citizens of Halloween”, which is the film version then tributed re-recordings by Panic! at the Disco and… Marilyn Manson. Well, isn’t that the scariest thing about this holiday? Get that man away from children’s media.
#5 - “Slut!” (Taylor’s Version) (From the Vault) - Taylor Swift
Produced by Taylor Swift, Jack Antonoff and Patrik Berger
Welp, now we’re in Taylor Territory and I will try to keep it brief - after all, these are barely even singles. These are deluxe tracks she cut off the original and waited damn near a decade to re-record and re-release, the fact that they’re being promoted and streamed is more a by-product of them being Taylor Swift songs rather than on the merit of them being, you know, songs. This was the intended single - things didn’t really work out, more on that later - and I should warn you, I don’t like 1989 that much to begin with. It has some of her best singles but is also much less sonically cohesive than it should be and has some of her all-time worst songs, some of which were actually improved in this re-recording. This is still a finished song though, and a pretty decent one too, with Taylor sarcastically convicting herself of the “crime” of being lovestruck with a guy and losing her mind about him, but with the acknowledgement - and looming threat - of how the media and society as a whole treats women and their sexual relationships. You can kind of tell she wrote this before she started swearing because the title drop is so faint and sounds borderline accidental with her typical breathy delivery amidst an expectedly reverb-drenched synthpop instrumental. The harmonies in the pre-chorus are particularly beautiful and whilst I really don’t like the flat-feeling percussion, I understand it kind of comes with the material as far as it comes to indie-infused pop from the mid-2010s. For a song called “Slut!”, it does a lot to make itself sound kind of cute and bouncy, and I can appreciate that dissonance, especially on the oddly glitched outro which is a pretty nice surprise by the end of the track, which does kind of run its course at that point. Anyway, next.
#2 - “Now that We Don’t Talk” (Taylor’s Version) (From the Vault) - Taylor Swift
Produced by Taylor Swift and Jack Antonoff
Continuing the relationship story, we have a post-breakup track where Taylor reminisces but honestly most just bitches about this guy that she can no longer know the inner workings of because they don’t talk anymore. This one’s just fine. The lyrics have a similar level of detail but there are also just less lyrics to think about, and her falsetto in the chorus, as well as her generally staccato delivery, is kind of grating against a particularly rubbery synthpop backing that feels much more like an 80s pastiche than the other vault tracks. I guess she just really wanted to replicate the feel of the original album with this one. That’s not a compliment.
#1 - “Is It Over Now?” (Taylor’s Version) (From the Vault) - Taylor Swift
Produced by Taylor Swift and Jack Antonoff
Now this is what the fans essentially chose as the single, and I can see why because this is fantastic. From the slightly off-beat echoing vocal loops in the beginning of the track that seem to collude around this faint very 80s synth propulsion to the contradicting lyrical detail, anxiety is ridden through this confessional track about mutual infidelity taking place at the very end of a dying relationship. The drums have a real power to them, coming in alongside a bright synth flare that really hits hard in that pre-chorus, and the way that Taylor’s vocals handle the wordy, off-rhythm lyrics is really interesting, it’s like she’s constantly doing damage control for her own song, which devolves into bitter half-rapping with some of the best vocal takes I’ve ever heard from Taylor. This is what all of Midnights should have sounded like - Hell, it doesn’t even sound like it came from 1989, it sounds straight out of her recent work. Maybe it was just a timeless track, but I find it very difficult to imagine that Taylor - or Antonoff for that record - passed on what would be an absolute slam-dunk of a single nine years later. Either way, it’s here now, it’s excellent and we’ll see how long it lasts. I have a feeling it’ll be longer than we expect.
Conclusion
Well, ultimately, like I said, it was a very interesting week and honestly, a pretty great one where I’m excluding the Halloween tracks on the principle of novelty - they function less as real songs than even the Christmas tracks - but liked pretty much everything else, except Taylor Swift’s “Now that We Don’t Talk” which does get the Worst of the Week but batting 2 for 3 is not that bad at all, and she grabs the Honourable Mentions with both “Slut!” and especially “Is it Over Now?”. The Best of the Week… I mean it wasn’t ever a competition, was it? It goes to “Now and Then” by The Beatles as you could see from a mile away. Anyways, we start the holiday season with practically the next episode, with Taylor acting a send-off to… normal music, so be prepared for that. For now though, thank you for reading, goodbye to Matthew Perry - we’ll try to keep it down - and I’ll see you next week!
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mariacallous · 2 years
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Today we get to see whether Rick Scott, Josh Hawley, Lindsey Graham, and Ted Cruz are successful in their effort to delay Senate GOP leadership elections and take on Mitch McConnell.
There's an air of Pickett's Charge or the Light Brigade at Balaclava or Dieppe about it, although sadly everyone involved will still both be alive and in positions to continue to harm.
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Note
Random question?
Who are your top 3 players from each nwsl team and who is your favorite overall nwsl player? So excited about the alyssa fics btw
ohhh ok long one ahead I can expand on some of these later if yall want
Chicago Red Stars first
Alyssa Naeher of course
Yuki Nagisato
Tierna Davidson
Washington Spirit
Ashley Sanchez
Andi Sullivan
Emily Sonnett
North Carolina Courage
Debinha
Carson Pickett
Casey Murphy
Gotham FC
Kristie Mewis
Imani Dorsey
Midge
Orlando Pride
Ally Watt now I guess
Honestly don't know or like any more players sorry Orlando
Houston Dash
Nichelle Prince
Sophie Schmidt
Ebony Salmon
Racing Louisville
Jaelin Howell
Emily Fox
Jessica McDonald
Kansas City Current
Desiree Scott
Kristen Hamilton
Lo'eau LaBonta
San Diego Wave
Taylor Kornieck
Kaelin Sheridan
Naomi Girma
Angel City
Christen Press
Jun Endo
Savannah McCaskill
Ok the next few are extra hard so may give more than three
Portland Thorns
Megan Klingenberg
Bella Bixby
Becky Sauerbrunn
Crystal Dunn
Rocky Rodriguez
Christine Sinclair
Janine Beckie
OL Reign
Rose Lavelle
Sophia Huerta (Sose for the win)
Tobin Heath
Megan Rapinoe
Jordyn Huitema
Bethany Balcer
Nikki Stanton
Alana Cook
Quinn
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allysah · 7 hours
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part 2 of the acw?? papa?? saga?? as requested by @tommy-288
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fantasy football draft cheat sheet 2022 mod menu 6MY+
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Nick Chubb Cam Akers D'Andre Swift Alvin Kamara Aaron Jones Saquon Barkley Josh Jacobs Ezekiel Elliott Elijah Mitchell Breece Hall James Conner Leonard Fournette David Montgomery Damien Harris Dobbins AJ Dillon Miles Sanders Antonio Gibson Devin Singletary Travis Etienne Kareem Hunt James Cook Chase Edmonds Clyde Edwards-Helaire Ken Walker James Robinson Dameon Pierce Melvin Gordon Tony Pollard Raheem Mostert Rhamondre Stevenson Ronald Jones Isaiah Spiller Michael Carter Rashaad Penny Alexander Mattison Jamaal Williams Marlon Mack Chuba Hubbard Cordarrelle Patterson D'Onta Foreman Damien Williams Tyler Allgeier Kenyan Drake McKissic Nyheim Hines Darrell Henderson Tyrion Davis-Price Rachaad White Gus Edwards Khalil Herbert Keaontay Ingram Zamir White Mark Ingram Sony Michel Hassan Haskins Samaje Perine Zack Moss Kenneth Gainwell Pierre Strong Giovani Bernard Duke Johnson Boston Scott Kene Nwangwu Myles Gaskin Benny Snell D'Ernest Johnson Jeff Wilson Kyren Williams Rex Burkhead Ke'Shawn Vaughn Matt Breida Joshua Kelley Eno Benjamin Jaret Patterson Snoop Conner Tevin Coleman Anthony McFarland Ryquell Armstead Craig Reynolds Darrynton Evans Mike Boone Dontrell Hilliard Tony Jones DeeJay Dallas Jermar Jefferson Trey Sermon Chris Evans Jerome Ford Justin Jefferson 2. Cooper Kupp 3. Ja'Marr Chase 4. Tyreek Hill 5. Davante Adams 6. Deebo Samuel 7. Stefon Diggs 8. Terry McLaurin 9. Mike Evans CeeDee Lamb Brown Keenan Allen Michael Pittman Courtland Sutton Mike Williams DK Metcalf DJ Moore Amari Cooper Diontae Johnson Tee Higgins Brandin Cooks JuJu Smith-Schuster Michael Thomas Chris Godwin Allen Robinson Amon-Ra St. Jerry Jeudy Chase Claypool Brandon Aiyuk Gabriel Davis Adam Thielen Mecole Hardman Jaylen Waddle DeAndre Hopkins Kenny Golladay Darnell Mooney DeVonta Smith Treylon Burks Allen Lazard Rashod Bateman Marquise Brown Jarvis Landry Christian Kirk Drake London Tyler Lockett Elijah Moore Michael Gallup Chris Olave Robert Woods Hunter Renfrow Christian Watson DeVante Parker Tyler Boyd Skyy Moore DJ Chark Corey Davis Alec Pierce Marvin Jones Marquez Valdes-Scantling Garrett Wilson Green Terrace Marshall Randall Cobb Jameson Williams Robbie Anderson Jamison Crowder Jakobi Meyers Jahan Dotson David Bell Kadarius Toney Nico Collins Russell Gage Sammy Watkins Van Jefferson Byron Pringle Bryan Edwards Zay Jones Odell Beckham Jr. Parris Campbell Jalen Tolbert Kendrick Bourne Rondale Moore Joshua Palmer Devon Allen Sterling Shepard Donovan Peoples-Jones Julio Jones Curtis Samuel John Metchie George Pickens Marquez Callaway Cedrick Wilson Darius Slayton Nelson Agholor James Washington Romeo Doubs Tyquan Thornton Josh Reynolds Tre'Quan Smith. Travis Kelce 2. Mark Andrews 3. Kyle Pitts 4. George Kittle 5. Darren Waller 6. Zack Ertz 7. Dallas Goedert 8. Dalton Schultz 9. Hunter Henry Hockenson Pat Freiermuth Mike Gesicki Dawson Knox Gerald Everett Albert Okwuegbunam Noah Fant Logan Thomas Cole Kmet Austin Hooper David Njoku Robert Tonyan Tyler Higbee Evan Engram Cameron Brate Mo Alie-Cox Uzomah Jelani Woods Irv Smith Hayden Hurst Adam Trautman Howard Jonnu Smith Harrison Bryant Ricky Seals-Jones Donald Parham Trey McBride Will Dissly Dan Arnold Tommy Tremble Tyler Conklin Brevin Jordan Foster Moreau Blake Bell Isaiah Likely Drew Sample John Bates Greg Dulcich. Justin Tucker 2. Daniel Carlson 3. Matt Gay 4. Harrison Butker 5. Tyler Bass 6. Evan McPherson 7. Younghoe Koo 8. Ryan Succop 9. Matt Prater Brandon McManus Rodrigo Blankenship Jason Sanders Dustin Hopkins Greg Zuerlein Robbie Gould Jake Elliott. Buffalo Bills 2. San Francisco 49ers 3. Indianapolis Colts 4. New England Patriots 5. Tampa Bay Buccaneers 6. Los Angeles Rams 7. Denver Broncos 8. New Orleans Saints 9. Miami Dolphins Kansas City Chiefs Los Angeles Chargers Dallas Cowboys Cleveland Browns Green Bay Packers Pittsburgh Steelers Baltimore Ravens. Fantasy Football.
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gonefishing712 · 2 years
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1. Runs away. - Novaleigh 2. Turns every light on. - Teagan 3. First to die. - Rosslyn 4. Hides in the dog house. - Dodge 5. Last to die. - Scott 6. The one running in high heels. - Presley 7. Splits up and goes alone. - Vanessa 8. Sits in the corner rocking and sucking their thumb. - Harlow 9. Films everything on their cell phone. - Damien 10. Takes a selfie with the killer. - Alice 11. Helps the killer. - Adah 12. Is the killer. -  Sheriff Stanton 13. Always checking their makeup. - Katharina 14. Plays dead. - Alexis 15. Jumps out of the 2nd story window. - Calla 16. The smart one. - Ryker 17. Virgin that doesn’t die. -  Hunter 18. Hides under the bed. - Catherine 19. Turns into a werewolf. -  Zachary 20. Sucks everyone's blood. - Aurora 21. Is chased by a doll. -  Melanie 22. Is drunk the whole time. - Finn 23. Doesn’t know what is going on. - Mayor Edwards 24. The comic relief. - Raleigh 25. Gets stuck sneaking up the fireplace. - Peyton 26. Loses a toe. -  Bowie 27. Dies having sex. - Maverick 28. Gets eaten by a venus flytrap. -  Astrid 29. Yells grab my strong hand. - Grace 30. Keeps asking where the weed is. - Ezekiel 31. The skeptic. - Daphne 32. Trips and falls into the well. -  Braxton
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Monster Mash - Bobby Pickett
Thriller - Michael Jackson
I put a spell on you - Nina Simone
Time Warp - Rocky Horror
Somebody's Watching Me - Rockwell
People Are Strange - Echo & The Bunnymen
Love potion number 9 - The Searchers
Psycho Killer - Talking Heads
Superstition - Stevie Wonder
Pet Sematary - Ramones
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kissmysassxo · 2 years
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Stuck in a horror movie game match-up. 1. Runs away. Calla 2. Turns every light on. Catherine 3. First to die. Daphne 4. Hides in the dog house. Rosslyn 5. Last to die. Raleigh 6. The one running in high heels. Presley 7. Splits up and goes alone.  Alice 8. Sits in the corner rocking and sucking their thumb. Mayor Edwards 9. Films everything on their cell phone. Aurora 10. Takes a selfie with the killer. Vanessa 11. Helps the killer. Alexis 12. Is the killer. Damien 13. Always checking their makeup. Melanie 14. Plays dead. Adah 15. Jumps out of the 2nd story window. Katharina 16. The smart one. Hunter   17. Virgin that doesn’t die. Novaleigh 18. Hides under the bed. Peyton 19. Turns into a werewolf. Finn 20. Sucks everyone's blood. Braxton 21. Is chased by a doll. Astrid 22. Is drunk the whole time. Maverick   23. Doesn’t know what is going on. Sheriff Stanton 24. The comic relief. Ryker 25. Gets stuck sneaking up the fireplace. Zachary 26. Loses a toe. Bowie   27. Dies having sex. Scott 28. Gets eaten by a venus flytrap. Grace 29. Yells grab my strong hand. Dodge 30. Keeps asking where the weed is. Ezekiel 31. The skeptic. Harlow 32. Trips and falls into the well. Teagan
Eerie spooky playlist
Monster Mash - Bobby Pickett  The Purple People Eater - Sheb Wooley  Oogie Boogie - Toby Parkinson  One Way or Another - Bette Midler  This is Halloween - Danny Elfman  Halloween Theme - The Dark  Addams Family Theme - Amc Orchestra  Ghostface Theme - Brian Tyler  Spooky, Scary Skeletons - Andrew Gold  Ghostbusters - Ray Parker, Jr. 
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pleaserelaxfc · 2 years
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NWSL: International Absences
So, with the NWSL picking up with three games per team between now and the likely return of most of its international players, I thought I would do a rundown of how each team will be affected, starting with the teams least affected and moving towards those most affected. 
First, a quick overview of how many players each team is missing - number in parentheses is how many of them have played more than 50% of the club's minutes this season: 
OL Reign:  8 (4)
Washington Spirit:  7 (5)
Houston Dash:  7 (5)
Portland Thorns:  6 (6)
San Diego Wave:  5 (5)
North Carolina Courage:  5 (4)
NJ/NY Gotham:  4 (4)
Racing Louisville:  4 (1)
Chicago Red Stars:  3 (2)
Angel City:  2 (1)
Kansas City Current:  2 (1)
Orlando Pride:  1 (1)
In general, I think the number of high-minute players absent from a team is a pretty good (but not perfect) proxy for how much a team will be affected in the international window, so in this post, I'm going to start with the Orlando Pride, the Kansas City Current, Racing Louisville, and Angel City.  These four teams are each going to be missing one or two starters - often important players for the team as a unit, but with only one or two players out, the international window won't affect them much more than the normal course of short-term injuries already does.
Orlando Pride
Player(s) out:  Gunny Jonsdottir (MF)
Jonsdottir is a pretty key piece for Orlando, both in terms of play and leadership.  She is often the best performer in a fairly shaky midfield, where she can play either in a more attacking or a more defensive role, and she has even been tasked with playing as an outside back in a couple of recent games.  However, the Pride's problems in the upcoming games are going to come down to player management and weaknesses throughout the field, rather than just her individual availability.  Erika Tymrak was very good for the Pride last season but has gotten less than 90 minutes this season; either she or Mikayla Cluff, who didn't start either of the Pride's last two games with a mild foot injury, could fill in comfortably in Jonsdottir's usual attacking midfield position. 
Not on international duty but absent nonetheless is Sydney Leroux, who was just traded to Angel City.  She and Darian Jenkins were mainstays in the Pride's front line all season, and for good reason - although Jenkins is a standout player and will surely get some good goals, Leroux's absence will significantly limit the Pride's ability to win games outright.
Kansas City Current
Player(s) out:  Desiree Scott (MF); Sydney Schneider (GK)
Scott is the bigger loss here, having the second-highest number of minutes of all Current players, while Schneider has not yet made an appearance for the team.  Scott will be a loss in the defensive midfield, but rookie Alex Loera has gotten a few minutes in defensive midfield earlier in the season alongside her, and the Current also have the enormous blessing of Kristen Edmonds, who can play almost any position.  While Loera hasn't necessarily appeared as a sole number 6 in the NWSL, it seems that the Current have been working on improving the defensive capabilities of several of their other midfielders, including Victoria Pickett and Chardonnay Curran, so if she does start there, the other midfielders could pick up some of the slack as well.  With Loera and Edmonds both starting as center backs in recent games, either would need to be replaced there - but there is no lack of capable defenders on the Current's bench, including Taylor Leach, the newly-traded Addisyn Merrick, and (once she returns from injury) Jenna Winebrenner.
Angel City
Player(s) out:  Vanessa Gilles (CB), Allyson Swaby (DF)
Gilles seemed to be holding Angel City's defense together single-handedly for large portions of the Challenge Cup, and while their defensive line has become stronger the more they have played together, she is probably still the strongest player on their back line and her absence will be notable.  For their first game, Madison Hammond, who had started several Challenge Cup games before Megan Reid returned from injury, will be out under COVID protocol, so I would expect to see Paige Nielsen alongside Reid - Nielsen hasn't gotten many minutes following her own off-season health issues, but was a pretty strong player with Washington last season, so while there will be a drop in quality, I don't think it will be too significant. 
More concerning for Angel City is their rapidly-shrinking depth all over the field, including in defense - in addition to Gilles and Swaby on international duty and Hammond under COVID protocol, they are still missing Jasmyne Spencer, Sarah Gorden, and M.A. Vignola to injury.  Tyler Lussi has been performing at outside back, but she is already a converted forward in that position (and given the injuries in more attacking roles, might be better utilized there for the moment), and Ali Riley was kept out of the New Zealand gameday squad during their June games due to an injury picked up in training - I'm not entirely sure how Angel City would respond if anyone else in their defense weren't able to play.  Their other field positions aren't doing much better, although not due to international absences, with Christen Press suffering a season-ending ACL tear, Simone Charley out with an achilles injury, and Cari Roccaro also out under COVID protocol.
Racing Louisville
Player(s) out:  Emily Fox (LB), Nadia Nadim (FW/AM), Rebecca Holloway (LB), Satara Murray (DF)
Fox is pretty clearly the biggest loss here, having been a standout player for Racing through the season and a half she's been in the NWSL, but Nadim has been adding some much-needed energy off the bench that will also be missed, particularly having traded away Cece Kizer and Ebony Salmon.   While Holloway would have been the natural replacement for Fox, it seems that Racing have been preparing for their combined absences by repurposing Lauren Milliet as an outside back, and she hasn't done poorly there, either.  Milliet has been starting on the front line, and recent starting lineups have had her there alongside Alex Chidiac and Savannah DeMelo, but Racing has plenty of young talent on the forward line that could fill her absence on the wing, including Emina Ekic, Kristen Davis, and Sh'nia Gordon - those three may also be relied on more heavily off the bench while Nadim is out.
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mayasdeluca · 2 years
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well, that was awful and painful to watch... midfield is back to nonexistent, the attackers can't score and the defense was actually great tonight except for the two goals that I rather not comment on 😬 for me today it's like they were back to Scott's era which is not great. I wanted to know your overall thoughts on Pickett, I didn't like her today but maybe it was only because the team was not great as a unity?
That's so true, it felt like a Scott coached match to me as well. They just looked so flat with no energy or game plan the whole game, I don't know what happened. Spirit was pressuring them from the start and it was like they kept trying to play out of the back and turning the ball over and that's all they did with Scott. I truly feel like they're all just worn down physically and mentally from the losing and so it's hopeless for them to get out of it and all the little mistakes end up being costly and then that's when they break and end up losing by 1 or 2 goals.
I think Pickett is put in a tough spot because I think she's supposed to be a solid player (I honestly didn't pay much attention to her when she was on KC though) but this midfield at Gotham has been such an issue and now it's been a mix of players with the new coach and to be honest Kristie has been underwhelming most of the season and it feels like she just doesn't care anymore at this point either. Most of her passes are so bad and I'm just like?? So the midfield of Pickett, Mewis and Torres just was underwhelming because Torres is a rookie and Pickett is new and I just feel like it's all a mess. The Zerboni apologists are going to come out and say she needs to be in the lineup now I'm sure so that's going to be lovely too 😑
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darkstorm1720 · 2 months
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almackey · 6 months
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Dorsey Pender’s July 1 Attack on Seminary Ridge Helped Inspire Pickett’s Charge
Alfred Scales’ North Carolinians, one of Pender’s two brigades, passed over this ground and then went by the McPherson Barn as they attacked Seminary Ridge. (Photo by Noel Kline) This article by Scott Hartwig is from the January 2020 issue of America’s Civil War magazine. “It is frequently presumed that Pickett’s Charge, on July 3, 1863, was doomed to defeat before a single cannon opened fire or…
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