#Ruth Callaghan
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
tunafishjournal · 2 years ago
Text
Song
Like clockwork toys clicking and whirring
And wound up to a whistle
The cicadas sing rounds a capella 
Fireflies dance at the water’s edge
Each a tiny living lantern in the darkness
Their flames snuffed out and rekindled
From moment to moment
The dark river an unceasing symphony
The trills, croaks and hoots of the soloists
Cutting through the night
My little one turns to me and laughs
I think the cicadas are singing for my birthday, she says
Soon she’ll turn three
And the cicadas will sing for her
- Ruth Callaghan do Valle (she/her), TFJ Issue One: Celebrations
Personal |  Instagram | Twitter | YT | The Minison Project | Reading of Song
2 notes · View notes
hogwarts9 · 5 years ago
Text
Does cara married female rowan cause male Rowan is Aishwarya future husband @unfortunate-arrow
The O'Donnell Cousins
**AKA the fankids of the O'Donnell quadruplets and their spouses**
Ryan O'Donnell and Penny Haywood’s two children:
-Seán Elijah O'Donnell: 17; born February 22, 2003; he was sorted into Hufflepuff; he’s a beater and a prefect; he has blond hair and green eyes; he’s pan
-Beatrice Rebecca “Bea” O'Donnell: 14; born January 5, 2006; she was sorted into Gryffindor; she has brown hair and blue eyes; she’s a lesbian
Cara O'Donnell and Rowan Khanna’s adopted daughter:
-Keira Willow Khanna-O'Donnell: 16; born January 24, 2004; she was sorted in Gryffindor; she’s a prefect; she’s of Indian, British, and Irish descent; she has black hair and brown eyes; she’s bi
Sara O'Donnell and Barnaby Lee’s four children:
-Valentine Rowan “Val” O'Donnell-Lee: 21, born July 7, 199; she was sorted into Hufflepuff; she’s currently a magiozoologist; she has red hair, green eyes and wears glasses; she’s bi
-James Ryan “Jem” O'Donnell-Lee: 19; born June 3, 2001; he was sorted into Slytherin; he plays seeker for the Ballycastle Bats; he has brown hair and blue eyes; he’s ace
-Ailis Cara O'Donnell-Lee: 17; born May 3, 2003; she was sorted into Ravenclaw; she’s a prefect and headgirl; she has brown hair and blue eyes; she’s straight
-Alexander Conor “Alex” O'Donnell-Lee: 12; born May 31, 2008; he was sorted into Hufflepuff; he has brown hair, green eyes and wears glasses; he’s straight
Conor O'Donnell and Ruth Callaghan’s three boys:
-Rory Michael O'Donnell: 14; born May 16, 2006; he was sorted into Ravenclaw; he plays chaser; he has brown hair, blue eyes and wears glasses; he’s gay
-Gabriel Finn “Gabe” O'Donnell: 10; born July 27, 2010; Seth’s identical twin brother; he will be sorted into Ravenclaw; he will be a prefect; he has blond hair and blue eyes; he’s straight
-Seth Oisin O'Donnell: 10; born July 27, 2010; Gabe’s identical twin brother; he will be sorted into Ravenclaw; he will play seeker; he has blond hair and blue eyes; he’s straight; Conor’s mini-me but with an interest in archeology instead of architecture; Seth inherited his father’s stutter which means it’s not purely genetic as Gabe doesn’t have a stutter
18 notes · View notes
ukrfeminism · 3 years ago
Text
1 minute read
People in Scotland who want to legally change their gender will be able to do so more easily and from an earlier age, after the plans were approved by MSPs despite an SNP rebellion.
The age at which people can apply to change their gender will be lowered from 18 to 16, with the length of time they must live in their new gender cut from two years to six months.
People who want to change gender will also no longer have to obtain a formal medical diagnosis of gender dysphoria in order to do so.
Seven SNP MSPs voted against the plan and two abstained, in what was the biggest rebellion since the party came to power at Holyrood more than 15 years ago.
The rebels included Ash Regan, who resigned as a Scottish Government minister hours before the debate began, saying her “conscience” would not allow her to support the reforms.
In doing so, she became the first SNP minister to resign over government policy since the party came to power in 2007.
Other SNP rebels included former minister Fergus Ewing as well as Ruth Maguire, Kenneth Gibson, Stephanie Callaghan, Michelle Thomson and John Mason.
Only two Conservatives backed the plans after being given a free vote, but Labour, the Greens and the Liberal Democrats all voted in favour. The general principles of the legislation were approved by 88 votes to 33.
By pushing ahead with the plans Scotland will become the first part of the UK to amend the Gender Recognition Act, which has been in place for almost 20 years.
The Bill will also require applicants to make a legally binding declaration that they intend to live permanently in their acquired gender, with the falsifying of this statement becoming a criminal offence punishable by up to two years in jail.
Some campaigners have raised fears that it could erode women’s rights and lead to some people changing gender and later regretting it.
Trans rights groups welcomed the outcome of the vote, saying the changes would improve the “difficult” and “demeaning” process of obtaining a gender recognition certificate.
Vic Valentine, the manager of Scottish Trans, said: “The process that trans men and women must currently use to update the sex recorded on their birth certificate has far too many barriers, meaning that at important moments in their lives when their birth certificate is needed, such as when registering to marry or starting college or a new job, they have to show a document that does not reflect who they are, how they live their life, or their other identity documents.”
Speaking during the debate, Mr Mason said the Bill risked blurring the distinction between men and women, adding that if this happened, “then almost inevitably it becomes more difficult to ensure that women are paid equally or equally represented in Parliament or elsewhere”.
“And it becomes more difficult to ensure that women have access to safe spaces, including prisons, where they can be reasonably certain that no man will be present.” 
22 notes · View notes
nightsidewrestling · 2 years ago
Text
D.U.D.E Bios: Deirdre Llewellyn
The Cyhyraeth Princess of C.R.C Deirdre Llewellyn (2020)
Tumblr media
Kirby's cousin, the niece of Hywel, and the daughter of Naoise. An Irish-Catholic living in Wales and an observant, empathetic mother. Deirdre is an excellent teacher, and thus her kids know how to fight.
"It's not everyday you learn about screams damning others to the grave."
Name
Full Legal Name: Deirdre Saoirse Arianrhod Eithne Llewellyn (Née Rhydderch)
First Name: Deirdre
Meaning: From the Old Irish name 'Derdriu', meaning unknown, possibly derived from 'Der' meaning 'Daughter'
Pronunciation: DEHR-dre
Origin: English, Irish, Irish Mythology
Middle Name(s): Saoirse, Arianrhod, Eithne
Meaning(s): Saoirse: Means 'Freedom' in Irish Gaelic. Arianrhod: Probably means 'Silver Wheel' from Welsh 'Arian' 'Silver' and 'Rhod' 'Wheel'. Eithne: Possibly from Old Irisg 'Etne' meaning 'Kernel, Grain'
Pronunciation(s): SEER-sha. at-YAN-rawd. EH-nye
Origin(s): Irish. Welsh Mythology. Irish, Irish Mythology, Old Irish
Surname: Llewellyn (Née Rhydderch)
Meaning: Derived from the Welsh given name 'Llywelyn', which is probably a Welsh form of unattested Old Celtic name 'Lugubelinos', a combination of the names of the gods 'Lugus' and 'Belenus', or a compound of 'Lugus' and a Celtic root meaning 'Strong'. (Rhydderch: From the given name 'Rhydderch' from the Old Welsh name 'Riderch', derived from 'Ri' 'King' and 'Derch' 'Exalted)
Pronunciation: loo-EHL-in (HRUDH-ehrkh)
Origin: Welsh (Welsh)
Alias: Cyhyraeth Princess, Deirdre Llewellyn
Reason: This is Deirdre's ring name
Titles: Mrs, Ma'am
Characteristics
Age: 47
Gender: Female. She/Her Pronouns
Race: Human
Nationality: Welsh. Welsh-Irish Mix. Dual Citizenship ROI-UK
Ethnicity: White
Birth Date: November 2nd 1973
Symbols: Banshees, Cyhyraeths, Ghosts, Crowns
Sexuality: Heterosexual
Religion: Irish-Catholic
Native Language: Welsh
Spoken Languages: Welsh, Irish, Scottish (Scots Gaelic), English
Relationship Status: Married
Astrological Sign: Scorpio
Theme Song: 'She Bop' - Cyndi Lauper (1991-)
Voice Actor: Ruth Jones
Geographical Characteristics
Birthplace: Tullahought, Kilkenny, Republic of Ireland
Current Location: Llanfaethlu, Anglesey, Wales
Hometown: Llanfaethlu, Anglesey, Wales
Appearance
Height: 5'6" / 167 cm
Weight: 136 lbs / 61 kg
Eye Colour: Blue
Hair Colour: (Born Blonde) Brown
Hair Dye: None
Body Hair: N/A
Facial Hair: N/A
Tattoos: (As of Jan 2020) 30
Piercings: Ear Lobe (Both), Tragus (Both), Double Eyebrow (Both), Anti-Eyebrow (Both)
Scars: None
Health and Fitness
Allergies: None
Alcoholic, Smoker, Drug User: Smoker, Social Drinker
Illnesses/Disorders: None Diagnosed
Medications: None
Any Specific Diet: None
Relationships
Allies: (As of Jan 2020) The Rhydderch Clan
Enemies: (As of Jan 2020) None
Friends: Maeve Pritchard, Bridget Griffiths, Rosaleen O'Sullivan, Aisling O'Hannigan, Caoimhe O'Hannegan, Eithne O'Hannagan, Kathleen Mulrennan, Haf McFarlane, Tydfil McFarland, Olwen McDermott, Gwen McCracken, Branwen McCormick, Llinos McConnell
Colleagues: The C.R.C Locker Rooms / Too Many To List
Rivals: None
Closest Confidant: Ivan Llewellyn
Mentor: Naoise Rhydderch
Significant Other: Ivan Llewellyn (48, Husband)
Previous Partners: None of Note
Parents: Naoise Rhydderch (80, Father), Talulla Rhydderch (81, Mother, Née MacGinnis)
Parents-In-Law: Tadhg Llewellyn (78, Father-In-Law), Fianna Llewellyn (79, Mother-In-Law, Née Bellerose)
Siblings: Maeve Pritchard (50, Sister, Née Rhydderch), Jarlath Rhydderch (44, Brother), Patrick Rhydderch (41, Brother), Bridget Griffiths (38, Sister, Née Rhydderch), Rosaleen O'Sullivan (35, Sister, Née Rhydderch), Lochlainn Rhydderch (32, Brother)
Siblings-In-Law: Conall Pritchard (51, Maeve's Husband), Ursula Rhydderch (45, Jarlath's Wife, Née Cavanaugh), Moira Rhydderch (42, Patrick's Wife, Née Callaghan), Raeburn Griffiths (39, Bridget's Husband), Rafferty O'Sullivan (36, Rosaleen's Husband), Vanessa Rhydderch (33, Lochlainn's Wife, Née Sauvageot), Odilia Lister (45, Ivan's Sister, Née Llewellyn), Iordan Lister (46, Odilia's Husband), Blagovest Llewellyn (42, Ivan's Brother), Eirini Llewellyn (43, Blagovest's Wife, Née MacBay), Romilda MacKay (39, Ivan's Sister, Née Llewellyn), Kamen MacKay (40, Romilda's Husband), Blagun Llewellyn (36, Ivan's Brother), Haris Llewellyn (37, Blagun's Wife, Née MacRae), Theudelinda Masson (33, Ivan's Sister, Née Llewellyn), Krastio Masson (34, Theudelinda's Husband), Bojidar Llewellyn (30, Ivan's Brother), Kleio Llewellyn (31, Bojidar's Wife, Née McAfee), Wigburg McCabe (27, Ivan's Sister, Née, Llewellyn), Lubomir McCabe (28, Wigburg's Husband)
Nieces & Nephews: Too Many To List
Children: Ida McDougall (27, Daughter, Née Llewellyn), Kevin Llewellyn (24, Son), Padrig Llewellyn (21, Son), Wanda Llewellyn (18, Daughter), Vale Llewellyn (15, Daughter), Aaron Llewellyn (12, Son), Bada Llewellyn (9, Son), Cadence Llewellyn (6, Daughter), Dacre Llewellyn (3, Daughter)
Children-In-Law: Desmond McDougall (28, Ida's Husband), Mavourneen Llewellyn (25, Kevin's Wife, Née McEachern), Rathnait Llewellyn (22, Padrig's Wife, Née McTaggart)
Grandkids: Keelin McDougall (7, Granddaughter), Caomh McDougall (4, Grandson), Cathal McDougall (1, Grandson), Muadhnait Llewellyn (4, Granddaughter), Muire Llewellyn (1, Granddaughter), Ceallach Llewellyn (1, Grandson)
Great Grandkids: None
Wrestling
Billed From: Kilkenny, Ireland
Trainer: The C.R.C Wrestling School, Naoise Rhydderch
Managers: Ivan Llewellyn
Wrestlers Managed: Ivan Llewellyn
Debut: 1991
Debut Match: Deirdre Rhydderch VS Talulla Rhydderch. Deirdre won via pinfall.
Retired: N/A
Retirement Match: N/A
Wrestling Style: Brawler / Hardcore
Stables: The Rhydderch Clan (1991-)
Teams: No Team Names
Regular Moves: Belly To Back Suplex, Bulldog, Figure-Four Leglock, Inverted Atomic Drop, Low Blow, Multiple Jabs, Poking / Raking Opponent's Eyes, Running High Knee Strike, Big Boot, Atomic Drop, Backbreaker Rack, Diving Overhead Chop, High Knee, One-Armed Body Slam, Piledriver, Running Big Boot, Running Leg Drop, Vertical Suplex Slam
Finishers: Sleeper Hold, Jumping Knee Drop, Top Rope Jumping Knee Drop
Refers To Fans As: The Fans, The Family
Extras
Backstory: Deirdre Rhydderch of the C.R.C (Welsh Wrestling League / Cynghrair Reslo Cymru) owning Rhydderch family. When Naoise dies Deirdre will have a 1/56th ownership of the promotion. Deirdre is a 'Cyhyraeth Style' (Brawler / Hardcore) trainer. She's a quarter-Welsh and three quarters-Irish.
Trivia: Nothing of Note
5 notes · View notes
clovermunson · 5 years ago
Note
How about all of five of my MCs/OCs? (Ryan O’Donnell, Cara O’Donnell, Sara O’Donnell, Conor O’Donnell & Ruth Callaghan)
Ranking:
Cara: ★ ★ ★ ★ ★
Sara: ★ ★ ★ ★ ★
Ryan & Conor: ★ ★ ★ ★ ☆ (I couldn’t put one above the other, they’re both great and I couldn’t do them wrong like that)
Ruth: ★ ★ ★ ☆ ☆ (only because I’m still trying to fully figure out her personality, but I’m very interested in her!)
First impression of Cara:
Okay wow, she’s cool as heck. And she’s a Slytherin? Dude, alright she’s amazing. I don’t think I can truly express how much I love Cara, from her girl power attitude to her imaginative and challeging personality, it’s all perfect for her character.
First impression of Sara:
Such a sweetheart?? Like how is it possible?? She’s so sweet and caring of those that she loves and that’s not a trait you’d find very commonly. And the fact that compared to her siblings, she’s not the sporty one, that makes her absolutely adorable.
First Impression of Ryan:
Ryan’s boldness is bound to get him into trouble, huh? Lol, but Ryan’s personality is a little more complex than meets the eye. While he is sort of a very stereotypical Gryffindor, he doesn’t really display all of the elements of a classic Gryffindor. Also I highkey ship Ryan and Penny.
First Impression of Conor:
Oh my gosh. Such a sweet, precious little bean. Can’t even lie, I have a soft spot for Conor too. Also he adores Star Wars and Indiana Jones? Okay, I love him and he must be protected at all costs. Rhia would 100% protect him from everything.
First Impression of Ruth:
I’ll admit, Ruth took a little bit to grow on me, but she’s pretty cool, actually. I also love the fact that she’s Jewish, because the Jewish community needs more representation in everything. Her being socially awkward but also very talkative is adorable as heck too.
6 notes · View notes
hogibebeleri · 5 years ago
Text
eski model listesi
bunu temizleyip yürürüz diycektim ama çok varmış o yüzden eski ünlülere isimlere bakmak için buraya bırakıyom kalsın sdfojdsoğjısıdjğods
ay daraltçam bu ne aq
- A -
Aaron Johnson - Leo Constantine
Aaron Tveit - Ezekiel Wymond
Abbey Lee Kershaw - S
Adam Brody - Cedric P. Powell
Adelaide Kane - Alana Windsor
Aidan Turner - Blaise Lynch
Alicia Vikander - Lily Marzia Lewis
Alona Tal - Claire Jenkins
Alycia Debnam Carey - Faith Franchot
Amber Heard - Edith Mori de Oliveira & Aureola Diana
Amy Poehler - Apple Corin
Ana de Armas - Riley Polanco
AnnaSophia Robb - Olivia Maeve
Andrew Garfield - Christen Austen
Andrew Lincoln - Desmond
Andy Samberg - Milo Dexter
Anna Christine Speckhart - Maria Sparrow
Anna Kendrick - June Lynwood
Ansel Elgort - Landon Scotty
Armie Hammer - Nikolai Fedosov
Ash Stymest - Wilford Grayson
Ashley Benson - Lexie Mallaith
Astrid Berges-Frisbey - Anthea Harrison
Aubrey Plaza - Zoya Everdene
- B -
Barbara Palvin - Annie Lancaster
Bella Heathcote - Fern Weinberg
Bill Skarsgård - Hermes Wolfhart
Boyd Holbrook - Hugo Montague
Bradley Cooper - Adonis Dard
Brett Dalton - Aldous Riordan
Brian J. Smith - İ.
Brit Marling - Euria Madlyn
- C -
Candice Accola - Evanora Eckhart
Carey Mulligan - Ophelia Delfino
Charlie Cox - Darcy Hemingway
Charlie Weber - Wardell Jon
Chloe Bennett - Miroslawa Waljewski
Chris Pine - Azure Welkin
Chris Pratt - Dux Stanton
Chris Wood - Atlas
Christian Bale - Mars Brant
Christian Cooke - Conor Lynton
Chyler Leigh - Cassandra Evans
Claire Holt - Karyna Gwen
Clark Gregg - Christopher Hart
Courtney Eaton - Night Haven
- D -
Daisy Ridley - Monica Myles
Dakota Johnson - Barbie Riley
Dan Stevens - Damien Delacroix
Daniel Radcliffe - Michael Genim
Daniel Sharman - Clementine Quinton
Danielle Campbell - Calista Apostolou
David Tennant - Hunter Chandra
Dianna Agron - Isis Chamberlain
Domhnall Gleeson - Jules E. Lincoln
Dominic Cooper - Quentin J. Lloyd
Dominic Sherwood - Dimitri Wolf
Douglas Booth - Vasco Delacour
Dylan O''brien - Nathaniel Hawkins
Dylan Sprayberry -Ove Stanford
- E -
Eddie Redmayne - S
Ebba Zingmark - Eloine Heaven
Eiza Gonzalez - Veronika Boleslava
Eleanor Tomlinson - Calleigh Gardenar
Elizabeth Debicki - Pippa Voughan
Elizabeth Henstridge - Gwendoline Cler
Elizabeth Olsen - Corinne Constantine
Eleanor Tomlinson - Calleigh Gardenar
Ella Purnell - Dolu
Elle Fanning - Rosie Van Laren
Ellen Page - Lydia Carrington
Elodie Yung - S
Emeraude Toubia - Elena Dimitriou
Emma Stone - Alexandra Zaleski
Emilia Clarke - Maya Davenport
Emilie De Ravin - Astrid Blanche
Emily Bett Rickards - Ocean Highmore
Emily Blunt - Lilla Arverne
Emily Browning - Ava Marlowe
Emily Deschanel - Hannah Montiel
Emily Didonato - Vera Isabel
Emmy Rossum - Vivian Gardner
Emily Rudd - Antje Griet
Erin Richards - Glory Constance
Eva Green - Verena Gray
Evan Peters - Viktor Chekov
Evangeline Lilly - Blue Marchand
Ewan McGregor - Acse Lemoine
Ezra Miller - Eugene Irwin
- F -
Felicity Jones - Macey Raphaelle
Felix Kjellberg - Silvestre César
Finn Jones - Buster
Freya Mavor - Olivia Fitzgerald
- G -
Gabriel Luna - José Espina
Gaia Weiss - Freya Kjellfrid
Gal Gadot - Cerys Ryan
Garrett Hedlund - Vitto Carlevaro
Gemma Arterton - Sabetha Belrossa
Georgina Haig - Calypso
Gigi Hadid - Mitchie Finnegan
Gina Rodriguez - Ida Castillo
Grace Phipps - Mia Kayleigh
Gustaf Skarsgård - Vincent Valente
- H -
Haley Bennett - Graciela de la Fuente
Hannah Simone - S
Harry Lloyd - Valentin Veaceslav
Hayden Christensen - Kristoff E. Petrov
Hayden Panettiere - Skyla Chavira
Hayley Atwell - Carmela di Chimici
Henry Cavill -Â Chester Norton
Hunter Parrish - Francis Rousseau
Hwang Jung Eum - Hana Godfrey
Ian De Caestecker - J.C. Murphy
Isabel Lucas - Helen Ambrosia
- J -
Jack O''Connell - Roy Whesker
Jai Courtney - Téo Teixeira
Jake Johson - Tony Thompson
James Franco - N/ash Carrington
James McAvoy - Sebastian Van Laren
Jamie Chung - Irene Weitz
Jane Levy -Â Elsie Rodgers
Jasmine Sanders -Â Liesje Lijsbeth
Jason Statham - Rafael Romero
Jay Baruchel - Cal J.W. Fox
Jeffrey Dean Morgan - Zed O''Callaghan
Jenna-Louise Coleman - Cecilia D. Chandler
Jennifer Morrison - Penny Black
Jensen Ackles - Florian W. Hoffman
Jeon Jeongguk - Jeon Jeongguk
Jeremy Renner - Dorian Dixon
Jesse Soffer - Grover Alen
Jessica De Gouw - Vera Guthrie
Ji Sung - Yong Jae Sun
JoAnna Garcia Swisher - Pacifica
Joe Gilgun - Desmond Gallagher
Johanna Braddy - Reva Keegan
John Krasinski - Jesse Wescott
Jon Kortajarena - Aaron Anderson
Josefine Frida Pettersen - Dolu
Jude Law - Andrei Pavlov
Julian Morris - Wesley Franklin
Julianne Hough - Madelyn Weaver
- K -
Karen Fukuhara - Yuki Nakashima
Karen Gillan - Emma Fray (<33)
Kate Mara - Tuesday Beckett
Kate Mckinnon - Myrna Morgenstern
Katherine McNamara - Norene Harland
Kaya Scodelario - Quinn Jenae
Keira Knightley - Mystral Roux
Kevin Zegers - Damon Wallner
Kit Harington - Joel Paxton
Kristen Bell - Vivien Rouge
Krysten Ritter - Iris Thorne
- L-
Lauren Cohan - Wonder B.
Leighton Meester - Anastacia Bouvier
Leonardo diCaprio - Jerry Arlexa
Lily Collins - Frankie Chandra
Lily James - Anaïs V. Grimaldi
Lindy Booth - Camilla Weitz
Lindsey Morgan - Zenobia
Lizzy Caplan - Ramona Fade
Logan Lerman -Â Harley Langley
Luana Perez - Elizabeth Burton
Lucy Hale -Â Sheri Payne
Lyndsy Fonseca - Daisy de la Vina
- M -
Mads Mikkelsen - İ
Maeve Dermody - Athena Zoega
Maia Mitchell -Â Lynda Stine
Margot Robbie - Josie Lesniewski
Maria Valverde - Valerija Roque
Marie Avgeropoulos - Ljubica Solvej
Marion Cotillard - Marika Lamora
Martin Wallström - Fabio Chepe
Mary Elizabeth Winstead - Amelie Steiner
Matt Hitt - Douglas Roswell
Matt McGorry - Corbin Renwick
Matthew Daddario - Diego Mendoza
Matthew Gray Gubler - Patrick Descoteaux
Max Irons - Marc Janko
Max Riemelt - Ziggy Hildebrand
Melanie Martinez - D
Melissa Benoist - Charlotte Evans
Melissa Fumero - Catherine Winters
Michael Fassbender - Franco Locatelli
Miguel Ángel Silvestre - Rico A. Moreno
Min Yoongi - Min Yoongi
Morena Baccarin - Tulip Talitha
- N -
Natalie Dormer - Gem Julep
Nick Blood - Isaac Wyatt
Nick Offerman - Alfred Castillo
Nico Mirallegro - Jack Daniels
Nikolaj Coster-Waldau - Theos Volantis
Nina Dobrev - Emmaline Winslow
Norman Reedus - Harley Harford
Noomi Rapace - Yulia Utkin
- O/Ö -
Olesya Rulin - Ceku Balım
Olga Kurylenko - Zelda Croft
Olivia Holt -Â Rylee Cantrell
Oscar Isaac - Aldo C. Ferreiro
- Q -
- P -
Paul Rudd - Marco Polo
Paula Patton - Winter Willford
Penelope Mitchell -Â Caitlyn Weatherly
- R -
Rachel McAdams - NavoÅŸ Lancaster
Rashida Jones - Jean Cardellini
Rebel Wilson -Â Lauren Dwyer
Reeve Carney - Dylan Breckendridge
Richard Madden - Tristan Windsor
Rinko Kikuchi - S
Rosario Dawson - Eve Blanchett
Rosamund Pike - Daniela Carlevaro
Rose McIver - Skyler Freestone
Rosie Huntington-Whiteley - Leona Lane
Ruth Negga - Lara Tailler
- S -
Sabrina Carpenter - Louise Linn
Sam Claflin - Mathias Clayton
Sarah Gadon - Nina Buchvarov
Sarah Hyland - Marceline Apostolou
Sebastian Stan - Maximillian di Chimici
Seychelle Gabriel - Leila Beaumont
Scarlett Johansson - Diamontina Dixon
Shailene Woodley - Joy Cappella
Shantel Vansanten - D
Shelley Hennig - Nora Simmons
Sophia Bush - D
Sophie Cookson - Rain Gisbourne
Summer Glau - Rhea Crisanta
- T -
Taron Egerton - Caleb Lysander
Tatiana Maslany - Margo Wiggins & Felicia Makovecz
Taylor Marie Hill - Milla Alexander
Taylor Swift - Melanie Phoenix
Teresa Palmer - Dora Desjardins
Theo James - Keiro Padmore
Tom Ellis - Hector A. Whittemore
Tom Felton - Alpha Rigorous
Tom Hardy - Dito Delfino
Tom Hiddleston - Newton F. Windsor
Tom Holland - Flynn Holdsworth
Tom Mison - Armitage Cromwell
Toni Garrn - Audrey Tyler
Torrey Devitto - D
Travis Fimmel - Forrest Dickson
Tuppence Middleton - Mia Santiago
- U/Ü -
- V -
Victoria Justice - Lotus van Boven & Selo
- X -
Xavier Samuel -Â August FridtjofÂ
- W -
Will Smith - Dante di Mercurio
Willa Holland - Ethea Middlesworth
- Y -
- Z -
Zendaya - Izzy McGowan
Zoe Kazan - D
Zoë Kravitz - Thalia Hardy
Zoe Saldana - Kiara Kingsley
Zooey Deschanel - Hailey Montiel
Zoey Deutch - Myra Blackbourne
8 notes · View notes
fuckyeahoncethemusical · 8 years ago
Link
The hugely successful 'Once: The Musical' will return to Dublin's Olympia Theatre this summer, for the third consecutive year.
The mutiple Tony Award-winning musical will play ay the Olympia from July 1st - August 26th, and for the first time ever will feature an all-Irish cast.
It's the first time that an all-Irish cast has ever been used in the production, which has played on Broadway and across America, in London, Seoul, Melbourne and Toronto.
The cast includes Brian Gilligan as Guy, Niamh Perry as Girl, Sandra Dowd Callaghan as Baruska, Faoileann Cunningham as Reza, Phelim Drew as Billy, David Ganly as Bank Manager, Turlough Gunawardhana as Emcee, Bob Kelly as Eamonn, Sam McGovern as Andrej, Bill Murphy as Da, Rickie O’Neill as Svec and Ruth Smith as Ex-Girlfriend.
7 notes · View notes
newyorkprelawland-blog · 4 years ago
Text
The Government Edicts Doctrine And The Future Of American Legislation
By Arnelle Jean-Jacques, University at Albany Class of 2023
March 26, 2021
Tumblr media
While the Coronavirus pandemic swiftly made its way throughout the United States, the Supreme Court, as per usual, found no time to waste. In a year that saw several movements advocating for racial justice and gender equality, what unbelievably flew under the radar was an incredibly significant expansion to a historic intellectual property statute that dates back several centuries. 
On April 27, 2020, while much of the nation had - for the most part - assimilated into quarantine life, the Supreme Court ruled that the state of Georgia could not trademark interpretations to its official state law code, thus expanding the use of the Government Edicts Doctrine, which in simpler terms, states that no one can “own the law.” The theory behind this notion was formed using the ideologies of three pre-Civil War media and intellectual property cases: Wheaton v. Peters, Banks v. Manchester, and Callaghan v. Myers. While Wheaton and Callaghan are similar in that the court held that reporters cannot have a copyright on the court’s opinions[1], Banks’ approach offered a different perspective, with the court holding that judges themselves cannot establish their own “ownership” over any holdings, rulings or other work that they perform in their work in the judicial system.[2] The viewpoints and angles that took form from each of these issues and contributed to these holdings ultimately allowed the Supreme Court to establish a comprehensive dogma that would serve as the groundwork for order in these corporate and federal settings.
The ruling was decided in a 5-4 decision when Georgia’s Code Revision Commission submitted their annual annotated code, the OCGA, through a process that includes creation by the Code Revision Commission and authorization by the state’s constitution. The Commission would then delegate the creation of these annotations to LexisNexis, a private platform, under a “work made for hire” agreement, which under the work-for-hire doctrine, gives the CRC ownership of the annotations.[3]  However, Public.Resource.org, a nonprofit organization, began distributing hard copies of the code and publishing it online under various domains. Committed to securing public access to government materials, its website contained an easily downloadable link that was posted without permission from the state of Georgia.[4]
Initially settled in favor of Georgia in the District Court, the case was reversed by the Eleventh Circuit and its holdings were established there.[5] However, while Chief Justice John Roberts issued the majority ruling, several other justices, including Samuel Alito, Clarence Thomas, Stephen Breyer, and Ruth Bader Ginsburg filed dissenting opinions.
The important question to be analyzed here, however, is simple: Despite the obvious conflict in opinion within the Supreme Court, what will this mean for the future of intellectual property? How will the motives behind this legal action impact future legislative efforts?
The court opinion of Roberts essentially broke down each part of the historic doctrine so that it could be thoroughly investigated, arguing that although the Copyright Act grants protection over “original works of authorship,” that protection does not extend to these annotations, as similar to the way Banks v. Manchester held that judges who possess the ability to make laws cannot possess a copyright on their material, Georgia’s annotations were created by the CRC, which is a body of state legislature.[6] While the doctrine’s expansion to the legislative branch is, in a sense, avant garde, it is still sure to hold significant weight in the ways in which statutes are formed and distributed.
It is highly obvious that the presence of the Government Edicts Doctrine was felt throughout the course of this trial and its eventual ruling. Because of this, it is evident that this case, like the doctrine itself, has set a precedent for cases, holdings, and rulings regarding edicts that will inevitably take place in the future. The legal environment of intellectual property and government edicts will undoubtedly evolve so that a greater structure is present in the production of statutes that will go beyond the concepts stressed in the doctrine and in Georgia v. P.R.O.
Its importance clearly cannot be overstated, as it, of course, expanded public access to the law, thus reflecting the ideologies of today’s times which continue to rapidly evolve and justifying the critical notion that the future of a nation, whether successful or vain, depends on the ways in which the signs of the times are interpreted and how that affects the American people.
More importantly, however, is the crucial fact that judicial integrity will arguably be the biggest influence in copyright decision making, and as evidenced by the events surrounding and occurring throughout the course of this case, this integrity will require a keen and visible sense of coherence and consistency in order to truly prevail throughout the legislative branch. The internal work to be done in Georgia and across the country will, in turn, establish an even greater relationship between legislation, work-for-hires , and individual contractors.
______________________________________________________________
[1] Wheaton v. Peters, 8 Pet. 591, 8 L.Ed. 1055, Callaghan v. Myers, 128 U.S. 617, 9 S.Ct. 177, 32 L.Ed. 547
[2] Banks v. Manchester, 128 U.S. 244, 9 S.Ct. 36, 32 L.Ed. 425
[3] 17 U.S.C. 101
[4] PRO, 140 S. Ct. at 1505.
[5] Intellectual Property Alert, Vorys
[6] Georgia , et al., Petitioners v. Public.Resource.Org, INC., 140 S.Ct. 1498 (2020).
0 notes
thedsp-blog1 · 8 years ago
Text
Dr. Death’s victim list
Acton, Lily Adams, Lizzie Adkinson, Sarah Adshead, Norman Adshead, Rose Ann Aitken, Irene Andrew, Dorothy Mary Andrew, Joseph Andrew, Mary Emma Arrandale, Albert Arrowsmith, Winifred Ashcroft, Netta Ashton, Dora Elizabeth Ashton, Ellen Ashworth, Ada Ashworth, Brenda Ashworth, Elizabeth Ashworth, James Ashworth, Sarah Aveyard, Clara Ethel Baddeley, Elizabeth Mary Baddeley, John Bagshaw, Bertha Barber, Squire Bardsley, Joseph Bardsley, Lily Bardsley, Nellie Barker, Elsie Barlow, Charles Henry Barnes, James Edward Battersby, Elizabeth Baxter, William Beech, Joseph Bell, Norman John Bennett, Ethel Bennett, Frances Bennett, Nellie Bennison, Charlotte Bent, Arthur Berry, Irene Bill, Edith Annie Birchall, Mary Ivy Bird, Violet May Black, Alice Boardman, Kathleen May Boardman, Mary Louisa Bogle, Geoffrey Bolland, Alice Bowers, Mary Elizabeth Bradshaw, Miriam Brady, Edith Bramwell, Harold Bramwell, Vera Brassington, Charles Geoffrey Brassington, Nancy Anne Bridge, Doris Bridge, Jane Brierley, Albert Brierley, Edith Broadbent, Lily Brock, Edith Brocklehurst, Charles Edward Brocklehurst, Vera Brooder, Irene Brookes, Lily Brookes, May Brown, Alice Brown, Mary Alice Brown, William Henry Buckland, Edward Buckley, Ethel Burke, Elizabeth Mary Butcher, Lydia Edith Cains, Ida Callaghan, Sean Stuart Calverley, Edith Campbell, Annie Carradice, Marion Carrington, Alice Carroll, Josephine May Cartwright, Hannah Chadwick, Wilfred Challinor, Ivy Elizabeth Challoner, Genevieve Chapman, Irene Chappell, Alice Chappell, Wilfred Charlton, John Charnock, George Cheetham, Albert Cheetham, Alfred Cheetham, Elsie Cheetham, Hena Cheetham, Norah Cheetham, Thomas Chidlow, Amy Clarke, Fanny Clayton, Elsie Clayton, Frances Clee, Beatrice Helen Clough, James Condon, Thomas Connaughton, Alice Hilda Connors, Michael Conway, Margaret Ann Coomber, Frederick Cooper, Ann Copeland, Erla Copeland, Sydney Hoskins Couldwell, Constance Anne Coulthard, Ann Coutts, Mary Couzens, Hilda Mary Cox, Eileen Theresa Crompton, Eileen Daphne Crompton, Frank Crompton, John Crossley, Lily Cullen, Lilian Cuthbert, Valerie Davies, Cissie Davies, Eric Davies, Fred Davies, Miriam Dawson, Fanny Dean, Elsie Lorna Dean, Joan Edwina Delaney, Bessie Denham, Christopher Dentith, Frederick Devenport, Ronnie Dixon, Alice Dobb, Edgar Dolan, Ethel Drinkwater, Alice Drummond, Joseph Dudley, Mary Rose Dutton, Elaine Earls, Doris Earnshaw, William Eddleston, Harold Eddleston, Monica Edge, Agnes Evans, Bethel Anne Everall, Hannah Everall, Joseph Vincent Farrell, Phyllis Fernley, Marie Antoinette Firman, Mary Elizabeth Fish, Hilda Fitton, Hilda Fletcher, Dorothy Fletcher, Elizabeth Floyd, Arthur Fogg, Leah Foulkes, Edwin Fowden, Thomas Fox, Moira Ashton France, John Freeman, Harold Freeman, Winifred Frith, Hannah Galpin, Minnie Doris Irene Garlick, Rose Garlick, Violet Garratt, Mary Alice Garside, Millicent Gaskell, Marion Gaunt, Mary Gee, Nellie Gess, Clifford Givens, William Goddard, Edith Godfrey, Elsie Golds, Annie Elizabeth Gorton, Alice Maude Graham, Edith Gray, Rebecca Greenhalgh, John Sheard Grimshaw, Annie Grimshaw, Muriel Grundy, Donald Anthony Grundy, Kathleen Grundy, Nora Hackney, Clara Hackney, Clara Hadfield, Violet Hague, William Hall, Josephine Halliday, Frank Hallsworth, Janet Hamblett, Leonora Hamer, Mary Emma Hammond, Caroline Veronica Hampson, Jesse Hancock, Christine Hannible, Elsie Harding, Joan Milray Harris, Charles Harris, Harriet Harrison, Christina Harrison, David Alan Harrison, Marion Harrison, Muriel Eveline Harrison, Samuel Harrop, Elsie Haslam, Mary Elizabeth Hawkins, Sarah Healey, Winifred Heapey, Clifford Barnes Heapey, Gladys Heathcote, Irene Heginbotham, Olive Hennefer, Ellen Hett, Mary Jane Heywood, Ada Heywood, Florence Hibbert, Hilda Mary Hickson, Robert Higginbottom, George Eric Higginbottom, Peter Higgins, Barry Higgins, Lily Higham, Marion Elizabeth Highley, Ruth Higson, Ellen Hill, Sarah Ann Hillier, Pamela Marguerite Hilton, Ada Matley Hilton, John Hirst, Emma Holgate, Ethel Doris Holland, Alline Devolle Holt, Alice Hopkins, Dorothy Doretta Howcroft, John Hulme, Hilda Hurd, May Iwanina, Jozef Jackman, Harold Edward Jackson, Maureen Lamonnier Jackson, Nancy Jameson, Ronald Jeffries, Beatrice Johnson, Norah Johnson, Richard Johnston, Leah Jones, Alice Mary Jones, David Jones, Hannah Jones, Ivy Jones, Jane Jones, Robert Edward Jordan, Mary Ellen Keating, Mary Kellett, Ethel May Kellett, Fred Kelly, Ellen Kelly, Moira Kennedy, Alice Killan, Charles Henry King, Elsie King, James Joseph Kingsley, Mary Kitchen, Alice Christine Lacey, Renee Leach, Florence Leech, Edith Leech, William Henry Lees, Olive Leigh, Carrie Leigh, Joseph Leigh, Wilfred Lewis, Elsie Lewis, Florence Lewis, Peter Lilley, Jean Lingard, Robert Henry Linn, Laura Frances Livesey, John Louden Llewellyn, Edna May Lomas, Harry Lomas, Ivy Long, Dorothy Longmate, Thomas Alfred Lord, Jane Ellen Lowe, Beatrice Lowe, Esther Lowe, May Lyons, Eva MacConnell, Charles Mackenzie, Selina Mackie, Christina McCulloch Mansfield, Mary Ann Mansfield, Walter Marley, Martha Marsland, Sarah Hannah Matley, Maud McDonald, Kathleen McLaren, William James McLoughlin, Gertrude Melia, Joan May Mellor, Elizabeth Ellen Mellor, Samuel Mellor, Winifred Meredith, Oscar Metcalfe, Margaret Middleton, Deborah Middleton, Mary Mills, Samuel Mitchell, Cyril Mitchell, Wilbert Molesdale, John Bennett Morgan, Emily Moss, Bertha Moss, Hannah Mottram, George Henry Mottram, Hannah Helena Mottram, Pamela Grace Moult, Thomas Mullen, Nellie Mycock, Miriam Rose Emily Needham, Nora Nicholls, Violet Nichols, Fanny Nichols, Lily Nuttall, Hervey Nuttall, Norah O'Sullivan, Thomas Ogden, Mary Oldham, Agnes Oldham, Samuel Oswald, Frances Elaine Otter, Enid Ousey, Margaret Ovcar-Robinson, Konrad Peter Overton, Renate Eldtraude Oxley, Phyllis Parker, Marjorie Parkes, Annie Parkin, Laura Victoria Parr, Bertha Pearce, Elizabeth Pedley, Rosetta Penney, Vara Pickering, Leah Pickup, Kenneth Pickup, Mavis Mary Pitman, Edith Platt, Elsie Platt, Marion Pomfret, Bianka Potts, Frances Potts, Reginald Powers, Annie Alexandra Preston, Ada Marjorie Prestwich, Alice Proud, Ethel May Quinn, Marie Ralphs, Anne Lilian Ralphs, Ernest Colin Rawling, Alice Reade, Audrey Redfern, Tom Renwick, Dorothea Hill Richards, Jose Kathleen Diana Richardson, Alice Riley, Stanley Roberts, Edith Roberts, Esther Hannah Roberts, Gladys Robinson, Eileen Robinson, Eveline Robinson, Lavinia Robinson, Mildred Rogers, Elizabeth Ann Rostron, Jane Frances Rowarth, Dorothy Rowbottom, Annie Rowland, Jane Isabella Royles, Elsie Royston, Betty Rudol, Ernest Russell, Tom Balfour Sankey, Margaret Saunders, Albert Edward Saunders, Gladys Scott, Edith Scott, Elsie Sellors, Kate Maud Sharples, Cicely Shaw, Joseph Shaw, Leonard Shaw, Lilian Shaw, Neville Shaw, Susan Eveline Shawcross, Edna Shawcross, Ernest Shawcross, Mabel Shelmerdine, Jack Leslie Shelmerdine, Jane Elizabeth Shore, Lily Sidebotham, Florence Sigley, Elizabeth Teresa Simpson, Kenneth Harry Slater, Albert Slater, Florence Slater, Lena Norah Slater, May Smith, Alice Smith, Dora Elizabeth Smith, Emma Smith, Kenneth Ernest Smith, Margaret Smith, Mary Alice Smith, Sidney Arthur Smith, Winifred Isabel Sparkes, Monica Rene Squirrell, Alice Stafford, Harry Stafford, Kate Elizabeth Stansfield, Joe Ainscow Stocks, Louisa Stone, John Stopford, Arthur Henderson Stopford, Harriet Strickland, Ruth Sumner, Grace Swann, Bessie Swann, Robert Swindells, Emmeline Taylor, Caroline Mary Taylor, Edna Mary Taylor, Florence Taylor, Lily Newby Taylor, Mary Tempest, Mary Ann Thomas, Alice Thomas, Sarah Ann Thornton, Maria Tideswell, Sarah Tierney, Angela Philomena Tingle, Walter Toft, Beatrice Tomlin, Mary Townsend, Margaret Tucker, Dorothy Tuff, Mary Tuffin, Winifred Amy Turner, Frances Elizabeth Turner, Irene Uttley, Stanley Vickers, Frederick Vickers, Margaret Mary Virgin, Lucy Vizor, George Edgar Vizor, May Wagstaff, George Lawton Wagstaff, Jessie Irene Wagstaff, Laura Kathleen Waldron, Margaret Anne Walker, Edward Walker, Ellen Walker, Henrietta Walker, Winifred Mary Waller, Harry Waller, Marjorie Hope Walls, Mary Walton, Sydney Warburton, Ada Ward, Maureen Alice Ward, Minnie Ward, Muriel Margaret Ward, Percy Wardle, Eric Wareing, William Hill Warren, May Wass, Kathleen May Watkins, Annie West, Maria Wharam, Ellen Frances Wharmby, Lavinia White, Mona Ashton Whitehead, Amy Whitham, Colin Whittaker, Maureen Whittaker, Violet Mary Whittingslow, Vera Whittle, Edith Wibberley, Edith Wilcockson, Joseph Frank Wilkinson, Annie Wilkinson, Maud Williams, Albert Redvers Williams, Emily Williamson, Sarah Jane Wills, Jack Wilmore, Margaret Wilson, Muriel Elsie Wimpeney, Mark Winston, George Winston, Olive Winterbottom, Mary Wood, Annie Wood, Charles Henry Wood, Fanny Wood, James Woodhead, Joyce Woodhead, Kenneth Wharmby
15 notes · View notes
356mission · 8 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media
List of artists who have participated in exhibitions at 356 Mission: 2013 Laura Owens Math Bass Mike Bouchet Sarah Braman Sara Clendening Barry Johnston Kricket Lane Daniel McDonald Pentti Monkkonen Matt Paweski Jennifer Rochlin Colin Snapp Jessica Stockholder Oscar Tuazon Daniel Turner Amy Yao Eric Palgon Yshai Yudekovitz Nicholas Arehart Bridget Batch + Kevin Cooley Danielle Bustillo Joey Cannizzaro Jamie Hilder Meghan Gordon Becca Lieb Mindy Lu David Sikander Muenzer Bryne Rasmussen-Smith + Andrew Smith-Rasmussen Tatiana Vahan Sturtevant Shimon Minamikawa 2014 John Kaufman Scott Reeder Oliver Payne Yuki Kimura Alex Katz Michael Dopp, Calvin Marcus, and Isaac Resnikoff Trevor Shimizu Becca Albee Brody Albert and Kaeleen Wescoat-O'Neill Lilly Aldriedge Katie Aliprando Mark Allen Dewey Ambrosino Marie Angeletti Eika Aoshima Jonathan Apgar Cory Arcangel Jacinto Astiazaran Lisa Anne Auerbach John Baldessari Judie Bamber Ray Anthony Barrett Peter Barrickman Darcy Bartoletti Math Bass Stephen Berens Jennifer Berger Molly Berman Cindy Bernard Amy Bessone Lucas Blalock Seth Bogart Jennifer Bolande Joseph Bolstad Elba Bondaroff Marco Braunschweiler Brian Bress Brian Briggs and Laura Copelin Delia Brown Sally Bruno Edgar Bryan Elizabeth Bryant Jedediah Caesar Jedediah Caesar and Kate Costello (Extraterrestrial) Sarah Cain Kristin Calabrese Ingrid Calame Ross Caliendo Joshua Callaghan Brian Calvin Andrew Cannon Ben Carlson Jae Choi Milano Chow Donna Chung Jonathan Clarke Sara Clendening Justin Cole Kelly Marie Conder Matt Connors Vanessa Conte Alika Cooper Liz Craft Meg Cranston Cameron Crone CH Cummings Lila De Magalheas Dave Deany Michael Decker Gracie DeVito Michael Dopp Katie Douglass Lauren Dudko Julia Dzwonkoski and Kye Potter Mari Eastman Brad Eberhard Clifford Eberly Shannon Ebner Benjamin Echeverria Ken Ehrlich Alyse Emdur Karl Erickson Ron Ewert Ann Faison Cayetano Ferrer Gabrielle Ferrer Luke Fischbeck Katy Fischer Morgan Fisher Jesse Fleming Maya Ford Simone Forti Brendan Fowler Magdalena Suarez Frimkess Erik Frydenborg Francesca Gabbiani and Eddie Ruscha Nikolas Gambaroff Kathryn Garcia John Geary Veronica Gelbaum Rashell George Laeh Glenn Samara Golden Piero Golia Sayre Gomez Hannah Greely Justin John Greene Cassandre M. Griffin Katie Grinnan Mark Grock Julian Gross Karin Gulbran Jamal Gunn Becker Karl Haendel Mark Hagen Rick Hager Kate Mosher Hall Kevin Hanley Justin Hansch Peter Harkawik Jenny Hart Jeff Hassay Michael Henry Hayden and Anthony Lepore Carol Hendrickson James Herman Nick Herman Roger Herman Marcus Herse Paul Heyer Ian Hokin Evan Holloway Violet Hopkins and Foxy Production Jonathan Horowitz Amy Howden-Chapman Joe Hoyt Melissa Huddleston Cannon Hudson Amy-Claire Huestis Raymie Iadevaia Mitsuko Ikeno Daniel Ingroff Charles Irvin Alex Israel James Iveson Johanna Jackson Dain Johnson Kathleen Johnson Barry Johnston Emily Joyce E'wao Kagoshima Stanya Kahn Glenn Kaino, Sadie Kaino, and Stella Kaino Raffi Kalenderian Sanya Kantarovsky Matt Keegan Michael John Kelly Sean Kennedy Julie Kirkpatrick Karen Kilimnik Tom Knechtel Keith Rocka Knittel Rebecca Kolsrud David Korty Greg Kozaki Max Krivitzky Cyril Kuhn Rosina Kuhn Andrew Kuo Shio Kusaka Joel Kyack Molly Larkey Elad Lassry Tom Lawson William Leavitt Ann Leese Sarah Lehrer-Graiwer Alex Lemke Julia Leonard Anthony Lepore Sharon Lockhart Nick Lowe Tim Lokiec Andrea Longacre-White Anaïs Lozano Christopher Lux Caleb Lyons Matt MacFarland Ashley Macomber Tobias Madison Becca Mann Josh Mannis Chloé Maratta Calvin Steele Marcus Frank Masi Max Maslansky Katie S. McCauley and Bradly D. Fischer Danny McDonald Ross McLain Alex Meadows Jason Meadows Mieko Meguro Dain Mergenthaler Matt Merkel Hess and Conrad Merkel Donato Mezzenga Dianna Molzan Pentti Monkkonen Rebecca Morris Jane Moseley Hanne Mugaas Joshua Nathanson Davida Nemeroff Ruby Neri Ryan O'Halloran Tara Jane O'Neil J.D. Olerud Silke Otto-Knapp Robin Paravecchio and Ignacio Genzon Michael Parker John Parot Jane Parshall Julia Paull Mary Pearson Andrew Hirsch Perlman Jon Pestoni Primo Pitino Todd Pleasants Megan Plunkett Monique Prieto Jon Pylypchuk Chadwick Rantanen Sarah Rara Josh Reames Isaac Resnikoff Michael Rey John Riepenhoff Carolyn Pennypacker Riggs Shelby Roberts Jennifer Rochlin Ry Rocklen Torbjorn Rodland Mark A. Rodriguez Alix Ross & Morgan Ritter Amanda Ross-Ho Amanda Ross-Ho and Erik Frydenborg with Jorge, Mother, and Bud Nancy Sandercock Melinda Sanders Aaron Sandnes Rachelle Sawatsky Asha Schechter Carolee Schneeman Max Schwartz Zach Schwartz John Seal David Benjamin Sherry Peter Shire Flannery Silva Alex Slade Ryan Sluggett Alexis Smith Barbara T. Smith Jen Smith Joe Sola Frances Stark Linda Stark Jason Starr A.L. Steiner LeRoy Stevens Kate Stewart Thaddeus Strode Ricky Swallow Jordyn Sweet Martine Syms Tara Tavi Paul Theriault Amanda Tollefson Beatrice Valenzuela Monique Van Genderen Sigrid Vejvi Mark Verabioff Laura Vitale Erika Vogt Amy Von Harrington Christine Wang Mary Weatherford Michael Webster Benjamin Weissman John Wesley Brica Wilcox Chris Wilder Elise Marie Wille Lisa Williamson Lena Wolek Nate Wolf Jonas Wood Suzanne Wright Aaron Wrinkle Wendy Yao Jason Yates Michael Zahn Bari Ziperstein Jesse Fleming Larry Sultan André-Pierre Arnal Pierre Buraglio Louis Cane Noël Dolla Daniel Dezeuze Christian Jaccard Jean-Michel Meurice Bernard Pagés Jean-Pierre Pincemin Patrick Saytour Claude Viallat 2015 Anna Helm Lisa Lapinski Jay Chung & Q Takeki Maeda Lisa Anne Auerbach Lucky deBellevue Rochelle Feinstein Dane Johnson Jane Kaplowitz Max Krivitzky Ann Leese Cary Leibowitz Paul McMahon Rob Pruitt Sam Roeck Ruth Root Jason Rosenberg Theo Rosenblum + Chelsea Seltzer Joe Scanlan Lena Wolek Sam Anderson Becca Albee Eric Wesley Ben Vida Katy Fischer Kerry Tribe Graham Lambkin Shahryar Nashat Seth Bogart Nancy Lupo and Molly McFadden Rebecca Morris Gary Indiana 2016 Susan Cianciolo Seth Price Wayne Koestenbaum Lutz Bacher Chris Domenick & Em Rooney Wu Tsang Maggie Lee Eric VVysokan John Seal 2017 Trisha Baga Brian Sharp David Reed Henning Bohl C-Brushammer COBRA Daisuke Fukunaga Naotaka Hiro Ken Kagami Veit Laurent Kurz Soshiro Matsubara Puppies Puppies Stephen G. Rhodes Trevor Shimizu Yosuke Takayama Yuji Agematsu Nancy Arlen Jeremy Anderson Hans Bellmer Bill Bollinger Lee Bontecou Robert Breer Dan Burkhart Cameron Nicolas Ceccaldi Magalie Comeau Tony Conrad Jay DeFeo Michaela Eichwald Agustin Fernandez Terry Fox Ilka Gedő Jean-Léon Gérôme Bill Hayden Matt Hoyt Steve Keister Mike Kelley William Leavitt Lee Lozano Robert Mallary Harold Mendez Henri Michaux Eric Orr Tom Rankin Deborah Remington John Singer Sargent Michael E. Smith Unica Zürn Jacqueline Kiyomi Gordon
13 notes · View notes
tunafishjournal · 2 years ago
Text
Iridescence
ir·i·des·cence | \ ˌir-ə-ˈde-sᵊn(t)s \
1: a lustrous rainbow-like play of color caused by differential refraction of light waves (as from an oil slick, soap bubble, or fish scales) that tends to change as the angle of view changes 
2: a lustrous or attractive quality or effect
I have never seen a jewel - unless you count the crown jewels, but they were set in their constrictive metal structures, 
enclosed within claustrophobic chambers behind glass, sitting silently spotlit in darkness.
Here I see living jewels, irreducibly vivid in colour, movement and noise - their very existence a celebration - 
unapologetically loud, carried on wings of a grassy green whose brightness and purity sing and revealing an intense electric blue in flight, covered modestly when at rest.
There is no elegance or sophistication in their vocal brawling, quarrelling even while courting - although that could be sweet nothings in their own tongue.
My tongue is constricted as I seek language to paint a picture of a raucous handful of feathers both fragile and larger than life itself.
And I am left with a new definition imprinted in my mind.
ir·i·des·cence | \ ˌir-ə-ˈde-sᵊn(t)s \3: Tuim (Forpus xanthopterygius)
- Ruth Callaghan do Valle (she/her), TFJ Issue One: Celebrations 
Personal |  Instagram | Twitter | YT | The Minison Project 
0 notes
mizutoyama · 5 years ago
Note
Alice, learning Ruth is Muggleborn:
Tumblr media
(Alice would finally be able to ask all the questions she has that she couldn’t ask her Muggle friends without sounding weird or revealing she’s a witch. Not to mention Alice is fascinated by the concept of religion. She has some knowledge on Catholicism because her Irish grandmother’s best friend is a priest who is also a Squib.)
And @drinkyoursoupbitch we have another member for the oblivious girls club!
What is Ruth’s relationship with her parents like? And what are her thoughts on Alice (a fellow Ravenclaw)?
Tumblr media
“Dad’s great. One of my favorite people. He’s always been there for me, like always. After Mum left, he was there. He’s always made sure that I know how much he loves me. He actually taught me how to bake all sorts of stuff, as he runs Bubbe and Zayde’s bakery back in Galway. 
“Alice is very nice. She’s a great roommate as well. We’ve discussed television shows before. She was one of the first people that I didn’t feel all that awkward with when talking to her. She was just very kind.”
Ruth’s relationship with his father is very solid, especially as her mother left when she was very young. So Ruth’s relationship with her mother is basically no nonexistent. Even as an adult, she doesn’t know if she wants to find her mother or not. 
Ruth would get along well with Alice. They could discuss muggle stuff as Ruth is muggleborn. They could also explain certain traditions to one another, especially because Ruth is Jewish. (She’s usually wearing a gold Star of David necklace). They’re also both oblivious Ravenclaws who don’t know that their guy is actually interested in them (of course, Conor is not much better in that sense). (They may also be oblivious at different points in time.) 
4 notes · View notes
reviewsandotherstuff · 5 years ago
Text
Dear Amy by Helen Callaghan. Book & Audiobook Review
Dear Amy by Helen Callaghan. Book & Audiobook Review
  Here’s a book that I started reading two years ago but I didn’t think of finishing it until recently. In fact, I didn’t even know if I was ever going to finish it because of several reasons. For example, even though the cover is really intriguing and nice, the first half of the book was quite difficult for me to follow because the writing seems a little too convoluted and the story’s pacing is…
View On WordPress
0 notes
aion-rsa · 5 years ago
Text
Channel 5’s The Deceived Ending & Plot: What Happened to Ophelia, Roisin and Michael?
https://ift.tt/3ikfgEA
Warning: contains finale spoilers for The Deceived
‘This has all been about your fragile little ego, hasn’t it?’ Ophelia told Michael in The Deceived’s final episode, and she was dead-on. Dr Michael Callaghan, played by Emmett J Scanlan (Peaky Blinders, The Fall, In the Flesh), was poison to the women around him. He lied, cheated and manipulated to conceal his inadequacies, and in the end, paid the price. With spoilers, here’s how the psychological thriller’s finale played out.
What happened to Annabelle? 
Before Michael’s affair with Ophelia (played by Emily Reid), he was cheating on his wife with another student – Annabelle Lorimer (played by Saffron Coomber). She had written the manuscript of her first novel – The Ruin – and asked him to read it. Realising it was good, and having failed to get his own first novel published, Michael stole her work, changed the title, and had it published as his own debut.
He had ended the relationship with Annabelle, telling her that his wife was too mentally unstable for him to leave and that he had to do the right thing and stay with her. When Annabelle realised the theft, she argued with Michael outside the college – a fight witnessed by Ophelia and Ruth – and eventually talked her way inside Michael and Roisin’s Cambridge home. Annabelle was looking for the copy of her manuscript she had given to Michael, which he had signed with a compliment to her, to use as proof of his theft. She told Roisin (played by Catherine Walker) about the affair and during the argument, Annabelle (presumably – it was off-screen) fell, hit her head and died. 
Knowing that reporting Annabelle’s death to the police would lead to the discovery of his manuscript theft, Michael convinced Roisin that she had no choice but to cover it up. He told her that with her history of jealousy and mental health problems, as well as a past threat she had made to one of his students, she wouldn’t be believed, so concocted a plan to get rid of the body.
Why was Ruth so convinced that Roisin was in trouble?
Because in between killing Annabelle and Michael coming home, Roisin had phoned Ruth in a panic to tell her that she’d been right about Michael’s affair and that ‘the most awful thing’ had happened. Previously, Ruth had confronted Roisin about Michael’s affairs with students but Roisin had rejected her claims and called her jealous. That’s why Ruth sent so many panicked emails when Roisin seemed to disappear off the face of the earth.
What was Michael’s plan?
Fairly baroque! It was to dispose of Annabelle’s body by faking Roisin’s death and burying Annabelle in Roisin’s coffin, then collecting Roisin’s life insurance payout and hide Roisin at her mother’s house until it was safe for the pair to leave Ireland, with Roisin travelling under a fake passport. Or at least, that’s the plan he told Roisin. Whether fleeing the country with his (un)dead wife is really the next step he foresaw in his newly flourishing literary career, who can say. 
Michael and Roisin drove Annabelle’s corpse to Ireland, where he let Roisin’s mother Mary in on the scheme, and set about faking Roisin’s death. They dressed Annabelle in Roisin’s clothes and staged a drunk smoking accident, with Mary setting fire to the body while Michael was building his alibi at the local pub. Then they buried Annabelle’s burned body under Roisin’s name, and hid Roisin in her childhood bedroom at her mother’s house. Michael had planned to sell the house and go away with Roisin travelling under a false passport. And he would have gotten away with it had it not been for that pesky kid/Cambridge student he’d impregnated.
Why did Mary go along with the plan?
To protect her daughter from being prosecuted for killing Annabelle. Mary (played by Eleanor Methven) believed Michael’s story about needing to cover up the killing because Roisin was in danger. He insinuated that Roisin had killed Annabelle in a blind rage, alluding to her past mental health episodes. Also, I don’t know if you’ve noticed, but Mary’s more than a bit scary. 
Why did Roisin go back to the house after her ‘death’?
Because her mother had told her about Ophelia’s arrival and she wanted to see for herself the girl that her husband had been having an affair with. She recognised her from the night they met in the bathroom at a college event.
So there were no ghosts then?
That’s all a matter of perspective, but no. It all works without anything supernatural going on.
Read more
TV
Blood: an engrossing thriller for fans of Broadchurch & Unforgotten
By Louisa Mellor
TV
Unforgotten series 3 writer: “we live in uncompassionate times”
By Louisa Mellor
Did Michael kill his father?
We don’t know. Hugh died suddenly after accusing Michael of being responsible for what he saw as Roisin’s suicide, and objecting to Michael’s plans to sell the family home to be renovated into a country hotel. It could have been murder or simply a coincidence.
How did Michael die?
He was strangling (pregnant-with-his-child) Ophelia – who’d uncovered his lies and was trying to convince Roisin to leave him and put things right – when Roisin saved her life by hitting Michael over the head with a brick. That made him fall through the burned-out floorboards onto the floor below, where he hit his head and died. 
What was Mary’s plan?
To frame Michael for Annabelle’s murder (because he was the only one with a motive due to the manuscript theft) and – get this – to fake Roisin’s death for a second time. This time, they pretended that Michael had dragged Roisin into the boot of his car (planting her blood there from a self-inflicted wound) and that she had never been seen again, presumed murdered. In reality, Roisin left the country travelling on her new fake passport and somehow slipped away unnoticed despite having been described several times as a famous celebrity around those parts. Michael was posthumously charged with Annabelle’s murder.
What happened to Ophelia and the baby?
They were last seen back at Cambridge one year later, when Roisin’s missing person’s case had been closed, Ophelia presumably with enough material of her own now to write a whole series of hit crime thrillers. Whether Paul Mescal’s Sean kept in touch, we don’t know but let’s imagine he did.
Where is Roisin now?
Drinking Moroccan tea and writing her next book somewhere hot and remote, possibly in North Africa by the looks of it. That’s where Annabelle’s brother tracked her down.
Why did Annabelle’s brother leave flowers on Michael’s grave?
Presumably because he’d worked out that Michael hadn’t killed his sister (even though he had stolen her book and passed it off as his own, as we saw on a poster advertising an event celebrating Annabelle’s book, the news had been made public).
Why did Annabelle’s brother track down Roisin?
Again, presumably because he’d worked out that Roisin had killed Annabelle and he wanted to confront her about it. That, or he was just a really big fan of her books and wanted to get some signed.
Will there be a second series?
While the events of this series have mostly wrapped up, creators Lisa McGee and Tobias Beer have indicated that an anthology-style second series could follow, involving some of the same characters or revolving around the same location. No second series has yet been officially announced though.
The Deceived is available to watch on Channel 5 catch-up service My 5 until September. 
The post Channel 5’s The Deceived Ending & Plot: What Happened to Ophelia, Roisin and Michael? appeared first on Den of Geek.
from Den of Geek https://ift.tt/3igV9ag
0 notes
blairemclaren · 5 years ago
Text
Dewey Ruth Death | Cause of Death - Dewey Ruth Obituary
Dewey Ruth Death | Cause of Death – Dewey Ruth Obituary
Dewey Ruth Death | Dewey Ruth Obituary – In a Facebook post  by John Westerbeck on the 25th of June 2020, Dewey Ruth has passed away. Dewey Ruth was a great friend and also liked to people around him happy.
He would really be missed by friends and family. The cause of death was not stated in the Facedbook post.
Also Read: Kate Callaghan | Cause of Death – Kate Callaghan Obituary – Death by Cancer
View On WordPress
0 notes
maxwellyjordan · 5 years ago
Text
Opinion analysis: Sharply divided bench rejects Georgia’s copyright in annotations of Georgia statutes
The decision this morning in Georgia v Public.Resource.Org resolves a technical question of copyright law, the extent to which governmental authorities can copyright (and profit from) the materials that they create. The specific question here is the copyrightability of annotations that summarize, but are not part of, the state’s body of enforceable statutes. The opinion of Chief Justice John Roberts for a 5-4 majority holds that the “government edicts” doctrine, long recognized as preventing copyright protection for judicial opinions and statutes, also applies to annotations of those statutes that are prepared at the behest of the legislature. Dissents from Justice Clarence Thomas (joined by Justice Samuel Alito and in large part by Justice Stephen Breyer) and by Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg (joined by Breyer) would have permitted Georgia to copyright those materials and retain the exclusive right to authorize their sale.
Roberts starts with a summary of the three 19th-century Supreme Court decisions that recognized the government edicts doctrine. The first of those (Wheaton v. Peters) concluded that neither the justices nor the reporter of the Supreme Court’s decisions had any protectible copyright in the opinions of the court. The second, Banks v. Manchester, considered the opinions of the Ohio Supreme Court, as well as syllabi and “head notes” explaining the substance of those opinions; following Wheaton, the Banks court explained that neither the reporter nor the judges of the Ohio court held any protectible copyright in those materials. The third was a companion case to Banks, Callaghan v. Myers, in which the Supreme Court (as Roberts summarizes it) “upheld the reporter’s copyright in several explanatory materials that the reporter had created himself. … Because the reporter was not a judge, he was free to obtain a copyright for the materials that were the result of his own intellectual labor (cleaned up).”
Roberts discerns “a straightforward rule” in those opinions, that judges “cannot be the ‘author’ of the works they prepare ‘in the discharge of their judicial duties’” (quoting Banks). For the majority, that rule applies “both to binding works (such as opinions) and to non-binding works (such as headnotes and syllabi).” Application of that rule to legislators follows logically: “If judges, acting as judges, cannot be ‘authors’ because of their authority to make and interpret the law, it follows that legislators, acting as legislators, cannot be either.” Thus, Roberts reasons: “In the same way that judges cannot be the authors of their headnotes and syllabi, legislators cannot be the authors of … their floor statements, committee reports, and proposed bills.”
With that framework in hand, the opinion turns to Georgia’s annotations. Because Georgia’s Code Revision Commission retained a private company (LEXIS) to prepare the revisions, “[t]he Copyright Act therefore deems the Commission the sole ‘author’ of the work.” In turn, because the Commission “functions as an arm of [the Georgia Legislature],” the Commission is “wield[ing] the legislature’s authority when it works with Lexis to produce the annotations.”
Having determined that it can credit legislators as preparing the annotation, the majority then considers “whether the Commission created the annotations in the ‘discharge’ of its legislative ‘duties’” (again quoting Banks). For Roberts and the majority, it is enough that the Commission prepared the annotations “under Georgia law” and that the legislature acted explicitly to publish them, even though it did not adopt them with a bicameral vote and present them to the governor for signature (as it would have done with legislation). Accordingly, the majority held that “the annotations in Georgia’s Official Code fall within the government edicts doctrine and are not copyrightable.”
The remainder of the opinion dismisses the “several grounds” on which Georgia based its claim of copyright. For example, Georgia maintained that some annotations must be copyrightable, because the act’s definition of works of authorship refers to “annotations.” Roberts points out, though, that the act “refers only to ‘annotations … which … represent an original work of authorship.’” For the majority, “[t]he whole point of the government edicts doctrine is that judges and legislators cannot serve as authors when they produce works in their official capacity.” The statutory reference proves only that “supplemental, explanatory materials are copyrightable when prepared by a private party, or a non-lawmaking official.”
Georgia also “draws a negative inference from” the act’s exclusion from copyright protection of all works prepared by officers or employees of the federal government,” an exclusion that does not extend to the states. That does not suggest to the majority that it should treat all state-created works as copyrightable. Rather, Roberts explains, Congress’ failure to extend that exclusion to the states leaves the states, unlike the federal government, “free to assert copyright in the vast majority of expressive works they produce, such as those created by their universities, libraries, tourism offices, and so on.”
The opinion closes on a more practical note, addressing Georgia’s effort to “minimiz[e] the annotations as non-binding and non-authoritative.” Roberts argues that Georgia’s “description undersells their practical significance,” pointing out that “the economy-class version of the Georgia Code,” which omits the annotations in question, includes a variety of objectionable laws that “requir[e] political candidates to pay hefty qualification fees” and “criminaliz[e] broad categories of consensual sexual conduct, … with no hint that important aspects of those laws have been held unconstitutional by the Georgia Supreme Court.” Conversely, Roberts notes, “first-class readers with access to the annotations will be assured that these laws are, in crucial respects, unenforceable relics that the legislature has not bothered to narrow or repeal.”
In the end then, as Roberts summarizes the majority’s holding, courts should not “examin[e] whether given material carries ‘the force of law,’” but instead should “ask only whether the author of the work is a judge or legislator,” because “whatever work that judge or legislator produces in the course of his judicial or legislative duties is not copyrightable.”
[Disclosure: Goldstein & Russell, P.C., whose attorneys contribute to this blog in various capacities, is counsel for the respondents in this case. The author of this post is not affiliated with the firm.]
The post Opinion analysis: Sharply divided bench rejects Georgia’s copyright in annotations of Georgia statutes appeared first on SCOTUSblog.
from Law https://www.scotusblog.com/2020/04/opinion-analysis-sharply-divided-bench-rejects-georgias-copyright-in-annotations-of-georgia-statutes/ via http://www.rssmix.com/
0 notes