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2025 Alphabet Soup – Author Edition Reading Challenge Just for Fun! It's An Alphabet Challenge! Start keeping track of your authors and by December 31, 2025 your bowls must be filled by one author for each letter of the Alphabet. Be sure to include the book title too. Details This challenge will run from January 1st, 2025 until December 31st, 2025. You can join anytime. You do not have to post a review of the book. Books can come from any genre. You do not need to link up each spoonful. Make a page or a post or a GoodReads shelf where you will keep track of your spoonfuls. I keep track of mine on my Challenge Page. Crossovers to other challenges are allowed and encouraged! It’s an alphabet challenge!!! The challenge is to read one book that has an author whose first name, middle, or last name starts with every letter of the alphabet. So there are two different ways you can set up your own A-Z Reading Challenge. A – How I plan to do it: Make a list on your blog from A-Z. Throughout the year, as you go along, add the authors with the book you read to the list. Towards the end of the year, you can check and see which letters you are missing and find authors/books to fit. OR B – Make a list now of 26 books, picking one for each letter of the alphabet. For example: A – Donna Andrews - For Duck's Sake: A Meg Langslow Mystery B – Bailey Cates - Rituals and Rolling Pins (A Magical Bakery Mystery) C – Harlan Coben - Nobody's Fool X - Diana Xarissa - Frustrated in Massachusetts (The Midlife Crisis Mysteries) Y- Maisey Yates - Hero for the Holidays (Four Corners Ranch) Z- Chad Zunker - The Wife You Know Books can be read in any order and all formats – print – e-book – and audio – are acceptable for this challenge! Ready to join?? Bloggers grab the image below and make a post about the challenge to encourage others to join! Non-bloggers you can join too! Just keep track any way you wish. You can even set up a special shelf on Goodreads.com to help you keep track! It is super easy, Just click the MY BOOKS tab at the top of the page. When that page opens just click – ADD A SHELF in the left-hand sidebar. Title it Alphabet Soup Author Edition Challenge and you are all set. As requested this challenge has been added to Storygraph. https://app.thestorygraph.com/reading_challenges/84d0f727-fbe2-4b96-891c-cf96b30bfef1 Follow Escape With Dollycas Into A Good Book as there may be special announcements made about the challenge. If you post about your books on Social Media please use the hashtag #AlphabetSoupAuthorChallenge There is a very group on Facebook for this challenge where you can share your books read and converse with others taking part in the challenge. Alphabet Soup – Author Edition – Challenge – You can share your accomplishments throughout the year there. IMPORTANT – You must fill out a form to join the challenge before joining the Facebook Group and be sure to answer the group membership questions completely or your request for membership to the group will be declined. I am asking everyone to sign up using Google Forms. Sign Up Here. This way I have your emails in case I need to contact you about any changes to the challenge or about special events. FILL OUT THIS FORM WHEN YOU COMPLETE THE CHALLENGE GOOD LUCK! Your Escape Into A Good Book Travel Agent Read the full article
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Thayer family: Stories behind their portraits
By Jonathan Monfiletto

Joseph Thayer is back in the Oliver House, right alongside his son. Actually, right off the bat, that sentence is a misnomer.
Joseph Thayer himself never lived in the Oliver House, and Joseph Thayer the painting never was on display in the Oliver House to begin with. Thanks to a grant from the Greater Hudson Heritage Network and the NYSCA/GHHN Conservation Treatment Program, and thanks to the work of conservator Klara Zold, however, Thayer's portrait now hangs in the front parlor of the Oliver House next to a portrait of his son, Joseph J. Thayer. NYSCA/GHHN had previously funded Zold's conservation of the painting of Thayer Jr. as a child.
A third portrait in the group – donated by a descendant of the Thayer family that settled in the town of Milo in Yates County in 1810 – features Thayer's wife, Semantha Bayard (as Stafford C. Cleveland's 1873 “History and Directory of Yates County” renders her name; different sources provide different spellings and versions of her name). The Yates County History Center has a goal to have Mrs. Thayer's painting conserved and displayed alongside those of her son and husband.
Of course, this occasion of having Joseph Thayer's portrait now on display (it had previously been in storage awaiting conservation) in the Oliver House has me interested in learning more about the Thayer family in general who were early settlers of Milo and the Joseph Thayer family in particular who were part of this group. Interestingly, the portrait of Joseph J. Thayer (I refer to him as Thayer Jr. on second reference, but it appears he wasn't a true junior but had a middle initial to distinguish him from his father) depicts him as a young boy – unique to the YCHC collection as a painting of a middle-class child – yet he had a whole life ahead of him at that point and went on to achieve great things, including serving in the Civil War and owning a business in the village of Penn Yan.
Meanwhile, Joseph Thayer (whom I will refer to Thayer Sr. on second reference) appears to have been involved as the contractor in the construction of “the new bridge over the Crooked Lake outlet,” according to the Yates County Chronicle of July 12, 1866 (the Main Street bridge, I would assume, but I'm not certain) and was listed as a candidate for Yates County sheriff the following year. Thayer Sr. submitted a bid to build the Clinton Street bridge – “building a stone arch bridge over Jacob's Brook,” states the Penn Yan Express of June 29, 1870 – but did not receive the contract. The following year, he was appointed county undersheriff but died a few months later.
It all started in 1810, according to Cleveland, with Simeon and Elizabeth Thayer moved from Smithfield, Madison County to Milo five years after they married. Simeon was born in Hoosic, Rensselaer County in 1782 and lived some years in Ballston Springs, Saratoga County before arriving in Smithfield. Simeon married Elizabeth Lucas, who was born in 1786, in 1805. Eventually settling on a farm on the shore of Keuka Lake five miles south of Penn Yan, the couple arrived with two sons – Jacob, born in 1806, and Joseph, born in 1808. Eleven more children followed – James, Samuel, Sally Ann, Simeon, David, William, Laura, Emeline, Reuben, Andrew, and John. “This family is remarkable from the fact that the children are all living, thirteen in number,” Cleveland wrote. “The homestead is still in the family, and all of the members are respectable citizens.” The family was also remarkable in the fact that – before the term was coined, which apparently happened in 1931 by James Truslow Adams – its members lived the American Dream. According to Cleveland, Simeon Thayer came to Yates County as a poor man, sharing a yoke of oxen with another man and having one dollar in his pocket. Half of the dollar paid for a bushel of corn, and the other half paid for a gallon of whiskey to raise a log house (how you raise a house with whiskey, I don't know; was the whiskey payment for the builder of the house?). Nevertheless, Simeon Thayer's “children and grandchildren are now paying taxes on a thousand acres of land in Milo,” Cleveland wrote.
Born July 22, 1808, Thayer Sr. married Semantha Bayard – born in 1818 the daughter of Joshua Bayard – on March 29, 1838. Coming from a family of 13 children, Thayer Sr. and his wife had just one child – son Joseph J. Thayer, born November 30, 1842. In turn, Thayer Jr. married Mary F. Clark – born 1851 in Varick, Seneca County – on April 10, 1879 and had just one child, a daughter. Virginia P. Thayer was born 1885 and died September 7, 1879; she is buried in Fayette, Seneca County.
While Joseph Thayer is listed as the contractor on the bridge over the outlet, an item in the Express of March 13, 1867 shows Joseph J. Thayer being paid $15.00 for “labor on bridge.” It was difficult to distinguish between Thayer Sr. and Thayer Jr. in my search through the digitized newspapers, so maybe Thayer Jr. was the contractor on the bridge – he would have been in his mid-20s at the time – or maybe be assisted his father in the work. On the note of difficulty distinguishing between father and son, the Chronicle of August 29, 1867 lists Joseph Thayer as a candidate for sheriff in that fall's election, but an item signed by Joseph J. Thayer in the Chronicle of September 26, 1867 states he is not a candidate and the report is false. Nevertheless, both Thayer Sr. and Thayer Jr. seem to have been actively involved in civic and political causes around Yates County and ran for several local offices each. Thayer Sr. served as undersheriff, by appointment, while Thayer Jr. served as Milo town clerk in the 1890s.
In August 1864, Co. C of the 59th New York State Militia volunteered for 100 days of service and was mustered on August 25 to become Co. H. of the 58th NGSNY (National Guard of the State of New York). With Thayer Jr. among them, the soldiers of this unit served as prison guards at Elmira and conducted drafted men and substitutes to the front. Twenty two years old at the time, Thayer Jr. and his comrades were mustered out at Elmira on December 3, 1864.
Prior to being called up for military service during the Civil War, Thayer Jr. formed a partnership with E.B. Bunnell in a grocery store that was located on Main Street in Penn Yan. An advertisement for the partnership touting “New Firm and New Grocery Store” ran for the first time in the Chronicle of June 23, 1864 and appeared in the newspaper nearly weekly for nearly a year – a time period that would have encompassed Thayer Jr.'s service. On May 4, 1865, an item titled “Noticed of Dissolution” appeared, as Bunnell & Thayer announced it had dissolved by mutual consent. In a separate item, Thayer Jr. stated he would continue the business on his own. Meanwhile, Bunnell said he would go to work for the dry goods establishment operated by Myron Hamlin and his sons. Thayer Jr. closed his business altogether three years later, as announced in the Chronicle of April 29, 1869.
Subsequently, as announced in the Chronicle of July 27, 1870, Thayer Jr. became the clerk of the Benham House, “rapidly gaining popularity with the traveling public who become guests of the house.” Meanwhile, when Thayer Sr. was appointed undersheriff, the Chronicle of January 12, 1871 called the moment “handsome recognition of one of the staunchest Bolters in the County” – a Bolter being someone who “bolted” from the Republican party ticket, in 1867 according to this item, and rejected the party's candidates and platform. Thayer Sr. apparently had returned to the Republican party to run for sheriff in 1870, seeing the major party support as his best chance to get elected. Nevertheless, “This shows that the Bolters are right good fellows after all,” the newspaper stated.
Thayer Sr.'s tenure as undersheriff was brief. On May 2, 1871, at 4 in the afternoon, the undersheriff was struck by paralysis (perhaps a stroke) while on the sidewalk in front of the Jones & Lown store. Though he revived somewhat soon after, he died that evening at age 63. “He was not born in this town, but nearly all his life was spent here, and he was well known to the people of Yates county. He was a quiet, peaceable citizen, of good habits and good character,” the Chronicle of May 4, 1871 eulogized. “Many friends and a large circle of relatives mourn his decease.” His wife Semantha survived him for another 11 years, dying in 1882.
Coincidentally, Thayer Jr. also died of paralysis at nearly the same age, being stricken the morning of June 10, 1910 and dying later that day. He died at his home in Waterloo, Seneca County, having moved first to Varick and then to Waterloo a few years before his death. His wife Mary survived for 26 more years, dying in 1936.


#historyblog#history#museum#archives#american history#us history#local history#newyork#yatescounty#pennyan#milony#thayer#family#portrait#painting
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THE 100 GREATEST DIRECTORS IN THE HISTORY OF WORLD CINEMA! (@INDIES)
.Roman Polanski
.David Lean
.Alfred Hitchcock
.Frank Capra
.Elia Kazan
.Dasari Narayana Rao
.Fred Zinnemann
.Milos Forman
.Kamal Amrohi
.Peter Jackson
.John Huston
.Billy Wilder
.Frank Lloyd
.Roland Joffe
.Lekh Tandon
.Asit Sen
.B.R. Chopra
.Edgar Wright
.Chris Columbus
.Ernst Lubitsch
.Alain Resnais
.Guru Dutt
.George Cukor
.Ivan Reitman
.Mahesh Kaul
.Jayant Desai
.Richard Curtis
.Robert Clouse
.Basu Bhattacharya
.Maurice Pialat
.David MacDonald
.Mel Gibson
.Anthony Minghella
.Jamie Uys
.Joseph Mankiewicz
.Pierre Chenal
.David Fincher
.Ken McMullen
.Jeremy Leven
.Mary McGuckian
.Alfonso Cuaron
.Rob Reiner
.Delbert Mann
.Louis Malle
.John Cromwell
.Charles Chaplin
.A. Bhimsingh
.Jean Delannoy
.Mervyn LeRoy
.Nancy Meyers
.William Wyler
.Bhargava (Kannada)
.Jonathan Lynn
.Peter Weir
.Robert Rossen
.Roger Michell
.Robert Zemeckis
.Robert Z. Leonard
.J. Lee Thompson
.Robert Wise
.Jerome Hill
.Anthony Quinn
.Jacques Audiard
.Agnes Jaoui
.Mervyn LeRoy
.Roland Emmerich
.Wallace Worsley
.Stephen Herek
.Blake Edwards
.Andrew Fleming
.John Frankenheimer
.Claude Autant-Lara
.Kenneth Branagh
.Lasse Halstrom
.Ralph Nelson
.Andrei Tarkovsky
.Robert Stevenson
.John Madden
.Stanley Kramer
.Olivier Dahan
.Norman Z. McLeod
.Mike Newell
.Raymond Rouleau
.Michael Curtiz
.Nora Ephron
.Arthur Hiller
.Vittorio De Sica
.Bernardo Bertolucci
.Sohrab Modi
.John McTiernan
.Steven Spielberg
.Tay Garnett
.Abel Gance
.Richard Linklater
.Merian C. Cooper
.Michael Bay
.Renny Harlin
.Victor Fleming
.Phil Karlson
.Satyajit Ray
.David Yates
.John Guillermin
.Oliver Stone
.James Cameron
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Joanna Ampil as Grizabella, in 'Memory'; plus, Ellie Young as Victoria, Nicholas Pound as Deuteronomy, Luke Fraser Yates as Munkustrap, Elizabeth Futter as Jellylorum, and Andrew Keelan as Gus.
International tour 2019, at the Manila press event in November (X).
#international tour#2019 international tour#s: memory ii#c: grizabella#c: victoria#c: jellylorum#c: gus#c: deuteronomy#c: munkustrap#joanna ampil#ellie young#nicholas pound#luke fraser yates#elizabeth futter#andrew keelan
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Patriots placing C David Andrews & LB Josh Uche on IR, promote three from practice squad
Patriots placing C David Andrews & LB Josh Uche on IR, promote three from practice squad -@ShawMellors

First reported by Field Yates, the Patriots have placed C David Andrews and LB Josh Uche on IR.
https://twitter.com/FieldYates/status/1309951934552567808?s=20
Both players were ruled out of Sunday’s game and now will miss at least three weeks. Andrews is a huge loss for the offensive front, there was some discussion that Andrews may attempt to snap using his left hand, but now he heads…
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Save Writing NSW
An open letter to Create NSW and the NSW Minister for the Arts
We, as writers and active members of the literary community, were dismayed by Create NSW’s decision not to grant Writing NSW Multi-Year Organisations Funding in their latest round, despite the fact that Writing NSW was recommended for funding.
This decision demonstrates the ongoing devaluation of literature within the Australian arts funding landscape. We know literature is the most popular artform in the country, with 87% of Australian reading some form of literary work in any given year, yet in this round Create NSW offered only 5.7% of their ongoing funding to literature organisations.
The decision to defund Writing NSW carries a particular sting. Writing NSW is the leading organisation representing writers in a state with a long literary history and one that is home to many of Australia’s leading publishers, writers, literary agents and other core participants in the Australian literary industry.
Writing NSW is an important stepping-stone for writers at the beginning of their careers, providing high quality professional development programs, and it also employs emerging and established writers to deliver and lead these programs. For decades the organisation has provided high-quality courses, seminars, workshops, festivals, events, grants and literary prizes. In putting such programs at risk, Create NSW is jeopardising both an entry point and an ongoing support system for writers.
Macquarie University research shows that the average income of an Australian author from their practice is $12,900. The current economic crisis caused by the coronavirus pandemic makes the situation of writers even more precarious. Writing NSW offers key employment opportunities to writers, through teaching, publication, speaking engagements and both curatorial and judging positions. The removal of these opportunities will mean many writers will not be able to maintain the other income streams that support their writing careers.
The removal of $175,000 from a single source would be catastrophic for any business – not-for-profit or otherwise. For a government funding body to enact such a blunt economic withdrawal in the midst of a global pandemic and without concern for the economic flow-on effect to hundreds of industry professionals is deeply distressing.
We call on Create NSW to reverse this decision and ask them to reveal their future strategies for arts funding and how they plan to rectify the disparity in funding between other funded artforms and literature.
As writers, we will never accept the loss of a vibrant, essential cultural network such as Writing NSW.
What you can do We invite anyone affected by Create NSW’s decision – writers, publishers, literary agents, illustrators, readers alike – to co-sign this letter. You can copy and customise this letter to draft a version from your own point of view on this matter to send to a Member of Parliament.
To co-sign this letter, add your name here: shorturl.at/dERX6
Signatories
Pip Smith, Writer, creative writing teacher Sam Twyford-Moore, Writer and arts administrator Fiona Wright, Writer, editor, critic, reader Gabrielle Tozer, Author, writer, editor Brigid Mullane, Editor Jules Faber, Author, Illustrator Dr Christopher Richardson, Author and academic Liz Ledden, Author, podcaster, book reviewer Kate Tracy Ashley Kalagian Blunt, Writer, reviewer, reader Julie Paine, Writer Nick Tapper, Editor Belinda Castles, Writer and academic Simon Veksner, Writer Amanda Ortlepp, Writer, reader, reviewer, High School English Teacher Bronwyn Birdsall, Writer, editor Robin Riedstra, Writer, reviewer, reader, English teacher Dr Delia Falconer, Writer, critic, academic Robert McDonald, Author, writer, creative writing teacher Dr Kathryn Heyman, Author Wai Chim, Author Kirsten Krauth, Writer, editor Tricia Dearborn, Poet, writer, editor Dr Mireille Juchau, Writer Gail Jones, Writer Dr Jeff Sparrow, Writer, editor, academic Linda Jaivin, Writer, editor, translator Adara Enthaler, Poet, editor, literary arts manager Keighley Bradford, Writer, editor, arts and festival administrator Nicole Priest, Reader and aspiring writer Shamin Fernando, Writer Andrew Pippos, Writer Bianca Nogrady, Writer and journalist James Bradley, Writer Ali Jane Smith, Writer Dr Eleanor Limprecht Idan Ben-Barak, Writer Jennifer Mills, Writer Nicole Hayes, Writer, podcaster Michelle Starr, Writer/journalist Phillipa McGuinness, Writer and publisher Vanessa Berry, Writer and academic Blake Ayshford, Screenwriter Emily Maguire, Writer Sarah Lambert, Screenwriter Anwen Crawford, Writer Sarah Bassiuoni, Screenwriter Jackson Ryan, Writer, journalist, academic Simon Thomsen, Journalist, editor, other wordy stuff Ivy Shih, Writer Miro Bilbrough, Writer, filmmaker, screenwriting teacher, script editor Graham Davidson, Writer, artist, festival director Christos Tsiolkas, Writer JZ Ting, Writer, lawyer Susan Francis, Writer, teacher Suneeta Peres da Costa, Writer Dr Harriet Cunningham, Writer, critic, journalist Adele Dumont, Writer, reader Sheree Strange, Writer, book reviewer, book seller Phil Robinson, Reader Ashleigh Meikle, Reader, writer, book blogger Naomi RIddle, Writer, editor Cathal Gwatkin-Higson, Writer, book seller Hannah Carroll Chapman, Screenwriter Angela Meyer, Writer, editor Steve Blunt, Reader, supporter Ambra Sancin, Writer, arts administrator Michelle Baddiley, Writer, reader, archive producer Dinuka McKenzie, Writer, reader Catherine C. Turner, Writer, reader, freelance editor and publisher, arts worker Hilary Davidson, Writer, poet, academic, reader Dr Eleanor Hogan, Writer Nicola Robinson, Commissioning Editor Kim Wilson, Screenwriter Jane Nicholls, Freelance writer and editor Lisa Kenway, Writer Virginia Peters, Writer Sarah Sasson, Physician-writer and reader Dr Joanna Nell, Writer Laura Clarke Author / Copywriter Nicole Reddy, Screenwriter Anna Downes, Writer Sharon Livingstone, Writer, editor, reader Lily Mulholland, Writer, screenwriter, technical editor Benjamin Dodds, Poet, reviewer, teacher Markus Zusak, Writer Alexandria Burnham, Writer, screenwriter Sam Coley, Writer Marian McGuinness, Writer Selina McGrath, Artist Adeline Teoh Natasha Rai, Writer Catherine Ferrari, Reader Jessica White, Writer & academic Zoe Downing, Writer, reader, creative writing student Amanda Tink, Writer, researcher, reader Lisa Nicol, Children's author, screenwriter, copywriter Aurora Scott, Writer Gillian Polack, Writer, academic Susan Lever, Critic and writer Denise Kirby, Writer Michele Seminara, Poet & editor Meredith Curnow, Publisher, Penguin Random House David Ryding, Arts Manager Catherine Hill Genevieve Buzo, Editor Hugo Wilcken DJ Daniels, Writer Linda Vergnani, Freelance journalist, writer and editor Tony Spencer-Smith, Author, writing trainer & editor Dr Viki Cramer, Freelance writer and editor Petronella McGovern, Author, freelance writer and editor Jacqui Stone, Writer and editor Talia Horwitz, Writer, reader & writing student Sophie Ambrose, Publisher, Penguin Random House Rebecca Starford, Publishing director, KYD; editor and writer David Blumenstein, Writer, artist Rashida Tayabali, Freelance writer Sheila Ngoc Pham, Writer, editor and producer Rosalind Gustafson, Writer Alan Vaarwerk, Editor, Kill Your Darlings Gillian Handley, Editor, journalist, writer Karina Machado Isabelle Yates, Commissioning Editor, Penguin Random House Michelle Barraclough, Writer Natalie Scerra, Writer Melanie Myers, Writer, editor and Creative Writing teacher Emily Lawrence, Aspiring Writer Nicola Aken, Screenwriter Jennifer Nash, Librarian, writer Clare Millar, Writer and editor Kathryn Knight, Editor, Penguin Random House Linda Funnell, Editor, reviewer, tutor, Newtown Review of Books Stacey Clair, Editor, writer, former events/projects producer at Queensland Writers Centre Virginia Muzik, Writer, copyeditor, proofreader, aspiring author Lisa Walker, Writer Sarah Morton, Copywriter, aspiring author, Member of Writing NSW Board Laura Russo, Writer and editor Vivienne Pearson, Freelance writer Justin Ractliffe, Publishing Director, Penguin Random House Australia James Ley, Contributing Editor, Sydney Review of Books Alison Urquhart, PublisherPenguin Random House Debra Adelaide, Author and associate professor of creative writing, University of Technology Sydney Magdalena Ball, Writer, Reviewer, Compulsive Reader Anna Spargo-Ryan, Writer, writing teacher, editor, reader Charlie Hester, Social media & project officer, Queensland Writers Centre Mandy Beaumont, Writer, researcher and reviewer Chloe Barber-Hancock, Writer, reader, pre-service teacher Dr Patrick Mullins, Academic and writer Wendy Hanna, Screenwriter Chloe Warren Dianne Masri, Social Media Consultant Jane Gibian, Writer, librarian, reader Dr Airlie Lawson, Academic and writer Karen Andrews, Writer, teacher, reader Tim Coronel, General manager, Small Press Network and Industry adjunct lecturer, University of Melbourne Tommy Murphy, Playwright and screenwriter Evlin DuBose, Editor, writer, screenwriter, director, poet, UTS's Vertigo Magazine Tony Maniaty, Writer Emma Ashmere, Writer, reader, teacher Alicia Gilmore, Writer Suzanne O'Sullivan, Publisher, Hachette Australia Jacqui DentWriter, Content Strategist Rachel Smith, Writer Intan Paramaditha, Writer Cassandra Wunsch, Director TasWriters (The Tasmanian Writers Centre) Meera Atkinson Eileen Chong, Poet, Writer, Educator Debra Tidball, Author, reviewer Beth Spencer, Author, poet, reader Lou Pollard, Comedy writer, blogger Bronwyn Stuart/Tilley, Author and program coordinator, Writers SA Gemma Patience, Writer, illustrator, reviewer Amarlie Foster, Writer, teacher Dr Felicity Plunkett, writer Angela Betzien Drew Rooke, Journalist and author Michael Mazengarb, Journalist RenewEconomy Katrina Roe, Children's author, broadcaster, audiobook narrator Liz Doran, Screenwriter Arnold Zable, Writer. Tom Langshaw, Editor, Penguin Random House Brooke Maddison Monica O'Brien, ProducerAmbience Entertainment Jacinta Dimase, Literary AgentJacinta Dimase Management Jane Novak, Literary AgentJane Novak Literary Agency Sarah Hollingsworth, Arts Organisation ManagerMarketing and Communications Manager, Writers Victoria Barbara Temperton, Writer Sandra van Doorn, Publisher Red Paper Kite Alex Eldridge, Writer Karen Beilharz, Writer, editor, comic creator Esther Rivers, Writer, editor, poet Jane Pochon, Board Member, lawyer and reader Zoe Walton, Publisher, Penguin Random House Eliza Twaddell Alison Green, CEO, Board Member, Pantera Press Emma Rafferty, Editor Sarah Swarbrick, Writer Dayne Kelly, Literary Agent, RGM Léa Antigny, Head of Publicity and Communications, Pantera Press Jenny Green, Finance, Pantera Press Sarah Begg, Writer Mark Harding, Writer, Brand Manager, Social Media and Content Specialist Shanulisa Prasad, Bookseller Katy McEwen, Rights Manager, Pantera Press Olivia Fricot, Content Writer/Bookseller, Booktopia Jack Peck, Writer, Open Genre Group Convenor, Writing NSW, Retired Kathy Skantzos, Writer, Editor Serene Conneeley, Author, Editor Kerry Littrich, Writer Merran Hughes, Creative Cassie Watson, Writer Lisa Seltzer, Copywriter, Social Media Manager and Marketing Consultant Gemma Noon, Writer and Librarian Tanya Tabone, Reader Laura Franks, Reader, Editor, Writer Dani Netherclift, Writer Who to contact We urge you to join us in advocating for Writing NSW and the state of funding for Australian literature, by contacting Create NSW, your NSW Member of Parliament, and the NSW Minister for the Arts.
Chris Keely Executive Director, Create NSW Email: [email protected]
The Hon. Don Harwin, MLC Phone: (02) 8574 7200 Email: [email protected]
Who to else to contact
The Hon. (Walt) Walter Secord, MLC Shadow Minister for the Arts Phone: (02) 9230 2111 Email: [email protected] Ms. Cate Faehrmann, MLC Greens representative for Arts, Music, Night-Time Economy and Culture Phone: (02) 9230 3771 Email: [email protected] A full list of names and contact details for NSW State MPs is available here.
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In 1863, Mississippi farmer Newt Knight serves as a medic for the Confederate Army. Opposed to slavery, Knight would rather help the wounded than fight the Union. After his nephew dies in battle, Newt returns home to Jones County to safeguard his family but is soon branded an outlaw deserter. Forced to flee, he finds refuge with a group of runaway slaves hiding out in the swamps. Forging an alliance with the slaves and other farmers, Knight leads a rebellion that would forever change history. Credits: TheMovieDb. Film Cast: Newton Knight: Matthew McConaughey Rachel: Gugu Mbatha-Raw Moses Washington: Mahershala Ali Serena Knight: Keri Russell Daniel: Jacob Lofland Sumrall: Sean Bridgers Lieutenant Barbour: Brad Carter Miss Ellie: Jane McNeill Prosecuting Attorney: Gary Grubbs Jasper: Christopher Berry Amos Deason: Joe Chrest Quitman: David Jensen Injured Soldier: Kurt Krause Confederate Color Guard: Carlton Caudle Freedman 1: Martin Bats Bradford Matthew Yates: Matt Lintz Mary: Kerry Cahill Annie: Jessica Collins Confederate Soldier: Juan Gaspard Junie Lee: Liza J. Bennett Polling Station Clerk: David Maldonado Schoolgirl: Serenity Neil Chester: Lawrence Turner Mrs. Deason: Lara Grice Col. Robert Lowry: Wayne Pére Farmer 1: Jim Klock Town Folk: Emily Bossak Sergeant: P.J. Marshall Third Man: Ritchie Montgomery Stillman Coleman: Mattie Liptak Aunt Sally: Jill Jane Clements Col. McLemore: Thomas Francis Murphy Old Man: Johnny McPhail Lt. Barbour: Bill Tangradi First Man: William Mark McCullough Edward James – Cotton Field Worker: Sam Malone Boy at Alice Hotel: Kylen Davis Farmer 2: Will Beinbrink George: Troy Hogan Confederate Soldier: Cy Parks Ward: Dane Rhodes Second Woman / Yeoman Farmer: Lucy Faust Yeoman Girl: Stella Allen Older Coleman Brother: Cade Mansfield Cooksey Maroon (uncredited): Tahj Vaughans Davis Knight: Brian Lee Franklin Film Crew: Casting: Debra Zane Production Design: Philip Messina Costume Design: Louise Frogley Editor: Juliette Welfling Producer: Jon Kilik Supervising Art Director: Dan Webster Editor: Pamela Martin Director of Photography: Benoît Delhomme Producer: Scott Stuber Executive Producer: Oren Aviv Set Decoration: Larry Dias Writer: Gary Ross Executive Producer: Robert Simonds Executive Producer: Robin Bissell Art Direction: Andrew Max Cahn Sound Re-Recording Mixer: Paul Hsu Executive Producer: Wang Zhonglei Executive Producer: Stuart Ford Prosthetics: Gary Archer Foley: Marko Costanzo Makeup Department Head: Nikoletta Skarlatos Executive Producer: Wang Zhongjun Co-Producer: David Pomier First Assistant Director: Eric Heffron Assistant Costume Designer: Meagan McLaughlin Foley: Eric Milano Second Unit Director: Garrett Warren Visual Effects Editor: Gershon Hinkson Executive Producer: Michael Bassick Makeup Artist: Kris Evans Executive Producer: Bruce Nachbar “B” Camera Operator: Jerry M. Jacob Executive Producer: Matt Jackson Additional Camera: Michael Watson Executive Producer: Christopher Woodrow Hairstylist: Felicity Bowring Casting: Meagan Lewis Music Editor: John Finklea Executive Producer: Jerry Ye Set Designer: Randall D. Wilkins Still Photographer: Murray Close Sound Re-Recording Mixer: Mike Prestwood Smith First Assistant “A” Camera: Chad Rivetti Special Effects Coordinator: David K. Nami Hair Department Head: Jules Holdren Key Hair Stylist: Melizah Anguiano Wheat Set Costumer: Adriane Bennett Costume Supervisor: Carlane Passman Prosthetic Makeup Artist: Matthew O’Toole Visual Effects Producer: Lisa Beroud Key Hair Stylist: Theraesa Rivers Executive Producer: Russell Levine Additional Camera: Greg Morris Set Costumer: Tom Cummins Art Department Coordinator: Wylie Griffin Supervising Dialogue Editor: Branka Mrkic Visual Effects Supervisor: Kelly Port Second Assistant “C” Camera: Griffin McCann Set Costumer: Lisa Magee Wigmaker: Khanh Trance Art Direction: Chris Craine Gaffer: Bob Bates Original Music Composer: Nicholas Britell First Assistant “C” Camera: Wade Whitley Co-Producer: Diana Alvarez Second Second Assistant Director: Marvin Williams “A” Came...
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Hollywood Reporter, October 30
Cover: Fighting for the Future of Film

Page 2: Contents

Page 4: Contents

Page 11: The Report -- AT&T’s shadow war resets as activist investors claim wins
Page 12: Why Wall Street doesn’t mind cable’s “Dark” pay TV future
Page 14: When movies shift over to streaming: Bonuses just go out the window, When will Netflix finally end its content cash burn?
Page 16: $0 is magic number for new streamers: It’s About Scale, Wanna Boost Box Office -- host a Q&A
Page 18: Box Office, Broadcast TV, Cable TV, Billboard Hot 100, Billboard 200
Page 20: Tribute to Robert Evans -- William Friedkin
Page 21: Rose McGowan, Joe Eszterhas, Phillip Noyce, Christine Peters
Page 22: Feinberg Forecast -- Nominations, Britannias and Oscar Prom in October -- Best Picture -- The Irishman, 1917, Actor -- Matt Damon, Actress -- Scarlett Johansson, Director -- Greta Gerwig, Original Screenplay -- Us
Page 24: 7 Days of Deals -- How Endemol turns Banijay into a truly global TV powerhouse, It’s a Bird It’s a Plane It’s a lot more spinoffs, Rights Available -- Thumbs by Sean Lewis, Tiny Imperfections by Alli Frank and Asha Youmans, Film -- Rachel Weisz, Bill Condon, Craig Mazin and Ted Elliot to develop a Pirates of the Caribbean reboot, Shia LaBeouf and Vanessa Kirby, Kelly Marie Tran
Page 25: Justin Bieber, Television -- Dwyane Wade, Amy Poehler, Johnny Galecki and Anthony Del Broccolo, Alia Shawkat and Jeff Bridges, Digital -- Jared Harris and Lee Pace to star in Apple+ space drama Foundation, Beau Willimon, Freddie Prinze Jr., Joseph Mawle will play the main villain on Amazon’s Lord of the Rings series, Rep Sheet -- Gwyneth Paltrow, Ozuna, Ross Mathews, Chris Diamantopoulos, Ayesha Curry, Next Big Thing -- Ana de la Reguera
Page 27: Why Hollywood still doesn’t have a consensus presidential candidate
Page 28: Long before #MeToo a showbiz secretary skewered Selznick
Page 29: The unconventional path of Prince’s memoir -- Esther Newberg, Ian Schrager returns to the Sunset Strip
Page 30: About Town -- Governors Awards -- Laura Dern and Isabella Rossellini and Kyle MacLachlan, Jennifer Lopez, Jon Hamm and Olivia Wilde, David Lynch, Tom Hanks, Leonardo DiCaprio and Quentin Tarantino, Lina Wertmuller, Charlize Theron and John Lithgow and Regina King and Damon Lindelof, Wes Studi and Christian Bale, Geena Davis and Jim Gianopulos, Mark Twain Prize -- Elaine and Dave Chappelle, Tiffany Haddish, Morgan Freeman and Chris Tucker, Nancy Pelosi, Common and daughter Omoye Assata Lynn
Page 31: Britannia Awards -- Donald Glover and Phoebe Waller-Bridge, Kerry Washington and Lupita Nyong’o, John C. Reilly, Taron Egerton and Dexter Fletcher, Norman Lear, Jordan Peele and wife Chelsea Peretti, Michael Howells and wife Courtney Howells and Matthew Wiseman and wife Lisa, Jackie Chan and Vin Diesel, Steve Coogan and Chantal Rickards and Hilary Roberts, Lorne Michaels, Bradley Cooper with daughter Lea De Seine Shayk Cooper, Michael Che and Colin Jost
Page 32: Yes I Did Say That! Rachel Maddow, Bob Iger, Ted Mundorff, Tyler Perry, Kelly Bachman, Martha Stewart on Felicity Huffman, Amanda Knox on Lady Gaga, Kurt Sutter, Flashback -- Arnold Schwarzenegger in 2015
Page 34: Rambling Reporter -- Josh Brolin avenges Santa Monica crime fighters, Strauss Zelnick goes topless in youth pill ad, how Koch went from Howard to Hawk, the day Taika Waititi made little Archie Yates cry
Page 35: Hitched, Hatched, Hired, Power Dining -- Lenny Kravitz, Haim Saban, Maria Shriver and son Patrick Schwarzenegger, Lindsey Vonn, Bob Simonds, Jake Gyllenhaal, Andrew Garfield, Jeffrey Katzenberg, Joel Silver, Gary Gilbert, Natalie Portman and Ellen Pompeo double date, Jason Momoa, Lea Michele, Harrison Ford
Page 36: The Business -- Mimi Leder
Page 38: Who broke NDAs for Bombshell
Page 42: Who Wants to Take on Fox News?
Page 44: My plea for a best blockbuster Oscar
Page 45: Behind the Screen -- The sound of a de-aged De Niro
Page 48: Style -- Ralph Lauren shares insights about his life and work on the eve of the HBO documentary Very Ralph
Page 50: The “Shape Shifter” costumes of Harriet
Page 52: Dan Aykroyd’s haunted hotspots
Page 54: Cover Story -- The Executive Roundtable
Page 62: Welcome to the Flim Flam Film Fest
Page 66: Awards Season -- 42 movies in on Oscar
Page 70: Making of Marriage Story
Page 74: Reviews -- The Morning Show
Page 75: Social Climbers -- Actors -- Zac Efron, Kristen Bell, Scripted TV -- Rick and Morty, TV Personalities -- Trevor Noah
Page 77: Backlot -- Rob Riggle’s plans to play nice as awards show host
Page 78: Dr. Mehmet Oz on his show’s health, past mistakes and his future
Page 80: 90 Years of THR -- In 1984 Terminator arrived and (kept coming back)
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Dungeons & Dragons Starter Set by Wizards RPG Team
Clean Code by Robert C. Martin
How to Win Friends & Influence People by Dale Carnegie
Code: The Hidden Language of Computer Hardware and Software by Charles Petzold
Feeling Good: The New Mood Therapy by David D. Burns
No More Mr Nice Guy by Robert A. Glover
Introduction to Algorithms, 3rd Edition by Thomas H. Cormen
Starting Strength by Mark Rippetoe
Player’s Handbook (Dungeons & Dragons) by Wizards RPG Team
C Programming Language, 2nd Edition by Brian W. Kernighan, Dennis M. Ritchie
Thinking, Fast and Slow by Daniel Kahneman
JavaScript: The Good Parts by Douglas Crockford
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Design Patterns by Erich Gamma
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Code Complete by Steve McConnell
The Bogleheads’ Guide to Investing by Taylor Larimore
A Short History of Nearly Everything by Bill Bryson
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Models: Attract Women Through Honesty by Mark Manson
Ready Player One by Ernest Cline
Superintelligence: Paths, Dangers, Strategies by Nick Bostrom
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A Universe from Nothing by Lawrence M. Krauss
Batman Vol. 1: The Court of Owls (The New 52) by Scott Snyder
Influence: The Psychology of Persuasion, Revised Edition by Robert B. Cialdini
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Command and Control by Eric Schlosser
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Getting Things Done by David Allen
Working Effectively with Legacy Code by Michael Feathers
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Misquoting Jesus by Bart D. Ehrman
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Trump: The Art of the Deal by Donald J. Trump, Tony Schwartz
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Snow Crash by Neal Stephenson
Man’s Search for Meaning by Viktor E. Frankl
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The Mind Illuminated by Ph.D.) Culadasa (John Yates
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Ready Player One: A Novel by Ernest Cline
The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up by Marie Kondō
Mindfulness in Plain English by Bhante Henepola Gunaratana
Manufacturing Consent by Edward S. Herman, Noam Chomsky
The Way of Kings (The Stormlight Archive) by Brandon Sanderson
Don’t Make Me Think, Revisited by Steve Krug
1491: New Revelations of the Americas Before Columbus by Charles C. Mann
Saga, Vol. 1 by Brian K Vaughan
The Practice of System and Network Administration, Second Edition by Thomas A. Limoncelli
A People’s History of The United States 1492- Present by Howard Zinn
Dune by Frank Herbert
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The Baby Owner’s Manual by Louis Borgenicht M.D., Joe Borgenicht
House of Leaves by Mark Z. Danielewski
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On Food and Cooking by Harold McGee
Sex at Dawn by Christopher Ryan, Cacilda Jetha
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Old Man’s War by John Scalzi
The Devil in the White City by Erik Larson
Everyone Poops by Taro Gomi
What’s the Matter with Kansas? by Thomas Frank
Escape from Camp 14 by Blaine Harden
The Anxiety and Phobia Workbook by Edmund Bourne PhD
How to Read a Book by Mortimer J. Adler, Charles Van Doren
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Elements of Style by William; White, E. B. Strunk
Why Evolution Is True by Jerry A. Coyne
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Rock, mosh e crowdsurf: os ingredientes orgânicos no seu habitat natural - Dia 3 do Vodafone Paredes de Coura 2022 | Reportagem

A tarde estava bem apetecível para uma estadia à beira rio até mais tarde e até por isso foi impressionante a maré de gente logo às 18:30h para o concerto de abertura do palco principal. Algo em total contraste com o dia anterior no mesmo horário.
Finalmente o artista britânico consegue estar presente no festival, em 2019 não pôde estar presente. Yellow Days é o projeto de George van den Broek que se fez acompanhar por uma banda apresentou um som muito suave, e melodioso a fazer lembrar a presença de Boy Pablo neste mesmo festival em 2019. Tanto pela inesperada adesão de público como no estilo musical.

George van den Broek finalmente em Coura [mais fotos clicar aqui] Donny Benét regressou ao Minho, tocou no Vira Pop em 2019, e tocou em formato trio acompanhado por músicos no saxofone e bateria. Com um som sensual, dançável e alicerçado em batidas eletrónicas fizeram uma performance agradável no segundo concerto do dia no palco secundário. Um regresso positivo deste australiano no qual seguramente terá ganho mais alguns fãs.
Shabaka Hutchings, Max Hallett e Dan Leavers do trio britânico The Comet is Coming são explosivos e perante a enchente brilharam com um som poderoso no qual é cozinhada uma mistura de jazz, com eletrónica e rock psicadélico entre outras inspirações.

Shabaka Hutchings dos The Comet Is Coming [mais fotos clicar aqui] O rock norte-americano (na noite em dose dupla) chegou no momento certo para aquecer as almas numa altura em que a temperatura começava a descer rapidamente, primeiramente foram os Parquet Courts a dar cartas. Num dos melhores concertos do dia, será igualmente um dos melhores do contexto de todo o festival, a banda faz questão de mostrarem o orgulho nova-iorquino, no entanto, a imagem do mapa mundo que estava projetada atrás indica que são uma formação de alcance mundial.
Com o seu indie rock, são uma banda perfeitamente alinhada com o espírito musical mais íntimo do festival.

Sean Yeaton dos Parquet Cours [mais fotos clicar aqui] A partir do tema "Almost Had to Start a Fight/In and Out of Patience" a ebulição subiu de tom e presenciei uma espécie de masterclass de como ser uma banda alternativa em palco dada por Andrew Savage, Austin Brown, Sean Yeaton e Max Savage. Encantados com o ambiente, cantarolaram de improviso "Its Magic you know" num momento que deu para uns arrepios. Eles estavam emocionados com a experiência courense e o público estava em sintonia.
Os Turnstile entraram em palco uns minutinhos atrasados só que isso não foi impeditivo de entraram a todo o vapor. O rock não está morto e a par dos seus conterrâneos Parquet Courts provaram-no de forma excelsa. Os ingredientes musicais são mais virados para inspirações de hardcore punk e a efervescência do vocalista Brendan Yates foi bem visível, tanto no modo como vive a sua música como no jeito que interage com a audiência. Foi uma jarda épica, mais uma, vivida numa noite com magia e gosto alternativo.

Pat McCrory dos Parquet Cours [mais fotos clicar aqui] “Turnstile Love Connection” foi o tema certo para deixar a chama acesa com os fãs e com o Couraíso. Uma escolha impecável para prime time deste 3º dia. A primeira vez dos L'Impératrice de Paris em Portugal aconteceu no Vodafone Paredes de Coura. Entraram para a parte frontal do palco, ficaram alinhados com um curioso enfeite em forma de coração. Esse enfeite estava iluminado e a bater com cor vermelha, funcionaram durante toda a performance se bem que as cores variaram durante a performance.
Flore Benguigui,Charles de Boisseguin, David Gaugué, Hagni Gwon, Achille Trocellier e Tom Daveau são os seis elementos desta formação francesa, apelidada igual a nome de perfume, apresentaram-se com uma vestimenta em tons de laranja.

Flore Benguigui na sua estreia em Portugal [mais fotos clicar aqui] Com um estilo musical pop-eletro e uma presença aveludada tomaram conta do anfiteatro natural e as pessoas relaxaram dançando livremente e afastando todos os seus maus espíritos, se é que eles surgem no idílico festival minhoto. Nota final para Flore Benguigui, ela que fez questão de saudar o público recorrendo à língua de Camões em tom perfeito.
Parquet Courts, Turnstile e L'Imperatrice encheram totalmente as medidas e foram para mim estreias que me deixaram imensa “água na boca”.
Fiquei com pena de não ter podido dar atenção aos concertos de Molchat Doma e L’Éclair, fico com os nomes registados para uma próxima oportunidade.
Vejam toda a foto-reportagem do 3º dia: clicar aqui

Texto: Edgar Silva Fotografia: João Machado
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1990 | Chris Isner | Charles Linder | E. Tidemann | C. Hengst | S. Scarboro | J. Locke | Rev. Marko Aaron | Presley Kennedy | 23 Degrees (band) | Nurse Margot | Brother Perkins | Jimmy Lee | Sudduth Kyra Nijinsky | Dennis Shelden | KEVIN SUDEITH | KEVIN EVENSEN | ADAM QUEST ZO’ | DIANA BARBEE | Katrin Sigurdardott | MICHAEL DAMM | MICHAEL MOORE BILL DANIEL | CHARLES GOLDMAN | J. Cline | M. Fox | BEN BUCHANAN | Robert Heckes | CHERYL MEEKER | RIGO NELSON | HENDEE | DAVID NASH | GERHARD NICHOLSON | DALE CHIHULY | TIM EVANS | RODNEY ARTILES | PATRICK TIERNEY | Clay Culbert | RICHARD LODWIG | URI TZAIG | MARLENE ZULLO | PAUL BRIDENBAUGH | Mari Andrews | Rodney Artiles | Heather Bruce | Tim Evans | Richard Haden | Douglass Kerr | Sam McAfee | John Muse | Bob Ortbal | Carla Paganelli | Stephanie Syjuco | Norma Yorba | DAVE ARDITO | GAY OUTLAW | Tal Angel | Yasmin Guri | Tuire Helena | Hamalainen | Ruti Helbetz | Yehudit Sasportas | Nati Shamia-Ophir | Nurit Tal-Goldwirth | Galya Uri | SIMON LEUNG | Pip Culbert | Permi K. Gill | Amy Berk | Paul Bridenbaugh | Castaneda/Reiman | Caroline Clerc | Ben Dean | Cirilo Domine | Paul Gasper | Neil Grimmer | Suzanne Kanatsiz | Arnold Kemp | Chris Komater | John Muse | Robert Ortbal | Hugh Pocock | William Radawec | Martha Schlitt | Stacey Vetter | Megan Wilson | Martha Benzing | Charles LaBelle | Robert Levine | PHILIP KNOLL | JSG Boggs | Orianne Stender | Ming Wei Lee | Eric Jones | Graham Gillmore | David Hunt | Jill Weinstock /Heather Sparks | Toland Grinnell | Steve Roden | Don Suggs | TILO SCHULZ | Jeremy Dickinson | Gilad Ophir | Roi Kuper | IZHAR PAKTIN | Joe Bloggs | Paul De Marini | Lewis DeSoto Gustavo | Dough Harvey | Guy Hundree | Marie Puck Broodthaer | Scott Williams | Vegar Abeslnas | Linda Sandhaus | Lesley Ruben Kunda | Alexandra Bowes | Jonthan Fung | Brandon Labelle | Ati Maier | Tom Marioni | Steve Roden Steve Peters | Heather Sparks | Adam Sinykin | Totemplow | Illana Zuckerman | Jennifer Davy | LARRY ABRAMSON | Jake Tilson | Herman de Vries | CHRIS DRURY | SAM YATES | Marcia Tanner | Castaneda/Reiman | Mary Tsongas | Orly Maiburg | Michael Shmir | Sono Osato | Miriam Cabessa | Tsibi Geva | Adam Berg | Shirley Tse | Yehudit Sasportas | CONRAD ATKINSON | MARGARET HARRISON | Anna Novakov | Zadok Ben-David | Terry Berkowitz | Adam Berg | China Blue | Paco Cao | Nicola Cipani | Michael Kessus Gedalyovitch | GARY GOLDSTEIN | Cheryl Meeker | Luisa Lambri Horea | Jim Lutes | Ken Goldberg | Matmos | KimPietrowski | Lucy Puls | Rik Ritchey | John Roloff | Tony Labat | Julia Scher | Reout Shahar | Esther Shalev-Gerz | Anita Sieff | Patricia Tavenner | Francesc Torres | Leslie Johnson | Ange Leccia | Alfredo Jaar | Marie-Ange Guilleminot | Didi Dunphy | Jason Byers | Evelyne Koeppel | Pam Davis | Alfred Spolter | Valery Grancher | FX C | Thomas Buisseret | SOL LEWITT | Margaret Crane/Jon Winet | Guy Over | Felt Herman de Cries| Desiree Holman | Shu-Min Lin | Sonya Rapoport | DAVINA GRUNSTEIN | John C. Rogers | Jay Evaristo | Batlle Alex Kahn | Slater Bradley | Andrew Bennett | Paul Kos-Linda Fleming| Madeline O’Connor | Renee Shearer | Rae Culbert | Marcy S. Freedman | Sally Elesby | Naomi St. Clar | Naomie Kremer | Alen Ozbolt | JONATHAN RUNCIO | Susannah Hayes | John Hoppin | Jonathan Hammer | Bill Fontana | Christopher O’Conner | Helen Mirren | Will Rogan | Matthew Bakkom | Douglas Ross | Elizabeth Saveri | Suzanne Stein | Julie Deamer | KIM ANNO | Keith Boadwee | Yauger Williams | Tia Factor | Katrin Feser | Harrell Fletcher | Heather Johnson | | Ted Purves | Libby Black |
Erez Golan | Rigo 01 | Matthew Higgs | Amanda Hughen | Jon Rubin | JP Villegas | Roman Signer | Hans Winkler | Paul Bridenbaugh | Pam Davis | Charles Long | H C Westermann | MEIN KAMPF MIEN KRAMPF | DJ Polywog | Lee Walton | Yori Levin | Silent Gallery | Janine Gordon | FUCKSHITUP | YORAM WOLBERGER | John Slepian | Rebecca Miller | Tommy Becker | Michael Goedecke & Eric Saks | Chris Perez | Geof Oppenheimer | Sasha Baguskas | Sarah Hughes | Douglas Argue | Ori Gersht | D3ms | Jeremy Cline | Jess | Brain Goldberg | PINO SIGNORETO | JOSEPH DELLAPE| Tony Labbat | Guido Gerlitz | Adam Gale | Sam Yates | NAT WILSON | MARCY FREDMAN | Mimi Mayer | AVI S RAVITI | Justin Charles Hoover | Tamir Karta | Elizabeth Atjay, | Alex Bargas | Camilla West | Felipe Dulzaides | Yin-Ju Chen | Ana Teresa Fernandez | Ron Hutt | Jennifer Locke | Allan Gerson | Sabina Ott | Bijan Yashar | Michelle Wasson | Shiri Mordechay | Jack Leamy | Maya Smira | Mie Hørlyck Mogensen | Sandro Chia | Elisabeth Ajtay | Ron Hutt |wexller | Salvador Dali | Menashe Kadisman | David Gerstein |
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FBB 2021 Team Awards & Review
This team was supposed to finish in last place according to my Rotowire draft software. In the end, I finished in 3rd place. (I dropped from 2nd on the last day of the season.) So, I stand with this theory for my success; this was a “made” team. And boy, was it fun.
I decided early on to go with high-risk, young starters. Ergo, why I have Cease, McClanahan, and Manoah on my roster. McKenzie came later, as did Rasmussen. These guys were hot hands with great promise and great risk. I listened to the analysts on these guys. Maybe too much, but it worked out.
My team fluctuated between 2nd and 6th place most of the season, but once my young starters settled in, I stayed around 3rd place.
Team MVP: Cedric Mullins $1 - when Oscar Mercado didn’t make the team with Cleveland, I had an opening in my outfield. I knew there was a good chance he’d get decent playing time, but never did I believe that he would explode for a 30/30 season. What a bargain.
Next Best: Matt Olson $15
Team Cy Young: Dylan Cease $1 - heard Vlad Guerero Jr say he was the toughest pitcher he had faced in the minors, so I grabbed him when one of my starters went down. Cease was inconsistent at times, but delivered the Ks.
My Value Pick: Cedric Mullins $1 - I mean, $1 for a 30/30 season
Trade Evaluation: Early on in the season, I traded Jake Odorizzi and Greg Holland for Amed Rosario. (I was trying to get Wander Franco.) I felt my team was in bad shape, so I looked long term. It took some time for Rosario to get going but he finished strong.
Regrets: Trading Carlos Correa when I thought I was really out of it. He was solid all season and Vidal Brujan never got the call up.
My Re-Made Team
I usually subscribe to the idea that your team is made in the draft, but this team proves that this is not entirely true. Other than my catchers, I only retained 5 of my position players from the draft.
As for my pitching staff, I only retained 2 of my original pitchers.
STARTING TEAM FINAL TEAM
C - Sean Murphy OAK $9 Sean Murphy OAK $9
C - Kurt Suzuki, LAA $7 Kurt Suzuki, LAA $7
1B - Matt Olson, OAK $15 Matt Olson, OAK $15
2B - Hanser Alberto, KC $1 Andres Gimenez, CLE $20
SS - Carlos Correa, HOU $32 Ramon Urias, BAL $1
3B - Joey Wendle, TB $7 Joey Wendle, TB $7
MI - Freddy Galvis, BAL, $1 Amed Rosario, CLE $19
CI - Renato Nunez, DET $7 Owen Miller, CLE $1
DH Franmill Reyes, CLE $28 Franmill Reyes, CLE $28
OF
Ramon Laureano,OAK $25 Jake Meyers, HOU $1
Manuel Margot, TB $17 Manuel Margot, TB $17
Randal Grichuk, TOR $20 Randal Grichuk, TOR $20
Oscar Mercado, CLE $7 Cedric Mullins, BAL $1
Yoshi Tsutsugo, TB $1 Jose Siri, HOU $1
[NOTE: I would have had Ramon Laureano still on my team but he got suspended for a PED violation. Plus, I have Andrew Vaughn reserved at the end of the season.]
SP
Jake Odorizzi, HOU $11 Shane McClanahan, TB $1
John Means, BAL $3 John Means, BAL $3
Domingo German, NYY $7 Drew Rasmussen, TB $1
Yusei Kikuchi, SEA $4 Dylan Cease, CHW $1
Kris Bubic, $3 Alex Manoah, TOR $14
Triston McKenzie, CLE $3
RP
Kirby Yates, TOR $25 Lou Trevino, OAK $1
Greg Holland, KC $15 Alex Colome, MIN $21
Bryan Garcia, P DET $4 Greg Soto, P DET $1
Greg Soto, P DET $1
[I also have Pat Sewald $1 SEA]
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England League 1 Live Scores | Football
Efl div 1 results - –20 EFL League One - Wikipedia
Wilks Hull 18 reeults 11 J. Yates Blackpool 18 6 10 D. Charles Accrington 17 1 8 L. Jephcott Plymouth 16 2 12 J. Marquis Portsmouth resultz 2 8 V. Oliver Gillingham 14 0 8 J. Pigott Efl div 1 results 14 3 9 M. Taylor Oxford 14 0 7 K. Hemmings Burton Albion 13 0 9 C. Jerome MK Dons 13 0 7 C. Aneke Charlton 12 0 7 J.
Magennis Hull 12 3 4 S. Szmodics Peterborough 12 0 5 Back to top Wigan Athletic 0 1 Portsmouth FT. Portsmouth 2 1 Rochdale FT. Sunderland 3 1 Efp United FT. Swindon Town 0 2 Blackpool FT. Gillingham 1 0 Wigan Athletic FT. Blackpool 2 2 Plymouth Argyle FT. Bristol Rovers 0 1 Sunderland FT. Hull City 1 1 Gillingham FT.
Shrewsbury Town 1 2 Portsmouth FT. Blackpool 3 1 Peterborough United FT. Portsmouth 2 1 Ipswich Town FT. Gillingham 2 2 Doncaster Rovers FT. Oxford United 0 2 Blackpool FT. Rochdale 3 3 Peterborough United FT. Sunderland 1 1 Lincoln City FT. Accrington Stanley 0 2 Sunderland FT. Siv 1 1 Burton Albion FT. Peterborough 1 Hull 3. Plymouth 0 Wigan 2. Rochdale 0 Shrewsbury 2. Swindon 1 Oxford Utd 2. Wimbledon 0 Burton A efl div 1 results. Accrington 2 Swindon 1. Blackpool 1 Wimbledon 1.
Burton A 2 Peterborough 1. Doncaster 2 Plymouth 1. Hull 2 Bristol Rovers 0. Lincoln 3 Efl div 1 results 0. Northampton 4 Portsmouth 1. Oxford Utd 0 Charlton 0. Shrewsbury 0 Fleetwood 2.
Sunderland 2 Rochdale 0. Wigan 3 MK Resilts 0. Gillingham 3 Ipswich 1. Accrington 1 Ipswich 2. Blackpool 1 Crewe 1. Burton A 1 Bristol Rovers 0. Doncaster 2 Portsmouth 1. Hull 2 Rochdale 0. Lincoln 1 Fleetwood 2. Northampton 2 Plymouth 0. Oxford Utd 0 Peterborough 0. Shrewsbury 1 Wimbledon 1. Sunderland 1 Swindon 0. Gillingham 3 MK Dons 2. Wigan 0 Charlton 1.
Bristol Rovers 2 Shrewsbury 1. Charlton 0 Blackpool 3. Crewe 2 Sunderland 2. Fleetwood 1 Accrington 1. Ipswich 2 Doncaster 1. MK Dons 1 Oxford Resultw 1. Peterborough 2 Wigan 1. Plymouth 4 Lincoln 3. Portsmouth 1 Gillingham 1. Rochdale 0 See here A 2. Swindon 2 Northampton 1. Wimbledon 0 Hull 3.
Plymouth 0 Peterborough 3. Bristol Rovers 1 Wigan 2. Charlton 1 Burton A 2. Retrieved 2 November Retrieved 3 November Retrieved 17 December resulgs Retrieved 23 December Retrieved 12 February Efl div 1 results 2 March Retrieved 13 May Retrieved 18 July Retrieved 30 July Retrieved 4 August Resutls level English football league seasons. Southern Football League. EFL League One play-offs. Premier League. Read review League NationalNorthSouth.
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London Kingston upon Thames. Efo of Bolton Stadium. Memorial Stadium. St Andrew's [16]. these details Stadium.
John Coleman.
2019–20 EFL League One
Seamus Conneely. Glyn Hodges. Will Nightingale. Neil Critchley. Jay Spearing. Blackpool Council home: "VisitBlackpool. Ian Evatt. Jason Lowe. Ben Garner. Ollie Clarke. Utilita Energy [17].
Jake Buxton. Prestec UK Ltd [18]. Mark Robins. Liam Kelly. Darren Moore. Ben Whiteman. Joey Barton. Paul Coutts.
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GOP memo criticizing FBI surveillance is released

President Trump authorized the release Friday of a GOP memo alleging surveillance abuses by the FBI, intensifying a fight between the White House and Republican lawmakers, on one side, and the nation’s top law enforcement agency over claims that the FBI hid the political motivations of a key figure supplying it information in the case.
Trump approved release of the memo without redactions Friday morning. He told reporters in the Oval Office: “I think it’s a disgrace what’s happening in our country. . . . A lot of people should be ashamed of themselves and much worse than that.”
The FBI has said it has “grave concerns” that the contents of the memo leave out important details and create an inaccurate portrait of its work.
[Read the memo, annotated]
The four-page, newly declassified memo written by the Republican staffers for the House Intelligence Committee said the findings “raise concerns with the legitimacy and legality of certain [Justice Department] and FBI interactions with the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court (FISC).” It cites “a troubling breakdown of legal processes established to protect the American people from abuses related to the FISA process,” a reference to the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act.
0:51 Trump: 'It's a disgrace what's happening in our country'
After releasing the Nunes memo on Feb. 2, President Trump said that "A lot of people should be ashamed of themselves and much worse than that." (Photo: Jabin Botsford/The Washington Post)
The memo alleges that a surveillance warrant was obtained and renewed on a former Trump campaign adviser, Carter Page, with information from an individual with an anti-Trump agenda.
It accuses officials who approved the surveillance applications — a group that includes then-FBI Director James B. Comey, his deputy Andrew McCabe, then-Deputy Attorney General Sally Yates and current Deputy Attorney General Rod J. Rosenstein — of signing off on court surveillance requests that omitted key facts about the political motivations of the person supplying some of the information, Christopher Steele, a former intelligence officer in Britain.
The memo says Steele “was suspended and then terminated as an FBI source for what the FBI defines as the most serious of violations — an unauthorized disclosure to the media of his relationship with the FBI.’’ The memo argues that Steele’s contacts with reporters in the fall of 2016 “violated the cardinal rule of source handling — maintaining confidentiality — and demonstrated that Steele had become a less than reliable source for the FBI.”
The government website housing the memo, docs.house.gov, crashed soon after the document was posted, apparently overwhelmed by users clamoring to read it.
The memo is not an intelligence document and reflects information the committee has gathered, which Democrats, the FBI and Justice Department have criticized as incomplete and misleading. Law enforcement officials have said they often rely on information from people with grudges or agendas but that investigators are expected to check the accuracy of any claims before seeking a warrant....
Continued:- https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/national-security/president-approves-release-of-gop-memo-criticizing-fbi-surveillance/2018/02/02/699eb988-06cf-11e8-b48c-b07fea957bd5_story.html?hpid=hp_hp-top-table-main_congressmemo-1155am%3Ahomepage%2Fstory&utm_term=.102169a6f43c
Revolutionary Eye:Quite a poor article by the Post aiming at balance rather than highlighting this as a deliberate attempt to obfuscate and ultimately derail the Mueller inquiry.Best read this editorial in the NY Times to see what they are up to:- https://www.nytimes.com/2018/02/01/opinion/nunes-memo-fbi-trump.html?action=click&pgtype=Homepage&clickSource=story-heading&module=opinion-c-col-left-region®ion=opinion-c-col-left-region&WT.nav=opinion-c-col-left-region
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Robert Massimi. “Temping” at Dutch Kills Theater is a play brilliantly put forth in these peculiar times. An immersive play that involves just one person, seated at a desk and working as a temp for an actuary firm. Like going to the office, you are given a desk, a computer, a phone and of course a Brother printer. Not an easy field to work in, being thrown into a desk as a temp with no knowledge of how an actuary does his job is part of the fun. The audience member is given instructions on how to answer messages, given further instructions on the computer and receives some of the wackiest of information via the Brother. Written by Michael Yates Crowley, “Temping” was first put in workshop in 2014. It has since played at theaters from University of Maryland, NYTW Adelphi, NYFF53 Lincoln Center , American Repertory Theater, University of Ottawa, and now at The Wild Project in The East Village. Crowley has written a decent body of work (there were times when the writing lagged), as it is unusual to be in an office that at first seems friendly and profession but is anything but. The temp over hears fighting between co-workers, flirtatious printouts from who knows who and employees trying to cover there tracks from mishaps in the office. Filling in for Sarah Jane Tully who is over winded and ditsy in her computer recordings, she is able to figure out the life expectancy of an airline pilot, she tells me how risky her trip to Hawaii is. She tells me that she has been with the company for seventeen and a half years and how corporal tunnel syndrome has forced her to take this vacation. She goes on to explain all the employees at the company and what each persons function is and what their strengths and weaknesses are. In the movie “Along Came Polly”, we get a funny understanding of how this profession works; people are able through mathematics to determine a persons life expectancy with accurate confidence.In good fun, every time you make a mistake (which is often at the beginning), you get a friendly email that reminds you that even though your a temp, you must get your act together and do the assignments right. Having a blunder usually means a follow up by the printer telling you to get with it. A phone message usually follows shortly after by one of the employees telling you not to worry about your mistake. In a typical cubical work place, director Michael Rau has made this work place all too familiar with the secrets, the mistakes, the high pressure that people are watching and at any time, someone could get fired. In the set design by Sara C. Walsh, we have the sticky pads, the coffee cup and even some nice candy bars to snack on while we work. As the show goes on, the deceased list grows and as it grows, Brother prints out a humorous eulogy of the people who have perished. Unusual and unconventional, “Temping” was a welcome respite for the theater starved critic or chronic theater goer. The show opened on October 23erd and will run till December 4th. The play can only handle one person at a time but it has many runs throughout the day as well as evening. The running time is only fifty minutes, however, it is a fun fifty minutes. “Temping” will make you want to be back at the theater again, it will also make you miss the office. The play gives us a double dose of nostalgia; being among co-workers and being at the theater. Although it is not clear if “Temping” is performed with more than just one person in a non Covid environment, the writing has some very good things about it. Writer Michael Yates Crowly pokes fun at the office politics, he deftly brings out the insecurity of many of the co-workers at the actuary firm. In many immersive plays we find that the writers too poke fun at the audience members, many of whom do not know that they are being made fun of. In “Temping” we get jabbed by the computer and the Brother print out and it is just enough to make you have uncomfortable fun at the office. The Wild Project is located at 195 East 3erd St between Avenues A and B in The East Village. Sarah Jane: Sarah Jane Tully; James: Chas Carey, Jason: Patrick Barrett, Directory Voice: Emily Louise Perkins, Printer: Brother HL3170, Operator: Julia Cavagna, Operator: Jack McGuire, Operator: Charlotte McPherson, Operator Alley Scott, Operator: Alec Silver, Operator: Asa Wember. Produced by: Dutch Kills Theater, Publicity: Ron Lasko. Upload Image Upload ImageEmbed VideoUnsplash image @robertmassimi, Duck Duck Go, Hot Mail, You Tube, Gmail, off Broadway, Wild Project, Theater Review, Corona Virus, New York City, Andrew Cuomo, Metropolitan Magazine, Vocal Media.
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Géneros, clasificaciones y duraciones del vídeo.
1.-Establece una clasificación y subclasificación de las producciones audiovisuales, explicando lo que más caracteriza a cada una de ellas.
1.1 Duración:
Cortometraje (0-25 min) : Se caracterizan por ser contundentes, por tener una narración ágil y por tener una “vuelta de tuerca” que representa un giro inesperado que da un nuevo sentido a la historia.
Mediometraje (26-69 min) : Tiene un sentido más profundo, transmite diversas sensaciones y emociones pese a estas características el mediometraje no tiene unas normas fijas.
Largometraje (70 ó + min) : Al tener una mayor duración es el más completo de los tres además es el más profundo y el que transmite más emociones.
1.2 Temática general:
Ficción: Formada por sucesos y personajes imaginarios.
Documental: Hechos y escenas totalmente reales, aunque en ocasiones no es objetiva.
Animación: Elementos creados por los realizadores dando lugar a un mundo hecho a base de dibujos, modelos 3D, esculturas de plastilina o imágenes reales pero manipuladas.
1.3 Temática particular de las historias:
Acción: La base de la película son los distintos enfrentamientos físicos entre los personajes y elementos cargados de energía.
Horror: El principal elemento es el miedo. Todos los elementos que forman la grabación forman parte de un conjunto cuyo objetivo es asustar al espectador.
Dramas: Están protagonizadas por elementos psicológicos y por distintas situaciones de los personajes que muestran la intensidad de estos.
Comedias románticas: Son la versión más suave del drama, son historias de amor.
Melodrama: Es un drama cuyas características están exageradas y estereotipadas.
Aventuras y fantasía: Historias emocionantes que se desarrollan en lugares exóticos.
Históricas: Películas en las que se narra un acontecimiento histórico.
Musicales: Se narra una historia a través de la canción y el baile.
Western: Presentan una estructura del salvaje oeste.
Ciencia ficción: Se basa en aquellas cosas que nos podemos imaginar, mezcla la ciencia y la tecnología
2.-¿Por qué hablamos de corto/medio/largo metraje?
Existen estas tres clasificaciones en cuanto a las películas ya que antiguamente las películas de celuloide se medían en pies y el metraje indicaba, de forma literal, la longitud de la cinta de ahí el nombre de cortometraje, mediometraje y largometraje.
3.-En general, ¿cuándo decimos que una producción audiovisual es más cinematográfica o televisiva?
Se dice que una producción audiovisual es más cinematográfica cuando hablamos de su refinamiento, la calidad del lenguaje audiovisual, que toma un papel de mayor importancia, o la complejidad de su creación.
Por otro lado, decimos que una producción audiovisual es más televisiva cuando presenta una trama de menor complejidad y más rápida y cuando la calidad del lenguaje y de la producción es menor.
4.-Realiza la clasificación del punto 1 con varios ejemplos de cada caso.
1.1 Duración:
Cortometraje: Cuerdas (2013), Pedro Solís García-11 minutos. Decorado (2016), Alberto Vázquez-11 minutos.
Mediometraje: El Muelle (1962), Chris Marker-29 minutos. Una partida de campo (1936), Jean Renoir-40 minutos.
Largometraje: La La Land (2017), Damien Chazelle-127 minuto The italian job (2003), F. Gary Gray- 104 minutos.
1.2 Temática general
Ficción: Al filo del mañana (2014), Doug Liman. Origen (2010), Christopher Nolan.
Documental: Stolen Daughters (2018), Gemma Atwal. Antes de que nos olviden (2014), Matías Gueilburt.
Animación: Buscando a Nemo (2003), Andrew Staton y Lee Unkrich. El rey león (1994), Rob Minkoff y Roger Allers.
1.3 Temática particular de la historia
Acción: Transporter (2002), Louis Leterrier, Corey Yuen. Top Gun (1986), Tony Scott.
Horror: Satanic (2016), Jeffrey G. Hunt. La monja (2018), Corin Hardy.
Drama: Lo imposible (2012), J. A. Bayona. Un don excepcional (2017), Marc Webb.
Comedia romántica: Crazy, stupid, love (2011), Glenn Ficarra y John Requa. El lado bueno de las cosas (2012), David O. Russell.
Melodrama: El gran Gatsby (1974), Jack Clayton. ¡Qué bello es vivir! (1946), Frank Capra.
Aventuras y fantasía: La niñera mágica (2006), Kirk Jones. Harry Potter y el misterio del príncipe (2009), David Yates
Históricas: 12 años de esclavitud (2013), Steve McQueen. Bohemian Rhapsody (2018), Bryan Singer.
Musicales: Grease (1978), Randal Kleiser. Mamma mia! (2008), Phyllida Lloyd.
Western: Django: desencadenado (2012), Quentin Tarantino. Los 7 magníficos (2016), Antoine Fuqua.
Ciencia Ficción: Los vengadores (2012), Joss Whedon. Men in black (1997), Barry Sonnenfeld.
5.-Busca los trailers oficiales de las siguientes producciones y clasifícalas según los criterios vistos en el punto 1.
a. L´Odyssée.-Largometraje, ficción, aventuras y drama
b. No soy madame Bovary.-Largometraje, ficción, comedia y drama.
c. El hombre de las mil caras.-Largometraje, ficción basada en hechos reales, drama y terror.
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