Tumgik
#* &. samantha stone briggs.
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@cheersnap has liked for samantha stone-briggs w/ chrissy cunningham.
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               ❝   so   what   are   YOU   doing   for   costume   day?   ❞      it’s   just   idle   conversation   as   the   pair   sit   together   in   the   library.      partnered   for   history,   they   have   to   do   research   and   a   presentation   on   one   GREAT   EVENT   in   american   history.      they   have   a   week   to   complete   it,   so   who   said   they   couldn’t   have   a   little   BREAK   for   some   conversation?      it   was   always   good   to   give   the   brain   a   little   rest   and   reset   from   the   boring   topics.      ❝   you   know,   cause   spirit   week   is   next   week.      not   a   CHEERLEADER,   right?   ❞      she   offers   a   small   smile,   only   because   that   would   be   such   an   OBVIOUS   choice   for   the   cheerleader.
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adventure-showdown · 7 months
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What is your favourite Doctor Who story?
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ROUND 2 MASTERPOST
synopses and propaganda under the cut
The Faceless Ones
Synopsis
The TARDIS arrives at Gatwick Airport in July 1966. A great many young people have vanished, including Ben and Polly. With the help of Samantha Briggs, the sister of one of the missing youths, the Second Doctor and Jamie must uncover the plot of the Chameleons.
Propaganda no propaganda submitted
The Daemons
Synopsis
The Master, posing as a rural vicar, summons a cloven-hoofed demon-like creature named Azal in a church crypt. Seeking to gain the ancient titan's demonic power, he gathers a cult and then corrupts or controls the residents of Devil's End to bow to his will. Dark elemental forces begin to disturb the village on the eve of May Day: unexplained murders, a stone gargoyle come to life, and a nigh-impenetrable infernal energy dome. With the Master fully prepared to destroy the Earth, the Doctor and UNIT — aided by a benevolent practitioner of witchcraft — battle the wicked rites of a secret science wielded by an alien from another world.
Propaganda
what is the most important quality of a good doctor who story, to have a strong plot, something to say, something new to try. all of these are positives, yes, but sometimes the best doctor who stories are just fun. sometimes they feature the master pretending to be the leader of a satanic cult pretending to be an anglican priest, remote control bessie, an alien who's basically the devil, a living gargoyle, a witch, and the doctor escaping being tied to a maypole by pretending to be a wizard. truly, this is the heights of doctor who, it is beyond fun to watch, i love it so much. If that’s not enough, then surely the fact that this has THE ‘the brigs an alcoholic and mike yates is gay’ moment (anonymous)
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murkyhazed-hasmoved · 2 years
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my headcanon for samantha since i’ve just very recently learned they gave her a canon last name:
samantha’s parents got divorced when she was ten, and it was ugly.  her father cheated on her mother with a younger woman, and the custody battle was incredibly stressful on her.  because of the pain her father caused the family, she refuses to address herself as samantha stone, and instead goes by briggs, which is her mothers maiden name.  legally she is samantha stone, but she will not answer you if you use that last name, because as far as she’s concerned her father AND that name/legacy are dead to her.
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mariocki · 2 years
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The Saint: Marcia (2.6, ITC, 1963)
"Presumably you know the story behind your sister's death?"
"You mean the acid in the face?"
"Mmhm. A friend of mine, another actress named Claire Avery, has been threatened with the same thing. I thought you might be able to help me."
"How?"
"By telling me about your sister."
"Do you mean the girl? Or the legend?"
#the saint#marcia#itc#1963#leslie charteris#harry w. junkin#john krish#roger moore#samantha eggar#kenneth mackintosh#marion mathie#johnny briggs#jill melford#philip stone#stanley meadows#tony beckley#janet davies#philip anthony#virginia clay#peter duguid#we're back at Elstree Studios (the real life home of production on The Saint!) for another movie set mystery; this episode takes far#more advantage of the setting than Starring the Saint‚ with numerous scenes on studio sets and a fight on the catwalks above#the plot is a rather grim tale of suicide and blackmail‚ beginning with newsreel footage of a screen starlet's funeral (actually clips from#Ivor Novello's funeral!) before we get another Saint first: a flashback scene! director Krish plays with the format more than many other#directors on the series‚ employing foggy visuals and extreme angles for the flashback scene and later pulling off a beautiful crash zoom#into Eggar's screaming mouth. his style is notable but perhaps it was too showy for the producers (this was his only Saint episode)#eggar is very good but a little underserved by a script which doesn't require much from her besides acting scared#i genuinely did not recognise the great Tony Beckley; i knew i recognised the face but just couldn't place him bc I've genuinely never seen#him so young! again he's great but doesn't have much to do; this is a Simon heavy episode in which supporting players are little more than#sketched in‚ which is a shame‚ bc Starring the Saint did great stuff with unbearable movie types and hangers on
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xmanicpanicx · 3 years
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Mammoth List of Feminist/Girl Power Books (200 + Books)
Lists of Real, Amazing Women Throughout History
Bad Girls Throughout History: 100 Remarkable Women Who Changed the World by Ann Shen
Good Night Stories for Rebel Girls by Elena Favilli & Francesca Cavallo
Good Night Stories for Rebel Girls 2 by Elena Favilli & Francesca Cavallo
Good Night Stories for Rebel Girls: 100 Immigrant Women Who Changed the World by Elena Favilli & Francesca Cavallo
Brazen: Rebel Ladies Who Rocked the World by Pénélope Bagieu, Montana Kane (Translator)
Rejected Princesses: Tales of History's Boldest Heroines, Hellions, and Heretics by Jason Porath
Tough Mothers: Amazing Stories of History’s Mightiest Matriarchs by Jason Porath
Women in Science: 50 Fearless Pioneers Who Changed the World by Rachel Ignotofsky
Bygone Badass Broads: 52 Forgotten Women Who Changed the World by Mackenzi Lee
Wonder Women: 25 Innovators, Inventors, and Trailblazers Who Changed History by Sam Maggs
The Little Book of Feminist Saints by Julia Pierpont
Rad Women Worldwide: Artists and Athletes, Pirates and Punks, and Other Revolutionaries Who Shaped History by Kate Schatz
Warrior Women: 3000 Years of Courage and Heroism by Robin Cross & Rosalind Miles
Women Who Dared: 52 Stories of Fearless Daredevils, Adventurers, and Rebels by Linda Skeers & Livi Gosling 
100 Nasty Women of History by Hannah Jewell
The Warrior Queens by Antonia Fraser
Sea Queens: Women Pirates Around the World by Jane Yolen
The Book of Gutsy Women: Favorite Stories of Courage and Resilience by Hillary Rodham Clinton & Chelsea Clinton 
Fight Like a Girl: 50 Feminists Who Changed the World by Laura Barcella
Samurai Women 1184–1877 by Stephen Turnbull
A Black Woman Did That by Malaika Adero
Tales from Behind the Window by Edanur Kuntman
Amazons, Abolitionists, and Activists: A Graphic History of Women's Fight for Their Rights by Mikki Kendall
Witches and Pagans: Women in European Folk Religion, 700-1100 by Max Dashu
Mad and Bad: Real Heroines of the Regency by Bea Koch
Modern HERstory: Stories of Women and Nonbinary People Rewriting History by Blair Imani
Individual and Group Portraits of Real, Amazing Women Throughout History
Alice Paul and the Fight for Women's Rights: From the Vote to the Equal Rights Amendment by Deborah Kops
Vanguard: How Black Women Broke Barriers, Won the Vote, and Insisted on Equality for All by Martha S. Jones
Ruth Bader Ginsburg: A Life by Jane Sherron De Hart
The Firebrand and the First Lady: Portrait of a Friendship: Pauli Murray, Eleanor Roosevelt, and the Struggle for Social Justice by Patricia Bell-Scott
I Am Malala: The Story of the Girl Who Stood Up for Education and Was Shot by the Taliban by Malala Yousafzai, Christina Lamb
Life Undercover: Coming of Age in the CIA by Amaryllis Fox
Native Country of the Heart: A Memoir by Cherríe L. Moraga
The Soul of a Woman by Isabel Allende
Hidden Figures by Margot Lee Shetterly
Ashley's War: The Untold Story of a Team of Women Soldiers on the Special Ops Battlefield by Gayle Tzemach Lemmon
Alice Diamond and the Forty Elephants: The Female Gang That Terrorised London by Brian McDonald
Women Against the Raj: The Rani of Jhansi Regiment by Joyce Chapman Lebra
Girls to the Front: The True Story of the Riot Grrrl Revolution by Sara Marcus
The Amazons: Lives and Legends of Warrior Women Across the Ancient World by Adrienne Mayor
Rise of the Rocket Girls: The Women Who Propelled Us, from Missiles to the Moon to Mars by Nathalia Holt
The Women of WWII (Non-Fiction)
Women Heroes of World War II: 26 Stories of Espionage, Sabotage, Resistance, and Rescue by Kathryn J. Atwood
Skyward: The Story of Female Pilots in WWII by Sally Deng
The Women with Silver Wings: The Inspiring True Story of the Women Airforce Service Pilots of World War II by Katherine Sharp Landdeck
The Unwomanly Face of War: An Oral History of Women in World War II by Svetlana Alexievich, Richard Pevear (Translation), Larissa Volokhonsky (Translation)
Les Parisiennes: How the Women of Paris Lived, Loved, and Died Under Nazi Occupation by Anne Sebba
To Serve My Country, to Serve My Race: The Story of the Only African-American Wacs Stationed Overseas During World War II by Brenda L. Moore
Standing Up Against Hate: How Black Women in the Army Helped Change the Course of WWII by Mary Cronk Farrell
Sisters and Spies: The True Story of WWII Special Agents Eileen and Jacqueline Nearne by Susan Ottaway
A Woman of No Importance: The Untold Story of the American Spy Who Helped Win World War II by Sonia Purnell
The White Mouse by Nancy Wake
Code Name Hélène by Ariel Lawhon
Code Girls: The Untold Story of the American Women Code Breakers Who Helped Win World War II by Liza Mundy
Tomorrow to be Brave: A Memoir of the Only Woman Ever to Serve in the French Foreign Legion by Susan Travers & Wendy Holden
Pure Grit: How WWII Nurses in the Pacific Survived Combat and Prison Camp by Mary Cronk Farrell
Sisterhood of Spies by Elizabeth P. McIntosh
Spy Princess: The Life of Noor Inayat Khan by Shrabani Basu
Women in the Holocaust by Dalia Ofer
The Light of Days: The Untold Story of Women Resistance Fighters in Hitler's Ghettos by Judy Batalion
Night Witches: The Untold Story of Soviet Women in Combat by Bruce Myles
The Soviet Night Witches: Brave Women Bomber Pilots of World War II by Pamela Jain Dell
A Thousand Sisters: The Heroic Airwomen of the Soviet Union in World War II by Elizabeth Wein
A Dance with Death: Soviet Airwomen in World War II by Anne Noggle
Avenging Angels: The Young Women of the Soviet Union's WWII Sniper Corps by Lyuba Vinogradova
The Women of WWII (Fiction)
Among the Red Stars by Gwen C. Katz
Night Witches by Kathryn Lasky
Night Witches by Mirren Hogan
Night Witch by S.J. McCormack
Flygirl by Sherri L. Smith
Daughters of the Night Sky by Aimie K. Runyan
The Lost Girls of Paris by Pam Jenoff
Code Name Verity series by Elizabeth Wein
Front Lines trilogy by Michael Grant
The Alice Network by Kate Quinn
All-Girl Teams (Fiction)
The Seafire trilogy by Natalie C. Parker
Elysium Girls by Kate Pentecost
The Good Luck Girls by Charlotte Nicole Davis
The Effigies trilogy by Sarah Raughley
Guardians of the Dawn series by S. Jae-Jones
Wolf-Light by Yaba Badoe
Undead Girl Gang by Lily Anderson
Burned and Buried by Nino Cipri
This Is What It Feels Like by Rebecca Barrow
The Wild Ones: A Broken Anthem for a Girl Nation by Nafiza Azad
We Rule the Night by Claire Eliza Bartlett
Tigers, Not Daughters by Samantha Mabry
The All-Girl Filling Station's Last Reunion by Fannie Flagg
Saving CeeCee Honeycutt by Beth Hoffman
Bad Girls Never Say Die by Jennifer Mathieu
The Secret Life of Prince Charming by Deb Caletti
Kamikaze Girls by Novala Takemoto, Akemi Wegmüller (Translator)
The Island of Sea Women by Lisa See
The Passion of Dolssa by Julie Berry
The Scapegracers by Hannah Abigail Clarke
Sisters in Sanity by Gayle Forman
The Scandalous Sisterhood of Prickwillow Place by Julie Berry
The Southern Book Club's Guide to Slaying Vampires by Grady Hendrix
The Lost Girls by Sonia Hartl
Hell's Belles series by Sarah MacLean
Jackdaws by Ken Follett
The Farmerettes by Gisela Tobien Sherman
A Sisterhood of Secret Ambitions by Sheena Boekweg
Feminist Retellings
Stepsister by Jennifer Donnelly
Poisoned by Jennifer Donnelly
Girls Made of Snow and Glass by Melissa Bashardoust
The Girl Who Fell Beneath The Sea by Axie Oh
Kissing the Witch: Old Tales in New Skins by Emma Donoghue
Doomed by Laura Pohl
The Seventh Bride by T. Kingfisher
The Boneless Mercies by April Genevieve Tucholke
Seven Endless Forests by April Genevieve Tucholke
The Queens of Innis Lear by Tessa Gratton
A Thousand Nights by E.K. Johnston
Kate Crackernuts by Katharine M. Briggs
Legendborn series by Tracy Deonn
One for All by Lillie Lainoff
Feminist Dystopian and Horror Fiction
The Handmaid’s Tale by Margaret Atwood
The Grace Year by Kim Liggett
Sawkill Girls by Claire Legrand
Godshot by Chelsea Bieker
Women and Girls in Comedy 
Crying Laughing by Lance Rubin
Stand Up, Yumi Chung by Jessica Kim
This Will Be Funny Someday by Katie Henry
Unscripted by Nicole Kronzer
Pretty Funny for a Girl by Rebecca Elliot
Bossypants by Tina Fey
We Killed: The Rise of Women in American Comedy by Yael Kohen
The Girl in the Show: Three Generations of Comedy, Culture, and Feminism by Anna Fields
Trans Women
Redefining Realness: My Path to Womanhood, Identity, Love & So Much More by Janet Mock
Nemesis series by April Daniels
American Transgirl by Faith DaBrooke
Tranny: Confessions of Punk Rock's Most Infamous Anarchist Sellout by Laura Jane Grace
A Safe Girl to Love by Casey Plett
Gracefully Grayson by Ami Polonsky
Fierce Femmes and Notorious Liars by Kai Cheng Thom
Becoming Nicole: The Transformation of an American Family by Amy Ellis Nutt
George by Alex Gino
The Witch Boy series by Molly Ostertag
Uncomfortable Labels: My Life as a Gay Autistic Trans Woman by Laura Kate Dale
She's Not There: A Life in Two Genders by Jennifer Finney Boylan
An Anthology of Fiction by Trans Women of Color by Ellyn Peña
Wandering Son by Takako Shimura
Stone Butch Blues by Leslie Feinberg
Feminist Poetry
Women Are Some Kind of Magic trilogy by Amanda Lovelace
Wild Embers: Poems of Rebellion, Fire and Beauty by Nikita Gill
Fierce Fairytales: Poems and Stories to Stir Your Soul by Nikita Gill
Great Goddesses: Life Lessons from Myths and Monsters by Nikita Gill
The Girl and the Goddess by Nikita Gill
A Bound Woman Is a Dangerous Thing: The Incarceration of African American Women from Harriet Tubman to Sandra Bland by DaMaris B. Hill
Feminist Philosophy and Facts
The Creation of Patriarchy by Gerda Lerner
The Creation of Feminist Consciousness: From the Middle Ages to Eighteen-Seventy by Gerda Lerner
Misogyny: The World's Oldest Prejudice by Jack Holland
White Tears/Brown Scars: How White Feminism Betrays Women of Color by Ruby Hamad
We Should All Be Feminists by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie
Dear Ijeawele, or a Feminist Manifesto in Fifteen Suggestions by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie
Colonize This!: Young Women of Color on Today's Feminism by Bushra Rehman
Feminism is for Everybody: Passionate Politics by bell hooks
Here We Are: Feminism for the Real World by Kelly Jensen
The Equality Illusion by Kat Banyard
White Feminism: From the Suffragettes to Influencers and Who They Leave Behind by Koa Beck
Everyday Sexism by Laura Bates
I Have the Right To by Chessy Prout & Jenn Abelson
Feminism and Nationalism in the Third World by Kumari Jayawardena
The Second Sex by Simone de Beauvoir
How to Suppress Women's Writing by Joanna Russ
Invisible No More: Police Violence Against Black Women and Women of Color by Andrea Ritchie
Ain't I a Woman: Black Women and Feminism by bell hooks
Black Feminist Thought: Knowledge, Consciousness, and the Politics of Empowerment by Patricia Hill Collins
But Some of Us Are Brave: All the Women Are White, All the Blacks Are Men: Black Women's Studies by Akasha Gloria Hull, Patricia Bell-Scott, Barbara Smith Women, Race, and Class by Angela Y. Davis This Bridge Called My Back: Writings by Radical Women of Color by Cherríe L. Moraga, Gloria E. Anzaldúa
Half the Sky: Turning Oppression Into Opportunity for Women Worldwide by Nicholas D. Kristof & Sheryl WuDinn
Sister Outsider: Essays and Speeches by Audre Lorde
Bad Feminist by Roxane Gay
Difficult Women by Roxane Gay
Hunger: A Memoir of (My) Body by Roxane Gay
Not That Bad: Dispatches from Rape Culture by Roxane Gay
This Bridge Called My Back: Writings by Radical Women of Color by by Cherríe Moraga & Gloria Anzaldúa
Power Shift: The Longest Revolution by Sally Armstrong
Eloquent Rage: A Black Feminist Discovers Her Superpower by Brittney Cooper
Hood Feminism: Notes from the Women That a Movement Forgot by Mikki Kendall
Had It Coming: What's Fair in the Age of #MeToo? by Robyn Doolittle
She Said: Breaking the Sexual Harassment Story that Helped Ignite a Movement by Jody Kantor & Megan Twohey
#Notyourprincess: Voices of Native American Women by Lisa Charleyboy
Girl Rising: Changing the World One Girl at a Time by Tanya Lee Stone
Dead Blondes and Bad Mothers: Monstrosity, Patriarchy, and the Fear of Female Power by Sady Doyle
Sisterhood is Powerful: An Anthology of Writings from the Women's Liberation Movement by Robin Morgan (Editor)
Girls Make Media by Mary Celeste Kearney
Rock She Wrote: Women Write about Rock, Pop, and Rap by Evelyn McDonnell (Editor)
You Play the Girl: And Other Vexing Stories That Tell Women Who They Are by Carina Chocano
Things We Didn't Talk About When I Was a Girl: A Memoir by Jeannie Vanasco
The Portable Nineteenth-Century African American Women Writers by Henry Louis Gates Jr. (Editor), Hollis Robbins (Editor)
Shrill: Notes from a Loud Woman by Lindy West
A Room of One's Own by Virginia Woolf
Believe Me: How Trusting Women Can Change the World by Jessica Valenti and Jaclyn Friedman Bread Out of Stone: Recollections, Sex, Recognitions, Race, Dreaming, Politics by Dionne Brand
Other General Girl Power/Feminist Awesomeness
The Edge of Anything by Nora Shalaway Carpenter
Kat and Meg Conquer the World by Anna Priemaza
Talk Before Sleep by Elizabeth Berg
The Female of the Species by Mandy McGinnis
Pulp by Robin Talley
Juliet Takes a Breath by Gabby Rivera
How to Save a Life by Sara Zarr
That Summer by Sarah Dessen
Someone Like You by Sarah Dessen
Honey, Baby, Sweetheart by Deb Caletti
The Girl With the Louding Voice by Abi Daré
Mrs. Everything by Jennifer Weiner
Beauty Queens by Libba Bray
Memoirs of a Geisha by Arthur Golden
American Girls by Alison Umminger
Don't Think Twice by Ruth Pennebaker
The Color Purple by Alice Walker
In Love & Trouble: Stories of Black Women by Alice Walker
You Can't Keep a Good Woman Down: Stories by Alice Walker
Wonder Woman: Warbringer by Leigh Bardugo
Sula by Toni Morrison
Rose Sees Red by Cecil Castellucci
A Deadly Education by Naomi Novik
Moxie by Jennifer Mathieu
Rules for Being a Girl by Candace Bushnell & Katie Cotugno
None of the Above by I.W. Gregorio
Little Women by Louisa May Alcott
Orlando by Virginia Woolf
Everything Must Go by Jenny Fran Davis
The House on Olive Street by Robyn Carr
Orange Is the New Black by Piper Kerman
Queens of Geek by Jen Wilde
Lady Luck's Map of Vegas by Barbara Samuel 
Fan the Fame by Anna Priemaza
Puddin' by Julie Murphy
A Heart in a Body in the World by Deb Caletti
Gravity Brings Me Down by Natale Ghent
Snow Flower and the Secret Fan by Lisa See
The Summer of Impossibilities by Rachael Allen
The Dead Girls of Hysteria Hall by Katie Alender
Don't Tell a Soul by Kirsten Miller
After the Ink Dries by Cassie Gustafson Girl, Unframed by Deb Caletti
We Are the Ashes, We Are the Fire by Joy McCullough 
Maybe He Just Likes You by Barbara Dee
Things a Bright Girl Can Do by Sally Nicholls
The Disreputable History of Frankie Landau-Banks by E. Lockhart
Uprising by Margaret Peterson Haddix
The Cure for Dreaming by Cat Winters
Dress Coded by Carrie Firestone
The Prettiest by Brigit Young
Don't Judge Me by Lisa Schroeder
The Roommate by Rosie Danan
Tomboy: A Graphic Memoir by Liz Prince
Surpassing the Love of Men: Romantic Friendship and Love Between Women from the Renaissance to the Present by Lillian Faderman
All the Single Ladies: Unmarried Women and the Rise of an Independent Nation by Rebecca Traister
Paper Girls comic series by Brian K. Vaughan
Heavy Vinyl comic series by Carly Usdin
Please feel free to reblog with more!
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booksociety · 4 years
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Could you please recommend werewolf romance novels please? ( like shiver and wolfsong)
Hello and sorry for the wait! Here are some werewolf romance recs we came up with. Enjoy. ❤️
A Hunger Like No Other (Immortals After Dark #1) by Kresley Cole
A Werewolf in Manhattan by Vicki Lewis Thompson
Beauty and the Werewolf by Mercedes Lackey
Bitten by Kelley Armstrong
City of Fallen Angels (The Mortal Instruments #4) by Cassandra Clare (Franzi)
Clean Sweep (Innkeeper Chronicles #1) by Ilona Andrews (Nickie & Isabel)
Cry Wolf (Alpha & Omega #1) by Patricia Briggs (Nickie & Isabel)
MacRieve (Immortals After Dark #13) by Kresley Cole
Moon Called (Mercy Thompson #1) by Patricia Briggs (Isabel)
Nightshade (Nightshade #1) by Andrea Cremer
Pleasure of a Dark Prince (Immortals After Dark #8) by Kresley Cole
Queen Heir (NYC Mecca #1) by Jaymin Eve & Leia Stone
Scarlet (The Lunar Chronicles #2) by Marissa Meyer (Vee & Mels)
The Summoning (Darkest Powers #1) by Kelley Armstrong (Sage)
Virals (Virals #1) by Kathy Reichs (Mels)
War of Hearts (True Immortality #1) by Samantha Young
Wicked Deeds on a Winter's Night (Immortals After Dark #3) by Kresley Cole
- Nickie
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3 Year Anniversay of my Musical Trading Site!
It has been three years since I officially established my trading site! For those of you who don’t know I am https://its-all-green.weebly.com/ to celebrate I am gifting some of my audio masters from some of my favourite shows since I wouldnt be where I am today if it wasn’t for the kindness and generosity of others. Feel free to list them on your own site and enjoy!
 ​
Only Fools and Horses || West End || 5th October 2019 || Matinee
https://mega.nz/folder/U41gzCaD#gEcUbaMMZ0AN-BS4gKf1Pw
​Cast: Tom Bennett (Del Boy), Ryan Hutton (Rodney), Philip Childs (u/s Grandad/Uncle Albert), Dianne Pilkington (Raquel), Lisa Bridge (u/s Cassandra), Peter Baker (Trigger), Andy Mace (u/s Boycie), Samantha Seager (Marlene), Bradley John (u/s Denzil), Andy Bryant (u/s Mickey Pearce), Peter Gallagher (Danny Driscoll), Adam Venus (Tony Driscoll), Lee Van Geelan (u/s Mike), Melanie Marshall (Mrs Obooko), Chris Bennett (Sid), Oscar Conolon Morrey (Dating Agent and Various) Notes: Its-all-green's master | Never to be sold except by me Tracked
Wicked || West End || 16th January 2019 || Matinee || Audio
https://mega.nz/folder/Ql0mWCZB#2U8j_OTwyQIgOKJ-uSPoAA
Cast: Aimee Fisher (u/s Elphaba), Maria Coyne (s/b Glinda), David Witts (Fiyero), Melanie La Barrie (Madame Morrible), Chris Jarman (u/s The Wizard), Jack Lansbury (Boq), Rosa O’Reilly (Nessarose), Rhidian Marc (u/s Doctor Dillamond) Notes: Recorded from the 2nd row || My master (It's-all-green's Master) Tracked and Untracked
Six || West End || 15th October 2019
https://mega.nz/folder/wht0QSiI#PK8ViLM1EylUKPqq4fUYFg
Cast: Jarneia Richard-Noel (Catherine of Aragon), Courtney Bowman (Anne Boleyn), Natalie Paris (Jane Seymour), Alexia McIntosh (Anna of Cleves), Vicki Manser (Katherine Howard), Danielle Steers (Catherine Parr) Notes: Danielle's and Courtney's first! Vickis first as principle Howards, it was also the musicals 500th performance for this run. Natalie has an emotional heart of stone. Includes Megasix video taken from the front row || Its-all-green's master, never to be sold
Bat Out of Hell || West End Dominion || 27th June 2018 || Matinee || Aduio
https://mega.nz/folder/xolCQSYB#uuQnl2O04_tlMdlsC2eNcA
Andrew Polec (Strat), Christina Bennington (Raven), Craig Ryder (u/s Falco), Hannah Ducharme (u/s Sloane), lex Thomas-Smith (Tink), Danielle Steers (Zahara), Wayne Robinson (Jagwire), Sam Toland (u/s Ledoux) Notes: Craig and Hannah's 2nd perfomance together, their first was the night before || My master (it's all green's master) || never to be sold ​Tracked
Waitress || West End || 27th March 2019 || Matinee
https://mega.nz/folder/11MzSQRL#3bvfOLnyqB8pxwq1H0wY6A
Cast: Katharine McPhee (Jenna), Marisha Wallace (Becky), Laura Baldwin (Dawn), David Hunter (Dr. Pomatter), Jack McBrayer (Ogie), Stephen Leask (Cal), Shaun Prendergast (Joe), Peter Hannah (Earl), Kelly Agbowu (Nurse Norma), Arabella Duffy (Lulu), Olivia Moore (Francine Pomatter), Charlotte Riby (Mother) Notes: Jack added this extra "hot coffee" bit after Never Ever getting rid of me, when I mentioned it at stage dorr he siad he wanted to "liven up the audience" the rest of the cast were trying so hard to not break character ��|| My Master (it's all green's master), never to be sold Tracked and Untracked
Hamilton || West End || 14th August 2019
https://mega.nz/folder/0w9QRYDa#d2SPn_iJaLdsPhfzjXKaCA
Cast: Stephenson Ardern-Sodje (u/s Alexander Hamilton), Rachelle Ann Go (Eliza Hamilton), Sifiso Mazibuko (Aaron Burr), Jason Pennycooke (Marquis de Lafayette/Thomas Jefferson), Dom Hartley-Harris (George Washington), Allyson Ava-Brown (Angelica Schuyler), Tarinn Callender (Hercules Mulligan/James Madison), Cleve September (John Laurens/Philip Hamilton), Courtney-Mae Briggs (Peggy Schuyler/Maria Reynolds), Waylon Jacobs (s/b King George III), Jack Butterworth (Samuel Seabury), Aaron Lee Lambert (Charles Lee), Curtis Angus (George Eacker), Leah Hill (The Bullet) Notes: Its-all-green's master, never to be sold except through me Tracked  
& Juliet || West End || 4th December 2019
https://mega.nz/folder/h5kQgAQD#G9YpCdn5aZG0h_536E36hA
Cast: Miriam-Teak Lee (Juliet), Jordan Luke Gage (Romeo), Cassidy Janson (Anne Hathaway), Ivan de Freitas (u/s William Shakespeare), David Bedella (Lance), Tim Mahendran (Francois), Arun Blair-Mangat (May), Melanie La Barrie (Nurse), David Bedella (Lance), Jocasta Almgil (Lady Capulet/Nell), Christopher Parkinson (s/w Lord Cauplet/Sly), Rhian Duncan (Imogen), Danielle Fiamanya (Lucy), Kieran Lai (Kempe), Nathan Lorainey-Dineen (Gregory), Grace Mouat (Judith), Antoine Murray-Straughan (Augustine), Kerri Norville (Susanna), Dillon Scott-Lewis (Richard), Alex Tranter (Henry), Kirstie Skivington (Eleanor) Notes: My master (its-all-green's master). Record from the front row, includes curtain call video (though this is mostly Jordan (sorry not sorry)). Untracked but with a few tracked songs
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nsula · 6 years
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Spring 2018 Dean’s List
NATCHITOCHES – Northwestern State University announced the names of 1,087 students named to the Dean’s List for the Spring 2018 semester.  Students on the Dean’s List maintained a 3.5-3.99 grade point average. Students, listed by hometown, are as follows.
 Abbeville -- MaKayla Lewis;
Albany -- Kaitlyn Kinchen;
Alexandria -- Chris Vincent Advincula, Evelyn Allen-Lewis, Lili Bedoya, Heather Bergeron, Tianna Bowens, Lydia Branch, Morgan Bryant, Thomas Crowe, Noel Cusick, Angela Dunn, Aubrey Farque, Claudia Gauthier, Ian Grant, Monnie Guillory, Tameka Hammonds, Tyraneisha Hayward, Roderick Henry, Martha Hopewell, Jaliyah Jasper, Whitney Joffrion, Jordan Johnson, Kelli Leone, Hunter Lewis, Jimmie Magee, Aaron Martin, Ceerah McNeal, Jennifer Miranda, Kylah Porter, Sailor Reed, Savannah Sices, Shacora Simpson, Christopher Warren, Shanequa Watkins, Amber Williams Taylor;
Anacoco -- Lindsey Alligood, Kinsley Blakeway, Kenneth Cochran, Alan Cosio, Nicole Fitzgerald, Rachel Fournier, Christopher Guy, Elizabeth Guy, Karlee Laurence, Brittany Lewis, Mahala Lewis, Caitlin McKee, Kayli O’Toole, Clarissa Owens, Katie Perkins, Bret Phillips, Amanda Shores, Cheyenne Taylor;
Anchorage, Alaska -- Sydney Bulot;
Angola -- Ursula Poarch;
Arlington, Texas -- Mariah Denson;
Arnaudville -- Zachary Leboeuf;
Ashland -- Victoria Roderick;
Atlanta -- Peyton Howell, Morgan Williams;
Atlanta, Texas -- Shannon Jones;
Aurora, Colorado -- William Mccullough;
Austin, Texas -- Ysmina Smith;
Avondale -- Brian Videau;
Baker -- Devante George;
Baldwin -- Lakesha Colar, Gerianna Lyons;
Ball -- Stephen Carpenter, Nickolas Juneau, Lauren Nugent, Vanessa Toney, Megan Wakefield, Alice Wilson;
Barksdale AFB -- Elysia Lanier, Tova Volcheck;
Barlanquillo Atlantico, Columbia -- Camilo Simancas Morelo;
Baton Rouge -- Emmanuel Dunn, Lydell Emerson, Madison Fry, Julian Guerrero Acevedo, Maisyn Guillory, John Guillot, Kelly Guillot, Madison Harris, Jessica Joseph, Mckane Kinchen, Henrietta Mercer, Madalyn Mullins, Katie Pham, Colleen Reese, Reagan Smith, Jason Stampley;
Beaumont, Texas -- Dustin Burns;
Belcher -- Sierra Laing;
Belle Chasse -- Natalie Wilson;
Belmont -- Tristan Ponder;
Bentley -- Zachary Doucet;
Benton -- Kelyn Bihm, Christopher Heard, Kara Knippers, Jessica O'Neal, Jadyn Sepulvado, Torea Taylor, Kimberly Umphries;
Bernice -- Brandy Ganter;
Blanco, Texas -- Reagan Rogers;
Bogalusa -- Amanda Crawford;
Boise, Idaho -- Jessica Anderson;
Bossier City -- Alexander Bequette, Kendall Caple, Jael Ahmad, Lauryn Bakalis, Abigail Barkley, Breanna Black, Elizabeth Blair, Brittany Boothe, Steven Braddock, Katie Briggs, Jonathan Castillo, Peyton Davis, Anthonia Dogbey, Madison Edwards, Bailey Freeman, Karli Freeman, Laschae Gadson, Kelsey Gallman, Julie Golden, Mizzani Grigsby, Candace Guillory, Devonte Hall, Oai Lee Huynh, Anton Inyakov, Dejaney Jackson, Nourain Jamhour, Anqumesha Jeter, Shane Kaiser, Tina Kile, Danielle Lombardino, Alexandra Madrid, Samantha Maiette, Caroline McKee,  Amanda Mings, Stacy Moore, Katherine Parson, Kennedy Parson, Brittani Phillips, Kathryn Pierce, Rachael Pierce, Tatyana Porter, Timothy Rice, Jami Rivers, Jasmine Roberson, Kassidy Robideaux, Madison Rowland, Rheagan Rowland, Jeremy Ryals, Dakota Schudalla, Ranya Shihadeh, Hope Spaw, Tabitha Stevenson, Susan Stone, James Taylor,  Jazmine Tom-Jones, Giselle Trejo, Lacey Velasquez, Madalyn Watson, Meagan Willis, Nour Zeidan, Eric Zheng;
Bourg -- Micaiah Richie, Abigail Trahan;
Boyce -- Tiffany Barnhart, Ekaterina Bordelon, Sarah Hill, Sonya Hill, Hannah Miller, Ashley Smith;
Breaux Bridge -- Ashtin Mouton, Tyler Thibodeaux;
Brentwood, Tennessee -- Joe Tappel;
Broken Arrow, Oklahoma -- Madeline Drake;
Bunkie -- Emily Arnaud;
Burleson, Texas -- Eric Neeley;
Campti -- Alisha Bedgood, Paige Cason, Trenton Parker, Ronald Reliford, Madeline Valencia, Rebekah Wiley;
Carencro -- Malik Babin, Chaney Dodge, Destiny Kennerson;
Cartagena, Bolivar -- Carlos Camargo Patron, Maria Carmona-Ruiz, Angela Coneo Valdez, Carlomagno Leon Jimenez, Paula Martinez Marrugo, Nestor Mercado-Garcia, Romulo Osorio Herrera, Ronald Rodriguez Herrera, Valentina Herazo Alvarez, Luis Osorio Betancourt, Juan Paternina Paez, Valeria Perez Espinosa, Alonso Restrepo Cardozo;
Cedar Hill, Texas -- Timmis Bonner;
Chalmette -- Sara Mendoza;
Cheneyville -- Katelyn Baronne;
Chicago, Illinois -- Brandon Hutton;
Choudrant -- Taylor Holley, Mya Melancon;
Clayton -- Glendalyn Boothe, Ruben Smith;
Colfax -- Camren Bell, Michael Dupre, Angela McCann, Lessie Rushing, Elizabeth Slayter, Morgan Vandegevel;
Colorado Springs, Colorado -- Rossana Potempa;
Columbia, South Carolina -- Brittany Bell;
Converse -- Samantha Davis, Ashley Forgues Brock, Hannah Womack;
Costa Mesa, California -- Keith Ford;
Cottonport -- Zachary Gauthier, Justin Tigner;
Coushatta -- Jason Bell, Nick Ezernack, Erikka Johnson, Jamary Jones, Sidney Jones, Aaron Murray, Jacob Shaver, Precious Smith, John Squires, Keyairrowa Thomas, Treasure Wilson, Caroline Wren, Lauren Young, Rena Yount;
Covington -- Justin Brogdon, Rachael Coyne, Margaret Denny, Titus McCann, Andrea Mier, Cathleen Oviedo, Catherine Sadler, Kenneth Sears, Jennifer Vo;
Coyolilla Veracruz, Mexico -- Guadalupe de Jesus Mendez Zaragoza;
Creole -- Brooklyn Frerks;
Crowley -- Kylan Poullard, Desiree Robinson;
Cut Off -- Zachary Breaux;
Cypress, Texas -- Alexis Gomez;
Dayton, Texas -- Jerry Maddox;
DeBerry, Texas -- Sarah Britt;
Deer Park, Texas -- Blake Stephenson;
Denham Springs – Joey Carroll, James Fillingame, Caitlin Griffin, Keisha Johnson, Halle Mahfouz, Amy Thomas, Jenson Wall, Emily Williams;
DeQuincy -- Austin Nichols;
DeRidder -- Dawanna Burgess, Maygin Chesson, Alphonse Engram, John Ham, Michael Keeper, Kayla Kowalski, Reagan Laird, Brittney March, Shayla Miller, Zachary Pursley;
Derry -- Hannah Antee;
Desoto, Texas -- Nicholas Forde;
Destrehan – Patrick Juneau;
Deville -- Hailey Bolton, Savannah Carter, Hailie Coutee, Kinley Deville, Candice Dryden, Hannah Lewis, Caleb Rhodes, Sydney Ryder;
Dike, Texas -- Brynn Offutt;
Dodson -- Courtney Booker, Kierstyn Cyrus, Haley McClendon;
Doyline -- Lucas Darbonne, Zeke Wallace;
Dry Prong -- Megan Alwell, DeAnna Bartlett, Jacob Boydstun, Ashley Martin, Judith Mixon;
Dubberly -- Alex Robles;
East Windsor, New Jersey – Andreia Martins;
Edmond, Oklahoma -- Ashley Medawattage, Amanda Stokes;
El Paso, Texas -- Christopher Barron;
Elizabeth -- Kolby Friday, Clyde Hurst;
Elmer -- Tula Newman;
Eros -- Alecia Smith;
Eunice -- Jeremy Ortego;
Ferriday -- Dalenesha Wimley;
Flatwoods -- Taylor Nichols;
Florien -- Whitney Byles, Travis Cook, Emma Herrington, Jackson Kleven, Ashton Remedies, Megan Wagley, Shari Wilson;
Flower Mound, Texas -- Cody McGee;
Folsom -- Sarah Moore;
Forest Hill -- Brett Atkinson, Anna Doherty, Rafael Sierra, Charli Stanley, Nancy Vargas, Leslie Winners;
Fort Lauderdale -- Abigail Pangallo;
Fort Polk -- Brittany Chadwick, Molly Fields, Clarrissa Lancour, Blaise Nkengafac, Lindsay Romero, Shiela May Tabonares, Jimma Tear, Nohora Valencia Camacho, Leslie Whitsett;
Fort Worth, Texas -- Angelica Valdez;
Fouke, Arkansas -- Holly Tweedy;
FPO, AP -- Amber Travis;
Franklin -- Shelley Bell, Abriana Lanceslin;
Franklinton -- Brian Geraghty, Bethany McGinnis;
Freeland, Washington -- Paul Aune;
Frierson – Mason Barnes, Shelby Callens, Treanna Howard, Shawna Longoria, Clinton Oliver, John Rachal;
Frisco, Texas -- Adam Trupp;
Garland, Texas -- Joseph Goodson, Alec Horton, Nia Randall;
Geismar -- Emilee Hawkins;
Georgetown, Texas -- Kyle Bryant;
Glenmora -- Brooks Davis, Faith Lawrence;
Gloster -- Paris Gillum;
Goldonna -- Alexander Guillory, Brandon Smith;
Gonzales, Texas -- Ivan Longoria;
Gorman, Texas -- Kourtney Seaton;
Gorum -- Josephine White;
Grand Cane -- Nathan Graham, Rachel Kinman, Jaylen Mcintyre;
Grand Isle -- Abigail Frazier,
Grand Prairie, Texas -- Stephen Garrett;
Grant -- Regina Johnson;
Gray -- Cassie Becnel;
Greenwell Springs -- Katherine Bryant, Madison Shade, Jamie Brooks;
Greenwood -- Ragan Aple, Malory Jeter, Char'Tarian Wilson;
Gretna -- Donald Wagner;
Gun Barrel City, Texas -- Dustin Huffman;
Hallandale Beach, Florida -- Ralph Boereau;
Hallsville, Texas -- Emma Hawthorne;
Hamtramck, Michigan -- Mary Cotter;
Harlingen, Texas -- Frances Knight;
Harvey -- Tajalai Evans;
Hattiesburg, Mississippi -- Mary Mitchell;
Haughton – Benny Broadway, Kayla Bull, Brittony Cole, Randi Corley, Bethanie Couch, Brandon Curry, Ashley Hamil, Tyler Holdsworth, Sydney MacFarlane, Tonya Morgan, Brooke Payton, Jamie Phillips, Makenzie Rains, Johnathan Schlicher, Logan Turner, Kaili Williams, Brigette Wilson, Chase Woltz;
Haynesville -- Eriel Fields;
Hempstead, Texas -- Joshua Roberts;
Henderson, Texas -- Andrew Blackmon, Asha Cormier;
Hermon, Maine -- Allessa Ingraham-Albert;
Hessmer -- Dana Lala, Molli Lamartiniere;
Hineston -- Richard Clark, Angela Merchant, Madison Morrison, April Nornholm;
Homer -- Madison Cain, Francene Ferguson;
Honolulu, Hawaii -- Melissa Baker;
Hornbeck -- Ronald Guess, Jerry Hughes Jr, Jaclyn Smith;
Hosston -- Alaysia Jaynes;
Houma -- Rhiannon Dean, Billy Gorr, Zoe Hebert, Corinne Paris, Sherrie Pena;
Houston, Texas -- Brittany Davis, Stephanie Hall, Natashia Jackson, Alyssa Jacobs, Kenneth Sheldon, Kendall Westfall, Madilyn Wood;
Hutchinson, Kansas -- Cassandra Childress;
Hutto -- Tommi Long;
Independence -- Sabrina Cook;
Iowa -- Nicholas Fisher, Matthew Phillips, Marvette Williams;
Jeanerette -- Selene Allain-Kovacs, Brandy Jackson;
Jefferson -- Matthew Broekman, Jaleia Parker, Codi Vernace, Amanda Wilburn;
Jena -- William Tradewell;
Jennings -- Emily Benoit, Destany Brown, Janee Charles, Rachel Edwards, Kelsey Fitzgerald, Lindsay Orgeron, Lydia Williams,
Jonesboro -- Dearo Nash;
Jonesville -- Rachel Eichmann, Shana Jefferson, Kayla Robertson, Memory Shriner;
Kaplan -- Gabriel LeMoine;
Katy, Texas -- Brittany Cecil, Clayton Holgorsen;
Keithville -- Eleanor Coleman, Erin McDonnell, Hannah Mikovich, Allie Neill, Cora Procell, Erica Sanders, Alexandra West, Deja White;
Kenner -- Christina Arrechavala, Willie Soniat, Kailyn Verdin;
Kentwood -- Iris Travis;
Kerens, Texas -- Brandon Brumbelow, Eric Guerra;
Kilgore, Texas -- Hannah Gribble;
Kinder -- Lorin All;
Kingwood, Texas -- Eric Piccione;
Klamath Fall, Oregon -- Megan Baker;
Lacey Washington -- Shana Sweeney;
Lafayette -- Samantha Donlon, Ashley Fontenot, Ashley Guidry, Bryce Hernandez, Emilee Leger, Nicole Neveu, Christina Poole, Hunter Robicheaux, Caleb Starks, Julia Towry, China Young;
Lake Providence -- Jayadra Campbell, Tamika Turner;
Lake Arthur -- Nicole Andrews, Hannah Worley;
Lake Charles -- Andrew Darbonne, Kennedy Fontenot, Marsha Heap, Karley Hebert;
LaPlace -- Jalen Haydel, Jacob St. Pierre, Doria Wilson;
Las Vegas, Nevada -- April Ficarrotta;
Lawtell -- Karoline Guidry, Olivia Guidry;
League City, Texas -- Emily Ornelas, Hunter Wamack, Christopher Zirkle;
Lecompte -- Allison Williams;
Leesville -- Junette Cutshaw, Skyler Abrams, Lyric Bacote, Marilyn Brooks, Kaylee Busby, Victoria Butler, Anthony Cantrell, Michael Carradine, Charlotte Cassin, Raven Collins, Haleigh Edinger, Brittany Edwards, Tyana Ellis, Caryllann Fermato, Ashley French, Brittany French, Jessica Gray, Gabriella Haymon, Kimberly Henley, Jessica Herring, Heather Hickman, Caitlan James, Zachary Keeton, Jessica Gray, Karl Marzahl, Kylie McAllister, Kelsea Mckinney, Emily Moore, Kaitlyn Pajinag, Montana Phillips, Charlotte Rivara, Chloe Rouleau, David Santos,  Hannah Scott, Heather Snell, Peggy Stanley, Collin Strickland, Haley Tucker, Matthew Ward, Jessica Taylor;
Lena -- Juan Gonzalez;
Lewisville, Texas -- Venus Par;
Little Elm, Texs -- Jasmine Ealy, Daniel Larin;
Little Rock, Arkansas – Tara Lane;
Livonia -- Ryann Bizette;
Logansport -- Amanda Hill, Ashley Wheless;
 Longview, Texas -- Gustavo Corrales, Hannah Dunn, Robdrick Halton, Joni Overman;
Julie Rawls;
Longville -- Johanna Braden;
Lonoke, Arkansas -- Rachel Terry;
Loranger -- Cambree Bailey, Laurie Lassalle;
Louisville, Mississippi -- Zachary Wilson;
Luling --- Nathan Roth;
Lumberton, Texas -- Joshua Terry;
Madisonville -- Alyce Lis, Jensen Volz;
Mandeville -- Evan Guillory, Guy Lecompte, Connor Loar, Carrie Maxwell, Blake Naquin, Prinice Neyland, Shannon Roussell, Sheridan Smith;
Mangham -- Rebekah Aultman;
Manito, Illinois -- Sarah Picken;
Mansfield -- Nicolette Hogan, Ashley Shelton, Brooke Smith;
Mansura -- Deaisha Johnson, Jonah Johnson, Katherin Lemoine, Distiny Thompson;
Many -- Rachel Bensinger, David Bourgeois, Toby Bruce, Jocelyn Cannon, Tyler Colston, Skyler Ezernack, Tiarra Frazier, Alison Garcia, Brittney Garcie, Savannah Garcie, Sheridan Gowen, Emmy Hinds, Emily Holcomb, Jenifer Meadows, Matthew Peace, Lincoln Pearce, Jonathan Pilcher, Bailey Walker;  
Maringouin -- Laura Scronce, Jalacia Toussant;
Marksville -- Andre Boyer, Erica Ducote, Andria Lachney, Chaterrika Lavalais, Zachary Moreau, Madeleine Morrow, Tanner Nugent;
Marrero -- Lorn Bourgeois, Jade Duthu, Luis Escobar, Addison Hinson;
Marshall, Texas -- Tiffany Cortes, Laurann Graham, Tristian Zamora;
Marthaville -- Dillon Hagan, Mallory Powell, Madeline Procell, Daniel Rachal-Claspill;
Masura -- Kate Losavio;
Maurice -- Jenna-Clair Courville, Nicole Levine;
Merryville -- Kalan Townsley;
Metairie -- Kathryn Bancroft, Cameron Duhe, Mary Gaffney, Ellie Mandel, Madysen Norra;
Midland, Texas -- Savannah Cantwell;
Minden -- Kadeem Bailey, Aubry Dennis, Erin Dotson, Abby Greene, Hutton Leppert, Madison Tanner, Kayla Theus, Heather White;
Mira -- Taylor Andrews;
Missouri City, Texas -- Cayla Jones;
Monroe -- Demonta Brown, Dataya Cummings, Deshon Hayes, Ashley Jackson Franklin, Tatianna Randle;
Montgomery --Laryn Graves, Teri Ogorek, Stephanie Sanders;
Mooringsport -- Jacklyn Dublin;
Mora -- Gracy Rowell;
Morgan City -- Norris Duthu;
Morrow -- Quaniqua Joseph;
Moscow, Russia -- Polina Ivanova,
Mt. Hermon -- Warren McFarlain;
Murrieta, California -- LaQuitta Wilkins;
Natchez -- Victoria Bradford, Courtney Sarpy;
Natchitoches -- Alissa Addison, James Armstrong, Cass Arnold, Adam Barnes, Behrend Behrendsen, Lauren Bennett, Joshua Bolton, Kayla Bordelon, Megan Bouchie, Taylor Burch, Deasia Burrell, Ebone Burton, John Byone, Ana Cardaba Garcia, Valerie Chadick, Hannah Chelette, Laura Coffey, Donna Cooper, Whitney Crooks, Dalton Dark, Cieara Davis, Sean Day, Jacob Ellis, Fred Fontenot, Daniela Forero Salcedo, Ashley Fortenberry, Mark Gallien, Luis Gallo Quintero, Taylor Garland, Christopher Gistarb, Samuel Greene, Pamela Gross, Hannah Haigh, Michaela Haigh, Jorgia Hamel, Jett Hayes, Emily Heard, Marcie Jenkins, Regina Johnson, Zachary Johnson, Jeremy Jones, Brian Jordan, Daniel Killian, Michael Kingsley, Abagael Kinney, Lyndon Knueppel, Jiyoon Lee, Robert Lee, John Lindsey, Luke Lucky, Kary-Katharine McCormick, Amber Minor, Shanteria Montgomery, Destiny Moody, Sarah Moody, Brooklyn Noe, Karmen O' Connor, Joseph Parrie, Kevin Price, LaKendria Remo, Antavious Roberson, Cayla Roberts, Tyler Roberts, Aaron Rogers, William Rogers, Kayla Roquemore, Dante Samuel, Spencer Sepulvado,  Anna Sibley, Josie Stamey, Scott Stewart, Harrison Thomas, Margaret Thompson, Victoria Thompson, Kaleb Usleton, Kristan Valdez, Ricardo Ventura, Ryan Wade, Kathryn White, Sarah Kay, Nicholas Wiggins;
New Iberia -- Tara Bonvillain, Bryson Bourque, Destinee Leger, Natalie Ortega, Madison Romero, Alexis Trosclair;
New Llano -Kendra Jones, Reaz Khan, Dennis Stein;
New Orleans -- Rayna Brantley, Beau Cook, Marquise Davis, Amy Favalora, Jaime Hendrickson, Karina Santiago, Jeffrey Swift;
Newman, Georgia -- Samantha Sims;
Norcross, Georiga -- Kailee Striplin;
Norwood -- Ty'Dashia McElwee;
Oakdale – Alyssa Cole, Kirstin Richard;
Oberlin -- Jonathon Villareal;
Opelousas -- Kierra Doucet, Diamond Leblanc, Amy Levier;
Pacifica, California -- Nicholas Pierotti;
Paris, Texas -- Emily Essary, Zachary Hevron, Cody Vorwerk, Jordan Whatley;
Pattison, Texas -- Morgan Hildebrand;
Pelican -- Mary Myers;
Pereira Risaralda, Columbia -- Mariana Ospina Rivas;
Pineville -- Connor Littleton, Aimee Ashworth, Christian Boudreaux, Raegan Brocato, Samantha Browning, Kaitlyn Burns, Taylor Campbell, Erika Carter, Luke Conway, Caitlin Crawford, Glory Deaton, Cory Franklin, Hannah Gaspard, Brooke Gongre, Leia Graham, Megan Gypin, Katelyn Hebert, Kaylin Jameson, Jacqueline Johnson, Alissa Joseph, Jessica King, Landon King, Carlee Lake, Brooke Leger, Jeffery Lepage, Ashlee Mitchell, Austin Nelson, Michalene Perry, Cinnamon Player, Wendi Powell, Brittany Shackleford, Odie Trusty, Wesley Williams, Alexis Williamson, Alan Winegeart, Jewel Woods, Madeline Wright;
Pitkin -- Jessica Jones;
Plain Dealing -- Hunter Horton;
Plaquemine -- Kameron Landry, Ma Kayla Washington;
Plum City, Wisconsin -- Brittany Reiter-Theeuwen;
Pollock -- Tanner Brazil, William Hardy;
Port Barre -- Olivia Lanclos, Danielle Schexnayder;
Prairieville -- Lauren Breaux, Joanna Bunnell, Claire Credeur, Andrea Gathercole, Jakalyn Hills, Bailey Mohler, Kyle Munson, Payton Stafford, Brooke Tompkins, Kaylon Wood;
Pride -- Leann Wills;
Princeton -- Ariell Shield;
Raceland -- Emily Adams, DQuincy McGuire;
Raeford, North Carolina -- Lauren Reilly;
Raleigh, North Carolina -- Aleida Alfonso;
Rayne -- Cameron Desselle;
Rayville -- Emily Rawls, Jennifer Rogers, Mary Rogers, Leslie Sharbono;
Reserve -- Ranata Coxie;
Rhinehart -- Bethany Russell;
Richardson, Texas -- Erin Wrozek;
Richmond, Texas -- Sidney Harris;
Ridgeland, Mississippi -- Jacqueline Fairley-Taylor;
Ringgold -- Alora Bryant, Abram Cook;
River Ridge -- Taylor Young;
Robeline -- Amy Bass, Hunter Dubois, Keira Huff, Bergen Oge, Laura Olguin, Megan Palmer, Rebecca Sparish, Christopher Taylor;
Rogers, Arkansas -- Taylor Bush;
Roseland -- Erin Verberne;
Rosepine -- Emily Camacho;
Rosharon, Texas -- Whitney Washington;
Rowlett, Texas --Daniel Miner;
Ruston -- Irene Hild, Qay'Shon Thurman, Jena Warren;
Saint Francisville – Claire Leming, Kathleen Morse, Katherine Noble, Hannah Prewitt;
Saint Gabriel -- Jainakee Cross;
Saint Ignace, Michigan -- Emilee Keuten;
Saint Martinville -- Blake Blanchard;
San Pedro Sula, Cortes, Honduras -- Jonathan Andino Madrid, Vilma Castro Lopez, Cesia Corrales;
Santa Fe, Texas -- Micaela Bouvier;
Saratoga, Arkansas -- Christie Sain;
Saskatoon Saskatchewan Canada -- Loren MacLennan;
Scott -- Tayla Soileau;
Scottsboro, Alabama -- Jessica Provenza;
Scurry, Texas -- Rebecca Blackshear;
Shreveport -- Foster Adams, Phillip Adams, Ashlee Arkansas, Chris Bankson, Angelica Bartlett, Austin Beene, Azhani Bennett, Jessica Bollingham, Hannah Bolton, Alyssa Bonacci, JiKeeriya-Jontay Bowden, Rakeisha Brown, Amanda Charles, Brandon Cockerham, Caitlin Coker, Elizabeth Cook, Colby Cranford, Naterria Davis, Emily Dean, Courtney Dehart, Kimberly Dennis, Kristina Doyal, Jada Dudley, Shalanda Duncan, Hannah Ellis, Reagan Escude, Ronald Evans, Candice Faith, Amye Flair, Sierra Foster, Sterlin, Samantha Freeman, Jamie French, Zachary Fussell, JaSae Gatlin, Rayvin Gaudet, Michael Ghattas, Destinee Green, Lashonda Hall, Madison Harper, Brea Housley, Melinda Hunt, April Hunter, Alyecia Ivory Stills, Ronesha Johnson, Randall Johnston, Lajarious Jones, Demariae Jordan, Molly Kelly, Emalee Kennon, Kaitlyn Knighton, Lakenya Lafitte, Katie Layfield, Hannah Lee, Jay Lester, Brandon Lewis-Graham, William Mahoney, Alaina McMillian, Destiny Mitchell, Damitron Moore, Latravia Mosley, Aaron Navarre,  Maria Ogletree, Haley Peace, Allison Pearah, TreSor Pennington, Jared Perkins, Hayden Pilcher, Laura Pritchard, Lindsey Ray, Patricia Reed, Harrison Reeves, Kendall Reeves, Keyonna Roberson, Ansley Rosett, Caleb Rounsavall, Amanda Rushing, Mallori Sanders, Elizabeth Scott, Lawson Scott, Catherine Shaw, Kathryn Shrader, Mary Sibley, Jackiesha Simmons,  John Slocum, Shelby Sowers, Christa Sprawls, Angel Stewart, Rashima Stewart, Somer Stratton, Amanda Strother, Khalil Sumlin, Destini Sweet, Joyce Taylor, Breyonna Thompson, Albert Tuiel, Kayla Waller, Ilyanna Warlen, Aaliyah Watkins, Dillion Wilkerson, Donald Williams, JeVannica Williams, Suzanne Williams, Emily Wingrove, Morgan Woodall,  Randy Woodle;
Sibley -- Julianna Schober;
Sierner -- Emily George;
Sieper -- Whitney Browning;
Sikes -- Dylan Kelly, Tonya LeBaron;
Simmesport -- Kimani Batiste, Bailie Marsh, Taylor Myers;
Slaughter -- Ciara Gibbs;
Slidell -- Katie Buttner, Robert Carter, William Jensen, John Norvel, Theresa Sharp, Sophia Toranto, Maci Walgamotte, Olivia Warren;
Spring, Texas -- Victoria Harris, Elyssa Hernandez;
Starks -- Triston Bussell,
Stockbridge, Georgia -- Rachel Jeane;
Stonewall -- Hailey Compton, Madison Parker, Chassidy Sutton;
Sugarland, Texas -- Jake Gore;
Sulphur -- Kobe Ardoin, Derek Henry, Bralyn James, Rylie Mcfarlain;
Summerfield, South Carolina -- Alexandria Hughes;
Talihina, Oklahoma -- Heidi Couch;
Texarkana, Texas -- Cody Hambly, Daphne Hammett;
The Woodlands, Texas -- Robyn Beatty, Tyler Rapp;
Thibodaux -- Tierra Johnson;
Tioga -- Hannah Pusateri;
Tomball, Texas -- Kylie Spencer;
Toms River, New Jersey -- Jacqueline Manza;
Trout -- Makayla King, Kalee Mcguffee, Jacie Paul;
Turkey Creek -- Kelsie King;
Tyler, Texas -- De'Shalyn Jones;
Vacherie -- Tameeka Ross;
Vidalia -- Kayla Banks, Charles Johnson;
Vierzon -- Lena Billault;
Ville Platte -- Gabrielle Chapman, Joseph Evans, Hannah Gallow;
Vinton -- Shae Cramer;
Vinton, Texas -- Alexis Frescas;
Virginia Beach, Texas -- Danielle Hill;
Walker -- David Kolb;
Washington -- Halie Briley;
Welsh -- Jordan Durio, Lauren LeDoux;
West Monroe -- Charles Allen, Abigail Beck, Laura Lovell;
Westlake -- Baleigh Derouen,
Wills Point, Texas -- Rebekah Clark;
Winnfield -- Jermesia Anderson, Taylor Burnett, Simona Curry, Trenton Dill, Rhonda Duff, Kerry Fitzgerald, Kara Grantadams, Ieishlia Lynch, Brittany Parker, Katreiona Starks, Caitlin Womack, Caroline Womack, Katy Zimmerman;
Winnsboro -- Hunter Cooper, Darrel Doyle, A'Lexus Johnson;
Woodville -- Tiera Trask;
Woodworth -- Taylor Henry;
Yaroslavl, Russia -- Polina Mutel;
Youngsville -- Randall Blair, Hannah Broussard, Jessica Gilmore, Alexys Hebert, Brian Horton, Devyn Shores;
 Zachary -- Carmeka Cooper, Neil Ahldwin;
 Zwolle -- Holly Laroux, Courtney McDaniel, Konner Parrie, Holden Rivers;
Rebecca Reine.
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@itsbllshit​   //   samantha & nancy.   ♡
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               tommy   h   and   carol…      honestly   some   of   the   WORST   people   samantha   has   ever   had   the   displeasure   of   knowing.      she   really   wasn’t   into   those   jock   popular   types.      they   always   seemed   so   FULL   of   themselves.      the   way   they   carried   themselves,   it   was   more   than   just   confidence.      plus   they   were   complete   ASSHOLES   to   anyone   they   viewed   even   SLIGHTLY   outside   the   social   norm.      she’d   also   heard   about   what   they’d   done   last   year   at   the   theater.      what   they   wrote   about   nancy.      steve   had   been   involved   in   that   too,   but   samantha   had   seen   the   change   in   him.      she   can   TELL   he’s   not   that   same   asshole   like   his   former   friends.      arms   fold   over   her   chest   as   she   watches   them   walk   away   laughing,   and   then   she   approaches   the   other   teenage   girl   from   behind.      ❝   i’m   just   saying,   murder   is   totally   an   option.   ❞
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myscrollmate · 5 years
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Always and Forever
1: What book did you last finish? When was that? “ China's Commercial Sexscapes: Rethinking Intimacy, Masculinity, and Criminal Justice” by Eileen Yuk Tsang finished today.
2: What are you currently reading? “Rituals” by Kelley Armstrong  and “Sweet Tea” by Wendy Lynn Decker
3: What book are you planning to read next? The Other Daughter by Shalini Boland
4: What was the last book you added to your tbr? “Woman on the Edge: by Samantha M Bailey
5: Which book did you last re-read? Its been a long time since I’ve re-read a book cause I have a list a mile long of stuff to read still so im going to take a guess and say “Bitten” by Kelley Armstrong
6: Which book was the last one you really, really loved? “The Woman Upstairs” by Ruth Heald
7: What was/were the last book/books you bought? “Cruel Fate” by Kelley Armstrong
8: Paperback or hardcover? Why? Hardcovers cause they stand up better over time but paperbacks because they are cheaper and I can get two for the price of a hardcover
9: YA, NA or Adult? Why?  YA they always have such cute and powerful messages
10: Sci-Fi or fantasy? Why?  Fantasy it can cover so much but if its done well its pure magic
11: Classic or modern? Why? modern easier to relate to 
12: Political memoirs or comedic memoirs? comedic the political is always a little bit to dry for my liking
13: Name a book with a really bad movie/tv adaption: Twilight
14: Name a book where the movie/tv adaption actually was better than the original:  Fight Club
15: What book changed your life? Before I go to Sleep by SJ Watson
16: If you could bring three books to a deserted island which would you bring and why?  Room by Emma Donoghue because the child innocence would make things easier.  “Haunted” By Kelley Armstrong because the fantasy would take me away and I can read that book a million times and never get sick of it. And the last book would have to be “The Girlfriend” by Sarah J Naughton the thriller is something that can always keep you entertained even if you know the ending. 
17: If you owned a bookshop what would you call it? Undercover books
18: Which character from a book is the most like you? Maybe Maud in “Elizabeth is Missing” By Emma Healey
19: Which character from a book is the least like you?  Anastasia Steele in Fifty Shades of Grey by EL James
20: Best summer read? The Perfect Girlfriend by Karen Hamilton
21: Best winter read?  Trapped by Michael Northrop
22: Pro or anti e-readers? Why? Both Pro cause you can take millions of books with you in one form con because every one I”ve had has broken fairly quickly
23: Bookdepository or Amazon? amazon never heard of the other one
24: Do you prefer to buy books online or in a bookshop? both where ever I can find the book I’m looking for
25: If you could be a character from a book for just one day who would you be and why? (Bonus: any specific day in the story?) Elena from Bitten I think it would be cool to live in her life. 
26: If you could be a character from a book for their entire life who would you be and why?  Zoey Redbird in Marked i think it would be cool to be a vampyre.
27: If you could change one thing about mainstream literature what would you change? (i.e. more diversity, better writing, better plot etc.) nothing
28: How many books have you read so far this year? 114
29: How do you sort your shelves? (i.e. by color, author, title etc.)  Author and series
30: Who’s your favorite author? Kelley Armstrong, Cathy Glass, Patricia Briggs, 
31: Who’s your favorite contemporary author? Chelsea M Cameron
32: Who’s your favorite fantasy author? Kelley Armstrong
33: Who’s your favorite Sci-Fi author? Ernest Cline
34: List five OTPs:   Elena Michaels and Clay Danvers, Blaire Waldorf and Chuck Bass,  Augustus Waters and Hazel Lancaster,  Olivia and Rickey, Mercy Thompson, and Adam Hauptman
35: Name a book you consider to be terribly underrated: “Helium” by Rudy Francisco 
36: Name a book you consider to be terribly overrated: Anything by Stephen King
37: How many books are actually in your bookshelf/shelves right now? lots to many to count
38: What language do you (most often) read in? English
39: Name one of your favorite childhood books “Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone” by JK Rowling  
40: Name one of your favorite books from your teenage years? “Bitten by Kelley Armstrong 
41: Do you own a library card? How often do you use it? Yes in person not to much but I use the online library a lot 
42: Which was the best book you had to read in school? The Catcher in the Rye by JD Salinger
43: Are you the kind of person who reads several books at once or the kind of person who can only read one book at a time? several at once
44: Do you like to listen to music when you read? no I like to concentrate on what I’m reading 
45: What is your favorite thing to eat when you read? something that won’t wreck the pages of my book
46: What is your favorite thing to drink when you read? water
47: What do you do to get out of a reading slump? read something different or pull a suggestion from someone one
48: Where is your favorite place to read? my bed or my couch
49: When is your favorite time to read? anytime
50: Why do you love to read? it takes me away to another world
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doctorwhonews · 7 years
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The Doctor Falls
Latest Review: Written by Steven Moffat Directed by Rachel Talalay Starring Peter Capaldi, Pearl Mackie and Matt Lucas with Michelle Gomez, John Simm, Briana Shann, Rosie Boore, Samantha Spiro, Simon Coombs, Nicholas Briggs, Stephanie Hyam, and David Bradley Produced by Peter Bennett Executive Producers: Steven Moffat, Brian Minchin A BBC Studios Cymru Wales Production for BBC ONE First broadcast 6.30pm, Saturday 1 July 2017   This review contains spoilers and is based on an advance preview copy of the episode.   Last week Matt Hills described World Enough and Time as ‘the bleakest and darkest that Doctor Who has been for quite some time’. The Doctor Falls, befitting the second part of World Enough and Time’s story, maintains if not deepens this atmosphere. Nothing that is done in World Enough and Time is reversed. At times many of the lead characters seem to be competing to find which of them has the most profound death wish. The plan the Doctor comes up with can only obtain a minor respite for the embattled humans on floor 507. Indeed, when the Doctor argues that the emergence of Cybermen is inevitable in any human society, and where he also points out that in this closed and time-dilated environment their advantage is overwhelming, what point can there be to fighting on? It’s this question which The Doctor Falls seeks to explore, and in doing so say more than we have heard for some time, if ever, about both Steven Moffat’s and Peter Capaldi’s understanding of who the Doctor is. The result is oddly uplifting. My first reaction, as messaged to one of the editors of this page, was ‘Shining, brilliant, beautiful’; but I added that I think I needed more words to do the story justice. So: The shift of setting between the first and second half of a two-part story is an established Steven Moffat device. As The Big Bang moved from the underhenge of the climax of The Pandorica Opens to the museum, so The Doctor Falls uses its pre-credit sequence to establish the society on floor 507. The Big Bang was itself a cornerstone for the edifice of mythology which Steven Moffat had (with characteristic use of paradox) already begun to build before the stone was set. The Doctor Falls finds Moffat readying and detonating the explosion which will bring down his own version of Doctor Who. The destruction is even more careful than that wrought by the Doctor within the episode, but the visuals suggest what happens: though so much is reduced to ash, burning the old growth might allow for the cultivation of the new. Floor 507 displays a placeless but vaguely mid-Atlantic rusticity, neatly juxtaposed with the gas-choked dystopia over five hundred floors below. It’s an agricultural community where children are central and guarded against the predations of the topknots by a thin line of defenders. It recalls Russell T Davies's idea from his 2003/4 pitch document, that outer space stories should feature human pioneers so the audience have points of identification, perhaps unconsciously also recalling the western. In contrast to the masculine universalism of the Cybermen – both male in that there are no Cyberwomen, but genderless in that the Master insists Bill is now an it – the community has a matriarchal bent, with Hazran as its leader. The chief cook and chief executive are the same person, unproblematic and brought to the screen with authoritative warmth and human fear by Samantha Spiro. The character reminded me a little of Lucy Cohu's Deborah Goren in Ripper Street. There are at least nods to the New England orphanage of The Cider House Rules, and to the pioneer communities of Little House on the Prairie, but theirs are not the stories being told. Introducing a child viewpoint character is an old familiar Moffatism, here used self-consciously. Briana Shann’s Alit recalls Caitlin Blackwood’s Amelia Pond; apparently parentless, independent, willing to confront her fears, and bearing enough of a resemblance to Pearl Mackie’s Bill (exaggerated by the hairstyling) to make one wonder if there is a direct connection between the characters. Perhaps this is Moffat once more embodying the child audience and acknowledging its link with the companion. Alit is the first person Bill sees when she arrives on floor 507, and the first person to make an empathic connection with her when she wakes up from the ‘sleep’ induced by the Doctor. Alit perhaps embodies the audience’s hopes that Bill can be restored to humanity, as well as the wish of her community and the Doctor for a non-cybernetic future. In reminding long-term viewers of lost friends, and present lookers-in on the current predicament, Alit helps to highlight the optimism underlying what could otherwise be read for much of its length as an overwhelmingly pessimistic episode. The Doctor Falls follows the non-linear structure of World Enough and Time in its first act, containing flashbacks within flashbacks. However, opening the main narrative with a scene where the Doctor is undergoing torture and ritual humiliation is a good choice. There’s something Christ-like about suffering enabling the Doctor to restate his values, though I’d be cautious about following this parallel too far. The scene and the Doctor’s speeches also help divorce the episode from the detail of the setting: there will, the Doctor says, always be Cybermen, wherever there are human beings. The origin of the Cybermen is a tale Doctor Who has told elsewhere in other media, and it’s a legend which this episode supposes will be told again and again in different ways. Hence the nod to Doctor Who Magazine's The World Shapers with the mention of Marinus, and why it is perfectly acceptable in this context for the Cybermen to blast death rays from their headlamps in a way which they never managed before on television, but did on the back cover of  the first paperback edition of Doctor Who and the Tenth Planet. Cybermen created by Kit Pedler and Gerry Davis; but with embellishments by Chris Achilleos, Grant Morrison and many others. Moffat, like Russell T Davies, has never been reluctant to draw from non-television Doctor Who where it helps develop a concept. Likewise his attitude to the programme’s lore: the importance is not in the detail of where the Cybermen come from, but that the Cybermen’s conviction that turning people into Cybermen is a dead end for all the natural and moral sciences. As someone once said, they must be fought. Bill is herself a battlefield. The Master likes to remind everybody (but particularly the Doctor) that she is a Cyberman, the result of a conversion process which stripped away anything deemed useless to Operation Exodus. From his point of view, Bill is dead. The programme shows the Master to be wrong, or at least that it disagrees with his view of the individual as nothing more than an organism. As long as Bill recognizes and believes in herself, she exists, even if the programming of a Cyberman rages like a hurricane in her head. The continuing presence of Pearl Mackie in the credits and her voiceover in the trailer tantalized exactly what role she would play, and doubtless many hoped or expected a speedy and conventional resolution. The Master’s brutal taunting is a reminder that we can obtain neither. The device of allowing the viewer to see, most of the time, Bill as she understands herself, not only avoids practical problems surrounding the uniformity and inflexibility of the Cyberman costumes, but allows Pearl Mackie’s talents to be displayed in a way they haven’t been so far. Mackie's physical awareness makes her fill the space of a Cyberman while remaining visibly Bill to us. We often see Bill as a Cyberman only when she is reminded that a Cyberman is what others see – such as when she walks in on Hazran and Nardole unannounced and Hazran blasts away with her shotgun. It’s a jarring, heartbreaking moment. Also breaking hearts is Missy. Those hoping for an hour of multi-Master malevolence will be disappointed, but I think this episode does better with the scenario it presents than it would with the one some seem to have hoped for. Michelle Gomez plays Missy in the manner of an addict who keeps slipping from the wagon, deliberating giddily between new and old hits and guessing at some kind of peace beyond the spectre of withdrawal. It’s an irony that the Doctor never knows for certain that Missy was luring her former self into a trap which would have made her feel free to help the Doctor. In the meantime Missy and the Master flirt like bad fairy nobles making sport in the woods. Shakespeare scholars will know better, but their bickering seemed to me a sort of self-obsessed fusion of elements of A Midsummer Night’s Dream and Much Ado About Nothing. Gomez and John Simm are very good at this, especially as there’s a genuinely disturbing undercurrent to their bantering. Simm in particular, with his beard, is a poisoned Pan, a violator whose lust for his next self reminds one of the brutality with which the Master treated his wife Lucy. Despite his very real and effective threat (and history) of violence, John Simm’s Master is a hollow malevolence, harmful, damaging, self-consumed, but overall an evil with no point to it. I’ve been looking at academic Doctor Who books for another project, and remembered that in an interview with the writers of Doctor Who: The Unfolding Text, Douglas Adams complained that the Master’s plans had no meaning. The Doctor theorizes the path of the Master’s career on the ship in a way which assumes the emptiness and self-defeat in the pursuit and exercise of absolute power for its own sake. In return, later, the Master critiques the Doctor’s course of action on his way to floor 1056, arguing that if the Doctor hadn’t given his lecture on time dilation he would have arrived early enough to save Bill. This line of reasoning is possibly flawed in story terms, but anticipates (or echoes, depending on where one stands) the criticisms made by several reviewers of World Enough and Time. It’s an old fan observation that the Master often seems like a character who realizes that he is in a television series and behaves accordingly, but here his criticisms flag up his own powerlessness; he’s not willing to act in a way that helps anybody or contributes to the main narrative, so stands on the sidelines and plays critic until he can escape. It's tempting to think of this aspect of him as a departing showrunner who knows his successor is already in the office. The Doctor Falls is a good episode for Nardole, a character whom we never really got to know and who has probably suffered from never having been the focus of an episode. A friend explained him to her enquiring mother as the Doctor’s butler, and perhaps that’s why he remained semi-visible, his full properties a secret. Here, though, Hazran makes her discovery of him one of her missions and Matt Lucas’s depiction of Nardole’s awkwardness must resound with everybody who has felt unworthy of another person’s esteem. It’s natural and credible and also very much part of Moffat’s observational writing of male self-effacement and overconfidence as a mask for doubt. How one greets it will depend on one’s patience with Moffat’s themes, but for me, here, it works unobtrusively, the Doctor and Nardole competing over their relative usefulness, or lack of it. Nardole’s departure doesn’t give him a chance to say a long goodbye; he leaves as part of an operation in much the way he might have done if he’d expected to see the Doctor again, but as he never had a conventional introduction this is appropriate. As a title, The Doctor Falls intrigued me more after World Enough and Time because in one sense the Doctor had already fallen; he’d hubristically reduced his way of living to a formula by which he thought he could test Missy, and where stock phrases had replaced psychological insight. Instead we have a heroic fall which (like much else, as Matt Hills noted last week) calls back to the series trailer. The Doctor says he is a man of peace, but walks in war, and here he accepts the fate of the warrior, picking off more Cybermen than logic would perhaps expect with his absurdly versatile screwdriver until a Cyberman blasts him down through the chest, a wound which is one of at least two ways in which Bill’s fate has anticipated his own. The devastated landscape which the Doctor’s bomb leaves behind is as much a design achievement as anything Michael Pickwoad has hitherto accomplished – a landscape we’ve got to know has become a devastation of a kind previously associated in his time on the series with Skaro or Trenzalore, and this time the Doctor is the immediate cause. Redemption and the chance of new beginnings come in part because the Doctor was wrong. There was hope and there was a witness, perhaps even a reward. I’m sure that in earlier seasons we’d have had glimpses of Heather now and then, as the series piled arc upon arc. None of Steven Moffat’s companions have been allowed to return to anything approximating their old lives; travelling with the Doctor means incorporation into the mythic substrata of the universe, and so it proves with Bill, reunited with a Heather whose personality has now re-emerged and seems dominant in the watery spaceship. It's good to see Stephanie Hyam once more; there's still a note of wondering in her performance but the dislocation has become the confidence of the explorer. As all the interaction between Bill and Heather is seen from Bill’s narrative point of view once Bill has been remade as a Heather-like creature, perhaps what we see is all a translation convention. Whatever, the choice to become human again is open; it’s intriguing that the door is not closed entirely on Pearl Mackie’s return. However, if this is a farewell, it’s a good one. There's irony in the Doctor’s regeneration being sparked by a tear (a rearranging of the meaning of grief expressed for the third Doctor in The Monster of Peladon and Planet of the Spiders, of course) from a protected friend who has now turned twice into a creature he has previously fought against. It recalls Russell T Davies’s theme of the Doctor as agent of liberation rather than reinforcer of parental authority. However, this year the Doctor has forgotten that lesson and become guardian and tutor to both Bill and Missy, with Nardole as an unteachable voice by the wings. The Doctor's efforts to protect people have not succeeded in the way he sought. As the first Doctor realized at the conclusion of The Dalek Invasion of Earth, beneficial change can come from taking the risk of being brave enough to let go. That was the real lesson of Susan's portrait seen on the Doctor's desk in The Pilot, and he had forgotten. The problem, of course, is that the Doctor doesn’t want to let go. Bill, as a Cyberman, wanted to die if she couldn’t be herself any more. The Doctor wants to die too. Peter Capaldi’s performance of a fragmented Doctor, repeating the words of his earlier selves while holding on to his current physical form, was dizzying, helped by a camera which located him at once from several angles and levels in the TARDIS interior. Perhaps this Doctor’s changes of persona across series reflect an ongoing uncertainty about who he is which stretches beyond the ‘Am I a good man?’ interrogations of series eight. Back in 2010 Frank Collins wrote (in a review of The End of Time) of the tenth Doctor’s life as a Bildungsroman; the Doctor’s reward for personal development and the achievement of self-knowledge, was however to be returned to adolescence to begin the process again. Perhaps this older Doctor is about to change without having reached the point his two immediate predecessors did, and worse, can’t see any prospect of doing so. What, then, can be made of the first Doctor’s emergence from what presumed convergence of narrative (over fifty-one years) leads us to believe is an Antarctic blizzard? I’d thought earlier this series that Steven Moffat’s valedictory notes weren’t only for the period he’s been showrunner, but for the entire period he’s been involved, from the time Doctor Who returned in 2005. The Logopolis homage of companions suggests this too in content, as well as calling further back in form. If nothing else, the montage will open up arguments about who counts as a companion again, which will keep a lot of people happy and angry at the same time. The first Doctor said, if only in the script of The Tenth Planet, that he would not go through with the change to his next self, and the meeting of the two Doctors benefits from that level of fan knowledge while I hope still working as a confounding moment – a ‘suspended enigma’, it was once called – for those who don’t know. In the brief time we see him, David Bradley gives a performance which is very much the first Doctor as opposed to his William Hartnell or his Hartnell as the first Doctor from An Adventure in Space and Time, which augurs well. I’m always conscious that I tend to emphasize what works for me in these reviews, and they are often moments which leap out rather than broader themes or more thorough analysis. This article is based on one viewing of the episode and I’m still not sure why I found it so positive an experience. Throughout I imagined that the director, rather than the Doctor, must have the hidden arms of a Venusian Aikido practitioner; Rachel Talalay conducting with at least three batons like a hexapod, but with many more eyes than Alpha Centauri. The open vistas of floor 507 come to mind; the fatally wounded Doctor’s monologue about stars, too, was uplifting despite its note of disappointment, perhaps because it acknowledged that the Doctor’s belief and perhaps hope that this was the end for him was false. Heather’s return was a reminder that hope, even if apparently lost, can never be written off. Yet throughout there are sacrifices unappreciated and only postponed, with the sense that the inevitable is only being delayed. Perhaps the episode can be read as a musing on mortality, especially given that Cybermen, Time Lords, unconverted humans and indeed puddle-spaceship-creatures are all seeking to delay the inevitable, unless they are the Master, which is in a sense to be nothing at all because he can’t adequately empathize with others’ conditions. If so, it’s also the second part of three. The twelfth Doctor’s finale is begun, but it is not over, and we have to wait almost six months to conclude our verdicts on the whole. http://reviews.doctorwhonews.net/2017/07/the_doctor_falls.html?utm_source=dlvr.it&utm_medium=tumblr
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ninsiana0 · 6 years
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I read 103 books in 2017 (Thanks, Anxiety!)
Most of the books I read this year were written by women and authors of color. I read books by exactly two cishetwhitedudes. Huzzah!
Here are all the books I read this year in alphabetical order:
YOU WILL KNOW ME by Megan Abbott STAY WITH ME by Ayobami Adebayo PERDITION by Ann Aguirre THRONE OF THE CRESCENT MOON by Saladin Ahmed AMERICAN WAR by Omar El Akkad THE POWER by Naomi Alderman RIPPER by Isabel Allende THE HOUSE OF SPIRITS by Isabel Allende ALL THE BIRDS IN THE SKY by Charlie Jane Anders MAGIC BINDS (Kate Daniels 9) by Ilona Andrews SWEEP IN PEACE (Innkeeper Chronicles 2) by Ilona Andrews ONE FELL SWEEP (Innkeeper Chronicles 3) by Ilona Andrews WHITE HOT (Hidden Legacy 2) by Ilona Andrews WILDFIRE (Hidden Legacy 3) by Ilona Andrews BITTEN by Kelley Armstrong THE HEART GOES LAST by Margaret Atwood SIEGE & STORM (Grisha 2) by Leigh Bardugo THE IDIOT by Elif Batuman BLOOD BOUND (Mercedes Thompson 2) by Patricia Briggs IRON KISSED (Mercedes Thompson 3) by Patricia Briggs BONE CROSSED (Mercedes Thompson 4) by Patricia Briggs SILVER BORNE (Mercedes Thompson 5) by Patricia Briggs RIVER MARKED (Mercedes Thompson 6) by Patricia Briggs FROST BURNED (Mercedes Thompson 7) by Patricia Briggs INK & BONE by Rachel Caine THE LONG WAY TO A SMALL, ANGRY PLANET by Becky Chambers THE GIRL FROM THE WELL by Rin Chupeco THE PASSAGE by Justin Cronin LABYRINTH LOST by Zoraida Cordova THE BOOK OF THE UNNAMED MIDWIFE by Meg Elison THE BOOK OF ETTA by Meg Elison THE STORY OF A NEW NAME (Neapolitan Novels 2) by Elena Ferrante THOSE WHO LEAVE AND THOSE WHO STAY (Neapolitan Novels 3) by Elena Ferrante SWIMMING LESSONS by Claire Fuller DRAGONFLY IN AMBER (Outlander 2) by Diana Gabaldon VOYAGER (Outlander 3) by Diana Gabaldon TWO GIRLS, FAT AND THIN by Mary Gaitskill HUNGER by Roxane Gay THE VEGETARIAN by Han Kang DAY SHIFT (Midnight, Texas 2) by Charlaine Harris NIGHT SHIFT (Midnight, Texas 3) by Charlaine Harris ALL THE LITTLE LIARS (Aurora Teagarden 9) by Charlaine Harris AERIE (Magonia 2) by Maria Dahvana Headley MR. SPLITFOOT by Samantha Hunt THE OBELISK GATE (Broken Earth 2) by NK Jemisin THE STONE SKY (Broken Earth 3) by NK Jemisin THE FATE OF THE TEARLING (Queen of the Tearling 3) by Erika Johansen THE LAST LITTLE BLUE ENVELOPE by Maureen Johnson WHEN SHE WOKE by Hillary Jordan THE ETERNITY CURE (Blood of Eden 2) by Julie Kagawa ASK BABA YAGA by Taisia Kitaiskaia THE HISTORIAN by Elizabeth Kostova A WRINKLE IN TIME by Madeleine L'Engle A WIND IN THE DOOR by Madeleine L'Engle TENDER MORSELS by Margo Lanagan A WIZARD OF EARTHSEA by Ursula K. Le Guin ANCILLARY SWORD (Imperial Radch 2) by Ann Leckie ANCILLARY MERCY (Imperial Radch 3) by Ann Leckie WOMEN NO. 17 by Edan Lepucki HIT MILK by Deborah Levy UPTOWN THIEF by Aya de Leon WHERE THE MOUNTAIN MEETS THE MOON by Grace Lin FACES IN THE CROWD by Valeria Luiselli HEIR OF FIRE (Throne of Glass 3) by Sarah J. Maas A LOCAL HABITATION (October Daye 2) by Seanan McGuire AN ARTIFICIAL NIGHT (October Daye 3) by Seanan McGuire LATE ECLIPSES (October Daye 4) by Seanan McGuire ONE SALT SEA (October Daye 5) by Seanan McGuire ASHES OF HONOR (October Daye 6) by Seanan McGuire CHALICE by Robin Mckinley GATHER THE DAUGHTERS by Jennie Melamed SIGNAL TO NOISE by Silvia Moreno-Garcia CERTAIN DARK THINGS by Silvia Moreno-Garcia MAMA DAY by Gloria Naylor PLANETFALL by Emma Newman LITTLE FIRES EVERYWHERE by Celeste Ng WHO FEARS DEATH by Nnedi Okorafor HALF RESURRECTION BLUES by Daniel José Older SHADOWHOUSE FALL by Daniel José Older WHITE IS FOR WITCHING by Helen Oyeyemi DRINKING COFFEE ELSEWHERE by ZZ Packer COMMONWEALTH by Ann Patchett THE LONGINGS OF WOMEN by Marge Piercy THE GOLDEN COMPASS by Philip Pullman THE SUBTLE KNIFE by Philip Pullman THE AMBER SPYGLASS by Philip Pullman THE PASSION OF CLEOPATRA by Anne Rice & Christopher Rice HOW I LIVE NOW by Meg Rosoff HOGWARTS: AN INCOMPLETE & UNRELIABLE GUIDE by JK Rawlings BONE GAP by Laura Ruby A GATHERING OF SHADOWS (Shades of Magic 2) by V.E. Schwab A CONJURING OF LIGHT (Shades of Magic 3) by V.E. Schwab THIS SAVAGE SONG by Victoria Schwab A TORCH AGAINST THE NIGHT by Sabaa Tahir AMONG OTHERS by Jo Walton THE BEAST (Black Dagger Brotherhood 14) by JR Ward THE CHOSEN (Black Dagger Brotherhood 15) by JR Ward ALL SYSTEMS RED by Martha Wells WHEN WOMEN WERE BIRDS by Terry Tempest Williams THE SORCERER OF THE WILDEEPS by Kai Ashante Wilson CALL THE MIDWIFE by Jennifer Worth A LITTLE LIFE by Hanya Yanagihara THE BOOK OF JOAN by Lidia Yuknavitch
Follow me on Goodreads! www.goodreads.com/ninsiana0
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londontheatre · 7 years
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Amy Ross as Elphaba in WICKED UK & Ireland Tour. Photo Credit Matt Crockett
WICKED, the West End and Broadway musical phenomenon that tells the incredible untold story of the Witches of Oz, releases new production photography, by Matt Crockett, of Amy Ross as Elphaba, Helen Woolf as Glinda and Aaron Sidwell as Fiyero, who lead the cast, together with Jack Harrison-Cooper as Chistery, of the forthcoming return engagement of the spectacular, critically acclaimed and multi record-breaking UK & Ireland Tour, which begins a five-week season at the Bristol Hippodrome from 31 January 2018.
The full cast is Amy Ross (Elphaba), Helen Woolf (Glinda), Aaron Sidwell (Fiyero), Steven Pinder (The Wizard and Doctor Dillamond), Kim Ismay (Madame Morrible), Emily Shaw (Nessarose), Iddon Jones (Boq), Nikki Bentley (Standby for Elphaba), Charli Baptie, Jason Broderick, Samantha Brown, Hannah Cadec, Grace Chapman, James Davies-Williams, Howard Ellis, Amy Goodwin, Daniel James Greenway, Jack Harrison-Cooper, Charlie Karlsen, Nicole Lupino, Stuart MacIver, Stacey McGuire, Sara Morley, Emily Olive Boyd, Georgia Rae Briggs, Paul Saunders, James Titchener, Helen Walsh, Amy Webb, Luke Woollaston and Benjamin Yates.
The tour will visit: Bristol Hippodrome (Wednesday 31 January – Saturday 3 March 2018); Liverpool Empire (Wednesday 7 – Saturday 31 March 2018); Birmingham Hippodrome (Wednesday 4 – Sunday 29 April 2018); Edinburgh Playhouse (Tuesday 8 May – Saturday 9 June 2018); Leeds Grand Theatre (Wednesday 13 June – Saturday 7 July 2018); Dublin Bord Gáis Energy Theatre (Tuesday 17 July – 1 September 2018); Sunderland Empire (Thursday 6 – Saturday 29 September 2018); Southampton Mayflower Theatre (Wednesday 3 – Saturday 27 October 2018); Cardiff Wales Millennium Centre (Wednesday 31 October – Saturday 24 November 2018) and Manchester Palace Theatre (Tuesday 4 December 2018 – Saturday 5 January 2019). 
[See image gallery at http://ift.tt/1FpwFUw]
  A three-time winner of the theatregoer-voted WhatsOnStage Award for ‘Best West End Show’ and a two-time winner of the Olivier Audience Award, WICKED tells the incredible untold story of an unlikely but profound friendship between two sorcery students and their extraordinary adventures in Oz, which will ultimately see them fulfil their destinies as Glinda The Good and the Wicked Witch of the West. Based on the acclaimed, best-selling novel by Gregory Maguire that ingeniously re-imagines the stories and characters originally created by L. Frank Baum in ‘The Wonderful Wizard of Oz’, WICKED has become a global phenomenon featuring astounding technical wizardry, stunning costumes, a compelling ‘untold’ story and show-stopping songs, including the incredible ‘Defying Gravity’.
WICKED is already the 15th longest running show in West End theatre history and longest-running2th year at London’s Apollo Victoria Theatre, where it continues an open-ended run. Around the world, WICKED has been seen by over 53 million people in 15 countries, and won over 100 major awards.
WICKED has music and lyrics by multi Grammy and Academy Award-winner Stephen Schwartz (Godspell, Disney’s Pocahontas, The Hunchback of Notre Dame and Enchanted and, for DreamWorks, The Prince of Egypt) and is based on the novel ‘Wicked: The Life and Times of the Wicked Witch of the West’ by Gregory Maguire and adapted for the stage by Winnie Holzman (My So-Called Life). Musical staging is by Tony Award-winner Wayne Cilento and the production is directed by two-time Tony Award-winner Joe Mantello.
WICKED is produced around the world by Marc Platt, Universal Stage Productions, The Araca Group, Jon B. Platt and David Stone. Executive Producer (UK & Ireland) Michael McCabe.
Wicked UK & Ireland Tour
BRISTOL Hippodrome, Tuesday 5 February – Saturday 3 March 2018 Book Tickets
LIVERPOOL Empire, Wednesday 7 – Saturday 31 March 2018 Book Tickets
BIRMINGHAM Hippodrome, Wednesday 4 – Sunday 29 April 2018 http://ift.tt/2rMxesf
EDINBURGH Playhouse, Tuesday 8 May – Saturday 9 June 2018 Book Tickets
LEEDS Grand Theatre, Wednesday 13 June – Saturday 7 July 2018 http://ift.tt/1k0ZJHO DUBLIN Bord Gáis Energy Theatre, Tuesday 17 July – Sunday 26 August 2018 http://ift.tt/RbxcU5 SUNDERLAND Empire, Tuesday 4 – Saturday 29 September 2018 Book Tickets
SOUTHAMPTON Mayflower Theatre, Wednesday 3 – Saturday 27 October 2018 www.mayflower.org.uk CARDIFF Wales Millennium Centre, Wednesday 31 October – Saturday 24 November 2018 www.wmc.org.uk MANCHESTER Palace Theatre, Tuesday 4 December 2018 – Saturday 5 January 2019 Book Tickets
Wicked Apollo Victoria Theatre London
http://ift.tt/2gAGIjk London Theatre 1
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nsula · 5 years
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Spring 2019 President’s List
           NATCHITOCHES – Five hundred and sixty-four students were named to the Spring 2019 President’s List at Northwestern State University. Students on the list earned a grade point average of 4.0. Those named to the President’s List listed by hometown are as follows.
 Abbeville -- Kayla Marceaux;
Alexandria -- Lili Bedoya, Leslie Bordelon, Destiny Dotson, Selena Elmore, Claudia Gauthier, Ian Grant, Martha Hopewell, Jordan Johnson, Allison, McCloud, Madalyn Mayer, Madeline Mitchell, LaShanda Moss, Madeline Pharis, Jennifer Prevot, Sailor Reed, Zachary Roberts, Elaina Williams, Samantha Wynn;
 Amite – Sidney Polezcek;
Anacoco – Kinsley Blakeway, Karington Hood, Cassandra Osborne, Seth Ponthieux, Kayla Stephens, Casey Williams;
 Arlington, Texas – Samantha Bell;
Arnaudville -- Zachary Leboeuf;
 Atlanta –Deanna Guidry, Alexis Hanson;
 Austin, Texas – Skylar Besch, Anuj Patel;
 Baker – Katelyn Kennedy;
 Ball – Joseph Reynolds;
 Bastrop – Anna Akins, Taylor Gabell, Haleigh Vollmar;
 Baton Rouge – Meagan Barbay , Jasmine Davis, Hannah Knoff, Elizabeth Ledet, Bethany Lee, Henrietta Mercer, Madalyn Mullins, Mary Pourciau, Sarah Talbot;
 Baytown, Texas – Norma Trejo;
Belcher – Victoria Hebert;
 Belle Chasse -- Annie  Wright;
Belle Rose – Thomas Daigle;
 Benton – Victoria Berry, Bridget Miller, Jessica O’Neal, Finnley Plaster, Megan Rainwater, Ty Whatley;
 Bossier City – Christian Baker, Brittant Batchelor, Katie Briggs, Courtney Brooks, DeMontre Evans, Hannah Gates, Candace Guillory, Peyton Harville, Cayin Head, Ashanti Hill, Jodi Hill, Nicholas Hopkins, Brandon Larkin, Chelsea Laverdiere, Arielle Martignetti, Katherine Parson, Taylor Powell, Melissa Raley, Jenna Rambin, Jami Rivers, Jalyn Robertson, Winnifred Robinson, Tori Spraggins, Savannah Stevens, Courtney Wilson, Eric Zheng;
 Boyce – Bo Bowers, Katelyn Brister, Dylan Frazier, Jodie Martin;
 Branch – Elizabeth Sonnier;
 Breaux Bridge – Shayla James;
 Broken Arrow, Oklahoma – Madeline Drake;
 Brookeland, Texas – Paige West;
 Brussels, Belgium – Leyla Fettweis;
 Bunkie – Emily Arnaud, Brett Baker;
 Burleson, Texas -- Addison Pellegrino;
 Calhoun – Grace Cummings, Robert Mccandlish;
 Calvin – Erin Price;
Campti – Alisha Bedgood;
 Carencro – Jasmin Thibodeaux;
Cartagena, Colombia -- Valeria Correa Meza, Veronica Perez Espinosa, Hassik  Vasquez Narvaez;
 Carthage, Illinois – Nicole Clark;
 Castor – Brittany Sampey;
 Center, Texas – Chelsea Henderson;
 Church Point – Meghan Bearb;
 Clifton – Brittany Shackleford;
 Colfax – Alyssa Coleman, Elizabeth Slayter,
 Colorado Springs, Colorado – Morgan Linson;
Columbia -- Melissa Robinson;
Converse -- Haleigh Sharrow;
 Cottonport – Rayne Canoe, Zachary Gauthier;
 Coushatta – Sydney Anderson, Kaylee Antilley, Mary James, Sidney Jones, William Lee, Carmie Williams;                          
Covington -- Justin Brogdon, Andrea Mier;                            
 Custer, South Dakota – China Whitwer;
 Cut Off – Allie Soudelier;
 Cypress, Texas – Alexis Warren;
 Dallas, Texas – Natalie Robledo;
 Denham Springs – Jenson Wall;
De Ridder -- Delia Amadiz, Tabitha Deer, Ashleigh Fedderman, Rebekah Frantz, Shydae Hammond, Nickolas Lane, Briana March, Jessica Mullican, Rebecca Richmond, Shynikia Roberson, Mikalyn Russell, Summer Thomas, Jessica Wheeler, Tracy Wilson;
Des Allemands – Emily Blanchard, Claire Schouest;
 Destrehan – Hannah Boquet, Stephanie Webre;
Deville –Allison Deglandon, Alyssa Kline, Aubree Lampert, Maci Mayeux;
Diamondhead, Mississippi – Melissa Boyanton;
Dry Prong -- Jared Boydstun, Ashlee Elliott, Christy Gough;                          
 El Paso – Christopher Barron;
Elizabeth – Amanda Cloud;
Elmer – Halston Rachal, Joseph Rachal;
 Endicott, New York – Tonya Rackett;
 Fairmount, Georgia – Amanda Stephenson;
Florien --Connor Arthur, Ashley Carter, Shayla Duhon, Noah Parker, Ashley Ross;
Forney, Texas -- Jayden Wheeler;
Fort Myers, Florida – Andrea Smarsh;
Fort Polk -- Amanda Dhondt, Shaunda Gordon, Pierce Matthews, Maria Neumann, Christian Wood;
Fort Sill, Oklahoma -- Iryana Burrus;
Fort Valley, Georgia – Pittard Chapman;
Fort Worth, Texas – Corban James;                              
 Franklin -- Alison Guidroz;
Freeland, Washington – Paul Aune;
 Frierson -- Brittany Furrow;
 Frisco – Caroline Shepherd, Adam Trupp, Kalee Williams;
 Garland, Texas – Sierra Stone;
 Geismar -- Kristi Contreary;
Gheens -- Samantha Clark;
Glenmora -- Precious Goins, Tiara Baker;
Gloster -- Emmaleigh Cleary;                            
 Goldonna -- Harley Godwin;
Gonzales – Addison Adams, Kristina Gipson, Ryan Gremillion, Legand Lilly, Rebecca Marchand, Molly Moran, Bailee Ramey, Zoe Tapp;  
Grand Prairie, Texas -- Clayton Casner;
Grapevine, Texas – Margaret Black;
Gray – Cassie Becnel, Tevyn Johnson;
 Greenwell Springs – Cheramie Kravitz;
Greenwood -- Char'Tarian Wilson;
Gretna – Chloe Johnson;
Hammond – Andrea Hidalgo;
Harvey -- Christiana Johnson;
 Haughton – Brittony Cole, Bethanie Couch, Alexis Hoeltje, Victoria Lodrini, Jamie Phillips, Amber Simmons, Logan Turner, Morgan Webb;                            
 Heath – Megan Lohmiller;
Heflin -- Haley Garrison;
Henderson, Texas -- John Floyd;
Hermon, Maine -- Allessa Ingraham-Albert;
Hessmer -- Lacee-Beth Cazelot;                            
 Hineston -- Tylee Stokes;
 Hornbeck -- Emma DuBose Rogers, Joshua Hughes;
 Houma – Sarah Lajaunie;
 Houston, Texas – Oai Lee Huynh;
 Iowa – Matthew Phillips, Marvette Williams;
 Irving, Texas – Darria Williams;
Jefferson --Jaleia Parker;
Jena – Christian Aymond, Teacy Kendrick;
 Jennings – Aimee Boothe, Alyson Brown, Janee Charles, Rachelle Edwards, Wesley Simien, Lydia Williams;
 Jonesboro – Jordan Winston;
 Jonesville – James White;                          
 Keatchie – Susan Laws;
 Keithville – Cora Procell, Janae Richardson;
 Kenner – Brooke Petkovich;
Kentwood – Jenna Morris;
 Kerens, Texas – Brandon Brumbelow;
Killeen, Texas – Arlyn Johnson, Nathalohn Nanai;
 Kinder -- Jonathon Villareal;
 Lacombe – William Simpson;
 Lafayette – Natalye Bradley, Abbey Broussard, Rachael Bryant, Amari Carmouche, Madison Duplechine, Ashley Guidry, John Irion, Joy Newman, Jordan Redd, Brittany Robinson, Andrea Saelios, Dante Saelios, Chynna Theriot;
 Lake Arthur – Nicole Andrews;
 Lake Charles – Shawn Becton, Derek Fields, Ashtyn Hare, Rebekah Nicholas, Sarah Sargent;
 Lake Providence -- Brandy Chapman;
Lantana, Florida -- Christopher Mccormac;
Las Vegas -- April Ficarrotta;
 League City, Texas – Kennedi Carter, Emily Ornelas;
 Lecompte -- Allison Williams;                          
 Leesville -- Victoria Carbaugh, Carter Coriell, Brittany French, Geoffrey Goins, Kimberly Henley, Leigha Jackson, Kelsea Mckinney, Joseph Orchi, Heather Snell, Alicia Stanford, Jessica Tebbetts, Kristin Whistine;
Lena – Juan Gonzalez;
Little Elm, Texas -- Hunter Gagnon;                            
 Lockport -- Courtney Cedotal;
Longview, Texas -- Samantha Morris;
Loreauville – Tiffany Trahan;
Lumberton, Texas -- Joshua Terry;
 Mabank, Texas – Dustin Huffman,
 Madisonville – Alyce Lis;
Mandeville – Shannon Roussell, Sheridan Smith;
 Manito, Illinois – Sarah Picken;
Mansfield – Samantha Powell;
 Many – Skyler Ezernack, Alison Garcia, Emily Holcomb, Heidi Knight, Jaleah Lee, Shelbie Martinez, Toni Mitcham, Samantha Simmons;
Marble Falls, Texas -- Sarah Lewis;                              
 Marksville – Zachary Moreau, Madeleine Morrow;
 Marthaville – Dillon Hagan, Frank Lester, Emeri Manasco, Hanna Pardee,
 Maurice – Adam Courville, Jenna-Clair Courville, Adele Vincent, Elise Vincent,
Merryville – Courtney Jennings;                          
 Metairie -- Sadye Treadway;
Minden -- Aubry Dennis, Abigail Reynolds, Kirsten Sibley, Heather White;
Mississauga, Ontario, Canada -- Kayla Bomben;
Mobile, Alabama --   Sarah Dempsey;
Monroe -- Caleb Horton, Aaron Hunt, Ashley Jackson Franklin, Jameelah Sanaany;
Monroe -- Kristin Hutchins;                          
 Morgan City -- Jeremy Orgeron;
Morrow -- Kiante Mouton;
Morse -- Kierra Linden;                            
 Murphy, Texas – Bronte Rhoden;
 Natchez – Patricia Wise;
 Navarre, Florida -- Alexandria Morales;
Napoleonville -- Elizabeth Coleman;
Natchitoches -- Sarah Aviles, Brock Barrios, Dylan Bennett, Gracie Bennett, Keaton Booker, Keyana Brown, Deasia Burrell, Savannah Bynog, Maria Carmona-Ruiz, Gilda Chan, Leanna Coy, Whitney Crooks, Haley Dahlhoff, Jacob Dahlhoff, Elliot Davis, Jordan Durio, Abbie Gandy, Kara Gandy, Laura Guzman Rodriguez, Hannah Haigh, Dylan Hale, Kaitlin Hatten, Aura Hernandez Canedo, Ashlyn Hogan, Anthony Jones, Kelsey Jordan, Mary Keran, Lyndon Knueppel, Clayton Larimer, Lindsay Lee, LiZhang Matuschka, Jordan Mitchell, Jorgia Nevers, Brooklyn Noe, Kevin Nutt, Anthony Pastorello, Abigail Poe, Kevin Price, Melissa Remo, Maria Rushing, Madison Shade, Madeline Taylor, David Thibodaux, Shayna Tilley, Kaleb Usleton, Madysen Watts, Sarah Kay Whitehead;                        
 New Iberia -- Tara Bonvillain, Madison Castille, Emily Neuville, Madison Romero;
New Llano -- Reaz Khan, Collar Wilson;
New Orleans – Faith Burke;
Oakdale – Adrian Brown, Alyssa Cole, Katelyn Johnson, James Obrien;
 Olla – Brianna Corley, Cierra Evans, Kaycie Posey, Kristen Smith;                            
 Opelousas – Lauren Hebert, Keshayla Jackson, Alexia Rubin, Jaylen St. Romain;
 Pelican – Mary Myers;
 Pflugerville, Texas -- Zoe Richardson                        
 Pineville – Malak Abdelhadi, Raegan Brocato, Amber Edmisson, Katlin Ernst, Sarah Flue, Brooke Gongre, Connor Littleton, Cade Mitchell, Johnna Odom, Cinnamon Player, Wendi Powell, Peyton Spurgeon, Wesley Williams;
 Pitkin – Mattie Stewart, Grace White-Rainger;                    
 Pollock – Tanner Brazil, Hannah Gaubert, Jadynn Giles, Megan Gypin, Samantha Wilber;
 Port Allen – Makayla Lacy;
Port Arthur, Texas -- Eryn Sandwell;
 Port Barre – Skylar Guidroz;
Prairieville. – Roy Cobb, Chloe Lambert, Sarah Makin;
 Princeton – Micah Larkins;
 Provencal – Rachel Head, Bailey Scarbrough;
Quitman – Cassie Tucker;
Raceland -- Megan Parks, Paige Parks, DQuincy McGuire;
Ragley -- Elizabeth Jaycox, Cole Spooner;
 Reeves – Kayla Rider;
 Reno, Nevada – Olivia Marazzo                            
 Roanoke, Virginia – Tessa Burse;
 Robeline – Jessica Clark, Hunter Dubois, Cody Hamous, Alyssa Maley, Lillian Rachal, Caleb Wester;                            
 Rowlett, Texas -- Daniel Miner.
 St. Amant -- Kylie Nix;
 St. Francisville – Jordan Bringedahl, Ryan Reed;
St. Martinville -- Alli Douet;
St. Rose -- Alexis Mancuso;                            
 Salado, Texas -- Reagan Rogers;
Saline – Madelyn Cheatwood;
 San Antonio, Texas – Hayden Brown;
Scott -- Sydni Larriviere, Kristie Leger, Kristen Prejean;
Seattle, Washington – Zeynab Inaimi;                            
 Shreveport – Maria Awwad, Erin Batts, Maddison Benge, Hallie Bloxom, Jessica Bourne, Erin Brown, Rakeisha Brown, Kaysie Burgess, Kaylan Campbell, Kathryn Carroll, Kristen Ciconte, Abigail Davis, Jackson Driggers, Caleb Elkins, Jenna Fielder, David Fitzwater, Peyton Gamble, JaSae Gatlin, Leah Gould, Elaina Guerrero, Madyson Istre, Carly Johnson, Damion Johnson, Brett Kessel, Elysia Lanier, Alaina McMillian, Katherine Mckay, Maxey McSwain, Alexis Mason, Mary Murray, Kelly Moody, Aaron Navarre, Hannah Nicholls, Annabelle Parker, Michael Phelps, Taylor Poleman, Christopher Schimberg, Mary Sibley, Shelby Sowers, DeAndre Stevenson, Tim Whatley, Cara Wineinger;                      
 Sibley -- Julianna Schober;
 Simpson – David Marquis, Christina Snider;
Slidell -- Jacqueline Coleman, Shakera Dixon, Ayrianna Edwards, Parker Gwaltney, Kha Nguyen, Theresa Sharp, Olivia Warren;                          
 Spring, Texas – Rebekah Wilson;                            
 Springhill – Raegan Ferland;
Stinnett, Texas – Dalin Williams;
 Stonewall -- Brooke Meade;
Sulphur – Tiffany Lyons, Bryttani MacNamara, Elisabeth Perez;
 Sunset -- Lindsay Thibodeaux;
Texarkana, Texas – Sydney Cowgill;                            
 The Woodlands, Texas -- Tyler Rapp;
Thibodaux – Sheridan Duet;                              
 Tickfaw -- Colten Addison;
 Trout – Zachary Long, Deanna Poole, Devon Smith;
 Ventress – Racheal Gaude;
 Vidalia – Charles Johnson;
 Ville Platte – Alex Gautreaux;
 Vinton – Kelsie Rayon, Madison Zaunbrecher;                            
 Vivian -- Hannah Campbell, Steven McRae;
 Winnsboro – Samantha Browning;
 Walker – Johnny Brister, David Kolb, Brittany Marten;                          
 Washington -- Madelyn Dupont;
 West Monroe – Julianne Roan, Candyce Steele;                            
 Westport, Kentucky -- Sara MinkTaylor;
 White Castle – Cassidy Blanchard;
Whitehouse, Texas -- Jackson Allen;
Winnfield -- Tamierrea Alexander, Jermesia Anderson, John Collins, Simona Curry, Joshua Goins, Kayla Jones, Maggie Womack;
Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada – Tyra Duma;
 Winter Springs, Florida -- Justin Garretson;
Woodworth -- Christian Jeansonne;
Wylie, Texas -- Alexis Perry;
Youngsville -- Brandon Granger;
Zakopane, Poland -- Patrycja Polanska;    
 Zachary – Lydia Johnson;
 Zwolle – Holly Laroux, Courtney McDaniel, Chyna Sepulvado.
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tag drop 6 of idk
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part 8 of idk how many
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