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#I challenge Louis to wear this at the barricade
sunshineandlyrics · 1 year
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If we all manifest it hard enough, it may come true 🙏🏼
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bluewinnerangel · 3 years
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Maybe these are not boring: Happily, Just Can’t Let Her Go and Where Do Broken Hearts Go?
Happily: Name three things that make you happy.
1. My cat being in this mood most of the time:
2. Louis
3. Harry
(omg she said Louis first omg just say you hate harry askldjal)
Just Can’t Let Her Go: Name five turn ons.
waists bro
big ass kind blue eyes
stop describing louis challenge
broad shoulders where like if the person wears an oversized shirt it just kinda just ghosts WooOOoOooOooo around the torso bc it's just hanging on the shoulders not finding the rest of the body like weewoo curtain im fine
stop describing harry challenge..... bro I swear I've always been lke this it's not them ok its not
b u t t help these are all just physical attributes am superficial af
this is a mess god ehm just? confidence? Not like a lot? just a lil? A humble lil confidencey. there.
beanies and oversized sweaters and just cuddly comf lookin comfs still just describing otp I can't help it ok their range is too big whatever you gonna go for will describe them ok they're everything
Where Do Broken Hearts Go?: Talk about the best concert you ever attended.
Tbh.. concerts are sooooo dependent on your position in the crowd. Like barricade is just stand and stare and really take that shit in and amazing, and for that I'll probably go with RHCP. And then there's the front but past the first few rows is also the shit but a different kinda shit it's more like yeah you can take in the experience properly but you also have that crowd vibe and you just create a whole space there, for metal and just heavy shit it's... the pit, yk where a moshpit happens, and you see with Harry's concert there's congalines and dances are happening (and fights but lkasdajsk)... So for that one I'd probably say Slipknot as that's some craaaaazy energy and craaaazy moshpit. Like I just wanna see the biggest pit possible man that's the SHHIIEETT and that haaappeeenned that thing was massive and i was riiiiiight there and my friends were riiiight there and we got spread out across that field of a pit and just raaaan and people and shoes were flying and we screamed just if you trip if you fall if you hurt eachother theres just 10 people lifting you up to safety, if someone or something if a phone/wallet falls everyone just stops and creates a human barrier safe zone and all the flashlights go on and we find that shit THATS THE SHIIEETTT metal concerts are THE best and it's like you're flying and it's just so nice adsdfasdasdsa. Also like being on your way to find that sweet spot in the crowd before a show man with your friends that just feels like fking peaky blinders slomo walking scenes yk feels good man asdsdf.
That reminds me I got a larry/ie anger playlist that just peaks with just a wholeass slipknot spree after Kiwi in the middle there hmmhmm.
The RAMBLES.
(Asks but it's 1D)
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frivoloussuits · 7 years
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Preview: Suits/Hunger Games AU
Here’s a peek at the fic I keep procrastinating on by writing Suits 100 prompts instead, lol. Apologies in advance for any odd formatting+warnings for referenced drug use and deadly violence.
All the Capitol’s geneticists have tried and failed to produce something that can compare with Mike Ross’ brain. At three years old, he’s more literate than many of the adults around him, and he spends his days reading aloud from a dictionary, his family’s longest book, to his baby sister Jenny. His eyes, skimming over the text at stunning speed, shimmer blue like the sea, nothing like the coal and fire surrounding him in District 12.
In District 1, Lily Specter dresses her four-year-old son Harvey in his finest clothes and takes him to their city’s central park soon after winter ends. Surrounded by a horde of other children, he plays games, solving puzzles, punching targets as hard as he can, flitting through an obstacle course with all the easy grace of a spring breeze. He throws himself into the challenges with childish enthusiasm, turning downright giddy as he outstrips one opponent after another. Young as he is, he doesn’t realize these are the entrance tests for Pearson Academy, Panem’s premier training school for the Hunger Games. He doesn’t notice Jessica Pearson herself observing him from a distance.
When school starts, Mike skips particularly boring classes and instead loiters around the Hob, 12′s black market. Even though he’s too young to buy or sell anything himself, assorted shopkeepers take a liking to him, and some use him as a human calculator. When he’s not needed, he tucks himself into odd corners, soaking up old stories and the old records that Sae plays sometimes, all crackling horns and syncopated rhythm. One day he’s joined under a table by a fellow truant named Trevor, the same age as him, with a dangerous spark in his dark brown eyes.
Seven-year-old Harvey– or “Specter,” as everyone calls him nowadays– lounges in his Academy quarters, blasting jazzy music out of brand-new speakers and singing along. When other kids bang on the door and shout for him to quiet down, he simply smirks and turns the volume dial higher, because he’s added bars and bolts to his door and built a barricade from furniture to keep intruders out of his room, and nobody can stop him from doing what he wants in here.
That is, until a little redheaded girl breaks through all his barriers, circumvents all his defenses, sneaks up on him as he leans back in his chair with three of its legs off the ground, and moves as if to tip him over– only to reach across him and click the speaker’s off button instead.
As he gawps, she just raises an eyebrow and says, “Hi, I’m Donna. I just moved in next door. Shut up, please, or I won’t be so nice next time.”
In a single heartbeat, an explosion in a coal mine orphans both Trevor and Mike.
Harvey ignores the baseball bat at the back of his closet and instead brings out a dark suit. Today is the first time he’s ever been permitted to leave the Academy during school. The occasion meriting such special allowances is his father’s funeral.
When his mother shows up at the wake with another man on her arm, Harvey straightens up and tells her to go to hell. “You made a fool of Dad,” he says. “You exploited him and his legal problem this whole time, and all he ever did wrong was love you from the moment he met you. Is it so damn impossible for you to at least pretend to be faithful?”
Lily just shakes her head, torn between pity and exasperation. “That’s not how things work here, Harvey.”
In the aftermath, Mike and Jenny move in with their grandmother Edith. There’s a roof over their heads but never enough food on their plates, and the wind cuts right through the walls and their threadbare blankets to chill them to the bone.
During a particularly harsh winter, Jenny takes ill, and Trevor starts showing up at their door with extra supplies of meat and other food that he can’t possibly afford.
At the Academy, Harvey beats back his grief by hurling himself into the nonstop competition, battling all the other students who want a shot at one of 1’s Tribute spots. He regularly faces off with Scottie, a girl with flashing dark eyes and a brazen wit, and every time she forces him to the ground. When he at last wins a match, he expects her to sulk or play it off as a fluke, but instead she beams proudly at him. Then there’s Donna, who proves a damn near equal match for him. Each wins just as often as the other, and the hope of pulling ahead sharpens both of their resolves. They pummel each other with mock weapons, study for months to beat each other’s scores on Games knowledge tests, and spend every school day taunting each other.
With time, the taunting softens to playful teasing, and they gradually turn inseparable. In their rare hours of free time, they break out of the Academy and roam around the nearby city. Harvey rather suspects Jessica is aware of every time they stray outside– she seems to have a knowing glint in her eye each morning afterwards, but perhaps he’s just imagining it.
Mike starts going out to the woods with Trevor, breaking a wide array of laws simply by crossing 12’s fence. They compound the crime by poaching, hunting down animals to eat and selling whatever meat they have to spare. After some exploring, they discover a swath of wild Eufrosyne trees, and they start harvesting the leaves to sell as well. They find plenty of buyers– people seem grateful for drugs around here.
One night, they find that the fence is electrified when they try to go home, and so they are temporarily barred from 12. Trevor starts to panic, but Mike starts to plan, recalling hundreds of tricks for surviving in the wilderness that he’s learned off the Hunger Games. They end up adapting a shelter that the girl from 3 made last year and weathering the night. When the fence powers off the next morning and they return home, they find Edith and Jenny both frightened senseless.
“We’re perfectly intact,” Mike reassures them. “Nobody died!”
Trevor gives an easy smile and plants a kiss on Jenny’s lips. “Yeah, you know you can’t rid of me that easily.”
Harvey wears suits increasingly often, at interviews and dinners for fencing competitions and boxing tournaments and Mock Trials. Yet his dress is considerably plainer, just black slacks and a white T-shirt, on the day when he kills for the first time.
His victim is a patient suffering from a painful terminal illness who consented to being killed by an Academy student in exchange for money for her relatives. He knows taking her life ought to affect him– it’s an explicit opportunity to work through some of the self-loathing and moral quandaries that accompany killing ahead of the Games– yet he tries to pretend he doesn’t care. He thinks he’s doing a good job of it, until Jessica calls him to her office for a cup of tea and he winds up breaking down as he drinks it, just as he later finds out she predicted.
Days later, he’s dropped off in the wilderness with Donna for an Academy survival practical. As they huddle around their fire, in the shadow of a shelter they constructed together, she nudges him with her elbow. “I got us a present.”
“Oh?”
She pulls an old rubbing alcohol bottle out of her pack, unscrews the top, and hands it over to him. He takes a quick sniff and immediately starts chuckling. “Not quite the same alcohol it says on the label, huh?”
“Scotch, straight from Cameron Dennis’ surprisingly well-stocked cabinet.”
He grins and takes a swig. They while away the afternoon, passing the bottle back and forth and sharing increasingly ridiculous ideas for knocking off opponents in the Games, until Donna puts forth a plan with a can opener that Harvey can’t even try to top.
One bright spring morning, Edith passes away. Leaving Jenny with Trevor, Mike flees to the woods for the night, closing his fingers around the mockingjay pin she left him.
It’s impossible to ignore the Cameron Dennis problem anymore. And while Louis, the other main teacher at Pearson Academy, has his own endless issues, at least he’s not an addict.
Harvey and Donna drag Jessica down to Cameron’s office one night, when he’s out of his head with some ugly mix of alcohol and morphling, and the teacher they’ve studied under for years turns on them, slurring that Jessica ought to expel the two of them for their insubordination before lunging at Harvey. He easily sidesteps, and Jessica fires Cameron on the spot with a melancholy sigh.
“Well, that was self-sabotaging,” Harvey remarks in a half-hearted attempt at levity. “Now we’ve got to train with Louis instead.”
“No,” Jessica says sharply.
Harvey’s heart stops, as she confirms that they’ll be training in her small advanced class from now on, because she has officially decided to send them to the Games.
A few years down the road, Mike watches Dana Scott of District 1, a girl with murderous eyes and brazen confidence with all manner of deadly weapons, play in the 73rd Hunger Games. He’s fascinated in a sick sort of way, and he supposes he should root for her, if only because he’s put quite a bit of money down on her. She’s a relatively safe bet– Pearson Academy’s Tributes always start with the odds in their favor, thanks to their training and their willingness to do whatever it takes to win– and he grows more certain of her chances as the Games unfold, as images of Dana stabbing, garroting, and poisoning burn themselves into his brain. She pushes through the arena, along with her partner Vanessa, a young woman who matches her guile and skill in battle when necessary but has a sort of vulnerability about her that Mike rarely sees in Pearson students.
In between the deaths and fighting, the cameras show the coaches and sponsors and Gamemakers all mingling. Mike sees Jessica Pearson herself schmoozing with Caesar Flickerman, both wearing smiles that could kill. In the background, he identifies Tom Keller, the Capitol citizen in charge of most of the Games’ main gambling systems. The camera starts to pan away as Tom throws an arm around an up-and-coming Pearson Academy student, a young man strutting around with slicked hair and a suit that cost more than Mike’s house.
Mike rolls his eyes and tells Jenny, “If I ever try to look like that, feel free to smack me.”
“Will do,” she giggles, “after I figure out how you managed to afford anything remotely like that and take some of that money for myself.”
Mike gives her a thumbs-up.
“Okay, I’m going to bed,” he says a few minutes later, rising from his seat with a yawn. “Wake me when the Gamemakers start firebombing the kids from 5.”
“How do you know they will?” Jenny frowns.
"They will.”
And they do.
Dana and Vanessa win, and they visit 12 and all the other districts on their Victory Tour. Yet the Gamemakers and academies and gamblers have already turned their attention forwards, to the 74th Hunger Games.
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tchildrensguide · 7 years
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Shooting, child abduction vehicle located, Motorist, Kids missing
Shooting, Kid abduction Car located, driver, children missing
Shooting, child abduction vehicle situated, driver, children overlooking
By: Don Bishop
December 14 2017 9:46 PM
Tulsa, Okla. –  Tulsa authorities have located the vehicle attached to your fire and the abduction of two children from a home near Apache and Yale.
The automobile was discovered across 9:15 p.m. Thursday at 1000 North Winston, near Pine and Yale.
The car had been abandoned without a sign of this motorist Jason Myers Jordan.
He’s accused of shooting at a relative during a challenge and leaving the scene together with two children around 4:53 p.m. Thursday near 2400 North Winston.
The children are 1-year older Andi Aliyah Rayne along with old Jace Allen Jordan.
We are told Jordan has a record with authorities.
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A guy opened fire on two police officers that had been 15 feet away from him on Thursday afternoon, striking them with bullets which would have hit their chests or even for their bulletproof vests, according to multiple reports >> Read trending news The vests might have saved the officers’ lives, KTVI reported. The group had been speaking following the shooting in Bellefontaine Neighbors and conscious, as stated by the news station. They had been released from a hospital on Thursday afternoon after undergoing treatment for their injuries, St. Louis County police said. Bellefontaine Neighbors Mayor Bob Doerr told that the St. Louis Post-Dispatch the injured officers were a 44-year-old male sergeant who’d worked in law enforcement for “half his life” and a 25-year-old female police officer that had been hired in 2014. ‘They’re wearing their bulletproof vests, so thank God,’ Doerr older the Post-Dispatch The officers were wounded around 7:30 a.m. later being called Thursday morning to a home in north St. Louis County where a man was suspected of having fired multiple shots on Wednesday night, KTVI reported. Police left the home Wednesday after discovering no evidence to carry on an evaluation, St. Louis County authorities Sgt. Shawn McGuire  told KMOV. He told the news station a neighbor called police after spotting. Officials stated they found that the person walking in the region and tried to talk to him, however St. Louis County authorities said they had been unsuccessful. “Trainers tried to take the suspect in custody, at which time the suspect resisted arrest,” police said.   “Among the officers attempted to use a Taser to restrain the suspect, but was unsuccessful.” Authorities said the man then pulled a gun and fired shots at the officers’ chests. Among those officers returned fire, but it was not immediately clear if the guy was hit. He hurried into a home, prior to police officers could take him into custody where he barricaded himself for hours. Witness Steve Jones advised KMOV he spotted police officers Thursday morning on Bellefontaine Road in a home’s front lawn. “All of a sudden, I (see) … Bellefontaine officers seeking to shoot this guy to the ground, and the next thing I understand, this guy jumps up off the ground and I see pepper spray being set up in the officers,” Jones  told KMOV. “This guy backs up about 15 feet and starts shooting.” He said that he heard gunshots and saw the officers drop. He advised KMOV. Authorities did not immediately identify the guy accused of firing shots at possibly of the injured officers.
The tide of controversy associated with charges of sexual harassment which has swept the country and Capitol Hill, forced another lawmaker from the U.S. House to leave his occupation, as Rep. Blake Farenthold (R-TX) announced on Thursday afternoon he wouldn’t run for re-election in 2018, confessing his staff managment had been “self-evident” “I didn’t have any clue how to run a brand new office,” Farenthold said in a Facebook video. “I permitted a workplace culture to take root in my workplace which was overly permissive and decidedly unprofessional,” the Texas Republican added. While Farenthold said he had allowed ‘destructive gossip, off-hand remarks, off-color jokes,” he refused charges of sexual misconduct which had swirled around him. “I want to be totally clear, the charges which were made are untrue,” he said. Farenthold had already vowed to repay an $84,000 payment made by Congress to some former staffer, who had alleged sexual misconduct — however lately, it became clearer that remaining in Congress becoming a more and more precarious circumstance. “I had a couple of discussions with Blake Farenthold yesterday,” said House Speaker Paul Ryan at a press conference. “There are stories which are very disconcerting,” that the Speaker added. “I think he is making the perfect decision to retire,” that the Speaker added. Asked about obligations — such as those manufactured in the Farenthold instance — Ryan said there is in factn’t a ‘particular fun’ for members of Congress, rather it comes from the exact same sort of payments made to employees in the Legislative Branch to get all kinds of things that become legal issues. . @SpeakerRyan: Rep. Blake Farenthold ‘is creating the ideal decision to retire. There are stories which are disconcerting.’ Https://t.co/68oHZbA4M3 pic.twitter.com/m1ARpavKdp — ABC News Politics (@ABCPolitics) December 14, 2017 The decision by Farenthold will be the most up-to-date in a string of stories about lawmakers and sensual misconduct — every week, they forced the resignations of two House members, Rep. John Conyers (D-MI) and Rep. Trent Franks (R-AZ), in addition to Sen. Al Franken (D-MN). While Farenthold’s announcement imagines him finishing out his current term in Congress, there is still a pending investigation against him in the House Ethics Committee; it is still possible that may alter the calculus due to his passing. Currently, 20 currently-serving members of the home have decided not to run for re-election in 2018, yet another 17 are operating to get a different political office — that’s a 9 percent shift — with much more likely on the way.
Thursday marks the anniversary of the fatal mass. On Dec. 14, 2012, Adam Lanza, 20, first shot and killed his mother, then went to the school, opened fire and killed 20 children and six staff members before killing himself.> PHOTOS: Scenes from Sandy Hook In accordance with the Hartford Courant, the town is paying tribute to the victims this season with a temporary exhibit featuring photographs of the pupils and teachers that were killed in the shooting. “We request that you devote a couple of minutes in silent reflection as we recall the lives of those vibrant young children and caring adults that were part of the essence of this community as students, teachers and friends,” reads a sign at the display. “All these so tragically killed on that day were greatly loved by their families and friends and they continue to be loved and missed every day.” The display will be on display through Friday, WTIC reported.> Read more trending information   Additionally, town offices will shut for a moment of quiet reflection from 9:30 to 9:45 a.m. Wednesday. Trinity Church will also sponsor an interfaith service at 7 p.m., and St. Rose Church will hold a mass at 7:30 p.m., according to   WTIC. Earlier this week, Sandy Hook Promise, a nonprofit group made by parents of two of the victims, published a public service announcement urging individuals to become familiar with the warning signs resulting in mass shootings.> Watch the PSA here
Good news for drivers that frequent that the Broken Arrow Expressway in Tulsa. City officials have confirmed work has begun to reestablish the light. So far, lane closures have not been necessary, but which will change. KRMG’s advised an interior lane will be closed between South Columbia Avenue and South Sheridan Road starting at 9 a.m. Expected job schedule:  Friday, Dec. 15, at 9:01 a.m., through Monday, Dec. 18, at 5:59 a.m. for westbound work.     Friday, Jan. 5, at 7:01 p.m., through Monday, Jan. 8, at 2:59 p.m., for eastbound work.     Friday, Jan. 12, at 7:01 p.m., through Monday, Jan. 15, at 5:59 a.m., if necessary. The city has also published a statement about the repairs.   “The street lights are inoperable since vandals stole the copper wiring that carries the power to the lighting. From street lights citywide, about 34 miles of copper was stolen over the past two years, including on the Broken Arrow Expressway. To discourage thieves, crews have replaced the copper cables with aluminum and place decals on each pole stating — in both English and Spanish — “We utilize aluminum.” Through the efforts of both City Traffic Operations employees and contractor teams, 85 percent of this damaged lighting was repaired, finishing Phase I of this citywide project to revive highway light. Stage II of this project comprises the Broken Arrow Expressway and the Inner Dispersal Loop (airports encompassing downtown). Stage II is scheduled for completion in late 2018.”    
Under fire from Republicans, ” Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein defended the job of Special Counsel Robert Mueller, warding off repeated inquiries from GOP lawmakers who charge Mueller has gathered several senior officials who had been pro-Hillary Clinton and also anti-Donald Trump. “This is incredible,” said Rep. Jim Jordan (R-OH), that chastised Rosenstein like the Ohio Republican demanded more information a week from the FBI Director, taking aim at several leading FBI officials, whose own private texts revealed them with very little esteem for President Trump. “Just how having a straight face this particular group of Democrat partisans are impartial, and will provide President Trump a fair shake?” Asked Rep. Steve Chabot (R-OH). “I’m unaware of any impropriety,” Rosenstein said when asked about the Mueller probe, ” as he said he was convinced that Mueller wasn’t conducting a tainted investigation. However, Republicans n’t backed off. . @RepSteveChabot: ‘Allow me to just review some details about the allegedly ‘impartial’ set of individuals that Mr. Mueller pulled together…’ pic.twitter.com/SldT1NwP8O — Fox News (@FoxNews) December 13, 2017 It was all part of this latest GOP drive to undermine confidence in the the Special Counsel’s analysis of Russian infantry to the 2016 elections, and some links to President Trump’s effort, which saw fresh momentum with the release of text messages out of 2016 between certain senior Justice Department officials. The texts comprehensive a string of verbal put downs of Mr. Trump through the effort, using flowery language which many GOP lawmakers refused to read out loudly at Wednesday’s hearing. ” Some of the G-rated texts referred to Mr. Trump as “dreadful,” an “idiot,” plus a “loathesome human being.” Strzok/Page texts acquired from Fox’s @JakeBGibson ‘LP — I cannot think Donald Trump is likely to be a real, serious candidate.’ — Shannon Bream (@ShannonBream) December 13, 2017 “We realize that we have workers with political views,” Rosenstein said at a single stage. “And it is our responsibility to be sure those remarks don’t affect their activities. By top Rosenstein Democrats played with damage management. “Your testimony today is that you think Bob Mueller is a person of high ethics?” Asked Rep. Eric Swalwell (D-CA). “Yes,” Rosenstein responded. “You believe that investigation is being conducted rather,” Swalwell requested. “Yes,” said Rosenstein. But Democrats also came following Rosenstein occasionally, as the Deputy Attorney General was repeatedly pressed to tell whether he had been called on the telephone by the President, also advised to research certain people or issues — Rosenstein repeatedly warded off these questions too. “You are being really artful in jumping around and evading,” Rep. Hank Johnson (D-GA) told Rosenstein at a stage, alerting Rosenstein to disagree. “Are you really afraid of President Trump firing you?” “No, I’m not,” Rosenstein said, flashing a huge grin at the vanity table.
from Childrens guide http://www.the-childrens-guide.com/shooting-child-abduction-vehicle-located-motorist-kids-missing/
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