Jacqui Holland (thank you those who pointed it out - you can see one in the replies).
A comment she made on her facebook page:
"I think its good to have girlfriends that you have so much in common with..."
38 notes
·
View notes
February felt like we didn't do anything. That's only because, of course, we started the year with a last-minute trip to Holland to visit family.
The reason we went was because one of my uncles was diagnosed with terminal cancer and this was our last opportunity to see him.
About a week after we returned home, he lived out his last wish to return to the country of his birth: Indonesia. He went with his wife and two "kids" (my cousins who're around my age) on an adventure that involves a two part international flight totalling about fourteen hours in the air. No longer able to walk on his own, it was a wheelchair for him the entire trip. Once in Indonesia, they began doing a Greatest Hits of family, old friends, places he and my aunt grew up in, lived, knew from childhood and teenage years, and then a bunch of tourist stuff. During the course of three weeks, they moved across the country from west to east by trains, small planes, and cars. It was a magnificent trip we got to follow online through an app called PolarSteps, a real-time travel blog with pictures and video.
The trip was to last three weeks after which they'd all return home to Holland. Unfortunately by the last week, my uncle's cancer had progressed further, he was no longer able to eat or drink much, he was losing weight...
And then he was hospitalized.
In the end, he traveled the country of his birth from west to east for two and a half weeks, making it to Bali before he could go no further. He died after the day they were to return home. He died after his daughter returned to Holland and her daughter traveled the distance on her own to join him for the last two days of his life.
In his final hours, he slipped into a coma...
And then he was gone.
His memorial service was the first of March that's basically the thirtieth of February if there was such a thing as February thirtieth this year. We didn't catch the Livestream because it was too early our time but we did watch the video once it posted.
Of course everyone's speaking Dutch so there's only so much we understand. Fortunately, I have some tasty apps at my disposal so now we have a version that's captioned in English. It's not perfect, I'm sure. But good enough for our understanding.
On the same day as the memorial service happened, February 30 (😉), there was a Life celebration gathering for my production mentor and friend, Tom Speer, who passed away at the end of November, last year. This day on which we gathered was also, would've also been, Tom's birthday. So yeah. There was wonderfully frosted cake alongside an assortment of food and drink. We sang Happy Birthday. This is also a production/broadcast group of professionals whose paths cross or have crossed. So there's a lot of catching up, filling each other in on our lives. Most of what we did, though, was share Tom stories. In fact, the main event of our gathering was a number of friends standing up front to share their experiences with Tom as friends, as neighbors, as people who worked alongside Tom during his extensive career as a videographer. That really was the point. We all walked away knowing more about Tom than what we knew when we first walked in.
It was a gift. It really was.
Continuing this thread of dear life slipping away, I also dedicated time to writing the obituary for Kimmer's aunt Jacquie who passed away at the beginning of November last year.
I wrote her husband's obituary after he died at the top of 2023. It was crazy bittersweet to do the same for his wife who passed away eleven months later. And yeah. It really is a galling thing to reduce someone's life to five hundred words.
Not my favorite thing. Like, at all.
With Jacquie, we didn't get as lucky with her obit photograph as we did her husband. Someone had taken a genuinely iconic photo of him an,d not long before, forwarded it to his son, Kimmer's cousin. So Kimmer wound up going through every photo of her online, in any photo album, and anything on her phone or laptop. What she eventually settled on was perfect... although it was a photograph of a photograph in an album. And because of the angle at which the photo was taken and the reflections from the clear plastic covering the photo that obscured some of its details and because Kimmer was also in the photo standing shoulder to shoulder, slightly in front of her aunt...
Because of all that the photo was less than ideal. Fortunately, with an AI/Photoshop/Topaz Labs assist, I was able to scale up the photograph's resolution, pull Kimmer completely out of the shot, and restore anything that was hidden either by reflections or by Kimmer standing slightly in front of her aunt. It was a clever bit of magic these apps performed that produced the photograph we desired. Reminding us all through the process just how much we miss Jacquie.
Intersecting with all that loss on our minds, it felt like we were randomly asked "how are you doing?" more than usually occurs. Even on a normal day the question always gives me pause because there are so many moving parts in our lives and not all of them are awesome all the time. And some of them are. So what do we do? Average those things? Cherry pick? Go with fine???
The middle of the month was a spread out Valentine's Day. Spread out because we never celebrate on the day because everyone's out and about celebrating that day, clogging up all the quiet corners we care to occupy. Day after Valentine's Day, then, we go out to see a movie together, "The Holdovers" at The Crest in Shoreline. A magnificent experience we enjoyed with a humongous bucket of superbly buttered popcorn. Then the day after the day after Valentine's Day, Friday, we exchange presents and cards and flowers before heading out to dinner at Girardis Osteria in Edmonds for an ungodly amount of delicious pasta to accompany our wine.
Snow made an appearance at our home in late February, dusting our home and yard and cars three mornings running, having completely melted by three afternoons running. On the first of those days I took our car—the one that was stolen in December and taken on a wild bumper car ride to Bellevue—I took our car to the body shop where we're having our next round of work done in April. This particular day, our insurance wanted the interior mold taken care of so that what was done for our car since it spent a number of days in a tow yard with a fully smashed window during a string of relentlessly rainy days was not a waste of time. After the drop-off, I caught an Uber ride with a gentleman who's incredibly proud of his wife and daughters for the degrees and graduations they recently achieved.
Funny thing: one of his daughters works at a local company where one of his Uber rides turned out to be working. They figured it out during conversation that the ride and his daughter work in the same department.
Small world.
And the snow?
While we got a half inch or less, he and his neighbors accumulated two inches of snow on their properties.
Cats were a thing in February. We welcomed into our home a big black cat named Quarter (as in Quarter Note) on behalf of a dear friend who'll be away until Fall. Taking a bit of advice from a cat expert on YouTube, we kept our cat, Dinker, and the new cat apart for a week or so. Each was aware of the other, of course. But they never met in person. Early on, the closest they got was staring at each other through the glass of our family room door. No hisses. No aggressive postures. Just a curious sort of "who the heck are you?"
Eventually, they came to share the same physical spaces with a benign tolerance and trust. Again no hissing or aggressive posturing. By the end of the month, they were even playful with each other. Tussling. Chasing after one another.
They each have their own individual rituals and habits along with home bases at opposite ends of the house and a shared mealtime that turns into a bit of a race to see who finishes first so they can poach the other's unfinished meal.
February after Valentine's Day also bore witness to our first steps at deChristmassing our home. So far we've got all the garland down inside the house except for Kimmer's office where that bough will grace the room the full year. We've got most of the nicknacky decorations put away including the stockings hung over the fireplace. We've got a number of interior light strings put away even as most will stay up 'cause we like the look. All the icicle lights outdoors along our front gutters from one end of the house to the other are put away. As are the random lights we threw on the bushes. Thankfully, there was time to tag all the lights and garlands with their locations in preparation for the end of this year when they all go back up again.
Hopefully, probably, we'll have it all put away before this month of March sees its last day.
Okay.
The thread running through February that will continue running through the foreseeable months for the next one and a half years... is Kimmer and her doctoral program. Thirty-some hours a week of reading, writing, class interactions, lectures, conferences, and research paired with a thirty-hour work week and the never-ending charting each such week cranks out. It's not the sum total of our daily routines and responsibilities but it is the main juggling act on a high wire that's going on around here along with everything that pops up because yeah. Things pop up you gotta do or deal with or that you just wanna do as a break from what you gotta deal with.
So this.
Was not a month off. Just a different way to go wall to wall while maintaining a life together in there somewhere: lunches together, walks in the neighborhood, listening to podcasts, alternately streaming Royal Pains and Big Bang Theory, planning adventures, snuggling while the snow falls.
In the end, February was a month soaked in emotional experience. It was a lot of loss catching up with us in different ways that still hurt our hearts, sure. It was everything else as well. All the pieces and parts that add up and color our days. Which, I guess...
Is just what normal looks like around here.
🙂
0 notes
At Burning Man, a 26-foot tall box sculpture paid fiery tribute to Ukraine
CNN
By Jacqui Palumbo and Oscar Holland, CNN
Updated 2:32 PM EDT, Thu August 31, 2023
In the early hours of Thursday, in the middle of the ephemeral city that rises in Nevada’s Black Rock Desert each summer, a 26-foot-tall, 13-foot-wide box was set ablaze. The flames formed a column in the sky, engulfing the wooden tower for over 20 minutes before it collapsed to reveal a secret monument hidden…
View On WordPress
0 notes
Judge blocks $1.2 million 'Wizard of Oz' dress sale amid ownership dispute
Judge blocks $1.2 million ‘Wizard of Oz’ dress sale amid ownership dispute
Written by Oscar Holland, CNN
Contributors Jacqui Palumbo, CNN
A judge has blocked the sale of a pinafore dress worn by Judy Garland in “The Wizard of Oz” — just one day before it was expected to fetch up to $1.2 million at auction.
Missing for decades but rediscovered in shoebox last year, the costume was withdrawn from a movie memorabilia sale in New York on Tuesday due to an ongoing ownership…
View On WordPress
0 notes
Bad movie I have Gingerdead Man 3: Saturday Night Cleaver 2011
4 notes
·
View notes
BFCD Masterlist: Video Game Characters
List will be updated as characters are introduced to the blog. Feel free to continue to submit characters as I do not play or really know video games and those that I didn’t find in searching/research, were fewer in number than the ones that I happened across or found by sifting.
Edit: The asterisk is for voice actors and I only included the Black female voice actors. That’s why they don’t all have them. (Some of them were for whatever reason voiced by some nonblack).
Alyx Vance Half Life * Ozioma Akagha | Amanda Amanda the Adventurer | Amanda Stern - Detroit Become Human * Simbi Khali | Anaya Imanu - Tombraider * Melissa Lloyd | Angrboda - God of War: Ragnarok * Laya DeLeon Hayes | Aveline De Grandpre - Assassins’ Creed
Bangalore (Anita Williams) - Apex Legends * Erica Luttrell | Billie Lurk/Megan Foster - Dishonored 2 * Rosario Dawson | Bow Kid - A Hat in Time | Bunny Brawler - Fortnite
Calamity - Fortnite | Chondra Unkrich - YIIK: A Postmodern RPG | Citra Talugmai Far Cry | Clash (Morowa Evans) - Rainbow Six Siege * Sophia Walker | Claudette Morel - Dead by Daylight | Clementine - The Walking Dead Game
Daisy Fitzroy - Bioshock Infinite * Kimberly Brooks | Darli Dagger - Samurai Shodown | Doctor Slone - Fortnite * Mara Junot | Dolores - The King of Fighters
Efi Oladele Overwatch | Eileen the Crow - Bloodborne * Jacqueline Boatswain | Elena - Street Fighter * Eva La Dare (Karen Dyer) | Eliza Skullgirls | Élodie Rakoto - Dead by Daylight | Eurydice - Hades The Game * Francesca Hogan
Flint - Brute Force * Monnae Michaell | Fliss Dubois ( Félicité DuBois) - Man of Medan * Ayisha Issa | Frey Holland - Forspoken * Ella Balinska
Grace - Fighting Vipers | Grace Sienar - Star Wars: Squadrons * Erica Luttrell | Grace Walker - Wolfenstein * Debra Wilson
Holiis Forsythe - Psychonauts * Kimberly Brooks
Ikora Rey - Destiny The Game * Mara Junot | Imani - Paladins |
Jacqui Briggs - Mortal Kombat * Danielle Nicolet, Megalyn Echikunwoke | Jade - Mortal Kombat | Joslin Reyes Tomb Raider * Tanya Alexander | Julianna Blake - Death Loop * Ozioma Akagha
Kanna - Blast Master Zero | Kate Alen - F Zero
Lancer - Rogue Company | Layla Ellison - Redfall * Noveen Crumbie | Lifeline - Apex Legends | Liz Tuttle - Hogwarts Mystery | Lola Rembrite - Huniepop | Lydia Daybreak - Paradise Killer * Elli Osili Wood
Mary - Pop N’ Music | Marina - Splatoon | Marlene - The Last of Us * Merle Dandridge | Melusi - Rainbow Six Siege * Sibongile Mlambo
Nadine Ross - Uncharted | Nilin - Remember Me | Nora Harris - The Last of Us * Chelsea Tavares | Nyoka - The Outer Worlds
Oerba Dia Vanille - Final Fantasy | Olara Horizon Zero Dawn | Olive Specter - The Sims | Orisa Overwatch *Cherrelle Skeete |
Piranha Jet Set Radio | Plastic - Mirror’s Edge * Ozioma Akagha | Purna Jackson - Dead Island
Rae Sloane - Star Wars Aftermath | Regina Jones - Lily’s Garden | Riley Abel - The Last of Us *Yaani King | Robin Ayou - Subnautica Sub-Zero * Kimberly D. Brooks | Rochelle - Left 4 Dead | Rose Chapman - Detroit Become Human | Roxy Laveau - Mafia * Kalilah Harris
Samina Ebadji - Horizon Zero Dawn * Jaye Jacobs | Senna - League of Legends * Kimberly Brooks | Shani Beyond Good and Evil | Shaunte By WayForward | Sheva Alomar - Resident Evil * Karen Dyer | Shinobu Jacobs - No More Heroes *Kimberly Brooks | Stella - Spiritfarer | Sunny - Calico
Talanji - World of Warcraft * Susan Wokoma | Talia - Lolirock | T-Bug - Cyberpunk 2077 | Tilly Jackson - Red Dead Redemption * Meeya Davis-Glover
Vella Tartine - Broken Age * Masasa Moyo | Vivienne de Fer - Dragon Age Inquisition
Zahra - Indivisible *Secunda Wood | Zo - Horizon Zero Dawn * Erica Luttrell | Zoey Wade - Choices: Stories You Play
64 notes
·
View notes
Museum Paid Danish Artist Jens Haaning $84K — He Kept the Money and Called it 'Art'
When an exhibition about the future of labor opened at a Danish art museum on Friday, visitors should have seen two large picture frames filled with banknotes worth a combined $84,000.
The pieces were meant to be reproductions of two works by artist Jens Haaning, who previously used framed cash to represent the average annual salaries of an Austrian and a Dane -- in euros and Danish krone respectively.
But when the Kunsten Museum of Modern Art in Aalborg took delivery of the recreated artworks ahead of the show, gallery staff made a surprising discovery: the frames were empty. Rather than being the handiwork of thieves, the loaned cash was missing thanks to Haaning himself, who says he is keeping the money -- in the name of art.
"I have chosen to make a new work for the exhibition, instead of showing the two 14- and 11-year-old works respectively," Haaning told the museum in an email, the text of which is now displayed next to the empty frames.
"The work is based on/responds to both your exhibition concept and the works that we had originally planned to show."
The "new" conceptual piece, which Haaning has titled "Take the Money and Run," is now at the center of a dispute between museum and artist over labor, contractual obligations and the value of work -- all fitting themes for the exhibition.
"I saw, from my artistic point of view, that I could create a much better piece for them than what they could imagine," Haaning said over the phone, adding: "I don't see that I have stolen money... I have created an art piece, which is maybe 10 or 100 times better than what we had planned. What is the problem?"
Contractual dispute
As well as lending Haaning 534,000 Danish krone ($84,000) for the cash-filled artworks, the Kunsten Museum had agreed to pay a further 10,000 krone ($1,571) for his work, as well as covering costs like framing and delivery. But the artist said the project would still have left him out of pocket, due to studio costs and staff salaries.
"I normally find myself in a better position when I'm showing abroad," he said. "I'm a Dane and it's (a) Danish museum and they expect me to invest because then maybe one day they will buy something."
Kunsten's director, Lasse Andersson, maintained that the museum has upheld its side of the agreement. "It's really important for us because we have always been known for honoring contracts and also paying artists a reasonable fee," he said over the phone.
Haaning said he has no plans to return the money and is "not worried" about possible consequences. Andersson said the artist has until January, when the exhibition ends, to repay the loan, after which the museum will consider legal action.
For now, the museum is displaying "Take the Money and Run" as it is, putting it on a platform to be considered and critiqued. In the art world, works that question the value of art itself -- like Maurizio Cattelan taping a banana to a wall, or Banksy shredding a painting at auction -- are nothing new. Neither are invisible works of art, with the late Yves Klein exhibiting an empty room to thousands of people in 1958.
Commenting on the value of work is, after all, what Haaning intended. "I think behind the piece is a much more general statement: that (you) should look at the structures you participate in and reflect on them," he said, listing religion and marriage among them. "And if needed, you know, take the money and run."
Andersson has his own interpretation of the empty frames, which he sees in the context of his museum's show, "Work it Out."
"Do we have to work for money, or can we just take it?" Andersson asked. "Why do we go to work? All these kinds of things make us start to reflect on the cultural habits of society that we are part of. And then it also applies to the question: Are artists paid enough for what they do?"
Still, the museum director would like to see the cash returned.
"It's not my money -- it's public money, it's the museum's money," he said. "So that's why (by January) we need to make sure it's coming back to us."
Written by Jacqui Palumbo.
Contributors Oscar Holland.
104 notes
·
View notes
The Hidden Truth 1.8 Twelve Good Man (3rd September 1964). Written by Eric Corner & Ross Salmon; dir. Don Gale. Featuring regulars Alexander Knox, James Maxwell, Elizabeth Weaver, George Moon, Ruth Meyers & Jacqueline Chan. Guest starring Tenniel Evans, Maureen Pryor, Terence Alexander & Frances Cuka.
The invalid wife (Anne Woodward) of an analytical chemist living in Cornwall is found dead, apparently poisoned. The chemist, Collins (Tenniel Evans), is charged with murder [by Det. Inspector Thwaite (Barry Linehan) and Det. Sergeant Holland (Edward Cast)]. Dr Fox (James Maxwell) is asked to provide scientific evidence to prove Collins innocent. Assisted by Tua Ling (Jacqui Chan), his findings make him the key witness in the case for the defence. But “will the jury be swayed by emotion or by scientific fact?”
Terence Alexander reprised his role as Roger Blake QC, so Dr Fox had to face him again, after 1.3 “Cross Examination” where the QC gave Fox “the most unpleasant half hour [he] could remember” in the witness stand.
Also featuring Frances Cuka as Rachel Pascoe and Maureen Pryor as Belle Atkinson, with Peter Bathurst as the judge.
The TV pages showed some interest in the unusual angle regarding the poisoning plus noting Terence Alexander’s return - and, of course, the first appearance of new regular character, lab assistant, Tua Ling, as played by Jacqui Chan.
The Mirror took up the story, as she’d previously dated Anthony Armstrong-Jones & was therefore News. Tua Ling, the Mirror reporter claimed, “my Chinese secretary tells me means “dignified elegance.”” Producer Stella Richman intended to build up Chan’s role, and had booked her for two further episodes (one of which was 1.10 “One For the Road,” which, happily, exists). (Chan’s brief affair with Armstrong-Jones means that she also appears, somewhat controversially, as a fictional character herself in S2 of The Crown, played by Alice Hewkin.)
The episode was written by prize-winning playwright and marine biologist Eric Corner, who lived in Plymouth, and wrote as a hobby. He scripted the dialogue while his collaborator, broadcaster Ross Salmon, provided the storyline and characters.
6 notes
·
View notes
🔥 on hmmm....mortal kombat
oh god hmmm HMMMM!!!!
The most recent movie it was like 2020? Was too good i hate it it should have been bad video game movies arent allowed to be good or even just average because thats how you get shit like tom holland nathan drake
For the games...hmmm mortal kombat 11 didnt go far enough with the redesigns for the female characters. They tried to make their designs less objectifying and sexualized and yeah they did but also come on go further
like this is kitana in mk10 and then in mk11 like yes you got rid of most of the random patches of skin but shes still got heels and shit! And men threw so many tantrums over this!! This is so mild like!!!
I really think like for the next 10 years or so all video games have to stop objectifying women at ALL and put men in speedos until things balance out and then we can go back to boobs and butts everywhere or whatever
Also Jacqui and cassie should kiss <3
3 notes
·
View notes
February felt like we didn't do anything. That's only because, of course, we started the year with a last-minute trip to Holland to visit family.
A very big deal, by the way. A huuuuuuge experience.
The reason we went was because one of my uncles was diagnosed with terminal cancer and this was our last opportunity to see him.
About a week after we returned home, he lived out his last wish to return to the country of his birth: Indonesia. He went with his wife and two "kids" (my cousins who're within a decade younger than me) on an adventure that involves a two-part international flight totaling about fourteen hours in the air. No longer able to walk on his own, it was a wheelchair for him the entire trip. Once in Indonesia, they began doing a greatest hits of family, old friends, places he and my aunt grew up in, lived, knew from childhood and teenage years, and then a bunch of tourist stuff. During the course of three weeks, they moved across the country from west to east by trains, small planes, and cars. It was a magnificent trip we got to follow online through an app called PolarSteps, a real-time travel blog with pictures and videos.
The trip was to last three weeks after which they'd all return home to Holland. Unfortunately by the last week, my uncle's cancer progressed so much that he was no longer able to eat or drink much, he was losing weight losing weigth losing weight...
And then he was hospitalized.
In the end, he traveled the country of his birth from west to east for two and a half weeks, making it to Bali before he could go no further. He died one day after the day they were to return home. He died after his daughter returned to Holland and her daughter traveled the distance on her own to join him for the last two days of his life.
In his final hours, he slipped into a coma...
And then he was gone.
His memorial service was the first of March that's basically the thirtieth of February if there was such a thing as February thirtieth this year. We didn't catch the Livestream because it was too early our time but we did watch the video once it posted.
Of course everyone's speaking Dutch so there's only so much we understand. Fortunately, I have some tasty apps at my disposal so now we have a version that's captioned in English. It's not perfect, I'm sure. But good enough for our understanding.
On the same day as the memorial service, February 30 (😉), there was a Life celebration gathering for my production mentor and friend, Tom Speer, who passed away at the end of November, last year. This day in which we gathered was also, would've also been, Tom's birthday. So yeah. There was wonderfully frosted cake alongside an assortment of food and drink. We sang Happy Birthday. The gathering was filled with a production/broadcast group of professionals whose paths crossed or have crossed. So there's a lot of catching up, filling each other in on our lives. Most of what we did, though, was share Tom stories. In fact the main event of our gathering was sharing Tom experiences as friends, as neighbors, as people who worked alongside Tom during his extensive career as a videographer. That really was the point. We all walked away knowing more about Tom than we knew when we first walked into the room.
It was a gift. It really was.
Continuing this thread of dear life slipping away, I also dedicated time to writing the obituary for Kimmer's aunt Jacquie who passed away at the beginning of November last year.
I wrote her husband's obituary after he died at the top of 2023. It was crazy bittersweet to do the same for his wife who passed away eleven months later. And yeah. It really is a galling thing to reduce someone's life to five hundred words.
Not my favorite thing. Like, at all.
With Jacquie, we didn't get as lucky with her obit photograph as we did her husband. Someone had taken a genuinely iconic photo of him and not long before forwarded it to his son, Kimmer's cousin.
Kimmer wound up going through every photo of her aunt online, in any photo album, and anything on her phone or laptop. What she eventually found was perfect... although it was a photograph of a photograph in an album. And because of the angle at which the photo was taken... and the reflections from the clear plastic covering the photo that obscured some of its details and because Kimmer was also in the photo standing shoulder to shoulder, slightly in front of her aunt...
Because of all that the photo was less than ideal. Fortunately, with an AI/Photoshop/Topaz Labs assist, I was able to scale up the photograph's resolution, pull Kimmer completely out of the shot, and restore anything that was hidden either by reflections or by Kimmer standing slightly in front of her aunt. It was a clever bit of magic these apps performed that produced the photograph we desired. Reminding us all through the process just how much we miss Jacquie.
Intersecting with all this loss on our minds, it felt like we were randomly asked "how are you doing?" more than usually occurs. Even on a normal day the question always gives me pause because there are so many moving parts in our lives and not all of them are awesome all the time. And some of them are. So what do we do? Average those things? Cherry pick? Go with fine???
Well...
The middle of the month was a spread-out Valentine's Day. Spread out because we never celebrate on the day because everyone's out and about celebrating on that day, clogging up all the quiet corners we care to occupy. Day after Valentine's Day, then, we went out to see a movie together, "The Holdovers" at The Crest in Shoreline. A magnificent experience we enjoyed with a humongous bucket of superbly buttered popcorn. The day after the day after Valentine's Day, Friday, we exchange presents and cards and flowers before heading out to dinner at Girardis Osteria in Edmonds for an ungodly amount of delicious pasta to accompany our wine.
Snow made an appearance at our home in late February, dusting our home and yard and cars three mornings running, melting completely for three afternoons running. On the first of those days I took our car—the one that was stolen in December and taken on a wild bumper car smash-up ride to Bellevue—I took our car to the body shop where we're having our next round of work done in April. This particular day, our insurance wanted the interior mold cleared out given that our car spent days in a tow yard with a fully smashed window during a string of relentlessly rainy days. After the drop-off, I catch a charming Uber ride with a gentleman who's incredibly proud of his wife and daughters for the degrees and graduations they just achieved.
Funny thing: one of his daughters works at a local company where one of his Uber customers turned out to be working. They figured it out during conversation that the customer and his daughter work in the same department.
Small world.
And the snow?
While we got a half inch or less, he and his neighbors accumulated two inches of snow on their properties.
Cats were a thing in February. We welcomed into our home a big black cat named Quarter (after quarter note) on behalf of a dear friend who'll be away until Fall. Taking a bit of advice from a cat expert on YouTube, we kept our cat, Dinker, and the new cat apart for a week or so. Each was aware of the other, of course. But they never met in person. Early on, the closest they got was staring at each other through the glass of our family room door. No hisses. No aggressive postures. Just a curious sort of "who the heck are you?"
Eventually, they came to share the same physical spaces with a benign tolerance and trust. Again no hissing or aggressive posturing. Eventually, by the end of the month, they even got to be playful with each other. Tussling. Chasing after each other.
They each have their own individual rituals and habits along with home bases at opposite ends of the house and a shared mealtime that turns into a bit of a race to see who finishes first so they can poach the other's unfinished meal.
February after Valentine's Day also bird witness to our first steps at deChristmassing our home. So far we've got all the garland down inside the house except for Kimmer's office where that bough will grace the room the full year. We've got most of the nicknacky decorations put away including the stockings hung above the fireplace. We've got a number of interior light strings put away even as most will stay up 'cause we like the look. All the icicle lights outdoors along our front gutters from one end of the house to the other are put away. As are the random lights we threw on the bushes. Thankfully, there was time to tag all the lights and garlands with their locations in preparation for the end of this year when they all go up again.
Hopefully, probably, we'll have it all out away before this month of March sees its last day.
The thread running through February that will continue running through every foreseeable month for the next one-and-a-half years is Kimmer and her doctoral program. Thirty-some hours a week of reading, writing, class interactions, lectures, conferences, and research paired with a thirty-hour work week and the never ending charting each such week adds to the pile. It's not the sum total of our daily routines and responsibilities but it is the main juggling act on a high wire that's going on around here along with everything that pops up because yeah. Things pop up that you gotta do or deal with or that you just wanna do as a break from what you gotta deal with.
So this.
Was not a month off. Just a different way to go wall to wall while maintaining a life together in there somewhere: lunches together, walks in the neighborhood, listening to podcasts, alternately streaming Royal Pains and Big Bang Theory, planning adventures, snuggling while the snow falls.
In the end, February was a month soaked in emotional experience. It was a lot of loss catching up with us in different ways that still hurt our hearts, sure. It was everything else as well. All the pieces and parts that add up and color our days. Which, I guess...
Is just what normal looks like around here.
🙂
1 note
·
View note
Newcastle Law School is contributing to public debate on climate change
How is Newcastle Law School contributing to public debate on climate change?
Given the scientific consensus that an urgent and significant reduction in greenhouse gas emissions is required to avoid catastrophic environmental and economic consequences, Newcastle Law School encourages its students, alumni, and staff to support efforts to promote immediate and sustained action to reduce emissions.
Here are some recent developments that illustrate how members of the Newcastle Law School community have been taking up this challenge.
Law student Kelsey Gray has assisted one of her teachers (Law School Senior Lecturer Dr Elena Aydos) on important research into the effectiveness of the Australian Government’s Emissions Reduction Fund (ERF). Elena and Kelsey’s paper was published late last month in the Carbon & Climate Law Review. It concluded that unfortunately the ERF is not only costly and unsustainable, it has also been ineffective in achieving meaningful emissions reductions.
As for alumni, law graduate Katrina Bullock (class of 2013) works as General Counsel for Greenpeace Australia. She has recently been in the media discussing the energy company AGL’s court action against Greenpeace, including this interview on Radio National on June 1. Greenpeace has been running a campaign accusing AGL of inappropriately promoting itself as pro-environment, when AGL is actually Australia’s largest greenhouse gas emitter. AGL alleged in court that Greenpeace’s campaign breached AGL’s intellectual property rights, but AGL’s court action was largely unsuccessful.
As for staff, Jacquie Svenson is one of the law school’s Clinical Teacher/Solicitors. As well as having a core practice in advice and representation for community groups and individuals opposing fossil fuel projects, Jacquie regularly gives media interviews on the issue and convenes a local community action group. On 27 May, Jacquie co-authored an��article in The Conversation about an important climate change case. Eight teenagers had taken the Minister for the Environment to court, seeking an injunction to stop her approving a proposed extension to a coal mine in northwest NSW. Although the injunction was not granted, the judge did find that when the Minister makes decisions that could lead to increased greenhouse gas emissions, she has a duty of care toward future generations. In the absence of a successful appeal or legislative change, this will likely have important implications for future ministerial decision-making and climate litigation.
Newcastle Law School Senior Lecturer Dr Tim Connor was interviewed by Cosmos magazine on May 28 about another important case: a Dutch court has ordered Shell to cut its carbon emissions to 45% of 2019 levels by 2030—again on the basis that Shell has a duty of care to minimize harm to future generations. This follows an increasing number of cases in the Northern Hemisphere, particularly Holland, where reductions in carbon emissions are being achieved through the courts.
And stayed tuned for Elena’s soon to be published book Carbon Markets Around the Globe: Sustainability and Political Feasibility. The book is co-authored with Dr Sven Rudolph of Kyoto University and promises to make an important contribution to debates regarding how best to regulate carbon emissions.
Climate change poses a huge threat to current and future generations and we all need to do what we can to address it. Newcastle Law School is keen to play its part.
Studying at Newcastle Law School
The University of Newcastle Law School is committed to ensuring that their international students who commence the Juris Doctor/Graduate Diploma of Legal Practice (JD/GDLP) program in 2021–22 will be able to progress their studies online on a full-time basis until it is possible to travel to Australia.
Program: Juris Doctor & Graduate Diploma in Legal Practice
Location: Newcastle (Callaghan)
Duration: 3 years
Semester intakes: February and July each year
Application deadline: There is no official application deadline. You are encouraged to apply at least three months prior to the program’s start date.
2 notes
·
View notes
#1. Aaron Roeder — Terry Chen — tag: aroeder
2. Aida Wilks — Julia Garner — tag: awilks
3. Alexander Lightwood — Matt Daddario — tag: alightwood
4. Alexandria Gillham — Gemma Arterton — tag: agilham
5. Alia Maxwell — Vanessa Morgan — tag: amaxwell
6. Alisia Carabajal — Bridget Regan — tag: acarabajal
7. Alissa Kytönen — Nicola Peltz — tag: akytonen
8. Alyx Humphries — Joe Brooks — tag: ahumphries
9. Amadej Moralis — Matthew Daddario — tag: amoralis
10. Amanda H. Nørgaard — Selena Gomez — tag: anorgaard
11. Amelie Robin — Felicity Jones — tag: arobin
12. Angel Devaris — Neels Visser — tag: adevaris
13. Anna B. Mathiasen — Anna B. Mathiasen — tag: amathiasen
14. Anthony Higgins [ Race ] — Christian Navarro — tag: ahiggins
15. Antoine Neuhaus — Avan Jogia — tag: aneuhaus
16. Apolline Tachel — Taylor Swift — tag: atachel
17. April Olson — Amber Heard — tag: aolson
18. Archie Andrews — KJ Apa — tag: aandrews
19. Arlan Havernathy — Vasiliy Makarov — tag: vmakarov
20. Árni Sveinsson — Bruno Mars — tag: ásveinsson
21. Arron Castillo — Dylan Sprayberry — tag: acastillo
22. Asmarina Tesmi — Letitia Wright — tag: atesmi
23. Aurora Moon — Emma Stone — tag: amoon
24. Austin Valero — Danny Schwarz — tag: avalero
25. Ava Hunter — Danielle Campbell — tag: ahunter
26. Bastiaan Morgan — Jacob Young — tag: bmorgan
27. Beau Amarante — Douglas Booth — tag: bamarante
28. Bellamy Blake — Bob Morley — tag: bblake
29. Bentley French — Keegan Allen — tag: bfrench
30. Blair McKenzie/McKenna — Joe Brooks/Matt Bomer — tag: bmckenzie; bmckenna
31. Blake Anderson — Nick Robinson — tag: banderson
32. Bobbi Downes — Cole Sprouse — tag: bdownes
33. Bonilla Serrato — Hunter Schafer — tag: bserrato
34. Breana Logston — Hayley Lu Richards — tag: blogson
35. Broderick Boyer — Trevor Noah — tag: bboyer
36. Brooke Nicholas — Scarlett Johansson — tag: bnicholas
37. Buddy Wiltsie — Freddie Stroma — tag: bwiltsie
38. Caleb Whitton — Vasiliy Makarov — tag: cwhitton
39. Caley Greene — Margot Robbie — tag: cgreene
40. Casey Finch — Ashton Irwin — tag: cfinch
41. Caty White — Madelaine Petsch — tag: cwhite
42. Celeste Goodman — Virginia Gardner — tag: cgoodman
43. Célia Méndes — Marina Moschen — tag: cméndes
44. Cerin Ó'Caoimh — Spencer MacPherson — tag: cócaoimh
45. Charisse Walther — Odeya Rush — tag: cwalther
46. Chelsea Tassinari — Brittany Snow — tag: ctassinari
47. Cheryl Blossom — Madelaine Petsch — tag: cblossom
48. Christopher Candler — Rey Valentin — tag: ccandler
49. Ciel Phantomhive — Jakub Gierszal — tag: cphantomhive
50. Ciera Folger — Zendaya — tag: cfolger
51. Clarissa Fairchild — Katherine McNamara — tag: cfairchild
52. Clarke Griffin — Eliza Taylor — tag: cgriffin
53. Claude Donovan — Matt Cohen — tag: cdonovan
54. Cleopatra Mercia — Danielle Campbell — tag: cmercia
55. Cody Chester — Austin Mahone — tag: cchester
56. Connor Dreyer — Ryan Lochte — tag: cdreyer
57. Conrad Benham — Theo James — tag: cbenham
58. Corey Hamilton — Gregg Sulkin — tag: chamilton
59. Curt Wagoner — Ellar Coltrane — tag: cwagoner
60. Dallas Ference — Richard Madden — tag: dference
61. Dalton Fuller — Ed Westwick — tag: dfuller
62. Dana Bela — Griffin Powell-Arcand — tag: dbela
63. Deane Trager — Hayden Thompson — tag: dtrager
64. Deanna Scofield — Madison Beer — tag: dscofield
65. Demi-leigh Maclean — Victoria Justice — tag: dmaclean
66. Destin Rumancek — Penn Badgeley — tag: drumancek
67. Diamond Turk — Tristan Lake Leabu — tag: dturl
68. Diana Lanham — Gina Carano — tag: dlanham
69. Dmitry Alkaev — Andrew Boldar — tag: dalkaev
70. Dominik Aaron — Felix Mallard — tag: daaron
71. Dorothea Lightwood-Bane — India Eisley — tag: dlightwoodbane
72. Dorothy Baum — Kaniehtiio Horn — tag: dbaum
73. Doyle Barish — Ty Simpkins — tag: dbarish
74. Dwight Apolinar — King Bach — tag: dapolinar
75. Dyana Roy — Lyrica Okano — tag: droy
76. Edelira Réyes — Ana De Armas — tag: eréyes
77. Eden Farley — Diane Vulpine — tag: efarley
78. Eleanor Blackburn — Rachel-Marie Jones — tag: eblackburn
79. Elden Pointer — Harrison Gilbertson — tag: epointer
80. Eliot Waugh — Hale Appleman — tag: ewaugh
81. Émelié Overgard — Georgia Henley — tag: eovergaard
82. Emilio Youngberg — Brendon Thwaites — tag: eyoungberg
83. Emily Robin — Thomasin McKenzie — tag: erobin
84. Erin Madden — Anna Kendricks — tag: emadden
85. Essi Hanski — Lachlan Watson — tag: ehanski
86. Eva Coleman — Holliday Grainger — tag: ecoleman
87. Eva Rosales — Aimee Carrero — tag: erosales
88. Evangelina Stigall — Anya Chalotra — tag: estigali
89. Evie Trippe — Morgan Lily — tag: etrippe
90. Ezequiel Hanby — Ryan Guzman — tag: ehanby
91. Faye Thompson — Katherine Langford — tag: fthompson
92. Felix Tenner — Timothée Chalamet — tag: ftenner
93. Finn Jagger — Sam Riley — tag: fjagger
94. Forrest Nilges — Lucas Zumann — tag: fnilges
95. Gabriela Méndes — Camila Queiroz — tag: gméndes
96. Genevive Janowski — Hailee Steinfield — tag: gjanowski
97. Georgette Fresne — Ciara Bravo — tag: gfresne
98. Georgianne Rentfro — Dalilah Bela — tag: grentfro
99. Gino Warkentin — Andrew Garfield — tag: gwarkentin
100. Grace Quinn — Lucy Hale — tag: gquinn
101. Hailee Lewis — Chloe Norgaard — tag: hlewis
102. Harley Quinn — Margot Robbie — tag: hquinn
103. Harper Finch — George Shelley — tag: hfinch
104. Harry Hook — Thomas Doherty — tag: hhook
105. Hayley Marshall-Kenner — Phoebe Tonkin — tag: hmarshallkenner
106. Hazel Arden — Katheryn Winnick — tag: harden
107. Hunter Harris — Mikkel Jensen — tag: hhunter
108. Imelda Navarro — Alex Steele — tag: inavarro
109. Isis Monohan — Emily Rudd — tag: imonohan
110. Israel Preston — Landon Liboiron — tag: ipreston
111. Ivy Romano — Ariana Grande — tag: iromano
112. Jacqui Valo — Natalie Dormer — tag: jvalo
113. James Carstairs — Choi Jun-Hong — tag: jcarstairs
114. Jamie Kostelnik — Camren Bicondova — tag: jkostelnik
115. Jared Rubio — Sebastian Stan — tag: jrubio
116. Jaskier Pankratz — Joey Batey — tag: jpankratz
117. Jason Kleinman — Chris Pine — tag:jkleinman
118. JC Garner — Jonny Weston — tag: jcgarner
119. Jed Achorn — Hayden Christensen — tag: jachorn
120. Jellybean Jones — India Eisley — tag: jbjones
121. Jenna Ormond — Carlson Young — tag: jormond
122. Jeremy Lindsay — Cameron Palatas — tag: jlindsay
123. Jericho Lefévre — Stephen James Hendry — tag: jlefévre
124. Jimmie Souen — Conner Dennis — tag: jsouen
125. Joaquin Desantos — Rob Raco — tag: jdesantos
126. Joaquin Nero — Jamie Campbell-Bower — tag: jnero
127. Johanna Söderström — Anya Chalotra — tag: jsoderstrom
128. Jonathon Pruette — James Marsden — tag: jpruette
129. Jordan Burton — Devon Aoki — tag: jburton
130. Joshua Hope — Vasiliy Makarov — tag: joshhope
131. Jude Byrom — Ezra Miller — tag: jbyrom
132. Jude Godfrey — Sterling Knight — tag: judegodfrey
133. Jughead Jones — Cole Sprouse — tag: jugheadjones
134. Julie R. Mogensen — Bailee Madison — tag: jmogenson
135. Julio Guarnieri — Gael Garcia Bernal — tag: jguarnieri
136. Julius Satchell — Chris Pine — tag: jsatchell
137. Juliyn Godfrey — Austin Butler — tag: juliyngodfrey
138. Justine Schoolcraft — Melissa Benoist — tag: mbenoist
139. Kade Westfield — Cole Sprouse — tag: kadewestfield
140. Kailyn Howard — Ash Stymest — tag:khoward
141. Kameron Grainger — James Reid — tag:kgrainger
142. Kammy Milkovich — Rasmus Ledin — tag: kmilkovich
143. Kareem Mauriello — Graham Philips — tag: kmauriello
144. Karisa Sandström — Bridget Satterlee — tag: ksandstrom
145. Karleen Widell — Nathalie Emmanuel — tag: kwidell
146. Kaylah Robles — Kirsty Mooney — tag: krobles
147. Kendrick Slabaugh — Brenton Thwaites — tag: kslabaugh
148. Kenzi Malikov — Ksenia Solo — tag: kmalikov
149. Kian Westfield — Cole Sprouse — tag: kianwestfield
150. Killian Jones — Colin O’Donaghue — tag: kjones
151. Kira Connor — Katherine McNamara — tag: kconnor
152. Kiran Wilson — Paris Brosnan — tag: kwilson
153. Kirk Rich — Zac Efron — tag: krich
154. Kis Szabolcs — Alicia Vikander — tag: kszabolcs
155. Kisanet Isaias — Rihanna — tag: kisaias
156. Kitty Sullivan — Tina Guo — tag: ksullivan
157. Klaus Hargreeves — Robert Sheehan — tag: khargreeves
158. Krista Albertsdóttir — Naomi Scott — tag: kalbertsdóttir
159. Kristyn Dilley — Cara Delevigne — tag: kdilley
160. Koda Westfield — Cole Sprouse — tag: kodawestfield
161. Lacey Tauber — Adrianne Palicki — tag: ltauber
162. Lauranne Leemburg — Daisy Ridley — tag: lleemburg
163. Laurence Lachord — Toby Nichols — tag: llachord
164. Leah Holt — Crystal Reed — tag: lholt
165. Lennox Hamilton — Chay Suede — tag: lhamilton
166. Lenore Francoeur — Dascha Polanco — tag: lfrancouer
167. Leon Ó'Caoimh — Chris Collins — tag: lócaoimh
168. Lesli Mclaurin — Demi Lovato — tag: lmclaurin
169. Lexa Kom Trikru — Alycia Debnam-Carey — tag: lkomtrikru
170. Liam Dunbar — Dylan Sprayberry — tag: ldunbar
171. Liberato Pisani — Tanner Buchanan — tag: lpisani
172. Lita Balsley — Veronika Bonell — tag: lbalsley
173. Livia Hullett — Esme Creed-Miles — tag: lhullett
174. Lizbeth Burton — Maya Hawke — tag: lburton
175. Lola Porter — Rachel Hilbert — tag: lporter
176. Lorie Garnett — Elle Fanning — tag: lgarnett
177. Lucas Abbott — Drew Acker — tag: labbott
178. Mackenzie Greyr — Jaira Burns — tag: mgreyr
179. Madelaine Thomas — Dove Cameron — tag: mthomas
180. Majestas Upriti — Natalie Dormer — tag: mupriti
181. Makkai Barnabás — Judah Lewis — tag: mbarnabás
182. Mal — Dove Cameron — tag: mal
183. Marina Alves — Zendaya — tag: malves
184. Mark Blackthorn — Jamie Campbell-Bower — tag: mblackthorn
185. Mark Westlock — Luke Bilyk — tag: mwestlock
186. Matteusz Villegas — Samuel Larsen — tag: mvillegas
187. Matthias Brewer — Henry Cavill — tag: mbrewer
188. Maxxie Oliver — Mitch Hewer — tag: moliver
189. Melanie Widing — Kate Beckinsale — tag: mwiding
190. Mercedes Abbott — Lyndsy Fonseca — mabbott
191. Merida Dunbroch — Felicia Day — tag: mdunbroch
192. Mia Alloway — Taylor Momsen — tag: malloway
193. Micah Martin — Tom Holland — tag: micahmartin
194. Mickey Milkovich — Noel Fisher — tag: mmilkovich
195. Mihai Fenrirson — Asa Butterfield — tag: mfenrirson
196. Milosz Sheehan — Ilja Van Vuuren — tag: msheehan
197. Mira Martin — Amanda Seyfried — tag: miramartin
198. Monty Green — Christopher Larkin — tag: mgreen
199. Morgana Pendragon — Katie McGrath — tag: mpendragon
200. Morgyn Kennedy — Bill Skarsgard — tag: mkennedy
201. Murdock — Sharlto Copley — tag: murdock
202. Murphy McManus — Norman Reedus — tag: mmcmanus
203. Nadia Lowe — Tiera Skovbye — tag: nlowe
204. Neal Caffrey — Matt Bomer — tag: ncaffrey
205. Neil Crowley — Emile Hirsch — tag: ncrowley
206. Nelle Leng — Chloe Bennet — tag: nleng
207. Nicholas West — Max Lloyd-Jones — tag: nwest
208. Nikki Howe — Dylan Sprayberry — tag: nhowe
209. Niko King — Rob Raco — tag: nking
210. Nine/Nina — Kiernan Shipka — tag:nnine
211. Noah Lamont — Marlon Teixiera — tag: nlamont
212. Nola Delpozo — Anya Taylor-Joy — tag: ndelpozo
213. Octavia Blake — Marie Avgeropoulos — tag: oblake
214. Olivia Octavian — Elizabeth Gillies — tag: ooctavian
215. Olympia Green — Lana Condor — tag: ogreen
216. Orion Kirk — Dominic Sherwood — tag: okirk
217. Oscar Ellinger — Penn Badgley — tag: oellinger
218. Otto Feehan — Nat Wolff — tag: ofeehan
219. Paige Kerler — Abbie Cornish — tag: pkerler
220. Paris Dupont — Lucky Blue Smith — tag: pdupont
221. Patrick S. Knudsen — Joe Keery — tag: pknudsen
222. Paul Mann — Henry Cavill — tag: pmann
223. Peter Rumancek — Landon Liboiron — tag: prumancek
224. Phoenix Monsoon — Edu Beber — tag: pmonsoon
225. Poppy Martin — Danielle Campbell — tag: pmartin
226. Presley Lowe — Zoey Deutch — tag: plowe
227. Quentin Coldwater — Jason Ralph — tag: qcoldwater
228. Quinn Simons — Emilija Baranac — tag: qsimons
229. Rebecca Conway — Rihanna — tag: rconway
230. Reino Kantee — Rami Malek — tag: rkantee
231. Remi O'Reilly — Dylan Sprouse — tag: roreilly
232. Renée Gorski — Jenna Dewan — tag: rgorski
233. Reo Calhoun — Alexander Koch — tag: rcalhoun
234. Rhys Gray — David Henrie — tag: rgray
235. Riian Floyd — Andy Biersack — tag: rfloyd
236. Riley Bowman — Blake Lively — tag: rbowman
237. Robin Buckley — Maya Hawke — tag: rbuckley
238. Romain Plourde — Hudson Thames — tag: rplourde
239. Rory Gearheart — Hudson Thames — tag: rgearheart
240. Rosa Hurley — Kimberry Behets — tag: rhurley
241. Rosemary Daniele — Thaliá — tag: rdaniele
242. Rosia Obryan — Scarlett Sperduto — tag: robryan
243. Ruby — Katie Cassidy — tag: ruby
244. Rupert Fulgham — Jeremy Irvine — tag: rfulgham
245. Sabrina Spellman — Kiernan Shipka — tag: sspellman
246. Sammie Brandes — Taron Egerton — tag: sbrandes
247. Samuel Silver — Thomas Doherty — tag: ssilver
248. Sara Narjus — London Vale — tag: snarjus
249. Sascha Trent — Rasmus Ledin — tag: strent
250. Scarlet Patton — Alexandra Daddario — tag: spatton
251. Seren Haines — Cody Longo — tag: shaines
252. Shane Holden — Julian Schratter — tag: sholden
253. Shayne Fox — Alex Watson — tag: sfox
254. Simon Lewis — Alberto Rosende — tag: slewis
255. Skylar Mattiachi — Jelle Haen — tag: smattiachi
256. Sophia Tulloch — Alina Kovalenko — tag: stulloch
257. Sophie Lassiter — Abigail Cowen — tag: slassiter
258. Sophie Windsor — Elizabeth Gillies — tag: swindsor
259. Spencer Henderson — Tyler Blackburn — tag: shenderson
260. Stiles Stilinski — Dylan O’Brien — tag: sstilinski
261. Susanna Sandström — Bridget Satterlee — tag: ssandstrom
262. Suzume Ahumada — Constance Wu — tag: sahumada
263. Szymon Trujillo — Devon Bostick — tag: strujillo
264. Tabitha Mersey — Miranda Kerr — tag: tmersey
265. Talia Sholes — Lara Robinson — tag: tsholes
266. Taylor Beauford — Asa Butterfield — tag: tbeauford
267. Tess Friedkin — Jessica Lowndes — tag: tfriedkin
268. Thomas Escamilla — Nathan Saignes — tag: tescamilla
269. Tiberius Blackthorn — Asa Butterfield — tag: tblackthorn
270. Tinkerbell — Dove Cameron — tag: tinkerbell
271. TJ Hammond — Sebastian Stan — tag: tjhammond
272. Toby Kao — Selena Gomez — tag: tkao
273. Toni Topaz — Vanessa Morgan — tag: ttopaz
274. Trista Dutra — Corbin Reid — tag: tdutra
275. Valentin Sainz — Richard Madden — tag: vsainz
276. Venus Gallo — Dove Cameron — tag: vgallo
277. Verona Watkins — Maisie Williams — tag: vwatkins
278. Veronica Beck — Phoebe Tonkin — vbeck
279. Veronica Lodge/Luna — Camilla Mendes — tag: vlodge
280. Vigo Oldbuck — Zac Efron — tag: voldbuck
281. Viki Leick — Gigi Hadid — tag: vleick
282. Violet Addison — Elizabeth Gillies — tag: vaddison
283. Wendell Bray — Michael Grant Terry — tag: wbray
284. William Croxton — James McAvoy — tag: wcroxton
285. Xavier Camden — Thomas Doherty — tag: xcamden
286. Yalena Yardeen — Hannah John-Kamen — tag: yyardeen
287. Zaid Kyle — Chris Wood — tag: zkyle
288. Zakariah Franco — Nick Robinson — tag: zfranco
289. Zarka Nyék — Dakota Kuhn — tag: znyék
290. Zoe Cole — Antonia Thomas —tag: zcole
31 notes
·
View notes
Okay, a warning in advance: Danny and Rachel are being back together. Well, this might be the point to stop watching and retreat to fan art, fanfic and vidding. I’m so done with this BS of a show. Thanks for ruining Danny’s character. Though I never was delusional enough to think McDanno might become canon, I think that’s not what he deserves. I bet at the end of the season Danny is send off into the sunset with Rachel and the Kids because Scott is done with the show once and for all...
“Ho‘opio ‘ia e ka noho ali‘i a ka ua” – As a dangerous hurricane hits Oahu, Five-0 is tasked with protecting El Diablo (Raoul Trujillo), a captured serial killer who is being hunted by an assassin. Also, Tani’s civilian safety check during the storm turns deadly and Rachel and Charlie evacuate to Danny’s house, where the ex-spouses reminisce, on HAWAII FIVE-0, Friday, Feb. 15 (9:00-10:00 PM, ET/PT) on the CBS Television Network.
(“Ho‘opio ‘ia e ka noho ali‘i a ka ua” is Hawaiian for “Made prisoner by the reign of the rain”)
CHEAT TWEET: #H50 fans, as a hurricane hits the Island, Tani is in danger and Danny & Rachel get close... @MeaghanRath @HawaiiFive0CBS 2/15 9pm http://bit.ly/2CW8W35
REGULAR CAST:
Alex O’Loughlin
(Steve McGarrett)
Scott Caan
(Danny “Danno” Williams)
Chi McBride
(Lou Grover)
Ian Anthony Dale
(Adam Noshimuri)
Jorge Garcia
(Jerry Ortega)
Meaghan Rath
(Tani Rey)
Beulah Koale
(Junior Reigns)
Taylor Wily
(Kamekona)
Dennis Chun
(Sgt. Duke Lukela)
Kimee Balmilero
(Noelani Cunha)
RECURRING CAST:
Claire van der Boom
(Rachel Hollander)
Zach Sulzbach
(Charlie Williams)
GUEST CAST:
Raoul Trujillo
(El Diablo)
Ted McGinley
(Agent Collins)
Liam McNeill
(Agent Harris)
Craig Henningsen
(Mystery Man)
Lili Bordan
(Shona)
Greg Serano
(Jameson)
Hannah Raizelle Schwartz
(Emmy)
Bernard Aderhold-Lindsey
(Haku)
Mitchell J/ Johnson
(Moki)
Jacqui Lynn Phung
(Kalani)
Mahealani Richardson
(Local News Reporter)
Allyson Finn
(FBI Agent Lee)
WRITTEN BY: Rob Hanning
DIRECTED BY: Karen Gaviola
GENRE: Drama
40 notes
·
View notes
The Walking Deceased
THE WALKING DECEASED is the Scary Movie of the zombie genre, ripping on the biggest and best of zombie pop-culture, arguably the most crazed genre in the world. The story follows a group of survivors from all walks of the apocalypse – an idiotic Sheriff with definite coma-induced brain damage, his hardass son and a hobo with only a crossbow to stave off the walking dead, four squabbling friends…
View On WordPress
0 notes