Tumgik
#Mark Lamoureux
pocketsizedq · 7 months
Text
I have a hc in the works!
Its them with a midsize girl.
If you guys have any ideas send them in
(This is a test if also I can tag all 32 guys on the hc)
61 notes · View notes
Text
Vice surrenders
Tumblr media
I'm on tour with my new novel The Bezzle! Catch me TONIGHT in LA with Adam Conover at Vroman's, then on MONDAY in Seattle with Neal Stephenson, then Portland, Phoenix and more!
Tumblr media
Vice died the way it lived: being suckered in by smarter predators, even as it trained its own predatory instincts on those more credulous than its own supremely gullible leadership. RIP, we hardly knew ye.
For those of you who don't know, Vice was a Canadian media success story. It was founded by a motley clique of hipsters, one of whom – founder of the Proud Boys – has since grown to be one of the world's great fascism influencers. Another perfected the art of getting young people to work "for exposure" even as he built a massive, highly lucrative media empire on their free labor:
https://www.canadaland.com/podcast/vice-oral-history/
Eventually, Vice transitioned to a string of progressively worsening corporate owners, each more dishonest, predatory – and gullible – than the last. The company was one of the most enthusiastic marks for Facebook's infamous "pivot to video" – in which Mark Zuckerberg destroyed half the media industry by tricking them into thinking that the public was clamoring for video content, based on fraudulent viewing numbers:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pivot_to_video
Vice went all-in on video, spending hundreds of millions to finance Zuckerberg's doomed attempt to conquer Youtube. But unlike other the rubes who got zucked, Vice found greater fools to scam, convincing giant, slow-moving meidia companies that the best way to get in on the Next Big Thing was to shower them with vast sums of string-free money:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Viceland_(Canadian_TV_channel)
And yet, at every turn, through a succession of increasingly incompetent owners who bought the stumbling, declining Vice at fire-sale prices and then proceeded to hack away at the wages and tools its journalists depended on while paying executives salaries so high that they beggared the imagination, Vice's reporters continued to turn out stellar material.
This went on literally until the last moment. The memorial posted by 404 Media rounds up a selection of major stories Vice's beleaguered, precarious writers produced even as Vice's vulture capitalist leadership were pulling the rug out from under them:
https://www.404media.co/behind-the-blog-vices-legacy-and-the-idea-that-the-internet-is-forever/
True to form, those private equity scumbags locked all those workers out of the company's CMS without notice – and then forgot to lock down the podcasting back-end. That allowed a group of Vice veterans – Matthew Gault, Emily Lipstein, Anna Merlan, Tim Marchman and Mack Lamoureux – to gather for a totally unauthorized, tell-all session that they pushed out on an official Vice channel:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TKT4OtDEJRA
Tumblr media
It's a hell of a listen. Not only do these Vice veterans have lots of fascinating history to recount, but they also describe the conditions under which those blockbuster stories of Vice's final days were produced. As the "visionary leaders" of the company paid themselves millions, they halted payments to key suppliers, from Lexisnexis to the interview transcription service the writers depended on. Writers paid out of pocket to search PACER court records.
Not only did Vice's reporters do incredible work under terrible and worsening circumstances, but the Vice writers who got out ahead of the total collapse are also doing incredible work. 404 Media is a writer-owned investigative news publisher founded by four Vice escapees – Samantha Cole, Jason Koebler, Emanuel Maiberg and Joseph Cox, which is both producing incredible work and sustaining the writers who founded it:
https://www.404media.co/
All of which leads to an inescapable conclusion: whatever problems Vice had, they didn't include "writers don't do productive work" and also didn't include "that work isn't economically viable*. Whatever problems Vice had, they weren't problems with Vice's workers – it was a problem with Vice's bosses.
Which makes Vice's final, ignominious punishment at the hands of those bosses even more brutal, stupid and inexcusable. According to the leaked memos emanating from the company's investors and their millionaire C-suite toadies, the business's new strategy is abandoning their website in order to publish on social media.
This is…I mean, this,..
This is…
Wow.
I mean, wow.
The thing is, the social media business model is a giant rug-pull. They're not even bothering to hide their playbook anymore. For social media, the game is to encourage media companies to become reliant on third parties to reach their audiences. Once that reliance is established, the companies turn down – or even halt – the ability of those media companies to reach their audience altogether. Then, they charge the media companies to reach their audiences:
https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2023/06/save-news-we-need-end-end-web
Now, this wasn't always quite so obvious. Back when Vice was falling for Facebook's "pivot to video," it wasn't completely obvious that the long con was to take your audience hostage and ransom them back to you. But deliberately organizing your business to be reliant on social media barons today? It's like trusting your money to Sam Bankman-Fried…in 2024.
If there was ever a moment when the obvious, catastrophic, imminent risk of trusting Big Tech intermediaries to sit between you and your customers or audience, it was now. This is not the moment to be "social first." This is the moment for POSSE (Post Own Site, Share Everywhere), a strategy that sees social media as a strategy for bringing readers to channels that you control:
https://pluralistic.net/2022/02/19/now-we-are-two/#two-much-posse
Predicting that a social media platform will rug the media companies that depend on it today doesn't take a Sun Tzu – as cunning strategies go, the hamfisted tactics of FB, Twitter and Tiktok make gambits like "Lucy and the football" look like von Clausewitz.
The most bonkers part of this strategy is that it's coming from private equity bosses, who laud themselves as the great strategists of the 21st century, whose claim on so much of our global capital and resources is derived from their brilliant insight, which allows them to buy "distressed assets" like Vice, "restructure" them to find "efficiencies" and sell them on.
The reality is that PE goons – like other financiers – are basically herding animals. Everyone's hit on the tactic of buying up beloved media companies – from the 150-year-old Popular Science to modern publications like CNet – and then filling them with spammy garbage in the hopes that Google will fail to notice and continue to award them pride-of-place on search results pages:
https://pluralistic.net/2024/02/21/im-feeling-unlucky/#not-up-to-the-task
The fact that these billionaire brain-geniuses can't figure out how to "turn around" a site whose workers a) produce brilliant, popular, successful work; and b) depart to found successful firms that commercialize that work tells you everything about their ability to spot "a good business opportunity."
PE – like other mafiosi – only have one business-plan, the "bust out," where you invade a business that produces useful things, force them to pay your chosen suppliers sky-high fees for things they don't need, extract massive fees for your "management" and then walk away from the collapse:
https://pluralistic.net/2023/06/02/plunderers/#farben
Tumblr media
If you'd like an essay-formatted version of this post to read or share, here's a link to it on pluralistic.net, my surveillance-free, ad-free, tracker-free blog:
https://pluralistic.net/2024/02/24/anti-posse/#when-you-absolutely-positively-dont-give-a-solitary-single-fuck
254 notes · View notes
zebraszegras · 10 months
Text
Master list
(currently only hockey, but feel free to request other people and ill try writing about them if im comfortable!! :) )
NHL
Montreal Canadiens:
Cole Caufeild->
Kaiden Guhle->
Arber Xhekaj->
Juraj Slafkovsky->
“I gotta pee”
New Jersey Devils:
Jack Hughes->
Luke Hughes->
“Please…”
Nico Hischier->
Anaheim Ducks:
Trevor Zegras->
Jamie Drysdale->
Vancouver Canucks:
Quinn Hughes->
Chicago Blackhawks:
Connor Bedard->
College Hockey
UMich:
Ethan Edwards->
Mark Estapa->
Rutger McGroarty->
Team Canada
Fraser Minten->
Macklin Celebrini->
Maveric Lamoureux->
AUs:
Oh Baby – Dad!Luke Hughes AU
Umich Story:
- Introduction - Backstory -
Hughes sister insta AU:
Part 1
23 notes · View notes
drysdaleknieslee · 8 months
Text
Players I Write For (send in any requests)
New Jersey Devils:
Luke Hughes
Jack Hughes
Nico Hischier
Jesper Bratt
Vancouver Canucks
Quinn Hughes
Brock Boeser
Elias Peterson
Niels Hoglander
Montreal Canadiens
Cole Caufield
Nick Suzuki
Juraj Slafkovsky
Arber Xhekaj
Kirby Dach
Toronto Maple Leafs
Auston Matthews
Mitch Marner
Matthew Knies
William Nylander
Simon Benoit
Joseph Woll
Ottawa Senators:
Tim Stuzle
Brady Tkachuk
Anaheim Ducks: Trevor Zegras
Mason McTavish
Leo Carlsson
Tristan Luneau
Pavel Mintyukov
Olen Zellweger
Lukas Dostal
Philadelphia Flyers: Jamie Drysdale
Tyson Foerster
Cam York
Boston Bruins: Jeremy Swayman
Hampus Lindholm
Columbus Blue Jackets: Adam Fantilli
Cole Sillinger
Florida Panthers:
Matthew Tkachuk
College Hockey/ Alternate Teams:
UMICH:
Rutger McGroarty
Ethan Edwards
Luca Fantilli
Mark Estapa
Frank Lazar
Gavin Brindley
Tyler Duke
Dylan Duke
BC (Boston College): Will Smith (San Jose Sharks Prospect)
Gabe Perreault
BU (Boston University): Macklin Celebrini
QMJHL Drummondville Voltiguers:
Maveric Lamoureux (Arizona Coyotes Prospect)
Saskatoon Blades:
Fraser Minten (Toronto Maple Leafs)
London Knights: Easton Cowan (Toronto Maple Leafs)
Also including:
Alex Turcotte
12 notes · View notes
strawberryblondebutch · 3 months
Note
I agree with everything you said about Curl. I believe everyone deserves a second chance. Has this ideology hurt me personally? Yes on multiple occasions. And I also think that most people have good in them. What I don’t understand is, apparently Wisconsin is a very gay team (idk for sure I’ve just seen that said before, but I also don’t know the culture there), and to still have those views while being surrounded by so many members of communities you apparently have problems with, is insane to me. I sincerely hope she grows while in Minnesota, but who knows how their team culture is currently with everything going on. I completely understand people being upset, and I’d never tell them to not be upset, but we have to allow people to grow or else they’ll have those beliefs their whole lives and maybe become even more harmful. And I know it’s not our responsibility to educate people or give them such grace, but if not us, then who?
My alma mater was a feeder school for programs like UW, so I know a ton of players who went there, and the city of Madison is sometimes called "77 Square Miles Surrounded By Reality" because of how liberal the general populace is (being very careful with my wording here, because like every other Good Liberal City, boy do the people who live there have opinions about addicts and the unhoused).
While there's no way to know exactly what conversations happened in the Wisconsin locker room, the people I feel the worst for in all of this are the Edwards sisters. I'm a white gun owner and I would be uncomfortable sharing a locker room with someone who was pro-Kyle Rittenhouse.
I like to tell people my superpower is being annoying, but I really wish I could lock Curl and the Lamoureux twins in a room and just needle them until they told me why, exactly, trans people in sports hurt them. I want specific examples. I've done it with liberal-but-not-leftist friends about addicts before. You force them to get past the fearmongering and make them come up with a reason why that stranger with track marks on the subway is personally affecting them.
Because, and I've said this before, hockey is maybe the stupidest fucking sport to generate trans panic. It's idiotic in any sport, trans people are trying to live their lives, but you're telling me someone would really go through years of hormone treatments to make $30K in the PWHL when there are guys in the NHL who trip over their own skates every shift? Give me a fucking break.
5 notes · View notes
if-you-fan-a-fire · 3 years
Photo
Tumblr media
“NO DRUGS SEEN BY WALKATHON NURSE,” Montreal Star. August 19, 1931. Page 5. ---- Police Director Explains Why Contest Was Allowed To Start --- No evidence of "doped" contestants was observed by Miss Blondine Mallet, registered nurse, engaged by the promoters of the walkathon contest to look after the health of contestants. Mr. Justice Denis was told in the Practice Court yesterday at the resumed hearing of injunction proceedings by which is sought the right to continue the contest which had been interrupted by police after eight days in operation. Throughout the hearing yesterday the squad of contestants who are in attendance at the proceedings remained quietly seated in the courtroom, in marked contrast to their behavior of the previous day when the walking contest was carried on in court.
As regards evidence of indecent behavior on the part of contestants, Mme Maillet said that she had not seen anything out of the ordinary. She had complained to the promoter on one occasion that some of the men had entered the quarters occupied by the girls, but so far as she knew there was nothing obscene or indecent in their behavior.
CHECKED TEMPERATURE In the main arena where the contest was taking place and where the audiences was admitted she had seen nothing indecent. Her duties consisted of checking the temperatures and pulses of the various contestants and in administering treatment prescribed by the physician in charge. In some cases where a weak heart. action was indicated, strychnine was administered on the doctor's orders.
Police Director Fernand Dufresne was recalled to the stand at the opening of the hearing yesterday and explained that the contest had been allowed to proceed by tolerance only since the promoters had no permit from the city. In this connection, he explained that it in the practice of his department in certain instances to allow places of amusement to carry on for a time without a license. in order to learn how they were conducted. If complaints are received they are closed. In the present instance the same procedure had been followed. When first approached by the promoters, he had advised them), that the vaudeville part of the entertainment could not proceed on Sunday.
PREVIOUS CONTEST The Police Director said that he knew of a previous walkathon organized in his Majesty's theatre. The contest, he said, was allowed only on tolerance as in the present insistence, and after four days in operation the promoters had "skipped" without paying the contestants. All that the latter received, he understood, was some whiskey and biscuits. These facts were not known to him when he was approached by the promoters of the present walkathon or he would not have given even tacit permission for the contest to be staged, he said.
Philippe Lamoureux, superintendent of permits and licenses for the city, testified that he had been ordered by Honore Parent, director of services, to go to the Mount Royal Arena and close the walkathon. Arriving there he was asked by the promoters to allow them a short delay in which to get in touch with Alderman Bray, chairman of the Executive Committee. Later he had spoken on the telephone to Alderman Bray and was told to procure a deposit of $2,500 from the promoters as a guarantee for prize money, and If the money was not at once forthcoming to close the performance. The promoters were unable, they said, to make the deposit at once and the contest was therefore closed. 
The hearing a continuing this afternoon.
0 notes
yespoetry · 5 years
Text
Mark Lamoureux: The Devil
XV The Devil
Looping horns akimbo, high
as a gloaming bat above
the avenue where the roots
of trees push up flagstones
like the lids of coffins, outside
of time:
within the lit windows is what happens
in secret—reverse 
mitosis; the ascending spirits
pluck the harp of the spindle: 
night & day conjoined
in the mystery of their 
origin.  Indigo stains are the braille
of foxglove’s open-
throated hymns as the one sun
is ringed by melancholia—
godhead rides the trap groove
spinning around 
the ruby of the third eye.
A hoof steps quiet upon the black 
ice & radiates a crackling bloom
of unrealized timelines, walks
soundlessly across the expanse
of frozen mirror upon mirror upon 
mirror, communicating 
as braided wire or the warzone
of the splitting allele.  All shall be
well & all manner 
of things shall be undertaken
under the full stop 
of the unjoined caduceus.
Open thy arms
& receive
Editor’s Note: These poems are part of our collection, Haunted: Tarot Poems
Mark Lamoureux lives in New Haven, CT. He is the author of four full-length collections of poetry: It’ll Never Be Over For Me (Black Radish Books, 2016), 29 Cheeseburgers / 39 Years (Pressed Wafer, 2013), Spectre (Black Radish Books 2010), and Astrometry Orgonon (BlazeVOX Books 2008),. His work has been published in print and online in Elderly, Denver Quarterly, Jacket, Fourteen Hills and many others. In 2014 he received the 2nd annual Ping Pong Poetry award, selected by David Shapiro, for his poem “Summerhenge/Winterhenge.” He teaches at Housatonic Community College in Bridgeport, CT.
1 note · View note
aion-rsa · 3 years
Text
The Cinematic Legacy of Lupin: Arsène Lupin’s Live-Action Filmography
https://ift.tt/2ToNPSY
When Netflix premiered the first season of Lupin last January, 70 million sheltered-in-place households ravenously binged it, making the series the most-watched non-English show for its premiere month on the streamer so far. Lupin steals a page from French literature. The hero of Lupin, Assane Diop (Omar Sy) is inspired by France’s iconic ‘Gentleman Thief’ Arsène Lupin, a fictional figure created by French writer Maurice Leblanc in 1905. 
Lupin was the subject of some two dozen books by Leblanc, who continued adding into his literary franchise until well into the 1930s. Akin to Robin Hood, Lupin stole from the rich, and often did good deeds despite his thieving capers. He was a master of deception and disguise, a lady killer who always operated with a classy panache. With a legacy spanning more than a century, there have been plenty of live-action depictions in film and TV.
The First Lupin Films are Over a Hundred Years Old
The earliest cinematic portrayals of Lupin were in black and white, and many have been lost. One of the very first was a U.S. production, a short film titled The Gentleman Burglar in 1908. William Ranows, a veteran of over sixty films, played Lupin. It was directed by one of the first film directors ever, Edwin Porter, who worked for Edison. 
Leblanc was a contemporary of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, the creator of Sherlock Holmes. Consequently, Holmes appears in a few Lupin stories. Doyle took legal action against Leblanc, forcing the name change in Lupin stories to the thinly disguised ‘Herlock Sholmes.’ As Holmes is loved by the British, Lupin is cherished by the French, and both characters became global icons. Consequently, among the many film and TV adaptations, several that depicted their rivalry regardless of copyright issues. In 1910, a German film serial titled Arsène Lupin contra Sherlock Holmes starred Paul Otto as Lupin and Viggo Larsen as Holmes (Larsen also served as director.) There were allegedly five installments in the series, but they’ve all been lost. 
France produced Arsène Lupin contre Ganimard in 1914 with Georges Tréville as Lupin (Inspector Ganimard was constantly on Lupin’s trail). The silent film Arsène Lupin came out of Britain in 1916 with Gerald Ames in the titular role, followed by more U.S. productions: Arsène Lupin (1917) starring Earle Williams, The Teeth of the Tiger (1919) with David Powell, which is also lost, and 813 starring Wedgwood Nowell. 813 was the title of Leblanc’s fourth Lupin book. 
Lupin and the Barrymore Clan of Actors
The legendary thespian John Barrymore played Lupin in 1932’s Arsène Lupin. He took on the role under one of Lupin’s aliases, the Duke of Charmerace. His brother, Lionel Barrymore, played another Lupin nemesis, Detective Guerchard. Given the illustrious cast, this is a standout Lupin film, although there isn’t a shred of Frenchness in Barrymore’s interpretation. Coincidentally, John Barrymore also played Holmes in Sherlock Holmes a decade earlier. He is also the grandfather of Drew Barrymore. 
Barrymore’s Arsène Lupin revolved around the theft of the Mona Lisa from the Louvre. Historically, the Da Vinci masterpiece was stolen in 1911 and recovered in 1913. This inspired a Lupin short story, a parody akin to early fanfiction that was not written by Leblanc. In 1912, mystery writer Carolyn Wells published The Adventure Of The Mona Lisa which imagined Holmes and Lupin to be part of the International Society of Infallible Detectives alongside A. J. Raffles, Monsieur Lecoq, and other crime-solving luminaries. Barrymore’s Arsène Lupin does not retell this tale, but the theft of the Mona Lisa comes up again in other Lupin films because it’s France so robbing the Louvre is a common plot point. Netflix’s Lupin begins with Diop’s heist of the Queen’s necklace from the Louvre, an Easter egg referring to Leblanc’s original Lupin short story, ‘The Queen’s Necklace’ published in 1906.
The ‘30s delivered two more Lupin films. The French-made Arsène Lupin detective (1937) starred Jules Berry as Lupin and the American-made Arsène Lupin Returns (1938) with Melvyn Douglas who was credited under another Lupin alias Rene Farrand (Lupin has a lot of aliases). Despite being a completely different production, Douglas’ film was an attempt to capitalize on the success of Barrymore’s film as both films were from MGM. Universal Studios entered the fray soon after with their version Enter Arsène Lupin (1944) starring Charles Korvin. The following year, the Mexican-made Arsenio Lupin (1945) featured Ramón Pereda as the French thief. That film also starred José Baviera as Sherlock. 
The Early Japanese Lupin Adaptations
Lupin captured the hearts of the Japanese. Ironically, Japanese speakers have a difficult time pronouncing ‘L’s so Lupin is usually renamed as ‘Rupan’ or ‘Wolf’ (Lupine means wolf-like – remember Remus Lupin from Harry Potter). As early as 1923, Japan also delivered a silent version of 813, retitled Hachi Ichi San, starring Komei Minami as the renamed Lupin character of Akira Naruse. 
In the ‘50s, Japan produced 3 films that credit Leblanc: Nanatsu-no Houseki (1950) with Keiji Sada, Tora no-Kiba (1951) with Ken Uehara, and Kao-no Nai Otoko (1955) with Eiji Okada. However, post-WWII Japan has obscured most of the details on these films. Like Hachi Ichi San, these Japanese versions laid the foundations for the Lupin III, which debuted as a manga in 1967 and spawned a major manga and anime franchise. In karmic retribution for Leblanc poaching Sherlock, Japan stole Lupin. Lupin III was Arsène Lupin’s grandson. 
Notably, the second Lupin III feature film, The Castle of Cagliostro, marked the directorial debut of famed animator Hayao Miyazaki and is considered a groundbreaking classic that inspired Pixar and Disney (Disney’s The Great Mouse Detective (1986) pilfered the finale clockwork fight from The Castle of Cagliostro). In the wake of the anime Lupin III Part I (1971), Japan produced some anime films that were more loyal to Leblanc, notably Kaitō Lupin: 813 no Nazo (1979) and Lupin tai Holmes (1981). However, this article is focused upon live-action adaptations. Lupin III is another topic entirely. 
In the late ‘50s and into the ‘70s, France reclaimed her celebrated son. Robert Lamoureux became Lupin for two films, Les aventures d’Arsène Lupin (1957) and Signé Arsène Lupin (1959). A comedy version pitted rival sons of Lupin against each other in Arsène Lupin contre Arsène Lupin (1962). Playing the Lupin brothers were Jean-Pierre Cassel and Jean-Claude Brialy. 
Lupin on the Small Screen
Read more
TV
From Lupin III to Inspector Gadget: Examining the Heirs of Arsène Lupin
By Natalie Zutter
France also delivered several TV series. Arsène Lupin ran from 1971 to 1974 and starred Georges Descrières. It encompassed 26 60-minute episodes. L’Île aux trente cercueils (1979) is often included in Lupin filmographies because it is based on a Leblanc novel published in 1919 in which Lupin makes a guest appearance. However, he was omitted from this six-episode miniseries, so it doesn’t quite count. Arsène Lupin joue et perd (1980) was another six-episode miniseries loosely based on ‘813’ with Jean-Claude Brialy from the 1962 comedy. 
One more French TV show, Le Retour d’Arsène Lupin, was televised in two seasons, 1989-1990 and 1995-1996. These were 90-minute episodes with 12 in season 1 and eight in season 2. François Dunoyer starred as Lupin.
And in 2007, the largest Lupin TV show ran for a whopping 96 episodes plus one special. Lupin was made in the Philippines no less, starring Richard Gutierrez as André Lupin
Lupin in the Last Decade 
In 2011, Japan delivered one more live-action film Lupin no Kiganjo starring Kōichi Yamadera. Based on Leblanc’s 3rd Lupin book, L’aiguille Creuse, the film is reset in modern Japan.
In the strangest permutation of Japanese Lupins, Daughter of Lupin was a TV series that is an odd hybrid of Lupin III and Leblanc’s work. A campy sitcom in the tradition of Romeo and Juliet, Hana (Kyoko Fukada) comes from a family of thieves known as the L clan who are inspired by Lupin. Her lover, Kazuma (Koji Seto), is from a family of cops. When in thief mode, Hana wears a carnival mask and a velvet catsuit. It’s goofy, sort of a live action version of anime. It ran for two seasons in 2019 and 2020.
The Lupin Adaptation You Should See 
The strongest modern adaptation of Leblanc’s iconic burglar is the period film Arsène Lupin (2004). It’s an actioner, a creation story for Lupin, starting from his childhood and moving rapidly to him becoming a master gentleman thief. Romain Duris plays the titular role, and the film is in French. Backing Duris are veteran actresses Kristin Scott Thomas as Comtesse de Cagliostro and Eva Green as Clarisse de Dreux-Soubise. The story is absurd, like a mash-up between a superhero film and the DaVinci code, and it gets a bit muddled in the telling. However, it’s shot on location (including the Louvre) and encapsulates the spirit of Leblanc’s character in an updated fashion. It’s a perfect primer for Lupin Season 2.
cnx.cmd.push(function() { cnx({ playerId: "106e33c0-3911-473c-b599-b1426db57530", }).render("0270c398a82f44f49c23c16122516796"); });
Lupin seasons 1 and 2 are available to stream on Netflix now.
The post The Cinematic Legacy of Lupin: Arsène Lupin’s Live-Action Filmography appeared first on Den of Geek.
from Den of Geek https://ift.tt/2U0px1N
4 notes · View notes
goalhofer · 3 years
Text
2020 Olympics Canada Roster
Athletics
Trevor Hofbauer (Guelph, Ontario)
Evan Dunfee (Richmond, British Columbia)
Bismark Boateng (Toronto, Ontario)
Andre De Grasse (Markham, Ontario)
Gavin Smellie (Toronto, Ontario)
Aaron Brown (Toronto, Ontario)
Brendon Rodney (Brampton, Ontario)
Marco Arop (Edmonton, Alberta)
Brandon McBride (Windsor, Ontario)
Mohammed Ahmed (St. Catherines, Ontario)
Lucas Bruchet (Surrey, British Columbia)
Justyn Knight (Toronto, Ontario)
John Gay (Kelowna, British Columbia)
Matthew Hughes (Oshawa, Ontario)
Jerome Blake (Burnaby, British Columbia)
Cameron Levins (Campbell River, British Columbia)
Ben Preisner (Milton, Ontario)
Mathieu Bilodeau (Quebec City, Quebec)
Django Lovett (Langley, British Columbia)
Michael Mason (New Westminster, British Columbia)
Tim Nedow (Brockville, Ontario)
Pierce LePage (Toronto, Ontario)
Damian Warner (London, Ontario)
Dayna Pidhoresky (Windsor, Ontario)
Khamica Bingham (Brampton, Ontario)
Crystal Emmanuel (Toronto, Ontario)
Kyra Constantine (Brampton, Ontario)
Natassha McDonald (Mississauga, Ontario)
Melissa Bishop-Nriagu (Lakeshore, Ontario)
Lindsey Butterworth (Burnaby, British Columbia)
Madeleine Kelly (Pembroke, Ontario)
Gabriela Stafford (Toronto, Ontario)
Natalia Hawthorn (Bracebridge, Ontario)
Lucia Stafford (Toronto, Ontario)
Andrea Seccafien (Guelph, Ontario)
Julie-Anne Staehli (Lucknow, Ontario)
Noelle Montcalm (Windsor, Ontario)
Sage Watson (Medicine Hat, Alberta)
Alycia Butterworth (Parksville, British Columbia)
Geneviève Lalonde (Moncton, New Brunswick)
Regan Yee (South Hazleton, British Columbia)
Alicia Brown (Ottawa, Ontario)
Madeline Price (San Francisco, California)
Malindi Elmore (Kelowna, British Columbia)
Tasha Wodak (Vancouver, British Columbia)
Christabel Nettey (Brampton, Ontario)
Anicka Newell (Albuquerque, New Mexico)
Alysha Newman (London, Ontario)
Brittany Crew (Mississauga, Ontario)
Sarah Mitton (Brooklyn, Nova Scotia)
Liz Gleadle (Vancouver, British Columbia)
Camryn Rogers (Richmond, British Columbia)
Jillian Weir (Sunnyvale, California)
Georgia Ellenwood (Langley, British Columbia)
Canoeing
Cam Smedley-Audet (Ottawa, Ontario)
Michael Tayler (Ottawa, Ontario)
Connor Fitzpatrick (Dartmouth, Nova Scotia)
Roland Varga (Aurora, Ontario)
Mark De Jonge (Halifax, Nova Scotia)
Nicholas Matveev (Toronto, Ontario)
Simon McTavish (Oakville, Ontario)
Vincent Jourdenais (Chambly, Quebec)
Brian Malfesi (Maple Ridge, British Columbia)
Pierre-Luc Poulin (Quebec City, Quebec)
Katie Vincent (Mississauga, Ontario)
Haley Daniels (Calgary, Alberta)
Florence Maheu (Salaberry-De-Valleyfield, Quebec)
Laurie Lapointe (Trois-Rivières, Quebec)
Andréanne Langlois (Quebec City, Quebec)
Michelle Russell (Fall River, Nova Scotia)
Alanna Bray-Lougheed (Oakville, Ontario)
Madeline Schmidt (Ottawa, Ontario)
Cycling
Nick Wammes (London, Ontario)
Hugo Houle (Nicolet, Quebec)
Michael Woods (Toronto, Ontario)
Hugo Barrette (Santa Monica, California)
Vincent De Haître (Ottawa, Ontario)
Michael Foley (Montreal, Quebec)
Derek Gee (Ottawa, Ontario)
Jay Lamoureux (Victoria, British Columbia)
Guillaume Boivin (Montreal, Quebec)
Peter Disera (Kitchener, Ontario)
James Palmer (North Vancouver, British Columbia)
Karol-Ann Canuel (Amos, Quebec)
Leah Kirchmann (Winnipeg, Manitoba)
Lauriane Genest (Montreal, Quebec)
Kelsey Mitchell (Sherwood Park, Alberta)
Allison Beveridge (Calgary, Alberta)
Ariane Bonhomme (Gatineau, Quebec)
Jasmin Duehring (Vancouver, British Columbia)
Annie Foreman-Mackey (Kingston, Ontario)
Georgia Simmerling (Calgary, Alberta)
Alison Jackson (Vermilion, Alberta)
Catharine Pendrel (Fredericton, New Brunswick)
Haley Smith (Markham, Ontario)
Drew Mechielsen (Surrey, British Columbia)
Fencing
Shaul Gordon (Montreal, Quebec)
Marc-Antoine Blais-Bélanger (Montreal, Quebec)
Alex Cai (Montreal, Quebec)
Eli Schenkel (Richmond, British Columbia)
Maximilien Van Haaster (Montreal, Quebec)
Blake Broszus (Ottawa, Ontario)
Gabriella Page (Montreal, Quebec)
Jessica Guo (Toronto, Ontario)
Eleanor Harvey (Hamilton, Ontario)
Kelleigh Ryan (Ottawa, Ontario)
Alanna Goldie (Calgary, Alberta)
Sailing
Evan DePaul (Hamilton, Ontario)
William Jones (Hamilton, Ontario)
Tom Ramshaw (Toronto, Ontario)
Oliver Bone (Halifax, Nova Scotia)
Jacob Saunders (Halifax, Nova Scotia)
Mariah Millen (Toronto, Ontario)
Ali Ten Hove (Kingston, Ontario)
Nikola Girke (Grande Prairie, Alberta)
Sarah Douglas (Toronto, Ontario)
Climbing
Sean McColl (Vancouver, British Columbia)
Alannah Yip (North Vancouver, British Columbia)
Swimming
Markus Thormeyer (Vancouver, British Columbia)
Brent Hayden (Mission, British Columbia)
Joshua Liendo-Edwards (Markham, Ontario)
Yuri Kisil (Toronto, Ontario)
Cole Pratt (Calgary, Alberta)
Gabe Mastromatteo (Kenora, Ontario)
Finlay Knox (Toronto, Ontario)
Ruslan Gaziev (Toronto, Ontario)
Hau-Li Fan (Burnaby, British Columbia)
Javier Acevedo (Toronto, Ontario)
Hannah MacNeil (London, Ontario)
Ky Masse (Toronto, Ontario)
Penny Oleksiak (Toronto, Ontario)
Sydney Pickrem (Clearwater, Florida)
Taylor Ruck (Scottsdale, Arizona)
Kayla Sanchez (Toronto, Ontario)
Summer McIntosh (Toronto, Ontario)
Katrina Bellio (Mississauga, Ontario)
Kierra Smith (Kelowna, British Columbia)
Kelsey Wog (Winnipeg, Manitoba)
Katerine Savard (Pont-Rouge, Quebec)
Bailey Andison (Smiths Falls, Ontario)
Tess Cieplucha (Oakville, Ontario)
Rebecca Smith (Red Deer, Alberta)
Mary-Sophie Harvey (Laval, Quebec)
Kate Sanderson (Vancouver, British Columbia)
Claudia Holzner (Montreal, Quebec)
Jacqueline Simoneau (Montreal, Quebec)
Emily Armstrong (Toronto, Ontario)
Rosalie Boissonneault (Drummondville, Quebec)
Andrée-Anne Côté (Quebec City, Quebec)
Camille Fiola-Dion (Rimouski, Quebec)
Audrey Joly (Saint-Eustache, Quebec)
Halle Pratt (Edmonton, Alberta)
Table Tennis
Jeremy Hazin (Richmond Hill, Ontario)
Mo Zhang (Vancouver, British Columbia)
Eugene Wang (Aurora, Ontario)
Taekwondo
Skylar Park (Winnipeg, Manitoba)
Yvette Yong (Toronto, Ontario)
Wrestling
Amar Dhesi (Surrey, British Columbia)
Jordan Steen (Ottawa, Ontario)
Danielle Lappage (Olds, Alberta)
Erica Wiebe (Stittsville, Ontario)
Archery
Crispin Duenas (Toronto, Ontario)
Stephanie Barrett (Newmarket, Ontario)
Badminton
Brian Yáng (Richmond Hill, Ontario)
Jason Ho-Shue (Markham, Ontario)
Nyl Yakura (Toronto, Ontario)
Joshua Hurlburt-Yu (Toronto, Ontario)
Michelle Man-Shan (Markham, Ontario)
Rachel Honderich (Toronto, Ontario)
Kristen Tsai (Vancouver, British Columbia)
Josephine Wu (Edmonton, Alberta)
Basketball
Shaina Pellington (Pickering, Ontario)
Kia Nurse (Hamilton, Ontario)
Bridget Carleton (Chatham, Ontario)
Folade Raincock-Ekunwe (Vernon, British Columbia)
Kim Gaucher (Mission, British Columbia)
Miranda Ayim (London, Ontario)
Natalie Achonwa (Hamilton, Ontario)
Shay Colley (Brampton, Ontario)
Kayla Alexander (Milton, Ontario)
Laeticia Amihere (Mississauga, Ontario)
Nirra Fields (Lachine, Quebec)
Aaliyah Edwards (Toronto, Ontario)
Boxing
Wyatt Sanford (Kennetcook, Nova Scotia)
Mandy Bujold (Kitchener, Ontario)
Caroline Veyre (Montreal, Quebec)
Myriam Da Silva (Chambly, Quebec)
Tammara Thibeault (Saint-Georges, Quebec)
Diving
Cédric Fofana (Montreal, Quebec)
Rylan Wiens (Saskatoon, Saskatchewan)
Nathan Zsombor-Murray (Montreal, Quebec)
Vincent Riendeau (Montreal, Quebec)
Jennifer Abel (Montreal, Quebec)
Pamela Ware (Longueuil, Quebec)
Meaghan Benfeito-Correia (Montreal, Quebec)
Celina Toth (Victoria, British Columbia)
Mélissa Citrini-Beaulieu (Saint-Constant, Quebec)
Caeli McKay (Calgary, Alberta)
Equestrian
Chris Von Martels (Wellington, Florida)
Mario Deslausriers (Venise-En-Québec, Quebec)
Brittany Fraser-Beaulieu (New Glasgow, Nova Scotia)
Lindsay Kellock (New York, New York)
Colleen Loach (Sherbrooke, Quebec)
Jessica Phoenix (Uxbridge Township, Ontario)
Field Hockey
Floris Van Son (Amsterdam, The Netherlands)
Brandon Pereira (Surrey, British Columbia)
Scott Tupper (Vancouver, British Columbia)
Gabriel Ho-Garcia (Burnaby, British Columbia)
Oliver Scholfield (Toronto, Ontario)
Keegan Pereira (Toronto, Ontario)
Brendan Guraliuk (Vancouver, British Columbia)
Gordon Johnston (Vancouver, British Columbia)
Brenden Bissett (Vancouver, British Columbia)
Jamie Wallace (Vancouver, British Columbia)
Mark Pearson (Vancouver, British Columbia)
John Boothroyd (Vancouver, British Columbia)
Matthew Sarmento (Vancouver, British Columbia)
John Smythe (Vancouver, British Columbia)
James Kirkpatrick (Victoria, British Columbia)
Sukhi Panesar (Surrey, British Columbia)
Taylor Curran (Vancouver, British Columbia)
Antoni Kindler (Vancouver, British Columbia)
Soccer
Stephanie Labbé (Edmonton, Alberta)
Allysha Chapman (Oshawa, Ontario)
Kadeisha Buchanan (Brampton, Ontario)
Shelina Zadorsky (London, Ontario)
Deanne Rose (New Tecumseth, Ontario)
Julia Grosso (Burnaby, British Columbia)
Jayde Riviere (Pickering, Ontario)
Adriana Leon (King Township, Ontario)
Ashley Lawrence (Toronto, Ontario)
Desiree Scott (Winnipeg, Manitoba)
Christine Sinclair (Burnaby, British Columbia)
Évelyne Viens (L’Ancienne-Lorette, Quebec)
Vanessa Gilles (Châteauguay, Quebec)
Nichelle Prince (Ajax, Ontario)
Janine Beckie (Douglas County, Colorado)
Jessie Fleming (London, Ontario)
Kailen Sheridan (Pickering, Ontario)
Jordyn Huitema (Chilliwack, British Columbia)
Sophie Schmidt (Abbotsford, British Columbia)
Gabrielle Carle (Quebec City, Quebec)
Erin McLeod (Calgary, Alberta)
Golf
Corey Conners (Palm Beach Gardens, Florida)
Mackenzie Hughes (Charlotte, North Carolina)
Brooke Henderson (Smiths Falls, Ontario)
Alena Sharp (Phoenix, Arizona)
Gymnastics
René Cournoyer (Repentigny, Quebec)
Ellie Black (Halifax, Nova Scotia)
Brooklyn Moors (Cambridge, Ontario)
Shallon Olsen (Surrey, British Columbia)
Ava Stewart (Bowmanville, Ontario)
Rosie MacLennan (King Township, Ontario)
Samantha Smith (Vancouver, British Columbia)
Judo
Arthur Margelidon (Montreal, Quebec)
Tony Valois-Fortier (Quebec City, Quebec)
Shady El Nahas (Toronto, Ontario)
Ecaterina Guică (La Prairie, Quebec)
Jessica Klimkait (Whitby, Ontario)
Catherine Beauchemin-Pinard (Montreal, Quebec)
Karate
Daniel Gaysinsky (Caledon, Ontario)
Rowing
Trevor Jones (Selwyn Township, Ontario)
Patrick Keane (Victoria, British Columbia)
Maxwell Lattimer (Vancouver, British Columbia)
Kai Langerfeld (North Vancouver, British Columbia)
Conlin McCabe (Brockville, Ontario)
Jakub Buczek (Kitchener, Ontario)
Luke Gadsdon (Hamilton, Ontario)
Gavin Stone (Brampton, Ontario)
Will Crothers (Kingston, Ontario)
Carling Zeeman (Hamilton, Ontario)
Jessica Sevick (Vancouver, British Columbia)
Gabrielle Smith (Markham, Ontario)
Jill Moffatt (Clarington, Ontario)
Jennifer Casson (Kingston, Ontario)
Caileigh Filmer (Saanich, British Columbia)
Hillary Janssens (Victoria, British Columbia)
Stephanie Grauer (Vancouver, British Columbia)
Nicole Hare (Calgary, Alberta)
Jennifer Martins (Toronto, Ontario)
Kristina Walker (Coquitlam, British Columbia)
Susanne Grainger (London, Ontario)
Kasia Gruchalla-Wesierski (Montreal, Quebec)
Madison Mailey (Vancouver, British Columbia)
Sydney Paine (Toronto, Ontario)
Andrea Proske (Vancouver, British Columbia)
Lisa Roman (Surrey, British Columbia)
Christine Roper (Victoria, British Columbia)
Avalon Wasteneys (Victoria, British Columbia)
Kristen Kit (St. Catherines, Ontario)
Rugby
Phil Berna (Vancouver, British Columbia)
Connor Braid (Oak Bay, British Columbia)
Andrew Coe (Brampton, Ontario)
Justin Douglas (Matsqui, British Columbia)
Mike Fuailefau (Victoria, British Columbia)
Lucas Hammond (Victoria, British Columbia)
Nathan Hirayama (Richmond, British Columbia)
Harry Jones (Vancouver, British Columbia)
Patrick Kay (Duncan, British Columbia)
Matt Mullins (Belleville, Ontario)
Theo Sauder (Vancouver, British Columbia)
Jake Thiel (Victoria, British Columbia)
Conor Trainor (Vancouver, British Columbia)
Elissa Alaire (Trois-Rivières, Quebec)
Olivia Apps (Victoria, British Columbia)
Brittany Benn (Napanee, Ontario)
Pam Buisa (Victoria, British Columbia)
Bianca Farella (Westmount, Quebec)
Julia Greenshields (Sarnia, Ontario)
Ghislaine Landry (Toronto, Ontario)
Kaili Lukan (Barrie, Ontario)
Kayla Moleschi (Williams Lake, British Columbia)
Breanne Nicholas (Chatham, Ontario)
Karen Paquin (Quebec City, Quebec)
Keyara Wardley (Calgary, Alberta)
Charity Williams (Toronto, Ontario)
Shooting
Lynda Kiejko (North Dundas, Ontario)
Skateboarding
Andy Anderson (White Rock, British Columbia)
Matt Berger (Kamloops, British Columbia)
Micky Papa (Van Nuys, California)
Annie Guglia (Montreal, Quebec)
Softball
Danielle Lawrie-Locke (Burnaby, British Columbia)
Sara Groenewegen (White Rock, British Columbia)
Jenna Caira (Richmond Hill, Ontario)
Lauren Bay-Regula (Trail, British Columbia)
Natalie Wideman (Mississauga, Ontario)
Kaleigh Rafter (Guelph, Ontario)
Kelsey Harshman (Tucson, Arizona)
Jo Lye (Toronto, Ontario)
Jennifer Salling (Burnaby, British Columbia)
Janet Leung (Mississauga, Ontario)
Emma Entzminger (Victoria, British Columbia)
Erika Polidori (Brantford, Ontario)
Victoria Hayward (Winter Park, Florida)
Jenny Gilbert (Denton, Texas)
Larissa Franklin (Maple Ridge, British Columbia)
Tennis
Félix Auger-Aliassime (Monte Carlo, Monaco)
Leylah Fernandez (Boynton Beach, Florida)
Gaby Dabrowski (Ottawa, Ontario)
Sharon Fichman (Toronto, Ontario)
Triathlon
Tyler Mislawchuk (Oak Bluff, Manitoba)
Matthew Sharpe (Campbell River, British Columbia)
Alex Lepage (Montreal, Quebec)
Joanna Brown (Ottawa, Ontario)
Amélie Kretz (Sainte-Thérèse, Quebec)
Volleyball
T.J. Sanders (London, Ontario)
John Perrin (Creston, British Columbia)
Steven Marshall (Abbotsford, British Columbia)
Nick Hoag (Sherbrooke, Quebec)
Stephen Maar (Aurora, Ontario)
Jay Blankenau (Edmonton, Alberta)
Ryan Sclater (Port Coquitlam, British Columbia)
Lucas Van Berkel (Edmonton, Alberta)
Sharone Vernon-Evans (Toronto, Ontario)
Graham Vigrass (Calgary, Alberta)
Blair Bann (Edmonton, Alberta)
Arthur Szwarc (Toronto, Ontario)
Heather Bansley (London, Ontario)
Brandie Johnson-Wilkerson (Toronto, Ontario)
Melissa Humaña-Paredes (Toronto, Ontario)
Sarah Pavan (Kitchener, Ontario)
Water Polo
Claire Wright (Lindsay, Ontario)
Clara Vulpisi (Montreal, Quebec)
Kelly McKee (Calgary, Alberta)
Axelle Crevier (Montreal, Quebec)
Emma Wright (Trail, British Columbia)
Monika Eggens (Maple Ridge, British Columbia)
Gurpreet Sohi (Delta, British Columbia)
Joëlle Békhazi (Hamilton, Ontario)
Elyse Lemay-Lavoie (Montreal, Quebec)
Hayley McKelvey (Delta, British Columbia)
Kyra Christmas (High River, Alberta)
Kindred Paul (Spruce Grove, Alberta)
Shae La Roche (Winnipeg, Manitoba)
Weightlifting
Boady Santavy (Sarnia, Ontario)
Rachel Leblanc-Bazinet (Saint-Bruno-De-Montarville, Quebec)
Tali Darsigny (Sainte-Hyacinthe, Quebec)
Maude Charron (Sainte-Luce, Quebec)
Kristel Ngarlem (Montreal, Quebec)
1 note · View note
pocketsizedq · 7 months
Text
MY NHL MASTERLIST
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Anahiem Ducks
Lukas Dostal
Mason Mctavish
Trevor Zegras
Arizona Coyotes
**Maveric lamoureux
Boston Bruins
Jeremy Swayman
Buffalo Sabres
Joel hofer
Chicago Blackhawks
**Connor bedard
**Frank Nazar
Columbus Blue Jackets
**Adam Fantilli
Cole Sillinger
Montreal Canadiens
Cole Caufield
Kirby Dach
**Juraj Slafkovsky
New Jersey Devils
Nico Hischier
**Alex Holtz
Jack Hughes
**Luke Hughes
John Marino
Dawson Mercer
New York Rangers
Matt Rempe
Philadelphia Flyers
Jamie Drysdale
Cam York
Toronto Maple Leafs
**Fraser Minten
Matthew Knies
Joseph Woll
San Jose Sharks
William eklund
Vancouver Canucks
Quinn Hughes
UMICH
Luca Fantilli
Ethan Edwards
Mark estapa
**Rutger McGroarty
**Nick Moldenhauer
BC/U
**Macklin Celebrini
**Cutter Gauthier
**Gabe Perreault
**Will smith
**Ryan Leonard
* means they are a prospect for that team or not playing there yet
**under the age of 21. Even though I’m underage myself I will not be writing anything smut related about anyone under 21.
 martiny0rk — all rights reserved. please do not modify, translate, or plagiarise my content.
66 notes · View notes
massbaylib-fram · 3 years
Text
Tumblr media
Poets Donate a Poem to MassBay Library for #NationalPoetryMonth
We have a VERY special edition of our #NationalPoetryMonth LibGuide, featuring a dozen poets, who generously donated their work to MassBay Community College Library.
We also have featured pages on poets laureate Joy Harjo, Amanda Gorman & Porsha Olayiwola.
Thank you to the following poets for donating a poem to MassBay Library in observance of National Poetry Month: Amy M. Alvarez, Cheryl Boyce-Taylor, Alfred Corn, Jessica de Koninck, Jim Dunn, Mark Lamoureux, Christina Liu, Suzanne Mercury, Jess Mynes, Vané Pacheco, Christina Strong
https://massbay.libguides.com/poetry-month/2021-special
3 notes · View notes
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Jacques Marin.
Filmografía
Cine
Años 1940-1950
1946 : Le Beau voyage de Louis Cuny - Un mauvais garçon
1948 : L'assassin est à l'écoute de Raoul André - le barman
1950 : Dieu a besoin des hommes de Jean Delannoy
1950 : Le Mystérieux colonel Barclay, cortometraje de Jacques Vilfrid
1951 : Seul dans Paris : de Hervé Bromberger un homme du village
1952 : Jeux interdits de René Clément - Georges Dollé
1952 : Nous sommes tous des assassins de André Cayatte
1953 : Quitte ou double de Robert Vernay - Lucien
1953 : Un jour comme les autres, cortometraje de Georges Rouquier - Pierrot
1954 : Faites-moi confiance de Gilles Grangier - Bob
1954 : Avant le déluge de André Cayatte - L'ouvrier à bicyclette
1954 : J'y suis... j'y reste de Maurice Labro
1954 : Papa, maman, la bonne et moi de Jean-Paul Le Chanois - Le voisin
1955 : Si Paris nous était conté de Sacha Guitry - Un gardien de prison
1955 : Papa, maman, ma femme et moi de Jean-Paul Le Chanois - Le garagiste
1955 : Ça va barder de John Berry
1955 : Sur le banc de Robert Vernay - Le policier qui court après La Hurlette et Carmen
1955 : Le Dossier noir de André Cayatte - Un policier
1955 : Les Évadés de Jean-Paul Le Chanois - Un prisonnier
1955 : French Cancan de Jean Renoir - Un homme dans la file d'attente
1955 : La Rue des bouches peintes de Robert Vernay - Le commissaire
1955 : Les Hommes en blanc de Ralph Habib
1955 : Gas-oil de Gilles Grangier - Le gendarme
1955 : L'Amant de lady Chatterley de Marc Allégret - Un homme du pub
1956 : Des gens sans importance de Henri Verneuil - Le routier qui fesse Clotilde
1956 : Marie-Antoinette de Jean Delannoy - Un crieur de journaux
1956 : Mon curé chez les pauvres d’Henri Diamant-Berger
1956 : Ces sacrées vacances de Robert Vernay - L'automobiliste
1956 : Le Sang à la tête de Gilles Grangier - L'agent de police
1956 : Paris, Palace Hôtel de Henri Verneuil - Le livreur de fleurs
1956 : La Traversée de Paris de Claude Autant-Lara Le patron du restaurant
1956 : Cette sacrée gamine de Michel Boisrond - Un gendarme
1956 : Reproduction interdite de Gilles Grangier
1957 : Le rouge est mis de Gilles Grangier - Un flic de garde
1957 : A Paris tous les deux - (Paris holiday) de Gerd Oswald.
1957 : Les femmes sont marrantes de André Hunebelle - Le taxi
1957 : Les Vendanges (The Vintage) de Jeffrey Hayden
1957 : Le Coin tranquille de Robert Vernay
1957 : Porte des Lilas de René Clair - L'inspecteur qui enquête sur le vol chez l'épicier
1957 : Une Parisienne de Michel Boisrond - Le motard
1957 : Montparnasse 19 de Jacques Becker - Le patron du café
1958 : Les Misérables de Jean-Paul Le Chanois : Le messager (dans la première époque)
1958 : La Tour, prends garde ! de Georges Lampin
1958 : Le Désordre et la Nuit de Gilles Grangier - Le garçon de café bavard
1958 : En cas de malheur de Claude Autant-Lara - Le réceptionniste du Trianon-Hôtel
1958 : Les Racines du ciel (Roots of Heaven) de John Huston - Cerisot
1958 : Le Miroir à deux faces de André Cayatte - Un professeur
1958 : Le Temps des œufs durs de Norbert Carbonnaux - Le pêcheur
1958 : Trois jours à vivre de Gilles Grangier : le gendarme
1958 : Les Tricheurs de Marcel Carné - Monsieur Félix
1958 : Madame et son auto de Robert Vernay - Monsieur Rouille
1958 : Le Joueur de Claude Autant-Lara
1959 : Archimède le clochard de Gilles Grangier - Mimile, un habitué du café
1959 : Rue des prairies de Denys de La Patellière - Monsieur Mauduis
1959 : Maigret et l'affaire Saint-Fiacre de Jean Delannoy - Albert, le chauffeur de la comtesse
1959 : Guinguette de Jean Delannoy - Albert
1959 : Drôles de phénomènes de Robert Vernay - L'inspecteur
1959 : Croquemitoufle ou Les Femmes des autres de Claude Barma - Le contrôleur
1959 : La Bête à l'affût de Pierre Chenal - Le contrôleur routier
1959 : Match contre la mort de Claude Bernard-Aubert.
Año 1960
1960 : Les Vieux de la vieille de Gilles Grangier - Le brigadier de gendarmerie dont la chaîne de vélo a sauté
1960 : La Française et l'Amour, sketch Le Mariage de René Clair - Le contrôleur
1960 : Drame dans un miroir (Crack in the Mirror) de Richard Fleischer - Le gardien
1960 : Pantalaska de Paul Paviot - Monsieur Tropman
1960 : Monsieur Suzuki de Robert Vernay
1960 : Vers l'extase de René Wheeler - Le boucher
1960 : Au cœur de la ville de Pierre Gautherin
1961 : Le Président de Henri Verneuil - Gaston, le chauffeur de car.
1961 : Le cave se rebiffe de Gilles Grangier - L'inspecteur Larpin, de la police mondaine
1961 : Le Général ennemi (The Ennemy General) de George Sherman - Marceau
1961 : Le Grand Risque (The Big Gamble) de Richard Fleischer - L'employé de l'hôtel
1961 : Arrêtez les tambours de Georges Lautner - L'épicier
1961 : Le Monocle noir de Georges Lautner - Trochu
1961 : La Pendule à Salomon de Vicky Ivernel
1962 : Le Gentleman d'Epsom de Gilles Grangier - Raoul, le boucher turfiste
1962 : Gigot, le clochard de Belleville (Gigot) de Gene Kelly - Jean
1962 : Le Couteau dans la plaie de Anatole Litvak - Le commissaire
1962 : La Belle des îles (Tiara Tahiti) de Ted Kotcheff - Desmoulins
1962 : Portrait-robot de Paul Paviot
1963 : Charade de Stanley Donen - L'inspecteur Édouard Grandpierre
1963 : Le Glaive et la Balance de André Cayatte - Un gendarme
1963 : Méfiez-vous, mesdames de André Hunebelle
1963 : Le Poulet, cortometraje de Claude Berri
1964 : Le Train de John Frankenheimer y Bernard Farrel - Jacques, le chef de gare de Rive-Reine
1964 : La Vie conjugale (version Françoise) d’André Cayatte
1964 : Vacances pour Yvette (Vacaciones para Yvette) de José-Maria Forque
1965 : Fantômas se déchaîne de André Hunebelle - L'agent de police ferroviaire
1965 : Humour noir, sketch La Bestiole de Claude Autant-Lara
1965 : Les Bons Vivants, sketch La Fermeture de Gilles Grangier - L'acquéreur du mobilier de la maison close
1966 : Comment voler un million de dollars (How to steal a million) de William Wyler - Le gardien-chef du musée
1966 : Paris au mois d'août de Pierre Granier-Deferre - Bouvreuil
1966 : Les Centurions (Lost Command) de Mark Robson - Le maire coléreux à qui on prend son hélicoptère
1966 : Le Plus Vieux Métier du monde, sketch Aujourd'hui de Claude Autant-Lara - L'agent de police
1966 : La Vingt-cinquième Heure de Henri Verneuil - Le soldat chez Dubrosco
1968 : La Motocyclette (The Girl on a Motorcycle) de Jack Cardiff - Le pompiste
1968 : L'Homme à la Buick de Gilles Grangier - Un déménageur
1969 : La Nuit du lendemain (The Night of the Following Day) de Hubert Cornfield y Richard Boone - Le patron du café
1969 : La Fiancée du pirate de Nel.
Año 1970
1970 : Hello, Goodbye (Hello Goodbye) de Jean Negulesco
1970 : Darling Lili (Darling Lili) de Blake Edwards - Le major Duval
1971 : Mourir d'aimer de André Cayatte - Le correspondant
1971 : Le drapeau noir flotte sur la marmite de Michel Audiard - Antoine Simonet, chef de train S.N.C.F
1971 : Jo de Jean Girault - Andrieux, un policier chercheur
1971 : Le Cinéma de papa de Claude Berri - L'acteur jouant le chef de gare
1971 : Le Petit Matin de Jean-Gabriel Albicocco - La Bouhère
1973 : Shaft contre les trafiquants d'hommes (Shaft in Africa) de John Guillermin - L'inspecteur Cusset
1973 : Mais où est donc passée la septième compagnie ? de Robert Lamoureux - L'épicier français collaborateur
1974 : L'Île sur le toit du monde (Island at the Top of the World) de Robert Stevenson - Le capitaine Brieux
1974 : Les murs ont des oreilles de Jean Girault - Lucas
1974 : Vos gueules, les mouettes ! de Robert Dhéry - Le porte-bannière
1974 : Les "S" pions (S.P.Y.S) d’Irvin Kershner - Lafayette
1974 : Impossible... pas français de Robert Lamoureux - Dussautoy
1975 : Bons baisers de Hong Kong d’Yvan Chiffre - Le gradé de la police
1975 : Opération Lady Marlène de Robert Lamoureux - Le bistrot
1975 : Flic Story de Jacques Deray - Le patron de l'auberge de Saint-Rémy
1975 : Catherine et compagnie de Michel Boisrond - Le patron de l'agence de location de voitures
1976 : Marathon Man (Marathon Man) de John Schlesinger - Leclerc
1976 : L'Année sainte de Jean Girault - Moreau, le gardien de prison
1976 : Le Jour de gloire de Jacques Besnard - Le patron du bistrot
1977 : Le mille-pattes fait des claquettes de Jean Girault - L'inspecteur de police
1977 : La Coccinelle à Monte-Carlo (Herbie Goes to Monte-Carlo) de Vincent McEveety - L'inspecteur Bouchet
1978 : L'Horoscope de Jean Girault - J.L. Beauché
1978 : La Grande cuisine (Who Is Killing the Great Chefs of Europe?) de Ted Kotcheff - Masseret
1978 : Général... nous voilà ! de Jacques Besnard - Mac Goland
1979 : Grandison d’Achim Kurz.
Años 1980 - 1990
1981 : Ach du lieber Harry de Jean Girault - Un haut dignitaire
1982 : Te marre pas .. c'est pour rire ! de Jacques Besnard - Albert, le chauff.
4 notes · View notes
alexlacquemanne · 2 years
Text
Aout MMXXII
Films
Mais où est donc passée la septième compagnie ? (1973) de Robert Lamoureux avec Pierre Mondy, Jean Lefebvre, Aldo Maccione, Érik Colin, Robert Lamoureux et Pierre Tornade
On a retrouvé la 7e compagnie (1975) de Robert Lamoureux avec Pierre Mondy, Jean Lefebvre, Henri Guybet, Pierre Tornade et Bernard Dhéran
La Septième Compagnie au clair de lune (1977) de Robert Lamoureux avec Pierre Mondy, Jean Lefebvre, Henri Guybet, Gérard Jugnot, André Pousse et Patricia Karim
Y a-t-il un pilote dans l'avion ? (Airplane!) (1980) de David Zucker, Jerry Zucker et Jim Abrahams avec Robert Hays, Julie Hagerty, Lloyd Bridges, Leslie Nielsen, Robert Stack et Peter Graves
Les Traducteurs (2019) de Régis Roinsard avec Lambert Wilson, Alex Lawther, Olga Kurylenko, Riccardo Scamarcio, Sidse Babett Knudsen et Eduardo Noriega
Ho ! (1968) de Robert Enrico avec Jean-Paul Belmondo, Joanna Shimkus, Raymond Bussières, Paul Crauchet, Stéphane Fey, Alain Mottet et André Weber
Les Fugitifs (1986) de Francis Veber avec Pierre Richard, Gérard Depardieu, Anaïs Bret, Jean Carmet, Maurice Barrier et Jean Benguigui
Les 55 Jours de Pékin (55 Days at Peking) de Nicholas Ray, Andrew Marton et Guy Greena avec Charlton Heston, Ava Gardner, David Niven, Flora Robson et Leo Genn
Du haut de la terrasse (From the Terrace) (1960) de Mark Robson avec Paul Newman, Joanne Woodward, Myrna Loy, Ina Balin, Leon Ames et Barbara Eden
Soleil vert (Soylent Green) (1973) de Richard Fleischer avec Charlton Heston, Leigh Taylor-Young, Edward G. Robinson, Chuck Connors, Joseph Cotten et Brock Peters
Quai d'Orsay (2013) de Bertrand Tavernier avec Thierry Lhermitte, Raphaël Personnaz, Niels Arestrup, Bruno Raffaelli, Julie Gayet, Anaïs Demoustier, Thomas Chabrol, Thierry Frémont et Alix Poisson
Les Compères (1983) de Francis Veber avec Pierre Richard, Gérard Depardieu, Anny Duperey, Michel Aumont, Stéphane Bierry et Philippe Khorsand
Le Téléphone rose (1975) de Édouard Molinaro avec Mireille Darc, Pierre Mondy, Françoise Prévost, Michael Lonsdale, Daniel Ceccaldi et Gérard Hérold
Dies iræ (2003) d'Alexandre Astier avec Alexandre Astier, Tony Saba, Thomas Cousseau, Lionnel Astier, Alexis Hénon, Nicolas Gabion, Franck Pitiot et Jean-Christophe Hembert
La Chèvre (1981) de Francis Veber avec Pierre Richard, Gérard Depardieu, Pedro Armendáriz Jr, Michel Robin, André Valardy et Corynne Charby
Les Vieux Fourneaux (2018) de Christophe Duthuron avec Pierre Richard, Roland Giraud, Eddy Mitchell, Alice Pol, Henri Guybet et Méliane Marcaggi
Les Vieux Fourneaux 2 : Bons pour l'asile (2022) de Christophe Duthuron avec Pierre Richard, Eddy Mitchell, Bernard Le Coq, Alice Pol, Myriam Boyer, Jean Sarrus : Baba et Claire Nadeau
Guet-apens (The Getaway) (1972) de Sam Peckinpah avec Steve McQueen, Ali MacGraw, Ben Johnson, Sally Struthers, Al Lettieri et Slim Pickens
Vice (2018) de Adam McKay avec Christian Bale, Amy Adams, Steve Carell, Sam Rockwell, Tyler Perry & Alison Pill
Le Masque de fer (1962) de Henri Decoin avec Jean Marais, Sylva Koscina, Jean-François Poron, Gisèle Pascal, Philippe Lemaire et Jean Rochefort
Sous le plus grand chapiteau du monde (The Greatest Show on Earth) (1952) de Cecil B. DeMille avec Charlton Heston, Betty Hutton, Cornel Wilde, Gloria Grahame, James Stewart et Dorothy Lamour
Séries
The Rookie Saison 4
Acétylcholine - Chasse au trésor - Combat à mort - Menace sur a ville - Remise en cause - Le coeur au bord des lèvres
Les Nouvelles Aventures de Lucky Luke
Liki Liki - Lucky Luke en Alaska - Les Dalton contre Sherlock Holmes - Lucky Luke contre Lucky Luke - Lumière dans l'Ouest - Ni Dalton, ni maître - Roulette indienne - Fort Custer - Le Trésor des Dalton- L'Homme volant - Les Indiens Dalton - Les Héritiers - Pour une poignée de Dalton
Détective Conan Saison 1
Le Plus Grand Détective du siècle - Le Commencement - Méfiez-vous des stars - Le Poisson lumineux - La Bombe roulante - Le Meurtre de la Saint-Valentin - Le Mystérieux expéditeur - Meurtre au musée - Festival fatal - Conan marque un but - Sonate pour crime au clair de lune - L'Enlèvement d'Ayumi - Le Meurtre déconcertant - Un message à déchiffrer - Un cadavre a disparu - Le Meurtre du collectionneur d'antiquités - Cambriolage au supermarché - La Mariée de juin - Meurtre dans l'ascenseur - La Maison hantée - Meurtre sur un plateau - Les meurtriers en série embarquent sur le Luxury Liner : 1re partie - Les meurtriers en série embarquent sur le Luxury Liner : 2e partie - La Mystérieuse amnésique - Enlèvement contre rançon - John et l'Assassinat - La Réunion de classe de Kogorô : 1re partie - La Réunion de classe de Kogorô : 2e partie - Meurtre en direct - Un alibi parfait - Meurtre au studio de télévision - Meurtre au coffee shop - Rendez-vous mortel - L'Homme aux bandelettes : 1re partie - L'Homme aux bandelettes : 2e partie - Lundi 19h30 - Meurtre au cactus - La Fête du Feu - Le Meurtre de l'héritière : 1re partie - Le Meurtre de l'héritière : 2e partie - L'Affaire du drapeau en lambeaux - Meurtre au karaoké
Dix pour cent Saison 4
Charlotte - Franck - José - Sandrine - Sigourney - Jean
Le Visiteur du Futur : Néo-Versailles Saison 4
La Balade de Raph et Stella - La Cour Royale - Le Sauveur malgré lui - Un Nouvel Espoir - Le Bal - Le Réveil - Coup de Théâtre - Les Ficelles - La Révolution - Le Clou du Spectacle
Affaires sensibles
L'incendie de Notre-Dame de Paris - Irak 2003 : Quand la France résiste - Sports Sensibles IV : Springboks'95, la mort en arc en ciel - Les 24H du Mans de 1955 : le diable est dans la ligne droite - L’affaire du Watergate ou la chute du président Nixon - L'affaire des archives volées de la franc-maçonnerie
Columbo Saison 13, 12, 2
En grandes pompes - Le meurtre aux deux visages - Dites-le avec des fleurs
Kaamelott Livre I
Heat - Les Tartes aux myrtilles - La Table de Breccan - Le Chevalier mystère - Le Fléau de Dieu - Le Garde du corps - Des nouvelles du monde - Codes et Stratégies - Le Maître d’armes - Le Négociateur - Dîner dansant - Le Sixième Sens - Arthur et la Question - Monogame - Les Défis de Merlin - Le Banquet des chefs - Le Signe - En forme de Graal - Le Repos du guerrier - La Dent de requin - La Taxe militaire - La Queue du scorpion - La Potion de fécondité - L’Interprète - Le Sacrifice - À la volette - De retour de Judée - La Botte secrète - L’Assassin de Kaamelott - Le Trois de cœur - Basidiomycètes - L’Imposteur - Compagnons de chambrée - La Grotte de Padraig - Ambidextrie - Raison d’argent - La Romance de Lancelot
Stargate SG-1 Saison 3, 4, 1
Némésis - Victoires illusoires - De l'autre côté du miroir - Une dimension trop réelle
Spectacles
Double Mixte (1989) de Pierre Mondy avec Christian Clavier, Marie-Anne Chazel, Gérard Rinaldi, Marc Dudicourt, Stéphane Bouy, Julie Arnold et Marcel Philippot
Livres
Sherlock Holmes : Un scandale en Bohême suivi de trois autres récits de Sir Arthur Conan Doyle
Lucky Luke, Tome 18 : Le Bandit manchot de Morris et Bob de Groot
Le visiteur du futur : La meute de Slimane-Baptiste Berhoun et François Descraques
Quai d'Orsay, Chroniques diplomatiques, Tome 1 de Christophe Blain et Abel Lanzac
Quai d'Orsay, Chroniques diplomatiques, Tome 2 de Christophe Blain et Abel Lanzac
De la Terre à la Lune de Jules Verne
Kaamelott, tome 7 : Contre-attaque en Carmélide d'Alexandre Astier, Steven Dupré et Picksel
Autour de la lune de Jules Verne
OSS 117 : Atout cœur à Tokyo de Jean Bruce
0 notes
massbaylibs · 3 years
Text
Tumblr media
National Poetry Month 2021
We have a VERY special edition of our National Poetry Month LibGuide, featuring a dozen poets, who generously donated to the library.
We also have featured pages on poets laureate Joy Harjo, Amanda Gorman & Porsha Olayiwola.
Thank you to the following poets for donating a poem to MassBay Library in observance of National Poetry Month: Amy M. Alvarez, Cheryl Boyce-Taylor, Alfred Corn, Jessica de Koninck, Jim Dunn, Mark Lamoureux, Christina Liu, Suzanne Mercury, Jess Mynes, Vané Pacheco, and Christina Strong
Read their work here: https://massbay.libguides.com/poetry-month/2021-special
0 notes
yespoetry · 5 years
Text
Mark Lamoureux: May 2019 Poet of the Month
29 Cheesburgers: #31 Deluxe Bleu Cheese Burger Plate, Cozy Soup ‘N Burger, Astor Place, NYC
            for Bill Corbett.
  Bill,
 I go to the second church of the day, as I must,
            alone, & above
the nave of coffee urns—something I never noticed
            the handful of times I have come to this place—
is an actual backlit panel of stained glass
depicting two women wrapped in coiling cloth
            of cobalt blue proffering
a cheeseburger on a plate
            while their lower heaven-stretched arms
cradle a ceramic chalice of Cozy soup,
echoing the similarly light-filled
            windows of St. Mark’s on the Bowery from
whence I am come from your memorial, my eyes
            stung with tears—
 now at the end
as at the beginning
when I first crossed your threshold
some fifteen years ago, just out of hospital,
only days before having watched
            the huge ruddy man in the other bed,
Chaucer’s Miller, toss the orderlies around the room like rag dolls,
howling & sobbing like an infant because he didn’t want to take
the pills that would make him heavy & dull
until finally subduing him they put them down
his throat & held his chin like a cat’s & then poured water down
his gullet from a ridiculously tiny
            paper cup.
Fifteen minutes later I heard him
spit the unswallowed pills onto the floor.  I didn’t take mine
either.  He begged me to bring him a plastic model car
& glue             please he said
            please;
I taught the empty-eyed kid
who paced to one end of the ward & back
            again all day, all day to make poems
by picking random words out of the Reader’s Digest
            Condensed Books they kept in all the rooms.
            Why did you arrange them like that?
                                                                        I didn’t
that’s the order I picked them in.  Fair enough
            poetry is the music
of chance; just days later I would be in your parlor
in Columbus Square & I decided to trust
            that poetry
would save my life & you were the king
of poetry.
 Earlier today I am at the Wahrol retrospective
            at the Whitney for the second time, missing
my daughter, who knew the prints from Andy Land
the little book I bought her, signing more moo cow
more Andy Soup; please
please;
            with my backpack with my laptop & keys
& presents I bought her in the coat check I can’t shake
the feeling something’s missing;
            I lose track of Geof & Karen in the sprawling
exhibition, take a picture of myself in the reflection
of a self-portrait of Andy with a skull on his head—
memento mori I tell myself.
                                                            Something’s missing.
Somehow I lose the plastic tag with the number on it
            to retrieve my coat & the backpack that I got cheap
because it has somebody else’s initials—IQZ—
            monogrammed on the front.
                                                            Something’s missing.
The first time I was here I stood with Amabel
 in front of Crowd Scene.  Peoples she cooed
peoples &
just a few feet away there was Laurie Anderson;
            I wanted to ask her to kiss my baby but couldn’t
summon the gumption—
Lou Reed is dead said a voice in my head.
            You are dead too; I wanted you to kiss my baby
too.
             I used to drink when I felt sad,
which was all the time,
but now I buy things for my daughter instead & today before
            your memorial I bought her a little plastic watch
with an owl on the face,
 four pairs of little socks with the Peel Slowly
& See banana on them, a spherical strawberry-scented kitty
ball that slowly re-inflates itself
after being squishes & A is for Andy written by him
& his mama.
                                                Something’s missing.
 Before I really met you I knew you
            from the photograph on the cover
of New & Selected Poems: smiling at the camera
            in black & white; behind you a telescope
pointed out the glowing window
toward the sky.  I recognized you once outside
            of Out of Town news in Harvard Square
& said Hello Bill like I knew you & you said Hello like
            I was someone you recognized
            but I wouldn’t find myself
at your table for another handful of years,
            just out of hospital, a week
after John Wieners died. 
             I turned 47 last week & bought myself
the Complete Village Vanguard Recordings
of the Bill Evans Trio & listened to Scott LaFaro
            playing “Gloria’s Step” over & over again—
the last recording he would make before he
died just 11 days later & I wondered what you thought
of the “You Must Believe in Spring” poem after the song
on Evans’ final that I sent you
just before you died last spring.  Memory gorges
            every single thing
you wrote in a “Shower in June,”
printed on a broadside with a photo
of Pres outside the Five Spot you inscribed
            “For Mark at Aaron’s 30th, 2004”
which hangs just beside my front door & will be the first thing
I see when I exit the cab & unlock the door to my house,
            quietly, so I won’t wake Amabel
who will be sleeping upstairs.  Memory gorges
            every single thing.
                                                Something’s missing. 
 I will want to listen to the Evans records again,
            but will need to wait until morning
because the sleeping baby; I will need to wait
until morning to give my daughter the socks, the kitty,
            the book, everything
but the watch which I will save for her birthday
            in May & I admit it seems a little wrong
to give a toddler a watch—there’s a point
            at which time becomes the enemy,
but I couldn’t resist the little pink owl.  Owls
            were also the favorite
of my maternal grandma Mabel for whom
Amabel is named & owls
            have been appearing everywhere
lately—in an Arthur Sze poem on the wall
of the subway I took downtown,
            “Coming Soon—the Owl
Café” on a sign on the smudged-out windows
of a storefront I passed when I was walking
            from the Whitney to your memorial
in the Bowery.  I guess my point is
            the dead remain
in our lives in ways we don’t expect
or understand.  A few nights ago two postcards
            from you & Gerrit that had been there
since you were both alive fell off
my refrigerator & landed face up
at my feet—there must be scores of postcards
from you squirrelled away in & behind
books on my bookshelves & who knows
            where else—I never really file anything
away & I guess now maybe I understand why.
            Memory gorges
every single thing.      Something’s missing.
            This may be the longest poem
I have ever written, meandering, discursive,
            I guess probably because I don’t want it
to end because that means somehow this
            day in which I said goodbye to you will have ended
but now
            the train has pulled into the station
& the conductor is telling me to please exit the train
            we all want to go home.
                        I pack my IQZ backpack quickly
& panic out on the platform.
                                                Something’s missing
but the doors close & the train rumbles
            off into the future.
Mark Lamoureux lives in New Haven, CT. He is the author of four full-length collections of poetry: It’ll Never Be Over For Me (Black Radish Books, 2016), 29 Cheeseburgers / 39 Years (Pressed Wafer, 2013), Spectre (Black Radish Books 2010), and Astrometry Orgonon (BlazeVOX Books 2008),. His work has been published in print and online in Elderly, Denver Quarterly, Jacket, Fourteen Hills and many others. In 2014 he received the 2nd annual Ping Pong Poetry award, selected by David Shapiro, for his poem “Summerhenge/Winterhenge.” He teaches at Housatonic Community College in Bridgeport, CT. His chapbook, Maris McLamoureary's DICTIONNAIRE INFERNAL, co-authored with Chris McCreary, was published by Empty Set Press on Halloween 2017.
1 note · View note
goalhofer · 7 years
Text
2018 U.S.A. Olympic Roster
Alpine Skiing
Stacey Cook (Mammoth Lakes, California)
Breezy Johnson (Victor, Idaho)
Megan McJames (Park City, Utah)
Alice McKennis (New Castle, Colorado)
Laurenne Ross (Bend, Oregon)
Mikaela Shiffrin (East Burke, Vermont)
Resi Stiegler (Jackson, Wyoming)
Lindsey Vonn (Vail, Colorado)
Jacqueline Wiles (White Pass, Washington)
Bryce Bennett (Squaw Valley, California)
Tommy Biesemeyer (Plattsburgh, New York)
David Chodounsky (Crested Butte, Colorado)
Ryan Cochrane-Siegle (Stowe, Vermont)
Mark Engel (Salt Lake City, Utah)
Tommy Ford (Bend, Oregon)
Jared Goldberg (Sugar House, Utah)
Tim Jitloff (Park City, Utah)
Nolan Kasper (East Burke, Vermont)
Ted Ligety (Park City, Utah)
Wiley Maple (Aspen, Colorado)
Steven Nyman (Park City, Utah)
Andrew Weibrecht (Lake Placid, New York)
Biathlon
Emily Dreissigacker (Morrisville, Vermont)
Susan Dunklee (Barton, Vermont)
Clare Egan (Cape Elizabeth, Maine)
Madeleine Phaneuf (Fairfax, Virginia)
Joanne Reid (Boulder, Colorado)
Lowell Bailey (Lake Placid, New York)
Tim Burke (Lake Placid, New York)
Russell Currier (Stockholm, Maine)
Sean Doherty (Conway, New Hampshire)
Leif Nordgren (Marine, Minnesota)
Cross County Skiing
Sadie Bjornsen (Anchorage, Alaska)
Rosie Brennan (Anchorage, Alaska)
Sophie Caldwell (Stratton, Vermont)
Jessie Diggins (Stratton, Vermont)
Kikkan Randall (Anchorage, Alaska)
Ida Sargent (Craftsbury, Vermont)
Liz Stephen (East Burke, Vermont)
Caitlin Patterson (Craftsbury, Vermont)
Rosie Frankowski (Anchorage, Alaska)
Annie Hart (Stratton, Vermont)
Kaitlyn Miller (Bowdoin, Maine)
Erik Bjornsen (Anchorage, Alaska)
Simi Hamilton (Middlebury, Vermont)
Andy Newell (Bennington, Vermont)
Patrick Caldwell (Lyme, New Hampshire)
Logan Hanneman (Fairbanks, Alaska)
Scott Patterson (Anchorage, Alaska)
Reese Hanneman (Fairbanks, Alaska)
Tyler Kornfield (Fairbanks, Alaska)
Noah Hoffman (Aspen, Colorado)
Freestyle Skiing
Kiley McKinnon (Madison, Connecticut)
Maddy Olsen (Park City, Utah)
Ashley Caldwell (Ashburn, Virginia)
Maddie Bowman (South Lake Tahoe, California)
Brita Sigourney (Park City, Utah)
Devin Logan (Mt. Snow, Vermont)
Annalisa Drew (Andover, Massachusetts)
Jaelin Kauf (Steamboat Springs, Colorado)
Morgan Schild (Pittsford, New York)
Tess Johnson (Vail, Colorado)
Keaton McCargo (Telluride, Colorado)
Maggie Voisin (Whitefish, Montana)
Caroline Claire (Manchester, Vermont)
Darian Stevens (Park City, Utah)
Eric Loughran (Park City, Utah)
Jon Lillis (Park City, Utah)
David Bohonnon (Madison, Connecticut)
David Wise (Reno, Nevada)
Torin Yater-Wallace (Basalt, Colorado)
Alex Ferreira (Aspen, Colorado)
Aaron Blunck (Crested Butte, Colorado)
Casey Andringa (Park City, Utah)
Troy Murphy (Park City, Utah)
Emerson Smith (Dover, Vermont)
Bradley Wilson (Butte, Montana)
Gus Kenworthy (Telluride, Colorado)
Nick Goepper (Lawrenceburg, Indiana)
McRae Williams (Salt Lake City, Utah)
Alex Hall (Park City, Utah)
Ski Jumping
Michael Glasder (Lake Forest, Illinois)
Sarah Hendrickson (Park City, Utah)
Nita Englund (Steamboat Springs, Colorado)
Abby Ringquist (Salt Lake City, Utah)
Kevin Bickner (Chicago, Illinois)
Will Rhoads (Concord, New Hampshire)
Casey Larson (Barrington, Illinois)
Bobsleigh
Codie Bascue (Whitehall, New York)
Evan Weinstock (Las Vegas, Nevada)
Steven Langton (Malden, Massachusetts)
Sam McGuffie (Cypress, Texas)
Nick Cunningham (Latham, New York)
Hakeem Abdul-Saboor (Powhatan, Virginia)
Chris Kinney (Stockbridge, Georgia)
Sam Michener (Gresham, Oregon)
Justin Olsen (San Antonio, Texas)
Carlo Valdes (Newport Beach, California)
Sgt. Chris Fogt (Orem, Utah)
Nathan Weber (Denver, Colorado)
Elana Taylor (Douglasville, Georgia)
Lauren Gibbs (Denver, Colorado)
Jamie Greubel-Poser (Princeton, New Jersey)
Aja Evans (Homewood, Illinois)
Curling
John Shuster (Duluth, Minnesota)
Tyler George (Duluth, Minnesota)
Matt Hamilton (Duluth, Minnesota)
John Landsteiner (Duluth, Minnesota)
Joe Polo (Cass Lake, Minnesota)
Nina Roth (Madison, Wisconsin)
Tabitha Peterson (St. Paul, Minnesota)
Aileen Geving (Duluth, Minnesota)
Becca Hamilton (Madison, Wisconsin)
Cory Christiansen (Duluth, Minnesota)
Figure Skating
Alexa Knierim (DuPage, Illinois)
Madison Chock (Novi, Michigan)
Madison Hubbell (Ann Arbor, Michigan)
Maia Shibutani (Ann Arbor, Michigan)
Speed Skating
Shani Davis (Chicago, Illinois)
Jonathan Garcia (Katy, Texas)
Kimani Griffin (Winston-Salem, North Carolina)
Brian Hansen (Milwaukee, Wisconsin)
Emery Lehman (Oak Park, Illinois)
Joey Mantia (Salt Lake City, Utah)
Mitch Whitmore (Waukesha, Wisconsin)
Heather Bergsma (High Point, North Carolina)
Brittany Bowe (Ocala, Florida)
Erin Jackson (Ocala, Florida)
Mia Manganello (Crestview, Florida)
Carlijn Schoutens (Trenton, New Jersey)
Jerica Tandiman (Kearns, Utah)
John-Henry Krueger (Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania)
Thomas Hong (Laurel, Maryland)
Aaron Tran (Federal Way, Washington)
J.R. Celski (Federal Way, Washington)
Ryan Pivirotto (Ann Arbor, Michigan)
Maame Biney (Reston, Virginia)
Lana Gehring (Chicago, Illinois)
Jessica Smith (Melvindale, Michigan)
Hockey
Tony Granato (Madison, Wisconsin)
Keith Allain (New Haven, Connecticut)
Chris Chelios (Chicago, Illinois)
Ron Rolston (Fenton, Michigan)
Scott Young (Southborough, Massachusetts)
Chad Billins (Marysville, Michigan)
Noah Welch (Needham, Massachusetts)
John McCarthy (Boston, Massachusetts)
Brian O’Neill (Yardley, Pennsylvania)
Garrett Roe (Vienna, Virginia)
Brian Gionta (Rochester, New York)
Ryan Gunderson (Bensalem, Pennsylvania)
Broc Little (Phoenix, Arizona)
Bobby Butler (Marlborough, Massachusetts)
Ryan Donato (Scituate, Massachusetts)
Chris Bourque (Topsfield, Massachusetts)
Jordan Greenway (Canton, New York)
Jim Slater (Lapeer, Michigan)
Will Borgen (Moorhead, Minnesota)
James Wisniewski (Canton, Michigan)
Bobby Sanguinetti (Lumberton, New Jersey)
Troy Terry (Denver, Colorado)
Jonathon Blum (Rancho Santa Margarita, California)
Mark Arcobello (Milford, Connecticut)
Ryan Zapolski (Erie, Pennsylvania)
Brandon Maxwell (Winter Park, Florida)
David Leggio (Williamsville, New York)
Chad Kolarik (Abington, Pennsylvania)
Ryan Stoa (Bloomington, Minnesota)
Matt Gilroy (Manhasset, New York)
Cayla Barnes (Eastvale, California)
Megan Keller (Farmington, Michigan)
Kali Flanagan (Winchester, Massachusetts)
Monique Lamoureux-Morando (Grand Forks, North Dakota)
Emily Pfalzer (Buffalo, New York)
Meghan Duggan (Danvers, Massachusetts)
Haley Skarupa (Rockville, Maryland)
Kelly Pannek (Minneapolis, Minnesota)
Brianna Decker (Brookfield, Wisconsin)
Jocelyne Lamoureux-Davidson (Grand Forks, North Dakota)
Gisele Marvin (Bemidji, Minnesota)
Hannah Brandt (Maplewood, Minnesota)
Hilary Knight (Lake Forest, Illinois)
Kacey Bellamy (Westfield, Massachusetts)
Dani Cameranesi (Plymouth, Minnesota)
Kendall Coyne (Oak Lawn, Illinois)
Amanda Kessel (Madison, Wisconsin)
Nicole Hensley (Littleton, Colorado)
Alex Rigsby (Hartland, Wisconsin)
Maddie Rooney (Duluth, Minnesota)
Amanda Pelkey (Randolph, Vermont)
Sidney Morin (Minnetonka, Minnesota)
Luge
Chris Mazdzer (Pittsfield, Massachusetts)
Taylor Morris (Salt Lake City, Utah)
Tucker West (Ridgefield, Connecticut)
Justin Krewson (Eastport, New York)
Andrew Sherk (Ft. Washington, Pennsylvania)
Matt Mortensen (Huntington Station, New York)
Jayson Terdiman (East Stroudsburg, Pennsylvania)
Summer Britcher (Glen Rock, Pennsylvania)
Erin Hamlin (Remsen, New York)
Emily Sweeney (Portland, Maine)
Bryan Fletcher (Steamboat Springs, Colorado)
Taylor Fletcher (Steamboat Springs, Colorado)
Jasper Good (Steamboat Springs, Colorado)
Ben Loomis (Park City, Utah)
Ben Berend (Park City, Utah)
Skeleton
Matthew Antoine (Prairie Du Chien, Wisconsin)
John Daly (Smithtown, New York)
Katie Uhlaender (Breckenridge, Colorado)
Kendall Wesenberg (Modesto, California)
Snowboarding
Chris Corning (Silverthorne, Colorado)
Red Gerard (Silverthorne, Colorado)
Kyle Mack (Detroit, Michigan)
Ryan Stassel (Anchorage, Alaska)
Ben Ferguson (Bend, Oregon)
Chase Josey (Hailey, Idaho)
Jake Pates (Eagle, Colorado)
Shaun White (Silverton, Colorado)
Jamie Anderson (South Lake Tahoe, California)
Jessika Jenson (Idaho Falls, Idaho)
Hailey Langland (San Clemente, California)
Julia Marino (Westport, Connecticut)
Kelly Clark (Mammoth Lakes, California)
Arielle Gold (Steamboat Springs, Colorado)
Chloe Kim (La Palma, California)
Maddie Mastro (Mammoth Lakes, California)
A.J. Muss (Rumson, New Jersey)
Mike Trapp (Hyannis, Massachusetts)
Nick Baumgartner (Iron River, Michigan)
Jonathan Cheever (Saugus, Massachusetts)
Mick Dierdorff (Steamboat Springs, Colorado)
Hagen Kearney (Bradford, Pennsylvania)
Faye Gulini (Vail, Colorado)
Lindsey Jacobellis (Danbury, Connecticut)
Rosie Mancari (Steamboat Springs, Colorado)
Meghan Tierney (Edwards, Colorado)
6 notes · View notes