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#Robert Baines
teasetsotw · 7 months
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--- Designer/Manufacturer: Robert Baines [X] Region: Australia Time period: 1995
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myfairynuffstuff · 8 months
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Andrew Robert Baines (b.1962) - The Liberal No.2. Acrylic on canvas.
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should-david-be-there · 6 months
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critics are calling this the crossover of the century
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empirearchives · 6 months
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The Baths of Apollo in Versailles (detail), Hubert Robert, c. 1803, Napoleonic era
Musée Carnavalet
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vertigoartgore · 4 months
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Lea Thompson as Lorraine Baines McFly in Back to the Future.
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pedroam-bang · 1 year
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Back To The Future (1985)
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Peep show, 2007
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Let's (re)Read The Dragon Reborn! Chapter 38: Maidens of the Spear
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The Maidens will stab you if you complain about spoilers when you read this post. You're clicking "Keep reading" with full knowledge that I can and will spoil anything and everything about this whole series and any others I feel like.
This chapter starts with the Wheel-and-serpent icon because this is an important chance meeting.
Men were sometimes silly enough to think a woman was harmless merely because she was a woman; Egwene had no such illusions.
I assume these silly men are not counting women with ageless faces among the harmless but purely the average, non-channeling woman because otherwise they'd be jumping far past "silly" and into "suicidal".
Except maybe a fully trained sister, she admitted. But certainly not one woman, even if she is Aiel.
Egwene betrays her ignorance here. As her story goes on, she spends very little time being actually thwarted by any fully trained sisters and has a lot more difficulties with virtually everyone else.
“You have not the look in your faces, but we saw the rings. In your lands, you have women much like our Wise Ones, the women called Aes Sedai. Are you women of the White Tower, or not?”
Note that TECHNICALLY Aviendha isn't committing the same ageless face continuity error as in book 2. Not sure if that means it's already resolved or what.
“We are women of the White Tower,” Nynaeve said calmly. She was very obvious in not looking around for other Aiel. Even Elayne was peering about. “Whether you would consider any of us wise is another matter,” Nynaeve went on.
Nynaeve's statement wouldn't trigger the Oath Rod if she were already sworn to it, so good job! Also it's really quite impressive that she's so good at dealing with the Aiel. Unlike the other gals, she already knows that if they're surrounded, they're fucked, so why worry about an additional ambush when there seems to be a way to leave the conversation peaceably?
A friend of hers is dying? She sounds as if she is asking if we’ll lend her a cup of barley flour!
Egwene grows up a LOT, doesn't she?
And what if Nynaeve can’t Heal their friend? I wish she would ask before she makes these decisions that involve all of us!
I think Egwene is probably the last member of the party to come to the conclusion that the Aiel have no interest in fucking with them, and looks particularly immature to worry that the Aiel might kill them for honest failure but not for uncharitable refusal to help.
“I am Egwene al’Vere,” she told them. They seemed to expect more, so she added, “Daughter of Marin al’Vere, of Emond’s Field, in the Two Rivers.” That seemed to satisfy them, in a way, but she would have bet they understood it no more than she did all these septs and clans.
Egwene, it's obvious what being the daughter of someone means, and context explains the rest, though almost no one knows where the Two Rivers is.
“Then why do you not speak the words before your Wise Ones?” Chiad asked. “Bain and I became first-sisters.”
Because Elayne's saving herself for the right sister and she's right there, you homewreckers!
Bain knotted her brow in thought. “What you say comes near truth, yet misses it completely. When we wed the spear, we pledge to be bound to no man or child. Some do give up the spear, for a man or a child”—her expression said she herself did not understand this—“but once given up, the spear cannot be taken back.”
So obviously trying to apply modern labels of sexuality to people who don't exist in modern western culture is usually a mistake, even if their culture only exists in the fiction of western culture, but... Bain's a lesbian, right? I legit don't believe her when she says she doesn't NOT like men, she seems to be mostly in denial. (Also it's great getting to watch the Aiel go, "Holy shit you wetlanders are dumb." I look forward to this coming up more and more.)
“Yes, they do.” Chiad sounded as though she and Bain were sharing something between them.
They're laughing at Aviendha.
“Yes,” Egwene said faintly. She glanced at Elayne and saw the bewilderment in her blue eyes she knew must be in her own.
Egwene is so deeply into the White Tower that she can't even conceptualize organizations of people outside it anymore. That's deeply worrying.
But we do not share him, Elayne. We can neither of us have him.
Is this a Perrin chapter? Because I am just non-stop dunking on the stupidity of the POV character. EGWENE. Wake. the. fuck. up.
“Some of those fools that the oath-breaking treekillers call soldiers thought we were another handful of the bandits who infest this land. We had to kill them to convince them otherwise, but Dailin. . . . Can you heal her, Aes Sedai?”
That's... that's not how you convince people of facts, Aviendha. That's just how you stop them from harassing you.
Chiad and Bain stepped to the river’s edge and returned together. Their faces never changed, but Egwene thought they had almost expected the river to reach up and grab them.
Again we can see how our characters are very early on their personal journeys because even the random NPCs have better emotional and facial control than they do.
“She truly does sound like a Wise One,” Chiad told Bain softly, and the other woman gave a tight nod.
I'd like to see Nynaeve go to Rhuidean and probably break the initial ter'angreal because she's so fucking constant it can't come up with any alternate futures based on other things she could have done.
The Stones River. . . . Some claim it had water in it once, but that is only boasting. There are only the stones. The oldest records of the Wise Ones and the clan chief say there was never anything but stones since the first day our sept broke off from the High Plain sept and claimed that land.
Probably the initial Aiel who discovered the area still had remnant knowledge from the AoL and thus the ability to recognize the signs of a river destroyed by climate change.
“I would never harm an Aes Sedai,” Aviendha said abruptly. “I would have you know that. Whether Dailin lives or dies, it makes no difference in that. I would never use this”—she lifted one short spear a trifle—“against any woman. And you are Aes Sedai.”
Aviendha is of course concerned that Egwene is grabbing the One Power out of nowhere. Egwene can't even conceive of Aiel channelers and again she's barely spent any time with the White Tower.
Just because Elayne had been taught something did not mean it was true, even if the Aiel said the same thing.
This isn't a bad instinct to have, but Egwene only has it when it comes to her two equals in the party, not when it comes to the knowledge she's been taught at home and the Tower.
“Balefire,” Egwene said. “Aviendha, what is balefire?”
It's a good thing that these Aiel are on the up and up or Egwene would have just blabbed on herself in an incredibly stupid way. Also, I guess the Aiel have a better cultural memory of balefire than westerners because of Rhuidean. I don't remember if it's explicitly used in Rand's genetic memories though.
She was not sure she had even been able to make out all the many flows, much less the way Nynaeve had woven them together. What Nynaeve had done in those few seconds had seemed like weaving four carpets at once while blindfolded.
Egwene won't admit it even to herself, but she is deeply concerned with how ahead of her in channeling Nynaeve is.
Next time: The girls get kidnapped. Again!
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Great Scott! 💥 The Back to the Future cast is heading to Los Angeles Comic Con! Meet Michael J. Fox, Christopher Lloyd, Lea Thompson and Tom Wilson on Friday, October 4th and Saturday, October 5th!
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Get Early Bird Tickets: https://bit.ly/LAComicContickets
Get Photo Ops & Autographs: https://bit.ly/photo_ops
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nerds-yearbook · 7 months
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In 1955 Doctor Emmett Brown banged his head and got the idea of the Flux Capacitor which made time travel possible. No sooner was he done drawing it when there was a nock on his door from a boy from 1985 who came back in time with the time machine that the future Doctor Brown would invent. Doctor Brown had to help get the boy named Marty back to 1985 as well as get Marty’s parents back together after Marty accidentally got his mom to like him instead of his dad. To make it more confusing there was a second Marty and Doctor Brown from the future running around and as soon as Doctor Brown sent the first Marty back to 1985 the second one asked to send him to the old west. (Back to the Future[187], Back to the Future II flm)
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mariocki · 13 days
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New Scotland Yard: The Palais Romeo (1.4, LWT, 1972)
"We haven't had a PM yet. We haven't gone over the suspect's possessions, we haven't got the results from the trunk. We haven't seen this man Sawyer yet, the man who helped him carry it. There are five hundred things we haven't had time to examine. How can you make an arrest? You said yourself: a conclusion is a conclusion established when all the facts have been brought to light."
#new scotland yard#the palais romeo#classic tv#lwt#1972#bill bain#stuart douglass#john woodvine#john carlisle#richard o'callaghan#barry warren#claire warren#john mckelvey#susan richards#terence soall#robert hartley#colin rix#pauline stroud#godfrey jackman#peter porteous#a more generic cop show plot (a killer is targeting middle aged women) gets used to finally start developing these characters for the#audience; we learn quite a lot more about Woodvine here‚ including some background on his separation from his wife (which threatens#to impact his handling of the case)‚ and his relationship with Carlisle‚ which has so far been.. a little frosty shall we say? well here#it's downright uncomfortable. it's a curious choice: cop shows of the era didn't shy away from having some element of conflict in the inter#personal relationships of their characters (Z Cars and Softly Softly did it‚ The Sweeney a bit later) but that was always balanced by a#sense of camaraderie too. but our leads here seem at times to genuinely dislike each other on a personal level‚ and their butting of heads#culminates here in a shouting match that threatens to end their working relationship (it doesn't of course). lovely Richard O'Callaghan is#the main suspect but of course he's much too lovely to be guilty... despite the plot being about attacks on women this continues to be#a very blokey example of an already overly masculine genre; Stroud's WPC appears to be a recurring character but isn't even named and#exists mainly to make cups of tea for overwrought witnesses.. such is 70s tv alas
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fancycolours · 10 months
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Chicago (2023.)
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stuff-diary · 3 months
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Under the Silver Lake
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Movies watched in 2024
Under the Silver Lake (2018, USA)
Director & Writer: David Robert Mitchell
Mini-review:
I think I had never seen anything quite like this. It's evident that it draws inspiration from a lot of sources, but David Robert Mitchell has always excelled at taking obvious inspirations and making something that feels completely new and groundbreaking. It's also a deeply strange and personal movie, and I can see people finding it unwatchable. But in my case, I connected with it pretty quickly. I just vibe with all this stuff about conspiracies and paranoia. And there are so many Easter eggs, hints and clues all over the movie, to the point that I felt like watching it again right away. I will definitely be looking up everything I can find about it, cause it has such rich (and weird!) lore. So yeah, Under The Silver Lake is not an easy watch in any way, but it's one hell of a trip that kept me entranced.
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chicinsilk · 6 months
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US Vogue April 1989
Talisa Soto in crushed nylon double-breasted trench coat by Miyake Plantation and striped swimsuit by Robert Mannino. Fashion Editor: Grace Coddington Hair: Didier Malige Makeup: Mary Greenwell.
Talisa Soto en trench-coat à double boutonnage en nylon écrasé de Miyake Plantation et maillot de bain à rayures de Robert Mannino. Rédactrice de mode : Grace Coddington Coiffure : Didier Malige Maquillage : Mary Greenwell.
Photo Patrick Demarchelier vogue archive
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105nt · 2 years
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My 2022 in books
With my kids a little older and a lot more into their own stuff, I have had a good run. These are all the books I read for the first time this year in reverse order (I've not yet finished with The Time Traveller's Wife):
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The books I enjoyed most in 2022:
The Wonder by Emma Donoghue A hotpot of motherhood, abuse and atonement - in which science comes head to head with faith and both succeeds and fails. I was impressed by the way the story gives weight to every consideration - Anna's autonomy, Ireland's suffering, the duties and limits of love. Outstanding.
Normal People by Sally Rooney I came to this having loved the TV version, and I wasn't disappointed. A very raw, and very true, portrait of what it is like to live and love, and how that differs from what we're told to expect.
Precious Bane by Mary Webb I'd been planning to read some Mary Webb for some time, but it was never top of my reading pile. Then I read a biography that reignited my interest, when I found she once occupied a house about 100 yards from my back door, and I found an old cloth copy which I liked the feel of more than the paperback I'd already bought. I thought I knew what I was getting from Precious Bane - everyone knows that the heroine has a cleft lip which she feels sets her apart in solitude, and that the book abounds with rustic scenes, homilies and events, and that there will be a handsome man who will choose her. I'd read Cold Comfort Farm the year before, and so in some sense had already laughed at Precious Bane before opening it. I was not expecting it to be littered with events that were genuinely shocking and dramatic, or to be convinced by the romantic ending, but I was. I really felt it managed to transcend the fun that is poked at it.
The Ink Black Heart by Robert Galbraith I've been totally absorbed by Strike for nearly two years now. A lot of people didn't rate IBH but it arrives and takes its place in my top five with flick of its strawberry-blond mane. I was expecting another book like Troubled Blood - meaty, satisfying, layered ... I am back to hotpots again (must be the weather) but I spent the whole week I managed to stretch this over on the edge of my seat; disturbed and fascinated, wanting to be drawn in and pampered the way I had been with TB, but constantly having the rug pulled from under me. I will never forgive her for killing the sofa.    
Shuggie Bane by Douglas Stuart It's a rare skill to keep your reader wanting a happy ending long after it's clearly hopeless and yet make them unable to abandon the story. Douglas Stuart has that skill. He's a dangerous man and should be on a list somewhere.
A few other things:
My least favourite book was Worst. Idea. Ever. by Jane Fallon. I just can't ... I don't get it. Please. Someone. Explain.
My favourite audiobook this year was The Lamplighters by Emma Stonex. I'd never listened to an audiobook before and, to put it mildly, this was a good start. I also listened to all the Strike novels 1-6, Anna Karenina, War and Peace, The Count of Monte Cristo, Dracula, Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Seas and The Iliad. I go for the classics in a big way because 1. they are free, and 2. they go well with the ironing.
If I could only have had one of these reading experiences, it would have to be The Ink Black Heart. 
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Peep Show, 2007
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