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#Ron Rinaldi
mixamorphosis · 2 months
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Blog post and linked up tracklist [HERE]
Tracklist
01. Ron Rinaldi - Mexican Summer (Spacetalk) 02. Jam Band '80 - Jammin' (With The Jam Band) (Rush Hour Music) 03. Sunset Gun - Be Thankful For What You Got (Thanks But No Thanks Edit) (Balearic Blah Blah) 04. Carrie Cleveland - Love Will Set You Free (Kalita) 05. Nana Love - Love Feeling (Dance Mix) (BBE) 06. Rob - Make It Fast, Make It Slow (Soundway) 07. Baby Huey - California Dreamin' (Curtom) 08. Experience Unlimited - Functus (Black Fire) 09. Marvin Gaye - Right On (Tamla) 10. Jeff Floyd - Don't Leave Me (City Of Dreams) 11. Jaye P. Morgan - Let's Get Together (How Do You Are?) 12. Reuben Wilson & The Cost Of Living - Together (Cadet) 13. Frederic Castel - Open Up (Leng) 14. Billy Paul - It's Critical (12" Version) (Philadelphia International Records) 15. Oby Onyioha - Enjoy Your Life (Soundway Records) 16. John Ozila - Funky Boogie (Spaziale) 17. Bokoor Band - Onukpa Shawarpo (Strut) 18. Roy Ayers - Africa, Centre Of The World (pitched up) (Polydor) 19. BB Seaton - Dancing In The Moonlight (Studio One)
Download available via [Hearthis]
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heavenboy09 · 2 months
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Happy Birthday 🎂 🥳 🎉 🎈 ro you
The Beautiful & Radiant Mexican - Austrian German🇲🇽🇦🇹🇩🇪🤎 Actress Of The Early 2000's
She was born in Los Mochis, Sinaloa, Mexico on March 3, 1964 Her mother, María Elena Martínez-Cairo, is a Mexican spiritual teacher, real estate investor, and former secretary. Her father, Raymond Herring, was a Mexican developer and organic farmer of Austrian-German descent.
known professionally as Laura Harring, is an American actress and beauty pageant titleholder who won Miss USA 1985 and later began acting in television and film. She is best known for her dual roles as Rita and Camilla Rhodes in the 2001 movie Mulholland Drive. She is also known for her roles in other movies, including The Forbidden Dance (1990), John Q (2002), Willard (2003), The Punisher (2004), The King (2005), Love in the Time of Cholera (2007), Ghost Son (2007), The Caller (2008), Drool (2009), Sex Ed (2014), and Inside (2016). She also played Carla Greco in General Hospital (1990–1991), Paula Stevens on Sunset Beach (1997), and Rebecca "Becca" Doyle in The Shield (2006).
Harring won Miss El Paso USA, Miss Texas USA, then Miss USA 1985 becoming the first Hispanic woman to do so.
In 1990, Harring was lead actress in the Columbia Pictures release The Forbidden Dance, in which she played the role of Nisa, a Brazilian princess.Harring is best known for her performance in David Lynch's 2001 movie Mulholland Drive, opposite Naomi Watts and Justin Theroux. She played both the characters of Rita (an amnesiac who names herself after Rita Hayworth when seeing the name on a poster for the movie Gilda) and Camilla.
Please Wish This Beautiful & Radiant Mexican - Austrian German 🇲🇽🇦🇹🇩🇪🤎Actress Of The Early 2000's , A Very Happy Birthday 🎂 🥳 🎉 🎈 🎁 🎊
Ms. Laura Harring 🇲🇽🇦🇹🇩🇪🤎  
Happy 60th Birthday 🎂 🥳 🎉 🎈 🎁 🎊 To You Ms. Harring🇲🇽🇦🇹🇩🇪🤎 & Here's To Many More Years To Come
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#LauraHarring
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comicstoastonish · 6 years
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Captain America #453 (1996)
Writers: Mark Waid and Ron Garney
Artist: Pino Rinaldi
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surly01 · 3 years
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Memory and the Great Forgetting
“The struggle of man against power is the struggle of memory against forgetting.” -Milan Kundera
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What is it that we remember? And what memories do we leave behind?
Last week I had the opportunity to listen to Rocky Bleier speak at a breakfast meeting. Bleier was a hero of my young adulthood, part of a backfield tandem with Franco Harris on Pittsburgh's best 70s Steeler teams. During that talk, he touched on the frangibility of memory as he quoted author William Least Heat-Moon in "River Horse:"
"Our physical components change every seven years, so our brains are continuously passing along memories to a stranger; who we have been is only a ghostly fellow traveler. Were human memory total and perfect, perhaps I'd be only one person from start to finish, but forgetfulness cuts me off from who I've been so that hourly I am reborn."
Since our bodies refurbish our cells every seven years, we have at least this excuse. Which I will use. I've been embarrassed by having friends ask me if I recall an event and coming up with nothing. Inexplicable lacunas appear everywhere. So episodes, places, people as part of a life, all of who played a greater or lesser role, disappear into the mists. Then the mind skips, thinking of the shards of impressions we leave with others as we pass through their lives, partial, imperfect. Have we left behind flowers or broken crockery?
My wife and I had the opportunity with members of our extended family this past week. We enjoyed a day of sharing stories and hearing others for the first time in a day filled with laughter. I surprised myself by how much I looked forward to it, enjoyed it while happening, and look back on it fondly now.  I don't think I realized how much we thirsted for family contact after 14 months of enforced isolation, thanks to Covid quarantine.
Bleier's story is well worth hearing. ESPN's Tom Rinaldi recorded a deeply moving recollection. Bleier went back to Vietnam to revisit the spot where he was ambushed and wounded.  He recalls his journey from a hospital bed in Tokyo to overcome injuries and ultimately play for the Steelers. This story has been told in the book and movie "Fighting Back" and needs no further embellishment.
But Bleier was poignant on that morning, and his words resonated with a group of mostly older men:
"As I think back on the words of Heat-Moon, I am not that 23-year-old kid any longer. Although the highlights of my life are vivid, the retelling of the story is now gospel. Who I was, the emotions I had then, unfortunately, have faded with time. The story here is what I have learned over these 40 years. Maybe that's the question we end up asking ourselves. What have we learned? What have we done? Have we made a difference?"
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There is memory, and there is intentional forgetting.
The world was shocked at the discovery of the remains of more than 200 children at a former native school in Canada last week. The Kamloops Indian residential school was the largest of several such schools, whose mission was to take the next generation of Native American children away from family and tribe and indoctrinate them for "assimilation." The net result was to sever them irrevocably from their culture. Such schools existed in both Canada and the US generally dressed up in some sort of soggy, whitebread do-gooderism.  Today we call that "cultural genocide."
Charles Pierce notes:
The revelations in Canada came just as President Joe Biden flew to Tulsa to commemorate the 100th anniversary of the destruction of the Greenwood section of the city and the race massacre that ensued. The standard response over much of the mainstream media was a surprise that these events had been disappeared from history. Of course, there was a concerted effort in Tulsa to cover up the crimes, up to and including removing stories from newspaper archives. But there was more to it than that. Imperial power, as somebody once said to Ron Suskind, creates its own reality, and imperial power can be exercised domestically as well as overseas… Events are made to disappear as a kind of historical getaway car.
Not for nothing has Gore Vidal called this country "The United States of Amnesia." The Tulsa Black Wall Street massacre is just one of many that have been papered over in our Great Forgetting. Look up New Orleans in 1866, Wilmington in 1898, Wounded Knee, or just click this link here. Most "white" people in this country are sore aggrieved at being confronted with the US's blood-soaked history of slavery and genocide. See the recent backlash against the 1619 project and the teaching of "critical race theory," a construct its critics would be hard-pressed to explain. Except that they know that the long-deferred confrontation with its racist past will cause children to ask questions their parents would rather not answer.
American "personhood" is conditional. Anyone who doubts that has not been called "a god-damned dago” to his face, as I have. [It amuses me that so many Italian-Americans are hyper-partisan "patriots" of the red-white-and bluest sort. It's almost as if they intuit that the American Racial Contract recently conferring Italians full Personhood can be revoked at any time.] That Racial Contract means that nonwhite sub-personhood is enshrined alongside white personhood. The rules do not apply to nonwhites in the same way that they apply to whites, and promises made to "all citizens" are clearly negotiable depending on the claimant's race. In 1857, Rover Taney issued the worst Supreme Court decision of all time, the Dred Scott decision. He wrote that "[African Americans] had no rights which the white man was bound to respect..."
What has really changed in 164 years? Kundera was right about the power of memory against forgetting because, very often, it's the only power that victims hold, even from the grave. It's why we had trials at Nuremberg. And why our elites are busily rewriting history, from the January 6 Insurrection to last year's Covid response. Elites resist accountability with all they have, and memory is our last defense. So if memory disappears, we find ourselves once again living in Greenwood's ashes or in Kamloops as the bodies are buried, wondering once again how such a thing could have happened.
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vietnamwarera · 6 years
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Would you happen to have any information about/knowledge of the contribution of Canadian volunteers to the American war effort in Vietnam? Apparently one Medal of Honour recipient, Peter C. Lemon, was from Toronto, Ontario!
There isn’t a ton out there, largely because Canada didn’t send its own units as part of the Free World Forces (like Australia, Republic of Korea, etc). Those who served as part of the US military arguably had a harder time of it upon returning home. The US military did not keep explicit records about their foreign volunteers either.
Here are a couple of snippets:
“An estimated 10,000 to 12,000 Canadians served in the American military in Vietnam, although nearly half were Canadian citizens living in the United States. Seventy-eight Canadians are listed on the wall of the Vietnam Veteran’s Memorial in Washington, DC.” [Source: The Encyclopedia of the Vietnam War edited by Spencer Tucker]
Peter C. Lemon was indeed from Toronto, Ontario, and the only Canadian to be awarded the Medal of Honor in Vietnam. The medal was for actions that took place at Fire Support Base Illingworth on 1 April 1970. [Wiki]
Articles:
“Vietnam War - Allies in Vietnam - Canadians” by Fred Graffen (no date)
“Vietnam War Also Haunts Canadians Who Served” by Christopher S. Wren (1985)
“Ron Parkes on Canadians in the Vietnam War: Canada’s Stories” by Luc Rinaldi (2014)
“The Vietnam War: Canada’s Role” (2015)
“Lost to History: the Canadians who fought in Vietnam” by Chris Corday (2015)
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hannustratet · 2 years
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Week 5 February ‘22
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duane eddy - along the navajo trail
the raiders - indian reservation (the lament...)
the lollipops - naked when you come
santo & johnny - sleepwalk
piero umiliani - chaser
tommy roe - dizzy
oh no - heavy
david axelrod - the smile
marty robbins - they’re hanging me tonight
ron rinaldi - mexican summer
he 6 - you don't know
karl denver - wimoweh
charlie megira - yesterday, today and tomorrow
les maledictus sound - kriminal theme
the souther-hillman-furay band - mexico
claude denjean - everybody’s talkin’
the intruders - cowboys to girls
the walker brothers - the sun ain’t gonna shine anymore
tom jones - i (who have nothing)
shawn phillips - she was waiting for her mother at the station in torino...
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carlkruse · 2 years
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The Fernandez family in Puerto Rico has made "Ron del Barrilito" since 1880. Artist Carlos Davila Rinaldi pays tribute to it in his work "Barrilito Straight From the Bottle"    2011 - acrylic & tar gel on canvas.  ¡Salud!
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conniejoworld · 4 years
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Abbott says counties can indirectly coerce use of face coverings
By ROBERT T. GARRETT Austin Bureau [email protected] AUSTIN — Gov. Greg Abbott on Wednesday appeared to give his blessing to a move by the county judge in San Antonio to slap fines on businesses if they don’t make their employees and visitors wear masks when they’re less than six feet apart. At least, Abbott didn’t oppose the new edict by Bexar County Judge Nelson Wolff. Appearing on KWTX-TV in Waco, Abbott said Wolff had “figured out” that the authority to demand more wearing of masks was lying in plain sight — in Abbott’s executive orders on COVID-19 — but only through indirect coercion by private business. “There has been a plan in place all along that all that was needed was for local officials to actually read the plan that was issued by the state of Texas,” he said. “It turned out earlier today that the county judge in Bexar County finally figured that out.” Abbott, a Republican, spoke as rising numbers of coronavirus infections and hospitalizations in Texas have raised new questions about his reopening of businesses and other activities. Dallas County Judge Clay Jenkins said that on Thursday, he plans — after conferring with business and hospital leaders — to propose an order similar to Wolff’s that would compel businesses — with the threat of fines — to make people wear masks and take other safety precautions. “Hopefully we can get that enacted very soon,” he said. The easing of the mask impasse came a day after Abbott clashed with mostly Democratic local officials who said he had stripped from public-health officials’ arsenal a key weapon in the coronavirus fight — requiring people to wear face masks when in public. Abbott chastised the mayors and county judges, especially Jenkins, saying they wanted to abuse their powers and punish individuals for not wearing masks — and that he wouldn’t let them do that. But on Wednesday, Abbott did not object to a plan that Wolff, a Democrat, announced earlier in the day: fines of $1,000 on businesses that fail to require the wearing of masks by workers and customers when they’re near one another. As Wolff put it: “All commercial entities providing direct goods and services to the public must develop and implement a health and safety policy. It must require at a minimum that all employees and visitors wear face masks when they’re less than 6 feet apart.” Without elaborating, Wolff said the commercial operations “can certainly” adopt “other mitigating measures designed to control and reduce the transmission of COVID-19.” Wolff said his emergency order takes effect Monday. No objections Abbott raised no objections, telling KWTX anchor Pete Souza: “Just like they can require people to wear shoes and shirts, these businesses can require people to wear face masks if they come into their businesses. Now, local officials are just now realizing that that was authorized.” After Abbott’s interview, Jenkins tweeted that he was glad Abbott had “listened to science and changed his mind.” He noted that the city of Dallas and Dallas County had been following the state’s reopening recommendations until Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton wrote to cities to demand that the steps not be required. “This will save lives,” Jenkins said. As for Abbott’s saying Wolff “figured out” the path forward, Jenkins told The Dallas Morning News : “I think he was spinning a story there. I think it would be even worse for him, and of course all of us here in Texas, if he had actually written an order as if it was a riddle, and then allowed people to spread COVID for a month and a half before he agreed someone had uncovered his riddle. I don’t think he seriously believes that happened. Remember, we were doing what Bexar County is proposing to do in May … and they told us to stop.” Later Wednesday, Jenkins’ counterparts in Houston and Austin — Harris County Judge Lina Hidalgo and interim Travis County Judge Sam Biscoe — said they were considering whether to emulate Wolff and require businesses to make workers and customers wear masks, according to the Houston Chronicle and Austin American-Statesman . Wednesday evening, Austin Mayor Steve Adler signed an order mirroring Wolff’s that will take effect Thursday, the Texas Tribune reported. San Antonio Mayor Ron Nirenberg, who appeared with Wolff at the morning news conference in the Alamo City, updated his municipal emergency orders. They now conform with Wolff’s demands for businesses to adopt safety plans and require employees and visitors to wear face coverings when they’re near one another. Republican Mayors Betsy Price of Fort Worth and Jeff Williams of Arlington, however, told the Fort Worth Star-Telegram that they didn’t plan to require businesses to order the wearing of masks. The National Federation of Independent Business’s state director, Annie Spilman, objected to making business owners enforce safety rules. “Orders like Judge Wolff’s puts owners in the difficult position of policing their customers while trying to reopen and rebuild their businesses,” Spilman, an advocate for small businesses, said in a statement. It echoed calls by many Republicans in Congress — and by large corporations — for federal liability protections that would shield businesses from coronavirus-related lawsuits. Democrats criticize Abbott Democrats seized on the surge in positive test results for COVID-19 in most big Texas cities to assail Abbott. U.S. Rep. Lloyd Doggett, an Austin Democrat whose district extends to San Antonio, fired off a letter rebuking Abbott for gladly letting local elected officials enforce his COVID-19 edicts early in the pandemic, only to hobble them as he caved to Republican activists demanding faster reopening of the economy. “In March, you hid behind local control, as our cities led in making tough decisions to stay home and work safe — including painful but correct decisions to cancel SXSW and Fiesta,” Doggett wrote, referring to festivals, respectively, in Austin and San Antonio. “Unshackle local leaders to lead,” he urged. Abbott has had an evolving policy on punishments for violations of COVID-19 orders. In March, he gave local authorities the power to enforce his orders and threatened fines and up to 180 days in jail for violating them. Then on April 27, just days before he let restaurants, stores, movie theaters and certain other entities reopen at 25% of capacity, Abbott put this in Executive Order GA-18: “Individuals are encouraged to wear appropriate face coverings, but no jurisdiction can impose a civil or criminal penalty for failure to wear a face covering.” About a week later, after a state district judge in Dallas put hair salon owner Shelley Luther in jail for contempt of court after she refused to close her business, Abbott made a show of erasing any jail time for violation of his COVID-19 decrees. Republicans also critical The question of punishments is a fraught one for Abbott, who has also been under fire from libertarian and socially conservative quarters of the Texas GOP for assuming too much power over Texans’ lives during the health crisis. Former GOP state Rep. Matt Rinaldi tweeted that Abbott hasn’t been consistent. “Every business and every individual in Texas is at the whim of @GovAbbott and whatever mood he may be in any particular day,” Rinaldi said. On Wednesday, Abbott told Souza he’s been consistent all along. “We want to make sure that individual liberty is not infringed upon by government and hence government cannot require individuals to wear masks,” he said. “However, pursuant to my plan, local governments can require stores and businesses to require masks.” Staff writer Joe Hoyt in Dallas contributed to this report. Twitter: @RobertTGarrett
 but only through indirect coercion by private business.
what the hell does that even mean??? waffling- no direct order he can be held to
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hellofastestnewsfan · 4 years
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It’s Wednesday, February 12. On upheaval around the sudden, lighter sentence recommendation for Trump associate Roger Stone: “The administration’s rush to aid Stone, especially set against the retributive firings, shows Trump newly willing to flex his muscles,” David Graham writes.
In the rest of today’s newsletter: Let’s talk about contested conventions. Plus: How Trump boxed the EPA out of a major climate rollback.
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« TODAY IN POLITICS »
(MATT ROURKE / AP)
These are two words that no Democrat wants to hear: Brokered convention.
The prospect that Democrats don’t coalesce around one particular candidate by this summer is a nightmarish scenario for many in the party. An all-out brawl for the nomination could hamper the party’s ability to take on President Trump in November.
Last night’s New Hampshire primary may have only heightened fears of a brokered convention. Bernie Sanders beat the rest of the field, narrowly, and as my colleague Ron Brownstein has pointed out, none of the candidates have assembled a broad enough coalition to snag a majority of the delegates.
1. In the neighboring state that should be favorable to him, the Vermont senator didn’t sweep. Sanders got 26 percent of the vote, the lowest ever for a Democrat winner in the state. (The previous low was Jimmy Carter, in 1976.)
2. A certain billionaire’s fundraising juggernaut is a chaos factor. My colleague Edward-Isaac Dovere wrote about how a Bernie-Bloomberg showdown could happen:
“The thought that superdelegates could cost Sanders the nomination is upsetting enough for his supporters. The thought that he could lose to the man who shut down Occupy Wall Street with a dead-of-night police raid and has been nonchalantly spending his way into the Democratic process … it’s just too much.”
3. If the brokered-convention scenario comes to pass, who will emerge as a kingmaker? Who will mediate the various factions? That role could fall to a familiar face: Harry Reid, the former Senate majority leader beloved by Democrats across teh spectrum. Reid, who retired in 2017, is wrestling with a fatal cancer diagnosis that was supposed to have killed him already.
—Saahil Desai
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« OTHER CANDIDATES »
(M. SCOTT BRAUER / REDUX)
The once novelty candidate Andrew Yang dropped out the night of the New Hampshire primary, after struggling to make any real showing once votes were cast, but also having raised more money and qualified for more debates than even some candidates still currently running.
But he’ll be behind the eventual Democratic nominee, Yang told Edward-Isaac Dovere:
“You know, I’m not a dick. Like, obviously someone like offers me something serious and impactful but we can help do some good work, I’m not going to be like, ‘Fuck that.’”
Read the full story on the end of #MATH.
+ Also notable: In quick succession, Michael Bennet and Deval Patrick have both dropped out of the Democratic race. We hardly new ye.
(JESSICA RINALDI / THE BOSTON GLOBE VIA GETTY)
This is Bill Weld. He used to be the governor of Massachusetts. He’s a Republican. He’s running against Trump. Here’s what he’s up against:
Commanding more than 85 percent of the vote, Trump spun it as an unqualified victory. While it wasn’t the resounding 97 percent of the vote that Ronald Reagan carried as the incumbent in 1984, Trump won a higher percentage of the vote than Barack Obama, both George Bushes, and Bill Clinton did in their reelection primaries.
But, as Adam Harris reports from New Hampshire, Weld has a few other goals in mind.
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« EVENING READ »
(ELAINE CROMIE)
Clean Car Catastrophe
The Trump administration’s attempt to kill one of America’s strongest climate policies has been a complete debacle. Robinson Meyer tells the inside story of this stunning boxing out of the EPA.
It was the beginning of a fiasco that could soon have global consequences. The Trump administration has since proposed to roll back the tailpipe rules nationwide, a move that, according to one estimate, could add nearly 1 billion tons of carbon pollution to the atmosphere. Officials have justified this sweeping change by claiming that the new rules will save hundreds of lives a year. They are so sure of those benefits that they have decided to call the policy the Safer Affordable Fuel-Efficient Vehicles Rule—or SAFE, for short.
SNAFU may be a better moniker.
Read the rest.
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Today’s newsletter was written by Saahil Desai, an editor on the Politics desk, and edited by Shan Wang, who oversees newsletters.
You can reply directly to this newsletter with questions or comments, or send a note to [email protected].
Your support makes our journalism possible. Subscribe here.
from The Atlantic https://ift.tt/3bySKFm
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vladyhead · 6 years
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Verissimo anticipazioni: Ron, Nadia Rinaldi e gli altri ospiti | 17 febbraio
#Verissimo anticipazioni: Ron, Nadia Rinaldi e gli altri ospiti | 17 febbraio
Verissimo ritorna con una nuova puntata nel pomeriggio di sabato, 17 febbraio 2018, come sempre su Canale 5. Il programma condotto da Silvia Toffanin è pronto a raccogliere nel suo salotto un nuovo gruppo di ospiti, volti noti della musica e dello spettacolo italiano. Ron, Nadia Rinaldi, Rocio Munoz Moralessono solo alcuni dei nomi che interverranno nell’appuntamento in Tv, per parlare delle loro…
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Untitled #2105 by ioan-jeni featuring a high neck sleeveless dress
Michael Kors high neck sleeveless dress, 3.800 RON / Marina rinaldi coat, 5.145 RON / Gianvito rossi pumps, 1.240 RON / Wine jewelry
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jucks72 · 7 years
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Umberto Passarelli da “110 e lode” Essenza d’Estate il miglior cocktail - Italia a Tavola
New Post has been published on http://www.it-gourmet.it/2017/10/10/umberto-passarelli-da-110-e-lode-essenza-destate-il-miglior-cocktail-italia-a-tavola/
Umberto Passarelli da “110 e lode” Essenza d’Estate il miglior cocktail - Italia a Tavola
Umberto Passarelli, barman dell’Hotel Me Milan Il Duca di Milano, si è imposto nella seconda edizione di “110 e Lode” ideata da Danilo Bellucci, uomo di comunicazione e creatore di eventi nel settore food&beverage.
La competizione, riservata ai professionisti degli hotel a cinque stelle, si è svolta nella prestigiosa cornice dell’Albergo dell’Agenzia di Pollenzo (Cn), all’interno del complesso sede dell’Università di Scienze gastronomiche e della banca del vino. Una manifestazione che si è rivelata un vero e proprio inno alla cultura della miscelazione, in quanto classe, professionalità ed eccellenza nel servizio sono le caratteristiche dei barmen dei grandi hotel, professionisti che hanno fatto la storia della mixability.
Erica Guatto, Umberto Passarelli, Danilo Bellucci e Blendi Vogli
Ventisette i bartender in gara, giudicati dal giornalista Giovanni Angelucci, dal bar manager dell’Hotel The Westin Europa e Regina di Venezia Giorgio Fadda e dall’esperto di marketing agroalimentare Maurizio Di Dio. Dietro ad Umberto Passatelli si è piazzato Blendi Vogli del Lenkerhof Gourmet Spa Resort di Lenk an Simmental (Svizzera) ed Erica Guatto del Castello del Pozzo di Oleggio Castello (No).
Le ricette sul podio
1° classificato Umberto Passarelli Hotel Me Milan Il Duca – Milano Essenza d’Estate: 5 cl di vodka Grey Goose Martini& Rossi; 1,5 cl di Grand Marnier Campari; 1,5 cl di Belsazar vermouth dry Velier; 3 cl di spremuta di pompelmo; 1 cl di sciroppo di zucchero Monin Velier; albume d’uovo, vaporizzazione d’origano ed Essentia Velier; il tutto decorato con timo fresco e Caviar Calvisius.
2° classificato Blendi Vogli Lenkerhof Gourmet Spa Resort – Lenk am Simmental Svizzera As Time Goes By (to Gerry): 2,0 cl Prime Uve Cru di Moscato giallo – Bonaventura Maschio; 2,0 cl Martini bianco – Martini & Rossi; 1,5 cl St.Germain – Martini & Rossi; 1,5 cl spremuta di lime; 3,0 cl Uva di moscato pestata; decorazione: acini d’uva, rosmarino.
3° classificato Erica Guatto Castello Dal Pozzo – Oleggio Castello (No) Wonderland: 0,5 cl Liquore Strega – Strega; 1,0 cl Marie Brizard Crema Cacao bianca – D&C; 3,0 cl Taylor’s Porto Ruby Red – Rinaldi; 1,0 cl Matusalem ron 10 años – Montenegro Decorazione: cioccolato scuro, menta, marzapane.
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instapicsil1 · 7 years
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Swipe to see more - By Jessica Rinaldi/Globe Staff -- Ron, a California sea lion pup born at the New England Aquarium on July 2, is introduced to the main exhibit pool at the Aquarium today. #newenglandaquarium #aquarium #sealion http://ift.tt/2vpdjCP
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catalinamthings · 7 years
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floral paradise💙 (top set)
floral paradise💙 (top set) by charli-oakeby featuring white bath towels ❤ liked on Polyvore
Miss Selfridge ruffle top, 200 RON / Marina Rinaldi blue coat, 4.675 RON / Helmut Lang mini skirt, 605 RON / Nly Shoes high heels sandals, 88 RON / Chanel leather bag, 1.620 RON / Adidas Originals white watch, 290 RON / Nars cosmetic, 245 RON / NARS Cosmetics face toner, 120 RON / Linum Home Textiles white bath towel, 170 RON / iPad Pro Silicone Case Charcoal Gray, 300 RON / New Model Fuji Instax Mini 50s Piano White Fujifilm Instant Camera, 400 RON
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nyskateboarding · 7 years
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Brandon Johnson determined to get the highest wallride I Photo: @digimil
We teamed up with UXA and celebrated our 8th anniversary of NY Skateboarding with a BBQ/skate jam transforming the front of UXA’s Brooklyn shop into a mini block party. Food was provided by our friends at Crif Dogs & Bunker and PBR filled our icy cooler up with beers! UXA’s Peter Huynh built a special wallride ramp just for the BBQ and pulled out some additional stuff to skate. We hosted some best trick contests giving away some NYSB, UXA and Vans gear. We finished up the afternoon with a highest wallride contest blessing the winners with some new Vans!
Tasty food via Crif Dogs and Bunker I Photo: @thewastedtalent
Thanks to everyone for coming out and celebrating with us the best way possible – through skateboarding! Huge thanks to UXA, Bunker, Crif Dogs, Pabst and Vans for supporting the event!
∞ 🔥 @nyskateboarding
A post shared by UXA (@uxanyc) on Apr 30, 2017 at 9:01pm PDT
BBSC crew I Photo: @digimil
Gizmo the perfectionist | Photo: @digimil
Flatground for days I Photo: @thewastedtalent
Best spiderman impression wins prizes I Photo: @thewastedtalent
The little known ramp and patio I Photo: @thewastedtalent
Derek Rinaldi photobombed by Mike Powley and his PBR I Photo: @thewastedtalent
Justin Adams is happy to be here I Photo: @thewastedtalent
Bird’s eye view of the product I Photo: @thewastedtalent
JTMR! | Photo: @digimil
Bushwick Ron & Gizmo | Photo: @digimil
Brandon gets up I Photo: @thewastedtalent
Grigley in the house I Photo: @thewastedtalent
Max Mueller works on his sign language with Corn I Photo: @thewastedtalent
It’s official when you get Vinyl | Photo: @digimil
John Bee wanted to bash out every window | Photo: @digimil
If it’s in Bushwick, there will be flannel I Photo: @thewastedtalent
Look ma, no hands I Photo: @thewastedtalent
Tricks for kicks | Photo:
NYSB’s resident Creature Fiend, EJ Spindler I Photo: @thewastedtalent
Skateboarding: for every generation I Photo: @thewastedtalent
Andrew found a set and threw down kickflips immediately I Photo: @thewastedtalent
Event Recap: UXA x NY Skateboarding BBQ (2017) We teamed up with UXA and celebrated our 8th anniversary of NY Skateboarding with a BBQ/skate jam transforming the front of…
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violetterecords · 7 years
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Feed Your Head 488 Ron Rinaldi - Mexican Summer https://t.co/xch4YjNMUv
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