Commons Vote
On: Passenger Railway Services Bill (Public Ownership) Bill: Committee: Amendment 14
Ayes: 111 (95.5% Con, 4.5% DUP)
Noes: 362 (97.0% Lab, 2.5% Ind, 0.6% SDLP)
Absent: ~177
Day's business papers: 2024-9-3
Likely Referenced Bill: Passenger Railway Services (Public Ownership) Bill
Description: A Bill to make provision for passenger railway services to be provided by public sector companies instead of by means of franchises.
Originating house: Commons
Current house: Commons
Bill Stage: 3rd reading
Individual Votes:
Ayes
Conservative (106 votes)
Alan Mak
Alberto Costa
Alex Burghart
Alicia Kearns
Alison Griffiths
Andrew Bowie
Andrew Murrison
Andrew Rosindell
Andrew Snowden
Aphra Brandreth
Ashley Fox
Ben Obese-Jecty
Ben Spencer
Bernard Jenkin
Blake Stephenson
Bob Blackman
Bradley Thomas
Caroline Dinenage
Caroline Johnson
Charlie Dewhirst
Chris Philp
Claire Coutinho
Damian Hinds
Danny Kruger
David Davis
David Mundell
David Reed
David Simmonds
Desmond Swayne
Edward Argar
Edward Leigh
Gagan Mohindra
Gareth Bacon
Gareth Davies
Gavin Williamson
Geoffrey Cox
George Freeman
Greg Smith
Gregory Stafford
Harriet Cross
Harriett Baldwin
Helen Whately
Iain Duncan Smith
Jack Rankin
James Cartlidge
James Cleverly
James Wild
Jeremy Hunt
Jeremy Wright
Jerome Mayhew
Jesse Norman
Joe Robertson
John Cooper
John Glen
John Hayes
John Lamont
John Whittingdale
Joy Morrissey
Julia Lopez
Julian Lewis
Karen Bradley
Katie Lam
Kemi Badenoch
Kevin Hollinrake
Kieran Mullan
Kit Malthouse
Laura Trott
Lewis Cocking
Lincoln Jopp
Louie French
Mark Francois
Mark Garnier
Mark Pritchard
Martin Vickers
Matt Vickers
Mel Stride
Mike Wood
Mims Davies
Neil Hudson
Neil O'Brien
Neil Shastri-Hurst
Nick Timothy
Nigel Huddleston
Oliver Dowden
Patrick Spencer
Peter Bedford
Peter Fortune
Priti Patel
Rebecca Harris
Rebecca Paul
Rebecca Smith
Richard Fuller
Richard Holden
Robbie Moore
Robert Jenrick
Saqib Bhatti
Sarah Bool
Shivani Raja
Simon Hoare
Steve Barclay
Stuart Anderson
Stuart Andrew
Suella Braverman
Tom Tugendhat
Victoria Atkins
Wendy Morton
Democratic Unionist Party (5 votes)
Carla Lockhart
Gavin Robinson
Gregory Campbell
Jim Shannon
Sammy Wilson
Noes
Labour (351 votes)
Abena Oppong-Asare
Abtisam Mohamed
Adam Jogee
Adam Thompson
Afzal Khan
Al Carns
Alan Campbell
Alan Gemmell
Alan Strickland
Alex Baker
Alex Ballinger
Alex Barros-Curtis
Alex Davies-Jones
Alex Mayer
Alex McIntyre
Alex Norris
Alex Sobel
Alice Macdonald
Alison Hume
Alison McGovern
Alistair Strathern
Allison Gardner
Amanda Hack
Amanda Martin
Andrew Cooper
Andrew Gwynne
Andrew Lewin
Andrew Pakes
Andrew Ranger
Andrew Western
Andy MacNae
Andy McDonald
Andy Slaughter
Angela Eagle
Anna Dixon
Anna Gelderd
Anna McMorrin
Anna Turley
Anneliese Dodds
Anneliese Midgley
Antonia Bance
Ashley Dalton
Baggy Shanker
Bambos Charalambous
Barry Gardiner
Bayo Alaba
Beccy Cooper
Becky Gittins
Ben Coleman
Ben Goldsborough
Bill Esterson
Blair McDougall
Brian Leishman
Callum Anderson
Calvin Bailey
Carolyn Harris
Cat Smith
Catherine Atkinson
Catherine Fookes
Catherine McKinnell
Catherine West
Charlotte Nichols
Chi Onwurah
Chris Bloore
Chris Curtis
Chris Elmore
Chris Evans
Chris Hinchliff
Chris Kane
Chris McDonald
Chris Murray
Chris Vince
Chris Ward
Chris Webb
Christian Wakeford
Claire Hazelgrove
Claire Hughes
Clive Betts
Clive Efford
Clive Lewis
Connor Naismith
Connor Rand
Damien Egan
Dan Aldridge
Dan Carden
Dan Jarvis
Dan Norris
Dan Tomlinson
Daniel Francis
Danny Beales
Darren Paffey
Dave Robertson
David Burton-Sampson
David Pinto-Duschinsky
David Smith
David Taylor
Dawn Butler
Debbie Abrahams
Deirdre Costigan
Derek Twigg
Diana Johnson
Douglas Alexander
Douglas McAllister
Elaine Stewart
Ellie Reeves
Elsie Blundell
Emily Darlington
Emily Thornberry
Emma Foody
Emma Lewell-Buck
Euan Stainbank
Fabian Hamilton
Fleur Anderson
Florence Eshalomi
Frank McNally
Gareth Snell
Gareth Thomas
Gen Kitchen
Gerald Jones
Gill Furniss
Gill German
Gordon McKee
Graeme Downie
Graham Stringer
Grahame Morris
Gregor Poynton
Gurinder Singh Josan
Harpreet Uppal
Heidi Alexander
Helen Hayes
Helena Dollimore
Henry Tufnell
Ian Lavery
Ian Murray
Imogen Walker
Irene Campbell
Jack Abbott
Jacob Collier
Jade Botterill
Jake Richards
James Asser
James Frith
James Naish
Janet Daby
Jayne Kirkham
Jeevun Sandher
Jeff Smith
Jen Craft
Jenny Riddell-Carpenter
Jess Asato
Jess Phillips
Jessica Morden
Jessica Toale
Jim Dickson
Jim McMahon
Jo Platt
Jo Stevens
Jo White
Joani Reid
Jodie Gosling
Joe Morris
Joe Powell
Johanna Baxter
John Grady
John Healey
John Slinger
John Whitby
Jon Pearce
Jon Trickett
Jonathan Brash
Jonathan Davies
Jonathan Hinder
Josh Dean
Josh Fenton-Glynn
Josh MacAlister
Josh Newbury
Julia Buckley
Julie Minns
Juliet Campbell
Justin Madders
Karin Smyth
Karl Turner
Kate Osamor
Kate Osborne
Katie White
Katrina Murray
Keir Mather
Kerry McCarthy
Kevin Bonavia
Kim Johnson
Kim Leadbeater
Kirith Entwistle
Kirsteen Sullivan
Kirsty McNeill
Laura Kyrke-Smith
Lauren Edwards
Lauren Sullivan
Laurence Turner
Lee Barron
Lee Pitcher
Leigh Ingham
Lewis Atkinson
Liam Byrne
Liam Conlon
Lilian Greenwood
Lillian Jones
Linsey Farnsworth
Liz Kendall
Liz Twist
Lizzi Collinge
Lloyd Hatton
Lola McEvoy
Louise Haigh
Louise Jones
Lucy Powell
Lucy Rigby
Luke Akehurst
Luke Charters
Luke Murphy
Luke Myer
Margaret Mullane
Marie Tidball
Mark Ferguson
Mark Hendrick
Mark Sewards
Mark Tami
Markus Campbell-Savours
Marsha De Cordova
Martin Rhodes
Mary Glindon
Mary Kelly Foy
Matt Bishop
Matt Rodda
Matt Turmaine
Matt Western
Matthew Patrick
Matthew Pennycook
Maureen Burke
Meg Hillier
Melanie Onn
Melanie Ward
Miatta Fahnbulleh
Michael Payne
Michael Shanks
Michael Wheeler
Michelle Scrogham
Michelle Welsh
Mike Amesbury
Mike Kane
Mike Reader
Mike Tapp
Mohammad Yasin
Nadia Whittome
Natalie Fleet
Natasha Irons
Naushabah Khan
Navendu Mishra
Neil Coyle
Neil Duncan-Jordan
Nesil Caliskan
Nia Griffith
Nicholas Dakin
Nick Smith
Nick Thomas-Symonds
Noah Law
Oliver Ryan
Olivia Bailey
Olivia Blake
Pam Cox
Pamela Nash
Pat McFadden
Patricia Ferguson
Patrick Hurley
Paul Davies
Paul Foster
Paul Waugh
Paula Barker
Paulette Hamilton
Perran Moon
Peter Dowd
Peter Kyle
Peter Lamb
Peter Swallow
Phil Brickell
Polly Billington
Preet Kaur Gill
Rachael Maskell
Rachel Blake
Rachel Hopkins
Rachel Taylor
Richard Baker
Richard Quigley
Rosie Duffield
Rupa Huq
Ruth Cadbury
Ruth Jones
Sadik Al-Hassan
Sally Jameson
Sam Carling
Sam Rushworth
Samantha Dixon
Samantha Niblett
Sarah Champion
Sarah Coombes
Sarah Edwards
Sarah Hall
Sarah Jones
Sarah Owen
Sarah Sackman
Satvir Kaur
Scott Arthur
Sean Woodcock
Seema Malhotra
Sharon Hodgson
Shaun Davies
Simon Lightwood
Simon Opher
Siobhain McDonagh
Sojan Joseph
Sonia Kumar
Stella Creasy
Stephanie Peacock
Stephen Kinnock
Stephen Timms
Steve Race
Steve Witherden
Steve Yemm
Sureena Brackenridge
Tahir Ali
Taiwo Owatemi
Tanmanjeet Singh Dhesi
Tim Roca
Toby Perkins
Tom Collins
Tom Hayes
Tom Rutland
Tonia Antoniazzi
Tony Vaughan
Torcuil Crichton
Torsten Bell
Tracy Gilbert
Tristan Osborne
Uma Kumaran
Valerie Vaz
Vicky Foxcroft
Warinder Juss
Wes Streeting
Will Stone
Yasmin Qureshi
Yuan Yang
Zubir Ahmed
Independent (9 votes)
Apsana Begum
Ayoub Khan
Imran Hussain
Jeremy Corbyn
John McDonnell
Rebecca Long Bailey
Richard Burgon
Shockat Adam
Zarah Sultana
Social Democratic & Labour Party (2 votes)
Claire Hanna
Colum Eastwood
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ALAN THE INFINITE from Parabella on Vimeo.
Alan’s excited! It’s his first day at Lamin’8– a stale, grey, humdrum lamination company. Oh boy! If he buckles up, stays focused and impresses Gary, his unhinged boss, this might just be a job for life. But all is not quite as it seems, and when Alan accidentally unleashes cosmic, supernatural forces into the office, he realises that fitting in at Lamin’8 is going to be infinitely more tricky than he ever could have dreamed.
CREDITS
Written & Directed by - Mikey Please & Dan Ojari
Produced by - Mikey Please, Dan Ojari, Alex Holberton & Kev Harwood
Executive Producers - Mikey Please & Dan Ojari, James Stevenson Bretton, Tom Stuart & Bart Yates
Music by - Ben Please & Beth Porter @ The Bookshop band
CAST
ALAN - Dan Ojari
GARY - Baker Terry
PREA - Theodora van Der Beek
SUSAN - Jessica Rayner
NEIL - Rob Carter
SCIENTIST - Elliot Dear
Sound Design - Adam Janota Bzowski, Ben Please & Dan Ojari
Sound Mastering - Simon Harris @ Offset
DOP - Simon Paul
Camera Assistant. - Giles Warner
Additional lighting - Mikey Please, Dan Ojari, Peter Elmore & Max Halstead
Lead Animators - Andy Biddle, Dan Gill, Steve Warne, Anthony Farquhar Smith, Mikey Please & Dan Ojari
Animators - James Carlisle, Luke George, Rachael Olga, Nick Black & Angie Palethorpe
Puppet Design - Mikey Please
Puppet Fabrication - Mikey Please, Adeena Grub, Rosie Tonkin & Thomas O’Meara
Rigging - Robin Jackson
Crowd Puppets design and fabrication - Adeena Grub and Natasha Wigoder
Set Design - Dan Ojari
Art Direction - Dan Ojari, Emma Rose & Kat Simpson
Modelmakers - Katy Haggerty-Marks, Becky Weston, Rachael Olga, Nick Black, Luke George, Campbell Hartley, Emily Suvanvej, Millie Tennant, Adeena Grubb, Antonia Trister, Jack Pratt, Rebecca Howell, Steph Marshall, Natasha Wigoder, Beatriz Dominguez, Sofia Rodriguez Serrano, Maria Crus, Mireia Mendez & Brin Frost
2D facial Animation - Mikey Please
Additional 2D - Mathias Sgard & Elliot Dear
Lead Compositor - Mikey Please
Additional compositing - Mathias Sgard, Dan Ojari, Simone Ghilardoti & Tom Fisher
Grade - Elroy Gaskin-Payne @ Onsight
Post Production Supervisor - Benjamin Lole
Post Production Manager - Mira Valcheva
Post Production Creative Supervisor - Quentin Vien
3D Modelling - Lisa George-Gilroy
Rig Removal & 3D facial tracking - Elipse FX
Production Support - Ali Albion
Recording Engineer - Robert Frank Hunter
Behind The Scenes Film - Joseph Eckworth
THANK YOU - Charlie Perkins, Matt Day, David Cann, David Lupsein, David Rodger, Katie-Mae Griffith, Lydia Larson, Cross Street Studios, Clapham Road Studios
A Parabella Studios & Blink Industries Film
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ALAN THE INFINITE from Parabella on Vimeo.
Alan’s excited! It’s his first day at Lamin’8– a stale, grey, humdrum lamination company. Oh boy! If he buckles up, stays focused and impresses Gary, his unhinged boss, this might just be a job for life. But all is not quite as it seems, and when Alan accidentally unleashes cosmic, supernatural forces into the office, he realises that fitting in at Lamin’8 is going to be infinitely more tricky than he ever could have dreamed.
CREDITS
Written & Directed by - Mikey Please & Dan Ojari
Produced by - Mikey Please, Dan Ojari, Alex Holberton & Kev Harwood
Executive Producers - Mikey Please & Dan Ojari, James Stevenson Bretton, Tom Stuart & Bart Yates
Music by - Ben Please & Beth Porter @ The Bookshop band
CAST
ALAN - Dan Ojari
GARY - Baker Terry
PREA - Theodora van Der Beek
SUSAN - Jessica Rayner
NEIL - Rob Carter
SCIENTIST - Elliot Dear
Sound Design - Adam Janota Bzowski, Ben Please & Dan Ojari
Sound Mastering - Simon Harris @ Offset
DOP - Simon Paul
Camera Assistant. - Giles Warner
Additional lighting - Mikey Please, Dan Ojari, Peter Elmore & Max Halstead
Lead Animators - Andy Biddle, Dan Gill, Steve Warne, Anthony Farquhar Smith, Mikey Please & Dan Ojari
Animators - James Carlisle, Luke George, Rachael Olga, Nick Black & Angie Palethorpe
Puppet Design - Mikey Please
Puppet Fabrication - Mikey Please, Adeena Grub, Rosie Tonkin & Thomas O’Meara
Rigging - Robin Jackson
Crowd Puppets design and fabrication - Adeena Grub and Natasha Wigoder
Set Design - Dan Ojari
Art Direction - Dan Ojari, Emma Rose & Kat Simpson
Modelmakers - Katy Haggerty-Marks, Becky Weston, Rachael Olga, Nick Black, Luke George, Campbell Hartley, Emily Suvanvej, Millie Tennant, Adeena Grubb, Antonia Trister, Jack Pratt, Rebecca Howell, Steph Marshall, Natasha Wigoder, Beatriz Dominguez, Sofia Rodriguez Serrano, Maria Crus, Mireia Mendez & Brin Frost
2D facial Animation - Mikey Please
Additional 2D - Mathias Sgard & Elliot Dear
Lead Compositor - Mikey Please
Additional compositing - Mathias Sgard, Dan Ojari, Simone Ghilardoti & Tom Fisher
Grade - Elroy Gaskin-Payne @ Onsight
Post Production Supervisor - Benjamin Lole
Post Production Manager - Mira Valcheva
Post Production Creative Supervisor - Quentin Vien
3D Modelling - Lisa George-Gilroy
Rig Removal & 3D facial tracking - Elipse FX
Production Support - Ali Albion
Recording Engineer - Robert Frank Hunter
Behind The Scenes Film - Joseph Eckworth
THANK YOU - Charlie Perkins, Matt Day, David Cann, David Lupsein, David Rodger, Katie-Mae Griffith, Lydia Larson, Cross Street Studios, Clapham Road Studios
A Parabella Studios & Blink Industries Film
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Clear Polarization in Second Level Supreme Court Decision Making
A very important look at how SCOTUS justice polarization is made clear through their decision within the shadow docket
Over the past five Supreme Court Terms the justices have issued 157 separate opinions from Court orders. These are cases that are not orally argued and do not receive full merits consideration. We do not necessarily know all the justices votes in these cases – only the ones the justices made public through signing onto separate opinions. Of these 157 opinions, only two include at least one…
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Inspiring lines from crime thriller writers
Here are some of the most inspiring words from the most well-known crime thriller writers, curated by the Imagahub review team.
You’re looking for your character who’s got the absolute most at stake, and that’s the person who you want your story to be about. ~Daniel Palmer
Keep a plate spinning until the final paragraph. Then let it fall. ~Unknown
Books aren’t written, they’re rewritten. Including your own. It is one of the hardest things to accept, especially after the seventh rewrite hasn’t quite done it… ~Michael Crichton
You can always edit a bad page. You can’t edit a blank page. ~Jodi Picoult
When you’re editing write the following words onto a Post-it note in big red letters and stick it on your monitor: ‘Who Cares?’. If something has no bearing on the story, leave it out. ~Stuart MacBride
If I waited for perfection, I would never write a word. ~Margaret Atwood
The best advice is the simplest. Write what you love. And do it everyday. There’s only one way to learn how to write, and that’s to write. ~Steve Berry
Don’t go into great detail describing places and things… You don’t want descriptions that bring the action, the flow of the story, to a standstill. ~Elmore Leonard
Read aloud. And not just your own work. Read good writing aloud.
Listen to the sound the words make. ~Unknown
A good novel tells us the truth about its hero; but a bad novel tells us the truth about its author. ~G K Chesterton
Write about what you never want to know. ~Michael Connelly
I always refer to style as sound. The sound of the writing. ~Elmore Leonard
Before you can be a writer you have to experience some things, see some of the world, go through things – love, heartbreak, and so on -, because you need to have something to say. ~John Grisham
Writing is work. It’s also gambling. You don’t get a pension plan. Other people can help you a bit, but essentially you’re on your own. Nobody is making you do this: you chose it, so don’t whine. ~Margaret Atwood
For more great thriller action content, check out Imagahub today.
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Sound Bites’ Favorite Albums of 2020
- In a bleak year, music comes through
The year 2020 didn’t leave much to celebrate - unless pandemics, racism and the crumbling of American democracy are your things.
For all the bad - and there was a ton of bad - there was also a ton of good music. What follows are capsule reviews of Sound Bites’ favorite studio releases of his least-favorite year; read the contemporary pieces in the blue links.
The Wood Brothers - Kingdom in My Mind
Born from jams, authorship of the 10 tracks - plus a short reprise - is credited to guitarist Oliver Wood, bassist/harmonica player Chris Wood and multi-instrumentalist Jano Rix. Taken as a whole, the 38-minute LP - the band’s best to date - is full of lively numbers even as the trio spends an inordinate time singing about dying on cuts such as “Little Bit Sweet,” “Don't Think about My Death” and “Satisfied.”
David Bromberg Band - Big Road
If eclecticism equaled commercialism, David Bromberg would be one of America’s biggest artists. But it doesn’t and he isn’t. And instead, Americana’s best-kept, 50-year-old secret keeps the quality high with Big Road.
Gospel, rock ‘n’ roll, bluegrass and country are represented and Bromberg sings it all like Willie Nelson with a baritone - sporting the same quaver, the same emotional breaks in his voice and the same conviction.
Sarah Jarosz - World on the Ground
These are songs about “Eve,” who wants to ensure the world doesn’t spoil her inner goodness; “Johnny,” who just needs a bit of luck, love and light; and “Maggie” whose Ford Escape will hopefully live up to its name. Sarah Jarosz’s subjects - and sometimes Jarosz herself - drink cold coffee and wine; they want to stay and they want to leave; and they wonder why they left or why they stayed. Whether working with I’m With Her or on her own, Jarosz is among the best working these days.
Tyler Childers - Long Violent History
Nothing about Tyler Childers’ Long Violent History should work. Yet everything does. It’s a statement LP, yet it's mostly instrumental. It finds Childers standing with Black Lives Matter against a backdrop of old-timey fiddle music. And it opens with a creepy rendering of “Send in the Clowns.”
Childers, who plays fiddle exclusively, is joined by a band that includes Mandolin Orange’s Andrew Marlin on mandolin and Josh Oliver on guitar; fiddler Jesse Wells; and Dom Flemons on virtually everything else including banjo, bones, quills, jug, bass drum and harmonica. Together, they burn through seven additional trad tunes such as the mournful waltz of “Midnight on the Water” and the celebratory high step of “Sludge River Stop,” before Childers makes his point on the title track.
Tim Heidecker - Fear of Death
On Fear of Death, Tim Heidecker flips the script.
No longer simply a comedian who happens to make music, Tim Heidecker, on his fifth solo LP since 2016, proves himself a fully fledged musician who happens to be funny in the intelligent way Procol Harum and Crash Test Dummies are funny. Musically derivative, Fear of Death derives wisely from the Mamas & the Papas, the Byrds, Widespread Panic and others; special shout out to Weyes Blood, whose harmony and co-lead vocals add immeasurably to the proceedings.
Steve Earle & the Dukes - Ghosts of West Virginia
Steve Earle’s emotions are raw on the entirety of Ghosts of West Virginia, on which he and the Dukes tell the story the Upper Branch Mine disaster and the Mountaineer State’s coal-mining history with bluegrass on “Union, God and Country;” miners’ fates on the hard country of “Black Lung;” a widow’s side of the story on the heart-wrenching, “If I Could See Your Face Again;” and bring native son Chuck Yeager into the mix on the hard-stompin’ rockabilly of “Fastest Man Alive.”
Robby Krieger - The Ritual Begins at Sundown
After 10 years of studio silence, Robby Krieger returns with a killer Frank Zappa album. OK, the Ritual Begins at Sundown is a Krieger album masquerading as a Zappa album. But it’s killer, indeed.
Fine-tuned on stages before being transferred to the studio, the eight originals and two covers bear all sorts of Zappa hallmarks like odd time signatures, quirky tempo shifts and an overarching, unconventional quality that keep them interesting over repeated spins.
Willie Nelson - First Rose of Spring
A melancholic collection of 11 numbers, Willie Nelson’s First Rose of Spring covers country themes like death (“Stealing Time” and the title track, a sequel to “He Stopped Loving Her Today”), doing crimes (Johnny Paycheck’s “I’m the Only Hell My Mama Ever Raised”) and doing time (Merle Haggard’s “I’ll Break Out Again Tonight”).
Ben Harper - Winter is for Lovers
Through the pieces have titles and demarcation between them, Ben Harper’s all-instrumental, lap-steel-only Winter is for Lovers is essentially a 30-minute suite to be taken in totality. Sparse though it may be, it never lags and is a fulfilling listen in any number of settings.
Yo-Yo Ma, Stuart Duncan, Edgar Meyer and Chris Thile feat. Aoife O’Donovan - Not Our First Goat Rodeo
No one player dominates the mostly instrumental proceedings as the quartet of Yo-Yo Ma, Stuart Duncan, Edgar Meyer and Chris Thile - with appearances from vocalist Aoife O’Donovan - works together to create long-bowed, deep grooves on “Every Note a Pearl,” which seems a good thematic statement for the supergroup’s second Goat Rodeo. Every one of these musicians is a certified genius, which means the music is occasionally too complicated for its own good. But those moments are few on the 45-minute recording and Not Our First Goat Rodeo will leave the listener hoping a decade doesn’t pass before this quintet gets back on the horse again.
Honorable mentions
Chris Smither - More from the Levee
Recorded in 2013, including a slew of reimagined pieces from his songbook and featuring appearances from Alan Toussaint, Louden Wainwright III and Morphine drummer Billy Conway, More from the Levee is vintage Chris Smither, literally and figuratively.
Jeremy Spencer - Live in the Studio
Spencer’s fourth album of 2020 was actually recorded in 2005 and finds the former Fleetwood Mac axeman playing the blues for which he is best known as opposed to the languid, mostly instrumental atmospherics that characterized his most-recent LPs. This is the Spencer of light-touch, Elmore James-inspired slide guitar and Elvis Presley-esque vocal phrasing working his way through 14 songs in just under 50 minutes.
12/28/20
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Random Quotes on Crime & Thriller Writing
Here are some random quotes from some of the greatest crime and thriller authors of all time.
‘The way to write a thriller is to ask a question at the beginning, and answer it at the end.’ Lee Child
‘Place the body near the beginning of your book—preferably on the first page, perhaps the first sentence.’ Louise Penny
‘I’m interested in starting stories at the moment of some crisis to see how the character deals with it.’ Paul Auster
‘Figure out what exactly is at stake, and how to establish it quickly. That’s your conflict.’ Katia Lief
‘I’m always pretending that I’m sitting across from somebody. I’m telling a story, and I don’t want them to get up until I’m finished.’ James Patterson
‘Life is about working out who the bad guy is.’ Sophie Hannah
‘The only writers who survive the ages are those who understand the need for action in a novel.’ Dean Koontz
‘People don’t read books to get to the middle. They read to get to the end.’ Mickey Spillane
‘I do extensive outlines before I write a single word.’ Jeffrey Deaver
‘I like to come up with a massive scale concept and throw in very ordinary characters because I think if you have a massive scale concept with massive scale characters they tend to cancel each other out. People have more fun if they can imagine how either themselves or the type of people they know would react in a bizarre situation. It’s a bit boring if you know how some highly trained soldier is going to react to a situation. It’s not very interesting compared to how someone who is an electrician or a schoolteacher might react to a situation.’ Christopher Brookmyre
'Readers have to feel you know what you're talking about.' Margaret Murphy
‘A man's grammar, like Caesar's wife, should not only be pure, but above suspicion of impurity.’ Edgar Allan Poe
'Chapters are shorter than they used to be, and I have to be creative about ways to keep the pace moving: varying my sentence length, making sure each chapter ends on a note of suspense, keeping excess narration to a minimum.’ Joseph Finder
My idead? ‘Headlines. The human heart. My deepest fears. The inner voice that says: if it scares you, it’ll scare readers too.’ Meg Gardiner
‘I’d have to say that most of my ideas originate with everyday anxieties. What if I forgot to lock the door? What if a horrific crime happened next door? What if my daughter didn’t show up at work? What if I woke up one day and the house was empty?’ Linwood Barclay
‘Ideas are not the hard part of writing. I have ideas all the time. The challenge is understanding which ideas are the most interesting and powerful and dramatic, and then finding the best way to bring them to life. It’s all in the execution, because the idea is where the work begins, not where it ends.’ Jeff Abbott
‘If you don't understand that story is character and not just idea, you will not be able to breathe life into even the most intriguing flash of inspiration.’ Elizabeth George
‘The character that lasts is an ordinary guy with some extraordinary qualities.’ Raymond Chandler
'You’re looking for your character who’s got the absolute most at stake, and that’s the person who you want your story to be about.' Daniel Palmer
'Books aren't written, they're rewritten. Including your own. It is one of the hardest things to accept, especially after the seventh rewrite hasn't quite done it...' Michael Crichton
‘You can always edit a bad page. You can't edit a blank page.’ Jodi Picoult
‘When you’re editing write the following words onto a Post-it note in big red letters and stick it on your monitor: ‘Who Cares?’. If something has no bearing on the story, leave it out.’ Stuart MacBride
'If I waited for perfection, I would never write a word.' Margaret Atwood
‘The best advice is the simplest. Write what you love. And do it everyday. There’s only one way to learn how to write and that’s to write.’ Steve Berry
‘Don’t go into great detail describing places and things… You don’t want descriptions that bring the action, the flow of the story, to a standstill.’ Elmore Leonard
‘A good novel tells us the truth about its hero; but a bad novel tells us the truth about its author.’ G K Chesterton
For more great riveting thriller content, check out www.hubbfi.com.
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Cast Sparkles in Stages' 'Oklahoma!'
Cast Sparkles in Stages’ ‘Oklahoma!’
By Lynn Venhaus
Managing Editor
The game-changing musical “Oklahoma!” is celebrating its 75th anniversary, and Stages St. Louis has honored that legacy with a rollicking hoedown. Their colorful collaboration burns bright with vivid characterizations.
The ensemble’s good cheer emanates. Based on Lynn Riggs’ 1931 play, “Green Grow the Lilacs,” the first book musical by Oscar Hammerstein II and…
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Commons Vote
On: Budget Responsibility Bill: Committee: Amendment 9
Ayes: 109 (96.3% Con, 1.8% DUP, 0.9% Lab, 0.9% Ind)
Noes: 366 (97.8% Lab, 1.9% Ind, 0.3% SDLP)
Absent: ~175
Day's business papers: 2024-9-4
Likely Referenced Bill: Budget Responsibility Bill
Description: A Bill to impose duties on the Treasury and the Office for Budget Responsibility in respect of the announcement of fiscally significant measures.
Originating house: Commons
Current house: Commons
Bill Stage: 3rd reading
Individual Votes:
Ayes
Conservative (105 votes)
Alan Mak
Alberto Costa
Alex Burghart
Alicia Kearns
Alison Griffiths
Andrew Bowie
Andrew Griffith
Andrew Mitchell
Andrew Murrison
Andrew Rosindell
Andrew Snowden
Aphra Brandreth
Ashley Fox
Ben Obese-Jecty
Ben Spencer
Bernard Jenkin
Blake Stephenson
Bob Blackman
Bradley Thomas
Caroline Dinenage
Caroline Johnson
Charlie Dewhirst
Chris Philp
Claire Coutinho
Damian Hinds
Danny Kruger
David Davis
David Mundell
David Reed
David Simmonds
Desmond Swayne
Edward Argar
Gagan Mohindra
Gareth Bacon
Gareth Davies
Gavin Williamson
Geoffrey Clifton-Brown
Geoffrey Cox
George Freeman
Graham Stuart
Greg Smith
Gregory Stafford
Harriet Cross
Harriett Baldwin
Helen Whately
Iain Duncan Smith
Jack Rankin
James Cartlidge
James Cleverly
James Wild
Jeremy Hunt
Jeremy Wright
Jerome Mayhew
Joe Robertson
John Cooper
John Glen
John Hayes
John Lamont
John Whittingdale
Joy Morrissey
Julia Lopez
Karen Bradley
Katie Lam
Kemi Badenoch
Kevin Hollinrake
Kieran Mullan
Kit Malthouse
Lewis Cocking
Lincoln Jopp
Louie French
Luke Evans
Mark Francois
Mark Garnier
Mark Pritchard
Martin Vickers
Matt Vickers
Mel Stride
Mike Wood
Mims Davies
Neil Hudson
Neil O'Brien
Neil Shastri-Hurst
Nick Timothy
Nigel Huddleston
Oliver Dowden
Patrick Spencer
Peter Bedford
Peter Fortune
Rebecca Harris
Rebecca Paul
Rebecca Smith
Richard Fuller
Richard Holden
Robbie Moore
Robert Jenrick
Saqib Bhatti
Sarah Bool
Shivani Raja
Simon Hoare
Steve Barclay
Stuart Andrew
Suella Braverman
Tom Tugendhat
Victoria Atkins
Wendy Morton
Democratic Unionist Party (2 votes)
Gavin Robinson
Jim Shannon
Labour (1 vote)
Julia Buckley
Independent (1 vote)
Iqbal Mohamed
Noes
Labour (358 votes)
Abena Oppong-Asare
Abtisam Mohamed
Adam Jogee
Adam Thompson
Afzal Khan
Al Carns
Alan Campbell
Alan Gemmell
Alan Strickland
Alex Baker
Alex Ballinger
Alex Barros-Curtis
Alex Davies-Jones
Alex Mayer
Alex McIntyre
Alex Norris
Alice Macdonald
Alison Hume
Alison McGovern
Alison Taylor
Alistair Strathern
Allison Gardner
Amanda Hack
Amanda Martin
Andrew Cooper
Andrew Gwynne
Andrew Lewin
Andrew Pakes
Andrew Ranger
Andrew Western
Andy MacNae
Andy McDonald
Andy Slaughter
Angela Eagle
Anna Dixon
Anna Gelderd
Anna McMorrin
Anna Turley
Anneliese Dodds
Anneliese Midgley
Antonia Bance
Ashley Dalton
Baggy Shanker
Bambos Charalambous
Barry Gardiner
Bayo Alaba
Beccy Cooper
Becky Gittins
Ben Coleman
Ben Goldsborough
Bill Esterson
Blair McDougall
Brian Leishman
Callum Anderson
Calvin Bailey
Cat Smith
Catherine Atkinson
Catherine Fookes
Catherine McKinnell
Catherine West
Charlotte Nichols
Chi Onwurah
Chris Curtis
Chris Elmore
Chris Hinchliff
Chris Kane
Chris McDonald
Chris Murray
Chris Vince
Chris Ward
Chris Webb
Christian Wakeford
Claire Hazelgrove
Claire Hughes
Clive Betts
Clive Efford
Clive Lewis
Connor Naismith
Connor Rand
Damien Egan
Dan Aldridge
Dan Carden
Dan Tomlinson
Daniel Francis
Daniel Zeichner
Danny Beales
Darren Jones
Darren Paffey
Dave Robertson
David Baines
David Burton-Sampson
David Pinto-Duschinsky
David Smith
David Taylor
Dawn Butler
Debbie Abrahams
Deirdre Costigan
Derek Twigg
Diana Johnson
Douglas Alexander
Douglas McAllister
Elaine Stewart
Ellie Reeves
Elsie Blundell
Emily Darlington
Emily Thornberry
Emma Foody
Emma Hardy
Emma Lewell-Buck
Emma Reynolds
Euan Stainbank
Fabian Hamilton
Feryal Clark
Fleur Anderson
Florence Eshalomi
Frank McNally
Fred Thomas
Gareth Snell
Gareth Thomas
Gen Kitchen
Georgia Gould
Gill Furniss
Gill German
Gordon McKee
Graeme Downie
Graham Stringer
Grahame Morris
Gregor Poynton
Gurinder Singh Josan
Harpreet Uppal
Heidi Alexander
Helen Hayes
Helena Dollimore
Henry Tufnell
Hilary Benn
Ian Lavery
Ian Murray
Imogen Walker
Irene Campbell
Jack Abbott
Jacob Collier
Jade Botterill
Jake Richards
James Asser
James Frith
James Murray
James Naish
Jas Athwal
Jayne Kirkham
Jeevun Sandher
Jeff Smith
Jen Craft
Jenny Riddell-Carpenter
Jess Asato
Jess Phillips
Jessica Morden
Jessica Toale
Jim Dickson
Jim McMahon
Jo Platt
Jo Stevens
Jo White
Joani Reid
Jodie Gosling
Joe Morris
Johanna Baxter
John Grady
John Healey
John Slinger
John Whitby
Jon Pearce
Jon Trickett
Jonathan Brash
Jonathan Davies
Jonathan Hinder
Josh Dean
Josh Fenton-Glynn
Josh MacAlister
Josh Newbury
Josh Simons
Julia Buckley
Julie Minns
Juliet Campbell
Justin Madders
Kanishka Narayan
Karin Smyth
Karl Turner
Kate Dearden
Kate Osamor
Kate Osborne
Katie White
Katrina Murray
Kevin Bonavia
Kevin McKenna
Kim Johnson
Kim Leadbeater
Kirith Entwistle
Kirsteen Sullivan
Kirsty McNeill
Laura Kyrke-Smith
Lauren Edwards
Lauren Sullivan
Laurence Turner
Lee Barron
Lee Pitcher
Leigh Ingham
Lewis Atkinson
Liam Byrne
Liam Conlon
Lilian Greenwood
Lillian Jones
Linsey Farnsworth
Liz Kendall
Liz Twist
Lizzi Collinge
Lloyd Hatton
Lola McEvoy
Louise Haigh
Louise Jones
Lucy Powell
Lucy Rigby
Luke Akehurst
Luke Charters
Luke Murphy
Luke Myer
Luke Pollard
Margaret Mullane
Maria Eagle
Marie Tidball
Mark Ferguson
Mark Hendrick
Mark Sewards
Mark Tami
Markus Campbell-Savours
Marsha De Cordova
Martin McCluskey
Martin Rhodes
Mary Glindon
Matt Bishop
Matt Rodda
Matt Turmaine
Matt Western
Matthew Patrick
Maureen Burke
Maya Ellis
Meg Hillier
Melanie Onn
Melanie Ward
Miatta Fahnbulleh
Michael Payne
Michael Shanks
Michael Wheeler
Michelle Scrogham
Michelle Welsh
Mike Amesbury
Mike Reader
Mike Tapp
Mohammad Yasin
Nadia Whittome
Natalie Fleet
Natasha Irons
Naushabah Khan
Navendu Mishra
Neil Coyle
Neil Duncan-Jordan
Nesil Caliskan
Nia Griffith
Nicholas Dakin
Nick Smith
Nick Thomas-Symonds
Noah Law
Oliver Ryan
Olivia Bailey
Olivia Blake
Pam Cox
Pamela Nash
Pat McFadden
Patricia Ferguson
Patrick Hurley
Paul Davies
Paul Foster
Paul Waugh
Paula Barker
Paulette Hamilton
Perran Moon
Peter Dowd
Peter Kyle
Peter Lamb
Peter Prinsley
Peter Swallow
Phil Brickell
Polly Billington
Preet Kaur Gill
Rachael Maskell
Rachel Blake
Rachel Hopkins
Rachel Taylor
Richard Baker
Richard Quigley
Rosie Wrighting
Rupa Huq
Ruth Cadbury
Ruth Jones
Sadik Al-Hassan
Sally Jameson
Sam Carling
Sam Rushworth
Samantha Dixon
Samantha Niblett
Sarah Champion
Sarah Coombes
Sarah Edwards
Sarah Hall
Sarah Jones
Sarah Owen
Sarah Russell
Satvir Kaur
Scott Arthur
Sean Woodcock
Seema Malhotra
Sharon Hodgson
Shaun Davies
Simon Lightwood
Simon Opher
Siobhain McDonagh
Sojan Joseph
Sonia Kumar
Stella Creasy
Stephanie Peacock
Stephen Kinnock
Stephen Timms
Steve Race
Steve Witherden
Steve Yemm
Sureena Brackenridge
Tahir Ali
Taiwo Owatemi
Tanmanjeet Singh Dhesi
Tim Roca
Toby Perkins
Tom Collins
Tom Hayes
Tom Rutland
Tonia Antoniazzi
Tony Vaughan
Torcuil Crichton
Torsten Bell
Tracy Gilbert
Tristan Osborne
Tulip Siddiq
Uma Kumaran
Valerie Vaz
Vicky Foxcroft
Wes Streeting
Will Stone
Yasmin Qureshi
Yuan Yang
Zubir Ahmed
Independent (7 votes)
Apsana Begum
Imran Hussain
Jeremy Corbyn
John McDonnell
Rebecca Long Bailey
Richard Burgon
Zarah Sultana
Social Democratic & Labour Party (1 vote)
Colum Eastwood
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Empirical SCOTUS: Justices’ separate opinions suggest high polarization outside the regular merits docket
Over the past five Supreme Court terms, the justices have issued 157 separate “opinions relating to orders.” These orders, which are issued without oral arguments and without full merits consideration, typically fall into three categories: denials of cert petitions, rulings on emergency requests for relief in pending cases, and summary reversals of lower court decisions. We do not necessarily know all of the justices’ votes on these orders – only the ones the justices choose to make public through a brief note of their dissent or by signing onto a separate opinion. But an analysis of the publicly disclosed votes in such cases shows a high degree of polarization among the justices. Of the 157 separate opinions relating to orders that have been issued in the past five years, only two were joined by at least one conservative and one liberal justice. Both were joint dissents from Justices Neil Gorsuch and Sonia Sotomayor in orders relating to criminal cases. The other 155 separate opinions were either solo-authored or were joined by justices from the same ideological camp.
In some ways, the justices’ positions in these non-merits rulings are the best ways to gauge their ideologies relative to one another. That’s because the decision to write separately, or to join another justice’s separate opinion, is truly discretionary. Justices do not need to write anything on these orders – or even publicly record their votes – so they author or sign onto separate opinions only when they feel especially compelled to do so. Because these cases are not on the court’s merits docket, none of the strategic posturing concerns are in play. With this in mind, we can get a much clearer position of the justices’ actual positions on discrete issues. Steve Vladeck recently showed how this is the case with his analysis of “shadow docket” decisions where the solicitor general plays a role.
How were the justices aligned in their separate opinions relating to orders over the past five terms? The following chart shows the opinion counts from each permutation of justices, including solo authorships.
Click to enlarge.
As mentioned above, the only cross-ideological grouping came from the two opinions – both authored by Gorsuch and joined by Sotomayor – dissenting from cert denials in Hester v. United States and Stuart v. Alabama.
Sotomayor was the most active justice in these separate opinions. The following chart breaks down the justices’ separate opinion totals (the opinions they joined as well as authored) by opinion type.
Click to enlarge.
Justice Clarence Thomas was right behind Sotomayor in terms of overall opinion participation. That’s not surprising: Thomas authored the highest number of separate merits opinions this past term and tends to be the most prolific dissenter on the Roberts court. Among the justices who sat on the court for all of the past five terms, Chief Justice John Roberts and Justice Elena Kagan were the least involved in separate opinions relating to orders and were less involved even than Gorsuch and Justice Brett Kavanaugh, who both joined the court in the middle of this five-term period.
Sotomayor appears to dominate most metrics for separate opinions relating to orders, though. Along with signing onto the most separate opinions during the five-term period, she also authored more of these separate opinions than any other justice.
Click to enlarge.
We can also look at the justices’ separate authorship on a term-by-term basis, as the graph below depicts.
Click to enlarge.
Much of Sotomayor’s activity in this area stems from her regular dissents from emergency orders the court issues in death penalty cases. Indeed, separate opinions in death penalty cases are the most frequent opinions relating to orders overall, as the graph below shows. But capital punishment is by no means the only issue that garners a significant number of opinions relating to orders.
Click to enlarge.
Along with issues of criminal justice, on which Sotomayor has become the most vocal justice, Thomas is deeply engaged and vocal in cases dealing with First and Second Amendment rights as well as in cases dealing with Chevron deference to agency decision-making. Several areas that have drawn a mixed bag of authorship of opinions relating to orders include election law, immigration, eminent domain and Article III jurisdiction.
One other metric relating to the justices’ participation in these separate opinions deals with the length of the opinions. The following graph shows the average word length for the justices’ separate opinions relating to orders.
Click to enlarge.
Thomas, on average, authored the lengthiest separate opinions by far, followed by Sotomayor and Alito, while Roberts and Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg authored the shortest such opinions on average. Thomas authored the single longest opinion relating to an order during this period, a dissent from the denial of Second Amendment petition Rogers v. Grewal (6,200 words). The two next-longest opinions came from Sotomayor relating to two death penalty petitions: Arthur v. Dunn (5,572 words) and Elmore v. Holbrook (4,534 words). Rounding out the top five, Alito authored lengthy opinions relating to the First Amendment petition Stormans v. Wiesman (4,449 words) and the death penalty petition Murphy v. Collier (4,376 words). All five of these lengthy opinions were dissents.
There is much to be learned from the justices’ separate opinion practices in these cases. The justices’ ideological levelling – with Roberts leading the way as an unpredictable vote in high-profile merits decisions – that has been described so often at the end of the 2019-20 term may not tell all of the story. These separate opinions, some of the only truly discretionary decisions that we get to see from the justices, show that the justices may be more polarized than ever before. Sotomayor and Thomas are the leading voices in these opinions, though regarding vastly different issues. If the justices have any sway with their separate opinions relating to orders, they will convince their colleagues to take up these issues in future cert petitions and change the direction of the law according to their own vision.
This post was originally published at Empirical SCOTUS.
The post Empirical SCOTUS: Justices’ separate opinions suggest high polarization outside the regular merits docket appeared first on SCOTUSblog.
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Psychological crime and thriller quotes to get you thinking
If you’ve been searching for the greatest psychological crime and thriller quotes ever, you’ve come to the right place. The Imagahub review team has curated the best quotes to perfectly articulate the field of crime and thriller writing.
‘The first chapter sells the book; the last chapter sells the next book.’ Mickey Spillane
'Readers have to feel you know what you're talking about.' Margaret Murphy
‘A man's grammar, like Caesar's wife, should not only be pure, but above suspicion of impurity.’ Edgar Allan Poe
'Chapters are shorter than they used to be, and I have to be creative about ways to keep the pace moving: varying my sentence length, making sure each chapter ends on a note of suspense, keeping excess narration to a minimum.’ Joseph Finder
My idead? ‘Headlines. The human heart. My deepest fears. The inner voice that says: if it scares you, it’ll scare readers too.’ Meg Gardiner
‘I’d have to say that most of my ideas originate with everyday anxieties. What if I forgot to lock the door? What if a horrific crime happened next door? What if my daughter didn’t show up at work? What if I woke up one day and the house was empty?’ Linwood Barclay
‘Ideas are not the hard part of writing. I have ideas all the time. The challenge is understanding which ideas are the most interesting and powerful and dramatic, and then finding the best way to bring them to life. It’s all in the execution, because the idea is where the work begins, not where it ends.’ Jeff Abbott
‘If you don't understand that story is character and not just idea, you will not be able to breathe life into even the most intriguing flash of inspiration.’ Elizabeth George
‘The character that lasts is an ordinary guy with some extraordinary qualities.’ Raymond Chandler
'You’re looking for your character who’s got the absolute most at stake, and that’s the person who you want your story to be about.' Daniel Palmer
'Books aren't written, they're rewritten. Including your own. It is one of the hardest things to accept, especially after the seventh rewrite hasn't quite done it...' Michael Crichton
‘You can always edit a bad page. You can't edit a blank page.’ Jodi Picoult
‘When you’re editing write the following words onto a Post-it note in big red letters and stick it on your monitor: ‘Who Cares?’. If something has no bearing on the story, leave it out.’ Stuart MacBride
'If I waited for perfection, I would never write a word.' Margaret Atwood
‘The best advice is the simplest. Write what you love. And do it everyday. There’s only one way to learn how to write and that’s to write.’ Steve Berry
‘Don’t go into great detail describing places and things… You don’t want descriptions that bring the action, the flow of the story, to a standstill.’ Elmore Leonard
‘A good novel tells us the truth about its hero; but a bad novel tells us the truth about its author.’ G K Chesterton
‘Write about what you never want to know.' Michael Connelly
‘I always refer to style as sound. The sound of the writing.’ Elmore Leonard
‘Before you can be a writer you have to experience some things, see some of the world, go through things – love, heartbreak, and so on -, because you need to have something to say.’ John Grisham
‘Writing is work. It’s also gambling. You don’t get a pension plan. Other people can help you a bit, but essentially you’re on your own. Nobody is making you do this: you chose it, so don’t whine. Margaret Atwood
If you love anything thriller related, then check out the great psychological content at Imagahub today.
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Costa Blanca Bowls Roundup - 20 Oct 18 has been published at http://www.theleader.info/2018/10/20/costa-blanca-bowls-roundup-20-oct-18/
New Post has been published on http://www.theleader.info/2018/10/20/costa-blanca-bowls-roundup-20-oct-18/
Costa Blanca Bowls Roundup - 20 Oct 18
A Double Six proves unlucky for El Cid at Monte Mar By Paul Trunchion Sitting top of the league with 2 wins El Cid travelled to Monte Mar hoping to build on their good start to the Winter League. Out of 90 ends El Cid won 50 which should result in a win but dropping a 6 on two tight games proved very costly. Over the 5 Rinks Monte Mar took 3 wins pipping El Cid by 1 shot for shot difference and resulting in a 8-4 defeat. Stars for El Cid were the two all ladies teams of Betty Anderson, Geraldine Scutt, Hazel Brown and Yvonne Briden with a 20-11 win and Ros Dingle, Shirley Payne, Anita Randall and Pat Metcalfe winning 18 – 13. Well done to Monte Mar and must do better for El Cid. Next week sees El Cid back on the coach to Greenlands. Stewart Beattie AWAY SUCCESS FOR THE SWORDS! Good day for the Swords again on Monday, travelling to Finca Guila and coming away with 8-2 win (80 shots to 47)and a win on the Challenger Rink. In the scoring rinks best result went to Alan Hall, Jim Sissens and Ian Brown romping away to a 31-6 win. Wins also for Betty Anderson, Hazel Brown and Jill Glastonbury 20-14 and John Carr, Clive Bidel and Paul Whitmee 18-11. In the last scoring rink Pat Coburn, Paul Trunchion and Alan Ferrand were all square in to the 16th end, holding 3 to go ahead in the 16th only to see Finca’s Marjorie Parnham fire and take the jack back for 3 shots. No way back sadly and they lost 16-11. Big win for the Challengers, Dave Forret, Stuart Branch (who says this will no doubt surprise and please all his UK Mainland bowling friends!) with Stewart Beattie taking the game 27-12. Our Friendly losing out 18-11 on the ever challenging Rink 1! Next weeks match is now on Tuesday afternoon and sees the Swords take on BBC Tigers at El Cid. COME ON THE SWORDS! COUNTRY BOWLS CLUB Country Bowls ‘Cubs’ headed out to La Siesta for their second game of the season and for many of the team their first away league game. After a shaky start on all but one rink the newly formed ‘Cubs’ started their comeback. Winning 10 – 2 against the ‘Silvers’ with 4 rinks winning in a nail biting finish and the one loss that went to the last end. A very proud moment for the club and the team captain after a hugely successful summer programme introducing new players to the sport. The ‘Geckos’ in the B division finished with a 6 – 6 draw against San Luis ‘Leopards’ and the ‘Flamingos’ on Monday got off to a great start beating Emerald Isle ‘Saturns’ with a score of 8-4. All in all a positive start to the season for Country Bowls. For any information on Country Bowls please ring 966191552/635086742 or e-mail
[email protected] . Additionally visit our website www.countrybowlsmurcia.com for our regularly updated news. El Rancho Bowls Club Monday found two of our teams playing each other in the Voyager league, the Palominos being the home team, playing the Raiders. The Raiders proved to be the stronger team on the day 4 rinks with the other drawn, but the scores were close on most of the rinks, so all had to battle for the win, a great scenario for a morning’s fun. In the afternoon the Pintos were at Quesada playing the Rubies and had a good afternoons bowling, great company and a good result. Taking 3 rinks and drawing one, a fine end to an away fixture, a good start to the league. Friday morning found the Rangers playing host to Vistabella Conquistadors, playing very well to take full advantage of the home mat in taking the rinks by 4 to 1 and the overall shot by a good margin. Ngaio Baldwin, Pete Baldwin and Malc Elmore 33-14. Kay Griffith, Gary Dunstone and Brian Taylor 13-16. Dolly Ford, Ann Abbott and David Wright 31-05. Ron Edwards, John Richards and Mike Ager 27-09. Lesley day, Janet Wright and Bob Day 17-15. In the afternoon The Broncos were at home to the Horadada Royals, also having a good win, taking 4 rinks to Royal’s 1 and the overall shots by a reasonable margin.Jan Bright, Peter Bagwell and Jean Bagwell 20-13. Graham day, Sheila Cox and Mike Cox 24-9. Ann C Taylor, Denise Morgan and Keith Longshaw 16-15. Brian Harris, Bob Easthope and Rob Clark 17-15. Barbara Jones, Pam Harris and Geoff Jones 10-19. Meanwhile the Mustangs were at Emerald Isle playing the Cavaliers, whilst we came away with just the one rink, we had fun though the bowling was a little challenging. For further membership information contact Carolyn Harris on 966774316 or at
[email protected]. Or Brian Taylor on 9654077093 or at
[email protected] Emerald Isle Bowls Club ELWYN MORRIS Sat the Emerald Isle ladies played San Miguel ladies and the home team took the spoils by 3-2 and an aggregate of 85-78, the winners were M Riley M Whitelock C Parsons M Willicott 16-15, C Thomas B Doran J Westall 24-13, M Elliott B Eldred P Rhodes 17-13. Good game followed by a good meal, well done Ladies Sunday we had our annual visit from the St James Gate boys playing for The Perpetual SUN Trophy (who named it that) and the visitors came out on top with a clean sweep 4-0, so The Gate take the trophy back from the Isle, for another year. We also had some Yorkshire crown green bowlers over and they won their two games. Mind you they would be used to the conditions endured during game, maybe that gave them the edge, but well done all four of you. Monday saw the Titans play at home against La Siesta Apollos. The Titans won 10-2 aggregate 109-67 the winners were D Jones G Odell J Smyth 33-16, M Riley M Veale M Odell 22-7, D Rhodes K Jolliffe D Gerrard 21-16 S Johnson P Coffey I Brewster 18-12 The Neptunes were at home against the E I Moonrakers and they came out on top by 9-3 aggregate of 111-81. Winners were M Whitelock J Westall C Warner 25-10, R Adams L Vincent H Rhodes 25-16, C Ayling S Wickens D Donovan 23-16, B Doran C Thomas M Thomas drew 21-21. For the Moonrakers winners L Harris G Ponsford P Dix 23-14,L Burns T Dix E Bennett drew 21-21 The Saturns travelled to Country Bowls Flamingos and the home team won the game by 8-4 aggregate 106-73 winners were J Elliott G Smith R Ede 24-16, R Andrews S Adams J Mulloy 19-16 Wed took the Emerald Isle to San Miguel in the Winter and the home team were the winners 10-2 aggregate 78-75, winning rink was D Rhodes C Smyth M Odell C Lindgren 26-8 Friday the Cavaliers played El Rancho at home and they won 10-2 aggregate of 120-66 winners were B Kavanagh P Coffey S Kavanagh 32-7, P Rhodes J Pooley AMS 25-9, B Taylor C Smyth C Lindgren 26-5 S Johnson R White I Brewster 31-22 The Claymores travelled to San Luis Lions and the home team won 10-2 aggregate 66-111 Winners were M Whitelock C Parsons M Stacey 22-!9 The Outlaws played at home against Vistabella Swingers and won 8-4 aggregate 84-82 winners were L Harris G Ponsford P Dix 23-12, I Hughes D Close P Willicott 17-14, J Close T Dix EBennett 17-16 The Roundheads travelled to Greenlands Elms, beaten 10-2, aggregate 64-119, winners were D Martin R Andrews J Mulloy 22-14 Greenlands Bowls Club In the Voyager Division The Chestnuts were at home to Vistabella Buggies. Final scores were - Total shots for - 67. total shots against - 91. Points for - 2. points against - 10. Winning rink was..........Derek Hart, Brian White, skip John Newell. 19 shots to 14. After this match it was the turn of our other two teams from the Discovery Division, The Maples being the Away team and the Sycamores the home team. Final score was - total shots for - 76. total shots against 116. Points for - 2. Points against - 10 Winning team for the Sycamores - Phil Lockley, Mary Lockley, skip Mel Brown. - 28 shots to 18. Winning rinks for the Maples - Sally Cordell, Roy Cordell, skip Dave Webb. - 20 shots to 9. Avril Toozer, Joe Ridley, skip Diane Ridley. - 24 shots to 19. Janet Webb, Derek Toozer, skip John Obrien. - 30 shots to 7. Linda Hier, Veronica Sale, skip Derek Sale. - 24 shots to 13. On Thursday the club were hosts to Basingstoke B.C. The weather stayed fine and sunny which obviously pleased our visitors There was some very competitive games which resulted in two winning rinks to Basingstoke and four to the hosts. We all sat down to soup and sandwiches after the game, thanks to the owners of Greenlands for providing the meal once again. We look forward to next years visit from the friendly club of Basingstoke. In the Southern League C Div, the Elms were at home to Emerald Isle Roundheads. Final scores ..........Total shots for - 119. Total shots against - 64. Points for - 10. Points against - 2. Winning rinks - Doreen Watt, Terry Powel, skip Dave Thompson. - 35 shots to 6. Carol Stobbart, Vic Young, skip John Newell. 24 shots to 10. Margaret Hirst, Jean Thompson, skip Graham Watt. - 20 shots to 13. Dave Field, Neville Pulfer, skip John Dowell. - 26 shots to 13. In the Southern League A Div The Oaks were away to Vistabella Picadores. Final score was ....Total shots for - 91. shots against - 84. Points for - 8. Points against - 4. Winning rinks were - Averil Toozer, Linda Hier, skip John Obrien. - 18 shots to 11. Sally Cordell, Roy Cordell, skip Dave Webb. - 24 shots to 14. Janet Webb, Margaret Dewar, skip Jeff Hier. - 18 shots to 17. Greenlands are accepting new members so if you are new to the game or an existing Player please contact Chris Dewar on tel 698418987 or email
[email protected] or you can visit our website https://greenlands-bowls.wixsite.com/greenlandsbowlsclub. Horadada Bowls Club By Irene Graham This week is the start of the two league matches per week for us and Monday wasn’t a good day at the office for the first match of the Discovery Division. We were at home to San Miguel Dalmations and after a poor start we found it difficult to keep up to a better side on the day. However we did have one winning rink and that was: Irene Graham, Les Davies and Terry Hucknall. Well played Guys. The final score was 75 shots for and 95 against, giving us 2 points to San Miguels’s 10. Friday, in the Southern League, wasn’t a great deal better. We were playing away to El Rancho. This is not one of our favourite playing venues, it is difficult to adjust to the speed of the green. In saying that, some of the rinks had very close scores and it could have gone either way. One rink we only lost by 1 shot and another by 2 shots. Our 1 winning rink was: Irene Graham, Alan Miller and Brian Eatough. This was actually a very good match for us although the final scores don’t show that. Total shots for 71 to 87 against and the overall points were 2 for Horadada and 10 for El Rancho. The match was played in a very friendly, sporting manner. Horadada offers a warm welcome to new or experienced bowlers, and provides the necessary equipment. Our roll-up days for this friendly club are Tuesday, Thursday and Sunday mornings. Please contact Fred Trigwell on 659139129 for more information
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Derek Trucks and Susan Tedeschi (Photo by Derek McCabe)
Tedeschi Trucks Band has got some serious soul. The blues rock group is fresh out of the studio, having just finished their latest record. TTB is also touring through the end of the year and although it never stops, guitarist Derek Trucks likes it that way.
“When you’re on the road and the wind’s at your back, everything feels inspired. It’s constantly trying to keep the inspiration there and make everything fresh and new,” he said of being a musician. “Our band makes music in a really honest way.”
Formed in 2010, the band is led by Trucks on guitar and his wife, Susan Tedeschi on guitar and vocals as well as Kofi Burbridge, keyboards and flute; Tyler Greenwell, drums and percussion; J.J. Johnson, drums and percussion; Tim Lefebvre, bass guitar; Mike Mattison, harmony vocals; Mark Rivers, harmony vocals; Alecia Chakour, harmony vocals; Kebbi Williams, saxophone; Elizabeth Lea, trombone; and Ephraim Owens, trumpet. Their debut album, Revelator (2011) won the 2012 Grammy award for Best Blues Album, featuring songs like “Come See About Me,” “Don’t Let Me Slide,” “Midnight in Harlem,” “Bound for Glory” and “Simple Things.” They have since released three studio and two live albums.
Tedeschi Trucks Band (Photo by Stuart Levine Photography)
Trucks met his wife Susan in New Orleans when she was touring with The Allman Brothers Band. Rumor has it they fell in love over Chicago blues.
“We had a musical connection right out of the gates,” he said of their first meeting, which eventually grew into a marriage with two children and a successful professional collaboration. “In a lot of ways when you’re in a band, it feels a bit like a marriage anyway, so it’s a natural extension to me to work with my wife. It’s pretty amazing getting to do what we do together.”
Having grown up around music, it must have been his destiny when at 9 years old, Trucks bought his first guitar at a yard sale for $5. He took to playing right away and recalls a time when his parents took him and his brother to an annual Jazz Fest in Jacksonville, FL, where he saw Ray Charles and Miles Davis.
“That was one of my first musical memories, but the first show I ever went to was when I was 6 years old. I wanted to see Michael Jackson’s Thriller tour and I fell asleep for some of it,” said Trucks, whose parents introduced him to great music early on, including the likes of Ray Charles and BB King. “I feel fortunate to have witnessed some of that. Just hearing my dad tell stories about the power of that music and the look in his eyes when he spoke about it, I knew it was important. That’s the first music that really hit me as a child.”
Trucks’ musical lineage runs deep. In 1999, he became an official member of the Allman Brothers band, an opportunity he never thought would come. Fifteen years since joining the legendary group, he was still playing right alongside the greats, something he never envisioned would last for so long.
“I learned a lot right out of the gate, even to the very last day. I had to think about music and keeping the integrity at all times,” he said. “It was an amazing way for the group to go out. Our last show was in 2014 and it was pretty powerful.”
Of the three most influential records he listened to growing up, Trucks cites Derek and the Dominos’ Live at The Fillmore and Layla album, and Elmore James’ The Best of Elmore James. Those artists, he says were there from the beginning, as he cut his teeth to emulate Eric Clapton.
“There’s some beautiful material on there and the Allmans’ record also shaped a lot of how I thought about music,” said Trucks. “Elmore James’ Electric Slide songbook was the catalyst for everything that came after that. They were good building blocks.”
Gearing up for TTB’s eighth annual residency at the Beacon Theatre, Trucks said it is like going back to home turf for the band. March of 2000 was the first year that Trucks did a run with the Allman Brothers at the Beacon. It was also the same time he and Tedeschi had their first child.
Derek Trucks (Photos by Greg Logan)
Susan Tedeschi
“He was up in the dressing room during the performance, just a few weeks old. Everyone who is a part of the Beacon is home to us,” he said. “We really know the place and when we get there, it’s kind of like checking in.”
Trucks shared that a lot of the music on the band’s new record, as well as previous ones, were directly inspired by their children, which he believes is the same for every parent.
“People write songs out of things they’re going through. My dad always emphasized that it’s not how much you play, but how you play a single note and the space in between. Listen as much as you can and find what inspires you. That’s what’s always driven the great musicians,” he advised. “Hearing how they talk about the music that inspires them; they light up and that’s what’s going to carry you.”
Tedeschi Trucks Band will perform at the Beacon Theatre in Manhattan on Oct. 5, 6, 9, 10, 12 and 13. For tickets to the show, visit www.tedeschitrucksband.com.
Derek Trucks chats with Long Island Weekly's Jennifer Fauci about touring with Tedeschi Trucks Band. Catch him at the Beacon Theatre on Oct. 5, 6, 9, 10, 12 and 13! Tedeschi Trucks Band has got some serious soul. The blues rock group is fresh out of the studio, having just finished their latest record.
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Libri in tv
La tua settimana letteraria a portata di telecomando.
Lunedì 17 settembre 2018
Diario di una schiappa (ore 20:25 – Boing)
GENERE: Commedia | ANNO: 2010 | REGIA: Thor Freudenthal
Tratto dal romanzo illustrato omonimo di Jeff Kinney.
Dal tramonto all'alba (ore 21:10 - Paramount Channel)
GENERE: Horror | ANNO: 1996 | REGIA: Robert Rodriguez
Tratto da un racconto di Robert Kuzman.
Insider - Dietro la verità (ore 23:28 – Iris)
GENERE: Drammatico | ANNO: 1999 | REGIA: Michael Mann
Ispirato all'articolo "The Man who Knew Too Much" di Marie Brenner, pubblicato su Vanity Fair.
Martedì 18 settembre 2018
Venere in visone (ore 7:50 - Cine Sony)
GENERE: Drammatico | ANNO: 1960 | REGIA: Daniel Mann
Tratto dal romanzo 'Butterfield 8' di John O' Hara.
La bisbetica domata (ore 9:55 - Cine Sony)
GENERE: Commedia | ANNO: 1967 | REGIA: Franco Zeffirelli
Tratto dall'omonima commedia di William Shakespeare.
Sandokan alla riscossa (ore 11:20 - Rai Movie)
GENERE: Avventura | ANNO: 1964 | REGIA: Luigi Capuano
Tratto dall’omonimo romanzo di Emilio Salgari.
Tre colonne in cronaca (ore 12:53 – Iris)
GENERE: Drammatico | ANNO: 1989 | REGIA: Carlo Vanzina
Tratto dall’omonimo romanzo di Corrado Augias.
Torna El Grinta (ore 16:34 - Rete 4)
GENERE: Western | ANNO: 1975 | REGIA: Stuart Millar
Tratto dal romanzo "Il Grinta" di Charles Portis.
I giorni dell'ira (ore 21:00 – Iris)
GENERE: Western | ANNO: 1967 | REGIA: Tonino Valerii
Tratto dal romanzo "Der Tod ritt Dienstags" di Ron Barker.
La ciociara (ore 21:05 - Tv 2000)
GENERE: Drammatico | ANNO: 1960 | REGIA: Vittorio De Sica
Tratto dal romanzo omonimo di Alberto Moravia.
I Love Shopping (ore 21:10 - Paramount Channel)
GENERE: Commedia | ANNO: 2008 | REGIA: P.J. Hogan
Tratto dal romanzo "I love shopping", con elementi di “I love shopping a New York”, rispettivamente primo e secondo romanzo della serie “I love shopping” di Sophie Kinsella.
Beyond (ore 21:15 - Rai 5)
GENERE: Drammatico | ANNO: 2011 | REGIA: Pernilla August
Tratto dall'omonimo romanzo dell'autrice svedese-finlandese Susanna Alakoski.
Jumanji (ore 21:25 – Nove)
GENERE: Fantasy | ANNO: 1995 | REGIA: Joe Johnston
Liberamente ispirato al romanzo "Jumanji" di Chris Van Allsburg.
Qualcuno come te (ore 23:00 - Paramount Channel)
GENERE: Commedia | ANNO: 2001 | REGIA: Tony Goldwyn
Tratto dal romanzo "Animal Husbandry", opera prima di Laura Zigman.
L'ultimo dei mohicani (ore 23:30 – Spike)
GENERE: Avventura | ANNO: 1992 | REGIA: Michael Mann
Liberamente tratto dal romanzo omonimo di James Fenimore.
Mercoledì 19 settembre 2018
Cartagine in fiamme (ore 8:45 - Rai Movie)
GENERE: Avventura | ANNO: 1959 | REGIA: Carmine Gallone
Tratto dall’omonimo romanzo di Emilio Salgari.
California (ore 15:35 - Rai Movie)
GENERE: Western | ANNO: 1977 | REGIA: Michele Lupo
Tratto dall’omonimo racconto di Roberto Leoni e Franco Bucceri.
Harry Potter e la Pietra Filosofale (ore 21:20 - Italia 1)
GENERE: Fantasy | ANNO: 2001 | REGIA: Chris Columbus
Tratto dall’omonimo romanzo di J. K. Rowling.
I miserabili (ore 23:25 - Cine Sony)
GENERE: Drammatico | ANNO: 1998 | REGIA: Bille August
Tratto dall’omonimo romanzo di Victor Hugo.
Giovedì 20 settembre 2018
Il cappotto di Astrakan (ore 6:25 - Rai Movie)
GENERE: Commedia | ANNO: 1979 | REGIA: Marco Vicario
Tratto dall’omonimo romanzo Pietro Chiara.
La bisbetica domata (ore 7:35 - Cine Sony))
GENERE: Commedia | ANNO: 1967 | REGIA: Franco Zeffirelli
Tratto dall'omonima commedia di William Shakespeare.
Sole rosso (ore 12:00 - Rai Movie)
GENERE: Western | ANNO: 1971 | REGIA: Terence Young
Tratto dall’omonimo romanzo di Laird Koenig.
Uragano (ore 16:37 - Rete 4)
GENERE: Drammatico | ANNO: 1979 | REGIA: Jan Troell
Tratto dall’omonimo romanzo di James Norman Hall e Charles Nordhoff.
Ispettore Callaghan: il caso Scorpio è tuo! (ore 21:00 - Iris)
GENERE: Poliziesco | ANNO: 1971 | REGIA: Don Siegel
Tratto dall’omonimo racconto di Harry Julian Fink e Rita M. Fink.
Twilight (ore 21:10 - La5)
GENERE: Fantasy | ANNO: 2008 | REGIA: Catherine Hardwicke
Tratto dall’omonimo romanzo di Stephenie Meyer.
Io, Robot (ore 21:15 - Focus)
GENERE: Fantascienza | ANNO: 2004 | REGIA: Alex Proyas
Ispirato ai racconti di Isaac Asimov.
Il bambino con il pigiama a righe (ore 21:25 - Nove)
GENERE: Drammatico | ANNO: 2008 | REGIA: Mark Herman
Tratto dall’omonimo romanzo di John Boyne.
Sex and the City (ore 23:00 - Rai Movie)
GENERE: Commedia | ANNO: 2008 | REGIA: Michael Patrick King
Liberamente ispirato al romanzo omonimo di Candace Bushnell.
L'Attenzione (ore 23:30 - Cielo)
GENERE: Erotico | ANNO: 1985 | REGIA: Giovanni Soldati
Liberamente ispirato al romanzo omonimo di Alberto Moravia.
Creation (ore 0:50 - Cine Sony)
GENERE: Biografico | ANNO: 2009 | REGIA: Jon Amiel
Tratto dall’omonimo romanzo di Randal Keynes.
Venerdì 21 settembre 2018
Perdutamente tua (ore 8:15 - Cine Sony)
GENERE: Drammatico | ANNO: 1942 | REGIA: Irving Rapper
Tratto dall’omonimo romanzo di Olive Higgins Prouty.
Quel maledetto ponte sull’Elba (ore 10:20 - Rai Movie)
GENERE: Guerra | ANNO: 1968 | REGIA: León Klimovsky
Tratto dall’omonimo racconto di Lou Carrigan.
Dagli Appennini alle Ande (ore 11:13 - Iris)
GENERE: Drammatico | ANNO: 1959 | REGIA: Folco Quilici
Tratto dall’omonimo racconto di Edmondo De Amicis, in Cuore.
Gli uomini dal passo pesante (ore 15:45 - Rai Movie)
GENERE: Western | ANNO: 1965 | REGIA: Mario Sequi, Alfredo Antonini
Tratto dal racconto "Guns of North Texas" di Will Cook.
Delitto sotto il sole (ore 16:19 - Rete 4)
GENERE: Giallo | ANNO: 1982 | REGIA: Guy Hamilton
Tratto dall’omonimo romanzo di Agatha Christie.
Il dottor Dolittle (ore 21:10 - Rai Movie)
GENERE: Commedia | ANNO: 1997 | REGIA: Betty Thomas
Tratto dal racconto "Doctor dolittle stories" di Hugh Lofting.
Ancora vivo (ore 21:25 - Nove)
GENERE: Azione | ANNO: 1996 | REGIA: Walter Hill
Tratto dall’omonimo racconto di Ryuzo Kikushima e Akira Kurosawa.
Camere da letto (ore 0:40 - Cine Sony)
GENERE: Commedia | ANNO: 1997 | REGIA: Simona Izzo
Tratto dall’omonimo racconto di Graziano Diana e Simona Izzo.
Sabato 22 settembre 2018
Il sorpasso (ore 7:00 - Cine Sony)
GENERE: Commedia | ANNO: 1962 | REGIA: Dino Risi
Tratto dall’omonimo racconto di Rodolfo Sonego.
Tempo d'estate (ore 9:55 - Rai Movie)
GENERE: Sentimentale | ANNO: 1955 | REGIA: David Lean
Tratto dal romanzo "The time of the cuckoo" di Arthur Laurents.
Quell'ultimo ponte (ore 11:35 - Rai Movie)
GENERE: Guerra | ANNO: 1977 | REGIA: Richard Attenborough
Tratto dall’omonimo romanzo di Cornelius Ryan.
Sognando l'Africa (ore 13:20 - Cine Sony)
GENERE: Drammatico | ANNO: 2000 | REGIA: Hugh Hudson
Tratto dal romanzo "Sognavo l'Africa" di Kuki Gallmann.
Twilight (ore 13:50 - La5)
GENERE: Fantasy | ANNO: 2008 | REGIA: Catherine Hardwicke
Tratto dall’omonimo romanzo di Stephenie Meyer.
Io, Robot (ore 15:10 - Focus)
GENERE: Fantascienza | ANNO: 2004 | REGIA: Alex Proyas
Ispirato ai racconti di Isaac Asimov.
Il club di Jane Austen (ore 15:30 - Cine Sony)
GENERE: Drammatico | ANNO: 2007 | REGIA: Robin Swicord
Tratto dall’omonimo romanzo di Karen Joy Fowler.
Il dottor Dolittle (ore 15:45 - Rai Movie)
GENERE: Commedia | ANNO: 1997 | REGIA: Betty Thomas
Tratto dal racconto "Doctor dolittle stories" di Hugh Lofting.
Jumanji (ore 17:00 - Nove)
GENERE: Fantasy | ANNO: 1995 | REGIA: Joe Johnston
Liberamente ispirato al romanzo "Jumanji" di Chris Van Allsburg.
K-PAX - Da un altro mondo (ore 17:15 - Rai Movie)
GENERE: Commedia | ANNO: 2001 | REGIA: Iain Softley
Tratto dall’omonimo romanzo di Gene Brewer.
I Love Shopping (ore 19:10 - Paramount Channel)
GENERE: Commedia | ANNO: 2008 | REGIA: P.J. Hogan
Tratto dal romanzo "I love shopping", con elementi di “I love shopping a New York”, rispettivamente primo e secondo romanzo della serie “I love shopping” di Sophie Kinsella.
La sindrome di Stendhal (ore 21:10 - Italia 2)
GENERE: Horror | ANNO: 1996 | REGIA: Dario Argento
Ispirato dal libro omonimo di Graziella Magherini.
Detective coi tacchi a spillo (ore 21:30 - LA7D)
GENERE: Poliziesco | ANNO: 1991 | REGIA: Jeff Kanew
Basato sui romanzi di Sara Paretsky su V. I. Warshawski.
In the Electric Mist - L'occhio del ciclone (ore 22:55 - Rai Movie)
GENERE: Thriller | ANNO: 2009 | REGIA: Bertrand Tavernier
Tratto dal romanzo "In the Electric Mist with Confederate Dead" di James Lee Burke.
Tre scapoli e un bebè (ore 23:15 - LA7D)
GENERE: Commedia | ANNO: 1987 | REGIA: Leonard Nimoy
Tratto dal racconto "Tre uomini e una culla" di Coline Serreau.
Jackie Brown (ore 23:30 - Nove)
GENERE: Noir | ANNO: 1997 | REGIA: Quentin Tarantino
Tratto dal romanzo "Rum Punch" di Elmore Leonard.
The Divergent Series: Insurgent (ore 0:35 - 20)
GENERE: Fantascienza | ANNO: 2015 | REGIA: Robert Schwentke
Tratto dal romanzo omonimo di Veronica Roth, secondo della trilogia (anche filmica) “Divergent”.
Coco Chanel & Igor Stravinsky (ore 0:55 - Rai Movie)
GENERE: Drammatico | ANNO: 2009 | REGIA: Jan Kounen
Tratto dal romanzo omonimo di Chris Greenhalgh.
Domenica 23 settembre 2018
Don Camillo (ore 11:20 - Tv 2000)
GENERE: Commedia | ANNO: 1952 | REGIA: Julien Duvivier
Tratto dai racconti del volume "Mondo piccolo" (1948) di Giovanni Guareschi.
Io ti salverò (ore 14:40 - La7)
GENERE: Giallo | ANNO: 1945 | REGIA: Alfred Hitchcock
Tratto dal romanzo "The house of Dr. Edwardes", scritto da John Palmer e Hilary A. Saunders, sotto lo pseudonimo di "Francis Beeding”.
Il dottor Dolittle 2 (ore 15:10 – Paramount Channel)
GENERE: Commedia | ANNO: 2001 | REGIA: Steve Carr
Tratto dal racconto "Doctor Dolittle stories" di Hugh Lofting.
Jumanji (ore 16:30 - Nove)
GENERE: Fantasy | ANNO: 1995 | REGIA: Joe Johnston
Liberamente ispirato al romanzo "Jumanji" di Chris Van Allsburg.
I Love Shopping (ore 17:10 - Paramount Channel)
GENERE: Commedia | ANNO: 2008 | REGIA: P.J. Hogan
Tratto dal romanzo "I love shopping", con elementi di “I love shopping a New York”, rispettivamente primo e secondo romanzo della serie “I love shopping” di Sophie Kinsella.
Io prima di te (ore 19:10 - Paramount Channel)
GENERE: Drammatico | ANNO: 2016 | REGIA: Thea Sharrock
Tratto dall'omonimo romanzo di Jojo Moyes.
Le amiche (ore 21:15 - Rai Storia)
GENERE: Drammatico | ANNO: 1955 | REGIA: Michelangelo Antonioni
Tratto dal racconto "Tra donne sole" (contenuto in "La bella estate") di Cesare Pavese.
Edge of Tomorrow - Senza domani (ore 21:20 - Italia 1)
GENERE: Fantascienza | ANNO: 2014 | REGIA: Doug Liman
Tratto dall’omonimo romanzo di Hiroshi Sakurazaka.
La sindrome di Stendhal (ore 22:45 - Italia 2)
GENERE: Horror | ANNO: 1996 | REGIA: Dario Argento
Ispirato dal libro omonimo di Graziella Magherini.
The Watcher (ore 23:01 – Iris)
GENERE: Thriller | ANNO: 2000 | REGIA: Joe Charbanic
Tratto dall’omonimo racconto di Darcy Meyers e David Elliot.
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