#ansethic
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a-spec dog pride icons
anstethic french bulldog, aqueerplatonic irish setter, aplatonicspec pekingese
acespec norweigan lundehunde, arospec giant schnauzer
asocial dutch shepherd, aspec neopolitain mastiff, and asensualspec australian cattle dog
#icons#my icons#id#ansethic#french bulldog#frenchie#aqueerplatonic#irish setter#aplatonic spectrum#aplatonic#pekingese#acespec#asexuality spectrum#asexual spectrum#norweigan lundehunde#aspec#neopolitain mastiff#neopolitan mastiff#asocial#asocial spectrum#dutch shepherd#asensual#asensual spectrum#acd#australian cattle dog#australian heeler#blue heeler#queensland heeler
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when you send a whole dragon scale through the post with your letter to prove to your dad that no, you’re not drunk or on the skooma, this actually happened
#ansethe#orc dad is +1 dragon scale#it'll make a nice plate maybe??#skyrim behind the scenes shenanigans#enjoy your weird mail ugduin
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MASTER POST
Characters
Sirius Orion Black
Remus John Lupin
Polaris Anseth Lupin-Black
Ariel Ava Lupin-Black
Lyra Ruby Lupin-Black
Perseus Lucas Lupin-Black
Oberon Aiden Lupin-Black
Nashira Vivian Lupin-Black
Chara Wendy Lupin-Black
Lupus Gabriel Lupin-Black
Hesperos Silas Lupin-Black
Calytrix Oaklee Lupin-Black
James Fleamont Potter
Lily Jasmine Potter
Harrison James Potter
Peter Andrew Pettigrew
Frank Hendrix Longbottom
Severus Tobias Snape
High Priest Seto
Lore
Pharaoh ██████
Count Dracula
Vampires
Werewolves
Grim Reapers
Fallen Angels
Ifrits
Veela
Elves
Naga
Unicorns
Plot
Timeline
Fancasts
Family Tree
Art
Chapters
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Hey there! You know it's that time again! Women In Horror Recognition month is upon us once more and with it comes our WiH Massive Blood Drive. It's a world wide, no limits event where our cause is simple. We want YOU to BLEED for us. All month long we encourage people to give back in the most selfless of ways that honor the fearless heroines and heroes from horror. By being brave and bleeding. Heck, it's just a little prick and most likely not the biggest one we'll even have to deal with in the day! And we need blood donors! On a massive scale. Every two seconds someone needs blood. Just think about all the blood that people have needed JUST while you were reading this! Sadly very few people donate and we're on a mission to change that by bringing attention to the cause. Every year we do a little something different and pick unique themes while inviting a multitude of filmmakers from across the globe to participate. The only requirement to be invited is you must be a feminist. We've in the years expanded to invite male filmmakers along side the ladies. This year our PSA is a music video. The song is called BLOOD by Kevvy (Kevin James Maher) of FAKE SHARK. The collective is edited again by the talented Paolo Kalalo. This year our collective includes a killer combination of top talent including WiH Massive Blood Drive veterans and fresh bloods: Aleah Anseth (Being Little Miss Risk), Tamae Garateguy (All Night Long, She Wolf), Maude Michaud (60 Seconds 2 Die, Dys-), Jill Sixx Gevargizian (The Stylist), Damon Rickard (Dissociative, Rats), Patricia Chica (Ceramic Tango, Montreal Girls), Hannah Neurotica (WiH Month Founder and Creator), Nicholas Burman-Vince (Hellraiser), Russ Foxx, Brent Ray Fraser, and Aramis Sartorio (The Gruesome Death of Tommy Pistol). You may recognize Russ Foxx from American Mary who was our body mod consultant. In this video, yes, that blood IS real. You may also recognize that this video is awesome and you should donate blood. Which is true. It IS awesome and you SHOULD donate. I'd say viewer discretion is advised, but that's just not me. Drink it up and enjoy! And get out there and bleed for a truly heroic cause. After all, it's in you to give. But don't listen to me. Listen to a flashy music video with graphic imagery, sexual content, and Dean Cain. Look for MORE coming your way on Valentine's Day! MANY of our aforementioned directors have FULL versions of each of their videos. Look for them February 14th!
Fatally Yours!
Jen and Sylv
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Custom framed western print titled “Mr. Anseth” by William Matthews Studio using UV glass, glass spacers and frame by AMPF Moulding!
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Bend's Worthy Brewing celebrates resistance to police brutality, with MOsley WOtta and Rep. Peter Defazio, September 4th.
Press Release
August 17, 2020 (Bend, Ore.) – On September 4, Worthy Brewing will be celebrating its solidarity with all of the patriots who have peacefully protested against police brutality in a night of music and advocacy on its famed “Drink up Dream on” stage, featuring philosopher-poet MOsley WOtta and Rep. Peter Defazio.
"Here at Worthy we support the right if not the duty of Americans to exercise their First Amendment rights to peaceably protest the intolerable persecution of African-Americans by rogue officers who we pay to protect and serve," said Roger Worthington, owner of Worthy Brewing. “We salute our brothers and sisters in Portland and here at home for taking a stand against police brutality, as well as the unjustifiable deployment of militarized federal troops.”
To show solidarity, Worthy will be donating $20,000 to Oregon based non-profits, including Don’t Shoot Portland, the Oregon Justice Resource Center, Kaycee Anseth Legacy Foundation and CADA CASA.
“I've personally witnessed the courage and resiliency of those wishing to speak against things that harm society,” said Tai Carpenter, President of Don’t Shoot Portland. “We appreciate Worthy Brewing’s priceless investment in supporting citizens who were kidnapped, peppered, bludgeoned and shot for speaking up.”
“We are grateful for Worthy’s support of our legal advocacy,” said Amie Wexler, Oregon Justice Resource Center, a non-profit that is providing legal support to injured protesters in Portland. “We are ensuring that the civil rights of both the accused and the incarcerated are protected, as well as the First Amendment rights of those protesting against the rise of police brutality against Black lives.”
The inimitable MOsley WOtta will be joined by local artists Milo Matthews, Ragtop and Sean Allen. The music begins at 6 pm. Admission as always is free, but guests will be required to wear masks and safely distance from one another in compliance with state law and common sense. Tables must be reserved in advance.
Rep. Peter Defazio will speak about the importance of the Black Lives Matter movement and he will be joined by Deschutes County’s District Attorney, John Hummel, as well as Bend City Council candidates Anthony Broadman and Rita Schenkelberg. Speeches will be short and sweet.
"But for the patriots in Boston Harbor, we would still be bowing to a king,” said District Attorney Hummel, who will also speak to the dangers of excessive force. “I stand with those who take to the streets to speak truth to power. The right of people to peaceably assembly is fundamental to what it means to be an American and something I will always defend.”
In addition to a full line up of tasty ales and lagers, Worthy has brewed a special beer for the event: Solidarity Stout. For the first 50 customers Worthy will also be offering hand crafted “Justice First. Beer Second” pins.
Worthy Brewing of Bend, Oregon has been brewing world-class fresh, local and tasty ales and lagers since 2013. We are pleased to add Sol Power Pilsner to our line of flagships, anchored by Strata IPA. Sol Power Pilsner recently medaled at the Oregon Beer Awards. Worthy also features several seasonal and small batch beers, such as Tenmile Lager. Worthy offers two restaurants in Bend: Taps & Tacos downtown and the Pub on the East Side. For more about Worthy’s brewery, restaurant and Taps and Tacos pub, click here.
For more info about Worthy Brewing, please visit www.worthy.beer
from Northwest Beer Guide - News - The Northwest Beer Guide https://bit.ly/32cDh9Y
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The Soska Sisters Want Your Blood… Donations for Women In Horror Month
February is known for a great many things including Groundhog Day, Valentine’s Day, Chinese New Year, and Black History Month. For horror fans though, you will surely know it as Women in Horror Month, an occasion to remember the ladies that make the scares that frighten us so well. Enter “Twisted Twins” Jen and Sylvia Soska, who are not only using the occasion to promote their fellow female horror filmmakers, but also to do a little good for the masses. Watch out! The Soska Sisters are kicking off another year of blood letting, er, donating.
Earlier this week, the Soska Sisters launched their Blood Drive in junction with the 9th annual Women in Horror Month. If you’re unaware, WiHM is “an international, grassroots initiative, which encourages supporters to learn about and showcase the underrepresented work of women in the horror industries,” according to the WiHM website. “Whether they are on the screen, behind the scenes, or contributing in their other various artistic ways, it is clear that women love, appreciate, and contribute to the horror genre.”
Our Twisted Twins will be doing their part by promoting women in horror (like themselves) and promoting the always pressing need for blood donations. Using their YouTube Channel, the Soskas will release a new PSA everyday as a kind of anthology series that will highlight the good work of Women in Horror, past and present, while encouraging fans from all sexes to get out there and give blood.
Here’s the official letter from the Soska Sisters (via Bloody Disgusting):
“It’s that magical time of year again where we Sisters Soska don’t just want to spill blood on the screen, but want YOU to bleed for us. Don’t worry, it’s for an incredibly good cause…
Now in its 9th epic year, February marks the start of another “Women In Horror Month” meant to promote equality and celebrate the great artists both working today and the trailblazers who’ve come before.
As we all know women are quite capable and we’re not asking for a handout. Just some support. We’ve even taken it upon ourselves to be the ones giving back. You can’t think horror without thinking blood and we’ve long wondered why the horror genre hasn’t already thrown its weight behind the blood donation cause. So we did it.
As part of WiHM, each year we search out filmmakers from across the globe to make their own Public Service Announcements for Blood Services and Red Cross. The only requirements are that you have to be passionate about the cause and you must be a feminist. I’m proud to say that this year we have a record-setting 30 TEAMS that have participated. Magnificently each PSA was made with the filmmakers using their own money and resources along with generous donations and numerous volunteers.
We have a different theme each year and this year is BE A HERO.
In previous years, we’ve combined them all into one mega-anthology, but this year we’re making it our BIGGEST year yet. EVERY day in February (starting January 31st and ending March 1st) we will be releasing a NEW PSA via our Twisted Twins’ YouTube Channel. Please subscribe.
We are very proud to announce our outstanding list of contributors for our 2018 WiHM Massive Blood Drive:
Hannah Neurotica (WiHM Founder), Lex Lybrand, Paddy Murphy, Tonja Atmoic & Mi Chelle Nessk, Mary Rangel, Atropa Films, Maude Michaud, Tommy Pistol, Ama Lea, Damon Rickard, Adam Marcus, Stitch Mays, Marilyn Thomas, Joe Magna, Jamie DeWolf, Vanessa Wright, Nicholas Burman-Vince, Christian Francis & Mark Miller,Izzy Lee, Aleah Anseth, Sam Hawkins & Kim Pipkin, Andrew Hass, Dayna Noffke, Vicky Tori Ella, Aishlinn Clarke, Stephanie Michelle, Brandon Slagle, Michelle Romano, Angela Nolan, and us, the Soska Sisters.
Each day we’ll release profiles on the filmmakers along with their shorts and sometimes even poster art and BTS stills. As a special added surprise, you won’t know which one is being released when, so keep your eyes on the prize!
Thank you so much for watching, but PLEASE be sure to make an appointment to donate. We need you. After all, it’s in you to give.
Jen and Sylv”
The post The Soska Sisters Want Your Blood… Donations for Women In Horror Month appeared first on Nightmare on Film Street.
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AMERICAN ACADEMY of ARTS & SCIENCES announces new 2019 Academy Members
AMERICAN ACADEMY of ARTS & SCIENCES announces new 2019 Academy Members
Silicon Valley Lessons for Africa: Validators are Essential – Dr. James Manyika, McKinsey & Company Zimbabwean James Manyika and Michelle Obama among 200 luminaries to the US Academy of Sciences and Art. Manyika advised President Obama – AIWA! NO!
Cambridge, MA | April 17, 2019 – The American Academy of Arts and Sciences…
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#academic leader and former Governor Mitchell E. Daniels#actress and playwright Anna Deavere Smith#American Academy of Arts and Sciences#and paleoclimatologist Lonnie G. Thompson (Ohio State University)#artist Mark Bradford#author Jonathan Franzen#Berkeley)#business leader Charles H. Robbins (Cisco Systems)#cell biologist Jennifer Lippincott-Schwartz (Howard Hughes Medical Institute)#chemical and biological engineer Kristi S. Anseth (University of Colorado Boulder)#data science and technology expert James Manyika (McKinsey & Company)#David W. Oxtoby#economist Xiaohong Chen (Yale University)#former First Lady Michelle L. R. Obama#gender theorist Judith Butler (University of California#John Hancock#journalist James M. Fallows (The Atlantic)#Jr. (Purdue University)#mathematician Sylvia Serfaty (New York University)#neuro-oncologist Robert B. Darnell (Rockefeller University)#philosopher Tommie Shelby (Harvard University)#poet and foundation president Elizabeth Alexander (Andrew W. Mellon Foundation)#The Academy was founded in 1780 by John Adams
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The New Approach and A Nagging Knee Injury
New Story has been published on https://enzaime.com/new-approach-nagging-knee-injury/
The New Approach and A Nagging Knee Injury
While culinary expertise is the main qualification to be a chef, it certainly isn’t the only one. For example, you’re also required to work long hours on your feet. In fact, that’s what led Mike Schmidtbauer, 58, to Abbott Northwestern Hospital’s Joint Replacement Center.
A nagging knee injury made working as a chef increasingly difficult for Schmidtbauer. Then his knee buckled three times in one day, and he learned that he would be unable to return to work until his knee was repaired.
Joint replacement surgery has long been done at Abbott Northwestern, but the Joint Replacement Center has adopted a new approach. It aims to provide thorough preparation for patients and families; aggressive pain management; early rehabilitation; and responsive, compassionate care-all focused on helping patients recover as quickly as possible.
For Schmidtbauer, that translated to being “treated like a king. I’ve been hospitalized before, and nothing compares to the care I received at Abbott Northwestern,” he says. It began with the presurgery class he attended with his wife. “They walked us through the procedure and told us what to expect,” Schmidtbauer says. His wife was encouraged to spend the first night at the hospital with him and was involved in his recovery as his coach.
“We involve the family so they understand what challenges the patient will face and will feel confident about their ability to help care for the patient at home,” says Scott Anseth, MD, the orthopedic surgeon who operated on Schmidtbauer. Support and encouragement also came from fellow patients. Group therapy is an important part of the program, Anseth says. “The patients share their experiences and go through it as a team.” Anseth notes that instead of treating patients like they are sick, the Joint Replacement Center treats patients “more like injured athletes. They get up and get dressed every day, have meals together and participate in therapy together.”
As part of their patient-centered approach, Joint Replacement Center surgeons and anesthesiologists have collaborated to find the best combination of pain management strategies. “Our philosophy is that if you can control the pain early on, you can start therapy and rehabilitation sooner-and that leads to a better outcome and quicker recovery,” Anseth says. “We are committed to making the surgery as close to pain-free as possible.”
Like many patients with joint problems, Schmidtbauer was accustomed to pain. “The pain I experienced after surgery was nothing compared to the pain I was in before surgery,” he says. A special catheter was inserted near his knee that delivered pain medicine directly to the joint. This catheter remained in place throughout his hospital stay. After three weeks, the pain was minimal, and by six weeks, Schmidtbauer felt fully recovered.
The new approach is making a difference in patients’ recoveries. Before the Joint Replacement Center opened, 50 percent of patients were sent to skilled nursing facilities after discharge from the hospital. That rate has decreased to 20 to 25 percent of patients
“That’s a huge step,” Anseth says. “If our patients can go directly home after the hospital, it’s clearly beneficial for them. The reason I do joint replacement surgery is that it is a life-changing surgery. For someone like Mike, who is missing work because of pain, it allows him to get a good portion of his life back. Others in their 70s and 80s think their best years are behind them-all of a sudden, they are traveling and getting back out into the community with family and friends.”
#Anseth#main qualification#nursing facilities#pain management strategies#Schmidtbauer#General Surgerys
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Ingestible medical devices can be broken down with light
A variety of medical devices can be inserted into the gastrointestinal tract to treat, diagnose, or monitor GI disorders. Many of these have to be removed by endoscopic surgery once their job is done. However, MIT engineers have now come up with a way to trigger such devices to break down inside the body when they are exposed to light from an ingestible LED.
The new approach is based on a light-sensitive hydrogel that the researchers designed. Incorporating this material into medical devices could avoid many endoscopic procedures and would give doctors a faster and easier way to remove devices when they are no longer needed or are not functioning properly, the researchers say.
“We are developing a set of systems that can reside in the gastrointestinal tract, and as part of that, we’re looking to develop different ways in which we can trigger the disassembly of devices in the GI tract without the requirement for a major procedure,” says Giovanni Traverso, an assistant professor of mechanical engineering, a gastroenterologist at Brigham and Women’s Hospital, and the senior author of the study.
In a study in pigs, the researchers showed that devices made with this light-sensitive hydrogel can be triggered to break down after being exposed to blue or ultraviolet light from a small LED.
Ritu Raman, a postdoc at MIT’s Koch Institute for Integrative Cancer Research, is the lead author of the paper, which appears today in Science Advances. Other authors of the paper are former technical associates Tiffany Hua, Jianlin Zhou, Tina Esfandiary, and Vance Soares; technical associates Declan Gwynne, Joy Collins, and Siddartha Tamang; graduate student Simo Pajovic; Division of Comparative Medicine veterinarian Alison Hayward; and David H. Koch Institute Professor Robert Langer.
Controlled breakdown
Over the past several years, Traverso and Langer have developed many ingestible devices designed to remain in the GI tract for extended periods of time. They have also worked on a variety of strategies to control the breakdown of such devices, including methods based on changes in pH or temperature, or exposure to certain chemicals.
“Given our interests in developing systems that can reside for prolonged periods in the gastrointestinal tract, we continue to investigate a range of approaches to facilitate the removal of these systems in the setting of adverse reaction or when they are no longer needed,” Traverso says. “We’re really looking at different triggers and how they perform, and whether we can apply them to different settings.”
In this study, the researchers explored a light-based trigger, which they believed could offer some advantages over their earlier approaches. One potential advantage is that light can act at a distance and doesn’t need to come into direct contact with the material being broken down. Also, light normally does not penetrate the GI tract, so there is no chance of accidental triggering.
To create the new material, Raman designed a light-sensitive hydrogel based on a material developed in the lab of Kristi Anseth, a former Langer lab postdoc who is now a professor of chemical and biological engineering at the University of Colorado at Boulder. This polymer gel includes a chemical bond that is broken when exposed to a wavelength of light between 405 and 365 nanometers (blue to ultraviolet).
Raman decided that instead of making a material composed exclusively of that light-sensitive polymer, she would use it to link together stronger components such as polyacrylamide. This makes the overall material more durable but still allows it to break apart or weaken when exposed to the right wavelength of light. She also constructed the material as a “double network,” in which one polymer network surrounds another.
“You’re forming one polymer network and then forming another polymer network around it, so it’s really entangled. That makes it very tough and stretchy,” Raman says.
The material’s properties can be tuned by varying the composition of the gel. When the light-sensitive linker makes up a higher percentage of the material, it breaks down faster in response to light but is also mechanically weaker. The researchers can also control how long it takes to break down the material by using different wavelengths of light. Blue light works more slowly but poses less risk to cells that are sensitive to damage from ultraviolet light.
Deflated by light
The gel and its breakdown products are biocompatible, and the gel can be easily molded into a variety of shapes. In this study, the researchers used it to demonstrate two possible applications: a seal for a bariatric balloon and an esophageal stent. Standard bariatric balloons, which are sometimes used to help treat obesity, are inflated in a patient’s stomach and filled with saline. After about six months, the balloon is removed by endoscopic surgery.
In contrast, the bariatric balloon that the MIT team designed can be deflated by exposing the seal to a tiny LED light, which would in principle be swallowed and then pass out of the body. Their balloon is made of latex and filled with sodium polyacrylate, which absorbs water. In this study, the researchers tested the balloons in pigs and found that the balloons swelled up as soon as they were placed in the stomach. When a small, ingestible LED emitting blue light was placed in the stomach for about six hours, the balloons slowly deflated. With a higher-power light, the material broke down within 30 minutes.
The researchers also molded the light-sensitive gel into an esophageal stent. Such stents are sometimes used to help treat esophageal cancer or other disorders that cause a narrowing of the esophagus. A light-triggerable version could be broken down and passed through the digestive tract when no longer needed.
In addition to those two applications, this approach could be used to create other kinds of degradable devices, such as vehicles for delivering drugs to the gastrointestinal tract, according to the researchers.
“This study is a proof of concept that we can create this kind of material, and now we’re thinking about what are the best applications for it,” Traverso says.
The research was funded by the National Institutes of Health, the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, the Koch Institute Support (core) Grant from the National Cancer Institute, and an AAAS L’Oréal USA for Women in Science Fellowship.
Ingestible medical devices can be broken down with light syndicated from https://osmowaterfilters.blogspot.com/
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this just in: delphine was standoffish to baby
seamless integration of vanilla dialogue, and in character for her, but still
#skyrim#modded skyrim#please be kind to lucius flavius#hes baby#ansethe is giving her the reclined ears of grumpiness right now
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Loremageddon 2019, Day Nine: Asymmetrism and the Cyclical Glamor
Loremageddon 2019, Day Nine: Asymmetrism and the Cyclical Glamor
Hello, everyone, and welcome to Day Nine! This time on the docket: the Ansethi art movement known as Asymmetrism, and a rather impressive illusion spell! Here we go:
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Full Segment #1: Asymmetrism (World: Canno)
Asymmetrism is an art movement unique to Anseth which is believed to have originated among the rocky dwellings and hill country constituting the Republic of Osoye. While some theorize…
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HOLY DUCKING DUCK - IT'S HAPPENING!!! It's the 9th annual Women in Horror Recognition Month & WE WANT YOUR BLOOD!! TONIGHT AT MIDNIGHT - the very first Women in Horror Month Massive Blood Drive PSA will launch! Who will it be? Out of our thirty teams (yes, you got some bonuses) from Jan 31st to March 1st, premiering every night at midnight, you will be treated to a new short by a filmmaking team to get you in the blood letting mood. Who are our filmmakers this year? I'm glad you asked. We are honored to announce our EPIC LIST from industry heavy weights to international stars to new filmmakers already wowing people with their unique visions. Here they are: Angela Nolan Michelle Romano Brandon Slagle Stephanie Michelle Aislínn Ní Chléirigh Vicky Ella Bagley Dayna Noffke Andrew Hass & Kynda Laufmann Samantha Hawkins & Kimberly Pipkin Aleah Anseth Izzy Lee Mark Miller & Christian Francis Nicholas Burman-Vince Vanessa Ionta Wright Jamie DeWolf Joe Magna Marilyn Thomas Stitch Mays Adam Marcus, Debra Sullivan, & Bryan Sexton Damon Rickard Ama Lea Aramis Sartorio Maude Michaud Atropa Films Mary Rangel Tonjia Atomic & Mi Chelle Nessk Hannah Forman Paddy Murphy Lex Lybrand The Soska Sisters Where can you see these so you can watch, like, comment, and share to get the word out & that blood flowing? They will AIR AT MIDNIGHT, JAN 31ST - MARCH 1ST HERE on our Youtube Channel -https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCXgXYeqzu9Y0mhWL_BXUzAA?view_as=subscriber Each day we will post information highlighting the talented filmmakers and every day there will be more inspiration to donate. What's the order? It's a surprise! JOIN US IN THE NINTH ANNUAL WOMEN IN HORROR MASSIVE BLOOD DRIVE. Support these filmmakers - a little support goes a long way (Jen & I are living proof). Be kind, be supportive, and make a promise today to BLEED!!! Thank you, Hannah, for starting this event so many years ago. It's a privilege to be involved & to have watched to grow more & more every year. Please repost this to help get the word out! #WomenInHorrorMonth #ItsInYouToGive #WiHM9
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It’s that time of the year again ghouls @twistedtwinsproductions wants your blood
“That's right. We want you... to bleed for us. With Women In Horror Month upon us again it's time to suck it up, roll up your sleeves, and bleed for us. Every year we do a little something different and pick unique themes while inviting a multitude of filmmakers from across the globe to participate. The only requirement to be invited is you must be a feminist. We've in the years expanded to invite male filmmakers along side the ladies. This year our PSA is a music video. The song is called BLOOD by Kevvy (Kevin James Maher) of FAKE SHARK. The collective is edited again by the talented Paolo Kalalo. This year our collective includes a killer combination of top talent including WiH Massive Blood Drive veterans and fresh bloods: Aleah Anseth (Being Little Miss Risk), Tamae Garateguy (All Night Long, She Wolf), Maude Michaud (60 Seconds 2 Die, Dys-), Jill Sixx Gevargizian (The Stylist), Damon Rickard (Dissociative, Rats), Patricia Chica (Ceramic Tango, Montreal Girls), Hannah Neurotica (WiH Month Founder and Creator), Russ Foxx, Brent Ray Fraser, and Aramis Sartorio (The Gruesome Death of Tommy Pistol). Stay tuned for the FULL VIDEOS from each artist to be released on VALENTINE'S DAY... CREDITS "BLOOD" LYRICS VIDEO ART Pained/Shot/Edited by Hannah Neurotica ********* "Sippin on Some Syrup" Cast: Rapper - Jill Gevargizian Hype Man - Caitlin O'Connor Video Hoe 1 - Shelby Wiest Video Hoe 2 - Wesley Stonecipher Crew: Cinematographer - Adam Roberts Director & Editor - Jill Gevargizian Special Thanks - Fountain City Tattoo A Sixx Tape Production ********* "FaceLeak" Credit Russ Foxx Videographer Abby Normal ********* "Where We Gonna Get That" Writer, Producer, Director: Aleah Anseth Producer, Camera Operator, Editor: Terran Station Choreographer: Jayden Waldner Photographer: Akeira Anseth Starring: Emma MacDonald Hannah Feser Kadence Saunders Danika Guggenberger ********* "Faffing Can Be Fatal" Credits: Filmed and edited by Nicholas Vince Starring Tnuoc and Alucard Featuring Bertie ********* "GAMERING" Dirección y producción TAMAE GARATEGUY Guión CONNIE MARTIN y TAMAE GARATEGUY Fotografía Y Cámara CONNIE MARTIN Asistente de dirección y sonido directo FRAN CAPRA Montaje Andrés Pintos Bruno López VFX LULI PLANELLS Corrección de color FERNANDA MONTILENGO ACTORES VICENTE TORRE MILO OTT MARIANO JAVIER SOL GONZALEZ ROCIO RUMBO BACCARO ALAIN ZERZINOT NGOUANET LAURA GIANOTTI CESIA BRUZONE JOAQUIN GONZALEZ DIEGO STICKAR ********* "We Need It" Credits: A Quirk Films production Directed, shot and edited by Maude Michaud Assistant camera and blood: Sebastien Montpetit (In-Vitro FX) Blood Gangstas: Maude Michaud Luc Bernier Marie-Pierre Poulin Blood Angel: Nina Laurin Blood Babes: A - Karine Kerr B - Tamara Pettman O - Elise Duquette AB - Isabelle Beaudoin Special Thanks: Stephanie Ranger, France Bolduc, Robert Michaud & Phil Robillard ********* "Brent Ray Fraser - The Penis Painter" www.brentrayfraser.com ********* "LAS CHOLAS" Production Company: Roman Media Inc. Director, Writer: Patricia Chica Producer: Michelle Romano Canadian Producer: Patricia Chica Executive Producer: Morris Umali Associate Producer: Kimberly Shawn Geier Assistant-Director: Jonathan Weichsel Cinematographer: Rachel Dunn Grip/Electric: Daniel McCullar Camera B: Patricia Chica Additional Video: Bidkar Ramos Sound: Camille Fadl Editor: Patricia Chica Still Photographer: Bidkar Ramos Hair Stylists: Princess Santiago Kimberly Shawn Geier 2 Make up Artists: Cheyenne Garvert Amira Aranda Oksana Voiko April Rudy Kimberly Shawn Geier Props: Mariposa Miranda Special Thanks: Santuary Studios LAX Morris Umali Jonathan Hughes Rachel Dunn Sean Tretta Tessa Philbrook Miriam Urrutia David Deïas Kamal John Iskander The Soska Sisters ********* "BLOOD-HOG DAY" Director\writer\starring: Aramis Sartorio Director of photography: Shayna Yates Additional cinematography: Nicole McClure, Aramis Sartorio Puppets designed by: Shayna Yates, Aaron Farmer Puppeteers: Shayna Yates, Colleen Pointek, Nicole McClure, Aramis Sartorio Editor: Shayna Yates ********* "Bloody Nurses" Written & Directed by - Damon Rickard Bloody Nurse 1 - Jessica Messenger Bloody Nurse 2 - Lucy Clements Bloody Nurse 3 - Cat Davies Director of Photography - Jack Ayers 1st Assistant Camera - Freya Espie Production Assistant - Annette Rickard Special FX Make Up - Hannah Lomas Produced by Damon Rickard ”
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86 Biltmore Estate Phoenix, AZ 85016 Nathan Anseth
The post 86 Biltmore Estate Phoenix, AZ 85016 Nathan Anseth appeared first on GRAND CANYON Advisors.
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Welp... Found Lost Legends again. The Thalmor Embassy is a source of misery and grief and Bad Things in general. And...I guess I’d better do the thing now that she’s been alerted to it.
#ansethe#skyrim#snow elf dragonborn#excuse for a trauma makeover? yes#no more fancy shiny armor for you!
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