#preopeneing
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
rabbivole · 6 months ago
Text
bluetooth is so fucking cool. i love having my bluetooth driver crash during an osrs boss Twice, which is a guaranteed death
2 notes · View notes
petop-hotel-supply · 9 months ago
Text
Tumblr media
Bespoke sustainable wooden Do-Not-Disturb sign with your hotel engraved logo.
0 notes
ehowfind · 10 months ago
Text
Savour DXB Pre-opening jobs | SavourDXB
We are excited to announce the upcoming opening of Savour DXB pre-opening jobs. As part of the Savour DXB pre-opening a renowned hospitality
Find the latest jobs at Savour DXB preopening : Front of the House roles We are excited to announce the upcoming opening of Savour DXB pre-opening jobs | SavourDXB. As part of the Savour DXB pre-opening a renowned hospitality group known for its exceptional culinary experiences, we are seeking passionate individuals to join our pre-opening team. If you have a love for food and beverages and a…
0 notes
txttletale · 5 months ago
Text
something i really enojy about bavitz' work is their preopenity to write characters who are textually just humans* but narratively serve as a force of nature, an unstoppable agent of pure narrative. clownmuffle, red, mitchum graves to some extent, about half the damn characters in cleveland quixotic (especially shannon and mallory)--they feel like they are tangibly overwhelming the story whenever the're on screen: clownmuffle the destroyer of order, red the unknowable whim of fate, mitchum the primordial evil, shannon the avatar of normalcy. really interesting type of character to me
55 notes · View notes
quinloki · 3 months ago
Text
I cannot express how happy I am to be eating carrots right now.
I cannot effectively articulate the shit I went through the last six days trying to get my hands on some carrots.
Tumblr media
I bought a veggie tray and hummus and the hummus was preopened - by the time I had time to get more I had to pitch the original tray cause it had gone bad.
Then I tried to order carrots from a wing place (my desperation drove me) but they were out 😭😭😭
Then I got a second tray a couple days later from our grocery delivery, and wasn’t gonna wait, and reached my hand in and the carrots
✨Squished✨
T-T
but now I have carrots.
Not many, but I don’t care.
9 notes · View notes
matttgirlies · 1 year ago
Text
Tumblr media
Matt & Me🎀
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24
a story heavily based on Priscilla Presley’s Book “Elvis & Me” based in the 1950’s - 1970’s.
fem! reader x singer! matt
disclaimer!! - in no way am i saying matt would ever support or do these kind of things, for the sake of the book certain unethical things do happen at times.
warnings - mentions of guns,, drug use,, threats,, mentions of affairs
y/nn = your nickname for any confusion🩷
Chapter 21
Putting together the best musicians, sound and lighting technicians, costumers, and choreographers, he was taking no chances this time. He scoured the music scene for the top sidemen in the business. Auditions were held and he handpicked each player—names such as James Burton, John Wilkinson, Ronny Tutt, Glen D. Hardin, Jerry Scheff. He loved the sound of the Sweet Inspirations, backup group for Aretha Franklin, and he hired them on the spot as a warmup act and to sing backup vocals. He also hired his favorite gospel group, the Imperial Quartet.
Before leaving Los Angeles, Matt rehearsed at RCA Sound Studios for ten days and then polished the act for a full week prior to the opening. It was the event of the summer in Vegas. Colonel Parker brought the preopening publicity to fever pitch. Billboards were up all over town. On the third floor of the International, administrative offices bustled with activity. No other entertainer coming into Vegas had ever stimulated this kind of excitement. The hotel lobby was dominated by Matt paraphernalia—pictures, posters, T-shirts, stuffed animals, balloons, records, souvenir programs. You’d think Barnum and Bailey were coming to town.
Back home there was also excitement as we girls discussed what we’d wear to the opening. “I want you to look extra special, Baby,” Matt said. “This is a big night for all of us.” I hit every boutique in West L.A. before finding just the right outfit.
Though it had been nine years since Matt had given a live performance, you never would have known it from his opening. The audience cheered the moment he stepped onstage and never stopped the entire two hours as Matt sang, “All Shook Up,” “Blue Suede Shoes,” “In the Ghetto,” “Tiger Man,” and “Can’t Help Falling in Love.” He mixed the old with the new, the fast and hot with the lyrical and romantic. It was the first time I’d ever seen Matt perform live. Wanting to surprise me, he had kept me from rehearsals. I was astounded. At the end he left them still cheering and begging for more.
Cary Grant was among the stars who came backstage to congratulate him after the show. But the most touching moment was when Colonel William arrived with tears in his eyes, wanting to know where his boy was. Matt came out of the dressing room and the two men embraced. I believe everyone felt their emotion in that moment of triumph.
I don’t think we slept that night. Nate Doe brought in all the newspapers and we read the rave reviews declaring, “Matt was great” and “He never looked or sang better.” He shared credit for his new success with all of us.
“Well, we did it. It’s going to be a long thirty days, but it’s going to be worth it if we get the reception we got last night. I may have been a real tyrant, but it was well worth it.”
“Yeah, you’re right,” we all agreed, laughing. “You were a tyrant.”
The International Hotel was delirious over Matt’s performance and the box-office receipts. The following day they signed a fiveyear contract with the Colonel for Matt to appear twice a year, usually around the same time, January and August, at the then unheardof salary of one million dollars a year.
Matt literally took over Las Vegas for the entire month he was there, playing to a packed house every show as thousands more were turned away. No matter where we looked, all we could see was the name Matt—on television, newspapers, banners, and billboards. The King had returned.
Initially, Matt’s triumph in Las Vegas brought a new vitality to our marriage. He seemed a different person. Once again, he felt confident about himself as a performer and he continued to watch his weight and work out every day at karate.
It was also the first time that I felt we were functioning as a team. I made several trips to New York, trying to find unique accessories for him to wear onstage. I bought scarves, jewelry, and a black leather belt with chain links all around it that Bill Belew would later copy for the famous Matt jumpsuit belts.
I loved seeing him healthy and happy again, and I especially enjoyed our early days in Vegas. The International provided an elegant three-bedroom suite that we turned into our home away from home. During his show I always sat at the same table down front, never tiring of watching him perform. He was spontaneous and one never knew what to expect from him.
On occasion, after his midnight show, we’d catch lounge acts of other performers playing Vegas or we’d gamble until dawn. Other times we’d relax backstage, visiting with entertainers captivated by his performance. This was the first time I’d been with Matt at a high point in his career.
With the renewed fame came renewed dangers. Offstage he could be guarded by Sonny and Red. Onstage he was a walking target. One night that summer Nate and Sonny were tipped off that a woman in the audience was carrying a gun and had threatened to shoot Matt. A true professional, Matt insisted on going on. Additional precautions were taken and everyone was on the alert. Matt was instructed to stay downstage, making himself a smaller target, and Sonny and Jerry were poised to jump in front of him at the slightest sign of suspicious movement in the audience. Red was positioned in the audience with the FBI agents.
The show seemed to take an eternity. I glanced at Patsy apprehensively and she in turn grasped my hand as we comforted each other, longing for the night to end without incident. James remained backstage, never letting Matt out of his sight and praying, “Dear God, don’t let anything happen to my son.”
Because of this and other threats, extra security was arranged wherever Matt appeared. Entrances through backstages, kitchens, back elevators, and side exits became routine.
Matt had his own theory about assassinations, based on the murders of the Reverend Martin Luther King, Jr., and Robert F. Kennedy. He felt that the assassins gloated over their “accomplishments,” and told his bodyguards that if any attempt were made on his life, they should get the killer—even before the police. He didn’t want anyone bragging to the media that they’d killed Matt Sturniolo.
Sonny and Red lived in so much tension these days that they were constantly frenzied. Suspicious in crowds of overzealous fans, they were quick to respond to any sign of danger. Compared to Sonny’s diplomacy, Red’s reputation was to act first and ask questions later. Eventually, numerous assault-and-battery charges started piling up against Matt. When James warned him about Sonny and Red’s aggressiveness, Matt said, “Goddamn, Red. I hired you to keep the sons of bitches away from me, not get me in any legal binds. Somehow you’re going to have to control that redheaded temper of yours.”
Although Matt would joke about the death threats—and there would be several more throughout the Vegas commitments—the fear and constant need for security heightened the pressure of nightly performing.
In the beginning when Matt began doing regular Vegas engagements, we girls visited frequently. We’d fly in over the weekend, sometimes bringing our children, spend three or four days, and then return home.
On the days we were apart I’d take hundreds of Polaroids and home movies of Charlotte. She was growing so rapidly I didn’t want him to miss out on her development. Daily he’d receive his “care packages,” as I’d refer to them, including tape recordings of me teaching Charlotte new words and Charlotte mimicking me. Each week, upon my arrival, I’d paste photos on the mirrors in his bedroom to remind him that he had a wife and child.
During his first couple of engagements he still seemed humbled by lingering doubts of whether the public was fully accepting him. At this point he had no interest in outside affairs or flirtations, his concentration on daily rehearsals and performances every evening excluding everything else.
Later he would become more cocky. The crowds’ admiration took him back to his triumphs in the early fifties and he found it hard to come down to earth after a month of nightly cheers. His name on the International’s huge marquee would be replaced by the next superstar. The offices on the third floor would be cleared out and incoming calls for reservations would stop.
Thriving on all the excitement, glamour, and hysteria, he found it difficult to go home and resume his role as father and husband. And for me the impossibility of replacing the crowd’s adoration became a real-life nightmare.
At home in Los Angeles, there was just the usual group around—strictly a family atmosphere. This abrupt change was too much for him and soon he developed the habit of lingering in Vegas for days, sometimes weeks, after a show. The boys were finding it increasingly difficult to resolve the conflict between working for Matt and maintaining a home life.
Crazed with inactivity and boredom, Matt became edgy and temperamental, a condition exacerbated by the Dexedrine he was again taking to control his weight.
Sometimes, to ease the transition home, Matt would insist we all pile into cars and head for Palm Springs. Since our marriage we had spent-many weekends there sunning and watching football games and late-night television, but after Charlotte was born, my needs changed. The Palm Springs heat was too much for her, the long drive boring, the idleness of resort life wearying. One weekend I suggested, “Matt, why don’t just you and the guys go down?”
From that time on, the guys developed their own lifestyle in our secluded desert home. Occasionally we wives would be invited to spend the weekend, but by and large, Matt now considered Palm Springs his private refuge.
He made it clear that this time away was good for him, giving him a chance to think, to hang out with the guys. In reality Matt was lost. He did not know what to do with himself after Vegas. He escaped in more powerful, unnecessary prescribed drugs to raise his spirits and ward off boredom.
After he had conquered Vegas, it was agreed that Matt should go back on the road. Colonel immediately began booking concert tours around the nation, starting with an impressive run of six sold-out shows in the Houston Astrodome, which earned over one million dollars in three nights.
The night I arrived in Texas to watch the performance, Amber, Judy, and I flew in on a private jet. I looked down on the Astrodome and found it hard to believe my eyes. The length of a football field—and already sold out. It made me nervous. I could imagine how Matt felt.
Matt too found the Astrodome overwhelming. “Goddamn,” he said when he first walked in. “They expect me to sell this son of a bitch out? It’s a goddamn ocean.”
However dwarfed he was by the giant facility, he electrified his audience. Houston was our first run-in with mass hysteria. The limousine was strategically parked by the stage door for Matt’s immediate getaway. Even so, screaming fans surrounded the car, frantically yelling out his name, presenting flowers, and trying to touch him.
If anything, Houston was an even greater victory than Vegas. The King of Rock and Roll was back on top. The strain of sustaining such a hype was just beginning and, for the moment, I could believe that everything would still be all right. I did not realize the extent to which Matt’s touring was going to separate us, that this in fact was the beginning of the end. After Houston Matt began crossing the country, making one-night stands, flying by day, trying to catch some sleep to maintain the high energy level demanded by his performances. From 1971 on, he toured more than any other artist—three weeks at a time with no days off and two shows on Saturdays and Sundays.
I missed him. We talked constantly of being together more, but he knew that if he let me join him, he couldn’t refuse the requests from regulars whose marriages were also feeling the strain of long separations. For a while a group of us would fly in from time to time, but this didn’t last long. Matt noticed that his employees were lax in discharging their duties to him when spouses were present, and he established a new policy: No wives on the road.
I didn’t really miss the one-night stands, a tedious routine at best: Jump off the plane, rush to the hotel, unpack as little as possible, since you had to check out the next day, go to the performance, then back to the hotel for a little rest before heading back to the airport. Everything was the same except for the name of the town.
It was the day Matt suggested I come to Vegas less often that I became really upset and suspicious. He’d decided that we wives would attend opening and closing nights only.
I knew then I’d have to fight for our relationship or accept the fact that we were now gradually going to grow apart as so many couples in show business do. As a couple, we’d never sat down to plan out a future. Matt, individually, was stretching as an artist, but as man and wife we needed a common reality.
The chances of our marriage surviving were slim indeed as long as he continued to live apart from Charlotte and me, and in bachelor quarters at that. It came down to how much longer I could stand the separation. Matt wanted to have his cake and eat it too. And now, as the tours and long engagements took him even further from his family, I realized that we might never reach my dreams of togetherness.
I had trouble believing that Matt was always faithful, and the more he kept us apart, the more my suspicions grew.
Now when we went to Vegas, I felt more comfortable at the openings. He was always preoccupied with the show and I felt he needed me then. On closing nights I always felt uneasy. Too many days had gone by, enough time for suspicions to poison my thoughts. The Vegas maître d’s invariably planted a bevy of beauties in the front rows for the entertainer to play to. Curious, I would scan their faces while watching Matt closely to see if he seemed to direct his songs to any girl in particular. Suspicious of everyone, my heart ached—but we were never able to talk about it. It was to be accepted as part of the job.
Backstage one night James was jokingly negotiating for a key that had been tossed to Matt. She was an attractive middle-aged blonde—James’s type. Matt said, “Dad, you’ve got enough problems at home with one blonde. You certainly don’t need two.”
“Well, okay,” James said. “You’re going to have problems of your own if your wife goes out in the street looking like that.” I had begun wearing skimpy knit dresses and see-through fabrics that were daringly revealing. Steven and Charlie whistled and gave wolfcalls, while Matt proudly showed me off.
The jokes I played on him were also efforts to get his attention. One night, after he’d left early for a show, I put on a black dress with a black hood and an exceptionally low-cut back. When it came time for Matt to give away kisses to the girls in the audience—a regular part of his show—I went up to the stage. Instead of kissing me, he kept on singing his song, leaving me to stand there. With my hair hiding the dress strap around my neck, I appeared from the back to be nude from the waist up. I could hear the “oooh”s and “ahhhh”s of the audience. They were under the impression that a topless girl had cornered Matt and that he couldn’t figure out what to do.
I kept whispering to him, “Kiss me, kiss me, so I can sit down,” but he decided to turn the joke on me, and made me wait in the spotlight for the duration of the song. Planting a big kiss on my lips, he surprisingly introduced me to the audience. I felt a bit embarrassed and made my way back to my seat.
Later in the show he’d strut back and forth onstage, tease his audience, talk to them, tell them stories, even confide in them. “You know,” he’d say, “some people in this town get a little greedy. I know you folks save a long time to come and hear me sing. I just want you to know, as far as I’m concerned, there won’t be any exorbitant raise in price when you come back. I’m here to entertain you and that’s all I care about.”
Matt was having an ongoing love affair with his audience and the next time I was home alone I knew I had no choice but to start more of a life of my own.
It was with that thought in mind that Amber, my sister Michelle, and I planned a short trip to Palm Springs. In the course of the weekend I opened the mailbox to check the mail and found a number of letters from girls who had obviously been to the house, one in particular signed “Lizard Tongue.” My immediate response was disbelief, followed by outrage. I dialed Vegas and demanded that Nate find Matt and bring him to the telephone. When Nate said Matt was sleeping, I told him about the letters and insisted I speak to Matt. Nate promised that he would have Matt call as soon as he woke up. He did, but it was clear that Nate had filled him in on the situation and Matt had his explanation ready. He was totally innocent, the girls were just fans, they were out of their minds if they said they’d ever come to the house, and besides, it was their word against his. As usual, in the end I apologized for putting him on the spot, but things at this point were becoming too obvious.
He said, “Get out and do things while I’m gone, because if you don’t, you’re going to start getting depressed.”
Although my choices were limited—he still objected to my taking a job or enrolling in classes at college—I continued my dancing and started taking private art instruction.
Matt was a born entertainer and although he tried to avoid crowds, disliked restaurants, and complained he “couldn’t get out like a normal person,” this life-style suited him. He handpicked the people he wanted to be around him—to work with and travel withand they adjusted to his routine and his hours and his temperament. It was a pretty close clan throughout the years. A few arguments erupted and a few couples left over some misunderstandings, but they usually returned in a week or two.
My view of life had been fashioned by Matt. I had entered his world as a young girl and he had provided absolute security. He distrusted any outside influences, which he saw as a threat to the relationship, fearing they would destroy his creation, his ideal. He could never have foreseen what was happening as the consequence of his prolonged absences from home. A major period in my growth was beginning. I still feared our separations but felt that our love had no boundaries, that I was his and if he wanted me to change, I would. For years nothing had existed in my world but him, and now that he was gone for long stretches of time, the inevitable happened. I was creating a life of my own, starting to achieve a sense of security in myself, and discovering there was a whole world outside our marriage.
Over the years of playing Vegas, other pressures began to mount. There were more death threats and lawsuits, including alleged paternity suits and assault-and-battery charges. Jealous husbands claimed they’d seen Matt flirting with their wives, and others continued to charge that Sonny and Red were manhandling them. Matt began to get bored with these nuisances as well as with the sameness of the show. Inevitably, he tried to change the format, but then he felt it just didn’t have the same pacing as the original. He’d add a few songs here and there but then revert to the original. Pointed suggestions that he make changes before the next Vegas date added to the pressure.
Bored and restless, he increased his dependence on chemicals. He thought speed helped him escape from destructive thinking, when in reality it gave him false confidence and unnatural aggressiveness. He started losing perspective on himself and others. To me he became increasingly unreachable.
Excerpt from: "Elvis and Me" by Priscilla Beaulieu Presley. Scribd. This material may be protected by copyright.
a/n - welll..🎀
21 notes · View notes
moonbuckets · 2 years ago
Text
I saw Heathers in the theater yesterday (there was a 35th anniversary showing) and I got red vines at the consessions, naturally. During the Snappy Snack Shack scene, I grabbed my (preopened before the show) red vines. At the same time I saw and heard several people also grab their red vines and I just really love seeing a movie I love with other people who love it.
36 notes · View notes
that-one-poison-trainer · 1 year ago
Note
pelipper mail: a tuna can, preopened, inside a ziplock bag, covered in duct tape, with a note that reads "sorry I forgot".
(@psyonicscream)
Yippee :3
Mlem mlem mlem nom nom mlem nom mlem nom mlem mlem mlem mlem-
3 notes · View notes
rainyraisin · 2 years ago
Text
GUYS GUYS GUYS
I WAS AT MERRY HILL TODAY AND I SOMEHOW FOUND THE HOLY GRAIL IN THE WORKS
Tumblr media
I BOUGHT THE ENTIRE FUCKING BOX IT WAS ONLY £22 CAUSE THEYRE £1 EACH IM SO EXCITED MY SILLIES MY SILLIES MY SILLIES MY SILLIES‼️‼️‼️‼️‼️🥹🥹🥹💖💖💖🫶🫶🫶‼️‼️‼️
I genuinely rambled so much to my mom the entire rest of the trip I was jumping about I was flapping my hands I was ESTATIC‼️‼️‼️‼️‼️
Im live updating on my Instagram story with each pack's contents but I feel kinda bad spamming my tumblr so ILL REBLOG WITH ALL THE SILLIES I GOT‼️‼️‼️💪💪💪💖💖💖🫶🫶
Tumblr media
Btw whilst I was sorting them I found out two packs were preopened but DW I HAVENT SEEN WHO'S IN THEM‼️‼️‼️💪💪💪
14 notes · View notes
altonascends · 1 year ago
Text
demon the fallen
The following is a post that I make basically you commit myself into doing something that I’ve always wanted to do, updating demon into world of darkness fifth edition.
following is my list of preopening the book objectives, which is basically a long list of things that I’d love to do without having cracked open the book and probably the last three weeks to kind of make a guideline for myself of what I want to do
first, I have to rework the faith system. The faith system is great. I love the faith system, but it does suffer from a few flaws. Most of it being that it was unwieldy second lures anybody who heard the rulebook can tell you the laws are neither balanced nor really fully in my opinion thought out , lastly I would love to remove a little bit of the interesting. Shall we say concepts ideas you find the original demon the fallen book which a more modern reason would tell you is not the greatest.
I will try to update once a week. The odds of that actually happening are mediocre as there may just not be enough progress in one week in particular, but I hope by putting this out here I convince myself to actually fully connected to this as opposed to just starting and then immediately stoping
2 notes · View notes
datdangernoodle · 2 years ago
Text
Ao3 down and y’all need to read?? Fret not! I have an answer that may help some of you. As you may have noticed, you can still access previously loaded chapters of whichever story you’re reading. While that may not at first seem like a life saving thing (like, what am I going to do? Read the same chapter over and over again?? I’m not that desperate… yet…) it actually has a secret benefit— the download button. So here’s a short guide on how to use that button on various devices!
Iphone
As I have iPhone I’ll tell you what I do.
Download EPUB reader off the App Store (or use the provided link below).
Hit that savior of a download button on the ao3 story of your choice
Save as EPUB
Hit the download button on the bottom of you screen
Hit “open in” and open using EPUB reader
Congrats!! Now it should be in the app for your reading pleasure!!
Android
I don’t have android but a little bit of research showed me it’s the same as iPhone. Download as EPUB and find an EPUB reader on the play store
PC
I honestly doubt anyone’s gunna have ao3 tabs preopened on their pc but just in case here’s this.
Use PDF if you have a pdf reader or want to find one for free.
Use html freely it seems. Google says if you double click it it’ll open straight on chrome but only if you have it set as your default
For epub google says you need to have Adobe to open it, move with caution here
For MOBI you’ll need FBReader to open it, there’s a wikihow if you google it
For AZW3 you’ll need an Ebook reader to use it
Hope this helps!!~
3 notes · View notes
ehowfind · 10 months ago
Text
1920 Bar preopening vacancies - 2024
A leading restaurant in the Food & Beverages industry, is excited to announce 1920 bar preopening vacancies for the year 2024. We are looking for exceptional individuals to join our dynamic team and contribute to the success of our upcoming restaurant. If you have a passion for culinary excellence, exceptional customer service, and a desire to be part of a truly immersive dining experience, then…
0 notes
lifewithchronicpain · 11 months ago
Text
I mean fuck I used to be able to at least print tickets for my mom, now I have to make sure she knows how to use an app. And make sure she can access it because she doesn't pay for Data. She is able to access the many xfjnity hotapots but it's not always available. So I’ve had to preopen apps and pray it opens to the ticket and doesn't try to reload. What the fuck was wrong with printed tickets?
sorry for being such a boomer but i can't stand having to download a different app for every event i want to go to just to access my fucking tickets. i should be able to call a number and order them over the phone without the internet and then go to a nice old man at a booth on the day of the show and pick up my little paper tickets.
20K notes · View notes
sevendeadlyrpg · 17 days ago
Text
Happy Saturday and Belated Eid Mubarak to those who celebrate.
I'm online for a few hours. So why not send an app for an a canon or oc!
So take a look around here, send in a Preopening App, and send any questions you have here.
Are you a sinner or saint? Find out here at Seven Deadly Rpg.
Tumblr media
Signing in from the cosmos- Admin Milky Way
Tumblr media
0 notes
lampung7com · 29 days ago
Text
IHSG Menguat di Awal Pekan, Rupiah Juga Perkasa terhadap Dolar AS
Jakarta – Indeks Harga Saham Gabungan (IHSG) mengawali perdagangan pekan ini dengan sentimen positif. Pada sesi pembukaan Senin pagi, IHSG tercatat naik sebesar 18,289 poin atau 0,25 persen ke level 7.232,452. Sebelumnya, pada sesi preopening, indeks sempat bergerak naik 17,314 poin atau 0,24 persen ke posisi 7.231,477, menandakan optimisme investor terhadap pasar saham Indonesia. Sementara itu,…
0 notes
thewillowthing · 5 months ago
Text
Preopening commission slots for feb 9th- March 9th
There will be a weekly queue :3
Tumblr media
1 note · View note