JARED MCCANN & SHANE WRIGHT || who's afraid of little old me?
the haunting narrative of a young teenage first-round draft pick villainized by the media.
dysprosium, AN 66, is a silvery-white rare earth metal. its name is derived from the greek dysprositos, meaning “hard to get at”, owing to the difficulty in separating and isolating this rare earth element. dysprosium is used to measure neutron flux, to fuel reactors, and to activate phosphors. terfenol-d is a magnetorestrictive alloy, meaning that it changes shape when a magnetic field is applied, and is used to manufacture underwater acoustic systems.
jason “robo” robertson, dallas stars #21 for @simmyfrobby’s nhl periodic table poems <3
I'm Koffee Lila Bailey and I will be officially writing and editing on here (I made a post where I introduced myself, be sure to check that out or ask me for an updated post if you'd like so you can get to know me 🙂).
People I'll be writing for:
Koffee (obviously)
Lila Ikè (obviously)
Chloe Bailey (obviously)
Kwasi Kao (the guy beside Chloe but above Lila)
Halle Bailey
Ambrè
Michael B. Jordan
Tupac Shakur
Angela Bassett
Nicki Minaj
Beyoncé
Jennifer Hudson
Jade Cargill
Bianca Belair
Teyana Taylor
Desi Luila
Saweetie
Jacob Latimore
Trevor Jackson
Algee Smith
Keith Powers
Kodie Shane
Amari Noelle
Letitia Wright
Lauren London
Tems
SZA
Raysowavyy
Ann Marie
Serayah
Ella Mai
H.E.R.
Nia Long
Lex Scott Davis
Characters that I'll be writing for:
Jazlyn Forster (Grown-ish)
Sky Forster (Grown-ish)
Erik Killmonger (Black Panther)
Tank (Bullet)
Debbie (Friday)
Britney (The Chi)
Birdie (Above The Rim)
Adonis Creed (Creed)
Spoon (Gridlocked)
Emmett (The Chi)
Shuri (Black Panther)
Mo Washington
Draya (Barbershop: next cut)
Deena (Dreamgirls)
Effie White (Dreamgirls)
Aaron Jackson (Grown-ish)
Youngblood Priest (Superfly, the updated version)
Pam (No Remorse)
Lucky (Poetic Justice)
Jacob Rodriguez (Gang Related)
Tiana Brown (Empire)
Queen Mother/ Romonda (Black Panther)
Georgia (superfly)
Sabrina (Big Happy Family)
Anthony Smalls (A Soldier's Story)
Cochise (The Warriors)
I'll be back with a part 2, I haven't covered most or some of them
An orphaned boy raised by underground creatures called Boxtrolls comes up from the sewers and out of his box to save his family and the town from the evil exterminator, Archibald Snatcher.
Credits: TheMovieDb.
Film Cast:
Archibald Snatcher (voice): Ben Kingsley
Eggs (voice): Isaac Hempstead-Wright
Winnie Portley-Rind (voice): Elle Fanning
Fish / Wheels / Bucket (voice): Dee Bradley Baker
Lady Cynthia Portley-Rind (voice): Toni Collette
Lord Portley-Rind (voice): Jared Harris
Mr. Trout (voice): Nick Frost
Mr. Pickles (voice): Richard Ayoade
Mr. Gristle (voice): Tracy Morgan
Herbert Trubshaw (voice): Simon Pegg
Oil Can / Knickers (voice): Nika Futterman
Fragile / Sweets (voice): Pat Fraley
Clocks / Specs (voice): Fred Tatasciore
Sir Langsdale (voice): Maurice LaMarche
Sir Broderick / Male Workman 1 / Male Workman 2 (voice): James Urbaniak
Boulanger / Male Aristocrat (voice): Brian George
Female Aristocrat (voice): Lori Tritel
Shoe / Sparky (voice): Steve Blum
Female Townsfolk 1 / Female Townsfolk 2 (voice): Laraine Newman
Background Boy (voice): Reckless Jack
Baby Eggs (voice): Max Mitchell
Film Crew:
Screenplay: Irena Brignull
Director: Graham Annable
Adaptation: Anthony Stacchi
Novel: Alan Snow
Music: Dario Marianelli
Animation: Travis Knight
Screenplay: Adam Pava
Animation: Stephen Bodin
Animation: Malcolm Lamont
Animation: Matias Liebrecht
Animation: Brian Leif Hansen
Animation: Payton Curtis
Animation: Joon Soo Song
Animation: Adam Lawthers
Animation: Shane Prigmore
Animation: Chris Tootell
Animation: Kyle Williams
Animation: Mike Hollenbeck
Animation: Danail Kraev
Animation: Kristien Vanden Bussche
Animation: Adam Fisher
Animation: Anthony Straus
Animation: Sean Burns
Animation: Mael Gourmelen
Animation: David Vandervoort
Animation: Dan MacKenzie
Animation Supervisor: Brad Schiff
Animation: Kevin Parry
Adaptation: Phil Dale
Producer: David Bleiman Ichioka
Animation: Jon David Buffam
Animation: Rachelle Lambden
Animation: Gabe Sprenger
Animation: Philippe Tardif
Animation: Ian Whitlock
Animation: Daniel Alderson
Animation: Charles Greenfield
Animation: Jason Stalman
Casting: Mary Hidalgo
Line Producer: Matthew Fried
Sculptor: Toby Froud
Visual Effects Coordinator: Jeremy Fenske
Choreographer: Nicole Cuevas
Visual Effects Coordinator: Claudia Amatulli
Sculptor: Benjamin William Adams
Set Designer: Emily Greene
Additional Editing: Ralph Foster
Visual Effects Editor: Todd Gilchrist
Set Designer: Carl B. Hamilton
Sculptor: Scott Foster
Production Design: Paul Lasaine
Production Coordinator: Jocelyn Pascall
Editor: Edie Ichioka
Art Direction: Curt Enderle
Editorial Coordinator: Dave Davenport
Art Department Coordinator: Zach Sheehan
CG Supervisor: Rick Sevy
Music Supervisor: Maggie Rodford
Music Editor: James Bellany
Songs: Eric Idle
Visual Effects Supervisor: Steve Emerson
Costume Design: Deborah Cook
Production Manager: Dan Pascall
Additional Writing: Vera Brosgol
Post Production Supervisor: David Dresher
Editorial Manager: Trevor Cable
Visual Effects Supervisor: Brian Van’t Hul
Additional Editing: Christopher Murrie
Director of Photography: John Ashlee Prat
Set Designer: Polly Allen Robbins
Visual Effects Producer: Annie Pomeranz
Sound Re-Recording Mixer: Ren Klyce
ADR Voice Casting: Barbara Harris
Gaffer: James WilderHancock
Modeling: Paul Mack
Publicist: Maggie Begley
Sound Re-Recording Mixer: Tom Myers
Production Design: Michel Breton
Prop Designer: Alan Cook
Animation: Paul Andrew Bailey
Assistant Art Director: Phil Brotherton
Executive In Charge Of Post Production: Ben Urquhart
First Assistant Director: Samuel Wilson
Layout: Daniel R. Casey
Layout: Simon Dunsdon
Orchestrator: Geoff Alexander
Set Dresser: Duncan Gillis
Third Assistant Director: David J. Epstein
Animation: Anthony Elworthy
Animation: Dan Ramsay
Animation: Jan-Erik Maas
CG Animator: Carolyn Vale
Digital Compositors: Daniel Leatherdale
Digital Compositors: James McPherson
Foley Editor: Thom Brennan
Production Illustrator: Ean McNamara
Sound Effects Editor: David C. Hughes
Finance: Erin Baldwin
Finance: Jason Bryant
CG Animator: Jeff Croke
Con...
▷ ice hockey + doctor who
▷ known photoshop sufferer (my edits)
▷ exclusively a seattle kraken fan ♡ joey daccord, philipp grubauer, tye kartye, ryker evans, jared mccann, shane wright, jagger firkus
▷ also loves paul mcgann and the eighth doctor
▷ most posts are queued
▷ enjoy yr stay :)
Amell, Bernthal, Cox, Van Dien Added To FAN EXPO Philadelphia Lineup, June 2-4
Things just got a lot more interesting for fans of a few blockbuster franchises as FAN EXPO Philadelphia today announced a new slate of key additions to its already outstanding lineup of guests. “Arrow” star Stephen Amell, “Punisher” standout Jon Bernthal, “Daredevil” headliner Charlie Cox and “Stranger Things” breakout Grace Van Dien will now be attending the event, June 2-4 at the Pennsylvania Convention Center.
Advanced Tickets for FAN EXPO Philadelphia are on sale through May 18 at www.fanexpophiladelphia.com, with discounts on individual day, 3-day and Ultimate Fan Packages available for adults, youths and families. VIP packages are also available now, with dozens of special benefits including priority entry, limited edition collectibles, exclusive items and much more.
Amell teams with fellow “Arrow” cast member Emily Bett Rickards; Cox joins “Daredevil” co-star Vincent D’Onofrio; and Van Dien pairs with Joseph Quinn as a “Stranger Things” tandem at the show.
They complement the other previously announced FAN EXPO Philadelphia guests, led by icon Michael J Fox, his Back to the Future costars Christopher Lloyd and Tom Wilson; Henry Winkler (“Happy Days,” “Barry”); Christina Ricci (“The Addams Family,” “Wednesday”); Sam Raimi (The Evil Dead, Spider-Man); Sean Astin (The Lord of the Rings, Rudy); Peter Weller (Robocop, Adventures of Buckaroo Banzai Across the 8th Dimension); Katee Sackhoff (“The Mandalorian,” “Battlestar Galactica); and Bonnie Wright (Harry Potter). Additional celebrities, voice actors, creators, cosplayers exhibitors and programming for this major comics, sci-fi, horror, literary, anime and gaming convention will be announced closer to the event.
Known to millions as the crime-fighting vigilante in the title role of “Oliver Queen/Green Arrow” in the eponymous hit CW series, as well as “The Flash,” “Supergirl,” “Batwoman,” “DC’s Legends of Tomorrow” and other iterations, Stephen Amell has also appeared as a series regular in numerous shows, prominently "Hung," "Private Practice" and "Heartland." He also had recurring roles in "New Girl" opposite Zooey Deschanel and "Private Practice" as the love interest to Amy Brenneman.
Jon Bernthal played the lead “Frank Castle” in the Netflix Marvel series “Daredevil” after a popular run as “Shane Walsh” in the AMC hit drama “The Walking Dead.” The classically trained Bernthal most recently starred in last year’s “American Gigolo” on Showtime and has appeared in such large-scale productions as World Trade Center, The Pacific and Rampart, and has had guest roles on top TV series like "CSI: Miami," "Boston Legal," "Without a Trace" and "How I Met Your Mother."
Charlie Cox has had more than 40 screen credits, with his role as “Matt Murdock” on “Daredevil” (reprised in “She-Hulk” and Spider-Man: No Way Home) the most prominent. He gained wide notice for his portrayal of “Owen Sleater” in the HBO period drama “Boardwalk Empire” and played the lead role of “Michael Kinsella” in the AMC+ crime drama series “Kin.”
One of the breakout stars of this past season on “Stranger Things,” Grace Van Dien has earned a fervent following for her role as “Chrissy Cunningham,” the latest among her 30+ credits. She was also a regular on the NBC drama “The Village” and portrayed real-life actress Sharon Tate in the film Charlie Says, based on the Charles Manson murders.
Philadelphia is the eighth event on the 2023 FAN EXPO HQ calendar; the full schedule is available at fanexpohq.com/home/events/.
Jake Gyllenhaal and Michael Shannon in Nocturnal Animals
Amy Adams in Nocturnal Animals
Nocturnal Animals (Tom Ford, 2016)
Cast: Amy Adams, Jake Gyllenhaal, Michael Shannon, Aaron Taylor-Johnson, Isla Fisher, Ellie Bamber, Armie Hammer, Karl Glusman, Robert Aramayo, Laura Linney, India Menuez. Screenplay: Tom Ford, based on a novel by Austin Wright. Cinematography: Seamus McGarvey. Production design: Shane Valentino. Film editing: Joan Sobel. Music: Abel Korzeniowski.
Jake Gyllenhaal and Amy Adams are two of our best actors, but even they can't do what writer-director Tom Ford calls on them for in Nocturnal Animals: pull the two halves of his movie into coherence. Part of the film is a savage satire on the art world's high end and its wealthy patrons. The other part is a story of sexual violence and revenge. Adams's Susan Morrow exists in the first part as a wealthy gallery owner in Los Angeles with a husband who is cheating on her. One day she receives a manuscript from her ex-husband, Edward Sheffield (Gyllenhaal). It provides the second story, about Tony Hastings (also Gyllenhaal), who is waylaid by vicious young thugs while driving across West Texas by night. His wife, Laura (Isla Fisher), and his teenage daughter, India (Ellie Bamber), are in the car with him, but Tony, who survives by hiding from the men, is unable to save Laura and India from being raped and murdered. With the help of Bobby Andes (Michael Shannon), a detective who is dying of lung cancer, he gets his revenge but, as they say, at a cost. As Susan reads the manuscript, she envisions Tony as Edward, whom she had betrayed by leaving him and aborting their child, then marrying the wealthy Hutton Morrow (Armie Hammer), with whom she has a now-grown daughter, Samantha (India Menuez). The story so disturbs Susan that she wonders why Edward chose to send it to her after so many years -- is this tale of revenge itself a kind of threat? As well-done as the Tony Hastings story is, with strong performances by not only Gyllenhaal but also Shannon and Aaron Taylor-Johnson as the vicious Ray Marcus, it never comes into the same focus as the "real" story of Susan and the rather decadent art world in which she moves. That said, the best scene in the film may be the one in which Susan has lunch with her mother, a big-haired Texas grande dame played with finesse by Laura Linney. Ford has a way of tossing in secondary characters whose backstories sound potentially more interesting than the ones in the foreground. Nocturnal Animals is a disappointment, but only because it feels like it skims the surface of what it has to tell us.
Seen-it-all New York detective Frank Keller is unsettled – he has done twenty years on the force and could retire, and he hasn’t come to terms with his wife leaving him for a colleague. Joining up with an officer from another part of town to investigate a series of murders linked by the lonely hearts columns he finds he is getting seriously and possibly dangerously involved with Helen, one of the main suspects.
Credits: TheMovieDb.
Film Cast:
Frank Keller: Al Pacino
Helen Cruger: Ellen Barkin
Sherman: John Goodman
Terry: Michael Rooker
Frank Keller Sr.: William Hickey
Gruber: Richard Jenkins
Serafino: Paul Calderon
Struk: Gene Canfield
Dargan: Larry Joshua
Lieutenant: John Spencer
Gina Gallagher / Lonelyheart: Christine Estabrook
Miss Allen: Barbara Baxley
Older Woman: Patricia Barry
Murdered Man: Mark Phelan
Raymond Brown: Michael O’Neill
Doorman: Michael Fischetti
Omar Maldonado: Luis Antonio Ramos
Efram Maldonado: Rafael Báez
Black Guy: Samuel L. Jackson
Ernest Lee: Damien Leake
Tommy: John Thaddeus
Willie: Joshua Nelson
Supermarket Manager: Christofer de Oni
Supermarket Cashier: Dwayne McClary
Helen’s Mother: Jacqueline Brookes
Toastmaster: Thom Curley
Cable Supervisor: Fred Sanders
Clipboard Guy #2: Larry Mullane
Clipboard Guy #3: Anthony Catanese
Bartender: Thomas Wagner
Doorman: Manny Alfaro
James Mackey: Brian Paul
Tense Woman: Deborah Taylor
Sasha: Ferne Downey
Raymond Brown’s Wife: Nancy Beatty
Clipboard Guy #1: Tony De Santis
Yuppie Detective #1: Jackie Laidlaw
Yuppie Detective #2: Paul Hubbard
Surveillance Team Member: James Kidnie
Sherman’s Wife: Bridget O’Sullivan
Criminal Type: Franz Fridal
Hallway Cop: James O’Regan
Hallway Cop: Wayne Best
Young Cop: John Bourgeois
Young Cop: Hugh Thompson
Bride: Miranda de Pencier
Groom: Ty Templeton
Denice Gruber (scenes deleted): Lorraine Bracco
Film Crew:
Editor: David Bretherton
Director: Harold Becker
Director of Photography: Ronnie Taylor
Unit Production Manager: Louis A. Stroller
Producer: Martin Bregman
Costume Design: Betsy Cox
Script Supervisor: Blanche McDermaid
First Assistant Camera: Yves Drapeau
Second Assistant Director: Rocco Gismondi
First Assistant Director: Michael E. Steele
Second Assistant Director: David Sardi
First Assistant Director: Thomas J. Mack
Camera Operator: Andy Chmura
Casting: Mary Colquhoun
Production Design: John Jay Moore
Second Assistant Director: Madeleine Henrié
Additional Photography: Adam Holender
Associate Producer: Michael Bregman
Makeup Artist: Irving Buchman
Hairstylist: Bryan Charbonneau
Hairstylist: Bob Grimaldi
Makeup Artist: Irene Kent
Key Makeup Artist: Leslie A. Sebert
Stunts: Dick Ziker
Writer: Richard Price
Stunts: Glenn R. Wilder
Stunts: Buddy Joe Hooker
Production Assistant: Liam Kiernan
Stunts: Kenny Bates
Stunts: Steve Boyum
Stunts: Rick Parker
Stunts: Shane Cardwell
Production Manager: Barbara Kelly
First Assistant Camera: Michael Hall
First Assistant Camera: Horace Jordan
Location Manager: Debra Beers
Production Accountant: Dorothy Precious
Production Coordinator: Toni Blay
Sound Mixer: Keith A. Wester
Boom Operator: Steve Switzer
Gaffer: Rae Thurston
Best Boy Grip: Howie Balbraith
Grip: Randy Tambling
Dolly Grip: Robert DaPrato
First Assistant Art Direction: Lucinda Zak
Set Decoration: Gordon Sim
Set Dresser: Raman Majlath
Property Master: Vic Rigler
Wardrobe Master: Gail Filman
Second Assistant Camera: Rick Perotto
Assistant Location Manager: Anne Richardson
Assistant Accountant: Karen Demontbrun
Assistant Set Decoration: Richard Ferbrache
Assistant Property Master: Jeff Poulis
Wardrobe Assistant: Debi Weldon
Production Secretary: Regina Robb
Carpenter: Boyd Allen
Scenic Artist: Reet Puhm
Transportation Coordinator: Neil Montgomerie
Unit Publicist: Joan Eisenberg
Still Photographer: Rob McEwan
Casting: Stuart Aikins
Extras Casting: Scott Mansfield
Additional Editing: John Wright
Assistant Editor: Francine Fleishman
Assistant Editor: Irvin Paik
Assistant Editor: Charlene Olson
Assistant Editor: Haydn Streeter
Supervising Sound Editor: Norval D. Crutcher
Supervising Sound Editor: Randle ...
THIS POST IS NO LONGER RELEVANT. READ THE UPDATED POST IF YOU GIVE AN ACTUAL FUCK ABOUT OUR COMMUNITY OUTSIDE OF SANITIZED CORPO ACTIVISM (original post preserved under cut for reference; even with the ignored amendment)
Woke up today to see it was the 12th, the day of the Pulse Nightclub shooting.
As someone who lives relatively near Orlando, I remember this day so vividly and I still feel a lot of pain for the victims even five years later.
This list isn't in order with the photograph above, but please take a moment to remember their names:
Stanley Almodovar III, 23
Amanda Alvear, 25
Oscar A. Aracena-Montero, 26
Rodolfo Ayala-Ayala, 33
Alejandro Barrios Martinez, 21
Martin Benitez Torres, 33
Antonio D. Brown, 30
Darryl R. Burt II, 29
Jonathan A. Camuy Vega, 24
Angel L. Candelario-Padro, 28
Simon A. Carrillo Fernandez, 31
Juan Chevez-Martinez, 25
Luis D. Conde, 39
Cory J. Connell, 21
Tevin E. Crosby, 25
Franky J. Dejesus Velazquez, 50
Deonka D. Drayton, 32
Mercedez M. Flores, 26
Peter O. Gonzalez-Cruz, 22
Juan R. Guerrero, 22
Paul T. Henry, 41
Frank Hernandez, 27
Miguel A. Honorato, 30
Javier Jorge-Reyes, 40
Jason B. Josaphat, 19
Eddie J. Justice, 30
Anthony L. Laureano Disla, 25
Christopher A. Leinonen, 32
Brenda L. Marquez McCool, 49
Jean C. Mendez Perez, 35
Akyra Monet Murray, 18
Kimberly Morris, 37
Jean C. Nieves Rodriguez, 27
Luis O. Ocasio-Capo, 20
Geraldo A. Ortiz-Jimenez, 25
Eric Ivan Ortiz-Rivera, 36
Joel Rayon Paniagua, 32
Enrique L. Rios Jr., 25
Juan P. Rivera Velazquez, 37
Yilmary Rodriguez Solivan, 24
Christopher J. Sanfeliz, 24
Xavier Emmanuel Serrano Rosado, 35
Gilberto Ramon Silva Menendez, 25
Edward Sotomayor Jr., 34
Shane E. Tomlinson, 33
Leroy Valentin Fernandez, 25
Luis S. Vielma, 22
Luis Daniel Wilson-Leon, 37
Jerald A. Wright, 31
═══════════════
I remember biting back tears in my living room because I wasn't out of the closet, and couldn't let my family know just how much this hurt me. I remember breaking down that night while scrolling the headlines, watching as the number of fatalities kept climbing. I remember staring at the button on Facebook asking me if I was safe.
And to this day, even with those involved and responsible gone... I still do not feel safe as a queer man in this state or in this country.
Months later, the city tried to buy the property off. A mere few months after Orlando's LGBTQ+ and Latino communities suffered the largest tragedy it has known, the city and government put a price of $2.25 million on our blood. They claimed they wanted to make it a memorial site, to "honor us". In reality, they wanted profit. Quoted how “There are lots of people that are making a visit to the site part of their trip, part of their experience of Orlando, so I think 12 to 18 months of leaving it as-is would be appropriate."
Today there was a memorial held for the victims. It was live streamed on various news websites. And there is nothing but hatred in these chats, even in the face of mourning. Comments about how disgusting LGBTQ+ people were. How we were going to repent. How we were demons plaguing the nation's cities. How we deserve to be cast out or murdered for our sins. Comments about how there will be a forcible eradication of "our kind", whether we like it or not.
Today, the memorial independently, thanks to the club's owners and the onePULSE Foundation, which I encourage you donate to (if you can).
2023 EDIT: I rescind my statements about onePULSE now that new knowledge has come to light.
Local organizers and victims do not support onePULSE, as there are no survivors involved in onePULSE. Barbara Poma (a figurehead) is currently on vacation and the foundation has no plans to lead any community events. onePULSE is ultimately turning a profit on the backs of the survivors of this tragedy and the only thing they're bringing to the community is disaster tourism.
Instead, check out this group run by victims and the community impacted most by this tragedy:
═══════════════
But the fight for our rights, our recognition, and our safety still continues:
In June 2021, the Governor of Florida vetoed an "item-lined budget bill" - that legally provides mental health, counseling, and compensation directly towards victims of the June 2016 Pulse nightclub Orlando shooting.
While they cannot be enforced, sodomy laws still exist in Florida to this day. Every year, we are still criminalized by a technicality.
In many places, same-sex domestic partnerships are still not granted. It is only viable in approximately nine counties, thirty cities, and one town.
It took until 2016 for same-sex couples to be granted the same parental rights during in vitro fertilization and surrogacy as opposite-sex couples. Before then, the non-biological mother and father was not the child's legal parent nor guardian.
The state's "hate crime law" only accounts for sexual orientation, and does not protect victims who were attacked for their gender identity.
Anti-discrimination laws for sexual orientation and gender identity are not state-wide nor equally applicable within each county/town.
On June 1, 2021, Governor of Florida Ron DeSantis signed a bill to exclude transgender women from participating in sports designated for female students. This bill passed because of a last-minute legislative "procedural maneuver". The HRC is currently establishing a campaign to try and stop the law from going into effect (called "nullification") on midnight July 1.
Gay-panic and Trans-panic are still viable legal defenses, resulting in these abhorrent hate crimes to be decreased from murder to the lesser charge of manslaughter.
Conversion therapy against minors is not banned state-wide, and is still legal within many areas of the state. In fact, in some areas, a ban on the practice is deemed "unenforceable".