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#thomas e. ricks
tomorrowusa · 1 year
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In 2005, Putin famously lamented the collapse of the Soviet Union as the “great geopolitical catastrophe” of the 20th century. It would be ironic if his war completes the Soviet dissolution.
– Thomas E. Ricks, military and national security journalist, writing at the New York Times.
Putin is no time lord, he can't turn back the clock no matter how much he wishes to be Stalin. The Soviet Union is DEAD DEAD DEAD and nobody can bring it back.
Nobody has done more in this century to strengthen NATO, make former parts of the USSR more distrustful of Russia, and damage the Russian economy than Vladimir Putin. The invasion of Ukraine was an overreach of Shakespearean magnitude.
Putin is Russia's self-inflicted catastrophe of the 21st century. And it may take much of the rest of this century to sort out the mess he's created.
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tommy-thomas · 25 days
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Just bought books from my fave authorsss ehehehe~
I already read the one on the left online, but its so beautiful i couldnt resist getting the physical one 🥹🥹🥹
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the-gershomite · 7 months
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The Savage Sword of Conan the Barbarian #23 -October 1977-
adapted from the manuscipt by Robert E. Howard
"The Sriking of the Gong" a tale of Kull when Kull was king
script by Roy Thomas
art by Rick Hoberg & Bill Wray
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beautifulmakkaris · 1 year
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If you're missing Lockwood and Co, don't despair! Here are some recommendations from fans of the show and books to help fill the void while we fight for season 2 - please share far and wide <3
All recs are from responses to this post, myself and things I've seen floating around the internet (ie, Goodreads suggestions/lists). Recs may be based on specific characters, ships, tropes, genres, worldbuilding or just general ~vibes.
Please make sure to check all content warnings before reading/watching any recommendations on this list.
Books (standalone)
Spellbound by F. T. Lukens
The Agency for Scandal by Laura Wood
The Dead Romantics by Ashley Poston
The Cheat Sheet by Sarah Adams
This May End Badly by Samantha Markum
Cemetery Boys by Aiden Thomas
The Ex Hex by Erin Sterling
A Sky Painted Gold by Laura Wood
The Hidden Dragon by Melissa Marr
Trouble by Lex Croucher
Books (series - *ongoing)
Shades of Magic by V. E. Schwab
Skulduggery Pleasant by Derek Landy
A Good Girl's Guide to Murder by Holly Jackson
The Locked Tomb by Tamsyn Muir*
Virals by Kathy Reichs
The Shades of London by Maureen Johnson
The Raven Cycle by Maggie Stiefvater
Jackaby by William Ritter
Charlotte Holmes by Brittany Cavallaro
The Checquy Files by Daniel O'Malley
Alex Stern by Leigh Bardugo*
Stalking Jack the Ripper by Kerry Maniscalco
Scarlet by A. C. Gaughen
Renegades by Marissa Meyer
The Diviners by Libba Bray
City of Ghosts by Victoria Schwab
Percy Jackson & the Olympians by Rick Riordan
Mokee Joe by Peter J. Murray
Mortal Engines by Philip Reeve
Murder Most Unladylike by Robin Stevens*
Letters of Enchantment by Rebecca Ross*
The Left-Handed Booksellers of London by Garth Nix
Dreadwood by Jennifer Killick
The Empyrean by Rebecca Yarros*
The Bartimaeus Sequence by Jonathan Stroud
Ankh-Morpork City Watch (Discworld) by Terry Pratchett
The Mistborn Trilogy by Brandon Sanderson
Scarlett & Browne by Jonathan Stroud
His Dark Materials by Philip Pullman
Books (graphic novels)
Locke & Key by Joe Hill
Television series (*-ongoing)
School Spirits*
Buffy the Vampire Slayer
Shadow & Bone
Wednesday*
Stranger Things*
CW's Nancy Drew
Shadowhunters
Locke & Key
The Bastard Son and the Devil Himself
Spooksville
The Midnight Club
Teen Wolf
Dirk Gently's Holistic Detective Agency
Grimm
Please feel free to keep sending recommendations my way and I'll update this list as often as I can! Also let me know if you enjoy anything you found from this list, I'd love to know if you found it helpful :)
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book--brackets · 2 months
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Author Stats for BFB
When putting together the Best Fantasy Book polls, I noticed that a lot of authors were popular choices, so I thought I'd do a little post about our most popular authors from ones that are in the list only twice to the most common author we have!
The preliminary round for BFB starts tomorrow!
2 Times
J. R. R. Tolkien
Erin Morgenstern
Cassandra Clare
Eoin Colfer
Terry Pratchett
Laini Taylor
Jim Butcher
Robin Hobb
R. F. Kuang
Samantha Shannon
Shannon Hale
Jonathan Stroud
Seanan McGuire
Enid Blyton
Clive Barker
Alix E. Harrow
Scott Westerfeld
Raymond E. Feist
Wayne Thomas Batson
Xiran Jay Zhao
Lloyd Alexander
Meagan Spooner
Katherine Addison
Christina Henry
Gene Wolfe
N. D. Wilson
Emily Rodda
Jude Watson
Ellen Kushner
Cliff McNish
C. J. Cherryh
Garry Kilworth
3 Times
Rick Riordan
Roald Dahl
Brandon Sanderson
Cornelia Funke
Gail Carson Levine
Garth Nix
T. Kingfisher
Patricia C. Wrede
Robin McKinley
Kieron Gillen
Francis Hardinge
4 Times
Holly Black
V. E. Schwab
Naomi Novik
5 Times
Diana Wynne Jones
6 Times
Tamora Pierce
9 Times
Neil Gaiman
Mercedes Lackey
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shoshiwrites · 10 months
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Band of Brothers Ages: IRL vs. Actors
Did you know that according to a 1947 study, almost half the men who served in WWII were still under age 26 by the end of the war?
What this is : A (very long) post comparing the ages of the actors in Band of Brothers vs. the IRL figures they are portraying.
Background: Did I need to do this? No. Did anyone ask for this? Also no. Did I do it anyway? Yes.
Disclaimers: This is SUPER approximate for the most part. I based IRL ages off of D-Day unless otherwise noted, and actor ages off of January 1, 2000, the year filming took place (the latter is where the most variation will be because I didn't try to figure out what month filming started). I also didn't fact-check birthdays beyond googling. Most are sourced from the Band of Brothers and Military Wikis on fandom.com, Wikipedia, and IMDb.
I broke them up into rough categories, which are, again, approximate. I know I often forget how young the real life people were here, and this was a good reminder of that. I also found it interesting to see which actors were actually younger than their roles!
Check it all out under the cut ⬇️
~10+ years older
Dale Dye (55) as Col. Robert F. Sink (39) (~16 years)
Michael Cudlitz (35) as Denver "Bull" Randleman (23) (~12)
Marc Warren (32) as Albert Blithe (20) (~12)
Rocky Marshall (33) as Earl J. McClung (21) (~12)
Frank John Hughes (32) as William J. Guarnere (21) (~11)
Neal McDonough (33) as Lynn D. (Buck) Compton (22) (~11)
Dexter Fletcher (33) as John W. Martin (22) (~11)
~5+ years older
Simon Schatzberger (32) as Joseph A. Lesniewski (23) (~9)
Richard Speight Jr. (30) Warren H. (Skip) Muck (22) (~8)
Jason O'Mara (30) as Thomas Meehan (22) (~8)
Ron Livingston (32) as Lewis Nixon (25) (~7)
Donnie Wahlberg (30) as C. Carwood Lipton (24) (~6)
Matthew Settle (30) as Ronald C. Speirs (24) (~6)
Nolan Hemmings (28) as Charles E. "Chuck" Grant (22) (~6)
Douglas Spain (25) as Antonio C. Garcia (19) (~6)
George Calil (26) as James H. "Mo" Alley Jr. (21) (~5)
Rick Gomez (27) as George Luz (22) (~5 year)
Scott Grimes (28) as Donald G. Malarkey (23) (~5)
Stephen Graham (26) as Myron "Mike" Ranney (21) (~5)
~less than 5 years older
Shane Taylor (25) as Eugene G. Roe (21) (~4)
Tim Matthews (23) as Alex M. Penkala Jr. (19) (~4)
Matthew Leitch (24) as Floyd M. "Tab" Talbert (20) (~4)
Peter O'Meara (30) as Norman S. Dike Jr. (26) (~4)
Tom Hardy (22) as John A. Janovec (18) (~4)
Rick Warden (28) as Harry F. Welsh (25) (~3)
Kirk Acevedo (28) as Joseph D. Toye (25) (~3)
Eion Bailey (25) as David Kenyon Webster (22) (~3)
Craig Heaney (26) as Roy W. Cobb (29) (~3)
Damian Lewis (28) as Richard D. Winters (26) (~2)
Robin Laing as Edward J. "Babe" Heffron (~2, 21/23)
Ben Caplan (26) as Walter S. "Smokey" Gordon Jr. (24) (~2)
David Schwimmer (32) as Herbert M. Sobel (33) (~1 year)
Michael Fassbender (22) as Burton P. "Pat" Christenson (21) (~1)
Colin Hanks (22) as Lt. Henry Jones (21) (~1) (age around Bastogne)
Bart Ruspoli (23) as Edward J. Tipper (22) (~1)
~Same age
Peter Youngblood Hills as Darrell C. "Shifty" Powers (21)
Mark Huberman as Lester "Les" Hashey (19)
Younger
Lucie Jeanne (23) as Renée Lemaire (30) (age around Bastogne) (~7)
Ross McCall (23) as Joseph D. Liebgott (29) (~6)
Simon Pegg (29) as William S. Evans (~33) (~4)
Philip Barantini (19) as Wayne A. "Skinny" Sisk (22) (~3)
James Madio (24) as Frank J. Perconte (27) (~3)
Stephen McCole (25) as Frederick "Moose" Heyliger (27) (~2)
Matt Hickey (~16) as Patrick S. O'Keefe (18) (~2)
Incomplete/not found
Phil McKee as Maj. Robert L. Strayer (34)
Rene L. Moreno as Joseph Ramirez (30)
Doug Allen as Alton M. More (24)
David Nicolle as Lt. Thomas A. Peacock (24)
Rebecca Okot as Anna (Augusta Chiwy) (24) (age around Bastogne)
Alex Sabga-Brady as Francis J. Mellet (23)
Mark Lawrence as William H. Dukeman Jr. (22)
Nicholas Aaron as Robert E. (Popeye) Wynn (22)
Peter McCabe as Donald B. Hoobler (21)
Marcos D'Cruze as Joseph P. Domingus (not found)
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f1rewr1t3r · 3 months
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fandoms i write for pt 2
heres part 1 and 3
smut -🖤 fluff-🤍 angst-❤️
SHAMELESS
Fiona Gallagher
Lip gallagher
Ian Gallagher (platonic only)
Carl Gallagher
Mandy Milkovich
Mickey Milkovich (platonic only)
Kevin Ball
Veronica Ball
How to train your dragon rtte
Hiccup
astrid
ruffnut
tuffnut
eret
dagur
snotlout
NCIS
Jethro Gibbs
Anthony "tony" dinozzo
Kate Todd
Ziva David
Tim McGee
Abby Sciuto
Outer Banks
JJ maybank
Rafe Cameron
John B
Sarah Cameron
Kiara Carrera
Pope Heyward
Cleo
Barry
Cobra kai / karate kid
Robby Keene
Eli "hawk" Moskowitz
Tory Nichols
johnny lawrence
Miguel diaz
Daniel LaRusso
Anne of green gables/ Anne with an E
gilbert blythe
diana berry
anne shirley
Billy andrews
Moody Spurgeon
Young Sheldon/ Big Bang
Sheldon cooper
georgie cooper
George cooper
peaky blinders
Thomas Shelby
Arthur Shelby
John Shelby
Micheal Gray
Lizzie Shelby
The Walking dead
Carl Grimes
Rick Grimes
Daryl Dixon
Enola Holmes
Enola Holmes
Sherlock holmes
Tewkesbury
Victorious
Beck Oliver
Jade west
Tori Vega
Robbie Shapiro
Andre Harris
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lifblogs · 1 year
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Some queer book recs in the fantasy and sci-fi genres (books that are part of a series will have an * before them [some have queerness later in the series and not necessarily the beginning]):
*The Legendborn Cycle by Tracy Deonn
*The City We Became by N. K. Jemisin
Legends & Lattes by Travis Baldree
Iron Widow by Xiran Jay Zhao
Even Though I Knew the End by C. L. Polk
This Is How You Lose the Time War by Amal El-Mohtar, and Max Gladstone
*The Kingdom of Gods by N. K. Jemisin
*The Sun and the Star by Rick Riordan, and Mark Oshiro
She Who Became the Sun by Shelley Parker-Chan
*A Little Hatred by Joe Abercrombie
*Fortuna by Kristyn Merbeth
*Velocity Weapon by Megan E. O’Keefe
*Gone by Michael Grant
The Sunbearer Trials by Aiden Thomas
Cemetery Boys by Aiden Thomas
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balioc · 9 months
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BALIOC'S READING LIST, 2023 EDITION
This list counts only published books, consumed in published-book format, that I read for the first time and finished. No rereads, nothing abandoned halfway through, no Internet detritus of any kind, etc. Also no children’s picture books.
(There were so many children's picture books.)
Hand of the Sun King, J. T. Greathouse
Anne of Green Gables, Lucy Maud Montgomery
The Circus of Dr. Lao, Charles G. Finney
When the Angels Left the Old Country, Sacha Lamb
Strangers to Ourselves: Unsettled Minds and the Stories That Make Us, Rachel Aviv
Elder Race, Adrian Tchaikovsky
Yamada Monogatari: Troubled Spirits, Richard Parks
Victory City, Salman Rushdie
Achieving Our Country: Leftist Thought in Twentieth-Century America, Richard Rorty
Cage of Souls, Adrian Tchaikovsky
A Morbid Taste for Bones, Ellis Peters
One Corpse Too Many, Ellis Peters
Priest of Bones, Peter McLean
Priest of Lies, Peter McLean
Demon Summoner: Apprentice, Greg Walters
By the Sword: A History of Gladiators, Musketeers, Samurai, Swashbucklers, and Olympic Champions, Richard Cohen
Tsalmoth, Steven Brust
Priest of Gallows, Peter McLean
Priest of Crowns, Peter McLean
Waybound, Will Wight
Convenience Store Woman, Sayaka Murata
The Tatami Galaxy, Tomihiko Morimi
These Violent Delights, Chloe Gong
Death in Venice, Thomas Mann
Alchemy: The Dark Art and Curious Science of Creating Magic in Brands, Business, and Life, Rory Sutherland
The Man Who Was Thursday, G. K. Chesterton
Storming Heaven, Miles Cameron
Against Worldbuilding, and Other Provocations: Essays on History, Narrative and Game Design, Alexis Kennedy
From Ritual to Romance, Jessie L. Weston
To the Lighthouse, Virginia Woolf
Rats and Gargoyles, Mary Gentle
Labyrinth's Heart, M. A. Carrick
Sex at Dawn: How We Mate, Why We Stray, and What It Means for Modern Relationships, Christopher Ryan and Cacilda Jetha
Tomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrow, Gabrielle Zevin
The Long, Long Goodbye of "The Last Bookstore," Mizuki Nomura
The Last Sun, K. D. Edwards
The Hanged Man, K. D. Edwards
The Hourglass Throne, K. D. Edwards
Pinocchio, Carlo Collodi
The Thirteen Petalled Rose: A Discourse on the Essence of Jewish Existence and Belief, Adin Steinsaltz
The Lightning Thief, Rick Riordan
A City on Mars: Can We Settle Space, Should We Settle Space, and Have We Really Thought This Through?, Kelly and Zach Weinersmith
Untethered Sky, Fonda Lee
The Consolation of Philosophy, Boethius
The Star-Child, Oscar Wilde
Monk's Hood, Ellis Peters
St. Peter's Fair, Ellis Peters
The Leper of St. Giles, Ellis Peters
The Virgin in the Ice, Ellis Peters
The Nutcracker, E. T. A. Hoffman and Alexandre Dumas
The Sanctuary Sparrow, Ellis Peters
Child of God, Cormac McCarthy
The Devil's Novice, Ellis Peters
Dead Man's Ransom, Cormac McCarthy
Plausible works of improving nonfiction consumed in 2023: 10
["plausible" and "improving" are being defined very liberally here]
Balioc's Choice Award, Fiction Division: The Circus of Dr. Lao, Charles G. Finney
>>>> Honorable Mention: Rats and Gargoyles, Mary Gentle
[This seems like the correct place to point out that, for the Balioc's Choice Awards, I consider only works that were first published with the last 100 years. Otherwise it would just be "surprise, old classics are often classics for a reason."]
Balioc's Choice Award, Nonfiction Division: The Thirteen Petalled Rose: A Discourse on the Essence of Jewish Existence and Belief, Adin Steinsaltz
>>>> Honorable Mention: A City on Mars: Can We Settle Space, Should We Settle Space, and Have We Really Thought This Through?, Kelly and Zach Weinersmith
The Roscommon Princess Award for Luminous Trembling Beauty in the Face of a Bleakly Mundane World: The Star-Child, Oscar Wilde
The Anguished Howl Award for Somehow Making Me Regret Reading a Book About a Demon Summoner in the Thirty Years' War: Demon Summoner: Apprentice, Greg Walters
The Tamsyn Muir Award for Demonstrating that Popularity Really, Really, Really is Not the Same Thing as Quality: The Lightning Thief, Rick Riordan
The G. K. Chesterton Award for Being G. K. Chesterton, I Mean, to Whom Else Could I Compare Him, For Someone So Avowedly Stodgy He is the Ballsiest Motherfucker I Have Ever Read: The Man Who Was Thursday, G. K. Chesterton
**********
...this year was much like the last several years, only somehow even more so. Not in a good way, I fear. My current lifestyle continues not to be super-conducive to reading, and writing a weekendlong LARP kind of knocked the wind out of me, both during and after. If it weren't for a massive silly-fun historical-mystery binge in December, my numbers here would be shameful. And you will notice that a whole lot of the things on that list are very short.
Most of the contemporary fiction was pretty much what I expected it to be. There were few real standouts. Things by good authors continued to be mostly good; things by shlocky authors continued to be shlock.
I should probably drive less for my various solitary recreational jaunts, just so that I can spend more of that time with a book. I should definitely read more old stuff, because old stuff continues to be the most reliably rewarding. (The cream of the cream of the old stuff, anyway, which is...what you read.)
I continue to be Extremely In the Market for recommendations of really good, deeply-informative nonfiction.
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renthony · 1 year
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Anyway here's my reading list for my big film censorship project in case anyone's been wondering what I've been up to when I'm not being a stupid idiot cringey fandom blogger or whatever the jackasses think I am:
Vaudeville, Old and New: An Encyclopedia of Variety Performers in America, by Frank Cullen
Vaudeville and the Making of Modern Entertainment, 1890-1925, by David Monod
From Traveling Show to Vaudeville: Theatrical Spectacle in America, 1830-1910, edited by Robert M. Lewis
American Vaudeville as Ritual, by Albert F. McLean Jr.
American Vaudeville As Seen by its Contemporaries, edited by Charles W. Stein
Rank Ladies: Gender and Cultural Hierarchy in American Vaudeville, by M. Alison Kibler
The New Humor in the Progressive Era: Americanization and the Vaudeville Comedian, by Rick DesRochers
Humor and Ethnic Stereotypes in Vaudeville and Burlesque, by Lawrence E. Mintz
"Vaudeville Indians" on Global Circuits, 1880s-1930s, by Christine Bold
The Original Blues: The Emergence of the blues in African American Vaudeville, by Lynn Abbott and Doug Seroff
Waltzing in the Dark: African American Vaudeville and Race Politics in the Swing Era, by Brenda Dixon Gottschild
The Wizard of Menlo Park: How Thomas Alva Edison Invented the Modern World, by Randall Stross
Edison, by Edmund Morris
The Rise and Place of the Motion Picture, by Terry Ramsaye
The Romantic History of the Motion Picture: A Story of Facts More Fascinating than Fiction, by Terry Ramsaye (Photoplay Magazine)
Before the Nickelodeon: Edwin S. Porter and the Edison Manufacturing Company, by Charles Musser
The Kinetoscope: A British History, by Richard Brown, Barry Anthony, and Michael Harvey
The Man Who Made Movies: W.K.L. Dickson, by Paul Spehr
A Million and One Nights: A History of the Motion Picture, by Terry Ramsaye
Emergence of Cinema: The American Screen to 1907, by Charles Musser
Dancing for the Kinetograph: The Lakota Ghost Dance and the Silence of Early Cinema, by Michael Gaudio
The First Screen Kiss and "The Cry of Censorship," by Ralph S.J. Dengler
Archival Rediscovery and the Production of History: Solving the Mystery of Something Good - Negro Kiss (1898), by Allyson Nadia Field
Prizefighting and the Birth of Movie Censorship, by Barak Y. Orbach
A History of Sports Highlights: Replayed Plays from Edison to ESPN, by Raymond Gamache
A History of the Boxing Film, 1894-1915: Social Control and Social Reform in the Progressive Era, by Dan Streible
Fight Pictures: A History of Boxing and Early Cinema, by Dan Streible
The Boxing Film: A Cultural and Transmedia History, by Travis Vogan
Policing Sexuality: the Mann Act and the Making of the FBI, by Jessica R. Pliley
Screened Out: Playing Gay in Hollywood, from Edison to Stonewall, by Richard Barrios
The Ashgate Research Companion to Moral Panics, edited by Charles Krinsky
A Companion to Early Cinema, edited by Andre Gaudreault, Nicolas Dulac, and Santiago Hidalgo
The Silent Cinema Reader, edited by Lee Grieveson and Peter Kramer
The Harlot's Progress: Myth and Reality in European and American Film, 1900-1934, by Leslie Fishbein
Oscar Micheaux and His Circle: African-American Filmmaking and Race Cinema of the Silent Era, by Pearl Bowser, Jane Gaines, and Charles Musser
Banned in Kansas: Motion Picture Censorship, 1915-1966, by Gerald R. Butters, Jr.
Black and White and Blue: Adult Cinema From the Victorian Age to the VCR
Complicated Women: Sex and Power in Pre-Code Hollywood, by Mick Lasalle
Dangerous Men: Pre-Code Hollywood and the Birth of the Modern Man, by Mick Lasalle
Pre-Code Hollywood: Sex, Immorality, and Insurrection in American Cinema, 1930-1934, by Thomas Doherty
Forbidden Hollywood: The Pre-Code Era (1930-1934), When Sin Ruled the Movies, by Mark A. Vieira
Sin in Soft Focus: Pre-Code Hollywood, by Mark A. Vieira
Hollywood's Censor: Joseph I. Breen & the Production Code Administration, by Thomas Doherty
The Dame in the Kimono: Hollywood, Censorship, and the Production Code, by Leonard J. Leff and Jerold L. Simmons
Moral House-Cleaning in Hollywood: What's it All About? An Open Letter to Mr. Will Hays, by James R. Quirk (Photoplay Magazine)
Will H. Hays - A Real Leader: A Word Portrait of the Man Selected to Head the Motion Picture Industry, by Meredith Nicholson (Photoplay Magazine)
Ignorance: An Obnoxiously Moral morality Play, Suggested by "Experience," by Agnes Smith (Photoplay Magazine)
Close-Ups: Editorial Expression and Timely Comment (Photoplay Magazine)
Children, Cinema & Censorship: From Dracula to the Dead End Kids, by Sarah J. Smith
Freedom of the Screen: Legal Challenges to State Film Censorship, 1915-1981, by Laura Wittern-Keller
Picturing Indians: Native Americans in Film, 1941-1960, by Liza Black
America on Film: Representing Race, Class, Gender and Sexuality at the Movies, by Harry M. Benshoff and Sean Griffin
White: Essays on Race and culture, by Richard Dyer
Black American Cinema, edited by Manthia Diawara
Colorization: One Hundred Years of Black Films in a White World, by Wil Haygood
Hollywood's Indian: the Portrayal of the Native American in Film, edited by Peter C. Rollins and John E. O'Connor
Wiping the War Paint Off the Lens: Native American Film and Video, by Beverly R. Singer
Celluloid Indians: Native Americans and Film, by Jacquelyn Kilpatrick
Native Americans on Film: Conversations, Teaching, and Theory, edited by M. Elise Marubbio and Eric L. Buffalohead
Framing Blackness: The African American Image in Film, by Ed Guerrero
Toms, Coons, Mulattoes, Mammies, & Bucks: An Interpretive History of Blacks in American Films, by Donald Bogle
Hollywood Black: the Stars, the Films, the Filmmakers, by Donald Bogle
White Screens, Black Images: Hollywood From the Dark Side, by James Snead
Latino Images in Film: Stereotypes, Subversion, and Resistance, by Charles Ramirez Berg
Reel Inequality: Hollywood Actors and Racism, by Nancy Wang Yuen
Visions of the East: Orientalism in Film, edited by Matthew Bernstein and Gaylyn Studlar
The Hollywood Jim Crow: the Racial Politics of the Movie Industry, by Maryann Erigha
America's Film Legacy: The Authoritative Guide to the Landmark Movies in the National Film Registry, by Daniel Eagan
Movie-Made America: A Cultural History of American Movies, by Robert Sklar
Of Kisses and Ellipses: The Long Adolescence of American Movies, by Linda Williams
Banned in the Media: A Reference Guide to Censorship in the Press, Motion Pictures, Broadcasting, and the Internet, by Herbert N. Foerstel
Censoring Hollywood: Sex and Violence in Film and on the Cutting Room Floor, by Aubrey Malone
Hollywood v. Hard Core: How the Struggle Over Censorship Saved the Modern Film Industry, by Jon Lewis
Not in Front of the Children: "Indecency," Censorship, and the Innocence of Youth, by Marjorie Heins
Degradation: What the History of Obscenity Tells Us About Hate Speech, by Kevin W. Saunders
Censoring Sex: A Historical Journey Through American Media, by John E. Semonche
Dirty Words & Filthy Pictures: Film and the First Amendment, by Jeremy Geltzer
Flaming Classics: Queering the Film Canon, by Alexander Doty
Masculine Interests: Homoerotics in Hollywood Film, by Robert Lang
Monsters in the Closet: Homosexuality and the Horror Film, by Harry M. Benshoff
New Queer Cinema: A Critical Reader, edited by Michele Aaron
New Queer Cinema: The Director's Cut, by B. Ruby Rich
Now You See It: Studies on Lesbian and Gay Film, by Richard Dyer
Gays & Film, edited by Richard Dyer
Screening the Sexes: Homosexuality in the Movies, by Parker Tyler
Out in Culture: Gay, Lesbian, and Queer Essays on Popular Culture, edited by Corey K. Creekmur and Alexander Doty
Out Takes: Essays on Queer Theory and Film, edited by Ellis Hanson
Queer Images: a History of Gay and Lesbian Film in America, by Harry M. Benshoff and Sean Griffin
The Lavender Screen: the Gay and Lesbian Films, Their Stars, Makers, Characters, & Critics, by Boze Hadleigh
The Celluloid Closet: Homosexuality in the Movies, by Vito Russo
Tinker Belles and Evil Queens: the Walt Disney Company From the Inside Out, by Sean Griffin
The Encyclopedia of Censorship, by Jonathon Green
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This day in history
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Catch me in Miami! I'll be at Books and Books in Coral Gables TONIGHT (Jan 22) at 8PM. Berliners: Otherland has added a second date (Jan 28) for my book-talk after the first one sold out - book now!
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#20yrsago Europe to get fake-tree microwave masts https://www.theregister.com/2004/01/22/how_to_hide_a_phone/
#20yrsago Ian McDonald’s Kling Klang Klatch https://memex.craphound.com/2004/01/24/ian-mcdonalds-kling-klang-klatch/
#15yrsago Australian family caged, detained, starved and deported by US customs https://www.smh.com.au/national/mercy-dash-family-denied-entry-to-us-20090125-gdtb2n.html
#15yrsago Rick Lieder’s fantastic backyard bird photos — new book https://memex.craphound.com/2009/01/24/rick-lieders-fantastic-backyard-bird-photos-new-book/
#10yrsago Snowden’s Russian asylum extended https://edition.cnn.com/2014/01/24/world/europe/russia-snowden/index.html
#10yrsago You won’t believe how sweet this anti-hyperbole plugin is http://downworthy.snipe.net
#10yrsago Who reads books in America, and how? https://web.archive.org/web/20140119040800/http://pewinternet.org/Reports/2014/E-Reading-Update.aspx
#10yrsago Great Firewall of Cameron blocks game update because “XerathMageChainsExtended” contains “sex” https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2014/jan/21/uk-porn-filter-blocks-game-update-that-contained-sex
#5yrsago Elizabeth Warren proposes Thomas Piketty-style annual wealth tax https://theintercept.com/2019/01/24/elizabeth-warren-proposes-annual-wealth-tax-on-ultra-millionaires/
#5yrsago Braille RPG dice https://www.dotsrpg.org/3d-models
#5yrsago Davos audience erupts in uneasy laughter at mention of AOC’s proposal for a 70% tax on income over $10,000,000 https://www.cnn.com/business/live-news/davos-2019-live-updates/h_2e61fb5a7c8252de33a30ec4afecdc18
#5yrsago Peak indifference: “extreme weather events” drive record US acceptance of climate change as an immediate problem https://memex.craphound.com/2019/01/24/peak-indifference-extreme-weather-events-drive-record-us-acceptance-of-climate-change-as-an-immediate-problem/
#5yrsago Secret Service challenge coin commemorates unpaid labor during the shutdown https://www.cnn.com/2019/01/23/politics/challenge-coins-secret-service-government-shutdown/index.html
#5yrsago The “reverse supply chain”: vast warehouses of deeply discounted, returned goods https://www.theatlantic.com/technology/archive/2019/01/where-amazon-returns-go-to-be-resold-by-hustlers/580363/
#5yrsago Google, Facebook and Microsoft were the top sponsors of a conference that featured climate change denial kooks https://www.motherjones.com/politics/2019/01/google-facebook-and-microsoft-sponsored-a-conference-that-promoted-climate-change-denial/
#5yrsago Facebook sold out the internet, secretly lobbied IN FAVOUR of upload filters https://www.politico.eu/article/inside-story-facebook-fight-against-european-regulation/
#1yrago David Graeber's "Pirate Enlightenment" https://pluralistic.net/2023/01/24/zana-malata/#libertalia
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I'm Kickstarting the audiobook for The Bezzle, the sequel to Red Team Blues, narrated by @wilwheaton! You can pre-order the audiobook and ebook, DRM free, as well as the hardcover, signed or unsigned. There's also bundles with Red Team Blues in ebook, audio or paperback.
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aestheticvoyage2024 · 21 days
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Day 249: Thursday September 5, 2024 - "Beach Book 2024"
As soon as I saw it in Powell's Books earlier this year, on a staff recommendation shelf, knowing it'd be a noisy distracting election year, that First Principles would be a great beach book. Love a good paperback I can beat up in the sand under the sun with a nice engaging topic. I started it a few weeks back on the beaches of Whitefish Bay, and continued it last weekend in the much hotter suns of Sonora. I still have a strong love for early American history and poltics, since I was a kid and I am enjoying sitting with Rick's study that twists my learning of Greek and Roman Philosophy with how our Nation was born 250 years ago.
Song: Johnny Blue Skies and Sturgill Simpson - Who I Am
Quote: “Public Virtue cannot exist in a Nation without private, and public Virtue is the only Foundation of Republics. There must be a possitive Passion for the public good, the public Interest, Honour, Power, and Glory, established in the Minds of the People, or there can be no Republican Government, nor any real Liberty. And this public Passion must be Superiour to all private Passions.47 This was about as succinct an example as exists of the influence of the classical model on the thinking of the Revolutionary generation.” ― Thomas E. Ricks
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compacflt · 1 year
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Do you have any nonfiction that you would recommend if someone was interested in the US Navy/military?
im probably not the right person to ask this bc most of my military knowledge hyperfixation is centered on the ARMY in the American Revolutionary War & World War II. It’s only pretty recently that i got into modern warfare as a topic, so let me just give some indiscriminate recs
Can’t go wrong with David McCullough‘s 1776, which is a great overview of the first year of the revolutionary war + the extremely fraught politics of trying to start a new nation’s military—really illustrates where a bunch of lingering schools of thought in our military originated from.
Another David McCullough shout-out: his The Wright Brothers is an excellent book about the origins of flight, AND it was the book right next to the picture of Ice and Maverick shaking hands on Ice’s bookshelf in TGM. So we know ice has read that one. I think you can’t go wrong at all with any David McCullough. I own like 5-6 of his books and he hasn’t missed once. (His best is John Adams but that’s not mil related)
Ron chernows biography of Washington goes into his military background (7 years' war) a whole bunch, and kind of elucidates how truly fortunate we were to have our nation’s first leader be a military man who really kinda didn’t want to be there. Some really good takes on leadership. Just beware that chernow does have a reputation in the history community for just makin shit up sometimes. If it sounds too cute/quaint to be true, it really might be.
u may be tempted: DO NOT read Brian kilmeade's Thomas Jefferson & the Tripoli Pirates, one of the few navy NF books I've read. I read it b4 I even knew who kilmeade was--didn't matter. it fucking sucks. he uses like 7 sources in the whole book.
Stephen E. Ambrose's Citizen Soldiers is a great WWII NF book about that generation of infantrymen.
The one big Navy NF book I've read recently is (not to brag but my personally signed copy of) Craig symonds' new biography of admiral Chester Nimitz, who was COMPACFLT during WWII's war in the pacific. I got a SHIT ton of professional characterization for Ice from Nimitz' life and this book--Nimitz also worked 18 hour days, was also separated from the love of his life for long periods of time in Hawaii, was also probably acutely depressed, etc.
okay: THOMAS E. RICKS. The Generals is SUCH a good book. Army leadership from WWII up through Iraq and Afghanistan. Focusing on how the Army used to relieve (fire) commissioned officers who couldn't hack it, and that's a huge part of why we won WWII, but somewhere between WWII and Korea, being fired started being super shameful (macarthur's fault if I'm reading it correctly) so mediocre officers didn't get fired and that's why the army has suffered shit leadership in every war since WWII. It's a HUGE thesis that he backs up so well. Would so recommend. I'm also currently reading his FIASCO about the fuck-up of Iraq. Also incredible so far.
Michael O'Hanlon's Military History for the Modern Strategist-- a post Civil War survey of military strategy on the campaign/operational level. Might be a good introduction to US military history, just giving a pretty broad overview of post-CW warfare, so that way you don't pick up a random book about the Korean War and go "wait what was the Chosin campaign again?" Interestingly written and I got to meet him and he wrote "wishing you the best" in my book after I told him I wanted to steal his job at Brookings someday, so admittedly I'm biased.
Lawrence Wright's The Terror Years: From Al-Qaeda to the Islamic State is not strictly military related, but it is one of the best-written and most illuminating nonfiction books I've ever read and I cannot recommend it enough.
For war fiction, my taste is v mainstream: Pat Barker's Regeneration trilogy, Tim O'Brien's Going After Cacciato (imo better than the things they carried), Ahmed Saadawi's Frankenstein in Baghdad, Kevin Powers' The Yellow Birds, Cannot Miss Erich Maria Remarque's All Quiet on the Western Front if you haven't read it, Hassan Blasim's The Corpse Exhibition: And Other Stories of Iraq... For specifically Naval lit: Run Silent, Run Deep is a pretty good classic, and this summer I read the 600-page behemoth The Caine Mutiny, which is about specifically WWII-era naval law... it's a brick. But it won a pulitzer and it's...passable. Kind of interesting at least.
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nashentendo · 4 months
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Ei! Você viu o NASH TORRES por aí? você sabe, aquele aluno da graduação de 35 ANOS e se parece muito com JAMES LAFFERTY. eu acho que ele formou com especialização em DIREITO. Toda vez que passava pelo dormitório dele, ouvia AQUELE 1% de WESLEY SAFADÃO tocando pela porta. Todos que o conhecem dizem que ele costuma GENEROSO, mas também poderia ser TRAPACEIRO
— Básico
NOME: Nash Morrow Torres
ORIENTAÇÃO SEXUAL: Pansexual
GÊNERO: Homem cis
ALINHAMENTO: Chaotic Neutral
ANIVERSÁRIO: 26 de Julho
SIGNO: Leão com ascendente em Peixes
DEFEITOS: Trapaceiro, Cínico, Mentiroso, Covarde, Dissimulado
QUALIDADES: Generoso, Inteligente, Engenhoso, Disciplinado, Calmo
TATTOOS: TBA
CICATRIZES: Ombro direito por conta de um acidente na quadra de basquete.
GRADUAÇÃO: Direito
OCUPAÇÃO: Advogado da Arash Kardashian Associated
—  Inspirações
Tavares (Tapas e Beijos), Saul Goodman (Better Call Saul/Breaking Bad), Agostinho Carrara (A Grande Familia), Pai Helinho (Da Cor do Pecado), Neil Caffrey (White Collar), Rick Castle (Castle), Romero Rômulo (A Regra do Jogo)
—  Personalidade
Liso igual a um bagre ensaboado, é a a melhor definição para a personalidade de Nash. Encantador, educado, capaz e criativo. Nash é uma pessoa sociável e pode conversar com todos no caminho para enganá-los. Ele é um romântico inveterado, fica incrivelmente ofendido por uma falsificação ruim ou por uma roupa que não combina. Ele também é inteligente, tendo aprendido sozinho várias línguas estrangeiras e história da arte. Mas ele também é desonesto,se formou em direito para aprender brechas na lei e não confia em ninguém, nem mesmo em seus amigos.
É conhecido por sua boa aparência, seu preparo físico, por ser um dos melhores pivôs da história da UCLA, seu pensamento brilhante e inovador, capacidade de falar w mentir ou encantar para sair de (ou entrar) em qualquer coisa. Essas características revelam-se necessidades cruciais em seu ramo de trabalho e servem como uma vantagem nos muitos casos em que a vida dele ou de outra pessoa está em risco.
—  Resumo
Filho de Thomas Morrow com Helena Torres. Helena engravidou de Thomas quando ambos trabalhavam na Dragnatec como executivos da empresa. Thomas nunca assumiu o filho, para não desagradar a esposa rica.
É neto de Penn Morrow, um dos fundadores da Merryweather junto com Jean Luc Dragna.
Helena criou Nash sozinha com a ajuda mãe, Mercedes.
Nash joga basquete desde os 4 anos de idade, até hoje é um dos maiores pontuadores da história da UCLA e teria se tornado profissional se não tivesse desistido do draft da NBA em 2014. Até hoje ninguém sabe o motivo do abandono.
Morrow só mostrou interesse pelo filho quando Nash começou a aparecer nos noticiários esportivos como promessa nas ligas de High School, na esperança de fazer um bom dinheiro com o talento do garoto
Os dois eram bem próximos até 2013, quando Nash ouviu uma discussão dos pais
Em 2024, Nash é advogado da Arash Kardashian Associated. Ele ainda joga basquete, mas trabalha diretamente com os Zhanlan e com os Parton, além de fazer os próprios corres por fora do escritório.
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oncasette · 2 years
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all the boys i’ve loved before
i saw this on tiktok and thought it was cute omg. this is just off the top of my head but <3
A. adrien chase. andrew neiman. alfie solomons. adrian ivashkov.
B. barry allen. bruce wayne. bradley bradshaw. benny miller. benjamin barry.
C. charlie dalton. clark kent. cameron frye. carlisle cullen.
D. daniel larusso. darry curtis. draco malfoy. druig. din djarin. dean di laurentis. duke orsino.
E. eddie munson. eddie brock. eric northman.
F. finnick odair. finn hudson. frankie morales. ferris bueller. fred weasley. frank castle.
G. george weasley. garrett graham.
H. harry potter. hunter davenport.
I.
J. johnny lawrence. javier peña. jj maybank. jason dean. james potter. jack daniels. jim hopper. jake seresin. jesse swanson. johnny castle.
K. knox overstreet. kai parker.
L. luke skywalker. luke castellan.
M. marcus pike. matt murdock.
N. nick bradshaw.
O. oliver wood. obi-wan kenobi.
P. peeta mellark. phil wenneck. peter parker. peter quill. peter hayes. poor heyward. pacey witter. percy jackson.
Q.
R. ronald miller. rafe cameron. rick flag. regulus black. remus lupin. ron weasley. rodrick heffley.
S. stiles stilinski. stuart twombly. steven meeks. sirius black. scott lang. steven strange. steve rogers. seth cohen. stu macher.
T. thomas. topper thornton. theseus scamander. thomas shelby.
U.
V. vinny pazienza.
W. willard hewitt. walt finnegan.
X.
Y.
Z. zemo. zed necrodopolis.
tagging @fleurfairie @lucasnclair @forourmoons @dameronscopilot & anyone that wants to participate!!
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michelebrockent · 4 months
Video
vimeo
HIV and the Journey Toward Zero Part 1 from Journey Towards Zero on Vimeo.
"HIV and the Journey Toward Zero" sparks important conversations around the end of the HIV epidemic. What does “the end” mean for those who have been there from the start, those living with HIV today and those leading the way to an HIV-free future?
"HIV and the Journey Toward Zero" spotlights the perspective of some of Chicago’s most prominent activists. The film is presented in partnership with the Chicago Department of Public Health, Tessa Films and local community organizations. Join us as we hear from long-term survivors, newly diagnosed individuals, clinicians, researchers and community leaders — the voices that, together, can make HIV history.
Director: Chan C. Smith Producer: Lisa Masseur, Tessa Films Editor: Christina Stumpf Director of Photography: Ashley C. Battle Original music composed by: Joe George Shadid Line Producer: Sarah Minnie Creative Producer/Consultant: Sanford E. Gaylord Additional Camera Operator: Chan C. Smith 1st Asst. Camera/Camera Operator: Candice Majors DIT: Eric Almond Additional DIT: Emmanuel Bansa Gaffer: Kemi Mayomi Grip/Swing: Maddie C. Dodge Production Coordinator/Associate Producer: Julia Barr Payroll Manager: Holli Hopkins McGinley Production Business Manager: Mary Pat Forston Production Accountant: Lisa Bird Sound Utility: Nicholas Fanelli Key Makeup Artist: Libby Knapp Production Assistants: “Moishe” Zoe Bernardean, Joanna Bozic, Nick Canonaco, C’airra Cortez, John P. Harris, Mireillee “M” Lamort, Alex Monsalud, Luis Trevino Colorist: Craig Leffel Dialog Editor: Steve Wilke, Mix Kitchen Sound Effects Editor: Brian Leitner, Mix Kitchen Supervising Sound Editor/Re-Recording Mixer: Sam Fishkin, Mix Kitchen Archival Producer: Alexis Jaworski Research Assistants/Production Assistants: Otito Greg-Obi, Ronnie Chatterjee
Chicago Dept. of Public Health: Executive in Charge of Production: David Kern Chief Development Executive: Jorge Cestou Director of Creative Affairs: James Scalzitti Creative Executive: Riley Sorin
Stock and archival footage and images provided by: ACT UP AIDS Foundation of Chicago Associated Press The American Association for the Advancement of Sciences Tracy Baim Jeff Berry Doug Birkenhauer Lora Branch Caprice Carthans CBS Chicago Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Chicago Tribune Pat Cummings Damn Interfering Video Activist Television Terry Dudley The Estate of Mark Morrisroe (Ringier Collection) at Fotomuseum Winterthur Sanford E. Gaylord Gerber/Hart Library and Archives Getty Images Rick Guasco Lisa Howe-Ebright Tim Karr Owen Keehan David Lebe The Legacy Project Rae Lewis-Thornton Thomas McGovern, from Bearing Witness (to AIDS) The Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report National AIDS Memorial National Institutes of Health U.S. Clinical Center National Library of Medicine Alice O’Malley Pond 5 Positively Aware Magazine by TPAN Public Arts Fund Alon Reninger/Contact Press Images John Ryan Victor Salvo Dean Sameshima San Francisco History Center, San Francisco Public Library Renslow Sherer Tactical Media Files The 10% Show Evany Turk Video Data Bank Windy City Times/Outlines/BLACKlines Archives, by Tracy Baim, Mike Carter, Genypher Novak and Rex Wockner Israel Wright
Special thanks to: OTV—Open Television Alphawood Foundation Gerber/Hart Library and Archives Tracy Baim Lora Branch Sharon Zurek Dave Beedy Lori Cannon Victor Salvo Owen Keehan Anthony Hirschel Melissa Terrell Minnie Productions Eleven04 Moonwalker Cafe Chicago Film Office Illinois Film Office
Spoken word by Storie Deveraux “June 5, 1981”
Additional music provided by The Music Bed “Rest, Get Here” by Sharon Irving “All We’re Living For” by Sharon Irving
Promotion provided by Bigmouth Creative
Filmed on Location in Chicago, IL
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