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#william mcelroy
52nd · 8 months
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My least favorite flavor of Batman villain has to be whatever William McElroy/King Tut & Maximilian Zeus have going on.
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mcelroyfamilystaff · 9 months
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Candlenights is THIS SATURDAY! It's a pre-taped virtual event with special guests like @samreich, Montaigne, and Jasper William Cartwright, and the boys will be in the chat watching along with everyone. All proceeds will go to Harmony House, get your tickets now!
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sdpubliclibrary · 3 months
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Zine Librarians Code of Ethics Zine
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elisabeth515 · 1 year
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Titanic Officer Barbie Movie Posters (and 1 fun fact about each of the officers!)
(Because why not)
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Feel free to save as phone wallpapers 🙈
I’ve decided to include our babeypurser McElroy because the role of Purser is sometimes regarded as an officer role. Among all the officers, Lightoller (B), Pitman (5), Boxhall (2) and Lowe (14) survived the sinking. McElroy was the only officer whose body was recovered and identified; he was buried at sea.
Now to the fun facts!
Henry Wilde: he was already captain and was set to command the SS Cymric for the Liverpool to Boston Route. Unfortunately, the coal strike happened and his first voyage with Cymric was delayed to presumably 1st May. White Star Line decided to put him in onto the crew of Titanic as Chief Officer.
As you guys may know already, Henry Wilde is my favourite officer so it’s not surprising that I have been posting about him for this April. I also am currently doing a series of TikToks for his actions throughout Titanic’s maiden voyage as well🙈
Here’s my post about Wilde being made aware of joining Titanic
This is my post on the Crew Shuffle if anyone would like to read more about it
William Murdoch: Charles Lightoller thought his bestie’s moustache make him look ugly so he grew his moustache so that Will could shave. Nevertheless, we all think otherwise.
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Charles Lightoller: of course, his role as one of the captains of the little ships during the Dunkirk Evacuation. He saved around 130 lives in it with his family yacht, the Sundowner.
Side note: currently, the Sundowner is a museum ship in Ramsgate but sadly, the yacht is in a bad condition and we need money to repair. I know I don’t have much high opinions on the British (yeah except Henry Wilde), despite having been living in England for almost 5 years, but Lightoller has been one of the most intriguing figures to me; being through 4 shipwrecks and fire, also living through Titanic, WWI, and Dunkirk, his story of hope and survival is worth a movie. If you would like to help preserving a piece of history, please consider donate to help save this famous getaway yacht little ship🙈
Donate here
And here’s the campaign video by our TikTok Lightoller Fan Club President Melissa on saving the getaway yacht
Herbert Pitman: despite suffering from seasickness, this son of a farmer had a more than half-century long seafaring career, retiring in 1946. He started his career as an apprentice, then a deck officer and when he could not pass the eye test due to colour blindness at one eye, White Star Line made him a purser and he stayed in this position for the rest of his career. Pitman served in both world wars on troop ships; when he retired, he was a Lieutenant-Commander of the Royal Naval Reserves and was created an MBE in 1948, in recognition of his long service in the merchant marine.
Joseph Boxhall: he had a very happy marriage with his wife Majory and they were very fond of their dogs. This may be a substitute to children given that they do not have children together but anyways if anyone asked why you haven’t had kids yet, tell them about the Boxhalls and their doggos 🐶
Harold Lowe: he was a hobby artist who works with watercolours, as well as wood carvings. This may come across as surprising but you should not be surprised given that his father was an artist. There are a few of Harold’s drawings exists today, including a sketch of Titanic (in which he messed up with the funnels). Oh yes, he was also in the church choir as well when he was young.
James Moody: During his South American runs, he would sometimes flirt with female passengers with his very patchy Spanish and well, sometimes he just dropped in some swear words by accident. Yeah, in case you wondered, he’s not that shy as you thought after watching Ed’s portrayal of our daring Jim in the 1997 movie (the real Jim was quite cheeky actually).
Hugh McElroy: as the ship’s purser, he was there to take care of passengers’ needs (like he’s basically the “manager”). From parrot-tending (yes, and he trained the parrot to do morse code) to organising marriage ceremonies for runaway couples, he’s there to try to help. And as a result, he was a very popular man on the ship and passengers were honoured to share a table with him.
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Sources:
TitanicOfficers.com
@/Melissafairlady on tiktok (the revenge ‘stache fact)
Encyclopaedia Titanica forum (the discussion thread on Moody)
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rachelspoetrycorner · 8 months
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A Poem for Emily (1985) by Miller Williams
In Episode 250, Rachel shares a pretty emotionally devastating poem!
Rachel: I had a moment where I was like, "I don't wanna read this poem because it's so difficult to read out loud." And then I was like, "No, that's why I have to!"
Griffin: That's why you have to. That's why you must.
Rachel: Go towards the fear.
Griffin: We can't get to the corner without you, babe.
When Rachel said she was leading us back to the Poetry Corner, I was ready to get back to our familiar nook of comfort and enjoy a lovely poem. Yet this poem isn't lovely; it's fataly beautiful. But I'm so glad and thankful that it's Rachel who's taking us there, how else would we make it through?
If you’d like to hear more (or are just in the mood for a good cry, believe me, Rachel reading this makes it 10 times more powerful) you can do so here: Where's the Anxiety Here, from 22:46 - 30:34
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friendly-jester · 10 months
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IT'S SPOTIFY WRAPPED DAY FUCK YEAH
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roguebotanist · 1 year
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Despite the enormous quantity of dogs, life is pretty quiet for the McElroys.
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batman66sexyrogues · 1 year
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Round 1, Part 3D:
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Louie the Lilac was a gangster with an affinity for flowers, using them for various purposes including illegal manufacturing of perfumes, as hypnotic agents, and growing a maneating lilac. He originally attempted to manipulate Gotham’s “Flower Children,” and later abducted Bruce Wayne and Dick Grayson in an attempt to force them to work for his illegal perfume manufacturing, getting the scent glands from dangerous animals. Louie had a brief cameo in the comic spinoff, where he was placed in a comatose state by Poison Ivy, though she later released him from it after her capture, as well as in Batman: The Brave and the Bold.
The scholarly Professor William McElroy by daylight…at least until he was bonked on the head, King Tut fancied himself the reincarnation of the same pharaoh, attempting to bring about his kingdom in present-day Gotham. He initially attempted to use willpower-sapping toxins to assert his reign, but made several other attempts to do so in spite of his civilian persona’s attempts at avoiding another head-injury. King Tut was originally created as a one-shot villain, but his actor, Victor Buono, loved this larger-than-life role so much that he agreed to do more episodes anytime a script was written for him, and Tut remains one of few villains from the show to retroactively take hold in other continuities.
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ghosts-of-gotham · 5 months
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Professor William McElroy AKA King Tut
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Based on 'King Tut' from Batman 1966
William Mcelroy grew up being bullied for his size. He was a larger child, and he was picked on a lot by his classmates. He often retreated into the library and tried to forget the world around him. His favourite books were of Egypt and the ancient pharoahs like his dad would tell him about. His father worked at a museum.
But then a student riot happened, and he suffered a serious head injury. It left a scar of the back on his head and a very rare medical condition to arise. Whenever he got struck on the head, William would become a new and repressed personality. He would become to believe himself to be a reincarnated King Tut. And saw Gotham as his home to reclaim.
He set out and quickly became a criminal mastermind in Gotham during its 'New Age' of costumed crime. He had his followers and often was seen with a new 'queen' every so often. He was not good at picking good women. They always seemed to be from Lower Gotham or Jersey.
To this day, he still switched between William McElroy and King Tut. William trying to live a somewhat normal life and King Tut trying to reclaim Gotham for his own.
William's favourite was Tutankhamun. Or known more as 'King Tut'. He loved him so much he wished he could be him. He even pretended to be him for confidence.
He became a bookworm and a lover of ancient Egypt and history. So much so he became a professor of Eygtology at Gotham University.
He was a large man but had a kind heart. He was shy and soft spoken. Too good for this world. Everyone loved him and thought he was sweet.
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badmovieihave · 6 months
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Bad movie I have What If 2010
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milliondollarbaby87 · 7 months
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The Deep End of the Ocean (1999) Review
When Ben, the youngest member of the family, is kidnapped with no trace to be found. Nine years later, everything is about to change when they find him living in the new town they have just moved to. ⭐️⭐️⭐️ Continue reading The Deep End of the Ocean (1999) Review
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thisisnotthenerd · 8 months
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do you ever give yourself ideas that seem like they shouldn't take much time in execution and then end up taking up way too much time?
anyway we're back with the first real entry for thisisnotthenerd's d20 stats of 2024. this time we're talking:
cast appearances by episode count
season count is one thing; there's only 21 of those so far. by contrast, we've had 222 episodes of d20 as of 1/16/2024. by may 2024 we'll have finished fhjy and hit 241.
by the current count, the intrepid heroes' full seasons account for 128 episodes of the total 222, or around 57.6% of the total episode count. if you add the fantasy high oneshots, it bumps up to 59.4%, and if you consider that we're adding 20 to the count with fhjy, by may 2024, intrepid heroes episodes will make up 62.6% of the dimension 20 catalog.
anyway here's the cast list:
the uncontested winner is brennan lee mulligan with 211/222 episodes. 95% attendance. the only times he hasn't been there are: the 4 episodes of shriek week, the 6 episodes of coffin run, and the gencon mismag oneshot.
in second place is lou wilson, with 151/222 episodes. this is every intrepid heroes season (128/222), plus 3 sidequests (4+10+6) and 3 oneshots.
in third, sweeping her way with the most recent season, is siobhan thompson with 147/222, after the ih seasons, 3 oneshots and 2 sidequests (6+10)
in fourth, we have ally beardsley with 144/222, after the ih seasons, 2 oneshots, and 2 sidequests (10+4)
very close in fifth, we have zac oyama, with 143/222, after the ih seasons, 4 oneshots, and 2 sidequests (6+6).
in sixth is emily axford, with 138/222, from 126 ih episodes, 2 oneshots, and one sidequest (10)
and in seventh is brian murphy, with 130 episodes, from the ih seasons and 3 oneshots.
after this we have a steep drop off, since the ih episodes make up 57% of the total count, and will make up 61% by the end of junior year. anyway next is aabria iyengar, with 48 episodes, a little over half which she gm'd (26).
next is erika ishii, with 37 episodes. they've been in 5 sidequests (6+4+10+6+10) and one oneshot.
to finish off the top ten, rekha shankar and izzy roland are tied with 26, since both have been in three sidequests [(6+10+10) and (10+6+10) respectively]
the last of the three cree, in 11th place, is matthew mercer, with 18 (6+6+6) episodes, 6 of which he gm'd
after which is carlos luna and mike trapp with 12, though carlos has been behind the scenes as crew in many more.
13th is taken up with another tie, this time between danielle radford and becca scott, who each have 11, though their splits are different, since danielle has been in 2 sidequests and a oneshot (4+6+1), while becca has been in 1 sidequest and 1 oneshot (10+1)
after this we get into the mass groups:
with 10 episodes there's a couple of options for how they got to that point, but less options for 6 and 4
10 episodes: ify nwadiwe (6+4), lily du (6+4), katie marovitch (10), sam reich (10), raphael chestang (10), grant o'brien (10), persephone valentine (10), omar najam (10), oscar montoya (10), surena marie (10), rashawn nadine scott (10), and jasper william cartwright (10)
next is griffin mcelroy, with 7 episodes, because he did the RTX oneshot along with tiny heist.
6 episodes: amy vorpahl, justin mcelroy, travis mcelroy, clint mcelroy, jessica ross, marisha ray, krystina arielle, b. dave walters, jasmine bhullar (GM), anjali bhimani, alex song-xia, freddie wong, hank green
4 episodes: gabe hicks (GM), dani fernandez, monét x change, alaska thunderfuck, bob the drag queen, jujubee
and last but not least, our oneshot only friends: brian david gilbert, michelle nguyen bradley, noxweiler berf, and markeia mccarty
and that's all for this time! check out the spreadsheet to see where the data comes from and every individual checkbox that i had to click for this to be fully accurate.
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mcelquotes · 6 months
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If you heard the true voice of Robin Williams, it would make you insane.
Justin McElroy
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talesofpassingtime · 9 months
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Essential Readings for a Serious Writer
(revised)
Literature is a dialogue between story-tellers that has gone on for about six thousand years. Unless an author knows the conversation thus far, it is nearly impossible for that poorly read author to contribute anything meaningful to the dialogue. Serious writing requires serious reading. All great authors have been great readers.
Pre-19th Century
Homer, The Iliad, The Odyssey
Sophocles, works
Aeschylus, works
Euripides, works
Virgil, The Aeneid
Boccaccio, The Decameron
Chaucer, The Canterbury Tales, Troilus and Cressida
1001 Nights
Dante, The Divine Comedy
Cervantes, Don Quixote
Shakespeare
King James Bible
Spencer, The Fairie Queen
Milton, Paradise Lost, Paradise Found, Samson Agonistes
19th Century
Goethe, Faust, Sorrows of Young Werther
British Poets - Byron, Shelley, Keats, Coleridge, Burns, Blake, Wordsworth, Browning, Tennyson, Yeats
Pushkin, Eugene Onegin
Gogol, Dead Souls
Turgenyev, Fathers and Sons
Dostoevsky, works
Tolstoy, works
Hardy, works
Dickens, works
Galdos, Fortunata & Jacinta
Mary Ann Evans (George Eliot), Works
Emily Bronte, Wuthering Heights
Charlotte Bronte, Jane Eyre
Jane Austin, works
Melville, works
Hawthorne, works
Poe, works
Stoker, Dracula
Hugo, works
Dumas, works
Zola, works
Balzac, works
Flaubert, works
Scott, works
20th Century
Woolf, works
Joyce, works
Lawrence, works
Hardy, works
Proust, La Recherche de la Temps Perdu
Musil, Man without Qualities, Young Torless
Mann, works
Boll, works
Nabokov, works
TS Eliot, works
Martin Amis, works
Gaddis, works
Pynchon, works
Durrell, works
Byatt, works
Burroughs, works
Faulkner, works
Hemingway, works
Fitzgerald, works
O'Neill, works
Anouilh, works
Grass, works
Garcia Marquez, works
Chekov, works
Ibsen, works
Shaw, works
Shepard, works
Fante, works
Maugham, works
Delillo, works
McElroy, Women and Men
Kundera, works
Anderson, Winesburg Ohio
Henry Miller, works
Barnes, works
Broch, works
Nadas, works
Genet, works
Gide, works
Tennessee Williams, works
Bellow, works
A few words of advice:
Reading chronologically makes later allusions to earlier works available. Know your Homer, your Aeschylus, your Virgil. Lots of things won’t make sense at all if you don’t.
Reading all the important works of literature is the work of a lifetime, so don’t fret about how few you’ve read. What matters most is what you read next, because nothing will influence your writing more than what you are currently reading. 
Reading is writing.
Memorize Shakespeare, the plays, the sonnets, the poems. You won’t regret a word. Nothing is more important to a writer’s education than Shakespeare.
I am only including works and authors I have read in this list. It will continue to evolve as I continue to read. I’m sure there are many thousands of important authors still unlisted. As well, sometimes we learn the best lessons from terrible writers. Reading is too important to only read well.
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This Is Just To Say (1938) and The Red Wheelbarrow (1943) by William Carlos Williams, and In a Station of the Metro (1913) by Ezra Pound
In Episode 75, Rachel brings three short and sweet poems to the table! And of course, Griffin is super normal about it.
[Rachel finishes reading This Is Just To Say]
Griffin: It‘s really nice. Is it supposed to be like deeply sexual?
Rachel: [laughs] I don‘t think so! [...] So, William Carlos Williams grew up in Rutherford, New Jersey, and he was a doctor for more than forty years! The poem, The Red Wheelbarrow, he wrote when he was 60 years old. [...] -he used to write his little poems on little prescription pads in between clients.
Griffin: I like that! So he‘d be like "Here's 10 ccs of 'I ate your plums'". Deal with it.
This particular segment is so freaking enjoyable, and not just because of the jokes and goofs; Rachel's insight on the Imagist movement and Ezra Pound's influence on William are so interesting!
If you’re gonna listen to just one of Rachel's segments, please let it be this one, and please stick around until the end for an unexpected outro, which you can listen to over here: Gonna Need Those Plums Back, Though, from 27:50-37:00.
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mappingthemoon · 9 months
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Zines Read 2023
Unemployment / Aaron Lake Smith
Behind the Zines #14 / ed. Billy McCall
Zisk #31 / ed. Mike Faloon & Mike Fournier
Zisk #32: Remembering Bob Gibson / ed. Mike Faloon & Mike Fournier
Zisk #33: Bartolo Colon: Hall of Famer? / ed. Mike Faloon & Mike Fournier
Brief Text Descriptions of Everyday Events / Keith Helt
Flotation Device #18 / Keith Helt
Denacola: Menagerie / Dena Zilber
Nothing Spinning #1: Hydrogen / Lindsey Richter
Nothing Spinning #2: Helium / Lindsey Richter
Scenes from the Late Devonian Period / Lindsey Richter
Stoneybrook Looks / Lindsey E. Richter
sixteen years sober and i was thinking about relapsing / enola dismay
A Cookbook Christmas #5 / Peter & Ansley
QRK5 #6 / Ed Tillman
Save the USPS: A small business’s love letter to an essential American institution / Danny Caine
How to Resist Amazon and Why (rev. 2nd ed.) / Danny Caine
The Paruretic #1: The story of a guy who’s pee shy / Mark Cunning
The Paruretic #2: College / Mark Cunning
The Paruretic #3 Vacation / Mark Cunning
The Paruretic #4: The Search for Help / Mark Cunning
The Paruretic #5: Dating
I Could’ve Killed Alex Jones / Mark Cunning
Gut Bucket Research #10 / David Tighe
I Want an Army Out of Caves… #12/Unclassifiables #3 / ed. David Tighe
Unclassifiables #13 / ed. David Tighe
The Secret of the Moon’s Rotation #33 / ed. David Tighe
Behind the Zines #15 / ed. Billy McCall
Brides of the Mystery / Lydian Brambila
zines in libraries: collecting, cataloging, community / Zine Librarians Interest Group ; Joshua Barton, Violet Fox, Anissa Malady, Kelly McElroy, Matthew Moyer, Sarah G. Wenzel
Zine Librarians Code of Ethics Zine / Heidy Berthoud, Joshua Barton, Jeremy Brett, Lisa Darms, Violet Fox, Jenna Freedman, Jennifer LaSuprema Hecker, Lillian Karabaic, Rhonda Kauffman, Kelly McElroy, Milo Miller, Honor Moody, Jude Vachon, Madeline Veitch, Celina Williams, Kelly Wooten
Ornery Cuss / K Ratticus
Against the Logic of the Guillotine / crimethInc.
Bound to Struggle: Where Kink and Radical Politics Meet #1 / ed. simon strikeback
Bound to Struggle: Where Kink and Radical Politics Meet #2 / ed. simon strikeback
Bound to Struggle: Where Kink and Radical Politics Meet #3: Language / ed. simon strikeback
Bound to Struggle: Where Kink and Radical Politics Meet #5: Praxis / ed. simon strikeback
Men I Think Are the Same Man: Men I Have Mistaken For Each Other (and some women) / aggie
Every Thug Is a Lady: Adventures Without Gender / Julia Eff
tear the petals off of you / Julia Eff
People Like Us: David Byrne’s 1986 Cult Film True Stories as a Search for Autistic Connection / Lewis Attilio Franco
Tracing this Body: Transsexuality, pharmaceuticals & capitalism & New Flesh, New Struggles self discovery thru porn & kink / michelle o’brien
Brides of the Mystery / Lydian Brambila & Ariel Ackerly
An Otherworldly Light #1 / R. P. Schneider (ed.), ChatGPT, Stable Diffusion
An Otherworldly Light #2 / R. P. Schneider (ed.), ChatGPT, Stable Diffusion
Welcome to Our Dimension Party (2nd ed.) / Samantha Hensley
Behind the Zines #16: Zines Saved My Life! / ed. Billy McCall
Weirdo du Jour #3: “Line Cook Love” / K Ratticus
Cathode Ray Mission #1: A Horror and Sci-Fi Fanzine / K Ratticus
Cathode Ray Mission #2: A Horror and Sci-Fi Fanzine / K Ratticus
Testimony, v. 1 / ed. Ryan Avery
Postcards from Irving, v. 5 / Tyler
The Desert Sun #51 / Billy
Proof I Exist #42: Five Days in Chicago / Billy McCall
Zisk #34: If Ichiro Journaled Like Henry Rollins / ed. Mike Faloon & Mike Fournier
Selected list of zine distros and other places to find most of these titles:
Antiquated Future
Behind the Zines Distro (Billy McCall)
Bound to Struggle (simon strikeback)
Crapandemic (Julia Eff)
Dena Zilber
Flotation Device (Keith Helt)
Gut Bucket Research (David Tighe)
Honeycraft (Lindsey Richter)
Lydian Brambila
Policymaker (Mike Fournier)
Related Records (Ryan Avery)
SAMSKETCHBOOK (Sam Hensley)
Weirdo du Jour (K Ratticus)
ZineLibraries.info
PS I'm moonmoth on LibraryThing.
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