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#allan grant
thecinamonroe · 9 months
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Marilyn Monroe during her last interview for LIFE magazine on July 4th, 1962. Photo by Allan Grant.
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inthedarktrees · 10 months
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Jayne Mansfield taking a bath in the pink shag carpet covered bathroom of her Sunset Blvd. home | Allan Grant, Life, 1960
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Allan Grant for Life Magazine, 1951 (cat eating corn)
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de-salva · 2 months
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… untitled (US Route 30, Nebraska, 1948)
© Allan Grant / The LIFE Picture Collection
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nevver · 9 months
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Boom
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fayegonnaslay · 2 months
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Yolanda and Marshall Jacobs, after being married atop a flagpole, Coshocton, Ohio, 1946.
LIFE Magazine; Photo by Allan Grant
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henk-heijmans · 2 months
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Flagpole wedding, 1946 - by Allan Grant (1919 - 2008), American
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lascitasdelashoras · 25 days
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Dizzy Gillespie por Allan Grant
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lyssahumana · 1 year
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mudwerks · 6 months
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Paula Prentiss - Photos By Allan Grant For Life Magazine, 1961
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las-microfisuras · 2 months
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Georgia O'Keefe (1951) printed (1976)
Gelatin silver print.
Allan Grant
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vintagelasvegas · 9 months
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Atomic blast, Nevada Test Site, November 1951
“From 55 miles away another of last week's atomic explosions looks like a gigantic, blindingly brilliant candle standing on distant Frenchman Flat. The photograph was made from an 8,000-foot mountain range a few seconds after the bomb was detonated. The stem from the 'candle' is composed of vaporized incandescent dirt and rubble which is just beginning to be sucked up into the fireball. As rubble and fireball rise together they will form a mushroom cloud containing hundreds of tons of debris. The explosion was potent enough to break seven windows in Las Vegas, 75 miles distant.” - LIFE, 11/12/51. Photo by Allan Grant.
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inthedarktrees · 1 month
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Anita Ekberg | Allan Grant, Life, 1955
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tsibeyantiger · 10 days
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You know what I love about Jurassic World? That it makes the "We won't make the same mistakes again- No, this time you're making totally new ones" quote entirely come true. Jurassic Park failed because they put dangerous animals they hardly knew anything about in a theme park setting and thought they could control them- and then, surprised pikachu face, it turned out they couldn't. But the point is, they actually learned from it. In Jurassic World, they knew more about the animals, their wants and needs, their natural behaviour, and designed the park around it. They didn't try to control the animals in situations where they couldn't, and focused on avoiding these situations and keeping everything in a setting where they actually COULD keep them under control. And it worked AMAZINGLY WELL. While Jurassic Park already failed when it was still under construction, Jurassic World opened its gates for the public. Hell, they were able to allow people to go canoeing next to sauropodes without having a single accident. The park was open for a long time and was incredibly successful. And then, they decided to create a new spectacular dinosaur just out of pure spite. They didn't know what kind of animal they were creating, and neither they cared. And then, shocker!, said animal destroyed Jurassic World because no one could predict how it would behave.
Jurassic Park is not a series about the dangers of bioengineering. It is a series about how capitalist greed turns bioengineering into a catastrophe.
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de-salva · 2 months
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Kick start (US Route 30, Nebraska, 1948)
© Allan Grant / The LIFE Picture Collection
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dailyflicks · 2 years
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Ellie Sattler and Alan Grant in Jurassic World Dominion (2022)
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