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#jimmy doyle
odinsblog · 2 months
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😬
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mrsrobertfloyd5 · 9 months
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HELP A COLTONY FAN OUT
Alright, besties I am looking for a slime tutorial that is Manhattan themed with a little Irish boy that closed today. please I need this slime in my bloodstream
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altaruwusmolboiz · 10 months
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Does anyone have the audio bootleg or even a libretto for NYNY? I just listened to the cast album and it sounds great.
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detroitlib · 1 year
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Portrait of boxer Jimmy Doyle. Exhibits series. Printed on front: "Jimmy Doyle. Los Angeles, Cal. Made in U.S.A." Exhibit Supply Company. 1947-1966.
Ernie Harwell Sports Collection, Detroit Public Library
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ifelllikeastar · 10 months
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Jimmy Doyle
James Emerson Delaney known professionally as Jimmy Doyle, was a welterweight boxer who died later in the hospital after a boxing match with Sugar Ray Robinson.
In 1947, Doyle challenged Sugar Ray Robinson for the World Welterweight Title. Robinson had the advantage in every round except the sixth, when he was staggered twice and received a cut over his right eye. A single left hook from Robinson, thrown as Doyle was attempting a right hook, ended the fight in the eighth round. Doyle fell backwards onto his back, hard. As the referee started counting, Doyle raised himself onto his elbows, and tried to use the ropes to gain his feet, but he couldn't. The bell ending the round struck as the referee counted off 'nine,' so Doyle was saved from a complete knock out by the bell. His handlers asked the ref to end the match, as Doyle was in no condition to go on.
Jimmy was taken to St. Vincent's Charity Hospital immediately after the bout, where he failed to regain consciousness and died a few hours later.
James Emerson Delaney died in Ohio on June 25, 1947 at the age of 22.
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ameltzerdesign · 20 days
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Vic Ruggiero @ The Grassy Noll - 1.28.2024
Booked a semi-secret show with at a space named after the Kennedy assassination, so of course I had to do a conspiracy board full of jokes and It’s Always Sunny References…
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yamnbananas · 2 months
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Leap Year (whole heap of madness👀)
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denimbex1986 · 1 month
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'At the start of our interview, Andrew Scott and I are squeezing into a booth in the restaurant at the British Film Institute. It is very similar to the one occupied by Billy Crystal and Meg Ryan's characters in When Harry Met Sally. Quick as a flash, the actor smiles at me and says, “I'll have what she's having.”
Scott goes on to remark that he often dreads reading interviews with actors and hopes this won't be another that he recoils from. “Sometimes talking about acting can be reductive and a bit boring. Of course,” he adds, breaking into a wry, self-mocking grin, “I'm not like that. I'm completely fascinating. Everything I say is a bon mot. It's epigram after epigram. It's like sitting with Oscar Wilde... Although I have better hair!”
Witty. Mischievous. Charming.
These are precisely the qualities that catapulted Scott to stardom as Moriarty in BBC1's worldwide hit drama, Sherlock. People were already talking about him as a striking new talent after his first brief, if completely scene-stealing, 10-minute appearance in Steven Moffat and Mark Gatiss's compelling modern-day reworking of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's classic detective stories.
His performance as Holmes's dastardly foe – by turns mesmerising and menacing – won Scott the best supporting actor Bafta award last year, beating his co-star Martin Freeman (who plays John Watson in Sherlock) in the process.
It was not exactly an overnight success for Scott – the 37-year-old Irishman had for many years been turning in very creditable, if not such conspicuous performances in dramas such as Lennon Naked (in which he gave a memorable Paul McCartney opposite Christopher Ecclestone's John Lennon), The Hour, John Adams and Band of Brothers.
But Moriarty, who appeared to come to a sticky end at the end of the last series on Sherlock, transformed Scott's profile. Moriarty is the archetypal baddie who has all the best lines, and his popularity meant that the actor was soon being offered leading roles in ITV1 dramas such as The Town and The Scapegoat.
Scott, who was raised in Dublin, where his father worked in an employment agency and his mother was an art teacher, has the volume turned down in real life and has no need to turn the dial up to 11 in the way that Moriarty does. But you can see that he still possesses the same razor-sharp instincts as Sherlock's arch-enemy.
The actor is the first to acknowledge that playing the role of Moriarty has moved his career up several notches. Picking at a croissant, he reflects that: “Sherlock has changed all our careers, and I'm really pleased about that. It gives you the benefit of the doubt because executives like to see recognisable faces.
“It was overwhelming to be on a TV show that is quite so popular. That took me totally by surprise. People had an instant affection for it from the first episode. The reaction was extraordinary. People still come up to me in the street all the time, wanting to talk about it.”
Sherlock fans are known as some of the most passionate in the business, but Scott says they are generally delightful. “There is this impression that the fans are crazy, but they're not – they're very respectful. They don't overstep the mark. I get a lot of fan mail. Of course, some of it is a bit creepy, but mostly it's very moving and creative. People send me drawings and their own versions of Sherlock stories. It's a source of escapism for people and that's great.
“I'm an enthusiast for people, and I don't want them to become the enemy. I've seen that happen to colleagues who are disturbed the whole time, but there's a certain degree of control you can have if you keep yourself to yourself. The kind of actors I admire move through different characters and genres. That's the kind of actor I try to be. If you want that, you have to be circumspect about your private life.”
Scott thinks the character made such an impact because, “Moriarty came as a real surprise to people”. He adds: “He doesn't have to do the conventional villain thing. He is witty, and people like that. He is also a proper match for Sherlock. He's very mercurial, too. I have since been offered to play a lot of different characters, and that's because Moriarty is a lot of different characters. He changes all the time.”
The next legacy of the “Sherlock Effect” is that Scott is starring in a one-off BBC2 drama entitled Legacy. An adaptation by Paula Milne of Alan Judd's bestselling 2001 espionage novel, this is an absorbing contribution to the BBC's “Cold War” season. In this film, set at the height of the conflict between the UK and the USSR in 1974, which goes out on Thursday 28 November, Scott plays Viktor Koslov, a KGB spy.
Charles Thoroughgood (Charlie Cox), a trainee MI6 agent, tries to reconnect with Viktor, an old friend from their Oxford days, in an attempt to “turn” him. However, Victor adroitly turns the tables on Charles with a shocking revelation about the British spy's family. Deliberately shot in Stygian gloom, Legacy captures the murky world of the secret services where cynicism and duplicity are part of the job description. Its tagline could well have been: “Trust no one.”
The film convincingly conjures up the drabness of the 1970s, all three-day weeks, petrol rationing and power cuts. Scott says: “Characters in those days called from phone boxes – whoever does that now? The film fits the era. It has a melancholic tone. It's very brown and downbeat.”
Scott particularly enjoyed playing the ambiguity of Viktor's character. “I like the idea that you don't know who he is. It's important that you feel for Viktor and his predicament. You have to feel he's a human being with a family. But both he and Charles are elusive figures – it's not clear whose side they're on. It's not at all black-and-white, and that's why the film is so shadowy.”
The actor boasts a terrific Russian accent in Legacy. Where did it come from? “There isn't a huge amount of footage of Russians speaking English as a second language, so I started looking at Vladimir Putin videos on YouTube. But then Putin introduced anti-gay legislation this summer – so, being a gay person, I switched to Rudolf Nureyev videos instead. It was another Nureyev defection of sorts!”
Scott is low-key on the subject of his sexuality. “Mercifully, these days people don't see being gay as a character flaw. But nor is it a virtue, like kindness. Or a talent, like playing the banjo. It's just a fact. Of course, it's part of my make-up, but I don't want to trade on it. I am a private person; I think that's important if you're an actor. But there's a difference between privacy and secrecy, and I'm not a secretive person. Really I just want to get on with my job, which is to pretend to be lots of different people. Simple as that.”
Scott is very much getting on with the job at present. He has many intriguing projects in the pipeline, including starring in Jimmy's Hall, the new Ken Loach movie about a political activist expelled from Ireland during the “Red Scare” of the 1930s. He is also appearing with Tom Hardy and Ruth Wilson in Locke, a film about a man whose life is falling apart, and in The Stag, a movie about a stag weekend that goes horribly wrong. In addition, he is headlining alongside Bill Nighy, Dominic West and Imelda Staunton in Matthew Warchus's movie Pride, a true story about an alliance between the mine workers and the lesbian and gay community during the 1984 miners' strike.
If he can possibly find any spare time, Scott is also open to comedy offers. “Everything in life has to have an element of comedy about it. I did Design for Living at the Old Vic in 2010 – Noël Coward was a master of comedy. The audience were convulsing every night. It's such a joyous feeling to hold a pause and wait for the laughter. There is no better high. Forget about drugs!”
But despite the fact that producers are now cold-calling him like overeager mis-sold PPI salesmen, Scott won't be rushing into the first role he's offered. One positive by-product of his success is his ability to be choosy about what he does. He observes: “You have to be brave to turn things down, but there is a certain power to that. I've had offers to do more regular TV series, but I don't regret rejecting them. If money and fame are not your goals, then it becomes easier. American agents use the expression, 'this could be a game-changer'. The implication is that you want the game to change. But I don't. I don't have a plan. I like unpredictability and randomness.
“People get distracted by box-office figures and take jobs because they think it will advance their careers. Of course, it's nice to get a big cheque and be able to buy a massive house, but my view is that we're not here long, so why not do something of value?”
So Scott is very happy with where he's at. “To do all these different things is a dream for me. My idea of a successful actor is not the most recognisable or the richest – it's someone who is able to do a huge amount of different stuff. I don't want to be known for just one thing.”
It's true that Scott is now broadening his career far beyond Moriarty. But I can't resist one final question on the subject: Is there any chance that Moriarty will, like his nemesis, be making a Lazarus-like comeback in the new series of Sherlock? Scott has, after all, been photographed filming scenes for the upcoming third season.
“People ask me that every day. It's a small price to pay for having been in such a wonderful show,” he teases. But he is forbidden from spilling the beans about Moriarty's fate in Sherlock even to close family members.
So has Moriarty played one more dastardly trick on us by faking his own suicide? Or are the scenes the actor has been shooting merely flashbacks? Scott could tell us, but then – like some ruthless Cold War spy – he would have to kill us...'
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ariel-s-awesome · 3 months
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💕 Charlie Cox as Michael Kinsella 💕
Kin S2 Ep 8 ~
Bonus:
Mikey's getting-ready-to-assassinate-his-bastard-of-a-father stance. 🤭💕
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[🚨 SPOILER 🚨]
Plus, one messed up Kinsella family photo...
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Two generations of brothers, together for the last time.🥺💀
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mrsrobertfloyd5 · 1 year
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I have now seen New York New York twice and I am so in love with Jimmy Doyle I can barely function and NO ONE WILL TALK ABOUT HIM OR GIVE ME CONTENT
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chxrlie-cox · 1 year
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Character posters for Kin S2
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adhdtectives · 27 days
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The going has been slow and patchy, but I've just finished the scene where Jimmy meets a very pretty constable and makes such a good first impression of himself:
Suddenly faced with meltingly gorgeous brown eyes, Jimmy was momentarily dumbstruck. “Sir?” “Sorry?” “Who should I say wants to see the inspector?” enquired the constable, with a soft southern burr.
The constable exited into an office, and Jimmy breathed the smallest of sighs as he watched the man go, wishing that standard-issue police jackets were just a little bit shorter.
With a greater show of reluctance than he was feeling, Jimmy got up and approached the desk once more. Constable Doyle looked up and into his eyes. Oh dear. Clearing his throat and momentarily darting his own gaze away, Jimmy took a moment to compose himself. This, however, allowed Doyle to take the conversational initiative—not the best start.
"So please, if not for your own sanity then for mine, please give her something to follow.” Jimmy paired this last plea with his puppy-doggest eyes, and it seemed to be working—Doyle was softening.
“This is my landlady’s telephone number. Much better for undercover work, I reckon. Just leave a message for Tom Doyle, and she’ll make sure I get it.” He handed the paper to Jimmy, letting their fingers and gazes touch for a beat, then two. “You need help with anything, you just ring me up, alright?” Jimmy could feel the corner of his mouth twitching upwards of its own accord. “I’ll do that, Constable.”
At least it seems to be working for him...
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hey guys I think I have to come clean...
I am secretly ASP I started this account years ago pretending to be a fall out boy fan and then had it evolve over time to a literati stan account
here are things that are so true bestie
the danes and marianos are jewish except Jimmy who just follows along with whatever spiritual thing Sasha has going on
jess, rory, lane, dave, are all bisexual jess gets a boyfriend in Philly after the Rory incident
paris is in fact a lesbian don't ask about Doyle
season 7 is a disgrace to television
I hate logan as much as you do
dean is a piece of shit we were intentionally gaslighting you so you could get the full rory experience
luke was supposed to be a leftist woman named Louisa who never forgave liz the way luke did is and was much more protective of jess when is came to Liz but we changed the character last minute to we could have a love interest for lorelai
fuck Chris
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I was thinking of making more fan fics of boardwalk empire but with new options!
Jimmy Darmody x Fem reader
Richard Harrow x Fem reader
Mickey Doyle x Fem reader
Eli Thompson x Fem reader
Nelson Van Alden x Fem reader
_______________
Jimmy Darmody
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Richard Harrow
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Mickey Doyle
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Eli Thompson
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Nelson Van Alden
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Note
Jimmy/ Shinichi Kudou propaganda:
He’s a genuine teenage genius detective
The entire premise of his show is that he gets shrunk to his 6 year old self and continues to solve murders regularly
Given that he is tiny no one takes him seriously, so he uses another detective (childhood best friend’s dad) as a mouthpiece
Even though he constantly makes fun of the detective that he gives the glory to, he genuinely respects him and never tries to take credit for the cases he solves
He has a bunch of cool gadgets! Shoes that let him kick extra hard and fast (plus he’s already an incredible shot bc he loves soccer), a wristwatch with knockout darts in it (he uses this to solve crimes as the other detective guy so he doesn’t talk and mess things up), glasses that can follow tracking devises and are also extra-extra sturdy in case he gets shot at (which does happen, despite him being as small as a two year old), and a bow tie he can change his voice with!
He’s totally in gay love with this guy, Heiji, another genius teenage detective:
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[Image description: a screencap from Detective Conan | Case Closed of Heiji Hattori. Heiji has medium brown skin, blue-green eyes, thick dark brown eyebrows, and spiky dark brown hair. He’s wearing a baseball cap backwards and raising his eyebrow at someone with a slight smile. /End description]
Listen they both have canon love interests but they’re canon to me.
Look at Conan!
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[Image description: a drawing of Conan Edogawa from the cover of a volume of Detective Conan | Case Closed. Conan looks like a 6 year old child and has dark brown hair with a cowlick on the back of his head, blue eyes, and glasses. He’s sitting cross-legged on the floor and smiling up at the viewer. /End description]
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[Image description: a screencap of Conan from the anime. He’s facing the viewer with a small smile. /End description]
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[Image description n: a screencap of Conan from the anime. He’s wearing his usual suit and bow tie and is looking up at the viewer with a curious expression. /End description]
In conclusion: vote J- vote Ji- I can’t say it. Vote Conan. Look at his little face <3
.
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