Since I feel like it let's go for an appreciation post for some of the greatest singers of all times, some of the most beautiful voices you'll ever hear
Tracy Chapman
Tina Turner
Whitney Houston
Stevie Nicks
Cyndi Lauper
Dolores O'Riordan
Édith Piaf
Linda Perry
Amy Winehouse
Bonnie Tyler
And so MANY more. I love them. Women are so talented.
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yellowjackets as pre-crash song lyrics
taivan x bonnie raitt/something to talk about
let's give 'em something to talk about // how about love?
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This panel is so cute and funny, up until you realize you may also have a thing for the pirates in Nick's bubble, and then you start feeling attacked.
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https://fineartamerica.com/featured/michael-jackson-dangerous-michael-jackson.html
Famous The King of Pop Michael Jackson, “Dangerous” 1991. The metal fine wall art framed poster and canvas print in different sizes.
“Dangerous” track listing: Dangerous track listing, Jam, Why You Wanna Trip on Me, In the Closet, She Drives Me Wild, Remember the Time, Can't Let Her Get Away, Heal the World, Black or White, Who Is It, Give In to Me, Will You Be There, Keep the Faith, Gone Too Soon, Dangerous
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Scholars Respond to the Death of a University Administrator Dr. Antoinette “Bonnie” Candia-Bailey #SayHerName
“You had no intention of retaining me as the (vice president of student affairs),” she wrote in the email. “It went downhill after the [Family and Medical Leave Act and the Americans with Disabilities Act] documents were submitted due to my severe depress
Dr. Antoinette “Bonnie” Candia-Bailey Source: Lincoln University
SOURCE: Diverse Arrman Kyaw Jan 17, 2024
Dr. Antoinette “Bonnie” Candia-Bailey’s suicide on Jan. 8, has sparked a national conversation for higher education to dramatically improve its treatment of Black women.
In an email sent on the day of her death, Candia-Bailey, who served as vice president of student affairs at Lincoln…
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Second take: Needful Things (dir. Fraser C. Heston, 1993)
A mildly entertaining adaptation of King's second-tier novel stars always-solid Sydow, Harris, and Bedelia, who's effervescent in a role that somehow mirrors Annette O'Toole's phenomenal take on Beverly Marsh in the superior TV version of It. Beverly is among the most important literary characters of my childhood, and so are both actresses. Bedelia's two great roles were in Violets Are Blue... and Speechless, none of which became successful enough to launch her film career; she was probably closest to it after playing a boring role of Bruce Willis's wife in the Die Hard series did. Her role, as well as Plummer's signature coy-turning-slightly-psychotic character, is the highlight of this film. The plot is simple: Sydow, who incarnates the evil typical of King's roles (an energy vampire, just like Colin Robinson!), comes to a town (again, typical of King's plot settings) and turns its inhabitants against each other. But eventually they overcome! The production value could be higher though: particularly the score and the sepia, slo-mo effect in phantasy scenes are tacky. I like the pacing though: the film is long and doesn't hurry.
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