Tumgik
#Eric Whitehead
brokehorrorfan · 1 year
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Fly over to Cavity Colors for The Crow collection featuring two T-shirts designed by Devon Whitehead and Jert ($30), a long sleeve tee designed by Dismay Design ($40), and sweatpants designed by Dismay ($45).
73 notes · View notes
athletic-collection · 10 months
Photo
Tumblr media
Eric Kennedy (30) with Ace Whitehead (28)
11 notes · View notes
ruiraiox · 3 months
Text
Metal, Meat & Bone: The Songs of Dyin' Dog is an album released by American art rock band the Residents in July 2020. It is a rock opera which purports to be an album of covers of songs by fictional albino blues singer Alvin Snow, also known as Dyin' Dog. The album's musical style encompasses blues, electronic 
In their five-decade career, the Residents have managed to release nearly 50+ albums- touring for nearly every one of them. From their bizarre nature to their mysterious identities, the Residents have always been cult favorites amongst music lovers. Their latest album, Metal, Meat and Bone, sees the group dealing with yet another conceptual piece. While it isn’t at the level of their classic albums, Metal, Meat and Bone is still a fun and inspired effort from the group.
Like almost every Residents album before it, Metal, Meat and Bone revolves around a concept and/or theme. For this album, it’s presented as the Residents paying tribute to (more than likely fictional) blues musician Alvin Snow, aka the Dyin’ Dog. According to the press release and liner notes, the Residents were told of Snow in 2013 during the making of their 2015 documentary Theory of Obscurity. Former bandmate Roland Sheehan was interviewed for the documentary, which got him back in contact with the group. Sheehan briefly worked with Alvin Snow during the 1970s in Shreveport, LA- which is where the Residents originate from. Back in the day, Sheehan helped Snow record demos with Stan Lewis- owner of Jewel Records. Sheehan had forgotten about the demos until his meeting with the Residents. After listening to the demos, the Residents were in awe of Snow’s music and his story. Alvin Snow was an albino born musician born around 1939. Raised in an orphanage, Snow would soon become interested in music after hearing Howlin’ Wolf on a jukebox. During the 1970s, Snow would begin writing music. Journeying from Mississippi to Louisiana, Snow would meet a 60-something-year-old widow named Lillian Underwood at the Temple Baptist Church. Soon after recording the demos with Sheehan, Snow was set to make his premier on his 37th birthday on January 13, 1976. Sadly three days before the gig, both Miss Lillian and Snow’s hero Howlin’ Wolf died. Devastated by these losses, Snow disappeared and was never seen again.
The main album is presented in two parts: The Residents Play Dyin’ Dog and The Songs Inspired by Dyin’ Dog. Having listened to the album the first time around without knowing this, it doesn’t affect the listening experience. However, it is worth noting that the Dyin’ Dog tunes do sound like they’re following a story- possibly autobiographical on Dyin Dog’s part. Musically, the songs on Metal, Meat and Bone would fall along the lines of electronic and industrial music- with some alternative rock and old school Residents thrown in. The opening track, “Bury My Bone,” is a solid opener- as it combines elements of electronica and rock music. The electronica sounds continue on  other songs- with highlights including the soundscape filled “The Dog’s Dream” and the alien sounding “Dead Weight.” A few of the electronica songs dabble a bit in hip hop territory such as “Momma Don’t Go” and “Cut to the Quick.” The former sounds like a modern-day radio tune (sans the AutoTune) while the latter uses some sampling in the intro.
While an enjoyable album, Meat, Metal and Bone isn’t without its weaknesses. The middle part of the album, while not bad at all, tends to get repetitive. The songs are all well written and produced but it’s just nothing too exciting. Still, a majority of this album is enjoyable. As mentioned before, there’s some old-school sounding Residents tunes on here. “Die! Die! Die!” has Residents classic written all over it: from its visceral Tom Waits-like vocal delivery to its eerie vibe, it’s a standout from the album. Speaking of eerie vibes, this album is filled with them. The much coveted 1970s output from the group always had a sinister sound to it and this album is no different. The chilling “Hungry Hound” tells the story of the discovery of a stabbed dog in a graveyard. “She’s gone and God, I miss her/Lying in the ground” laments the singer. “I’ll never find another bitch to hump my hungry hound.” The album also ends on a strong note with the mini-five-minute epic “Midnight Man.” The song starts out slow but quickly evolves into a unique mix of electronica, alternative and even psychedelic rock. From the production to the vocal delivery, it’s a great way to close out the album.
As a whole, Metal, Meat and Bone is a solid studio effort from the Residents. When it comes the group’s work after the 1970s and/or The Commercial Album, the other 40-something albums in their discography are hit or miss for most fans. Speaking as someone who hasn’t heard every Residents album out there, I found myself surprised by this album. The concept/theme is strong and while not flawless, this is a good later-day effort from a veteran artist. It’s also worth mentioning that the album comes with a second disc- which are the “original” Dyin’ Dog demos. The inclusion of the second disc goes to show the group’s commitment to the concept. If you’re a long-time fan of the group’s earlier work and haven’t checked out their later work in a while, I say this is worth a listen.
Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the Residents have postponed Dog Stab tour- which would’ve seen the group performing songs from the new album and classics from the band’s 1978 effort Duck Stab/Buster And Glen album. The group have rescheduled the tour for 2021 so be on the lookout for tour dates
2015–present
Following the departure of Hardy Fox in 2015, Eric Drew Feldman was once again asked to help with duties previously undertaken by Fox. Along with Feldman, performers Laurie Hall and Peter Whitehead began appearing on Residents releases starting with The Ghost of Hope. Hall also appeared on Intruders, which introduced Sivan Lioncub.
The line-up of collaborators as featured on the Residents' 2020 album Metal Meat & Bone includes Eric Drew Feldman, Carla Fabrizio, Nolan Cook, Peter Whitehead, and Sivan Lioncub.
 Their 2022 Triple Trouble soundtrack album features Eric Drew Feldman as co-writer, co-arranger and co-producer along with The Residents; Feldman is the only credited musical collaborator on this release
Tumblr media
3 notes · View notes
judgingbooksbycovers · 10 months
Photo
Tumblr media
The Intuitionist: A Novel
By Colson Whitehead.
Design by Eric Fuentecilla.
1 note · View note
pickers · 1 year
Text
𝐠𝐢𝐟𝐩𝐚𝐜𝐤 𝐦𝐚𝐬𝐭𝐞𝐫𝐥𝐢𝐬𝐭 !
Tumblr media
🔥 UNDER THE CUT  are  all  my  gifpacks  that  i  transferred  over  from  my  main  blog  feel  free  to  crop / edit  them  however  you’d  like . please do not use my gifs if you are writing or writing opposite someone who is writing graphic depictions of topics that are illegal. kofi cos i gotta pay for ps now imma be SICK
# A - F
amanda arcuri / degrassi next class  ana golja / degrassi next class / s4 bel powley / the informer charles leclerc / interviews christoph waltz / downsizing diego calva / babylon diego luna / rogue one elijah hewson / interviews eric osborne / boys vs. girls / degrassi next class / (s4) / pyewacket felicity jones / like crazy fionn whitehead / bandersnatch & the children act freya mavor / modern love is rubbish
# G - K
gael garcia bernal / mozart in the jungle gijs blom / painkillers hiroshi abe / after the storm hunter doohan / wednesday / your honor imogen poots / popstar: never stop, never stopping jack lowden / calibre & the long song jeffrey wahlberg / don’t come back from the moon & toyed joe gilgun / preacher john gallagher jr. / high maintenance / modern love / olive kitteridge / sadie / short term 12 johnny simmons / late bloomer josefine pettersen / skam kiana madeira / giant little ones kristine froseth / when the streetlights go on
# L - P
lando norris / interviews lily rose depp / a faithful man lucas hedges / manchester by the sea nabhaan rizwan / the informer nick sagar / the princess switch nico hiraga / summer of ‘17 & north hollywood paddy considine / the informer & journeyman
# Q - Z
ricardo hoyos / degrassi next class / s4 rj cyler / me, earl and the dying girl ryder mclaughlin / summer of ‘17 sofia boutella / modern love sonoya mizuno / high strung tarjei sandvick moe / skam taylor hickson / giant little ones taylor russell / hot air / unit bryan / waves / words on bathroom walls
91 notes · View notes
Text
4 notes · View notes
bakaity-poetry · 1 year
Text
Alain Badiou on Gilles Deleuze, Pocket Pantheon, page 113 - 118
How is it that, even more so than ten years ago, he is our contemporary? And how is it that he is still out of step with the times, so out of step as to be that rarity: a future contemporary? He is certainly not 'modern' in the eyes of the academics who write the balance sheet of the twentieth century as though its spirit had always resided in the discussion, which now triumphs in our classrooms, between pious phenomenologists and democratic grammarians. Speaking of phenomenology, Eric Alliez is quite right to say that Deleuze's most constant - and most difficult - project was to prove that we can escape it. And that we must do so because it had, as he put it, 'blessed too many things'. As for analytic philosophy and the 'linguistic turn', he hated them with a vengeance, and took the view that a sort of Viennese commando had, at least in university philosophy departments, turned the rich American thought of the Emersons, the Thoreaus and the Jameses into a desert. As for democracy, it cannot be said too often, given that it is such a courageous and correct declaration, that one of the major characteristics of philosophy according to Deleuze is that it positively loathes the very notion of 'debate'.
But that does not necessarily mean that Deleuze completed the Heideggerian programme of modernity - that interminable 'end of metaphysics' that also goes by the name of the work of deconstruction. He liked to say that he had no problem with metaphysics. It is not easy to insert Deleuze into the usual genealogies. Of course he held that our times began with Nietzsche, as do so many others, and credited him - though this is not, in my view, his most powerful inspiration with having introduced into philosophy the notion of meaning, as opposed to that of truth, which had been killed by conformisms. And yet this Nietzsche, whose ancestor is a Spinoza baptized the 'Christ of philosophy' and whose French brother is Bergson, would surprise a lot of people. Truth to tell, Deleuze constructed a very unusual history of 'interesting' doctrines ('interesting' was a word he liked) that was meant only for himself: the Stoics and Lucretius, Duns Scotus, Spinoza and Leibniz, Nietzsche, Bergson, Whitehead ... It is not easy to generalize this panorama, or to make it the stigma of a shared 'modernity'.
Shall we say, then, that he is, as transatlantic classifications tend to see him, one of the postmodern (or post-postmodern?) representatives of continental, and especially French, thought of the 1960s? If we do, we forget that, at the time, he was swimming against the current. He spoke very eloquently about structuralism, about non-meaning as the cause of meaning, and about the theory of the 'empty set'. He shared certain of Blanchot's analyses of death and writing, but he also rectified them. But he did not belong to that school, and still less does he belong to it ten years later. His polemic against Lacan was violent, and he challenged him - in vain - with his schizoanalysis. His 'Marxism', fraternally woven together with Guattari, was the complete antithesis of Althusser's. Which leaves, obviously, the deep friendship that governs his tributes to Foucault. Although I do not have time to prove it here, I insist that their creative friendship must not conceal the fact that it changes completely as their central idea of what a concrete singularity itself is changes.
So how can we evoke him for our times? Why is it so obvious that he is by our side, even in the ironic distance of his perpetual retreat from the frontline where we were fighting against reactive infamy? I will disseminate this evidence in five major motifs, which are all bound up with the realization that something has been exhausted (another word he liked). He was often 'exhausted', and felt at such times that he was a brother to many of his heroes, such as Melville or Beckett.
1. Deleuze contrasted all thought of 'ends' (the end of metaphysics, the end of ideologies, the end of grand narratives, the end of revolutions . . .) with the conviction that nothing was 'interesting' unless it was affirmative. Critique, impotencies, ends, modesties . . . none of that is as valuable as a single real affirmation.
2. The motifs of unity, gatherings, 'consensus' and shared values are nothing more than thought's tiresome moment of fatigue. What does have value is certainly synthetic, as is all creativity, but in the form of separation, disjunction. Disjunctive synthesis: that is the real operation of anyone who is 'forced' to think (for we do not think 'freely', we think under pressure, we think as 'spiritual automata').
3. We have to stop speculating about time, its precariousness, and its subjective ubiquity. For what matters is eternity or, to be more specific, the temporal atemporality that has received the name 'event'. The great and unique 'throw of the dice' on which life wagers both its chance occurrence and its eternal return.
4. We have to get away from the obsession with language. Speech is of vital importance, but it is caught up in its multiform correlation with the integrality of affirmative experience, and has no constituent syntactic power. To confuse philosophy with grammar or with an inventory of rules is aberrational. Let us abandon, like an old corpse, the idea that the natural form of thought is judgement. And above all, do not judge: that is a good axiom for thought. Replace judgement with personal experience, with becoming 'caught up in our milieu'.
5. The dialectic is exhausted. We must rise up against the negative. In accordance with the 'Return' method, this brings us back to point 1: finding the integral affirmation of the improbable and doing so ascetically, which means of course without any negation of any kind, trusting - involuntarily - in becomings.
I would happily say that what sums up all these precious lessons - both for him and for me, even though I agree with neither the details nor the argument - can be summed up in one negative prescription: fight the spirit of finitude, fight the false innocence, the morality of defeat and resignation implicit in the word 'finitude' and tiresome 'modest' proclamations about the finite destiny of the human creature; and in one affirmative prescription: trust only in the infinite. For Deleuze, the concept is the trajectory of its real components 'at infinite speed'. And thought is nothing more than a burning to a chaotic infinity, to the 'Chaosmos'. Yes, that is the frontline I was talking about earlier, the frontline where he stands alongside us, and by doing so proves himself to be a very important contemporary: let thought be faithful to the infinity on which it depends. Let it concede nothing to the hateful spirit of finitude. In the one life we have been granted, and caring nothing for the limits that conformism assigns us, we will attempt at all cost to live, as the Ancients used to say, 'as immortals'. Which means: exposing within us, so far as we can, the human animal to that which exceeds it.
20 notes · View notes
musingsofmonica · 8 months
Text
July 2023 Diverse Reads
Tumblr media
July 2023 Diverse Read
•”Beyond the Story: 10-Year Record of BTS” by 
BTS & Myeongseok Kang, Translated by Anton Hur, Slin Jung, and Clare Richards, July 9, Flatiron Books, Biography/Memoir/History Book
•”Counterweight” by Djuna, Translated by Anton Hur, July 11, Pantheon Books, Science Fiction
•”Trinity” by Zelda Lockhart, July 4, Amistad Press, Historical 
•”Tropicália” by Harold Rogers , July 18, Atria Books, Literary 
•”Every Rising Sun” by Jamila Ahmed, July 18, Henry Holt & Company, Historical/Medieval
•”Vanishing Maps by Cristina García , July 18, Knopf Publishing Group, Contemporary/Magical Realism 
.”Crook Manifesto” by Colson Whitehead, July 18, Doubleday Books, Historical 
•”Small Worlds” Caleb Azumah Nelson, July 18, Grove Press, Literary
•”The Sea Elephants” by Shastri Akella, July 11, Flatiron Books, Historical 
•Days at the Morisaki Bookshop” by Satoshi Yagisawa, Translated by Eric Ozawa, July 04, Harper Perennial, Contemporary
•”King of the Armadillos” by Wendy Chin-Tanner July 25, Flatiron Books, Historical
•”Immortal Longings” by Chloe Gong, July 18, Gallery/Saga Press, Fantasy
•”The Deep Sky” by Yume Kitasei, July 18, Flatiron Books, Science Fiction
•”Silver Nitrate” by Silvia Moreno-Garcia, July 18, Del Rey Books, Thriller/Horror
•”Owner of a Lonely Heart: A Memoir” by
Beth Nguyen, July 04, Scribner Book Company, Personal Memoir/Cultural, Ethnic, & Asian American Studies
•”Excavations” by Hannah Michell, July 11 One World, Literary Thriller 
•”Promise” by Rachel Eliza Griffiths, July 11, Random House, Historical 
•”One Tough Cookie” by Delise Torres, July 18, Alcove Press, Romance
•”Temple Folk” by Aaliyah Bilal, July 04, Simon & Shuster, Short Story Collection
•”Goodbye Earl: A Revenge Novel” by Leesa Cross-Smith, July 03, Grand Central Publishing, Thriller/Suspense
Happy Reading!
Mo✌️
2 notes · View notes
offender42085 · 2 years
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media
Post 549
Eric Leigh Whitehead, Georgia inmate 1000473619, born 1995, incarceration intake at age 16, sentenced to life
Murder
Eric Whitehead, then 14, told investigators he had a dream that he and his 22-year-old sister, Trish Troglen, were arguing. Whitehead reportedly woke up enraged, took a rifle from his stepfather's room, and shot his stepsister in the head 10 times while she was napping on the sofa.
The Judge sentenced Whitehead to life in prison with the possibility of parole. He was charged as an adult and may be eligible for parole in 30 years.
Whitehead, who had a tendency to run away and get into trouble, was temporarily staying with his stepfather at the time of the shooting.  Shortly after the shooting, investigators said Whitehead told them he considered Troglen to be his best friend.
Investigators say Whitehead had a history of psychiatric problems. Following the fatal incident he underwent two mental examinations - both found him competent to stand trial.  Whitehead's biological father commented that he believed "teenage hormones and peer pressures led to all that went wrong."
2n
26 notes · View notes
kattra · 9 months
Text
What I’m Reading
BOOKS OF JUNE Black Light by Kimberly King Parsons (SS) Greedy: Notes From a Bisexual Who Wants Too Much by Jen Winston (NF)  Fruit of the Drunken Tree by Ingrid Rojas Contreras Things Have Gotten Worse Since We Last Spoke and Other Misfortunes by Eric LaRocca The Music Shop by Rachel Joyce  Things We Lost in the Fire by Mariana Enríquez (SS)  Making Love With the Land by Joshua Whitehead (NF)  The Great Alone by Kristin Hannah ** The Renunciations by Donna Kelly (P)
Graphic Novels: Call of the Night Vol.6-7 by Kotoyama  Caste Heaven Vol.7-8 by Chise Ogawa Akira Vol.1-2 by Katsuhiro Otomo Black or White Vol.1-3 by Sachimo Poppy’s Inferno written by Poppy & Ryan Cady, illustrated by Zoe Thorogood & Amilcar Pinna D.N.Angel Vol.1-10 by Yukiru Sugisaki* **
(87 books read / 125 books goal)
currently reading:  The Witching Hour by Anne Rice  The Prophet by Kahlil Gibran (P)  Shut Up You’re Pretty by Téa Mutonji (SS)  Girlhood by Melissa Febos (NF) The Solitude of Prime Numbers by Paolo Giordano The Dark Queens: The Bloody Rivalry That Forged the Medieval World by Shelley Puhak  Where the Sidewalk Ends by Shel Silverstein (P) 
* - re-read // ** - 4+ star-rating (recommended) GN - graphic novel // NF - non-fiction // P - poetry SS - short story collection // AB - audiobook 
TBR: Our Missing Hearts by Celeste Ng  A Game of Fate by Scarlett St. Clair Flyaway by Kathleen Jennings We Had No Rules by Corinne Manning (SS)  Bad Gays: A Homosexual History by Ben Miller & Huw Lemmey (NF)  Talk to My Back by Yamada Murasaki (GN) Ducks: Two Years in the Oil Sands by Kate Beaton (GN)
WHAT ARE YOU READING? :D
Find me on: GOODREADS | THE STORYGRAPH 
2 notes · View notes
brokehorrorfan · 1 year
Photo
Tumblr media
Silent Night, Deadly Night Collection will be released on December 13 via Lionsgate. The Blu-ray set includes the third, fourth, and fifth installments in the Christmas horror franchise. It’s the 28th installment in the Vestron Video Collector’s Series. 
1989's Silent Night, Deadly Night 3: Better Watch Out! is directed by Monte Hellman (Two-Lane Blacktop) and written by Rex Weiner. Richard Beymer, Bill Moseley, Samantha Scully, Eric Da Re, Laura Harring, Elizabeth Hoffman, and Robert Culp star.
1990's Silent Night, Deadly Night 4: Initiation is directed by Brian Yuzna (Society) and written by Zeph E. Daniel (Society). Maud Adams, Tommy Hinkley, Allyce Beasley, Clint Howard, and Neith Hunter star.
1991's Silent Night, Deadly Night 5: The Toy Maker is directed by Martin Kitrosser (writer of Friday the 13th Parts III and V) from a script he co-wrote with Brian Yuzna (Society). William Thorne, Mickey Rooney, Jane Higginson, Tracy Fraim, and Brian Bremer star.
All three films are presented in high definition with English 2.0 DTS-HD Master Audio. Devon Whitehead designed the cover art. Special features are detailed below.
Silent Night, Deadly Night 3: Better Watch Out special features:
Audio commentary by film historian Jarret Gahan
Interview with actor Bill Moseley
Interview with creative consultant Steven Gaydos
Interview with executive producer Richard Gladstein
Trailer
Still gallery
It’s a very bloody Christmas after Ricky Caldwell, the notorious “Killer Santa Claus,” awakens from a six-year coma with one thing on his mind: murder.
Silent Night, Deadly Night 4: Initiation special features:
Audio commentary by director Brian Yuzna
Our Man Ricky with Clint Howard
Interview with writer Woody Keith
Interview with effects artist Screaming Mad George
Interview with executive producer Richard Gladstein
Trailer
Still Gallery
A reporter’s investigation into a mysterious death leads her into the clutches of a cult that’s chosen her as its new queen.
Silent Night, Deadly Night 5: The Toy Maker special features:
 Audio commentary by director/co-writer Martin Kitrosser
Interview with producer/co-writer Brian Yuzna
Interview with actor Brian Bremer
Interview with effects artist Screaming Mad George
Interview with executive producer Richard Gladstein
Trailer
Still gallery
Mickey Rooney stars as a toy maker whose creations display some very human – and deadly – tendencies.
Pre-order Silent Night, Deadly Night Collection.
39 notes · View notes
edsonlnoe · 2 years
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media
P⬤21 Score Dune Hans Zimmer The Green Knight Daniel Hart The Lost Daughter Dickon Hinchliffe Luca Dan Romer Minari Emile Mosseri No Time to Die Hans Zimmer The Power of the Dog Jonny Greenwood Supernova Keaton Henson Swan Song Jay Wadley Soundtrack The Harder They Fall Judas and the Black Messiah Luca Nomadland Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings Swan Song Canción “Akh Lar Gayee (ft. Surinderjit Singh)” — Prem-Hardeep Prem-Hardeep, Surinderjit Singh The White Tiger “Dos Oruguitas” — Sebastián Yatra Lin-Manuel Miranda Encanto “Fight For You” — H.E.R. Gabriella Wilson, Tiara Thomas, Dernst Emile II Judas and the Black Messiah “The Harder They Fall” — Koffee Shawn Carter, Jeymes Samuel, Mikayla Simpson The Harder They Fall “Lead the Way” — Jhené Aiko Jhené Aiko, James Newton Howard Raya and the Last Dragon “No Time to Die” — Billie Eilish Billie Eilish, Finneas O’Connell No Time To Die “Rain Song” — Han Ye-ri Stephanie Hong, Emile Mosseri Minari “Run It (ft. Rick Ross & Rich Brian)” — DJ Snake William Sami Étienne Grigahcine, Brian Imanuel, Christian Dold, Rick Ross, SIM  Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings “Speak Now” — Leslie Odom Jr. Leslie Odom Jr., Sam Ashworth One Night in Miami... Mezcla de Sonido Dune Ron Bartlett, Doug Hemphill, Alan Meyerson, Thomas J. O'Connell , Mac Ruth, Don White Encanto David Boucher, Scott Curtis, David E. Fluhr, Gabriel Guy, Doc Kane, Paul McGrath, Alvin Wee In the Heights Vinny Alfano, Ryan Collison, Lewis Goldstein, Eric Gotthelf, Drew Kunin, John Marquis, Connor Nagy, Aaron Southerland, Jerrell Suelto, Tami Treadwell No Time to Die Mark Appleby, Al Clay, Simon Hayes, Stephen Lipson, Paul Massey, Adam Mendez, Mark Taylor Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings Sona Balam, Onnalee Blank, Jason Butler, Peter J. Devlin, Richard Duarte, Lora Hirschberg, Doc Kane, Yung Q, Fred Runner West Side Story Doc Kane, Tod A. Maitland, Shawn Murphy, Andy Nelson, Frank Rinella, Gary Rydstrom Edición de Sonido Dune David Bach, Clint Bennett, Theo Green, Mark A. Mangini, Ryan Rubin, Dave Whitehead The Green Knight Christopher Barnett, Richard Gould, Chris Manning, Johnny Marshall, Greg J. Peterson, Mark Jan Wlodarkiewicz Luca Barney Jones, Justin Doyle, André Fenley, Pascal Garneau, Samuel Lehmer, Justin Pearson, Larry Oatfield, Christopher Scarabosio, Lodge Worster No Time to Die Hugo Adams, Christopher Benstead, Bryan Bowen, Michael Fentum, Dawn Gough, James Harrison, Eilam Hoffman, Michael Maroussas, Becki Ponting, Oliver Tarney A Quiet Place Part II Erik Aadahl, Nancy Allen, Ramiro Belgardt, Malte Bieler, Chris Diebold, Brandon Jones, Vanessa Lapato, Nancy Nugent, Jim Schultz, Del Spiva, Ethan Van der Ryn Raya and the Last Dragon Chris Frazier, David C. Hughes, Shannon Mills, Samson Neslund, Steve Orlando, Brad Semenoff, Jim Weidman
13 notes · View notes
ruiraiox · 3 months
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Copenhagen Main Library - February 9th 2016
1994–2014
During recording of their Gingerbread Man album, the Singing Resident met future singer Molly Harvey at a coffee store, and invited her to record vocals for the song "The Old Woman".
 Following this she became a regular member of the Residents' team of collaborators, and appeared on all of their major albums and live shows until 2005's Animal Lover.
Also appearing for the first time on Gingerbread Man was Isabelle Barbier, a young actress who would make occasional appearances with the Residents until The Ghost of Hope in 2017.
The Residents' 1998–2000 Wormwood project introduced three important figures in Residents history, Carla Fabrizio, Nolan Cook and Toby Dammit.
 Dammit briefly played with the Residents live from 1999 to 2003, and performed on the Demons Dance Alone album.
 Carla played with the Residents in concert until the 2008 Bunny Boy tour,and has worked with the band on their studio albums as recently as 2020.
 Nolan Cook has acted as the Residents' lead guitarist both in concert and in the studio for over twenty years now, and was credited as guitarist on their 2023 God In Three Persons concert film.
In the years following Molly Harvey's departure, professional voice actress Gerri Lawlor began to make regular appearances on the Residents spoken-word projects, Tweedles, The River of Crime, The Voice of Midnight and Lonely Teenager.
 Corey Rosen also began working with the Residents during this time, on The River of Crime,The Voice of Midnight, and The Bunny Boy web series.
2015–present
Following the departure of Hardy Fox in 2015, Eric Drew Feldman was once again asked to help with duties previously undertaken by Fox.
 Along with Feldman, performers Laurie Hall and Peter Whitehead began appearing on Residents releases starting with The Ghost of Hope.
Hall also appeared on Intruders, which introduced Sivan Lioncub.
The line-up of collaborators as featured on the Residents' 2020 album Metal Meat & Bone includes Eric Drew Feldman, Carla Fabrizio, Nolan Cook, Peter Whitehead, and Sivan Lioncub.
 Their 2022 Triple Trouble soundtrack album features Eric Drew Feldman as co-writer, co-arranger and co-producer along with The Residents; Feldman is the only credited musical collaborator on this release
0 notes
noctambulatebooks · 1 year
Text
Reading 2023
5-January-2023: Tanizaki, Junichirō, The Maids (1963, Japan)
13-January-2023: Tevis, Walter, Mockingbird (1980, USA)
22-January-2023: Snyder, Michael, James Purdy: Life of a Contrarian Writer (2022, USA)
29-January-2023: Pressburger, Emeric, The Glass Pearls (1966, England)
31-January-2023: Mac Orlan, Pierre, A Handbook for the Perfect Adventurer (1951, France)
5-February-2023: Runciman, Steven, The First Crusade (Vol I: A History of the Crusades) (1951, England)
11-February-2023: Babitz, Eve, I Used to be Charming (1975-1997, USA)
15-February-2023: Indiana, Gary, Rent Boy (1994, USA)
26-February-2023: Zola, Émile, The Sin of Abbé Mouret (1875, France)
2-March-2023: Bennett, Alice, Alarm (Object Lessons), (2023, USA)
9-March-2023: Wyndham, John, The Kraken Wakes (1953. England)
17-March-2023: Manchette, Jean-Patrick, The Prone Gunman (1981, France)
17-March-2023: Shawn, Wallace, Night Thoughts: An Essay (2017, USA)
19-March-2023: Runciman, Steven, The Kingdom of Jerusalem (Vol II: A History of the Crusades) (1953, England)
26-March-2023: Carr, David, Final Draft: The Collected Work of David Carr (2020, USA)
5-April-2023: Manzoni, Alessandro, The Betrothed (1840, Italy)
10-April-2023: Childs, Craig, Finders Keepers: A Tale of Archaeological Plunder and Obsession (2010, USA)
16-April-2023: Butler. Octavia, Kindred (1979, USA)
22-April-2023: Liming, Sheila, Hanging Out: The Radical Power of Killing Time (2023, USA)
24-April-2023: Manchette, Jean-Patrick, Three to Kill (1976, France)
30-April-2023: Keefe, Patrick Radden, Empire of Pain: The Secret History of the Sackler Dynasty (2021, USA)
7-May-2023: Le Carré, John, Agent Running in the Field (2019, England)
10-May-2023: Dederer, Claire, Monsters: A Fan’s Dilemma (2023, USA)
13-May-2023: Mortimer, Penelope, Daddy’s Gone A-Hunting (1956, England)
26-May-2023: Morrison, Toni, Beloved (1987, USA)
30-May-2023: McCarthy, Cormac, The Passenger (2022, USA)
1-June-2023: Lewis, Herbert Clyde, Gentleman Overboard (1937, USA)
6-June-2023: Miéville, China, Embassytown (2011, England)
10-June-2023: McCarthy, Cormac, Stella Maris (2022, USA)
16-June-2023: Ambler, Eric, The Light of Day (1962, England)
23-June-2023: Ambler, Eric, Dirty Story (1967, England)
25-June-2023: Runciman, Steven, The Kingdom of Acre (Volume III, A History of the Crusades) (1954, England)
27-June-2023: Hartley, L.P., The Harness Room (1971, England)
4-July-2023: Motley, Willard, Knock on Any Door (1947, USA)
8-July-2023: Duras, Marguerite, The North China Lover (1991. France)
10-July-2023: Carr, J. L., A Month in the Country (1980, England)
14-July-2023: Thoreau, Henry David, Cape Cod (1865, USA)
18-July-2023: Modiano, Patrick, Missing Person (1978, France)
22-July-2023: Prime-Stevenson, Edward, Left to Themselves: The Ordeal of Philip and Gerald (1891, USA)
24-July-2023: Shakespeare, William, King Lear (1606, England)
6-August-2023: Whitehead, Colson, Crook Manifesto (2013, USA)
11-August-2023: Hampson, John, Last Night at the Greyhound (1931, England)
16-August-2023: Wyndham, John, The Midwich Cuckoos (1957, England)
19-August-2023: Ballard, J. G., The Drought (1965, England)
22-August-2023: Hines, Barry, A Kestrel for a Knave (1968, England)
31-August-2023: McPherson, William, Testing the Current (1984, USA)
10-September-2023: Pamuk, Orhan, Nights of Plague (2021, Turkey)
17-September-2023: Thoreau, Henry David, The Maine Woods (1864, USA)
20-September-2023: Thoreau, Henry David, A Plea for Captain John Brown (and other essays on abolition) (1859, USA)
24-September-2023: Kirino, Natsuo Real Life (2006, Japan)
30-September-2023: Renouard, Maël, Fragments of an Infinite Memory: My Life with the Internet (2016, France)
7-October-2023: Hamilton, Patrick, The Midnight Bell (1929, England)
12-October-2023: Hamilton, Patrick, The Siege of Pleasure (1932, England)
15-October-2023: Hamilton, Patrick, The Plains of Cement (1934, England)
21-October-2023: Kayama, Shigeru, Godzilla and Godzilla Raids Again (1955, Japan)
25-October-2023: Malcolm, Janet, Still Pictures: On Photography and Memory (2023, USA)
30-October-2023: Vonnegut, Kurt, Slaughterhouse-Five (1969, USA)
5-November-2023: Warner, Sylvia Townsend, Lolly Willowes (1926, England)
26-November-2023: Ainsworth, William Harrison, The Lancashire Witches (1848, England)
2-December-2023: Ginzburg, Carlo, Ecstasies: Deciphering the Witches’ Sabbath (1989, Italy)
10-December-2023: Baum, Vicki, Grand Hotel (1929, Germany)
16-December-2023: Sinykin, Dan, Big Fiction: How Conglomerates Changed the Publishing Industry and American Literature (2023, USA)
24-December-2023: Warner, Sylvia Townsend, T.H. White: A Biography (1967, England)
29-December-2023: Undset, Sigrid, Olav Audunssøn, Vol 4: Winter (1927, Norway)
1 note · View note
recentanimenews · 2 years
Text
Aoashi English Dub Reveals Cast & Crew, Release Date
Tumblr media
  We're about to blow our orange whistle and get the game started for Aoashi's English dub, but before we can kick off on April 23 at 2:00pm Pacific Time, we have to warm up by running down the draft picks:
  Cast
  Ciarán Strange (Richard in Requiem of the Rose King) as Ashito Aoi
Eric Vale (Trunks in Dragon Ball Z Kai) as Tatsuya Fukuda
Marisa Duran (Lou/Louise in SHADOWS HOUSE) as Hana Ichijo
Monica Rial (Bulma in Dragon Ball Z Kai) as Noriko Aoi
Blake McNamara (Seth Rich Cutter in Appare-Ranman!) as Shun Aoi  
Additional episode 1 cast:  
Greg Silva as Futamihama Coach
Kim Morton as Kogure
Meg McClain as Nanami
Kelsey Maher as Sawa
Jennifer Alyx as Female Assistant 1A
Aaron Campbell as Goalie's Father
Nazeeh Tasha as Male Baishinji Player 1A, Male Spectator 1A
Ben Balmaceda as Male Baishinji Player 1B, Male Futamihama Player 1D
Alex Mai as Male Futamihama Player 1A, Male Spectator 1B
JR Joseph as Male Futamihama Player 1A
Paul Cline as Male Futamihama Player 1C, Male Underclassman 1A
Justin Green as Male Underclassman 1B
  Crew
  ADR Director: Shawn Gann
Assistant ADR Directors: Emi Lo & Marcus Stimac
Lead ADR Engineer: Paul Cline
Assistant ADR Engineers: Ian Emerson & Noah Whitehead
ADR Script Writer: Leah Clark
ADR Script Supervisor: Bonny Clinkenbeard
ADR Prep: Ry McKeand
ADR Mix Engineer: Matt Grounds
Tumblr media
      RELATED: Crunchyroll Reveals SimulDub Lineup for Spring 2022, First SPY x FAMILY Cast Details
    Based on the manga by Yugo Kobayashi, Aoashi is directed by Akira Sato (RELEASE THE SPYCE) at studio Production I.G, with series composition by Masahiro Yokotani (Free! - Iwatobi Swim Club) and character designs by Toshie Kawamura (B-PROJECT).
  If you're a fan of sports anime, don't miss Episode 1 of Aoashi's English dub when it drops on April 23 at 2:00pm PT, right here on Crunchyroll!
   "I'll take you to the world." Ashito Aoi is a middle schooler who lives in Ehime, and the ace of an unremarkable soccer club. The day that they lost the final tournament of middle school, Ashito runs along the ocean in frustration, before running into a man who had been watching his game. That man is Tatsuya Fukuda, the coach of the high-school-aged Youth team of a leading J-League team, "Tokyo City Esperion FC." After sensing immense potential in Ashito's still-unrefined skills, he describes his ambition. "I want to build a team, and use it to take over the world. Our club isn't going to be a milestone for players who take on the world. Our club is going to be the world. And to make this happen, I'm going to need some 'aces' to train." After hearing Fukuda's offer, Ashito decides to head to Tokyo and try out for his team── Aoashi is considered the cutting edge of soccer manga, and now it's finally getting a TV anime adaptation! Loss, growth, and friendship: everything in youth is here!
Tumblr media
    Der shy man behind @Shymander, Liam is a timezone-fluid Aussie with a distinct fondness for anime, Eurovision and creating odd stats projects despite hating math.
By: Liam Dempsey
4 notes · View notes
the-frog-blog · 3 months
Text
Yuh yuh yuh
0 notes