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#Geneva Carr
riseandfallofme · 4 days
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Girlfriend! Pretty pretty princess! Angelface! This hair I need more
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mrbensonmum · 14 hours
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TV Shows - Bull IV
We're approaching the end of the second season, or even the beginning of the last episode, and we're immediately confronted with a shock that turns out to be just a dream.
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But it doesn't get better because even though the destruction of Bull's ex-wife's wedding turns out to be just a dream, the case he vigorously defended in the last episode has failed for him. His client was found guilty! Of course, this is no reason for Bull to give up now; his fighting spirit is ignited, and he's really ramping up. Will it work out?
You can tell that the Bull from the first season is becoming less and less present, and by now, we also recognize why. It's not just about Izzy's wedding; it's the cases that continue to wear Bull down. Especially the recent cases show this very clearly, and this goes hand in hand with the development of the various characters. The series chooses interesting paths because there's absolutely no balance.
That's not a bad thing; it's just very unusual. Normally, there are two possibilities: Either the characters' development is handled episode by episode, or there's a change over a whole season in small doses. Here, however, the developments are always thrown in between the individual cases, except for Bull's own development, which is clear if we look at the title of the series. But apart from Cable, there are also no episodes that focus solely on one character, especially in relation to Chunk or Marissa. Chunk's fatherhood is always mentioned in passing, even though there's the case with the reporter, but even there, the daughter and he play a subordinate role. With Marissa, it's the fraud, and even there, we only get glimpses of it, even though her therapy is now coming to the forefront towards the end.
As I said, just an observation. I find it interesting that despite the lack of balance, they still manage to always find the right point to tell what about whom, without it feeling out of place. It always fits very well, and you can process the information well because it's so abstract compared to the respective case that it stays in your memory.
I think this storytelling style is also the reason why the series has six seasons, although I don't know what will happen next.
However, what I miss are still the sessions with Chunk, the selection of jurors, or dealing with the processes, and how Bull analyzes them. I really like those analyses and those little comments he makes; it always reminds me of my sociology seminars. You could do something similar and have at least as much fun as Bull.
I'm very curious about what will change in the third season, how the team will come together, and, of course, how it will continue with Dr. Jason Bull because as it stands now, it looks pretty bleak. I really miss his blue suits and slightly longer hair, but his team also says they miss it.
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janamonji · 8 months
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'Jury Duty,' 'Bull' and '12 Angry Men'
After my brief one-day as a potential juror, I thought I should review some jury duty-related TV shows and movies. By itself, the classic feature film “12 Angry Men” isn’t available to stream, but the “Courtroom Double Feature” of “Twelve Angry Men” as the original teleplay for Studio One and “The Defender” is included in Prime. 12 Angry Men (1954) ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ By today’s standards, the black and…
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sponsoredbytonystark · 8 months
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You can’t watch season 3 episode 1 of Bull and doubt that Jason Bull loved Marissa Morgan. And if you can do that, come chat with me and I’ll present my powerpoint.
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Geneva Carr posted on her Instagram about My Policeman
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shipatfirstsight · 2 years
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Favorite books of 2022 7/?
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fvisualkei · 2 years
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Dark Academia Movie Masterlist
Here is just a basic master list of my own personal grace for some Dark Academia Movies, as some may want inspiration or just something new to watch. Enjoy!
*MOVIES*
NOTE: Watchable places apt to change, but these are some sites that have included it. Not all subscription status is readily available, some might include premium subscription, but I sadly do not know which. I am sorry for the inconvenience.
Dead Poets Society (1989) - Dead Poet’s Society is set in 1959 at an elite conservative boarding school. It tells the story of an English teacher who inspires his students through his teaching of poetry. The English teacher is played by Robin Williams. Can watch on Hulu (subscription), Amazon Prime ($3.99 USD), Apple TV ($3.99 USD), Vudu ($3.99 USD), YouTube ($17.99 USD), And Google Play Movies ($3.99).
The Riot Club (2014) - The Riot Club follows two first-year Oxford University students. They join a secret society. And they learn their reputations can be made or destroyed in one evening. Can watch on The Roku Channel (subscription), Amazon Prime Video (subscription), YouTube ($9.99 USD), Sling TV (subscription), Apple TV ($3.99 USD), and Google Play Movies ($9.99 USD).
The Goldfinch (2019) -The movie follows Theo Decker. Tragically his mother dies in a terrorist bombing. And a wealthy family takes him in.In a panic, he steals ‘The Goldfinch’ a painting. And that leads him to a world of crime. Stars Ansel Elgort, Finn Wolfard, and Nicole Kidman. Can watch on Amazon Prime Video (subscription), Google Play Movies ($2.99 USD), Vudu ($5.99 USD), YouTube ($2.99 USD), and Apple TV ($2.99 USD).
Hugo (2011) -Hugo is a young orphan. He loves the station clocks. And, his most treasured possession is his late father’s automation. Therefore, his mission is to find a key that will get it working. Stars Asa Butterfield and Sacha Baron Cohen. Can watch on Hulu (subscription), YouTube ($2.99 USD), Vudu ($2.99 USD), Apple TV ($3.99 USD), HBO Max (subscription), Google Play Movies ($2.99 USD), and Amazon Prime Video ($2.99).
Jane Eyre (2011) - Jane Eyre is hired by Edward Rochester to care for his ward Adèle. When she arrives at Thornfield Hall she starts to fall in love with Rochester. But there is a terrifying secret looming within the walls at Thornfield Hall. So what is Rochester hiding from Jane? Stars Mia Wasikowska. Can watch on Hulu (subscription), Sling TV (subscription), Amazon Prime Video (subscription), YouTube ($3.99 USD), Apple TV ($3.99 USD), The Roku Channel (subscription), Starz (subscription), Philo (subscription), Google Play Movies ($3.99 USD), and Vudu ($3.99 USD).
Maurice (1987) - Maurice is a romantic drama. And an adaptation of the 1971 novel Maurice by E.M Forster.A young man is trapped by the oppressiveness of Edwardian society. His lover rejects him. And he tries to accept his sexuality. Stars Hugh Grant as Clive. Can watch on Tubi (free), YouTube ($3.99 USD), Apple TV ($4.99 USD), Amazon Prime Video (subscription), and Google Play Movies ($3.99 USD).
Mary Shelley (2017) - Mary Shelley follows the life of the author. It starts with a young Mary Wollstonecraft.Her family disapprove when she announces her love for Percy Shelley.She stays in the home of Lord Byron at Lake Geneva. And the guests are challenged to write a ghost story. So Mary writes her novel “Frankenstein.” Stars Elle Fanning. Can watch on The Roku Channel (subscription), Apple TV ($4.99 USD), Google Play Movies ($9.99 USD), Amazon Prime Video (subscription), YouTube ($9.99 USD), and Vudu ($9.99 USD).
Kill Your Darlings (2013) -Kill Your Darlings follows a young Allen Ginsberg. He has a rival for the affections of his charismatic classmate—Lucien Carr. But his Rival is found dead. And Carr, William Burroughs and Jack Kerouac are arrested for murder. Stars Daniel Radcliffe and Elizabeth Olsen. Can watch on Hulu (subscription), Sling TV (subscription), Amazon Prime Video (subscription), Vudu ($2.99 USD), Google Play Movies ($3.99 USD), The Roku Channel (subscription), Starz (subscription), Philo (subscription), YouTube ($3.99 USD).
Dorian Gray (2009) - It follows a corrupt but beautiful young man. His image is captured in a special painting. And the painting keeps him from ageing. But for every sin he commits, the image in the painting rots.The movie is very gothic. A quick warning—the plotline differs from the book. Stars Ben Barnes. Can watch on The Roku Channel (free), Vudu (free), Amazon Prime Video (subscription), Google Play Movies ($2.99 USD), Tubi (free), Hulu (subscription), YouTube ($2.99 USD), and Apple TV ($3.99 USD).
Mona Lisa Smile (2003) - The Mona Lisa Smile follows a free-thinking and non-conformist teacher. He works at an all-women’s private school in the 1950s.He encourages women to pursue their dreams. And also question the roles expected of them in society. Stars Julia Roberts. Can watch on Hulu (subscription), Vudu ($2.99 USD), YouTube ($3.99 USD), Apple TV ($3.99 USD), HBO Max (subscription), Amazon Prime Video ($2.99 USD), and Google Play Movies ($3.99 USD).
Enola Holmes (2020) - It follows teenager Enola Holmes. Her mother goes missing. So she uses her sleuthing skills to find her. But she must also outsmart her famous brothers and help a runaway lord. Stars Millie Bobby Brown. (There is a new movie being released in July 2022) Can watch on Netflix (subscription).
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archduchessofnowhere · 4 months
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so i wanna start reading about elisabeth and i saw someone recommend Martyrdom of an Empress. Do you think It's a good book??
Hello! No, I don't think it's good at all. It's honestly baffling that's even recommended in this day.
The Martyrdom of an Empress was a book published in 1899 in London by an anonymous author who claimed to have been a close confidant of Elisabeth; years later the author was identified as being Marguerite Cunliffe-Owen (a person who was not part of the empress' entourage). It's technically one of the first "biographies" of Elisabeth, but it's so fictionalized that I don't even think it counts as one. I've tried to read it fully before just to be able to track down which myths about Elisabeth originated here, but I just get so exasperated by the amount of false information it contains that I can't make it pass the first chapter.
Again, I don't understand why would anyone even consider this book as a good source to learn about Elisabeth. That it was mostly gossip with fiction was well known and harshly pointed as soon as the book was out, as this fragment of a review by W. T. Stead, published in the The Review of Reviews in August 15 of 1899, show:
She [the author] represents herself as having been the friend and confidante of the Empress, and as having been her companion when she sojourned in Brittany. On that occasion the Empress, she says, was lodged in the ruined chateau of X. on the Breton coast— a chateau which belonged to her own family. But notwithstanding all this intimacy with the Empress— an intimacy so great as to allow her to address the Crown Prince Rudolf as "Master Rudie"—she has not hesitated to print for the amusement of a somewhat cynical world all the scandalous chronicles of the Austrian Court. It is also somewhat curious that most, if not all, of her revelations have been the common property of Viennese gossips for the last twenty years. The book is interesting reading to those to whom the subject is entirely new, but it is something of a tax upon our credulity to be asked to believe that all the familiar anecdotes of the Court were personally retailed to the sympathetic ear of this confidante, who was so little worthy of her trust as to pour them forth to minister to the curiosity of the world.
I think the worst (and saddest) thing about this book is that, while the author goes above and beyond to paint Elisabeth as a saint who lived devotedly to serve others, she also makes this claim with no shame:
Baroness Adolph Rothschild, whose beautiful villa of Pregny is one of the most exquisite spots on the banks of the lake of Geneva, had once been very kind to the Empress's favorite sister, the ex-Queen of Naples (...). Elizabeth never forgot this, and although she had a well-defined dislike for Israelites—with the exception of the poet Heine, whom she admired greatly—yet when she found herself so close to Pregny she decided to go and call upon Baroness Rothschild (p. 251).
Elisabeth knew Julie Rothschild through her sister, that much is true. She however was not antisemitic, but it seems that for Cunliffe-Owen it was just unacceptable that her perfect Christian heroine was in good terms with a Jewish woman, so just in case she feels the need to clarify she disliked all of them (except Heine. Make it make sense).
Btw we actually know what Baroness Rothschild thought of this book, thanks to a letter written by Harriet Hosmer, American sculptor who was also friends with Elisabeth's sister Queen Marie:
TO MRS. CARR. Watertown, Aug. 28, 1898? [sic, this letter must be from 1899, the year of the book's publication]
Dear C: I have a letter from the Baroness Adolphe, which I want to show you. She says of the "Martyrdom of an Empress" exactly what I thought she would, that it is a romance, containing certain well-known facts, and the rest fiction. The Baroness was a great friend of the Empress. She says that Countess Trani, the Empress' sister, told her that she knew of no friend of her sister's who entertained her in Brittany or who was with her as described in the book. (1912, p. 348)
While this letter is very much a "she says that she says that", I still find it way more trustworthy that anything that's written in The Martyrdom of an Empress.
If you wanna know which books I do recommend to learn about Elisabeth, I answered that here!
Sources:
Carr, Cornelia [ed.] (1912). Harriet Hosmer, letters and memories
Cunliffe-Owen, Marguerite (1899). The Martyrdom of an Empress
Stead, W.T (1899, August 15). "The Martyrdom of an Empress": Austrian History a la "Family Herald", The Review of Reviews for Australasia
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whatdoesshedotothem · 7 months
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1834 Oct[obe]r Tues[day] 7
8 5/..
11 35/..
P
No kiss fine morn[in]g – n[ea]r an h[ou]r look[in]g at the panorama of the lake of Geneva etc. bef[ore]
dress[in]g – br[eak]f[a]st at 10 – Game fr[om] IN- [Isabella Norcliffe] Langton kill[e]d on the 4th a brace of pheas[an]ts, and d[itt]o of
partridges – ord[erin]g ab[ou]t n[or]th chamb[e]r and enlarg[in]g new c[oa]ch h[ou]se – the wind[ow] int[o] joiners’ shop
finish[e]d exc[ept] glaz[in]g – 2 of Mallins[o]n men and 2 lads here – Ch[arle]s and Ja[me]s How[ar]th at n[or]th ch[ambe]r ward-
-robe and the latt[e]r cas[in]g tent r[oo]m wind[ow] – Pickels shift[in]g stones fr[om] Hall Green – my fath[e]r
and Mar[ia]n w[e]nt ab[ou]t 11 in th[ei]r op[e]n carr[ia]ge to call at Cliff hill and A- [Adney] and I walk[e]d aft[er]w[ar]ds and g[o]t th[e]re
at 1 – ver[y] well rec[eive]d and sat th[e]re an h[ou]r say[in]g our call w[a]s on Miss Rawson (Mary of
Millh[ou]se) as well as on Miss Walker – look[e]d ab[ou]t the plantat[io]ns – so[me] ti[me] at Lidgate –
Mr. Hirds’ foreman spo[ke] to me ab[ou]t Stump X Inn – w[oul]d be gl[a]d to ta[ke] it – s[ai]d I th[ou]ght of
lett[in]g it by ticket – Mr. Hird hims[elf] ca[me] whi[le] we were th[e]re, b[u]t we d[i]d n[o]t see h[i]m to
sp[ea]k to, as we w[e]nt out by the f[iel]ds int[o] Bramley Lane - ho[me] (thro’ Hipperh[olme] and the end
of Comm[o]n wood) at 4 3/4 – f[ou]nd Throps’ son, as we w[e]nt, in the walk gett[in]g Sycamore
seed w[i]th my leave giv[e]n so[me] ti[me] ago – out w[i]th the workm[e]n and walk[in]g ab[ou]t in the new
app[roa]ch r[oa]d in Tr[ough] of Boll[an]d wood till aft[e]r 6 – din[ner] at 6 1/2 – coff[ee] – h[a]d Pickels – set
to prepare for plant[in]g ivy along the wall at the top of Wellroyde low[e]r wood – w[i]th
my fath[e]r and Mar[ia]n a lit[tle] – 50 min[ute]s w[i]th my a[un]t till 9 1/2 – wr[ote] the ab[ov]e of today till 10
p.m. at w[hi]ch h[ou]r F[ahrenheit] 62° fine day – writ[in]g cop[ie]s of let[ter]s to Mess[ieu]rs Hammersleys, Hutton, Milbourne,
till ver[y] near 11 –
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makilalatv · 5 months
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youtube
Makilala TV Ep 128 | ‘Asian Persuasion’ and the Rise of Asian Cinema
GUEST PANELISTS
Jhett Tolentino Director and Producer
Mike Ang Writer
Dante Basco Actor
Paolo Montalban Actor
Geneva Carr Actor
HOSTS Rachelle Ocampo , EdM (lead) Public Health Professional
Cristina Pastor Community Journalist
GUEST CO-HOST Marivir Montebon Editor, OSM! online magazine
Produced by Manhattan Neighborhood Network (MNN) Zenaida Mendez, Director, Executive Producer Fredy Pinto, Production & Studio Manager
Cablecast Schedule: Manhattan Neighborhood Network - THURSDAY 2023 December 7 & 21
MakilalaTV Ep128 Yr11 Ep 6
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brookstonalmanac · 1 year
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Birthdays 5.6
Beer Birthdays
Bernard "Toots" Shor; saloonkeeper (1903)
Five Favorite Birthdays
George Clooney; actor (1961)
John Flansburgh; pop musician, "TMBG" (1960)
Willie Mays; San Francisco Giants CF (1931)
Anne Parillaud; actor (1960)
Orson Welles; film director, actor (1915)
Famous Birthdays
Paul Alverdes; German writer (1897)
Nestor Basterretxea; Spanish artist (1924)
Charles Batteux; French philosopher (1713)
Raymond Bailey; actor (1904)
Tom Bergeron; television host (1955)
Tony Blair; British politician (1953)
Susan Brown; English actor (1946)
Geneva Carr; actor (1971)
Jeffery Deaver; writer (1950)
Willem de Sitter; Dutch scientist (1872)
Robert H. Dicke; physicist and astronomer (1916)
Ariel Dorfman; Argentinian writer (1942)
Roma Downey; actor (1960)
Sigmund Freud; psychiatrist (1856)
Jimmie Dale Gilmore; country singer (1945)
Stewart Granger; English-American actor (1906)
Dana Hill; actor (1964)
Amy Hunter; actor and model (1966)
Ross Hunter; actor (1926)
Ernst Ludwig Kirchner; German-Swiss artist (1880)
Paul Lauterbur; chemist (1929)
Kal Mann; songwriter (1917)
Harry Martinson; Swedish writer (1904)
Lars Mikkelsen; Danish actor (1964)
Christian Morgenstern; German writer (1871)
Motilal Nehru; Indian politician (1861)
Martha Nussbaum; philosopher (1947)
Michael O'Hare; actor (1952)
Adrianne Palicki; actor (1983)
Robert Peary; arctic explorer (1856)
Marguerite Piazza; actor (1920)
Gina Riley; Australian actor (1961)
Maximilian Robespierre; French revolutionary (1758)
Tony Scalzo; pop singer (1964)
Bob Seger; rock musician (1945)
Rolf Maximilian Sievert; Swedish physicist (1906)
Randall Stout; architect (1958)
Jean-Baptiste Stuck; Italian-French composer (1680)
Rabindranath Tagore; Indian writer (1861)
James Turrell; artist (1943)
Rudolph Valentino; actor (1895)
Adrienne Warren; actor (1987)
Andre Weil; French mathematician (1906)
Theodore H. White; historian and writer (1915)
Lynn Whitfield; actor (1953)
Wally Wingert; actor (1961)
Jaime Winstone; English actor (1985)
Denny Wright; English guitarist (1924)
Raquel Zimmermann; Brazilian model (1983)
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mrbensonmum · 2 days
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TV Shows - Bull III
We've reached the second season, and Bull still manages to impress. However, it must be noted that with the second season and Michael Weatherly's new haircut, a little bit of DiNozzo is shining through. They're only subtle nuances, but they're still visible. However, this isn't meant as criticism; I also like it, although sometimes I find myself wishing for the other Bull from the early episodes of the first season.
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Right now, I'm in the third episode of the second season, and once again, Dr. Jason Bull has been asked for a favor by a judge, or in this case, a female judge. I find it interesting because it shows that even though he's very unpopular with some judges, his actions have influence and reach. However, the judge's son seems to have a different opinion, but that's a pleasant contrast.
This contrast is also seen repeatedly in individual episodes, as one could argue that the series always portrays the Bull side as winning. BUT, on one hand, this makes the series very comforting to watch, and on the other hand, this criticism wouldn't be entirely fair because we don't accuse NCIS or CSI: Las Vegas of always solving every case. (I mention this because I read it in a review of the series. I should stop reading reviews; they just raise my blood pressure. And NO, I'm not writing a review here, just sharing my experiences and interpretations. For me, there's a big difference.)
Unfortunately, I also checked the Wikipedia article for Bull again and sadly found out that one of my favorite characters, Cable, will only be in until the end of this season. I hope she gets an adequate replacement, although nobody can truly replace her, only succeed her. I also briefly feared for Chunk, due to his studies, not being around as often, and so far, that's been true. Because somehow, he's missed, and those dressing sessions are missed too. I found them quite interesting because you always learned some little extras there.
I find all the tech gimmicks used in the series a bit over the top, but they definitely serve the story and, of course, often create problems too, because if they fail or there's a blind jury, then they have to switch back to manual methods. This often adds a bit of tension, even though you know everything will turn out fine, but it's similar to an episode of Columbo. You know exactly who did what, but that part in between, practically connecting the dots from point A to point B, both of which you already know, is the interesting part. While Bull may lack Columbo's eye, trench coat and vintage car, parallels can still be drawn here.
There have been some changes in the second season, and I'm neutral about them because they're noticeable but not disruptive so far. And the series has six seasons, so it's unlikely to have a negative impact. Although, The Flash has nine seasons, and they could have ended it after six, or even, I believe, after five, right when they started ruining Killer Frost. I digress, apologies.
So far, I don't regret starting Bull; it's truly a good series that's enjoyable, and I'm a big fan of Michael Weatherly anyway. So, I'm happy for it to continue like this!
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collinthenychudson · 1 year
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Day 4: Union Pacific 618
Info from Wikipedia:
Union Pacific 618 is a class "C-57" 2-8-0 "Consolidation" type steam locomotive previously owned by the Union Pacific Railroad. The engine is now located in Heber City, Utah and owned by the Heber Valley Railroad. Built in July 1907 by the Baldwin Locomotive Works (BLW) of Eddystone, Pennsylvania, No. 618 is one of 12 surviving C-57 Series locomotives. The locomotive operated in revenue service until 1958. It was then donated to the State of Utah, where it sat on display for many years. In the mid 1960s, a full restoration effort began on the locomotive with the promise of heading up Utah's first tourist railroad in Heber City after the state donated the engine to the National Railway Historical Society. Today, it is one of UP's oldest locomotives and the first steam locomotive to be removed from a Public Park, and put back into operational condition in excursion service. The engine currently is out of service in Heber City, Utah undergoing restoration back to operating condition.
In July 1907, the Oregon Short Line Railroad received #1068. The 2-8-0 locomotive was part of the C-57 Class of locomotives for the OSL, which was a subsidiary of the Union Pacific. The 2-8-0 was part of a three locomotive order from the Oregon Short Line Railroad built that month by Baldwin and numbered 1066-1068.
During World War II, the locomotive pulled trains from the Ogden Yards to the Ogden Army Defense Base. This lasted from 1941-1945 when the Japanese surrendered. Afterward, the engine continued to handle freight in Utah and Idaho. Around 1949-1951, the standard square coal tender was replaced with a Vanderbilt styled tender. The reason why is still unknown. Through the 1950s, the locomotive continued to operate on freight duties until the engine was replaced by diesel locomotives on the Union Pacific. The locomotive's last assignment was to act as a snowplow near the Geneva Steel Mill. The Union Pacific had decided to donate 618 to the State of Utah with the agreement that the locomotive could not be sold, scrapped, or given to an out of state railroad.  In late May of 1958, the locomotive was fired up what some thought was the very last time. She pulled into the Diesel Complex in Salt Lake City. She was then pushed across North Temple Street to the County Fairgrounds and placed on display.
Initially, the locomotive was fairly well received by the public. However, after a while, the locomotive had started to become an eyesore. Many people wanted to get rid of 618, but the stipulations of the Union Pacific giving 618 to the state was that it couldn't be scrapped, sold, or given out of state. This prompted many to speculate what else to do with the locomotive. In the mid 1960s, there was a thought of just burying the engine. According to Stephen Carr, a historian at the Heber Valley Railroad, he stated that, "There was a thought of digging a big hole right next, next to it and tumbling it into the hole. Because nobody knew what else to do with it and nobody was interested in it."  In addition, the fairgrounds also were going to be expanded, and the locomotive needed to be moved to allow it. However, members of the National Railway Historical Society decided to step in and in 1969, they convinced the state to donate the engine to the Promontory Chapter of the National Railway Historical Society. After the donation, the group started conversations with the state to use the locomotive in a brand new tourist railroad based out of Heber City, Utah on the Wasatch Railway Museum.
Two years earlier in 1967, the Denver & Rio Grande Western had abandoned the Provo Branch Line that linked Provo to Heber City. The tracks were planned to be ripped up and be turned over as an extension of U.S Route 189. everal locals and businessmen fought to keep the tracks in order to start a potential tourist operation. When the Wasatch Mountain Railway moved their equipment onto the branch, Utah told them to leave. UDOT gave the historical group until April 1, 1972 to move its equipment. The railroad more or less balked at the order and moved #618 to Heber City from Provo on December 7th, 1970.[4] By 1971, the railroad added to their fleet with Pacific Lumber Co. #35 and a 3-Truck Shay #4 from the Yosemite Lumber Company. In January 3, 1971, #618 was fired up and ran the first excursion on the Heber Creeper. In November, the state decided to rescind their eviction and granted the Wasatch Railway Museum a 25 year lease on the former branch.  It ran excursion trains from 1971 until 1976 when it was taken out of service. After sitting for ten years, the railroad moved the engine in the shops in 1986 were they began rebuilding the engine. It eventually return to service in 1989 and ran excursions trains until 1990 when it was once again taken out of service and put into storage. In 1992, State of Utah moved all of its railroad equipment for use by the Heber Valley Railroad. For two years, the engine sat on display until 1993 when it went into the shops for an overhaul. The rebuild was completed on May 13, 1995 and it pulled its first train of the 1995 season to Deer Creek Dam and back. In 2007, the locomotive celebration its 100th birthday and was relettered and renumbered as Oregon Short Line No. 1068. Shortly after the event, the locomotive would continue to haul passenger trains for another three years. In June 2010, the locomotive made its last runs before its boiler ticket expired. It haul its last trains during Memorial Day weekends for photo charters and was indefinitely taken out of service and put on static display in front of the railroad dept. n 2014, it was removed from its display track and moved into the shops for restoration back to service, it will be converted to burn oil once finished.
models and route by: Trainz-Forge, Auran, and Download Station
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vintagewarhol · 2 years
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Absolutely heartbreaking that Bull is coming to an end. Any show that puts psychology at its forefront (even if it is only undergraduate level) will always have a special place in my heart. This show is going to be so missed 💔😭
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zkyeline · 3 years
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Doodle dump of Bull season 1 but it’s stuff that I screenshotted pt. 2: the TAC girls 💗
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