Lady and the Tramp: Animated (1955) v Live Action CGI (2019)
You do not have to see both to vote, but it might have been helpful.
Feel free to share opinions or explanations with comments/tags/rbs
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LADY AND THE TRAMP 1955
Look again, Pige. Look, there's a great big hunk of world down there, with no fence around it. Where two dogs can find adventure and excitement. And beyond those distant hills, who knows what wonderful experiences? And it's all ours for the taking, Pige. It's all ours.
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Tony Roberts cover art for Larry Niven's "A World Out of Time," 1977
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Wargames of D-Day, June 6, 1944, and the Normandy breakout, Operations Cobra and Goodwood
Cobra: Game of the Normandy Breakout, TSR, 1984, Larry Elmore credited as illustrator (designed by BE Hessel and updated by David James Ritchie, originally published by SPI in Strategy & Tactics magazine #65, 1977, then as an SPI boxed game in 1978; the TSR edition expands the scope by including the D-Day landings and the battles of Cherbourg and Caen)
Breakout: Normandy, Avalon Hill, 1993, Michael Reis box art with text recolored for ad in The General V29 N2 (designed by Don Greenwood and James Stahler; republished in 2011 by L2 Design Group)
St Lo: Normandy 1944: The Breakout Begins, West End Games, 1986, with Robert Berran box art (designed by Joseph M. Balkoski; republished in 2021 by War Drum Games/Quarterdeck International)
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I know pride month is over now, but I want to reflect on the artists, musicians, actors, singers, and others we lost to AIDS.
Keith Haring
Gia Carangi
Leonard Frey
Robert La Tourneaux
Frederick Combs
Keith Prentice
Kenneth Nelson
Larry Kert
Irving Allen Lee
Ilka Tanya Payán
I encourage others to add more people, as I will do the same in reblogs as there were so many more people I wanted to add. And those in the public eye that we lost don’t even hold a candle to the large amount of brothers, sisters, friends, that were lost due to AIDS.
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