Tumgik
#Levitch
luzzarm · 1 month
Text
Jerry in Jumping Jacks is such a mood
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Film: Jumping Jacks (1952)
— GIFs by me ☆
24 notes · View notes
jerrylewis-thekid · 8 months
Text
Tumblr media
This photo reminds me of the movie "That's my boy". Jerry is really very serious next to his father, he almost looks submissive to him. And Jerry's dad looks at Dean. Dean with that casual way of his. Who knows what he thought of him... who knows if he liked him, if he considered him better than his son, more handsome, intelligent, capable. Maybe...
17 notes · View notes
martinandlewislive · 1 year
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Some gifs I made from Jerome’s appearance on AM New York (1976)
25 notes · View notes
farminglesbian · 5 months
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
new favourite dynamic just dropped
4 notes · View notes
kwebtv · 5 months
Text
Tumblr media
Florence Stanley, James Patrick Stuart, Judith Light, Ashlee Levitch and Brett Cullen in "The Simple Life"
4 notes · View notes
d-i-x-i-t · 6 months
Text
We want winning without losing, we want understanding without confusion. - Pete Holmes (You made it weird - with Timothy Levitch)
2 notes · View notes
perfettamentechic · 8 months
Text
20 agosto … ricordiamo …
20 agosto … ricordiamo … #semprevivineiricordi #nomidaricordare #personaggiimportanti #perfettamentechic
2022: Leon Vitali, Alfred Leon Vitali, attore britannico e aiuto regista. Di origine italiana, divenne noto per aver collaborato con il regista Stanley Kubrick, il quale gli assegnò un ruolo nel film Barry Lyndon e una piccola parte in Eyes Wide Shut. Fu assistente personale del regista in Shining, e assistente alla regia e direttore del casting in Full Metal Jacket e Eyes Wide Shut. Vitali ha…
Tumblr media
View On WordPress
2 notes · View notes
amoebaboots · 3 months
Text
watching people like John Wilson and Timothy “Speed” Levitch makes me want to be more inquisitive about the world and find new and unique ways to draw meaning from monotonous aspects of life.
Idk how to translate that into my art because I feel like being able to discuss these ideas are more suitable for film :(
0 notes
baileye · 1 year
Text
“If I have an essential goal on the Cruise right now, I think that the simplest goal is perhaps to be able to exhibit that I am thrilled to be alive and to be still respected.
The more soulful of us, I suppose the Buddhist or whatever label you want to put on those experiencing their further individuality, might say like, "Look, why should you care about respect from others? I mean, just the thrill of being alive is your own business. You can do that alone in your living room." But that’s not what the Cruise is for me. The Cruise is about the searchings for everything worthwhile in existence. It is about walking into the bar and lusting after all the worthwhile possibilities of the world. It is about flesh. It is about waves undulating. And it is about exhibitionism. You know, I want to look at the flower and appreciate the beauty of a flower, for instance. Somebody else might say, "You can look at the flower and become the flower. Isn’t that even better?" But then I further would love it on the Cruise, if I could look at the flower, appreciate the beauty of the flower, and then have the flower appreciate the beauty of me.”
Timothy “Speed” Levitch
1 note · View note
thydungeongal · 4 months
Note
You've got a larger audience than me, so I'm wondering if you can boost this information about TTRPG freelance writers, who are the backbone of everything WotC, Paizo, and EN Publishing put out. (Seriously, I work with people who write and do artwork for all three)
Writers and Designers have a Word Count to produce their content within. And are typically paid between 5 cents and 10 cents per word. (Though -some- publishers pay as much as 15 cents a word!)
For most projects you get a bunch of freelancers to write 2,000-5,000 words each. You tell them what you want them to write about and you set them loose to create. You want a trio of Archetypes for a class? Give them a 2,000 word budget. You want a few monsters? 5,000 word budget. You want part of an adventure? 10,000 word budget.
The book is going to be anywhere from 30,000 words (50ish pages) to 60,000 words (100ish pages) or higher. And the more people you hire, the faster it gets done but the less cohesive it is.
Which is where Editors come in. Editors aren't paid by the word count, but by the page count.
Most adventures for WotC are written in this structure. Take Wild Beyond the Witchlight, for example.
Writers: Stacey Allan, Will Doyle, Ari Levitch, Christopher Perkins.
Stacey Allan's freelance writing for DM's Guild: https://www.dmsguild.com/browse.php?author=Stacey%20Allan
Will Doyle's: https://www.dmsguild.com/browse.php?keywords=Will++Doyle&x=0&y=0&author=&artist=&pfrom=&pto=
You get the idea.
And to some degree that probably plays into the issues of morality that D&D has always had. If you've got 10,000 words to write out 1/3rd of a short adventure you don't really have word count to introduce a bunch of different directions to take the adventure while still getting the story to the point where the next writer's work is meant to start.
So that's an thought and some information for folks behind the curtain of writing professionally!
This is all valuable information but I think there's been a bit of a misunderstanding about the intentions of my posts: I'm not criticizing D&D's writing for not meeting some standard of moral purity or not being nuanced enough. Like, I don't have beef with D&D the game as it's presented in the text, cause I don't require media to adhere to certain moral standards. It's okay to engage with the game just as is, just as it is to change things if you feel at odds with the text, but it all needs to start with a look at and understanding of what is actually in the text instead of pretending it's something it isn't. That's my main objection: the people who make statements about D&D being a game about something that the text itself doesn't fully support.
I don't think D&D has to, through its text, present a world full of moral nuance. If players are willing to accept the buy-in, that's good. I do understand that some of that lack of moral nuance is due to constraints put on writers. But some of that lack of nuance is just D&D being like it always has been. :)
18 notes · View notes
fredandginger64 · 1 month
Text
Tumblr media
Jerome Levitch💞
Happy Heavenly
Birthday, Sweet,
Beautiful, Doll
How I wish you could still be here and do it all over again. You have meant the world to me.
~March 16, 1926 ~ August 20, 2017
Tumblr media
9 notes · View notes
luzzarm · 4 months
Text
Jerry Lewis 💗
Tumblr media
Jerry Lewis onstage at the Sands Hotel in Las Vegas, NV
ca. late 50s
Looking like a rock star himself ☆
• • • • • • • • •
21 notes · View notes
jerrylewis-thekid · 1 year
Text
Tumblr media
Jerry with his parents and Patti.
5 notes · View notes
martinandlewislive · 1 year
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media
I made the beautiful mistake of watching Max Rose this morning, I will now spend the rest of my day (and perhaps life) in tears.
Jerry , I could almost feel you sitting next to me while I cried watching this film. I know you put a lot of your heart in this movie , I can see it and feel it. If they could package the way I feel about you Jerome, they’d make millions of dollars.
I love you Jerry 🤍
14 notes · View notes
ardenrosegarden · 9 months
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Amnesia: The Bunker, anti-militarism, and nationalism as a blight
Frictional Games, Amnesia: The Bunker Herman Lebovics, True France, The Wars Over Cultural Identity, 1900-1945 Leo Tolstoy tr. Constantine Popoff, What I Believe Fredy Perlman, The Continuing Appeal of Nationalism IAmTheSnuggler, Amnesia: The Bunker - War is Hell Mark Levitch, The visual culture of modern war: Photography, posters, and soldiers' art in World War I France Frédéric Mégret and Raphael Vagliano “We Will Not Go to the Trenches!” the “fusillés pour l’exemple,” Military Disobedience, and Soldiers’ Right to Life
20 notes · View notes
kwebtv · 5 months
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
The Simple Life - CBS - June 3, 1998 - July 8, 1998
Sitcom (7 episodes - 1 Unaired)
Running Time: 30 minutes
Stars:
Judith Light as Sara Campbell (née Lipschitz)
Brett Cullen as Luke Barton
Florence Stanley as Muriel Lipschitz
James Patrick Stuart as Greg Champlain
Ashlee Levitch as Frederica "Freddi" Campbell
Ross Malinger as Will Barton
Eliza Dean as Charlotte Barton
Recurring
Sara Rue as Melanie
Vasili Bogazianos as Nick
Jeff Blumenkrantz as Jeff
Matthew Perry as John
5 notes · View notes