GUYS I NEED TO SEE THIS PLS 😭🙏
I have been searching EVERYWHERE to watch this, it looks interesting, I live in the United States and I have no clue how to watch this ik it's on arrow video's The Fury blue ray from Europe but they don't have a American release 😔 So PLS SOMEONE TELL ME HOW I CAN WATCH DOUBLE NEGATIVE 💀PLSSSSS
1 note
·
View note
Thank Goodness it's Thursday Part 2 - Friday the 13th Part 2 (1981)
In today’s review, I find family sagas run deep on dilapidated camp ground, as I attempt a #positive review of the horror sequel, Friday the 13th Part 2 #AmySteel
#JohnFurey
#AdrienneKing
#StuartCharno
#SteveDaskewisz
#WaltGorney
#BillRandolph
#TomMcBride
For many people, their family can be everything, an eternal bond linked in blood that can help guide and influence their actions and/or beliefs. In 1981, after witnessing the supposed sacrifice that his mother tried to accomplish, and the lengths she went through, a now-grown boy seeks to follow the path. As audiences finally got acquainted with a masked killer named Jason, in Friday the…
View On WordPress
0 notes
Spam Spam Spam Humbug 156 - Should We Release This Episode as an #NFT? Brand New Venture!
Spam Spam Spam Humbug 156 - Should We Release This Episode as an #NFT? Brand New Venture!
#SSSHPodcast #podcast #MMORPG #SquareEnix
Subscribe on Anchor | Subscribe on iTunes | Subscribe on Google Play | Subscribe on Spotify | Subscribe on TuneIn | Subscribe on Stitcher | Subscribe on Android
Podcast Topic(s)
The last numbered Spam Spam Spam Humbug episode — we checked! — was recorded and published in September of 2021…which means that it has been far, far too long since the gang got together to chat about everything and…
View On WordPress
1 note
·
View note
Twofer in this one
Along with a wrench thrown
BILL AND DARCY😌😍
(I’m so normal abt them 😌😌😌)
i love themmmmmm
so I’ve decided that they were childhood best friends (they were, shut up), right? and so they grew up together, laughed, commiserated, blah blah blah, all of that lovely stuff. it’s the stereotypical childhood you see in the movies.
and then, as they got older, their relationship just. didn’t get any weaker? no, it got STRONGER. and rn you’re like, yes, emme, no shit, that makes sense. no, it doesn’t, because their relationship was already so close that they WERE MAKING EACH OTHER CLOTHES BECAUSE THEY WERE LIKE, AW, WOULDN’T IT BE FUN IF WE MATCHED (like, think harry and louis outfits while they were in 1D). THEY WORKED TOGETHER. THEY ATE DINNER TOGETHER. THEY SPENT LITERALLY ALL OF THEIR TIME TOGETHER.
AND THEN THEY MOVED IN TOGETHER.
and this is where shit gets good, I swear. because these men grow old together, too. oh, they eventually move out after a couple years, they get married to lovely women, for sure, because why wouldn’t they? and they have adorable children who become very successful adults, and they were so, so proud.
and then life comes to an end, because it has to. bill and darcy are old, and so happy. they’ve had good lives, they say.
bill goes first, and it’s a quiet, peaceful affair, if somewhat unexpected. he’s surrounded by his family, now both old and young, and he just falls asleep.
darcy’s not there for it, couldn’t be there for it, and that kills him when he finds out.
he lives for another two months, and they’re sad, dreary things completely consumed with his grief. his wife had died a year before, but darcy had never felt this low without her. but when bill left him? part of his soul flew away, like a butterfly in the wind, and darcy was stranded, frantically trying to stay afloat.
when he finally leaves the earth, he is too surrounded by loved ones and as comfortable as he could be. not only that, he is peaceful, and even happy for the first time in months. he repeatedly tells his children that he will be fine, that everything will be fine now.
his last words are, “bill, I’m on my way”.
17 notes
·
View notes
Roy Orbison and The Candy Men - Oh, Pretty Woman
(Mono Single Version) *
Roy Orbison / Bill Dees
from:
"Oh, Pretty Woman" / "Yo Te Amo Maria" (Single)
* The single version (in mono) and the LP version (in stereo on the "Oribisongs" LP) have slightly differing lyrics.
The LP version with the intended lyric: "come with me baby" was changed for the single to "come to me baby" as the former was considered too risque.
- Wikipedia
Rock and Roll
JukeHostUK
(left click = play)
(320kbps)
Personnel:
Roy Orbison: Lead Vocals / Band Leader
Jerry Kennedy: Guitar
Wayne Moss: Guitar
Billy Sanford: Guitar
Charlie McCoy: Harmonica
Boots Randolph: Saxophone
Henry Strzelecki: Upright Bass
Paul Garrison: Percussion
Buddy Harman: Drums
Bill Dees: Backing Vocals
Produced by Fred Foster
Recorded:
@ The Fred Foster Sound Studio
in Nashville, Tennessee USA
on August 1, 1964
Released:
August, 1964
Monument Records (US)
London Records (UK)
Published:
on August 26, 1964
Acuff-Rose Publications, Inc
6 notes
·
View notes
Giving Bayard Rustin His Flowers (ENCORE)
Caption: Bayard Rustin, half-length portrait, facing front, microphones in foreground Credit: Library of Congress
Today, we continue celebrating Black history and heritage with a special encore episode honoring an often forgotten civil rights leader. We take a look at the life and legacy of Bayard Rustin, a central figure in the and organizer of the 1963 March on Washington. Rustin was a trusted…
View On WordPress
1 note
·
View note
Interview of Dr. Leonard Roberts, Part 2 (Summer 1982)
Dr. Leonard W. Roberts Provides Commentary about the Hatfield-McCoy Feud #Appalachia #history #feuds #HatfieldMcCoyFeud
Truda Williams McCoy’s The McCoys: Their Story (1976) is a classic book about the Hatfield-McCoy Feud. Truda, a McCoy descendant born in 1902 who married a grandson of Ran’l McCoy, collected her stories directly from feud participants and close family members prior to and during the 1930s. Truda was unable to publish her manuscript, but after her death in 1974 Dr. Leonard W. Roberts located and…
View On WordPress
0 notes
Adolf M. Hopfmuller (German/American 1876-1971)
Adolf M. Hopfmuller - selected covers from SHADOWLAND magazine - 1919—1923
When publisher Eugene V. Brewster launched his third magazine SHADOWLAND in 1919, it was obvious this was something quite different. Billed as the “Handsomest Magazine in the World”, SHADOWLAND was most definitely an ARTS magazine, not just a movie fan magazine. Literary, theatrical, visual and fine arts, interior and set design, and yes, movies, and much more from the world of art, were all showcased inside SHADOWLAND.
SHADOWLAND was retired in November 1923 and blended into the Brewster Publications sister magazine, Motion Picture Classic. A.M. Hopfmuller continued as the Art Director of Brewster Publications (Classic and Motion Picture Magazines) until he left the company in early 1926 at the age 51.
Although he may have retired from Brewster Publications, A.M. Hopfmuller never retired from painting. He went on to work for another publishing mogul, William Randolph Hearst, on magazines such as Smart Set and McClures, and was named the Art Editor of Harper’s Bazaar in 1927.
His creative interests and abilities weren’t limited to painting. Hopfmuller worked with wood, hand-carving picture frames, building rustic garden furniture, and carved bookcases.
“He enjoyed building models of sailing ships for his grandchildren to sail/race in a local park (we still have one). And he designed and maintained a beautiful garden on his property adjoining his house.” – Ruth Hamann (Hopfmuller’s grand-daughter-in-law)
more about his life:
www.50plusworld.com/shadowlands-art-deco-artist-a-m-hopfmuller/
58 notes
·
View notes