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Chris Weiler
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01sentencereviews · 1 year
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New To Me - 2022
The Apple (1980, Menahem Golan)
The Celebration (1998, Thomas Vinterberg)
Ghostwatch (1992, Lesley Manning)
Heck (2020, Kyle Edward Ball)
Hi, Mom! (1970, Brian De Palma)
The Hole (1998, Tsai Ming-liang)
Nathan for You: Finding Frances (2017, Nathan Fielder)
The Plug Lady (2004, Anthony Saladino)
Starship Troopers (1997, Paul Verhoeven)
What Ever Happened to Baby Jane? (1962, Robert Aldrich)
+++
Afternoon (2005, Tsai Ming-liang)
All About Eve (1950, Joseph L. Mankiewicz)
American Movie (1999, Chris Smith)
Angelyne (1995, Robinson Devor & Michael Guccione)
Be My Cat: A Film for Anne (2015, Adrian Țofei)
Body Snatchers (1993, Abel Ferrara)
Bone (1972, Larry Cohen)
Disney’s FastPass: A Complicated History (2021, Kevin Perjurer)
Freddy Got Fingered (2001, Tom Green)
Fresh Kill (1994, Shu Lea Cheang)
In the Dark (2000, Clifton Holmes)
In the Darkness of Time (2001, Jean-Luc Godard)
The Last Broadcast (1998, Stefan Avalos & Lance Weiler)
log 1 (2019, Alexandre Galmard)
The Passion of Joan of Arc (1928, Carl Theodor Dreyer)
Pickle Surprise (1989, Tom Rubnitz)
The Player (1992, Robert Altman)
Prom Night (1980, Paul Lynch)
Senritsu Kaiki File Kowasugi! File 01 - Operation Capture the Slit-Mouthed Woman (2012, Koji Shiraishi)
Silent Night, Deadly Night III: Better Watch Out! (1989, Monte Hellman)
The Swimmer (1968, Frank Perry) 
Tetsuo: The Iron Man (1989, Shinya Tsukamoto)
Veneno (2020, Javier Ambrossi, Javier Calvo, Mikel Rueda, & Álex Rodrigo)
Wandering (2021, Tsai Ming-liang)
War of the Worlds (2005, steven spielberg)
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singeratlarge · 2 years
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ALBUM OF THE WEEK: LOST & FOUND VOL. 2 AMERICANA & THE GREAT BEYOND—For cosmic cowboys, misfits mystics, desert wanderers, and noir poets... I'm thrilled to present #2 in a series of recordings "lost" and found--music that deserves rediscovery and fresh hearings. These are projects I worked on in some capacity (production, performing), now out of print &/or are hard to find as downloads. Vol. 2 emphasizes Americana, folk rock, country rock, and acoustic-oriented music with me + (alphabetically) Brian Belknap, evinrude (a.k.a. Kevin Spyker), Ron Fleeger & the Lucky 7, Davy Jones (Monkees), Ben Kaplan, Buddy & Julie Miller, The Pick-Ups, The Third National Band (a Mike Nesmith tribute), Allie Weiler, and more (alter egos, rehearsals). With musical cameos from Chris Andrews (Roger Daltrey, Fleur de Lys), Tim Breon, Bill Engel, Skip Kline, Bill Matlack, Jr., Seth Olinsky (Akron/Family), Gary Owen, Rusty Richards (Brian Wilson), Easy Mark Tomeo, Felipe Torres (David Cassidy, Monkees), & other notables. Download your copy today!
#americana #countryrock #singersongwriter #poprock #evinrude #davyjones #monkees #nesmith #navajo #johnnieray #guymitchell #buddymiller #juliemiller #woodyguthrie #pennsylvania #johnnyjblair #singeratlarge #folkrock #cowboy #mystic #desert #noir #poets #fleurdelys #akronfamily #pickups #kaplan #medicinebow #timbreon #lostandfound
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thalkonvotes · 4 months
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Democratic Party
** Formed in 1848, the Democratic National Committee has been the home base for the Democratic Party, one of the oldest political parties in the United States
The Democratic Party is focused on advancing their Democratic Platform and looking for positive solutions that include everyone.
Their stance on, what would be considered, issues for major political debate would be:
Every person in this nation should be treated with dignity and respect
Health care is a right for all
Hard work of middle class families should be rewarded
Schools and streets should be free from gun violence
Women should be able to make decisions about her own body
Candidates
Aaron M. He (A: 4/26/23; Insufficient Funds)
Adam Ouariti (A: 3/31/21; Insufficient Funds)
Adrian Maurice Hall (A: 6/29/23; Insufficient Funds)
Ajay Thaliath (A: 1/27/29; Insufficient Funds)
Alida Felton (A: 4/6/23; Insufficient Funds)
Alan Huddleston (A: 1/5/23; Insufficient Funds)
Allan Channey Summers (A: 6/14/23; Insufficient Funds)
Amanda Catherine Eskelson (A: 8/22/23; Insufficient Funds)
Angad Singh Chera (A: 10/16/23; Insufficient Funds)
Ann Parkinson (A: 6/28/23; Insufficient Funds)
Anthony Manalakos (A: 6/8/23; Insufficient Funds)
Antonio Marco Pantalo (A: 11/17/22; Insufficient Funds)
Armando Pereze-Serrato (A: 1/19/23; Insufficient Funds)
Arse Vincent Cysewski (A: 1/23/22; Insufficient Funds)
Ashley Powell (A: 2/9/18; Insufficient Funds)
Azeem Hussein (A: 5/2/23; Insufficient Funds)
Beatrice Ramos (A: 1/3/24; Insufficient Funds)
Bella Berg Fonvergne (A: 12/15/23; Insufficient Funds)
Benjamin Garcia (A: 7/27/20; Insufficient Funds)
Bill Thomas Compton (A: 3/24/21; Insufficient Funds)
Brian Matthew Owen (A: 5/20/23; Insufficient Funds)
Brittany A. Mckown (A: 1/5/22; Insufficient Funds)
Bryan James (A: 4/5/23; Insufficient Funds)
Carson Loveless (A: 5/2/23; Insufficient Funds)
Cenk Uygur (A: 10/11/23; Insufficient Funds)
Charles Camilleri (A: 4/20/23; Insufficient Funds)
Christin Noel Powers (A: 7/15/22; Insufficient Funds)
Christopher Campbell (A: 2/9/21; Insufficient Funds)
Christopher David Portlock (A: 7/21/23; Insufficient Funds)
Chris Weiler (A: 7/18/23; Insufficient Funds)
Constance L. Johnson (A: 10/24/23; Insufficient Funds)
Coran De-Andre Smith (A: 10/9/23; Insufficient Funds)
Dantwan Samuel Watkins (A: 1/26/23; Insufficient Funds)
David Barnard (A: 6/4/23; Insufficient Funds)
David Cash (A: 5/3/21; Insufficient Funds)
David Curtis Jefferson (12/7/22; Insufficient Funds)
Dean Phillips (A: 10/26/23; Insufficient Funds)
Deborah Sharpe (A: 6/15/23; Insufficient Funds)
Donald Picard (A: 10/6/23; Insufficient Funds)
Doris Brown (A: 10/2/23; Insufficient Funds)
Dorsey Porter (A: 11/16/22; Insufficient Funds)
Dustin Rorex (A: 4/26/23; Insufficient Funds)
Dykeba Lecole Rogers (A: 8/22/22; Insufficient Funds)
Earl Davis (A: 1/19/23; Insufficient Funds)
Eban Cambridge (A: 10/17/23; Insufficient Funds)
Edward Nathaniel Grimes (A: 8/30/23; Insufficient Funds)
Erik Leckner (A: 4/28/22; Insufficient Funds)
Ethan Witzling Hamby (A: 6/30/22; Insufficient Funds)
Evette Rechelle Tippett (A: 6/5/22; Insufficient Funds)
Frank J. Lozada (A: 11/9/23; Insufficient Funds)
Gabriel Cornejo (A: 10/26/23; Insufficient Funds)
Gary Davis (A: 3/16/23; Insufficient Funds)
Gary J. Brown (A: 8/18/23; Insufficient Funds)
George Brucato (A: 4/16/22; Insufficient Funds)
Gerry Coleman (A: 4/21/23; Insufficient Funds)
Gibran Nicholas (A: 3/19/23; Insufficient Funds)
Golda D. Harris (A: 11/1/23; Insufficient Funds)
Gregory Marquis Thomas (A: 11/19/22; Insufficient Funds)
Harvey Wizard (A: 11/15/23; Insufficient Funds)
Heather Munoz (A: 11/7/20; Insufficient Funds)
Herbert Ezekiel Zeke Smyth (A: 4/3/22; Insufficient Funds)
Howard Dotson (A: 2/28/23; Insufficient Funds)
Hudson Theodore Zoller (A: 11/22/22; Insufficient Funds)
Hung Huynh Chan (A: 6/21/22; Insufficient Funds)
Isaiah Reid (A: 11/22/20; Insufficient Funds)
Jamarion Walker (A: 11/4/23; Insufficient Funds)
James Nixon (A: 7/26/20; Insufficient Funds)
James Orlando Ogle III (A: 3/7/22; Insufficient Funds)
Jason Palmer (A: 10/22/23)
Jeff Miles (A: 8/16/23; Insufficient Funds)
Jennifer Astello (A: 12/28/22; Insufficient Funds)
Jennifer Lee Ann Ney (A: 2/10/22; Insufficient Funds)
Jennifer McMurray (A: 10/31/22; Insufficient Funds)
Jodie Smithson (A: 11/7/22; Insufficient Funds)
Joe Exotic (Joseph Allen Maldonado) (A: 4/18/23; Insufficient Funds)
John Coyne (A: 8/19/23; Insufficient Funds)
John Gagliardi (A: 1/13/22; Insufficient Funds)
John Washington III (A: 3/26/23; Insufficient Funds)
Jonathan Tuan Tran (A: 11/15/22; Insufficient Funds)
Jose Font (A: 10/5/23; Insufficient Funds)
Joseph Firmage (A: 10/11/23; Insufficient Funds)
Joseph Jay Manger (A: 11/30/22; Insufficient Funds)
Joseph R Biden Jr (A: 9/5/23)
Joshua David Horwitz (A: 10/4/23; Insufficient Funds)
Julie Jones (A: 4/21/23; Insufficient Funds)
Kacey Nicole Samples (A: 4/24/23; Insufficient Funds)
Keira Anne Walker (A: 4/7/23; Insufficient Funds)
Keith Smith (A: 5/18/23; Insufficient Funds)
Kelan Farrell-Smith (A: 10/30/21; Insufficient Funds)
Kenny Taylor (A: 9/8/23; Insufficient Funds)
Kevin Gilroy (A: 6/3/22; Insufficient Funds)
Kevin John Carney (A: 10/14/23; Insufficient Funds)
Kina Shamier Kerry (A: 9/29/23; Insufficient Funds)
Kristopher Lee Davis (A: 11/19/22; Insufficient Funds)
Larry D. Azevedo (A: 2/8/23; Insufficient Funds)
Lee Mercer Jr. (A: 7/26/22; Insufficient Funds)
Lee Rhodes (A: 3/12/21; Insufficient Funds)
Lindsay Kelch (A: 11/16/22; Insufficient Funds)
Lord A.C. Toulme Jr. (A: 10/20/21; Insufficient Funds)
Lori Ann Henriques (A: 3/5/23; Insufficient Funds)
Marcus Alexander Branch (A: 11/28/22; Insufficient Funds)
Marianne Williamson (A: 2/23/23)
Mark Richard Prascak (A: 9/8/23; Insufficient Funds)
Mark Stewart Greenstein (A: 6/1/23; Insufficient Funds)
Martin Foster Robbins (A: 8/12/23; Insufficient Funds)
Mary Clement (A: 6/8/23; Insufficient Funds)
Mattie Preston (A: 1/6/23; Insufficient Funds)
Michael Chad Lemere (A: 8/6/23; Insufficient Funds)
Michael D'Ottavio (A: 11/9/20; Insufficient Funds)
Michael D. Swing (A: 1/14/22; Insufficient Funds)
Michael Landingham (A: 11/21/22; Insufficient Funds)
Michael Noonan (A: 6/21/23; Insufficient Funds)
Michael Soetaert (A: 12/23/23; Insufficient Funds)
Michael Steinberg (A: 7/2/23; Insufficient Funds)
Michael Tillinghast (A: 5/25/23; Insufficient Funds)
Mikey Lane (A: 11/26/21; Insufficient Funds)
Nancy Elizabeth Rodriguez (A: 5/3/22; Insufficient Funds)
Nicolae Bunea (A: 7/8/22; Insufficient Funds)
Nita Mildred Rice (A: 3/7/23; Insufficient Funds)
Pedro J. Velez (A: 5/20/23; Insufficient Funds)
Perry Jones (A: 1/1/24; Insufficient Funds)
Phillip Bryan Kleski (A: 6/13/23; Insufficient Funds)
President Boddie (A: 10/30/23; Insufficient Funds)
Quinci Renee Smith Slater (A: 12/12/23; Insufficient Funds)
Ralph Robbie Hoffman (A: 7/26/23; Insufficient Funds)
Randall Wick (A: 10/28/22; Insufficient Funds)
Reponsal Perkins (A: 8/19/23; Insufficient Funds)
Richard Hale Nelson (A: 4/10/23; Insufficient Funds)
Rick Chavez (A: 6/6/23; Insufficient Funds)
Riki Prado (A: 11/15/16; Insufficient Funds)
Robert Carlos Ayala (A: 6/21/23; Insufficient Funds)
Robert Ion Moldafsky (A: 1/26/21; Insufficient Funds)
Robert Jordan (A: 6/12/23; Insufficient Funds)
Robert Michael Becker (A: 7/18/23; Insufficient Funds)
Rodger Lee Roose (A: 9/30/21; Insufficient Funds)
Roland Kwadwo Dela Agorkle (A: 4/15/22; Insufficient Funds)
Ron S. Bull (A: 11/22/22; Insufficient Funds)
Ryan McCarty (A: 11/28/22; Insufficient Funds)
Ryan Oliver Christian Kraft (A: 1/3/24; Insufficient Funds)
Ryan P. Kirkpatrick (A: 5/27/22; Insufficient Funds)
Sae Hoon Park (A: 5/20/23; Insufficient Funds)
Sahmon Mustafa (A: 11/17/21; Insufficient Funds)
Saint jermaine Endeley (A: 4/26/23; Insufficient Funds)
Samuel D'Amico (A: 8/3/20; Insufficient Funds)
Sean McGuire (A: 6/21/22; Insufficient Funds)
Senator Cringe (A: 1/18/24; Insufficient Funds)
Shabadjot Bharara (A: 11/16/22; Insufficient Funds)
Shane Aleksander Mohammad (A: 10/28/23; Insufficient Funds)
Shantell Newman (A: 1/24/24; Insufficient Funds)
Shinae Ahn (A: 5/22/22; Insufficient Funds)
Skyles Fitzgerald McAuley (A: 4/30/22; Insufficient Funds)
Souraya Faas (A: 1/31/24)
Stephen Alan Leon (A: 4/1/22; Insufficient Funds)
Stephen Lyons Sr. (A: 9/21/23; Insufficient Funds)
Stephen Paul Murphy (A: 7/7/23; E: 10/17/23)
Steven Fleck (A: 10/12/21; Insufficient Funds)
Stuart Farber (A: 7/24/23; Insufficient Funds)
Sykema Powell (A: 4/20/23; Insufficient Funds)
Terrance James Harvey (A: 11/14/22; Insufficient Funds)
Terrisa Lin Bukovinac (A: 6/13/23)
The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air (A: 3/24/21; Insufficient Funds)
Theodore Milton Earth Fagin (A: 12/29/23; Insufficient Funds)
Thomas Daly (A: 3/18/21; Insufficient Funds)
Thomas Francis winterbottom (A: 1/22/21; Insufficient Funds)
Tiffany Gayle Keller (A: 1/4/23; Insufficient Funds)
Todd J. Ashcraft (A: 4/6/23; Insufficient Funds)
Trenita Walker (A: 10/4/21; Insufficient Funds)
Trista di Genova (A: 12/4/23; Insufficient Funds)
Ulrich Neujahr (A: 10/11/23; Insufficient Funds)
Valentine Vidal (A: 5/31/23; Insufficient Funds)
Victoria Dawn Zieg (A: 2/7/23; Insufficient Funds)
Wayne J. Villines (A: 1/5/23; Insufficient Funds)
Wayne Pope (A: 11/28/22; Insufficient Funds)
Whitney Medearis (A: 8/8/20; Insufficient Funds)
William Farms (A: 6/22/23; Insufficient Funds)
William Gailey (A: 12/13/21; Insufficient Funds)
Willie Carter (A: 3/19/22; Insufficient Funds)
** Definition is a summary of the About Page on the Democratic Party Website. There is also a link marked in above definition that will direct you to the incredibly long "Democratic Platform" document.
Back to 2024 Party List
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visplay · 1 year
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Chris: The Last Broadcast is a late 90’s film which falls into the horror subgenre of Found Footage, one of the first of that subgenre, it is about an investigation into the Jersey Devil, but the ending of the film is annoying, so it is only recommended for those studying Found Footage films, Watch: On Subscription Service.
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tsv-einheit1912 · 2 years
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TSV Reichartshausen – Fußball
Ansprechpartner: Abteilungsleiter Thorsten Koder
Tel.: 0163/4194407
Herren
Ergebnisse
TSV Zaisenhausen 1 – TSV 1 / 0: 1
(Torschütze: Yannik Zimmermann)
Unser Rumpfteam zeigte bei einem der Aufstiegsaspiranten eine insbesondere kämpferisch starke Leistung. In der ersten Halbzeit hatten wir Glück als die Heimmannschaft einen Foulelfmeter an den Pfosten setzte. Nach der Halbzeit kamen wir jedoch immer besser ins Spiel. In der Minute 54. erkämpfte sich Yannik Zimmermann den Ball und schoss überlegt zum 0:1 ein. Dieser Treffer hatte Zaisenhausen geschockt. Sie rannten zwar auf unser Tor an, aber so richtige Chancen konnten sie sich fast keine erspielen. Stattdessen hatten wir einige sehr gute Konterchancen, die wir aber leider nicht nutzen konnten. Daher musste bis zum Abpfiff der gutleitenden Schiedsrichterin gewertet werden, bis der Sieg unter Dach und Fach war. Nächste Woche müssen wir nach Gemmingen, einem weiteren Aufstiegsaspiranten.
TSV Zaisenhausen 2 – TSV 2 / 0 : 3
(Torschützen: Jannik Siegmann, Chris Elberth, Mathias Pojda)
Nach der heftigen Niederlage in Weiler trafen wir wieder auf einen Gegner auf Augenhöhe. In der ersten Halbzeit hatten wir es unserem Torwart Phileas Reznik zu verdanken, dass wir mit einer Führung in die Halbzeit gingen (Tor Jannik Siegmann, 33.). Ohne seine Paraden hätten wir uns nicht beschweren dürfen, 2 oder 3 Tore hinten zu liegen. Nach der Halbzeit hatten wir das Spiel besser im Griff. Mit dem 2:0 nach schöner Einzelaktion durch Chris Elberth (51.) war der Widerstand der Heimmannschaft gebrochen und wir bestimmten das Spiel. Trotz einer Vielzahl bester Chancen gelang nur noch durch Mathias Pojda ein weiterer Treffer (65.). Nächste Woche geht es für unsere 2. Mannschaft zum Derby nach Neidenstein.
FC Weiler 2 – TSV 2 / 7 : 0
Im Nachholspiel musste unsere 2. Mannschaft eine deftige Klatsche einstecken. Dabei sah es in der 1. Halbzeit gar nicht schlecht aus. Unser Team war mindestens gleichwertig und erspielte sich eine Vielzahl bester Chancen. Im Gegensatz zur Heimmannschaft konnte man diese jedoch nicht nutzen und so ging es mit einem 0:2 Rückstand in die Pause. Bis zum 3:0 war es auch in der 2. Halbzeit ausgeglichen. Nach dem 3:0 (70.) brachen jedoch leider alle Dämme. Die Heimmannschaft hatte in der Halbzeit mit Spielern der 1. Mannschaft personell nachgelegt. Im Endeffekt war die Niederlage zwar verdient, aber um einige Tore zu hoch.
Vorschau:
Sonntag, 16.10.22 ​
12:00 Uhr SV Neidenstein 2 – TSV 2
15:30 Uhr SV Gemmingen 1 – TSV 1
Jugend / Damen
Ergebnisse:
A-Junioren(Landesliga)
TSG Weinheim –TSV / 10 : 0
B-Junioren(Kreisliga)
JSG Obergimpern 2 – TSV / 2 : 3
C-Junioren(Kreisliga Sinsheim + Kreisstaffel Sinsheim)
TSV 1 – SV Rohrbach/S / 4 : 0 (Kreispokal)
JSG Waldangelloch – TSV 2 / 0 : 4
D-Junioren (Kreisliga Mosbach + Kreisstaffel Sinsheim)
TSV 2 – FV Mosbach 1 / 0 : 3 (Kreispokal)
JSG Obrigheim – TSV 2 / 3 : 4
JSG Steinsberg – TSV 1 / 6 : 2(Kreispokal)
VfB Eppingen 2 – TSV 1 / 2 : 4
E-Junioren (2 Mannschaften)
Spieltag in Rohrbach/S
TSV 1 – SV Neidenstein 1 / 7 : 2
TSV 1 – SG Waibstadt 1 / 4 : 0
TSV 1 – TSV Angelbachtal / 6 : 3
TSV 2 – SV Neidenstein 2 / 4 : 3
TSV 2 – SG Waibstadt S 2 / 2 : 2
F-Junioren
Spieltag in Reichartshausen
TSV 1 – TSV Ittlingen 1 / 2 : 4
TSV 1 – 1899 Hoffenheim 1 / 1 : 5
TSV 1 – SV Daisbach 1 / 4 : 4
Die Jugendabteilung möchte sich noch einmal bei allen Helferinnen und Helfern sowie den Spenderinnen und Spendern sehr herzlich bedanken. Ohne die vielen unterstützenden Hände beim Auf- und Abbau, dem Verkauf, der Turnierleitung etc. hätte der F- und Bambini-Spieltag am vergangenen Samstag nicht so gut funktioniert. Einen großen Dank gilt auch Dagmar Schilling und Katja Schilling für die Organisation des Verkaufs. Noch mal vielen lieben Dank an alle.
Damen(Landesliga)(SpG Reichartshausen/Helmstadt)
SpG Steinsfurt – TSV / 2 : 0
Vorschau
A-Junioren(Landesliga)
JSG Helmstadt/Neckarbischofsheim/ Reichartshausen
Samstag, 15.10.22, 11:30 Uhr
TSV – DJK Feudenheim (in Helmstadt)
Mittwoch, 19.10.22, 19:00 Uhr
JSG Rohrbach 1 – TSV (Kreispokal)
B-Junioren(Kreisliga)
JSG Neckarbischofsheim/Helmstadt/ Reichartshausen
Samstag, 15.10.22, 14:00 Uhr
TSV – JSG Ittlingen (in Neckarbischofsheim)
C-Junioren(Kreisliga Sinsheim + Kreisstaffel Sinsheim)
JSG Reichartshausen/Neckarbischofsheim/Helmstadt
Donnerstag, 13.10.22, 18:00 Uhr
JSG Mühlbach 2 – TSV 1
Freitag, 14.10.22, 18:30 Uhr
SG Waibstadt 2 – TSV 2
Samstag, 15.10.22, 11:00 Uhr
TSV 1 – JSG Elsenz (in Neckarbischofsheim)
D-Junioren (Kreisliga Mosbach + Kreisstaffel Sinsheim)
Samstag, 15.10.22,
13:00 Uhr TSV 2 – VfK Diedesheim 1
Montag, 17.10.22, 18:00 Uhr
TSV 1 – TSV Neckarbischofsheim
Dienstag, 18.10.22, 18:00 Uhr
JSV Limbach 1 – TSV 2
E-Junioren (2 Mannschaften)
Freitag, 14.10.22, ab 17:30
Spieltag in Neckarbischofsheim
F-Junioren
Samstag, 15.10.22, ab 11:00
Spieltag in Spechbach
Damen(Landesliga)(SpG Reichartshausen/Helmstadt)
Samstag, 15.10.22, 16:00 Uhr
1899 Hoffenheim 3 - TSV
Jugendabteilung Saison 2022/2023
Trainingszeiten
A-Junioren (Landesliga Rhein-Neckar)
Spielort und Trainingsort Helmstadt
B-Junioren (Kreisliga Sinsheim)
Spielort und Trainingsort Neckarbischofsheim
C-Junioren (Jahrgänge 2008 + 2009)
(Kreisliga + Kreisstaffel Sinsheim)
Spielort und Trainingsort Reichartshausen und Neckarbischofsheim
Betreuer TSV: Aaron Heiß, Lars-Pascal Sauer, Matthias Schilling, Yannik Zimmermann
Training: Montag + Donnerstag 18:30 bis 20:00 Uhr
D-Junioren (Jahrgänge 2010 + 2011)
(Kreisliga Mosbach + Kreisstaffel Sinsheim)
Spielort und Trainingsort Reichartshausen
Betreuer TSV: Sven Kress, Friedhelm Schilling
Training: Montag + Mittwoch 17:30 – 19:00 Uhr
E-Junioren (Jahrgänge 2012 + 2013)
(2 Mannschaften)
Betreuer: Luca Hotel, Thorsten Koder, Dirk Stieger
Training: Montag +Mittwoch 17:00 – 18:30 Uhr
F-Junioren (Jahrgänge 2014 + 2015)
Betreuer: Robin Brandt, Mathis Ditzinger, Aaron Schilling
Training: Dienstag + Freitag 17:30 – 18:45 Uhr
Bambinis (Jahrgänge 2016 und jünger)
Betreuer: Dennis Dobranzsky, Dominic Kohl
Training: Freitag 16:30 – 17:30 Uhr
Unsere Mannschaften würden sich freuen, wenn sie noch weitere Unterstützung erhalten würden. Jede neue Spielerin / jeder neuer Spieler ist daher jederzeit herzlich eingeladen, unsere Trainingseinheiten zu besuchen.
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dyoungv · 2 years
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🌻RISE SUNFLOWERS🌻 This exhibition sign was created by myself and @nickolaybereza for our co curated show 'Rise Sunflowers' which opened on July 16th 2022. ***@Select works from the exhibition are on display in the @lunarienne back gallery until September 25th. Proceeds go to @heartsforukraine.us The sign we designed was a throwback to the older @lunarienne tradition of displaying outdoor hand painted sign advertising their art shows. A tradition that went back to 1995 when they were called 'Fabric 8', before changing to 'Luna Rienne' in 2013. Many of those signs are still on display at Luna Rienne in their street level corridor. I'm proud to say that our sign will soon be on permenant display will all the others very soon. Feels good to be a part of such a historical SF collection! The original show features 28 local artists exhibiting affordable works of various media, the proceeds from which will be donated to Hearts for Ukraine, a Bay Area-based organization that delivers critical supplies to hospitals, shelters, schools, orphanages, nursing homes, refugee support centers and the territorial defense forces of Ukraine. For online purchases go to: www.lunarienne.com Participating artists: Amanda Lynn - @alynnpaint Ann Weiler Lady Henze - @ladyhenze Brett Amory - @brettamory Eddie Colla - @eddiecolla Rich Jacobs - @movezine David Ball - @davidmball Nicole Hayden - @nicolehaydenart Calamity Fair - @calamityfair Chris Stokes - @chrisstokes Adam Caldwell - @adamhuntercaldwell Alec Huxley - @alechuxley Seibot - @seibot Nathalie Fabri - @nathalie_fabri_artist Emily Fromm - @emilyfromm John Keating - @johnkeating_artist Antonio Mancera - www.lookgallerysf.com Mykola Bereza - @nickolaybereza Jenny Bagnyuk - @zhenyafoto Chris Farris - @christfarris Misia Farris - @misia.soup Nolan Yeloneck - @nolanwhy John Casey - @johncaseyart Brandon Joseph Baker - @brandonjosephbaker Mark Nobriga - @mr.malicioso_art Fabio Benê - @fabiobene D Young V - @dyoungv #risesunflowers #signpainting #lunariennegallery #fabric8 (at Luna Rienne Gallery) https://www.instagram.com/p/CieA7FZL1lD/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
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ashhell6 · 2 years
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Not known Details About Hotel Restaurant Lamm - Mosbach, Germany - Association
6 Simple Techniques For Baedeker's Rhine: - Page 146 - Google Books Result
Mosbach is the capital of the Neckar-Odenwald district in the north of Baden-Wrttemberg, Germany, about 58 km east of Heidelberg. Its geographical position is 49. 21 'N 9. 9'E. 1. Garkammer 4 based on 13 reviews Examined By Kevin1605 - Sulzbach, Germany Italian food is our favourite and Garkammer is a terrific little Italian restaurant actually excellent choice on the menu, truly pleasant staff a must visit if in Mosbach remember though that they do not accept credit or bank cards so you will require cash with you.
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Zum Amtsstuble 4 based upon 16 reviews Reviewed By Chris G - Upper Bavaria, Germany Simply two blocks from the center of Mosbach and connected to an extremely good hotel is Zum Amtsstueble. A broader-than-usual choice of German fare was served with class. Find Out More Here had was scrumptious, and the parts were generous.
Still, the service was sharp. Costs are what one would anticipate at a "hotel dining establishment"... i. e., a bit higher than normal. Still, the a great deal of locals eating next to us vouches for the worth (great service, outstanding food, enjoyable atmosphere). 3. Mosbacher Brauhaus 4 based on 58 reviews This is a brewery restaurtant We had a couple of beers and a Flammkuchen for an appetiser prior to supper-- everything was excellent, and the building was a lovely sight to see.
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Jessie's restaurant, Mosbach - Restaurant reviews
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4. Artemis 4. 5 based on 52 reviews Evaluated By catman52 - Arnhem, The Netherlands Tuesday night in Mosbach with all other noted restaurants closed. So easy choice but not frustrating. Terrace was completely reserved and a table tool 20 minutes. However ok as said no choice. Waiter/ owner? Offered us good service.
Jessie's restaurant, Mosbach - Restaurant reviews
Nothing exceptional however yummy and fresh Greek meals. White wine from the bottle was really excellent! All by all a great discover and recommendable. 5. Bella Italia 4. 5 based on 29 reviews The pizza was great-- it was authentic and served with a smile. Affordable and scrumptious Italian red wines also were in abundance.
6. Zum Ochsen Im Weiler 6, 74821 Mosbach, Baden-Wurttemberg, Germany German, European, Contemporary, Diner, Central European HK$ 133 - HK$ 290 +49 6261 15428 4. 5 based upon 15 reviews Reviewed By Kevin1605 - Sulzbach, Germany An actually outstanding dining establishment the food is exceptional excellent worth for cash and you are always made welcome.
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bezel-blue · 4 years
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I know who the Rott Weiler is on the Masked Singer! I figured it out because of his voice, and spent so long trying to figure it out, and I've finally got it...It's Chris Daughtry. The clues line up and it's his voice so you might as well take off the mask now, Chris, because I know it's you.
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Chris Weiler
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dickinsonstate · 5 years
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DSU Theatre presents Little Shop of Horrors opening Feb. 28
Dickinson State University Theatre is proud to announce that Little Shop of Horrors will be their third show of the 2018-2019 season. Performances are scheduled for Dorothy Stickney Auditorium in DSU’s May Hall Feb. 28 – March 2, at 7:30 p.m. with a matinee March 3, at 2:30 p.m.
Meek floral assistant Seymour stumbles across a new breed of plant he names after Audrey, the beautiful co-worker he loves but doesn’t feel he deserves. Audrey has her own self-esteem issues and can’t break away from the sadistic dentist she is dating. But the plant proves to be an R&B singing carnivore promising Seymour unending fame and fortune, not to mention the girl, as long as he keeps feeding it human blood. Amazingly, the plant seems to deliver. But over time, Seymour discovers this plant asks for more than it delivers and may have a portentous ultimate goal.
Dickinson State senior music major Tanner Bush and junior theatre major Rachael Solberg will play Seymour and Audrey. Past audiences will remember Bush for his roles in Bark, the Musical and The Great American Trailer Park Musical and his frequent solos with the DSU Chorale. Solberg’s memorable recent performances include The Great American Trailer Park Musical, Time Stands Still and As You Like It. They are supported by theatre majors Sarah Ramsey and Chris Prchal and music majors Cole Beck, Julianne Skaff and Presley Weiler. Community guest artist Kayla Kilwein rounds out the talented cast.
Dr. Ken Haught, professor of Theatre, is directing. Jarvis Jahner, associate professor of Theatre, will design and build the scenery. Instructor of music, Cheryl Hewson, is the musical director. Ann Wittkopp, instructor of Exercise Science, will provide choreography.
Little Shop of Horrors is rated PG for adult themes. Tickets are $10 and are available at www.dsuarts.com or by visiting May Hall room 3 during business hours. Tickets will also be sold at the door. DSU students, staff and faculty may attend free of charge with valid ID. For more information, call 701-483-2154.
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ryanmeft · 6 years
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Puzzle Movie Review
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Puzzle is a tiny wonder. It begins with modest ambitions. Agnes is a housewife in Bridgeport, Connecticut who has seen precious little of the world outside her family and church, and has spent her life seeing to the needs of others. Having reached her 40’s without knowing what her own needs are, she is not repressed. Rather, she simply knows no other life;  neither do the other women in her circle. We can guess it was simply the way of things that she would grow up and get married and have kids and devote herself to these things, and she did it because it was the way, because generations before her had made it the way, and on and on in a loop.
The film opens on a birthday party. Louis (David Denman) drinks and breaks a plate, which his wife Agnes (Kelly MacDonald) scrambles to clean up even as she also prepares the cake. She puts the candles on it, presents it to the guests, and then blows the candles out. That she is doing most of the work on her birthday is something that seems imprisoning, but also a state of affairs she herself would not likely question. She has cared for men and others since her immigrant father became ill, and not only is it second nature to her, it is also so to every woman she ever knows.
She eventually points this out to Robert (Irrfan Khan), a retired New York millionaire who once invented something and now competes in competitive jigsaw puzzle building. She received such a puzzle for her birthday, and found that 1000 pieces were not nearly enough to daunt her. Now they are puzzle partners, and soon they will be pushing towards more than that, but she is perplexed when he does not want kids: “It’s not weird, just different from me…and everyone else I’ve ever known.” Hers is a world of potlucks, Sunday Mass, and lots of children; you can see the old church steeple from her front porch. Her oldest son Ziggy (Buddy Weiler) had bad grades in school and is stuck. Her youngest son Gabe (Austin Abrams) is an overconfident young man with a vegan Buddhist girlfriend (Liv Hewson); he pens a college acceptance letter disparaging his mother’s lack of worldliness, demanding a life different from hers, that drips with irony. She accidentally finds it. She does not take it to him. She would never do that.
This might seem silly to those of you who grew up in a more modern environment. To me, it is recognizable, a pattern of lives spent in flyover country that I did not question until early adulthood. The scene in Alexander Payne’s Nebraska in which the men watch football while the women cook dinner comes to mind, as I recall it being derided as stereotypical of people in the middle of the country by a coastal critic; I never knew a household growing up where that did not happen. Why, you might ask, doesn’t Agnes simply go do what she wants, when she wants, how she wants? The crucial mistake here it to immediately assume this is not what she wants. As the movie goes on and Agnes discovers new things about herself, she also learns that there is much about her ordinary, dull, beautiful life she would actively choose if she’d made a choice. She would choose her children, and the greatest epiphany in her awakening is that she likes to spend time with them, rather than just raising them. She may have chosen her husband or one like him, who is not a lout or abusive or unfaithful. He is simply rather uninspired, but this is driven by the same wheel ‘o’ tradition that Agnes’s own life is.
I admit I found Louie an interesting person to see on screen, and want to spend a few minutes on David Denman before I return to the universally effusive praise for Kelly MacDonald. He has a thankless role. Many will simply regard him as unmemorable, and some will no doubt declare him an icon of patriarchy. He is neither. He loves a wife who never really got to decide if she loves him, and he does so in the only way many working class, non-metropolitan men are ever taught to do: by being the provider. His concerns are real. He worries about his weight and health, he strives to keep his garage’s financial struggles from burdening his family, he attempts to understand new ideas like Buddhism, and he it hurts him when his wife is unfaithful; he really doesn’t understand why she would do that. His failings are also real, from lamenting a lack of manliness in his oldest son’s desire to be a chef, to his inherent expectation that his wife needs nothing more than wife-dom to be happy, and finally to the rage from his abusive father that is almost never seen but lurks one too many drinks away. The point is he’s an entire, if unfinished, person, and that if he had been the focus of the film there would remain a story to tell.
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Kelly MacDonald, however, is one of the underrated treasures of modern actors. She is plain-looking by the ridiculous standards of the Hollywood machine, and will never have so much as a co-starring role in a blockbuster, which is fine. She carries an inward light that could propel many more leading roles in films like this one. Stop for a moment and look at how she, as Agnes, argues with her husband, saying what’s on her mind, realizing it makes sense only to her, and refusing to explain. That is sometimes how real people are; disagreements in life aren’t written for the screen. Watching MacDonald’s face as Agnes builds a puzzle with frightening speed is more visually arresting than you might expect, even though I quite frankly think I’d find a jigsaw competition more spectator-worthy than people eating hot dogs. There is a key scene with Ziggy. He runs into her unexpectedly during a bad day, says an honest thing, and to his surprise gets an honest answer. This may be the exact moment when Agnes decides to be something like herself, and note that it comes not in an intimate moment with the attractive affair partner, or even with her husband, but with her son. How many parental relationships would be vastly improved if the parent just said “To hell with my image”?
I dearly love a film like this. It has been directed by Marc Turtletaub, who worked from a script by Oren Moverman and Polly Mann, who in turn adapted an Argentine film by Natalia Smirnoff which doesn’t seem to be available here. In moving the setting to just-outside-of-somewhere, U.S.A., the writers have shown what I consider to be deep knowledge of the way things work outside of coastally-produced sitcom worlds. Chris Norr’s camera encompasses familiar details of the sorts of scenes I am used to from “nothing towns”, and frames them in ways that give the mundane an odd beauty. All of this seems to fit Agnes. MacDonald’s likely-unheralded-at-Awards-time performance draw us into a woman whose thoughts are maybe deeper than she knows, and certainly deeper than we do.
Verdict: Highly Recommended
Note: I don’t use stars, but here are my possible verdicts. I suppose you could consider each one as adding a star.
Must-See
Highly Recommended
Recommended
Average
Not Recommended
Avoid like the Plague
You can follow Ryan's reviews on Facebook here:
https://www.facebook.com/ryanmeftmovies/
 Or his tweets here:
https://twitter.com/RyanmEft
 All images are property of the people what own the movie.
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okletsgoalltheway · 2 years
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Passing this along:
Nothing says "Trust the Science" like Censoring, banning and prohibiting Scientists from speaking and trying to ruin their lives.
Here's a list of various Doctors trying to bring you the truth at great cost to themselves. Search for them on uncensored search engines and platforms such as Duck Duck Go, Telegram, Bitchute, Rumble, and Odysee.
There are two Nobel Peace Prize winners and one nominee on this list.
Dr. Michael Yeadon (Former Pfizer VP)
Dr. Robert Malone (mRNA inventor)
Dr. Peter McCullough (most published on CV)
Dr. Vladimir Zelenko (Nobel PP Nominee)
Dr. Kary Mullis (PCR inventor/Nobel PP winner)
Dr. Rima Laibow
Dr. Naomi Wolf
Dr. David Martin
Dr. Luc Montainger
Dr. Roger Hodkinson
Dr. Geert Vanden Bossche
Dr. Sherri Tenpenny
Dr. Judy Mitkovitz
Dr. Carrie Madej
Dr. Vernon Coleman
Dr. Ben Tapper
Dr. Michael Lake
Dr. Christiane Northrop
Dr. Simone Gold
Dr. Sean Brooks
Dr. Shiva Ayyadurai
Dr. Jane Ruby
Dr. Ryan Cole
Dr. Kevin Stillwagon
Dr. Afzal Niaz
Dr. Rashid A.Buttar
Dr. Paul Thomas
Dr. Vanessa Passov
Dr. Jessica Rose
Dr. Christopher Rake
Dr. Charles Hoffe
Dr. Mark Mcdonald
Dr. Jeff Barke
Dr. Andrew Kaufman
Dr. Manuel Alonso
Dr. Amir Shahar
Dr. Patrick Phillips
Dr. Bryan Ardis
Dr. Franc Zalewski
Dr. Daniel Griffin
Dr. Zandra Botha
Dr. Rochagné Kilian
Dr. Joseph Mercola
Dr. James Lyons-Weiler
Dr. Henry Ealy
Dr. Jay Bhattacharya
Dr. Michael Palmer
Dr. Eddy Bettermann MD
Dr. Harvey Risch
Dr. Steven Hotze
Dr. Dan Stock
Dr. Sam Duby
Dr. Francis Christian
Dr. Chris Milburn
Dr. John Carpay
Dr. Richard Fleming
Dr. Gina Gold
Dr. Kevin Corbett
Dr. Michael Mcdowell
Dr. John Witcher
Dr. Jim Meehan
Dr. Chris Shaw
Dr. Anne McCloskey
Dr. Reiner Fuellmich
Dr. Christiana Parks
Dr. Robert Young
Dr. Amandha Vollmer
Dr. Judy Wilyman
Dr. Michael McConville
Dr. Stella Immanuel
Dr. James Nellenschwander
Dr. Julie Ponesse
Dr. Sucharit Bhakdi
Dr. Paul Cottrell
Dr. Lee Merritt
Dr. Rochagne Killian
Dr. Larry Palevsky
Dr. Natalia Prego Cancelo
Dr. Hilde de Smet
Dr. Elizabeth Evans
Dr. Brian Hooker
Dr. Joel Hirschhorn
Dr. R. Zac Cox
Dr. Mohammed Adil
Dr. Ralph ER Sundberg
Dr. Johan Denis
Dr. Daniel Cullum
Dr. Anne Fierlafijin
Dr. Kevin Corbett
Dr. Pior Rubis
Dr. Pascal Sacre
Dr. Nicole Delepine
Dr. Lorraine Day
Dr. Yoav Yehezkelli
Dr. Nour De San
Dr. Kelly Brogan
Dr. Hervé Seligmann
Dr. Annie Bukacek
Dr. Mark Brody
Dr. Steven LaTulippe
Dr. Mark Trozzi
Dr. Scott Jensen
Dr. Byram W. Bridle
Dr. Andrew Wakefield
Dr. Larry Palevsky
Dr. Tom Cowan
Dr. Dan Erickson
Dr. James Todaro
Dr. Joe Lapado
Dr. Richard Bartlett
Dr. Ben Edwards
Dr. Pierre Kory
Dr. Heather Gessling
Dr. Bryan Tyson
Dr. Richard Urso
Dr. John Littell
Dr. Scott Jensen
Dr. Ben Carson
Dr. Peter Schirmacher
Dr. Zandra Botha
Dr. Pamela Popper
Dr. Tom Barnett
Dr. Theresa Long
Dr. Nancy Burks
Dr. Russel Blaylock
Dr. Shiv Chopra
Dr. Suzanne Humphries
Dr. Tori Bark
Dr. Meryl Nass
Dr. Raymond Obamsawin
Dr. Ghislaine Lanctot
Dr. Robert Rowen
Dr. David Ayoub
Dr. Boyd Hailey
Dr. Roby Mitchell
Dr. Ken Stoller
Dr. Mayer Eiesenstien
Dr. Frank Engley
Dr. David Davis
Dr. Tetyana Obukhanych
Dr. Harold Butram
Dr. Kelly Brogan
Dr. RC Tent
Dr. Rebecca Carley
Dr. Andrew Moulden
Dr. Jack Wolfson
Dr. Michael Elice
Dr. Terry Wahls
Dr. Paul Thomas
Dr. Stephanie Seneff
Dr. Richard Moskowitz
Dr. Jane Orient
Dr. Richard Deth
Dr. Lucija Tomljenovic
Dr. Chris Shaw
Dr. Susan McCreadie
Dr. May Ann Block
Dr. David Brownstein
Dr. Jayne Donegan
Dr. Troy Ross
Dr. Phillip Incao
Dr. Robert Mendelson
Dr. Theressa Deisher
Dr. Sam Eggertsen
Dr. Peter Doshi
Dr. Shankara Chetty
Dr. Elizabeth Eads
Dr. Kurt Malhom
Dr. Carolyn Bosack
Dr. Heiko Shoning
Dr. Aseem Malhotra
Dr. Patricia Lee
Dr. Daniel Nagase
Dr. Mobeen Syed
Dr. Bruce Patterson
Dr. Randi Juanta
Dr. Phillip McMillan
Dr. Peter Gotzche
Dr. Kurt Malholm
Dr. Sam Sigoloff
Dr. Suzanne Humphries
Dr. Ariyana Love
Dr. Pierre Gilbert
Dr. Nathan Thompson
Dr. Scott Youngblood
Dr. Peterson Pierre
Dr. Darell Wolfe
Dr. Mary Tally Bowden
Dr. Thomas Ynges
Dr. Guido Hofmann
Dr. Anne Mcclosky
Dr. James Grundvig
Dr. Amanda Vollmer
Dr. Kevin Stillwagon
Dr. Luis Miguel de Benito
Dr. Bruce Boros
Dr. Steven Gundry
Dr. Ray Page
Dr. Tess Lawrie
Dr. Andreas Noack
Dr. Mark Hobart
Dr. Peter Campbell
Dr. Peter Johnston
Dr. Eric Nepute
Dr. Bradley Campbell
Dr. Joseph Yi
Dr Robert Morse ND
Dr Piotr Witczak (biolog)
Dr Jerzy Jaskowski
Dr H.Czerniak
Dr. Anna Martynowska
Prof. Dolores Cahill
Prof. Retsif Levi
Prof. Maria Majewska- neurobiolog
There are more but you get the idea.
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orbemnews · 3 years
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The Silicon Valley Start-Up That Caused Wall Street Chaos The online trading app Robinhood became a cultural phenomenon and a Silicon Valley darling with a promise to wrest the stock market away from Wall Street’s traditional gatekeepers and “let the people trade” — making it as easy to put millions of dollars at risk as it is to summon an Uber. This past week, in the middle of a market frenzy pitting amateur traders against hedge fund bigwigs, that veneer began to chip. As it turned out, Robinhood was at the mercy of the very industry it had vowed to upend. The frenzy morphed into a crisis when legions of armchair investors on Robinhood, who had been buying up options and shares of GameStop, a video game retailer, enlarged those bets and also began making big trades in other stocks, including AMC Entertainment. As the trading mania grew, the financial system’s risk reduction mechanisms — managed by obscure entities at the center of the stock market called clearinghouses — kicked in on Thursday, forcing Robinhood to find emergency cash to continue to be able to trade. It had to stop customers from buying a number of heavily traded stocks and draw on a more than $500 million bank line of credit. On Thursday night, the company also took an emergency infusion of more than $1 billion from its existing investors. A high-flying start-up suddenly looked a lot like an overwhelmed, creaky company. “From a marketing standpoint they position themselves as new, innovative, cool,” said Peter Weiler, the co-chief executive of the brokerage and trading firm Abel Noser. “What I think everyone is missing is, when you peel the onion back they are just a heavily regulated business.” Robinhood’s distress follows a familiar narrative: A Silicon Valley company that promised to disrupt an industry ends up being overcome by the forces it unleashed and has to be reined in by regulators, or in this case, the industry it promised to change. Its arc is not all that different from Facebook and Google, which changed the ways in which billions of people socialize and search for information, but are now caught in the cross hairs of lawmakers and an angry public. “They were trying to change the rules of the road without understanding how the road was paved and without any respect for the existing guard rails,” said Chris Nagy, a former trading executive at TD Ameritrade and the co-founder of the Healthy Markets Association, a nonprofit that seeks to educate market participants. “It ended up creating risk for their customers and systemic risk for the market more broadly.” GameStop vs. Wall Street Let Us Help You Understand Shares in GameStop, the video game retailer, have soared because amateur investors, starting on Reddit, have bet heavily on shares of the company. The wave gained momentum in response to large hedge funds short selling GameStop stock — basically they were betting against the company’s success. The sudden demand has driven up the share price from less than $20 in December to nearly $200 on Thursday. On paper, anyway. It’s not just GameStop. Amateur investors have backed other companies that many big investors had shunned, such as AMC and BlackBerry. This bubble around GameStop may force big investors to raise money to cover their losses, or dump shares of other companies. The fiasco will almost certainly have consequences for the company. The Securities and Exchange Commission said on Friday that it would closely review any actions that may “disadvantage investors or otherwise unduly inhibit their ability to trade certain securities.” Lawmakers on both sides of the aisle called for hearings over complaints that customers were shut out of trades. After Robinhood limited some trading on Thursday and the price of the stock plunged, furious users flooded online app stores with vitriolic reviews, with some accusing Robinhood of doing the bidding of Wall Street. Others sued the company for the losses they sustained. Robinhood’s continuing vulnerability, even after raising $1 billion, became clear on Friday when it restricted trading in more than 50 stocks. “It was not because we wanted to stop people from buying these stocks,” Robinhood said in a blog post on Friday night. Rather, the start-up said, it restricted buying in volatile stocks so that it could “comfortably” meet deposit requirements imposed by its clearinghouses, which it noted had increased tenfold during the week. None of this seems to be slowing down its growth. Even as Robinhood’s actions angered existing customers, it was winning new ones. The app was downloaded more than 177,000 times on Thursday, twice the daily download rate over the previous week, according to Apptopia, a data provider, and it had 2.7 million daily active users on its mobile app that day, its highest ever. That’s more than its rivals — Schwab, TD Ameritrade, E*Trade, Fidelity and Webull — combined. All Growth, Few Guardrails Controversy is not new for Robinhood. The two Stanford classmates who created the company in 2013 said from the beginning that their focus was on “democratizing finance” by making trading available to anyone. To do so, the Menlo Park, Calif., company has repeatedly employed a classic Silicon Valley formula of user-friendly software, brash marketing and a disregard for existing rules and institutions. Online brokers had traditionally charged around $10 for every trade, but Robinhood said that customers of its phone app could trade for free. The move drew in hordes of young investors. In building its business, the company disregarded academic research showing how frequent, frictionless trading generally does not lead to good financial outcomes for investors. The risks to customers became clear last summer when a 20-year-old college student’s suicide note blamed a six-figure trading loss for his death. Robinhood also popularized options trading among novices. An option is generally cheaper than buying a stock outright, but has the potential to lead to much bigger and faster gains and losses, which is why regulators and brokers have traditionally restricted trading in these financial contracts to more sophisticated traders. Robinhood’s marketing, meanwhile, papered over the fact that its business model, and the free trading, were paid for by selling customer’s orders to Wall Street firms in a system known as “payment for order flow.” Big trading firms like Citadel Securities and Virtu Financial give Robinhood a small fee each time they buy or sell for its customers, typically a fraction of a penny per share. These trading firms make money, in turn, by pocketing the difference, known as the “spread,” between the buy and sell price on any given stock trade, and the more trades they handle, the greater their potential revenue. Many other online brokers rely on a similar system, but Robinhood has negotiated to collect significantly more for each trade than other online brokers, The Times has found. The mismatch between Robinhood’s marketing and the underlying mechanics led to a $65 million fine from the S.E.C. last month. The agency said that Robinhood had misled customers about how it was paid by Wall Street firms for passing along customer trades. Robinhood has also run afoul of regulators as it rushed to release new products. In December 2018, the company said it would offer a checking and savings account that would be insured by the Securities Investor Protection Corporation, or S.I.P.C., which protects investors when a brokerage firm fails. But S.I.P.C.’s then-chief executive said he hadn’t heard about Robinhood’s plan, and he pointed out that the S.I.P.C. doesn’t protect plain-vanilla savings accounts — that would be the job of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation. It took almost a year for Robinhood to reintroduce the product, saying in a blog post that it “made mistakes” with its earlier announcement. “They went in trying to make big splashes and they often had to get reeled back in,” said Scott Smith, a brokerage analyst at the financial firm Cerulli Associates. The Clash With Wall Street Robinhood’s ambitions and amateurism collided in recent weeks as small investors, many of them on a mission to challenge the dominance of Wall Street, used its free trades to push up the stock of GameStop and other companies. Rampant speculation on options contracts helped drive the rise of GameStop’s shares from about $20 on Jan. 12 to nearly $500 on Thursday — a rally that forced Robinhood to hit the brakes on its own customers. One institution that tripped up Robinhood this past week is a clearinghouse called the Depository Trust & Clearing Corporation. Owned by its member financial institutions including Robinhood, the D.T.C.C. clears and settles most stock trading, essentially making sure that the money and the shares end up in the right hands. (Options trades are cleared by another entity.) But the D.T.C.C.’s role is more than just clerical. Clearinghouses are supposed to help insulate a particular market from extreme risks, by making sure that if a single financial player goes broke, it doesn’t create contagion. To do its job, the D.T.C.C. requires its members to keep a cushion of cash that can be put toward stabilizing the system if needed. And when stocks are swinging wildly or there’s a flurry of trading, the size of the cushion it demands from each member — known as a margin call — can grow on short notice. That’s what happened on Thursday morning. The D.T.C.C. notified its member firms that the total cushion, which was then $26 billion, needed to grow to $33.5 billion — within hours. Because Robinhood customers were responsible for so much trading, they were responsible for footing a significant portion of the bill. The D.T.C.C.’s demand is not negotiable. A firm that can’t meet its margin call is effectively out of the stock trading business because D.T.C.C. won’t clear its trades any more. “If you can’t clear a trade, you can’t trade a trade,” said Robert Greifeld, the former chief executive of Nasdaq and current chairman of Virtu Financial. “You’re off the island. You’re banished.” For veteran players like Citadel Securities and JPMorgan Chase, generating additional hundreds of millions of dollars on short notice was not a problem. But for a start-up like Robinhood, it was a mad scramble. While it cobbled together the needed cash from its credit line and investors, Robinhood limited customers from buying GameStop, AMC and other shares. Allowing its investors to sell these volatile stocks — but not buy them — reduced its risk level and helped it meet requirements for additional cash, Robinhood said in its blog post. Ultimately, the company succeeded in pulling together roughly $1 billion from some of its existing investors, including the venture firms Sequoia Capital and Ribbit Capital. As a sweetener, Robinhood issued special shares to those investors that will give them a better deal when the company goes public, as early as this year. But the quick deal left more than one observer scratching their heads. “How does an online broker find itself in need of an overnight infusion of a billion dollars?” asked Roger McNamee, a longtime investor who co-founded the private-equity firm Elevation Partners. “There’s something about this that says somebody is really scared about what’s going on.” Source link Orbem News #Caused #Chaos #Silicon #StartUp #Street #Valley #Wall
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marmalaise · 3 years
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Karşılaşmaya hücumda etkili başlayan Anadolu Efes, ilk 4 dakikayı Pleiss'ın pota altından, Micic ve Larkin'in de dış atışlardan bulduğu sayılarla 12-6 önde geçti. Daha sonra Baldwin, Radosevic ve Dedovic ile 8-0'lık seri yakalayan Bayern Münih üstünlüğü ele geçirdi (12-14). Son bölümü karşılıklı sayılarla geçilen periyodu Larkin'in son saniyelerde serbest atıştan bulduğu basketlerle lacivert-beyazlılar 23-22 önde tamamladı.
İkinci periyoda hem hücumda hem de savunmada kötü başlayan Efes, Zipser, Dedovic ve Reynolds basketlerine engel olmayınca 29-23 geri düştü. Lacivert-beyazlılar, Pleiss, Micic ve Larkin ile farkı kapatmaya çalışsa da savunmada Baldwin'i durduramayınca devreye Münih skorla 42-37 üstün girdi.
Üçüncü periyotta Micic, Anderson'un üçlükleri, Pleiss ve Larkin'in de içeriden bulduğu basketlerle Anadolu Efes 10-0'lık seri yapıp öne geçti (47-44). Son bölüm Pleiss, Moerman ile pota altını iyi kullanan lacivert-beyazlılar periyodu 57-50 önde bitirdi.
Son periyoda Moerman'ın üçlüğü ile başlayan Anadolu Efes, farkı 8'e çıkardı (60-52). Periyodun son anlarında Reynolds ile pota altından etkili olan Münih 1 dakika kala 72-70 öne geçti. Son 17 saniye kala Larkin ile 2 serbest atışından birinden yararlanamayan Efes parkeden 74-71'lik skorla mağlup ayrıldı.
Karşılaşmanın en skoreri Efes'te 19 sayı ile oynayan Tibor Pleiss olurken, Münih'te ise Wade Baldwin 15 sayı ile takımına katkı verdi. Bu sonucun ardından lacivert-beyazlılar 4. yenilgisini alırken, Alman ekibi ise 7. galibiyetini elde etti.
Salon: Sinan Erdem
Hakemler: Juan Carlos Garcia, Saso Petek, Artem Lavrukhin
Anadolu Efes: Shane Larkin 13, Chris Singleton 2, Doğuş Balbay, Erten Gazi, Sertaç Şanlı 2, Adrien Moerman 9, Tibor Pleiss 19, Vasilije Micic 12, James Anderson 7, Krunoslav Simon 7
Başantrenör: Ergin Ataman
Bayern Münih: Nick Weiler-Babb 8, Wade Baldwin 15, Tj Bray, Jalen Reynolds 14, Malcom Thomas, Vladimir Lucic 7, Diego Flaccadori, Nihad Dedovic 10, Paul Zipser 12, Jajuan Johnson, Zan Sisko 4, Leon Radosevic 4
Başantrenör: Andrea Trinchieri
1. periyot: 23-22 (Anadolu Efes lehine)
Devre: 37-42 (Bayern Münih lehine)
3. periyot: 57-50 (Anadolu Efes lehine)
5 faulle çıkan: Nick Weiler-Babb (Bayern Münih)
Oğuzhan Ort - Mehmet Şirin Topaloğlu
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dyoungv · 2 years
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🌻RISE, SUNFLOWERS🌻 For those of you still curious to see the show.... Select works from 'Rise, Sunflowers' will be on view in the @lunarienne back gallery gallery until September 25th!!!! This back room showcase is coinciding with 'THE CITY REAWAKENS'', this is a two artist show featuring Beryl Landau and Anthony Holdsworth currently featured in the main gallert at @lunarienne Thus far 'Rise, Sunflowers' has garnered several thousand dollars in sales of which will be donated to the Bay Area fundraising organization @heartsforukraine.us which is providing immense humanitarian aid for the people of Ukraine. **Addionally... Works are still available for purchase online at www.lunarienne.com. Featured artists are: Ann Weiler Amanda Lynn - @alynnpaint Lady Henze - @ladyhenze Brett Amory - @brettamory Eddie Colla - @eddiecolla Rich Jacobs - @movezine David Ball - @davidmball Nicole Hayden - @nicolehaydenart Calamity Fair - @calamityfair Chris Stokes - @chrisstokes Adam Caldwell - @adamhuntercaldwell Alec Huxley - @alechuxley Seibot - @seibot Nathalie Fabri - @nathalie_fabri_artist Emily Fromm - @emilyfromm John Keating - @johnkeating_artist Antonio Mancera - www.lookgallerysf.com Mykola Bereza - @nickolaybereza Jenny Bagnyuk - @zhenyafoto Chris Farris - @christfarris Misia Farris - @misia.soup Nolan Yeloneck - @nolanwhy John Casey - @johncaseyart Brandon Joseph Baker - @brandonjosephbaker Mark Nobriga - @mr.malicioso_art Fabio Benê - @fabiobene D Young V - @dyoungv #risesunflowers (at Luna Rienne Gallery) https://www.instagram.com/p/Ch6HJ2grDS1/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
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