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#ed schlossberg
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John F. Kennedy, Jr., Ed Schlossberg and Anthony Radziwill.
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dreamofstarlight · 1 year
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gallescouture · 2 years
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valleyledger · 1 year
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Why Democrats won, and what comes next - Op-Ed by state Rep. Mike Schlossberg
Why Democrats won, and what comes next – Op-Ed by state Rep. Mike Schlossberg
I’ll be honest: As someone who spent months talking to voters, I had a feeling there was never going to be a red wave. Democratic, independent and many Republican voters I spoke with were scared. If I had a nickel for every time I heard, “These people scare me!” I’d be wealthy beyond measure. People weren’t just scared: They were angry. Angry at politicians who spent more time discussing school…
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joansiekennedy · 3 years
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ed schlossberg, anthony radziwill, rose schlossberg, and john f. kennedy jr.
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Happy 35th wedding anniversary to Caroline Kennedy and Ed Schlossberg 💐
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jackiekennedystyle · 4 years
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What a beautiful family 💗 Happy Anniversary to Caroline and Ed!
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lancer-andlace · 4 years
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Caroline Kennedy and Ed Schlossberg on their wedding day - July 1986
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The Kennedy family on Anthony Radziwill's wedding day, August 27, 1994.
From left to right: Ed Schlossberg, Ted Kennedy, Vicki Kennedy, Patricia Kennedy Lawford, Carole Radziwill, Anthony Radziwill, Eunice Kennedy Shriver, John F. Kennedy, Jr., Caroline Kennedy and Rose Schlossberg.
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dreamofstarlight · 1 year
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Carolyn, John, Caroline, and Ed at a Special Olympics event
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Faculty Listings 1970-71
Subject: CalArts faculty (and TA) listings including Design
Author: CalArts admin
Location: Provost’s Office
Item Dimensions: Letter
Original Format: NA
Creation Date: 1970
Location: California Institute of the Arts, Valencia, CA
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dk-thrive · 3 years
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So much so that, although it may seem like a lie, we can hear it...
Five decades ago,the philosopher Max Picard warned: “Nothing has changed human nature more than the loss of silence.” 
• In the 21st century, Ed Schlossberg, creator of ESI Design,a company dedicated to making innovative design spaces,has stated that “attention will be the most scarce and precious asset in the future”.
• Paying attention to a single object, stopping receiving information for an instant, consuming content, images, sounds, alerts, calls is almost impossible today.
We use the new technologies that connect us to the world of messages, tweets, Facebook posts, Google alerts, mobile phone alarms, news from our RSS feeds, Whatsapp invocations, 24 hours a day, wherever we are.
• Only when we get on the plane and the stewardess forces us to turn off our electronic devices, can we afford to feel us, alone. But then we avidly look for what movie they are going to put on.
• Schlossberg says he longs for the times when art offered a space for silence and attention. The static frame and the motionless spectator held together,exchanging radiation in the visible spectrum,without emitting a single noise. Contemplation is a luxury from another era...
✅The human being has owned silence for more than a million years.
Stillness and the absence of noise are part of the natural landscape as are the wind or the sky. We have adapted to silence, and without it we could not survive. So much so that, although it may seem like a lie, we can hear it...
— Steven Melbourne, from “Silence” in Abstract Universe (via Alive on All Channels)
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bodyalive · 3 years
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"Silence" • Five decades ago,the philosopher Max Picard warned: "Nothing has changed human nature more than the loss of silence." • In the 21st century,Ed Schlossberg, creator of ESI Design,a company dedicated to making innovative design spaces,has stated that "attention will be the most scarce and precious asset in the future". • Paying attention to a single object, stopping receiving information for an instant,consuming content,images, sounds,alerts,calls is almost impossible today. We use the new technologies that connect us to the world of messages, tweets, Facebook posts, Google alerts, mobile phone alarms, news from our RSS feeds,Whatsapp invocations, 24 hours a day,wherever we are. • Only when we get on the plane and the stewardess forces us to turn off our electronic devices can we afford to feel us alone. But then we avidly look for what movie they are going to put on. • Schlossberg says he longs for the times when art offered a space for silence and attention. The static frame and the motionless spectator held together, exchanging radiation in the visible spectrum without emitting a single noise. Contemplation is a luxury from another era. One of the film titles that made the most noise comes to mind and dates back to 2011. It was applauded at Cannes and an Oscar candidate. At that time it was one of the most successful films Is it incredibly true, considering it is a silent movie? A film without dialogue in the middle of 2011 - I remember it perfectly. It's called The Artist by Michel Hazanavicius. Many experts gouged their teeth at the cinematic aspects of the tape, but I just want to leave you a reflection... The human being has owned silence for more than a million years. Stillness and the absence of noise are part of the natural landscape as are the wind or the sky. We have adapted to silence and without it we could not survive. So much so that, although it may seem like a lie,we can hear it. A research led by neurologist Antonio Damasio from the Institute of Creativity and Brain of the University of South Los Angeles showed how our neurons react to the absence of stimuli. The experiment placed several volunteers in front of a television screen where different images were broadcast without audio: dogs barking, children crying, blows, glass shattered, explosions ... Scanner images of the participants' brains yielded a surprising conclusion: the brain areas of the auditory cortex were also activated by images that supposedly carried a powerful sound, even though the individual was not hearing anything. The relationship between the visual and auditory apparatus such as that between the auditory apparatus and other areas of the brain that have to do with our behavior shows to what extent sound can influence our organism, our state of mind and our health. How important is the moment, even brief, of silence. If not, tell the suffering citizens who live near an airport. Another recent study on silence is even more striking. A team of researchers from the University of Oregon investigated the neuronal synapses of a group of volunteers while listening to a speech. In doing so they discovered that, contrary to what was believed until now, there are two different neural channels to process the beginning and end of sounds. In other words, our brain uses one set of neurons to hear and another to stop hearing. We do not have a neuron that is activated when we listen and deactivated when we do not listen: what we have is a neuron that is activated when listening and another that is activated when not listening. What is important about this finding is the demonstration that our brain is prepared to stop receiving noise. Furthermore, these two neural channels are closely related to the areas of the brain that process language, memory, and learning. In some way, these neurons of silence are in charge of detecting, in the middle of a sentence, the spaces between words to determine when one begins and when another ends. They are specialized neurons in the pause (blessed virtue also in danger of extinction),the blank space, the breath, the silence ... We need to close our ears as much as we need to close our eyes from time to time. But the world we live in makes it increasingly difficult for us. In a recent interview, Michel Hazanavicius used a metaphor worthy of the best scientific disseminator. This: -- Silence is like zero in math. Many believe that it is worth nothing, that it represents emptiness. But, if you are in the right place, It can be very powerful .-- (...) This child has been reproduced many times, but on reflection,I wanted to capture his silence once again. #StevenMelbourne #ArtWork
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aion-rsa · 3 years
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Cobra Kai Season 3: Does Young Kreese Redeem Cobra Kai’s Founding Sensei?
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This article contains Cobra Kai spoilers.
Cobra Kai season 3 revealed the backstory we didn’t know we wanted – the harrowing Vietnam experience of Cobra Kai’s biggest villain, Sensei John Kreese (Martin Kove). Cobra Kai has been on point when it comes to filling in the personal histories of their characters. The writing team of Josh Heald, Jon Hurwitz, Hayden Schlossberg, and Bob Dearden have keen eyes for details and find reasonable justifications for the actions of its villains. Johnny’s (William Zabka) abusive father Sid (Ed Answer) has provided some redemption to his character’s initial villainy. But Kreese has remained villainous throughout the entire franchise. We don’t need to rehab all the villains, do we? 
Kreese’s origin tale is told across three episodes. Despite their brevity, they’re packed with clever Easter eggs for fans to find over repeated viewings and tricky red herrings that toy with fan expectations. They also give us clues to what season 4 might bring. 
Enlisting Kreese and His Son
Episode 2 “Nurture vs. Nature” begins with the grill of that iconic yellow 1947 Ford Deluxe, the very model that received Daniel’s (Ralph Macchio) wax on wax off treatment. As the car pulls into a soda shop, the driver is a cocky kid in a varsity jacket with a bullying attitude. He even says “They’re the opponent. You don’t show them mercy,” but in a quick Cobra Kai red herring, it’s not Kreese. The owner of that Ford is the first bully of the canon. Young Kreese (Barrett Carnahan) is his server who gets bullied mercilessly. 
The exquisite irony here is in the casting. Playing the Varsity Captain David is Jesse Kove, the son of actor Martin Kove. It’s a deliciously brilliant play by Cobra Kai. The first person to bully anyone in the history of the franchise and set off the chain of events that led to the formation of Kreese’s ultimate villainy is played by the actor’s son. 
The rest of the flashback scenes reveal how Young Kreese’s hard luck life became the building blocks of his character. His mother committed suicide and is branded as crazy, giving rise to the implication that Kreese may have inherited some of his mother’s mental illness. Kreese is a naturally gifted fighter. When pushed, he is able to defend himself against the Varsity Captain and his thug buddy, and steal David’s girlfriend Betsy (Emily Marie Palmer). However, with few options for advancement at the soda shop, he enlists for the Vietnam War and heads out for basic training at Monterey. He wants to be a hero.
Episode 2 has an unusually redemptive moment for the present-day Kreese. We see him do something good for a change. Kreese reaches out to Tory (Peyton List), offering her free tuition to come back to his Cobra Kai Dojo. While he’s visiting her, he picks up on the fact that she is being sexually harassed by her landlord, Rodney (Grayson Berry). Kreese returns and solves that for her in his usual Cobra Kai way, by striking first, striking hard and showing no mercy. Although recruiting Tory back into his fold serves his own selfish purposes, he does get her out of a sticky situation, but it’s not enough to redeem him entirely.
Prisoner of War
Episode 6 “King Cobra” takes Young Kreese to Vietnam in 1968, where he is pulled aside by Captain Turner (Terry Serpico) to join his special team. Serpico bears a passing resemblance to actor Anthony Michael Hall, so much so that many fans thought it was him, sparking a wave of chatter on the web and subsequent articles refuting the mistaken identity. Given the playfulness of Cobra Kai casting, perhaps Hall will have a cameo in season 4. 
Turner is the second significant bully to shape Kreese’s villainy. He instructs Young Kreese in the martial art he learned in Korea from Master Kim Sun-Yung and it’s not Karate. It’s Tang Soo Do. This resolves an issue that martial arts savvy fans have had with the series since the original films. The martial arts choreographer for The Karate Kid was Master Pat E. Johnson, who also played the Referee throughout the original trilogy. Johnson is a black belt in Tang Soo Do under Chuck Norris and well respected within the martial world. Martial arts aficionados always knew that the style propagated in the Cobra Kai Dojo was more like Tang Soo Do than Karate, so the quick clarification was welcomed. Despite this being Chuck Norris’ foundation style, most Americans don’t know enough about the martial arts to know about Tang Soo Do even today. During the era when the Cobra Kai Dojo was founded, Tang Soo Do school owners advertised Karate instead as a marketing ploy so this tiny rectification resolved a lot for martial savvy fans of the show.  
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Zabka continued to study under Johnson after the original film wrapped and that still shows in his fight scenes in Cobra Kai. And given that season 4 is headed back to the All-Valley Karate Tournament, Johnson would make for a great returning cameo.
Young Kreese pulls two of his comrades into Captain Turner’s special team, Twig (Nick Marini) and Ponytail (Seth Kemp) teasing another major cameo that fans are anticipating for season 4 – Terry Silver (Thomas Ian Griffith), the main villain from The Karate Kid Part III. Silver was Kreese’s old war buddy and he rocked a sleezy ponytail years before Steven Seagal broke into the movies. Silver has been referenced throughout Cobra Kai, and many fans believe the phone call Kreese makes at the end of season 3 is to him, so his inclusion in Young Kreese’s Vietnam years was essential. 
Turner establishes the foundation of the Cobra Kai creed while training Kreese, Twig and Ponytail when he espouses his philosophy “No hesitation, no second thoughts and no mercy.” It’s only a short jump from that to “Strike First, Strike Hard, No Mercy.” However, their mission goes awry. Radio feedback gives away Ponytail’s position as he is laying explosives in the enemy camp and the whole team is captured. And then, shockingly, Ponytail is executed right in front of Young Kreese, Captain Turner and Twig. It’s another superb red herring. Clearly, Ponytail is not Silver. Twig is Silver.   
Twig’s parting line to Kreese is “I owe you man, you saved my ass. Anything you need, I’m there for you, your whole life. You hear me Johnny? Your whole life. I owe you.” We’re all expecting payback in season 4.
The Snake Pit of PTSD
The Kreese back story concludes in the season finale “December 19.” As Captain Turner’s special team is imprisoned in a bamboo cage, Kreese blames himself for their failure. Turner taunts him about it, deepening the psychological damage. The weight of that guilt surely drives Kreese’s psychosis. 
Their captors force Kreese to fight Turner to the death over a snake pit. Cobra Kai overplays that. There’s a lot of snakes in that pit, dozens of them, but they appear to be constrictors, not cobras. When Young Kreese kicks Turner into the pit, we can hear them striking, but constrictors don’t strike. They constrict. It’s a picky point, and it’s understandable that the show creators went for the quantity with a brimming bed of snakes for dramatic effect, but it was a heavy-handed play. A lone king cobra would have been better. King cobras are indigenous to Vietnam albeit endangered now. And a king cobra is the world’s longest venomous snake averaging 12 feet in length. The largest measured one was over 19 feet long. A cobra would strike, first and hard. 
We already know the rest of Kreese’s story. He returns from Vietnam as a hero, as well as martial arts champion, but he’s psychologically scarred. Season 3 made us understand Kreese’s motivations and justifies his character flaws, but it doesn’t absolve him. We honor our military veterans for their service and now have a better sense of post-traumatic stress disorder, but no one has the right to stand above the law, no matter how much they have sacrificed. Will Kreese finally have to answer for his wrongdoings? Or will he find peace? We’ll just have to wait for season 4 to see. 
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Cobra Kai season 3 is available on Netflix.
The post Cobra Kai Season 3: Does Young Kreese Redeem Cobra Kai’s Founding Sensei? appeared first on Den of Geek.
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johnfkennedyjunior · 5 years
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The following day, at the postceremonial festivities, performer Grace Jones danced so provocatively with John that hundreds of guests stood still and watched. Nearly three months later, on July 19, 1986, twenty-eight-year-old Caroline Kennedy married forty-one-year-old Ed Schlossberg in a ceremony that had all the earmarks of any Kennedy extravaganza, including clambakes, sailboat races, and touch football game.
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kennedyaesthetic · 6 years
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I think Rose Schlossberg does resemble Jackie a bit, because she seems to have gotten Jackie's face shape. But to those who are saying Jack Schlossberg looks exactly like JFK Jr, I have to disagree. Jack Schlossberg is a carbon copy of his father, Ed.
I completely agree. Jack definitely looks like Ed. The main thing he and John Jr. have in common would be having a lot of hair. I definitely don’t think he’s an exact replica which seems to be what a lot of people have said in the past.
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