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guys-moments · 1 year
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ltwilliammowett · 1 year
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(Mary Jarecki shipwreck) , Pictured Rocks National Lakeshore von John McCormick Über Flickr: The Mary Jarecki was a wooden bulk freight steam Ship of 645 tons, 200 feet in length. It grounded on Au Sable Reef, Lake Superior, and went down on July 4, 1883. She lost her way in one of the heavy fogs that frequent the area.
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dude-storm · 1 year
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Tony Jarecki
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Jake.
💙💙
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"Crisis" by Nicholas Jarecki (2021)
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qazxswsblog · 2 years
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gorgousguys · 1 year
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fredalan · 3 months
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777-FILM Moviefone
1990
“Hello! And welcome to Moviefone!” -Russ Leatherman, ‘Mr. Moviefone’
[In-movie theater commercial] 
Sound effect: telephone busy signal   
 Announcer:   There one phone number for movie       showtime information that’s never busy.   Find out where and when it’s playing.   Call 777-FILM.   When all that matters is the movie.
Before there was a consumer internet, getting to the movies was a pain. Even figuring out whether a particular movie was playing in a given week at what theater required a logistic enterprise. It usually involved getting a local newspaper and sifting through columns of “listings” to figure out what showtimes were. You couldn’t be sure if there were tickets available and whether or not there were a few next to each other. Or whether they were in the front or back rows, and squeezed you in the middle of a long row. Heaven forbid, if you lived in a city with dozens of movie houses.
Enter entrepreneur, innovator and filmmaker Andrew Jarecki. Partnering with the original conceptualizer Russ Leatherman, they founded Moviefone to solve the problem. Just dial 777-FILM and life got easier. Now you could immediately know what movies were playing where, at what time, and whether there were ticket available. Voilà!
We met Andrew through our friends at Charlex and signed on as Moviefone’s first agency. Together, we quickly came up with several spots that would play in their partnered theaters and starting running them in New York and Los Angeles.  
Lo and behold! Moviefone was ringing off the hook, maximizing theater –and Moviefone!– profits. Soon, Andrew had figured out how to use call volume to predict ticket demand, which allowed  film producers to target their advertising to optimum effect, and of course, more success for all!
The company was acquired by AOL at the height of the first internet craze. Andrew went on to become an Academy Award nomimated filmmaker (“Capturing the Friedmans”) and produce and direct “The Jinx” for HBO and “Catfish” for MTV. ….. Actors: Albie Hecht & Paula Brinkman Director: Albie Hecht Producer: Chris Strand Production: Chauncey Street Productions Agency: Fred/Alan
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All good things, Andrew Jarecki, 2010
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kellymagovern · 2 years
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The Jinx: The Life and Deaths of Robert Durst (2015) dir. Andrew Jarecki
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olivierdemangeon · 2 years
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CRISIS (2021) ★★★✮☆
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portraituresque · 1 year
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Andre Jarecki - Self portrait as a clown
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guys-moments · 2 years
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more guys : instagram
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cathygeha · 17 days
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REVIEW
Charmed by the Wily Lass by Amy Jarecki
The MacGalloways #6
Fun way to spend a rainy day ~ Even though there is a murderer to find it was more a romance than a murder mystery.
What I liked:
* Lady Modesty MacGalloway: youngest daughter, considers herself plain and destined to be a spinster, loves horses, aspires to breed and train racehorses, secretly training to be a jockey, will never legally ride in a race, not sure why she enjoys kissing Kenneth when she doesn’t plan to marry
* Kenneth Davenport, 8th Viscount Berwick: scientist, prefers bees and sheep breeding to time with the ton, focused on finding the person that killed his brother, doesn’t feel ready to take on his lordly duties, unsure why he is attracted to Modesty when he is not ready to marry
* Freddie: orphan, taken in by Fagin-like female, eagerly accepts Kenneth’s offer to work for him
* Knowing that it was not likely a “lady” would parade in men’s clothes, learn to be a jockey, and do the things Modesty did – it was fun to watch her live out her fantasies and end up where she hoped to be
* Watching the romance and love develop between the main characters
* Lady Modesty’s mother: wily woman, loving mother, wants what is best for her children, wonder if she will find a love of her own?
What I didn’t like:
* Who and what I was meant not to like
* Thinking about how difficult it must have been to survive for many during this era and what it would take to improve one’s situation
Did I enjoy this book? Yes – not my favorite by this author but a fun book to read
Would I read more by this author? Yes
Thank you to the author for the ARC – This is my honest review.
3-4 Stars
BLURB
Thrust into the role of Viscount Berwick, Kenneth arrives in London to investigate the true cause of his brother’s death. The man might have died in his bed, but Kenneth does not agree with the doctor’s findings. As the new viscount begins to piece together the last days of his brother’s life, he doesn’t expect to be bamboozled by Lady Modesty MacGalloway nor does he want the lass impeding his quest.All her life Modesty has been underestimated because of her flaming red hair and face full of freckles. When Viscount Berwick thinks her daft enough not to notice when he “borrows” her diamond hair comb, she is determined to get it back. But once she learns his reason for the theft, the tide turns. Intrigued by a chance to prove her worth, Modesty offers Kenneth an ultimatum he cannot refuse. One that unexpectedly leads down the path of danger—not only to her person, but to her heart.
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dude-storm · 2 years
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Tony Jarecki
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bkenber · 1 month
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Richard Gere on Making Us Root for the Bad Guy in 'Arbitrage'
Photography By Myles Aronowitz WRITER’S NOTE: This article was originally written in 2012. Don’t get me wrong, Richard Gere has played many likable characters in movies like “Pretty Woman” and “An Officer and a Gentleman,” but it’s when he plays despicable ones that he truly excels as an actor. The latest example of this is his brilliant performance as Robert Miller in “Arbitrage,” the movie…
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qazxswsblog · 2 years
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Tony Jarecki
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