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#Alexandra Beaton
fyeahthenextstep · 6 months
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Riley is my baby sister. So I am pretty protective of Riley.
the next step throwback ━ season one [4/10] scenes ˋ°•*⁀➷ EMILY and RILEY in EP. 28
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ridehallmark · 1 year
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scenesandscreens · 1 year
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Luckiest Girl Alive (2022)
Director - Mike Barker, Cinematography - Colin Watkinson
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joah-shipper · 9 months
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somosorigen · 1 year
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Soltero En Navidad… Flojera Mil
Soltero En Navidad… Flojera Mil
Soltero en navidad es una cinta cliché al mil por ciento sobre un hombre gay que tiene a su mejor amigo desde hace años y quien lo acompaña a una cena de navidad en sustitución de su ex quien lo engañó. Frustrado se verá inmerso en un triangulo amoroso que ni el mismo había planeado, mientras toda su familia vive aventuras “navideñas”. (more…)
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movienized-com · 6 days
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Purgatory Jack
Purgatory Jack (2023) #BrettMButler #JasonGButler #TimRozon #AlexandraBeaton #EmilyAlatalo #JoelThomasHynes Mehr auf:
Jahr: 2023 Genre: Thriller Regie: Brett M. Butler, Jason G. Butler Hauptrollen: Tim Rozon, Alexandra Beaton, Emily Alatalo, Joel Thomas Hynes, Joel Gagne, Lora Burke, Heleene Cameron, Aaron Schwartz, Ruthie Nkut, Rick Blair, Shelley Gold, Morgan Bedard, Liam Siebolt … Filmbeschreibung: Die Geschichte folgt Jack Marlin, einem Privatdetektiv, der an einem neuen Fall arbeitet. Er muss einem…
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lovecatnip · 3 months
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Bring It On: Cheer or Die
2022
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gataxia · 4 months
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bring it on: cheer or die (2022) dir. karen lam
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zonetrente-trois · 7 months
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Purgatory Jack - OFFICIAL TRAILER The afterlife is a treacherous journey for punk icon Viv Vacious, (Alexandra Beaton) who finds herself fending off a limb-collecting gang and a suicide cult in this neo-noir thriller from Toronto’s Butler Brothers.
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Luckiest Girl Alive (2022) Review
Luckiest Girl Alive (2022) Review
Ani Fanelli is a woman living in New York who needs to constantly be in control of all aspects of her life, this is due to a massive trauma for her teenage years and everything begins to unravel. ⭐️⭐️⭐️ *This review contains spoilers and sensitive subjects* (more…)
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fyeahthenextstep · 7 months
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the next step throwback ━ season one [1/5] outfits ˋ°•*⁀➷ EMILY'S DRESS/HAIR IN THE REGIONALS FINALE
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royal-things · 1 year
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Princess Alexandra of Kent photographed by Cecil Beaton on coronation day 1953
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whileiamdying · 2 years
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Queen Elizabeth II
📍Buckingham Palace, London, England.
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sapphicreadsdb · 10 months
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Hi do you by chance have any sapphic fantasy recs? preferably adult fantasy but YA is fine too
sure! tho this could will get quite long... no links, sorry!, bc it was kicking up a fuss with those for some reason
+ = ya
pennyblade by j.l. worrad
lady hotspur by tessa gratton
sofi and the bone song by adrienne tooley (+)
she who became the sun by shelley parker chan
the scapegracers by h.a. clarke (+)
the third daughter by adrienne tooley (+)
the daughters of izdihar by hadeer elsbai
the malevolent seven by sebastien de castell
blackheart knights by laure eve
the warden by daniel m. ford
the unbroken by c.l. clark
dark earth by rebecca stott
witch king by martha wells
scorpica by g.r. macallister
the mirror empire by kameron hurley
now she is witch by kirsty logan
silverglass by j.f. rivkin
the woman who loved the moon and other stories by elizabeth a. lynn
...(this answer is how i discover there's a character limit per block so. doing this in chunks.)
fire logic by laurie j. marks
a restless truth by freya marske
when angels left the old country by sacha lamb (+)
the traitor baru cormorant by seth dickinson
an archive of brightness by kelsey socha
the bladed faith by david dalglish
the winged histories by sofia samatar
dragonoak by sam farren
the forever sea by joshua phillip johnson
into the broken lands by tanya huff
the jasmine throne by tasha suri
daughter of redwinter by ed mcdonald
the last magician by lisa maxwell (+)
the fire opal mechanism by fran wilde
...
the black coast by mike brooks
high times in the low parliament by kelly robson
foundryside by robert jackson bennett
the enterprise of death by jesse bullington
mamo by sas milledge (+)
from dust, a flame by rebecca podos (+)
uncommon charm by emily bergslien & kat weaver
wild and wicked things by francesca may
the unspoken name by a.k. larkwood
brother red by adrian selby
the final strife by saara el-arifi
way of the argosi by sebastien de castell (+)
the bone shard daughter by andrea stewart
ghost wood song by erica waters (+)
into the crooked place by alexandra christo (+)
ashes of the sun by django wexler
the midnight girls by alicia jasinska (+)
the midnight lie by marie rutkoski (+)
the never tilting world by rin chupeco (+)
water horse by melissa scott
...
a master of djinn by p. djeli clark
the good luck girls by charlotte nicole davis (+)
among thieves by m.j. kuhn
black water sister by zen cho
the velocity of revolution by marshall ryan maresca
sweet & bitter magic by adrienne tooley (+)
the dark tide by alicia jasinska (+)
the library of the unwritten by a.j. hackwith
a dark and hollow star by ashley shuttleworth (+)
the chosen and the beautiful by nghi vo
the councillor by e.j. beaton
these feathered flames by alexandra overy (+)
the factory witches of lowell by c.s. malerich
fireheart tiger by aliette de bodard
...
city of lies by sam hawke
bestiary by k-ming chang
the raven and the reindeer by t. kingfisher
the winter duke by claire eliza bartlett (+)
master of poisons by andrea hairston
the empress of salt and fortune by nghi vo
night flowers shirking from the light of the sun by li xing
down comes the night by allison saft (+)
wench by maxine kaplan (+)
girls made of snow and glass by melissa bashardoust (+)
girls of paper and fire by natasha ngan (+)
the impossible contract by k.a. doore
burning roses by s.l. huang
the house of shattered wings by aliette de bodard
not for use in navigation by iona datt sharma
weak heart by ban gilmartin
girl, serpent, thorn by melissa bashardoust (+)
the devil's blade by mark alder
...
we set the dark on fire by tehlor kay mejia (+)
the true queen by zen cho
moontangled by stephanie burgis
a portable shelter by kirsty logan
sing the four quarters by tanya huff
all the bad apples by moira fowley doyle (+)
the drowning eyes by emily foster
the priory of the orange tree by samantha shannon
miranda in milan by katharine duckett
the afterward by e.k. johnston (+)
thorn by anna burke
penhallow amid passing things by iona datt sharma
in the vanishers' palace by aliette de bodard
summer of salt by katrina leno (+)
the gracekeepers by kirsty logan
out of the blue by sophie cameron (+)
black wolves by kate elliott
the circle by sara b. elfgren & mats strandberg (+)
unspoken by sarah rees brennan (+)
thistlefoot by gennarose nethercott
passing strange by ellen klages
(and breathe)
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goodqueenaly · 5 months
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I accidentally deleted the following ask I was sent by @queenmorganlafay:
Hi. In a previous post, you mentioned that Rhaella might have crowned Viserys by touching her crown to his forehead. Is this something that’s done in real life, to bestow power on child kings and consorts?
(Referencing this ask)
There have certainly been changes to coronation rituals when child kings have been involved. Henry III was infamously crowned as a child not with a great crown of state (though the original St. Edward's Crown appears to have been one of the few crown jewels King John did not lose in the Wash) but with a corolla belonging to his mother, the dowager Queen Isabella; Edward VI too, although crowned with both St. Edward's Crown and the imperial crown, wore a crown specifically made to be light and small enough to fit the nine-year-old king's head. Likewise, when Mary, Queen of Scots was crowned at nine months old, Cardinal David Beaton simply held the crown over the head of the infant queen, rather than attempting to make the baby wear it. Too, there have been coronation rituals in history where a monarch uses their own crown to symbolically confer power upon another monarch: Nicholas II of Russia, for example, crowned his wife Alexandra by first placing his own magnificent imperial crown on her head for a moment before removing it and giving her the consort's crown instead. There can also be modifications, sometimes amusing, to a coronation ritual when circumstances demand it: when Charles of Valois, son of King Philip III of France, was acclaimed as King of Aragon during the Aragonese Crusade, for example, Cardinal Jean Cholet used his own galero (the wide-brimmed red hat of a cardinal) to crown young Charles, earning him the nickname roi du chapeau. 
In any event, the reason there is so much room to speculate here is because Targaryen coronations have been anything but consistent when it comes to their form or rituals, especially those responsible for the actual act of crowning. Queen Visenya placed the crown on Aegon the Conqueror's head at his first coronation (as she would later for her son Maegor), in the Aegonfort, while the ruling High Septon did so at his second, Oldtown coronation. Aenys I was presented with a crown by the High Septon when he became king, but it is unclear whether this represented a true act of coronation (as Aenys was also said to have "donned his father's iron-and-ruby crown" after the funeral of Aegon I, whereupon "Grand Maester Gawen proclaimed him" king). The ruling High Septon did the honors for the young King Jaehaerys I, but Gyldayn remains silent on any accession ceremonies for his grandson and heir, Viserys I (we'll leave aside the Stepstones coronation of Prince Daemon by his future father-in-law, Corlys Velaryon). During the Dance, each rival faction had its own coronation, with Criston Cole placing the Conqueror's crown on Aegon II's head and Prince Daemon crowning Rhaenyra with the crown of King Jaehaerys. (Though it is worth noting that Queen Alicent was reported to have placed her own crown on the head of the new queen, her daughter Helaena.) Aegon III appears to have been crowned by the High Septon, and the young king himself crowned his (first) queen, Jaehaera - though after Fire and Blood Volume 1, details on Targaryen coronations grow even more scarce (we know, for example, the High Septon crowned Daeron II, and we know there were coronations for Jaehaerys II and Aerys II, but little else). 
So in the last days of the Targaryen monarchy, as Queen Rhaella and her exiled household on Dragonstone watched an aristocratic revolution sweep away the old dynasty, the widowed queen may have decided to invent her own ritual of coronation for her sole remaining son, not only because there was little if any established precedent but also because she herself had limited resources at her disposal. If she herself had worn a crown as she sailed to Dragonstone (as Viserys and Daenerys certainly had such a piece for a time in Essos), she would not have had Aegon IV's ostentatious crown (worn by her husband), nor almost certainly the crowns of Aenys or Maekar (whose fates after the lives of their known bearers remain unknown). Nor could the High Septon sail to Dragonstone in the last hours of the civil war to acclaim young Viserys king, even if he had wanted to do so. In turn, maybe Rhaella figured that she was the only one on Dragonstone with the symbolic, regal standing necessary to confer the mystical aura of kingship to young Viserys. If a born Targaryen like Queen Rhaenys could crown a king, and if a Targaryen queen by marriage could crown her daughter as queen, then she, Rhaella, could crown her son as king, she might have thought - and if she lacked the proper coronal equipment traditional for a Targaryen king, she would simply use the crown she had on hand, already invested with her own queenly authority. Aerys II, perhaps, had crowned her queen (s Aegon III did for Jaehaera), or at the very least she had become queen at the moment he became king; by a sort of transitive property, then, Rhaella perhaps placing her crown on Viserys' brow may have linked the son to his father as his heir and successor. We don't know that any of this actually happened, of course, but if it did this is what I think might have been Rhaella's thinking on the matter
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livesunique · 2 years
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Queen Elizabeth II has died
Queen Elizabeth II, the United Kingdom’ s longest-serving monarch, has died at Balmoral aged 96, after reigning for 70 years.
Elizabeth II (Elizabeth Alexandra Mary; 21 April 1926 – 8 September 2022) was Queen of the United Kingdom and 14 other Commonwealth realms from 6 February 1952 until her death on 8 September 2022. 
Her reign of 70 years and 214 days was the longest of any British monarch and the second longest recorded of any monarch of a sovereign country.
Elizabeth was born in Mayfair, London, as the first child of the Duke and Duchess of York (later King George VI and Queen Elizabeth). Her father acceded to the throne in 1936 upon the abdication of his brother, King Edward VIII, making Elizabeth the heir presumptive.
She was educated privately at home and began to undertake public duties during the Second World War, serving in the Auxiliary Territorial Service. In November 1947, she married Philip Mountbatten, a former prince of Greece and Denmark, and their marriage lasted 73 years until his death in April 2021. They had four children together: Charles III; Anne, Princess Royal; Prince Andrew, Duke of York; and Prince Edward, Earl of Wessex.
When her father died in February 1952, Elizabeth—then 25 years old—became queen regnant of seven independent Commonwealth countries: the United Kingdom, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, South Africa, Pakistan, and Ceylon (known today as Sri Lanka), as well as Head of the Commonwealth. Elizabeth reigned as a constitutional monarch through major political changes such as the Troubles in Northern Ireland, devolution in the United Kingdom, the decolonization of Africa, and the United Kingdom's accession to the European Communities and withdrawal from the European Union.
The number of her realms varied over time as territories have gained independence and some realms have become republics. Her many historic visits and meetings include state visits to China in 1986, Russia in 1994, the Republic of Ireland in 2011, and visits to or from five popes.
Significant events include Elizabeth's coronation in 1953 and the celebrations of her Silver, Golden, Diamond, and Platinum Jubilees in 1977, 2002, 2012, and 2022, respectively. 
Elizabeth was the longest-lived and longest-reigning British monarch, the oldest and longest-serving incumbent head of state, and the second-longest verifiable reigning sovereign monarch in world history, only behind Louis XIV of France.
She faced occasional republican sentiment and media criticism of her family, particularly after the breakdowns of her children's marriages, her annus horribilis in 1992, and the death of her former daughter-in-law Diana, Princess of Wales, in 1997.
However, support for the monarchy in the United Kingdom remained consistently high, as did her personal popularity. Elizabeth died on 8 September 2022 at Balmoral Castle, Aberdeenshire.
“The Queen is dead, Long live King Charles III”
The Duchess of York with Princess Elizabeth, 30 June 1927 by Marcus Adams (The Royal Collection Trust),
Princess Elizabeth in uniform (1942) by Cecil Beaton (The Royal Collection Trust),
Princess Elizabeth and The Duke of Edinburgh on their wedding day, 20th November 1947 by Sterling Henry Nahum ‘Baron’ (The Royal Collection Trust),
Queen Elizabeth II poses on her Coronation Day on June 2, 1953, in London (Photography by Cecil Beaton),
Queen Elizabeth II with Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh and family - 16 Mar 1960 by Cecil Beaton (From the Collection of Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother),
Queen Elizabeth II and her son, the Prince of Wales, out riding at Windsor Castle I May 18, 1961 (PA),
The Royal coat of arms of the United Kingdom used outside of Scotland,
Queen Elizabeth II Platinum Jubilee 2022 - Platinum Party At The Palace. The Queen Elizabeth II and Paddington Bear having cream tea at Buckingham Palace (BBC Platinum Party at the Palace),
Portrait of Queen Elizabeth II released by The Royal Windsor Horse Show on April 20, 2022 to mark the occasion of her 96th birthday.
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