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nofatclips · 2 years
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Extended mix of End of All Things by Andrew Bayer (featuring Alison May) from the remix album In My Next Life
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blogger360ncislarules · 3 months
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“The Baxters” will premiere March 28 on Amazon Prime Video. Based on the bestselling novels by Karen Kingsbury, the faith-infused family drama series stars Roma Downey and Ted McGinley.
The series follows Elizabeth and John Baxter, played by Downey and McGinley, and their five adult children. The 10-episode first season revolves around their daughter Kari (Ali Cobrin), who discovers her professor husband Tim (Brandon Hirsch) is having an affair with one of his students. Kari must find comfort in her family and faith to discover if love is a choice or if her marriage can be redeemed.
Kingsbury’s novel series has encompassed more than 25 titles since its debut in 2002. Downey has had the book under option for over a decade.
“Since the day Roma Downey asked for my blessing in making the Baxter family literary series into a televised show, I have dreamed that it might find a home on Prime Video,” Kingsbury said. “Many millions of readers are going to be thrilled over this news. It is a dream come true.”
Masey McLain, Josh Plasse, Cassidy Gifford, Reilly Anspaugh and Emily Peterson round out the Season 1 cast. Guest stars Kathie Lee Gifford, Jake Allyn, Damien Leake and Orel De La Mota join the previously announced cast.
LightWorkers Media, Will Packer Media and Haven Entertainment produce “The Baxters.” Jessie Rosen serves as showrunner. Downey, Josen, Will Packer, Kevin Mann, Brendan Bragg and Jaime Primak Sullivan executive produce, while Karen Kingsbury and Rick Christian are consulting producers.
See the first-look clip below.
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flavorednarry · 6 years
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niall | guido | ali | james | john | jake | dcfc | ariana | steven | frank | paul | elton | rory | genie
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avengerness · 6 years
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The Avengers Declassified - Tipping the bowler from 2009 to 2018
Alan Hayes, the webmaster of „The Avengers Declassified“, announced yesterday that he will no longer update his website. However, fortunately, Alan decided not to delete the website, but it will remain as an archive.
Alan wrote that other things have supplanted the Avengers in his affection and „fire his enthusiasm in a way that The Avengers used to do but no longer" do. He decided that his essay for the booklet of the „Tunnel of Fear“ DVD would be his last contribution to The Avengers. The last of the many…
Alan Hayes is one of the pioneers of The Avengers; his research on the history of the series The Avengers is excellent and he contributed in many ways to The Avengers.
It started in the early days of the internet when Alan Hayes supplied information about the South African Radio Series of the Avengers to the fans of the series via the website of David Smith. Later Alan and his wife would cooperate with Mike Noon about the South African Radio Series and a website Avengers on the Radio was launched. Many years later (in 2012) the restoration of the recovered tapes from the 1970s was completed.
On Christmas 1999 the couple launched one of the first archives for rare images of The Avengers, „Second Sight“. It was so popular, that it was removed by the web host the next day due to the traffic it caused. The relaunched website included in 2001 a link to one of the earliest forums of the Avengers fandom. Also in 2001, they assisted Mike Noon to produce his website The Avengers Illustrated, a website originally focused on John Steed in comics and newspaper strips. In 2009 Alan created his popular website The Avengers Declassified. Amongst many other things, it includes a section about The Avengers on Home Video and Alan worked on The Avengers Reconstructed, a video project for Optimum Release and the remastered DVDs of The Avengers.
One can also find all reconstructions of series 1 on the new „Tunnel of Fear“ DVD.
Alan & Alys Hayes and Richard McGinley also published a book about the first series of The Avengers: The Strange Case Of  The Missing Episodes – the lost stories of the Avengers Series one (2013), followed by „With Umbrella, Scotch and Cigarettes“, „Two Against The Underworld“, his charity project „Avengerworld – The Avengers In Our Lives“ and another publication with Richard McGinlay, „Police Surgeon“.
And Alan did a fine research for all of his books.
I had the pleasure to work with him on a few minor projects such as the Avengerworld charity book, the online interview with Ian Hendry’s biographer, Gabriel Hershman, on Steedumbrella and we appreciated his help when Denis Kirsanov and I launched our website about Patrick Macnee in 2015.
I wish him all the best for his new projects, hoping that he will post now and then some news on the forum.
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sportscri · 3 years
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Rory McIlroy accepts work needed on his game ahead of The Open after disappointing Irish Open
Rory McIlroy accepts work needed on his game ahead of The Open after disappointing Irish Open
Rory McIlroy completed tied-59th on the Dubai Responsibility Free Irish Open, with the four-time main champion additionally in motion on the Scottish Open subsequent week forward of The Open at Royal St George’s later this month By Ali Stafford Final Up to date: 04/07/21 8:30pm 4:23 Paul McGinley and Robert Lee look again at the perfect of the motion from the ultimate spherical of the Dubai…
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flairmagazineblog · 3 years
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Holiday Is Where You Find It; Seasonal Coach Campaign
Highlighting the significance of family and holiday cheer, Coach unveiled its 2020 holiday campaign, starring none other than Jennifer Lopez and Michael B. Jordan, alongside their family members. Also featured are ambassadors Kiko Mizuhara, Jeremy Lin and Yang Zi. With a fashion lens, you will be able to spot the new Hitch backpack and belt bag for men but taking center stage is the Beat Shoulder Bag, which is inspired by the personality of downtown New York.
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Given the fact that this year has been crazy for basically everyone, this new campaign revolves around Coach’s belief in the power of staying positive and finding joy in the little things. There is a lot of comfort that comes with the traditions of this holiday season, and we’ve all been waiting for it to come around. Presented in a series of images and short vignettes, the campaign displays the cast celebrating with their families; the underlying message being that holiday can be a state-of-mind.
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Family members include Lopez’s mother, Guadelupe Lopez, and her children Emme and Max Muñiz. Jordan is seen with his parents, Michael A. Jordan and Donna Jordan, and his siblings, Khalid Jordan and Jamila Jordan-Theus. Mizuhara’ sister Yuka Mizuhara, and Lin’s friend and trainer, Josh Fan, also make appearances. Finally, some members of the Coach Family including Camila Morrone, Megan Thee Stallion, Quincy, Yuna and Ramla Ali also took part in the campaign.
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Working behind the scenes was a talented group of global creatives, including photographers and directors Ryan McGinley, Renell Medrano, Hao Zeng, Brad Ogbonna, Takako Noel, Yuaan, Fan Xin, DJ Furth, Zhangmeng, Jian LV and Christelle de Castro. 
Holiday Is Where You Find It; Seasonal Coach Campaign was originally published on FLAIR MAGAZINE
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allenmendezsr · 3 years
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Bodybyboyle Online Strength And Conditioning Service
New Post has been published on https://autotraffixpro.app/allenmendezsr/bodybyboyle-online-strength-and-conditioning-service/
Bodybyboyle Online Strength And Conditioning Service
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 Buy Now
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    If you are at all interested in fitness or strength and conditioning, you know who Mike Boyle is. For three decades Strength Coach Mike Boyle has been at the forefront of the profession, working with a wide range of athletes and clients. From middle school, to the pros, to busy adults who want to be in the best shape of their lives, Mike has delivered results over the years that have made him one of the top presenters at seminars around the world, the author of several published books and DVDs that have shaped the industry, and owner of the Number 1 Gym in America by Men’s Health Magazine
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The fitness world changes continuously so you need to always be learning the latest strategies and techniques to produce the best results. Now you can have access to everything that has made Mike Boyle so successful, on demand, right in front of you. And by everything, we mean EVERYTHING. From the programs we use at Mike Boyle Strength and Conditioning for our high school and college athletes, to the programs we use for our NFL combine athletes, to the most challenging and complete and effective fat loss programs ever released to the public. 
First and foremost, BodyByBoyle Online is where the latest content from Mike Boyle is Posted. And you get to be like one of the Mike Boyle Strength and Conditioning staff members, getting the same education as they do. From the months of September through June, each week you will sit in on the MBSC Staff Meeting and listen to discussions on program design, injury prevention, rehab, business, reviews of seminars and presentations, and debates that help create the most complete and effective strength and conditioning programs in the industry. 
The MBSC Staff Meeting Videos Include:
In Depth Program Design Discussion (see how and why the staff designs the programs for our athletes)
Hands On Discussions on Olympic Lifting, Mobility, Active Warm Ups, Rehab Exercises, and more!
Reviews and discussions of guest speaker’s talks, seminars, DVDs, Books, and more!
Listen in on the Wide Range of Athlete and Client Issues and How to fix them
And so much more! It is a like having a new Seminar every single week September through June!
BodyByBoyle Online is also an On-Demand library of Mike Boyle’s content. From DVDs, to Classic VHS Tapes we have converted to Digital, to Staff In Services, to talks that he gives to the Mentorship groups, and other seminars that can not be seen anywhere else. 
Here are just a few examples of the content:
Many of Mike’s Seminar Talks and Hands Ons
Start With Why Seminar
Speed Training In Services
Training the Overhead Athlete
90 Minute In Depth Walkthrough of the FMS and How to Make Use of it’s Data
Training the Obese Client Seminar
Joint by Joint Training Seminar
Core Training DVD
ACL Injury Prevention
Hips and Sports Hernias
The 2011 MBSC Winter Seminar Talk on The Case for Single Leg Training
Teaching the Olympic Lifts
Success Secrets Seminar
Mass Premiere Soccer Open House Presentation (Strength and Conditioning on the Field)
Training the Baby Boomer
And More!!!
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Over the last year BodyByBoyle Online has turned into the #1 Resource for Strength and Conditioning, Rehab, and Injury Prevention Education Content in the world.
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Just take a look at some of the recent talks we have in our database:
Frank Nash Social Media Seminar
2018 MBSC Winter Semianr
Tim Difrancesco (LA Lakers) Journey In Service
Jason Glass Load Xplode In Service
Fergus Connolly Future of Team Sports Performance Training
Ken Clark Latest on Speed Research and Application
Charlie Weingroff Spring 2019 Q&A In Service
Dan McGinley Coaching Behavior Change Seminar
Kevin Carr Full Spectrum Rehab Seminar
Pat Van Galen “The Aging Thing” Seminar
Mike Boyle on Conditioning (Spring 2019)
Ali Gilbert – The Other 23 Hours Seminar
Tony Holler Speed Training
Pat Davidson Programming In Service
FMS and Screening with Lee Burton
Anna Hartman on the Nervous System and Breathing
Joel Jamison on Energy Systems
Michael Mullin’s Multiple PRI In Services
Josh Henkin on Sandbag Training
Gray Cook on Movement Quality
Anna Hartman on Resting Postures
Sue Falsone (of Althete’s Performances and the LA Dodgers) presenting on the Thoracic Spine
Charlie Weingroff’s Multiple In Services on Programming
Nick Tumminello talking about Rotary Training
Teaching the Olympic Lifts Mini Workshop with Charles Staley
Dan John on the Quadrants
Dan John Talk to the Staff on Programming
Dan John Talk to the Staff on Being Successful in the Industry
Sand Bag Training Hands On with Troy Anderson
Kelly Starrett of MoblityWOD talking about Mobility and Rehab
John Pallof on the Shoulder
Devan McConnel on Conditioning
Mike Mullin – 3 Hour Postural Restoration Institute In Service
Josh Aycock – Training the Chinese Olympic Teams for the 2012 Olympics
Over 5 Hours of Q&A with Mike Boyle from our Mentorship Groups
Mike Boyle – Speed Training In Service
Mike Boyle – In Depth FMS Breakdown with Corrective Techniques
John Pallof – Over 3 Hour In Service and Hands on with on Strategies for Healthy Shoulders
Charlie Weingroff – Building a Beast Mini In Service with Q&A
Holly Fitzgerald – Injury Prevention for Sports
Training with the USA Women’s Hockey Team
90 Minute MoveNat In Service
And More!
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BodyByBoyle Online is housed on our easy to navigate website that offers more options than ever before, including:
Program Viewer to quickly access our program database
Multiple versions of our videos (for both high and low bandwidth situations)
NEW!!! All Future Videos are Formatted for the iPad and iPhone! We are also converting all old videos as well
Video Playlists for each video category for easy viewing and navigation between videos:
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The BodybyBoyle Online System is the next best thing to working directly with a coach. As I reviewed the program, I was amazed at how complete and thorough it was. Simply put, they give you EVERYTHING! Included is an amazing video database of all the exercises that are used at MBSC, a ton of programs options with everything listed and spelled out for the user (taking out all of the guesswork), and much, much more. I highly recommend it.
Craig Rasmussen, CSCS Program
Designer/Performance Coach
Results Fitness
Body By Boyle is simply fantastic, easily one of the most complete and exceptional education I’ve ever seen. The amount of time and effort that went into Body By Boyle is apparent in every aspect of the user experience, which is like a virtual tour into the mind of one of the most prolific and talented strength & conditioning coaches in the field today. Whether you’re an exercise professional or a recreational exerciser, from novice to expert, you’re going to find all of the tools that you need to be successful right here. I really can’t say enough about Body By Boyle: This is seriously impressive stuff!
-Jonathan Fass, PT, DPT, CSCS, ART Cert.
Accelerated Strength
Coach Boyle’s success in developing elite level athlete’s speaks for itself. Over the last 3 decades, Boyle’s innovative programs and coaching have helped athletes in every major sport compete at the highest levels. Body By Boyle Online extends the value of world-class training to athletes everywhere. The ready-made programs, extensive exercise video database, and information-based videos provide athletes with all the tools they need to succeed. This is truly a breakthrough in sports performance training.
Kevin Neeld
Director of Athletic Development,
Endeavor Sports Performance
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There is plenty of “fools gold” in the fitness industry these days: gimmicks, broken promises and plain misinformation.  Very few products and services hold their weight.  Body By Bolye On-Line (BBBO) is pure 24 karat gold!  BBBO is a unique resource available to all fitness professionals.  It’s a behind the scenes look into the top gym in America and a Coach with over 30 years of “In The Trenches” experience.  Video taped staff meetings, special guest lectures, assessments, and access to a plethora of MBSC programs make BBBO a MUST for any and all fitness professionals!  Essentially this is the only product of its kind that will allow you to have access to a “virtual” MBSC franchise.  My grandfather always said, “Quality is remembered long after the price is forgotten.”  Coach Boyle’s products are a MUST.  Plain and simple!  If you want to set yourself apart from the competition and invest in your future as competent, educated, well-versed trainer/Coach, I strongly recommend BBBO.  You can’t afford to miss out on this opportunity.   
Anthony Donskov, MS, CSCS, PES
Coach Boyle and his team have created another leap in the industry with Body By Boyle Online. This is one of those gems that rarely comes along. Whether you are a coach, personal trainer, athlete or client, BBBonline is a must have tool for your holster. Not only do you get to see what the #1 ranked gym in America is doing but you are able to take what they are doing and implement it into your programs. BBBonline has set a new standard for educational content.
Dewey Nielsen
Impact Performance Training
As a professional in the strength and conditioning field, constantly educating myself is what has allowed me to find true success with my clients as well as my own training. You cannot place a price on continuing education in a field which is ever evolving. I have followed Coach Boyle’s work for some time due to the high quality and integrity with which he produces informational products as well as his passion for the industry. This year I have had the distinct honor of presenting to his staff on two occasions, and I can attest to the exceptional quality of work at MBSC. The staff, methodology and programming at MBSC is unparalleled. Body By Boyle Online allows you to get an inside look at one of the absolute best facilities in the world, and gives you a chance to learn from the some of the most prominent educators in the field. I cannot stress enough the importance of investing in continuing education, and Body By Boyle Online is just that-a priceless investment in yourself and your clientele.
Neghar Fonooni
 I just want to say you online stuff is perfect for me as an owner training a staff. I watch a couple videos a week… With interns and staff and it is a tremendous help Also allows me to let them watch n learn while I do other things…. Thanks
– Mike Hanley HanleyStrength.com
The Same Exact Programs we Use with Our Amateur and Professional Athletes
An Information Database with Full Seminars, MBSC In Services, DVDs, Inside the MBSC Staff Meeting, and more added each month!
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We want as many people as possible to benefit from this content, so we are pricing it at a dramatically low, limited-time introductory price. We asked some of our testers what they would pay for a service like this. The responses indicated well over $100/month just for the education database. But you can have Insider Access to Mike Boyle Strength and Conditioning for less than that.
The Best Strength and Conditioning Programs in the World for Elite High School, College, Minor League and Professional Athletes and Body Composition and Strength Programs for the General Popualtion
Rehab Programs for Knees, Hips, and Shoulders
Access to an Information Database with Full Seminars, DVDs, MBSC Guest In Services, The MBSC Staff Meeting and more each month!
You will be billed $39.97 every 30-Days until Your Membership is Canceled.
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     That is it, no upsells, no hidden fees, everything we do at Mike Boyle Strength and Conditioning for $39.97/month.
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We are so confident that you are going to love BodyByBoyle Online that we are offering an unprecidented 60-Day Money Back Guarantee. NO QUESTIONS ASKED. Just keep in mind that your access to the BodyByBoyle Online content will be terminated if you are not satisfied with your purchase and request your money back.
If you have any questions you can contact us at support(at)bodybyboyleonline.com
Note: BodyByBoyle Online is a digital product, nothing physical will be delivered.  It may take up to 24-hours for your membership to be activated.
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Iain Armitage
Iain De Caestecker
Iain Glen
Ian Bohen
Ian Chen
Ian Anthony Dale
Ian Harding
Ian McShane
Ian Nelson
Ian Somerhalder
Ice-T
Iddo Goldberg
Idris Elba
Ignacio Serricchio
Ioan Gruffudd
Isaac Hempstead Wright
Isaiah Mustafa
Isaiah Washington
Iwan Rheon
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J. Lee
J. August Richards
Jack Cutmore-Scott
Jack Falahee
Jack Fulton
Jack Gleeson
Jack Dylan Grazer
Jack Moore
Jack Quaid
Jack Yang
Jacob Anderson
Jacob Artist
Jacob McCarthy
Jacob Pitts
Jade Hassouné
Jaeden Martell
Jaime Camil
Jake Borelli
Jake Cannavale
Jake Choi
Jake Johnson
James Avery
James Carpinello
James D’Arcy
James Denton
James Lafferty
James Marsters
James McAvoy
James Paxton
James Pickens Jr.
James Remar
James Roday
James Spader
James Michael Tyler
James Wolk
James Yaegashi
Jamie Bamber
Jared S. Gilmore
Jared Padalecki
Jaren Lewison
Jason Bateman
Jason Beghe
Jason Dohring
Jason Gedrick
Jason George
Jason Isaacs
Jason Momoa
Jason R. Moore
Jason Ralph
Jason Segel
Javier Muñoz
Jay Ali
Jay Harrington
Jay Hayden
Jay Hernandez
Jean-Luc Bilodeau
Jeff Garlin
Jeff Meacham
Jeff Perry
Jeff Ward
Jeffrey Dean Morgan
Jensen Ackles
Jeremy Jordan
Jeremy Pope
Jeremy Sisto
Jermaine Rivers
Jesse Tyler Ferguson
Jesse L. Martin
Jesse Lee Soffer
Jesse Spencer
Jesse Williams
Jim Beaver
Jim Caviezel
Jim O’Heir
Jim Parrack
Jim Parsons
Jim Rash
J.K. Simmons
Joe Dempsie
Joe Gilgun
Joe Keery
Joe Lo Truglio
Joe Minoso
Joe Manganiello
Joe Mantegna
Joe Morton
Joe Spano
Joel Labelle
Joel McHale
Joel McKinnon Miller
Joel David Moore
Joey Batey
Joey Lawrence
John Barrowman
John Ross Bowie
John Boyd
John Cho
John Francis Daley
John Gammon
John M. Jackson
John Karna
John Harlan Kim
John Krasinski
John Larroquette
John C. McGinley
John Noble
John Schneider
John Wesley Shipp
John Stamos
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Joivan Wade
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Jonathan Groff
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Jonathan Kite
Jonathan Tucker
Jonny Lee Miller
Jordan Bolger
Jordan Bridges
Jordan Calloway
Jordan Gavaris
Jordan Peele
Jordane Christie
Jorge Garcia
José Zuniga
Joseph Gilgun
Joseph Morgan
Josh Bowman
Josh Charles
Josh Dallas
Josh Gad
Josh Hartnett
Josh Holloway
Josh Radnor
Joshua Gomez
Joshua Jackson
Joshua Malina
Joshua Sasse
J.R. Bourne
J.R. Lemon
J.R. Ramirez
Judd Hirsch
Julian McMahon
Julian Works
Jussie Smollett
Justin Baldoni
Justin Berfield
Justin Chambers
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Justin Hartley
Justin H. Min
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artisticlegshake · 7 years
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My Top 25 Senior (16+) Solos of 2016/2017
(I just couldn’t cut it down anymore!)
In no particular order...
1. Samantha Falk - Sinking 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LO_2UDNRuxY&list=PLYKVRaQBwyDqeLRLAp2kDghqwPk_Ecpg9&index=26
2. Erica Grabowski - Body Language 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3w_ilVVP3QI&index=2&list=PLYKVRaQBwyDqeLRLAp2kDghqwPk_Ecpg9
3. Sidney Ramsey - La Mama Morta 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BoVEaNKyTck&index=3&list=PLYKVRaQBwyDqeLRLAp2kDghqwPk_Ecpg9
4. Ali Stevens - Dim My Mind 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gd89PkrEUlQ&index=5&list=PLYKVRaQBwyDqeLRLAp2kDghqwPk_Ecpg9
5. Ariana McClure - Pas Oublie 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Uom7lQCJ6Us&list=PLYKVRaQBwyDqeLRLAp2kDghqwPk_Ecpg9&index=6
6. Lauren Herb - Painting Greys 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QDA6Mj2Ut1w&list=PLYKVRaQBwyDqeLRLAp2kDghqwPk_Ecpg9&index=8
7. Simrin Player - Good Girl
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Kvi4jVCsEdw&list=PLYKVRaQBwyDqeLRLAp2kDghqwPk_Ecpg9&index=9
8. Addison Moffett - Foolish Games 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O4_soGmQqkE&list=PLYKVRaQBwyDqeLRLAp2kDghqwPk_Ecpg9&index=10
9. Michelle Quiner - Lost
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6tZKdKmWJ5s&index=11&list=PLYKVRaQBwyDqeLRLAp2kDghqwPk_Ecpg9
10. Nina Choi - Become Your Fantasy 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uizzyRIfc_g&index=12&list=PLYKVRaQBwyDqeLRLAp2kDghqwPk_Ecpg9
11. Paulina Macias - Cross The Line 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aORqsv7qECU&index=14&list=PLYKVRaQBwyDqeLRLAp2kDghqwPk_Ecpg9
12. Jessy Lipke - One in Ten 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5nenmcaXBm4&list=PLYKVRaQBwyDqeLRLAp2kDghqwPk_Ecpg9&index=15
13. Amanda Baez - Only Fault 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0_O_ON4RsyM&list=PLYKVRaQBwyDqeLRLAp2kDghqwPk_Ecpg9&index=16
14. Hannahlei Cabanilla - Sink Back Into the Ocean 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Fwf_RPLxMNc&list=PLYKVRaQBwyDqeLRLAp2kDghqwPk_Ecpg9&index=18
15. Taylor Sieve - Le Sacre 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RL-wyZn5dAM&list=PLYKVRaQBwyDqeLRLAp2kDghqwPk_Ecpg9&index=20
16. Kaylin Maggard - Because An Illusion Is An Illusion 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3_nS5oS-NV0&index=21&list=PLYKVRaQBwyDqeLRLAp2kDghqwPk_Ecpg9
17. Isabella Halek - Below 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d_r8v_qH808&index=23&list=PLYKVRaQBwyDqeLRLAp2kDghqwPk_Ecpg9
18. Elise Monson - Order 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_jAJ1g4lZLE&list=PLYKVRaQBwyDqeLRLAp2kDghqwPk_Ecpg9&index=24
19. Emily Slader - I Lost You 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6o4KIHZyDpI&list=PLYKVRaQBwyDqeLRLAp2kDghqwPk_Ecpg9&index=25
20. Ridge McGinley - Wind Beneath My Wings 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aEiLJiAHZrs&index=22&list=PLYKVRaQBwyDqeLRLAp2kDghqwPk_Ecpg9
21. Lex Ishimoto - Location 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J6ie3-rfO5c&list=PLYKVRaQBwyDqeLRLAp2kDghqwPk_Ecpg9&index=19
22. Dangelo Castro - (Performance as Best Dancer) 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7T1HK3K-l8c&index=17&list=PLYKVRaQBwyDqeLRLAp2kDghqwPk_Ecpg9
23. Michael Novitski - Ain’t No Sunshine When She’s Gone 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Mv0XdrM35Eo&index=13&list=PLYKVRaQBwyDqeLRLAp2kDghqwPk_Ecpg9
24.Logan Hernandez - Untitled 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IZ9p4jiqbfg&index=7&list=PLYKVRaQBwyDqeLRLAp2kDghqwPk_Ecpg9
25. Brendon Moran - Harmonic Dissonance 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7SzqiC1Yi-E&index=4&list=PLYKVRaQBwyDqeLRLAp2kDghqwPk_Ecpg9
Let me know your faves :)
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afrostylemagazine · 5 years
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A F R I C A N S H O W E R [swipe] Was an EDUN [Ali Hewson & Bono brand] SS’13 campaign shot by Ryan McGinley with African elephants in support of the protection of them. Following on from the Animal series, Edun and WildAid collaborated on a collection of T-shirts featuring Susie the elephant. Love it!! #fashion #fashionista #followforfollow #art #love #amazing  #tbt #instamood #picoftheday #selfie #lol #beautiful #blackandwhite #photographer  #photo #photography #summer #asia  #photooftheday #followme #me #fun  #style #throwback #color #creative  #europe #africa #wedding #thinkoutsidethebox WWW.AFROSTYLEMAG.COM ⁣ ⁣ https://www.instagram.com/p/B2McEFHli_A/?igshid=1ujjb10ywk0t
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blogger360ncislarules · 2 months
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Viewers watched Cassidy Gifford grow up as her mom, Kathie Lee Gifford, co-hosted Live! with Regis and Kathie Lee. Now she’s stepping into the spotlight alongside her mother in Prime Video’s The Baxters, based on Karen Kinsgbury’s bestselling novel collection.
Cassidy stars as Reagan Decker in the faith-driven drama series. Reagan works alongside Kari Baxter (Ali Cobrin) and becomes the love interest of Luke Baxter (Josh Plasse), the youngest member of the Baxter family. At the end of the first season, Reagan and Luke take a major leap in their relationship when they say “I love you” to one another for the first time.
Both mom and daughter have key roles in The Baxters. Kathie Lee makes a special guest appearance as Lillian Ashford, Elizabeth Baxter’s (Roma Downey) friend who tragically lost her son in a car accident years ago.
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Kathie Lee Gifford with Cassidy and Cody Gifford in 1995. (Spike Nannarello / ©CBS / Courtesy of Everett Collection)
The series, which consists of 10 episodes, also stars Ted McGinley, Brandon Hirsch, Masey McLain, Jake Allyn, Reilly Anspaugh, Emily Peterson, and Taylour Paige.
Throughout Kathie Lee’s Live! tenure, she frequently talked about her kids, Cassidy and Cody Gifford, whom she shares with the late Frank Gifford. Cassidy made her acting debut in an episode of That’s So Raven in 2005. The Baxters marks her first series regular role.
Kathie Lee returned to Studio 1A for an interview with Cassidy ahead of The Baxters premiere to discuss their new show. Kathie Lee co-hosted the fourth hour of Today with Hoda Kotb for 11 years.
“You’re great in it,” Cassidy sweetly told her mom about her performance in The Baxters. Kathie Lee, with her signature sass, quickly replied, “I am.” The former talk show host added that The Baxters is a “sweet” series, and it’s “time for a show like this.”
Unfortunately, the Giffords don’t share any scenes together in the first season. Hey, there’s always Season 2!
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flavorednarry · 6 years
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weflossindaily · 7 years
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Supreme skaters Javier Nunez and Tyshawn Lyons, model Paloma Elsesser, Jen Brill, skater Tyshawn Jones, Chloë Sevigny, skaters Sean Pablo Murphy and Mark Gonzales, all wearing a mix of Supreme and their own clothing.
James Jebbia, the man who, in 1994, founded and to this day runs the SoHo-based company that has been making clothing and skateboards and a lot of other things that the people who love it absolutely have to have, doesn’t think of Supreme the way most people in fashion might—as a brand that started out in a small store on Lafayette Street and has since inched its way to legendary global status. He thinks of Supreme more as a space. When Jebbia was a teenager in Crawley, West Sussex, in the eighties, working at a Duracell factory, listening to T. Rex and Bowie on breaks and spending his spare cash on trips to London to buy clothes, it was always in a certain elusive kind of store—one that became the model for Supreme.
“The cool, cool shop,” says Jebbia, who is 54 and dressed in jeans and a plain dark-blue T-shirt, label-free and low-key, with closely cropped hair and deep blue eyes. “The shop that carries the cool stuff that everybody was wearing—no big brands or anything.”
His office a few blocks west of the Supreme store is adorned with a skateboard designed by Raymond Pettibon; some drawings by Jebbia’s kids, age 8 and 10; and a larger-than-life-size portrait of James Brown—whom Jebbia, crucially, sees as not just the hardest-working man in showbiz but as a guy who never played down to his audience. Jebbia is, likewise, ever-mindful of his customer, who is generally aged eighteen to 25 and wants simply to buy cool stuff—and who will pay for it, assuming it’s worth it.
Of course, what began as a generally male-focused enterprise has, with more and more frequency, been co-opted by women—mirroring both the rise of girl skaters and youth culture’s impressively genderless approach to dressing and living. (The recent surfeit of off-duty models posting Instagrams of themselves lounging, living, and partying in Supreme has only added fuel to the fire.)
“My thing has always been that the clothing we make is kind of like music,” Jebbia says. “There are always critics that don’t understand that young people can be into Bob Dylan but also into the Wu-Tang Clan and Coltrane and Social Distortion. Young people—and skaters—are very, very open-minded . . . to music, to art, to many things, and that allowed us to make things with an open mind.”
Recently the fashion world has been waking up to Supreme. In the past decade, the company has opened stores in Tokyo, London, and Paris, while the passionate devotion of their customers has brought it into the conversation with both teenagers at skateboard parks and the front rows of high fashion—with Paris in particular swooning over Supreme’s collaboration this fall with Louis Vuitton. Jebbia loved working with Kim Jones, Vuitton’s menswear designer, to make skateboard trunks and backpacks, bandannas and gloves, shirts and jackets. The feeling was mutual.
“When you see the lines for Supreme in New York or London,” says Jones, “you see so many different types of people, and they are people you can relate to—they understand high-low, they’re smart, they’re intelligent, and they’re humorous. They know what they want, and they are very loyal—and a customer who is loyal is a real aspiration for anybody with a brand.”
The Vuitton collaboration was also, for many in fashion, their first glimpse into the secretive world of Supreme, which has become a kind of shorthand for authenticity, immediacy, speed, and deftness in its way of doing business. More than just selling sweats and tees and hats, the brand brings out a new collection two times a year, like any fashion company—generally, an online look-book, followed by a few pieces dropped every Thursday, each item available both online and in the stores. A Supreme drop, for those who haven’t experienced it, is an event. “We can have a leather jacket for $1,500, and if it’s a good value, young people will understand that,” Jebbia says. “But we also want to have the feeling that this won’t be here in a month. When I grew up, I think everybody felt that way. It’s like, If I love this, it may not be here, so I should buy it.”
If Jebbia was anxious to get press when he started, now he worries about overexposure. Supreme keeps advertising to a minimum and works with people like Sage Elsesser, the pro skater, who models for its look-book. Elsesser is the kind of person marketers think of as an influential outsider but whom customers see as just a cool skater. “Supreme is family-oriented, and that matters most to me,” says Elsesser. Supremeheads understand the nuances of marketing nonsense; their nose, both for corporations pretending to be human and for brands trying to throw themselves at potential customers, is highly refined, a reason Supreme uses social media primarily as an exhibit space. “We’re not trying to overconnect ourselves,” Jebbia says. “We’re just trying to show people things that we do—no different from what a magazine did 20 years ago.” (They published six issues of their own magazine before developing their website around 2006.)
Founder James Jebbia at the Supreme office in SoHo. Photographed by Anton Corbijn, Vogue, September 2017
Nothing about Supreme was planned in advance, its success a coincidence of place, time, and hard work. By the time he was nineteen, Jebbia had left England and was a sales assistant at a SoHo store called Parachute. From there, he worked a table at the nearby flea market, then founded a store, Union, on Spring Street that sold British goods and streetwear. Union did well enough until it began to sell clothing designed by Shawn Stüssy, the skateboarder and surfer, at which point it did great. Next, Jebbia helped run a shop with Stüssy until Stüssy decided to retire. “Now what the hell am I going to do?” he recalls asking himself.
“I always really liked what was coming out of the skate world,” Jebbia says. “It was less commercial—it had more edge and more fuck-you type stuff.” So he decided to open his own skate shop on Lafayette Street. Lafayette was then a relatively quiet strip of antiques stores, a firehouse, and a machinist, but also a Keith Haring shop—a downtown art-scene connection that, in hindsight, was key. Jebbia built a spare space (the very notions of spare and clean soon becoming Supreme trademarks), then brought in good skateboards, cranked the music, and played videos constantly—wildly disparate things like Muhammad Ali fight videos and Taxi Driver—to draw onlookers.
The kids he employed, often skateboarders themselves, were cool, opinionated—and, yes, often scowling at the uncool—but allowed outsiders a view into their clique. The very first employees were extras in Larry Clark’s film Kids, written by Harmony Korine, who lived in the neighborhood and recalls Supreme as less of a store, more of a hang—though within a year, designers from uptown as well as Europe and Japan were paying attention. “They were easy adapters to a kind of dissonance, where you have several things at different points on the cultural spectrum that are all connected by a kind of aesthetic or vibe,” says Korine. Supreme started a magazine featuring the faces of the young downtown scene—Chloë Sevigny, Ryan McGinley, Mark Gonzales—a mix of models, artists, skaters. “James tapped into a secret sauce,” Korine continues, “and they’ve kept strong because youth propels the culture, and they are always on the side of the youth. You can’t fake that.”
Initially, Supreme made only a few T-shirts. Then their customers arrived wearing Carhartt matched with Vuitton, Gucci with Levi’s. Soon Supreme tried a cotton hoodie, realizing that if it was simply made a little better than what was out there, skaters would be willing to pay a little more for it. According to Jebbia, this sort of thinking isn’t unique to skate culture. “Gucci is saying, ‘Hey—just because you’re young doesn’t mean you won’t love this $800 sweatshirt,’” he says. Jebbia can’t say enough about designers who respect young buyers rather than simply use them to attract press. The genius of Alessandro Michele, Gucci’s creative director, as he sees it, is that he doesn’t just show young people wearing pieces on the runway; he hopes they’ll actually wear them as they go about their lives. “He’s creating exciting products for right now—today,” Jebbia says.
The hoodies worked, as did the fitted caps they tried next. Collaborations came early on, with artists making work for skateboard decks, as well as for T-shirts and other clothing. The painter Lucien Smith credits Supreme’s intimacy. “A lot of people don’t understand that this is a supersmall group of people who are just working on that original idea—that it is a skate shop,” he says.
The list of artists who have worked with Supreme over the last two decades could fill a gallery space: Christopher Wool, Jeff Koons, Mark Flood, Nate Lowman, John Baldessari, Damien Hirst—even Neil Young. But the collaboration that changed everything was the line of tees, shoes, and shirts produced with Comme des Garçons, in 2012. “I think that opened a lot of doors, a lot of eyes,” Jebbia says. “I have never met anyone with such a strong, single-minded vision who has always stayed close to his sense of values,” says Adrian Joffe, president of Comme des Garçons and Rei Kawakubo’s husband. “That’s why our collaboration was so meaningful—and why the growth of Supreme has in a way mirrored our own.”
Spend some time with Jebbia and you get to know his own favorite brands, which include well-known names like Patagonia along with a few you are not likely to have heard of, like Antihero, a skateboard company. “They’re very below the radar,” he says, “but they are very pure in what they do—I hold them in as much esteem as I do Chanel or Vuitton.”
I think a lot of brands reach a point where they say, We kind of have a formula—we’ve got it made,” he says. “Our formula is there’s no formula.” He mentions his wife, Bianca, who grew up in Elm­hurst, Queens, in a Chilean family and raises their children at their apartment in Lower Manhattan. “She’ll shop at Prada, she’ll shop at Chanel—and then she’ll shop at Uniqlo and she’ll wear something from Supreme,” Jebbia says. “And it’s not ‘Look at me dumbing this stuff down.’ She’s just wearing what she likes, and I think that people are more like that now.”
On one recent morning in his office, Jebbia stepped up from his desk and went out for coffee, passing through the studio from which the new Supreme motorized street bike was about to drop, the latest in the seemingly infinite collaborations—this one with Coleman. The space is big and open and white-walled and has the feeling of a workshop. The office staff—an industrious, no-frills team of about 40—is dressed elegantly but practically as they prepare to release their new Comme des Garçons Nike Air Force 1s, the long lines on Lafayette Street still a day or two from forming.
Out on the street, he offered a tour through his own history. “Parachute was there,” he says, “and Comme des Garçons had a store there. . . .” He pointed up. “I love that Alex Katz lives up there,” he says. “People can talk shit about the neighborhood, but I really think it’s one of the most vibrant places in the world.”
Jebbia doesn’t have a title. “My wife keeps saying I should just call myself founder, but I don’t know,” he says. “ ‘Just tell em I run a skate shop’ is how I usually put it. But I guess I kind of direct things.” He likes to stay out of categories, to be free of market demands. Growth, for instance, is something he is focused on, but at the Supreme pace: slow, but quick enough to satisfy customer demand. “We don’t want people to think we are a tricky, hard-to-get brand,” he says. “We can only do so many things,” he says. “The hat factory we use can only make so many hats.” Jebbia is also wary of anything that will raise his overhead or put his ability to take risks at risk. “We’re making stuff we’re proud of,” he says, “not doing stuff to stay alive. I don’t think enough people take risks, and when you do, people respond—in music, in art, in fashion.”
As we walk, Jebbia is greeted by people from the neighborhood, and when at last we sit he seems to almost relax for a minute talking about his weekends—which are, he stresses, decidedly unglamorous. “The kids have a lot of homework,” he says, “and I actually like not having any plans.” As with his stores, he likes to keep life clean and simple—dinner with his wife and kids, and maybe a weekend visit to MoMA. “I don’t have this lavish lifestyle,” he says, “so I don’t have this massive overhead.”
And with that, he’s back to being wary. “I’ve seen brands get comfortable,” he says, “but I’ve never felt comfortable. I’ve always felt every season could be our last.”
In this story:
Sittings Editor: Sara Moonves. Hair: Tamara McNaughton; Makeup: Romy Soleimani. Production: Patrick Van Maanen for Moxie Productions.
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vogue
Supreme, From Cult Skate Shop to Fashion Superpower
James Jebbia, the man who, in 1994, founded and to this day runs the SoHo-based company that has been making clothing and skateboards and a lot of other things that the people who love it absolutely have to have, doesn’t think of Supreme the way most people in fashion might—as a brand that started out in a small store on Lafayette Street and has since inched its way to legendary global status.
Supreme, From Cult Skate Shop to Fashion Superpower James Jebbia, the man who, in 1994, founded and to this day runs the SoHo-based company that has been making clothing and skateboards and a lot of other things that the people who love it absolutely have to have, doesn’t think of Supreme the way most people in fashion might—as a brand that started out in a small store on Lafayette Street and has since inched its way to legendary global status.
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* Gli angeli vennero a cercarla la trovarono al mio fianco, lì dove le sue ali l’avevano guidata. Gli angeli vennero per portarla via. Aveva lasciato la loro casa, il loro giorno più chiaro ed era venuta ad abitare presso di me. Mi amava perché l’amore ama solo le cose imperfette. Gli angeli vennero dall’alto e la portarono via da me. Se la portarono via per sempre tra le ali luminose. È vero che era la loro sorella e così vicina a Dio come loro. Ma mi amava perché il mio cuore non aveva una sorella. Se la portarono via, ed è tutto quel che accadde. Fernando Pessoa Sienna Miller by Ryan McGinley
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moviesandmania · 4 years
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A Bad Place - USA, 2020 - preview
A Bad Place – USA, 2020 – preview
A Bad Place is a 2020 American horror feature film about three female strangers evading a shadowy force and their own grim pasts. The trio tries to find a way beyond a nightmare world that exists in a foggy edge of reality…
Written, directed by and starring ‘Scream Queen’ Jessica Cameron (Mania; Truth or Dare) the movie also stars Heather Dorff (Red Eye; The Curse of Buckout Road; Scary Story…
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leanpick · 5 years
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Rory McIlroy to play 2019 BMW PGA Championship at Wentworth | Golf News
Rory McIlroy to play 2019 BMW PGA Championship at Wentworth | Golf News
By Ali Stafford
Last Updated: 29/07/19 5:55pm
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Nick Dougherty, Paul McGinley and Luke Donald review the key moments from the final round of the 2018 BMW PGA Championship
Nick Dougherty, Paul McGinley and Luke Donald…
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