hello steven colbert i know you are on this website. please please mention gorchakov on your show. please present it as a real film and show 'proof' before revealing its made up. i beg of you.
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Who here has seen the masterpiece that is this forbidden film made by god himself called Goncharov? I have witnessed its beauty only once as of yet but I was speechless by how much of a feminist role model for independent women the wonderful goddess Katya is, the way she stabbed the man with so much power and then left him for ice pick joe to finish off was so beautifully written and shot. the way that ice pick joe said "me amour, the apple of my eye." before taking Gorchakov's eye out was utterly breathtaking. going from bright saturated colors shown in movies like Pearl to old-school noir color schemes, you must admit how brave the directors were, but it came out a cinematic masterpiece that no movie can outmatch. I thank the heavens and hell for allowing me to see this piece. for now, I am cursed with never experiencing such a movie again. it was utterly life-changing and urge all whom read my text to witness this ungodly cinema and to never blink whilst doing so, as for not to miss a second of the best movie to grace your conscience.
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Nikolay Bogdanov-Belsky (Russian, 1868-1945)
Portrait of Prince Konstantin A. Gorchakov, c.late 19th-20th century
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Azariy Gorchakov
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Николай Богданов-Бельский (1903) by Nikolay Bogdanov-Belsky
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Friendly reminder that this quote exists, and it was said by Prince Alexander Gorchakov to the US Ambassador in St. Petersburg during the American Civil War:
“Your country had just come into being when the Russians stood at your bedside like guardian angels during the first President of Washington. We don’t need the Northern or Southern states - only the United States of America will suit us.”
For those who do not understand why we say RusAme is a love-hate relationship. Yup, the love part is (was) pretty real.
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🎨 Azarily Gorchakov
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Shh, Listen
Hand-fed sugary solace
lay me nude
side by side
with the familiarity of a stance
uttering mortal devotion.
Reckless I say,
endless we do
devouring fate's saccharine dose
a hearty feast
bound to be shared_ irretrievable:
Fantasize not that what we regret
and even then shall my temple be condemned;
amethyst walls speak
whispered secrets,
noir sagas embellished with golden moons
revealing
tantric tales suited only for the bold
coveting
bodies
salivating to peak …
yet you still can not hear
trebles splashed dribbles
nails scraped paint-bearing fingertips
silhouettes stalking electric gestures
when in reality
our mind is nowhere near.
Upside down
backward
betwixt bones and breath
courting ambiance blew above
below
not to be only felt against skin
when my soul willingly seeks
attained knowledge
to accomplish living life
all over again,
expressions scrawled
manifested bent knees
wallowing
rhythmically;
it was destiny
that seeped beyond barriers
climbing
out of the darkness
basking in light
wide open
sprawled.
Walata M.
Artwork from Pinterest~ artist Azariy Gorchakov
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Uploaded by Azariy Gorchakov
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Azariy Gorchakov
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So last night before bed I casually mentioned to my man "oh! It's the one year since Gorchakov" except I said "gore-char-ahvo" and he just looked at me and was like wtf are you talking about. "you know? The movie?" and I could see the light in his eyes die as the gears clicked into place and he asked me "please tell me you're fucking with me. You. HOW. can you look at a Russian word and pronounce it like it's Spanish?" (the v on the end is silent yes? Like French does? Made his eye twitch I stg)
And then he spent 30 minutes trying to get me to say it right and I kept failing. He's not entirely convinced I'm not fucking with him.
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President Vladimir Putin visited Columbia University, where he answered questions from students and professors for an hour and a half on September 26, 2003, in New York.
The Russian leader urged those present to give up the concept of “Sovietology”. The inertia of old approaches is tenacious, the President said. The world has changed dramatically, the Soviet Union no longer exists, but still Sovietology survives.
That statement was not fortuitous: several centres at Columbia University study Russian history, politics, the Russian language and literature. About 500 students majoring in various subjects deal with Russian problems and many of them will shape Washington’s policy towards Moscow in the future.
After the speech President Putin answered a host of questions, about one-third of which were asked in Russian. The questions were about AIDS, the characteristics of the Russian language and even Vladimir Putin’s own speech, and various international problems.
After meeting with the students, Mr Putin took a short tour of the university. He looked at the Bakhmetyev Archive, one of the largest collections of Russian documents abroad. The President was given a copy of one of Leo Tolstoy’s letters. President Putin gave the archive a copy of a letter from Russian Foreign Minister Prince Gorchakov to the Russian envoy to the US regarding the Russian position on the American Civil War. The President also gave the archive a copy of Tsar Alexander I’s decree of 1808 appointing Andrei Dashkov (1775–1831) the first Russian Consul-General and charge d’affaires to the US.
President Putin also watched a baseball game between the Russian and American children’s teams.
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By Azariy Gorchakov
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Azariy Gorchakov
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