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#winston wickham
butterfrogmantis · 1 year
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You got a fast car I want a ticket to anywhere Maybe we make a deal Maybe together we can get somewhere Any place is better Starting from zero got nothing to lose Maybe we'll make something Me, myself, I got nothing to prove
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Working on more Sodor Rehydrated refs + a ... certain headcanon I’ve been sitting on since my original fandom days, but I was too cowardly to listen to my instinct. Not anymore haha.
Ace and Winston (c) TTTE / Thomas The Tank Engine And Friends
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lavenderrosiefan · 3 months
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Here's James! (This is how he looked before Thomas' departure)
Age:  12
Height:  5'10''
Weight:  155 lbs
Hair Color: Black
Eye Color: Red
Birthplace: Atherton, Greater Manchester, England
Attire: School (autumn and winter):     -Black and red blazer     -Black shirt     -Red, orange, and black tie     -Black pants     -Black socks     -Black shoes School (spring and summer):      -Black shirt     -Red, orange, and black tie     -Black pants     -Black socks     -Black shoes Casual:     -Black shirt     -Blue jeans     -Black socks     -Black and red sneakers Formal:     -White shirt     -Black blazer     -Black pants     -Black socks     -Black and red shoes     -Black bowtie
Relatives: Steven Hughes (father) Ashley Hughes (mother) Winston 'Eagle' Hughes (older brother, deceased) Janice Hughes (older sister)
Voiced by: Keith Wickham (UK) Kerry Shale (US)
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ava-candide · 5 years
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Here’s your problem. You are in charge of Poldark, one of the UK’s most successful TV series of the past five years. A huge hit in the US, the show made its leads, Aidan Turner and Eleanor Tomlinson, stars overnight. Last year’s fourth series was watched by 6m UK viewers at the height of a World Cup summer. (The final series of Game of Thrones, by comparison, reached just 3.39m viewers, and most soaps average 5m.) The series is based on 12 hugely popular books, of which you have adapted just seven. So there are five further novels to plunder. But...
“The first seven books are set in the 18th century and finish at the end of 1799,” explains the writer Debbie Horsfield, whose problem this actually is. “But then Winston Graham stopped writing — and when he came back for book eight, The Stranger from the Sea, he left an 11-year gap in the story and changed almost everything. We leave Ross in series four a frustrated MP. When we meet him in book eight, he’s basically a spy for the British government. Dwight [Enys, the doctor] is helping George III with his madness. Graham doesn’t really explain how any of this happened.”
None of this would matter if the latest TV adaptation of the books, like the 1975 version, simply gave up at the end of the first seven. There is, however, an informal agreement between cast and creative team that — if everyone is still around and available in 10 years — they will reunite to finish the final novels. “There’s nothing on paper, but everybody has said yes,” Horsfield says. “Why wouldn’t we?”
So she set about trying to fill in that 11-year gap for the fifth and perhaps final series, and turned, as the show has often done, to the ferociously radical politics of the time. There she found a real-life Ross Poldark in the shape of a radical war hero who had married one of his servants — Colonel Edward “Ned” Despard. (It’s tempting to say that desperate times call for Despard measures.)
“The parallels between him and Ross are quite astonishing,” Horsfield says. “They were both military men — Despard was a hero of the American Revolutionary War and his wife, Kitty, was originally a Jamaican servant in his kitchen. I asked Andrew Graham whether his father had based Ross on Ned, but he hadn’t heard of him. Despard’s history doesn’t end well, so it seemed that he could become the ‘There but for the grace of God’ figure for Ross.”
Vincent Regan, who knows how to buckle a swash, with roles in the BBC’s The Musketeers, Troy, 300 and Clash of the Titans, brings a rugged determination to the role. He roars his way through the first two episodes like a force of nature, and in this Horsfield has stayed true to the real-life Ned. After the American Revolutionary War, he was made superintendent of what became Belize, until he fell in love with Catherine (Kitty) and set out to give freed slaves the same rights as white settlers. This did not go down well in London — Despard was recalled and jailed. When he was released, he joined the London Corresponding Society, a radical organisation inspired by Thomas Paine’s Rights of Man, and agitated for the end of slavery.
“Ross was clearly an abolitionist, and there has always been a political thread running through Graham’s books,” Horsfield notes. “Period dramas shouldn’t be clean, neat and tidy — they should matter as much as contemporary stories.” To illustrate this, she sketches out what seems at first an improbably modern storyline: Luke Norris’s character, Dwight, the troubled Royal Navy doctor, develops a form of PTSD treatment for the villainous George Warleggan, played with chilling power in this series as a man driven literally mad with grief at the loss of his wife, Elizabeth.
“Graham mentions in passing in book eight that Dwight went to France to study with a Dr Pinel,” Norris says. “He was a real historical figure who pioneered humane ways of dealing with mental health issues, at a time when we locked people in Bedlam, plunged them into icy water, whipped them, beat them, locked them in cages, sedated them and purged them to rid them of demons or animal spirits.”
“It made sense,” Horsfield adds. “By book eight, Dwight has become the go-to expert on mental health, being called in to consult over George III.”
We forget there was a strong possibility of an English revolution at that time. There were serious food shortages and measures to suppress any kind of dissent, including trade unions. “The beauty of the novels is that the dashing Byronic hero makes thrilling drama out of the dullest school history lessons,” Horsfield says. “Ross opposes the greed of bankers and wealthy industrialists, so it made sense for him to have served with Ned, and for Ross and Demelza to be caught up in the story of Ned and Kitty.”
The idea of a radical mixed-race couple cutting a swathe through London at that time is almost certain to incite adverse comment. In fact, there were black Londoners in Roman times, the first settled black community in the capital was in the Elizabethan era, and by the time Despard was recalled to England, about 2% of London’s population was black.
It’s also true that in the early 19th century, the British secret service was headed by William Wickham, a civil servant busy infiltrating radical groups such as the London Corresponding Society. By gradual steps, Horsfield leads Ross and Demelza through the first two years of the missing 11, gradually wrapping Ross in the plots and skulduggery of political espionage.
For Turner, the arrival of Poldark’s old commanding officer provided a couple of welcome changes. “It was nice that Ross finally had a friend,” he says with a grin. “I got on great with Vince — he was an English actor doing an Irish accent, and I’m an Irish actor doing an English accent, so we do good impressions of each other.
“And it felt like there was a lot more action in the series, with Debbie given free rein. There’s much more sword-fighting, that’s for sure. We’ve had pistols, riding and swimming in previous seasons, but you can’t beat fighting with real steel swords. You can’t fool around with them. You just have to commit and go for it, and hope everything will be fine.”
Turner famously does his own stunts, except in the scenes where Poldark gallops along the cliffs. “For insurance reasons,” he points out hastily. “But they put me on a horse on the first day of shooting, back when I was such a young and innocent man. I was pretty nervous, I was on a horse and Debbie says I was quite fierce...” He pauses. “But I think I was a little bit nicer than that.”
He will miss the show, he admits. “We had pretty much the same crew for the entire job, so it was like a proper family, and I’ll miss everyone a lot. You hope to keep in touch — you tend to with the actors, but not so much with the crew.”
Perhaps unsurprisingly, Turner found his final day of shooting very emotional. “It’s always been amazing working alongside Eleanor, we get on great, and the last day was just the two of us doing some bedroom scenes,” he recalls. “That was quite lovely, and it seemed to make sense that it was just the two of us. It was poignant to leave things there.”
Leave them there? What about the talk of reuniting in 10 years? “I wouldn’t rule it out,” he says, then tacks a little to the left. “I mean, I wouldn’t rule anything out. That’s for other people to decide. It depends if it’s something the audience wants to see.”
Horsfield can’t see why the audience would have changed by then. “When I started this adaptation, people were asking how I was going to make it relevant for now,” she says. “But you don’t need to update it, because the concerns of the time and the concerns of Winston Graham are still the concerns we have now.
“Things actually don’t change. We all want to find a sense of community and not be exploited. That Europe, surveillance, terrorism and immigration are still hot topics may be a shame, but it’s really no surprise.
“If we are to come back in 10 years, dealing with mental health and continental politics — I mean, you’d be crazy to say that they won’t be hot topics in 2030. Constant conflict around the same ideas may be depressing for me as a person, but as a drama writer, it makes my job a whole lot easier.”
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gothic-suggestion · 5 years
Conversation
Classic literature characters mood board
Alice in Wonderland:
Alice: “wtf is wrong with adults”
Sherlock Holmes Series:
Holmes: *intense deduction*, “why is everyone stupid”, “this world is boring af let me do drugs”
Watson: ”no do not do the drugs”, *duck lips*, “am an innocent angel that deserves nothing bad in life ever”
Moriarty: “this bitch Holmes i swear-”, “i pushed Holmes off a cliff but he didn’t fucking die i did”
Brave New World:
John: “god please block all these sinful bitches”, “where the FUCK IS THE HOLY WATER”, *quotes Shakespeare every 10 minutes*
Bernard: “omg i’m a huge nerd”, “why does nobody understand my hermit life? :(“
Helmholtz: “am an innocent angel that deserves nothing bad in life ever”, ”omg Bernard’s a huge nerd”
Lenina: “my hobby is to get naked”
Mustapha: "why are there so many fucking idiots", "oh yeah i chose to live with them"
1984:
Winston: “onii-chan~~”, *PTSD flashbacks about rats*
Great Gatsby:
Daisy: “i like hitting people with my car”
Gatsby: “i am poor sad boy who mysteriously accumulated wealth”, “also i want Daisy to step on me”
Great Expectations:
Pip: “i am poor sad boy who mysteriously accumulated wealth”, “also i want Estella to step on me”
Wuthering Heights:
Heathcliff: “i am poor sad boy who mysteriously accumulated wealth”, “also i want Catherine to step on me”
Catherine 1: “holy fuck how can anyone ever not love me? I’m perfect”
Edgar: “am an innocent angel that deserves nothing bad in life ever”
Catherine 2: “am an innocent angel that deserves nothing bad in life ever”
Linton: "oh shit oh no the British sunlight gave me skin cancer"
Nelly: “1000% done with your melodramatic bullshits”
Metamorphosis:
Gregor: “am an innocent angel that deserves nothing bad in life ever”
Pride and Prejudice:
Darcy: “i’m pretty good at flirting with girls i talk shit about their family and personality”
Elizabeth: “marry you, the guy who sucks his own dick?”, "elizabeth: stop fucking judge people. elizabeth: nay."
Wickham: “hello friend do you have a few coins”, “why am i always short on money :(“
Hamlet:
Hamlet: “you’re not mY DAD”, “mommy, i have issues. Now can you stop fucking uncle”
Horatio: “am an innocent angel that deserves nothing bad in life ever”
Yorick: *is dead*
Ophelia: “holy shit is that fucking water”
Claudius: "here is the backup of the backup of the backup plan, since i'm anxious that the backup of the backup plan is gonna fail"
Fortinbras: "this is the best free real estate i've ever gotten in my life"
Beowulf:
Beowulf: “i may look like your average strongest, buffest man in the world but deep down i am just your average strongest, buffest man in the world”
Wiglaf: “am an innocent angel that deserves nothing bad in life ever”
Phantom of the Opera:
Erik: “you thought i am ghost but nah i’m just an ugly creepy dude living in the basement of an opera house”
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thelonelybrilliance · 6 years
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Concept:
Lupita Nyong’o as Elizabeth Bennett
Kerry Washington as Jane Bennett
Keke Palmer as Lydia Bennett
Winston Duke as Fitzwilliam Darcy
John Boyega as Charles Bingley
Gugu Mbatha-Raw as Georgiana Darcy
Susan Kelechi-Watson as Charlotte Lucas
Michael B. Jordan as George Wickham
Daveed Diggs as Colonel Fitzwilliam
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sheniq · 4 years
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RICHMOND, Va. -- Fifteen people arrested at a sit-in protest in the Huguenot neighborhood late Thursday night, according to Richmond Police. The demonstration was outside of Richmond Commonwealth's Attorney Colette McEachin's home, protesters and police sources told CBS 6. Police arrested 11 people for picketing, one for obstructing justice, two for assaulting a law enforcement officer, and one for trespassing. "Benjamin Madlinger, 25, of Mechanicsville, was arrested for trespassing (Class 1 misdemeanor) after running to the backyard of a residence as officers were making arrests," according to a Richmond Police spokesperson. "Madlinger was also charged with picketing." Dometrius Holden, 23, of Winston-Salem, North Carolina, and Gabrielle Heinlein, 27, of Pembroke, Virginia were arrested for assaulting a law enforcement officer (Class 6 felony), according to Richmond Police. One officer was treated and released from the hospital with an undisclosed injury, according to police. No information was released on how the officer was injured. McEachin released a statement to CBS 6 Friday afternoon. "As a potential witness, I cannot comment on last night’s activities specifically," said McEachin. "The Richmond Commonwealth’s Attorney's Office does not respond to demands from individuals or groups. Our duty is to respond to the law and facts of each case." Richmond Police tweeted out a timeline of events and said that no unlawful assembly declaration was made during the demonstration. A spokesperson for the police department said the people arrested for picketing and obstructing justice were released on a summons. "At approximately 10:25 p.m., RPD first announced that protesters were violating § 18.2-419 (Picketing or disrupting the tranquility of a home)," a Richmond Police spokesperson wrote in an email. "More than a dozen of those announcements were made via loud speaker over the next 20 minutes, giving protesters ample time to leave without being arrested." The 11 people charged with picketing (Class 3 misdemeanor) were identified as: Henry Wickham, 28, of Richmond Harrison Sellers, 22, of Chesapeake Julia Seliavski, 22, of Henrico Melanie Bartell, 28, of https://www.instagram.com/p/CB6OJq2H0E7/?igshid=uvy4ennvc4za
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thechasefiles · 5 years
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The Chase Files Daily Newscap 13/10/2019
Good Morning #realdreamchasers. Here is your daily news cap for Sunday, October 13th, 2019. There is a lot to read and digest so take your time. Remember you can read full articles via Barbados Government Information Service (BGIS), Barbados Today (BT), or by purchasing a Sunday Sun Nation Newspaper (SS).
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BODY OF STABBING VICTIM DISCOVERED IN CEMETERY – Police are at Westbury Cemetery, Westbury Road, St Michael investigating the discovery of a man’s body with stab wounds.  Lawmen said they received a report about 6:15 a.m. that a body was noticed in the cemetery with stabs wounds. Police are treating it as an unnatural death and their investigations are ongoing. (SS)
MAN DIES AFTER BEING SHOT – A St. Michael man is dead following a shooting incident at Golden Rock, The Pine last night. Lawmen say, 44-year-old Keron Anthony Hodge of #92 Midway Lane, Pinelands, St Michael was liming with other persons when a group of men passed by and opened fire about 11:45 p.m. last night.  Hodge received gunshot wounds to his chest area and was transported by private vehicle to the Queen Elizabeth Hospital for medical attention. He later succumbed to his injuries and was pronounced dead by medical personnel just after 12:00a.m. this morning. (SS)
UPDATE: MASS CASUALTY ACCIDENT ON BELMONT ROAD – Emergency personnel were called into action last night to respond to an accident which resulted in 13 people being injured. A minibus and a car were involved in the accident which occurred about 7:20 p.m. along Belmont Road, St. Michael.  The minibus (B101) owned by Motor Haven, Black Rock, St Michael and was driven by 46-year-old Terry Hunte of Sealy Hall, St Philip and the car was driven by 42-year-old Terry Forde of Inch Marlow, Christ Church. The driver of the car and two of his passengers were transported to the Queen Elizabeth Hospital for treatment. While the driver of the minibus and nine of his passengers were treated at the scene and discharged. None of the injuries were life-threatening. The minibus was moderately damaged while the car was extensively damaged. Police said the car was travelling west towards the city while the minibus was travelling in the opposite direction the exact reason for the crash has not yet been determined. (SS)
PORT OFFICIALS RESPOND TO SOCIAL MEDIA VIDEO ALLEGING THEFT – Barbados Port Inc (BPI) says it has been made aware of a video circulating on social media platforms, which shows people removing wheels from vehicles amidst a backdrop of cargo containers. “This is not a local video, but more importantly does not depict the plant of the Port of Bridgetown,” BPI said in a statement on Saturday. “Be advised that all BPI employees wear the required company branded uniforms and personal protective equipment (PPE) while in Port and on duty.” BPI is assuring all importers that it remains committed to the highest standards of service and security protocols at all levels of our operation. (BT)
HOPEFULS TO FACE-OFF TODAY – Whoever wins the Barbados Labour Party’s (BLP) St Michael West nomination this evening will likely be the next representative for that constituency after the next general elections, says political pollster Peter Wickham. He said it is to the credit of the BLP that they have been able to attract two quality candidates in Steven Leslie and Chris Gibbs, as both are young and intelligent and can bring an energy to the representation of a demanding urban constituency. Leslie, Director of Cricket at the Barbados Cricket Association, and Gibbs, an engineer and businessman, face-off for the nomination at the St Leonard’s Boys School, Richmond Gap at 4 p.m. The nomination is to replace Bishop Joseph Atherley as the ruling party’s representative in St Michael West after he parted company with the BLP to become Leader of the Opposition. (SS)
SHORTER WAIT FOR LIQUOR LICENSES – If changes to the Liquor Licence Act are approved, applicants will have to wait only a week to know if they are successful.  Currently it can take up to four months for people to receive their licences, and Minister of Small Business, Entrepreneurship and Commerce Dwight Sutherland expressed concern about this situation.  “To have you apply for a liquor licence, to sell liquor, which is a commercial activity that drives the economy, and for you to take three and four months . . .  you apply and it goes to the police, magistrate and it goes back to the police. “When we did our mapping, we found some 1 000 liquor licences sitting down in the Holetown Court waiting to be approved, and when we dug further – and this is no fault of the clerk – we recognised the clerks were the ones approving those applications and not the magistrates, and that is a cause for concern,” Sutherland said. He was speaking at the Lloyd Erskine Sandiford Centre on Friday during a second national stakeholders consultation that was attended by Government officials, members of the private sector and officials from the National Council on Substance Abuse.  The Liquor Licence Act has been in effect since 1957 and, for at least the past 20 years, both administrations have tried to make changes to the act. If the amendments are made, a Liquor Licensing Authority will police the legislation. “So with the repeal and replacement you have the process moving from some three months to some seven days and it will be done on a digital platform so you can apply online via credit card.  “If you don’t have a credit card, we have set up the facility at the Post Offices throughout Barbados so you can pay. Once you can pay, you journey to the Ministry of Small Business, we have an arm called the Liquor Licensing Authority and I’m speaking assuming the legislation will come to books,” Sutherland said. (SS)
CALL FOR CLEAR POLICY ON WIFI IN SCHOOLS – A philanthropist is calling on the Ministry of Education to set clearly defined rules on the use of WiFi and electronic devices in schools. Founder of the Aron and Christina Truss Foundation, Aron Truss, made the call, noting that without it, innovation in schools could be hindered. “As far as we are aware, there still aren’t official policies on the use of devices in the classroom, or WiFi in schools, so schools can’t really push forward with technology and innovation until those things are dealt with. “So we’d really encourage the ministry to get on with it so that other projects like ours can start to take place in education,” he said. (SS)
ACE PROGRAMME HELPING BOYS AT ST LEONARD’S – It has only been five weeks but the Sandy Lane Charitable Trust/St Leonard’s Boys’ Alternative Curriculum & Entrepreneurship Programme is already reaping success. The programme is the brainchild of former Third Form Year Head, Winston Cumberbatch, who realized that some of the boys were going down the wrong path when they reached Third Form. To illustrate the problem, Cumberbatch disclosed that this year, 30 students were repeating Third form “for very poor academic performance due to general weakness, little effort and/or indiscipline”. He was speaking Thursday at the official launch of the SLCT/SLB’s Alternative Curriculum and Entrepreneurship Programme at the Richmond Gap, St Michael school. Cumberbatch, who is now the First Form Year Head, told the audience of parents, students and members of the stakeholder organizations that he recommended to the Principal that an additional Third Form be created for those boys. The curriculum, while offering a reduced number of academic subjects, has been enhanced with developmental and vocational subjects. The central focus, however, is business and entrepreneurship, he stated. The subjects include: English, Mathematics, Integrated Science, Social Studies, Principles of Accounts, Caribbean Vocational Qualifications, Reading, Home and Family Life Education, Business Craft and Life Skills, which will be taught by the Mentorship with Love organization. Cumberbatch reported that since the programme started this term, the boys have attended all of the classes and have shown enthusiasm towards the new curriculum. Previously, he noted, they were skipping classes and displaying a general lack of interest. Parents have also been reporting improvements in the attitudes of their sons. The Year Head said even the teachers were excited about the new programme. (BT)
MORE PRIZE MONEY FOR NIFCA – Greater rewards are in store for Barbados’ most talented through the National Independence Festival of Creative Arts (NIFCA). Chief executive officer of the National Cultural Foundation (NCF) Carol Roberts-Reifer revealed yesterday that prize monies for all of the awards have increased, new award categories were being introduced, and competitors would also be able to gain developmental opportunities. Deeming the changes as an upgrade to the festival which will take effect from this year, Roberts-Reifer said the team was making adjustments based on the pleas of the general public and past NIFCA participants. “It was time to do an assessment of the festival, retain the excellence and take on board comments made by sponsors, the general public and from current and past participants,” she said. (SS)
SUKI WINS ONE, LOSES ONE – Former world champion Ronald “Suki” King was like a foreigner in his homeland yesterday during his World Three-Move Restriction draughts title match against reigning champion Sergio Scarpetta of Italy at the Usain Bolt Sports Complex. About a dozen supporters were on hand in the classroom setting for the morning session on a day dedicated to visionary educator Professor Sir Hilary Beckles of the University of the West Indies. King won the first game but lost the second to trail 3-1, as up to press time, neither of the two games in the evening session was completed. Trailing 0-2 overnight after the first eight games on Thursday and Friday, the wily King quickly reduced the deficit by winning the ninth game when play resumed on Day 3. (SS)
TRIDENTS LIFT CPL TROPHY WITH IMPRESSIVE VICTORY OVER WARRIORS – Barbados Tridents won their second Hero Caribbean Premier League (CPL) title as Guyana Amazon Warriors’ perfect season unravelled at the worst possible moment. The Warriors had won all 11 matches – including three against the Tridents – before the final, but came off second best in the face of an inspired performance from the Barbados outfit. After Jonathan Carter’s unbeaten 50 off 27 balls led a recovery from 108 for 6 in the 15th over to an imposing 171 for 6 from 20 overs, the Tridents bowled and fielded for their lives to defend the target by 27 runs, restricting the Warriors to 144 for 9 and break their hearts at the last.Raymon Reifer led the way with remarkable figures of four for 24 from his four overs. While the Tridents celebrate a well-deserved and comprehensive victory, the Warriors are left to reflect on a fifth Hero CPL final defeat in seven years. This will perhaps be the toughest to take of all given the flawless season that had preceded it. Chandrapaul Hemraj, apparently struggling with a hamstring injury, could have been run out twice before he was caught at short third-man off Reifer for just a single and things got worse for the Warriors when Shimron Hetmyer holed out to long-on for just nine to give Reifer a second wicket. Shoaib Malik then smashed a long-hop from leading 2019 Hero CPL wicket-taker Hayden Walsh Jr straight to Reifer on the midwicket boundary to leave his side in real trouble at 53 for three. When Brandon King yorked himself and was smartly stumped by Shai Hope off Ashley Nurse for 43, the game had swung decisively the Tridents’ way. Nicholas Pooran raced out of the blocks with two fours and a six, but Nurse and death-bowling specialist Harry Gurney strangled the life out of the Warriors’ run-chase. Just eight runs came from three overs after the loss of King, and it felt like something simply had to give as the required rate spiraled north of 14 per over. Pooran went after Nurse but only managed to pick out Alex Hales at long-on to leave the Warriors needing a miracle. Sherfane Rutherford hit back-to-back boundaries off Gurney but then failed in the daunting task of trying to clear Jason Holder at long-off. Reifer returned to take his third wicket when Romario Shepherd cue-ended a full, wide delivery through to Hope, and Keemo Paul’s 14-ball 25 was entertaining but futile. He, like Rutherford, fell to the hugely impressive Gurney having failed to get the ball over Holder. Reifer finished things off in the final over, having Chris Green caught behind for his fourth wicket and getting out of the over without any bother as the Tridents’ celebrations began. Hales and Johnson Charles had earlier got the Tridents innings off to a fine start before the England opener skied one high to midwicket where King steadied himself and made a tough catch look easy as Shepherd struck in his first over. Phil Salt, the England prospect who flew in at the last minute as an injury replacement for JP Duminy, fell soon after, given out caught behind attempting to pull a Ben Laughlin slower ball. Charles took up the charge and was absolutely flying when he became Imran Tahir’s 16th victim of the tournament. It was a wicket the Warriors desperately needed, Charles having plundered four fours and a six in his previous eight balls before Tahir’s extra bounce induced a top edge. The Tridents then wobbled for the only time in the match. Shai Hope was smartly caught by Hemraj at midwicket off Paul before the vastly experienced duo Jason Holder and Shakib Al Hasan were both run out in the space of three overs. (SS)
There are 81 days left in the year Shalom!  Follow us on Twitter, Facebook & Instagram for your daily news. #thechasefiles #dailynewscaps #bajannewscaps #newsinanutshell
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ramajmedia · 5 years
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10 Things In Historical Period Movies You Didn't Know Were CGI
When most of us think of CGI in films, we think its enhancing superhero capes as they fly through the air, or creating alien creatures in science fiction adventures. Most audiences don't expect it to appear in historical period films, where so much emphasis is placed on the story, actors, and props being as accurate as possible.
CGI in these particular films is used more often than you think, for every imaginable reason. Either because a certain historical item or location no longer exists, or because there's simply no other way to demonstrate the scale of a historical battle or environment. It's also used for enhancing environments, whether it's in 19th century Regency England or the '40s in Europe during WWII. Below you'll find 10 things in historical period films you didn't know were CGI.
10 LONGSHANK'S ARMIES & STAKES IN BRAVEHEART
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Despite Mel Gibson being a lot older than the real William Wallace at the time he portrayed him in Braveheart, as well as a few creative liberties taken with the breadth of Wallace's march on York, it still holds up as a great historical film. CGI was used to enhance it only where completely necessary so as not to take away from the authenticity.
CGI was used for long shots of Edward Longshank's armies as they line up before the initial battle, and while "an army" of extras were hired for the film, CGI was used to vastly multiply their numbers. When the horses were impaled on stakes in the battle, the stakes were CGI, while the horses were dummies.
9 THE ENVIRONMENTS IN PRIDE & PREJUDICE
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Joe Wright's 2005 version of Pride & Prejudice is one of many film versions of Jane Austen's classic piece of literature, but what sets it apart from the others is the enchanting beauty of its natural environments, from capturing the majesty of England's rolling hills, to the stately elegance of its manor homes and country houses.
Though most people think it's CGI-free because it's a period drama, you'd win a bet if you decided to prove them wrong. CGI was used to enhance the facades of many historical homes and remove modern-day anachronisms, and heighten lighting in natural environments. The scene where Lizzy is crying in her carriage about Lydia and Wickham was shot in the day but made to look like dusk.
8 CINDERELLA'S FEET
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When Disney's live-action Cinderella debuted, the dazzling CGI of the lavish historical environments wasn't the topic on everyone's lips. Audiences were debating on whether or not the star's svelte waistline had been altered using CGI to be even smaller than it would be while corseted.
RELATED: The 10 Best Disney Live-Action Movies Of All-Time, According To IMDB
Ironically, that wasn't where the CGI was used on the star! She never felt her feet were particularly attractive, and for the scene involving the glass slipper being placed on them, she was happy to have them digitally enhanced to be daintier and more slender.
7 SOLDIERS IN DUNKIRK
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Christopher Nolan takes great pride in using as little virtual effects as possible in his films. He prefers to use practical effects wherever possible, with CGI only used as enhancement. But even he couldn't get away with making a large scale film like Dunkirk without a little CGI boost.
RELATED: 10 Best World War II Movies, Ranked
In the scenes on the beach involving hundreds of stranded men, Nolan and his team used a time-honored tradition of using CGI to multiply certain extras by putting the same ones in a different position and replicating them. He had to do something to indicate there were 400,000 men stranded on that beach. Surprisingly, he only ever had three (real) spitfires in the sky, which didn't provide the same sense of scale.
6 COLISEUM CROWD IN GLADIATOR
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Gladiator was a historical period drama on an epic scale, drawing from real history and combining it with scintillating narrative enhancements to tell the story of one gladiator who defied his place and challenged an Empire. Some of the enhancements were through CGI, and they were done cleverly enough as to not pull focus from the grand storyline.
The Coliseum is well known to have been recreated using CGI wizardry, returning it to its glory in ancient times. But the crowd was also CGI as well beyond the Emperor's box, meaning Russell Crowe was addressing about 10 people max.
5 SOUTHAMPTON IN TITANIC
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Pioneering filmmaker James Cameron has always used the latest in digital technology to bring his cinematic visions to life. The technology he used in The Abyss for the most realistic water effects ever seen on film was used extensively in Titanic, especially in the sequence where it capsizes.
But there were other environmental aspects that audiences may not realize were also made digitally. Much of early 20th century Southhampton, where the ship sets all from, didn't exist. They had to either map historical buildings over real ones, or completely recreate buildings long-since demolished.
4 BULLET WOUNDS IN SAVING PRIVATE RYAN
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Steven Spielberg, like James Cameron, is a filmmaker who is at the forefront of film making technology to get his narrative exactly the way he wants it. In the famous war film, while he used thousands of extras in lieu of CGI soldiers, and built provincial French towns where none existed with practical effects, he had to use CGI for some of the smallest details.
You would think he'd simply have his VFX crew pour corn syrup and ketchup on some prosthetic wounds, but he used CGI in 1998 to make them as gruesome and realistic as possible in Saving Private Ryan.
3 DONOVAN'S DEATH IN INDIANA JONES AND THE LAST CRUSADE
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The Indiana Jones films used a variety of movie-making magic to Chronicle the adventures of the worlds most famous globe-trotting archaeologist. From creating giant matte paintings to create jungle vistas and ancient temples, to playing with blue screen for exciting car chases, every effort was made to make the scenes seem as real as possible.
RELATED: Indiana Jones 5: 10 Scrapped Ideas From Previous Sequels It Should Use
In the third installment in the film franchise, for the scene involving Donovan's death by drinking from the wrong grail, Spielberg wanted a long take focused on his decaying body. Multiple puppets were made in his likeness and then the actor's face was digitally mapped over it, a tricky process in 1989.
2 THE PIER IN THE GREAT GATSBY
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Baz Luhrman's The Great Gatsby is a dizzying, frenetic look at one of American literature's most important novels and characters. CGI can be found throughout the beautiful sets, to recreate aspects of New York City in the 20s, as well as heighten the level of opulence in Gatsby's impressive abode.
But where it might not have been expected is to recreate the infamous pier in the novel, which separates Gatsby's house in the fictional West Egg from his rival Tom Buchanan's house in the East Egg. The pier, water, and blinking green lantern were all created using CGI.
1 SOOT IN THE DARKEST HOUR
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While The Darkest Hour gets great accolades for using practical effects and makeup to transform Gary Oldman into Winston Churchill during WWII, it should be celebrated for its painstaking recreation of wartime London through the clever use of CGI.
London in the 40s was covered in a thick layer of soot, and it wasn't possible to film exterior shots of the city without using CGI to bathe the city in a blanket of blackness. It added to the oppressive ambiance of the film and showed the descent into degradation the war effort had caused on the jewel of the British Empire.
NEXT: 10 Things In Sci-Fi Movies You Didn't Know Were CGI
source https://screenrant.com/historical-period-movies-didnt-know-cgi/
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butterfrogmantis · 2 years
Text
Doin’ a little uh, 
Aceston revamp here- Mind if I just- 
Lots of stuff below the cut
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Ace decides to return to Sodor to see Thomas - well tbh, Thomas is one of the only friends he’s ever had, and his adventures with him and Nia had made him realise that. He considered the other racers his friends but … well after seeing the way Thomas had gone after her, he kinda realised he couldn’t count on them the way Thomas and Nia had. Uh, excuse him - what he actually means is that he was living free and easy and just HAPPENED to be in Sodor on his journey ofc! Well anyway he doesn’t see why he can’t stay for a while, to look around. As he’s cruising around the roads one day he happens to spot a little chauffeur standing by an interesting little rail car. Ace is a big fan of cars, so out of pure curiosity he stops and begins to enquire about it - mostly how fast it can go. The other man is a bit surprised by the stranger but he’s going to be waiting for Sir Topham for a while and he was raised to be polite, so he stops for a while to talk about the car and compliment Ace’s. The two exchange names and Ace asks if he’d want to try out a “real” car, offering to show him how fast he could be driving if he wanted to. Winston does have a bit of a him that thinks it would be very exciting but… he’d rather not, he’s not sure he can trust this man he just met after all and Ace seems so … cool, compared to him. Ace doesn’t really think anything of it, and continues his sightseeing journey.
Throughout the week, he spots Winston a few more times, it’s not hard to do when the Fat Controller is all over the island after all, and each time he has a friendly chat and “offers” a ride in his race car, to which Winston politely says he needs to get on with his job. Well a couple of weeks go by and Winston has a free day, and happens to run into Ace at a cafe this time. Not having the excuse of work, Winston “somehow” finds himself in the passenger seat of Ace’s car going for a joy ride on racing tracks. And sure, it’s exciting! Maybe … a bit too exciting - actually he starts to feel really quite ill and once they’re done Ace takes Winston back to his house at his request and whilst his original attitude is “pft spoilsport” he decides to stay with him to um, make sure he’s alright, he did look a bit green after the ride after all and “making sure he’s alright” turned into spending the whole night, and some of the next morning.
Well Winston isn’t entirely clear what happened after that, but they spent Ace’s last few weeks on Sodor together most evenings, once Winston got off his shift. It was … quite nice. Really, Winston had never had anyone pay this much attention to him before, and Ace was so … out there. He’d had so many adventures and seen so many places and done so much stuff Winston could only dream of! And somehow Ace found HIM interesting enough to spend time with. And then … he was gone. Not even really a goodbye, Winston just heard one day that Ace had gone on to his next adventure. Winston wasn’t surprised by the leaving, he knew Ace was going off soon but … he was hurt that he’d done it so coldly, just when Winston was starting to feel really special, and he kinda felt used :,D Well, sometime later, Winston hears of a race happening on the main land, and finds out from Thomas that Ace is participating. Winston goes, intending to confront him and ends up signing himself into the race, hoping to teach Ace a lesson. Ace is very surprised by that, because he knows Winston doesn’t really like the speed and tries to get him to back out, but now Winston is mad at him for “protecting” him when he was the one that left. So, stupidly, Winston keeps his mouth shut and goes to the start line. The first part wasn’t too bad, he even made it round the first bend ok - and you know what? Winston maybe started to see why Ace enjoyed the speed so much. He was having fun! And that relaxation lost his concentration. He started to veer dangerously to one side, and would have had a prettty serious accident - only, another driver basically sacrificed their car to protect him. One second he’s about to smack into another car, the next, he’s .. he’s ok. Bruised and quite shocked, but fine. The other two cars … not so much. It’s then he realises that Ace had pushed his car out of the way and taken the full damage. Some medical people come and take Ace and the other driver to hospital, and Winston goes there asap where he gets some bad news. The other driver is mostly fine, but Ace has … sustained some more serious injuries. The doctor explains that it will be a while until he’s fully back to normal, but that a recovery looks promising due to his health. Winston doesn’t even hesitate to offer to let Ace stay with him, if he wants, and the racer does. Wheelchair bound, then crutch bound, then slowly starting to walk again, it’s almost a year before Ace is back on his feet, but as the doctors hoped, he’s doing well  and of course with news of his recovery, the other racers want to know if he’ll make an epic come back to racing. Ace is excited by the prospect but … well to be honest, Sodor almost feels like a second home to him now. See, when he left Winston originally it wasn’t out of him being cruel but because a goodbye would have been hard, he realised he genuinely cared, and now - does more than ever. He’d had some flings after Winston but he didn’t know what it was about him that was so special, maybe because he’d never cared about his reputation but was genuinely curious in his hobby and him as a person, something Ace realised not many others were. At the time he felt he couldn’t have both his free and easy life style AND something with Winston so he just … left, to make it easier for himself. He still wants to race, but he’ll be a bit more “easy” than free, after all he doesn’t want to get too hurt again now he’s back to normal. And as for Winston? Well … he doesn’t mind giving Ace a more permanent residence in between his less dangerous adventures, just as long as Ace knows he ought to fly ‘home’ soon. Winston and Ace (c) TTTE / Thomas The Tank Engine And Friends
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lavenderrosiefan · 10 months
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Age:  17
Height:  6'
Weight: 159 lbs
Hair Color: Red
Eye Color: Red
Birthplace: Atherton, Greater Manchester, England
Attire: School (autumn and winter):     -Red and black blazer     -Black shirt     -Red, orange, and black tie     -Black pants      -Red socks     -Black shoes School (spring and summer):     -Black shirt     -Red, orange, and black tie     -Black pants      -Red socks     -Black shoes Casual:     -Red and black shirt     -Black jacket     -Blue jeans     -Red socks     -Red and black sneakers Formal:     -Red shirt     -Red bowtie     -Black blazer     -Black pants     -Red socks     -Black and red shoes
Relatives: Steven Hughes (father) Ashley Hughes (mother) Winston 'Eagle' Hughes (older brother, deceased) Janice Hughes (older sister)
Voiced by: Keith Wickham (UK) Kerry Shale (US)
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movietvtechgeeks · 7 years
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Latest story from https://movietvtechgeeks.com/la-la-land-stranger-things-atlanta-sweep-2017-pga-awards/
'La La Land,' 'Stranger Things' and 'Atlanta' sweep 2017 PGA Awards
“La La Land” is easily sweeping up all the awards this year, but Netflix’s “Stranger Things” jumped in on the action along with “Atlanta” for the 28th annual Producers Guild Awards (PGA).
The musical comedy-drama went up against “Arrival,” “Deadpool,” “Fences,” “Hacksaw Ridge,” “Hell or High Water,” “Hidden Figures,”  “Lion,” “Manchester by the Sea,” and “Moonlight,” but was able to come out the winner which was presented by Dustin Hoffman.
The guild recognized the candy-colored musical with its Darryl F. Zanuck Award for theatrical motion picture production Saturday, a prize that often precedes the best picture Academy Award. (Last year was an exception, when “The Big Short” won the guild award, while “Spotlight” got the Oscar.) The nominees for the guild’s top film prize echo Oscars’ best picture nominees this year, with the exception of “Deadpool,” which made the cut with producers but not the film academy.
But the guild’s celebration at the Beverly Hilton Hotel of the year’s outstanding film and television productions had a decidedly political tone, as President Donald Trump’s ban on refugees and visitors from several Muslim countries triggered protests in New York, Los Angeles, Chicago, Dallas, Seattle and other cities.
“Our America is big, it is free, and it is open to dreamers of all races, all countries, all religions,” singer John Legend said as he introduced “La La Land” at Saturday’s untelevised ceremony. “Our vision of America is directly antithetical to that of President Trump. I want to specifically, tonight, reject his vision and affirm America has to be better than that.”
Ezra Edelman, producer and director of “O.J.: Made in America,” which claimed the guild’s documentary prize, echoed Legend’s sentiments.
“Please keep telling stories that are about our humanity,” he said.
Other winners Saturday included “Zootopia” for animated feature, “Atlanta” for episodic television comedy and “Stranger Things” for episodic TV drama.
Presenters included Justin Timberlake, Octavia Spencer, Taraji P. Henson, Nicole Kidman, Jeff Bridges, Kerry Washington, Robert De Niro and Martin Scorsese. Veteran producers James L. Brooks, Tom Rothman and Irwin Winkler received special awards.
Dustin Hoffman presented the night’s top prize. As producer Marc Platt accepted for “La La Land,” he said, “The power of cinema cannot be denied and has no borders … We must believe love can change our lives, much as it can change the world.”
Full List of 2017 Producers Guild Awards Winners:
The Darryl F. Zanuck Award for Outstanding Producer of Theatrical Motion Pictures: • La La Land (WINNER) Producers: Fred Berger, Jordan Horowitz, Marc Platt • Arrival Producers: Dan Levine, Shawn Levy, Aaron Ryder, David Linde • Deadpool Producers: Simon Kinberg, Ryan Reynolds, Lauren Shuler Donner • Fences Producers: Scott Rudin, Denzel Washington, Todd Black • Hacksaw Ridge Producers: Bill Mechanic, David Permut • Hell or High Water Producers: Carla Hacken, Julie Yorn • Hidden Figures Producers: Donna Gigliotti, Peter Chernin & Jenno Topping, Pharrell Williams, Theodore Melfi • Lion Producers: Emile Sherman & Iain Canning, Angie Fielder • Manchester By the Sea Producers: Matt Damon, Kimberly Steward, Chris Moore, Lauren Beck, Kevin Walsh • Moonlight Producers: Adele Romanski, Dede Gardner & Jeremy Kleiner
The Award for Outstanding Producer of Animated Theatrical Motion Pictures: • Zootopia (WINNER) Producer: Clark Spencer • Finding Dory Producer: Lindsey Collins • Kubo and the Two Strings Producers: Arianne Sutner, Travis Knight • Moana Producer: Osnat Shurer • The Secret Life of Pets Producers: Chris Meledandri, Janet Healy
The Award for Outstanding Producer of Documentary Theatrical Motion Pictures: • O.J.: Made in America (WINNER) Producers: Ezra Edelman, Caroline Waterlow • Dancer Producer: Gabrielle Tana • The Eagle Huntress Producers: Stacey Reiss, Otto Bell • Life, Animated Producers: Julie Goldman, Roger Ross Williams • Tower Producers: Keith Maitland, Susan Thomson, Megan Gilbride
The David L. Wolper Award for Outstanding Producer of Long-Form Television: • The People v. O.J. Simpson: American Crime Story (Season 1) (WINNER) Producers: Scott Alexander, Larry Karaszewski, Ryan Murphy, Brad Falchuk, Nina Jacobson, Brad Simpson, D.V. DeVincentis, Anthony Hemingway, Alexis Martin Woodall, John Travolta, Chip Vucelich • Black Mirror (Season 3) Producers: Annabel Jones, Charlie Brooker • The Night Manager (Season 1) Producers: Simon Cornwell, Stephen Garrett, Stephen Cornwell, Hugh Laurie, Tom Hiddleston, Susanne Bier, David Farr, John le Carré, William D. Johnson, Alexei Boltho, Rob Bullock • The Night Of Producers: Steven Zaillian, Richard Price, Jane Tranter, Garrett Basch, Scott Ferguson • Sherlock: The Abominable Bride Producers: Mark Gatiss, Steven Moffat, Sue Vertue, Beryl Vertue
The Award for Outstanding Sports Program: • VICE World of Sports (Season 1) (WINNER — TIE)  • Real Sports with Bryant Gumbel (Season 22) (WINNER — TIE) • E:60 (2016) • The Fight Game with Jim Lampley: A Tribute to Muhammad Ali • Hard Knocks: Training Camp with the Los Angeles Rams (Season 11)
The Award for Outstanding Digital Series: • Comedians in Cars Getting Coffee (Season 7, Season 8) (WINNER) • 30 for 30 Shorts (Season 5) • Epic Rap Battles of History (Season 5) • Marvel’s Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.: ACADEMY (Season 1) • National Endowment for the Arts: United States of Arts
The Norman Felton Award for Outstanding Producer of Episodic Television, Drama: • Stranger Things (Season 1) (WINNER) Producers: Matt Duffer, Ross Duffer, Shawn Levy, Dan Cohen, Iain Paterson • Better Call Saul (Season 2) Producers: Vince Gilligan, Peter Gould, Melissa Bernstein, Mark Johnson, Thomas Schnauz, Gennifer Hutchison, Nina Jack, Robin Sweet, Diane Mercer, Bob Odenkirk • Game of Thrones (Season 6) Producers: David Benioff, D.B. Weiss, Bernadette Caulfield, Frank Doelger, Carolyn Strauss, Bryan Cogman, Lisa McAtackney, Chris Newman, Greg Spence • House of Cards (Season 4) Producers: Beau Willimon, Dana Brunetti, Michael Dobbs, Josh Donen, David Fincher, Eric Roth, Kevin Spacey, Robin Wright, John Mankiewicz, Robert Zotnowski, Jay Carson, Frank Pugliese, Boris Malden, Hameed Shaukat • Westworld (Season 1) Producers: J.J. Abrams, Jonathan Nolan, Lisa Joy, Bryan Burk, Athena Wickham, Kathy Lingg, Richard J. Lewis, Roberto Patino, Katherine Lingenfelter, Cherylanne Martin
The Danny Thomas Award for Outstanding Producer of Episodic Television, Comedy: • Atlanta (Season 1) (WINNER) Producers: Donald Glover, Dianne McGunigle, Paul Simms, Hiro Murai, Alex Orr • black-ish (Season 2) Producers: Kenya Barris, Jonathan Groff, Anthony Anderson, Laurence Fishburne, Helen Sugland, E. Brian Dobbins, Vijal Patel, Gail Lerner, Corey Nickerson, Courtney Lilly, Lindsey Shockley, Peter Saji, Jenifer Rice-Genzuk Henry, Hale Rothstein, Michael Petok, Yvette Lee Bowser • Modern Family (Season 7) Producers: Steven Levitan, Christopher Lloyd, Paul Corrigan, Abraham Higginbotham, Elaine Ko, Jeff Morton, Jeffrey Richman, Brad Walsh, Danny Zuker, Vali Chandrasekaran, Andy Gordon, Vanessa McCarthy, Jon Pollack, Chuck Tatham, Chris Smirnoff, Sally Young • Silicon Valley (Season 3) Producers: Mike Judge, Alec Berg, Jim Kleverweis, Clay Tarver, Dan O’Keefe, Michael Rotenberg, Tom Lassally, John Levenstein, Ron Weiner, Carrie Kemper, Adam Countee • Veep (Season 5) Producers: David Mandel, Frank Rich, Julia Louis-Dreyfus, Lew Morton, Morgan Sackett, Sean Gray, Peter Huyck, Alex Gregory, Jim Margolis, Georgia Pritchett, Will Smith, Chris Addison, Rachel Axler, David Hyman, Erik Kenward, Billy Kimball, Steve Koren
The Award for Outstanding Producer of Non-Fiction Television: • Making a Murderer (Season 1) (WINNER) Producers: Laura Ricciardi, Moira Demos • 30 for 30 (Season 7) Producers: Connor Schell, John Dahl, Libby Geist, Bill Simmons, Erin Leyden, Gentry Kirby, Andrew Billman, Marquis Daisy, Deirdre Fenton • 60 Minutes (Season 48, Season 49) Producers: Jeff Fager • Anthony Bourdain Parts Unknown (Season 5-8) Producers: Anthony Bourdain, Christopher Collins, Lydia Tenaglia, Sandra Zweig • Hamilton’s America Producers: Alex Horwitz, Nicole Pusateri, Lin-Manuel Miranda, Jeffrey Seller, Dave Sirulnick, Jon Kamen, Justin Wilkes
The Award for Outstanding Producer of Competition Television: • The Voice (Season 9-11) (WINNER) Producers: Audrey Morrissey, Jay Bienstock, Mark Burnett, John de Mol, Chad Hines, Lee Metzger, Kyra Thompson, Mike Yurchuk, Amanda Zucker, Carson Daly • The Amazing Race (Season 27, Season 28) Producers: Jerry Bruckheimer, Bertram van Munster, Jonathan Littman, Elise Doganieri, Mark Vertullo • American Ninja Warrior (Season 7, Season 8) Producers: Arthur Smith, Kent Weed, Anthony Storm, Brian Richardson, Kristen Stabile, David Markus, J.D. Pruess, D. Max Poris, Zayna Abi-Hashim, Royce Toni, John, Gunn, Matt Silverberg, Briana Vowels, Mason Funk, Jonathan Provost • Lip Sync Battle (Season 1, Season 2) Producers: Casey Patterson, Jay Peterson, John Krasinski, Stephen Merchant, Leah Gonzalez, Genna Gintzig, LL Cool J • Top Chef (Season 13) Producers: Daniel Cutforth, Jane Lipsitz, Doneen Arquines, Tom Colicchio, Casey Kriley, Padma Lakshmi, Tara Siener, Erica Ross, Patrick Schmedeman, Wade Sheeler, Ellie Carbajal
The Award for Outstanding Producer of Live Entertainment & Talk Television: • Last Week Tonight with John Oliver (Season 3) (WINNER) Producers: Tim Carvell, John Oliver, Liz Stanton • Full Frontal with Samantha Bee (Season 1) Producers: Samantha Bee, Jo Miller, Jason Jones, Tony Hernandez, Miles Kahn, Pat King, Alison Camillo, Kristen Everman • The Late Late Show with James Corden (Season 2) Producers: Ben Winston, Rob Crabbe, Mike Gibbons, Amy Ozols, Sheila Rogers, Michael Kaplan, Jeff Kopp, James Longman, Josie Cliff, James Corden • Real Time with Bill Maher (Season 14) Producers: Bill Maher, Scott Carter, Sheila Griffiths, Marc Gurvitz, Billy Martin, Dean E. Johnsen, Chris Kelly, Matt Wood • Saturday Night Live (Season 42) Producers: Lorne Michaels, Steve Higgins, Erik Kenward, Lindsay Shookus, Erin Doyle, Ken Aymong
The Award for Outstanding Children’s Program: • Sesame Street (Season 46) (WINNER) • Girl Meets World (Season 2, Season 3) • Octonauts (Season 4) • School of Rock (Season 1) • SpongeBob SquarePants (Season 9)
Movie TV Tech Geeks News
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nakeddeparture · 7 years
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BARBADOS (Naked Departure) — LAST WEEK IN PHOTOS from Barbados and around the world!   Naked Departure
Andrew Foster
ac/dc Deleon Ward
ac/dc Deleon Ward
ac/dc Deleon Ward
Caribbean Export Development Agency and its Executive Director Pamela Coke Hamilton and her management bringing the organization into disrepute
A jaundice-looking Leacock, Guyanese running things in Barbados
Bullying is part of Barbadian Culture
Lord Evil marries
Lord Evil marries….–not her though….
Christopher King, Kiddie Porn PRIEST
Hope Hamilton
Travel ban overturned by Federal Court. Appeals court upheld court’s decision.
Tabari–Got a young teenager pregnant?
Can you vouch for her?
Can you vouch for her?
Can you vouch for her?
Chante Natasha Yarde decided to hang herself. The lack of more suicides in Barbados show how people can get accustomed to mediocrity
Delacey Walters raped his gf’s three daughters. They were under 10 years of age.
Photos on Chante Yarde’s page
re: Chante Natasha Yarde
Ryan Spencer Delano Coppin, accused rapist
Ryan Antonio Oneal Bullen admitted to killing 14 year old Kalifa Downes
Barbados under Spirtual Curse
Damian Edmund’s obsession with underage boys
Omarosa foot injury in WH?
Little savages
Poor Cheryl, her watch is not up to snuff! Cheryl Broome Webster
Kekesweetss drama
Michael Edwards REST IN HELL!!! GOOD RIDDANCE!!
Michael Omar Edwards — GO TO HELL!! GOOD RIDDANCE!!!!
Nordstrom drops Ivanka Trump’s line
Shineka Gray 15, killed in Montego Bay
Tameisha scantlebury Massy Card Service. Blog was so vulgar it was not posted, but you need to play fair with people
Tameisha scantlebury Massy Card Service needs to play fair with people — Blog was too vulgar to be published
Jamel Layne, Porn Star, at work in Barbados
Jamel Layne porn star
Jamel Layne
Jan and Cyndi Oster — Robbed in Barbados
Tracia Nicole Eastmond Pounder — keep an eye on her and your money
Why are some children in South Africa not dying from AIDS?
Salters accident
Salters accident
Salters accident
Salters accident
GIS — workers who sexually abused child under their care
Barbadians reduced to eating Ramen and sardines
Ramen Noodles is not FOOD
Ramen Noodles=Poison
Bajan jockey drama
Bajan jockey drama
Bajan jockey drama
Bajan jockey drama
Bajan jockey drama
Bajan jockey drama
Richard ‘Rickey’ Parris’ Memorial Service
Prisoners used as training property for dogs
Grave digger Sharon. The child belongs to the grave digger!!!!
Jason Leacock police constable
Lisa Kerri Ann Koeiman
Lisa Kerri Ann Koeiman
Tamron Hall FIRED
Winston Errol Bovell RAPIST
Paul Maxwell, BPWCCUL and Capita Financial – CORRUPTION
Guyanese women breeding for Bajan men.
Pastor Jermaine Gibson accused of having sex with 12 year old girl. Jamaica
The Thornes from Salisbury, St. George
The Thornes from Salisbury, St. George
BARBADOS: TRANSPORT BUS turns over in ST. PHILIP and one person from CHRIST CHURCH was on board. Driver was hurt.
Street Vendors
Fatal accident in Barbados
Dave McGregor and Johann Greaves, Canada/Barbados Light & Power
Last King and KekeSweetss
Lastking and Kekesweetss
Lastking and Kekesweetss
Lastking and Kekesweetss
Lastking and Kekesweetss
Michael Howard’s book, The Development of Barbados, charts novel territory.
Owen Arthur
Lieutenant Colonel Glyne Sinatra Grannum, BDF’s new chief
Darien Harewood
Ryan Trevor Clegg, 43, Evil 8 — Pedophile
Shane Campbell, 26, SAVAGE JAMAICAN, killed 3-year old for soiling herself
Jermaine Simmons caught inside man’s wife
Grave digger drama
adriel brathwaite, fire HIM, fire THEM
Ally Yates weak link. YOU ARE FIRED!!!!
Blair Richards accused rapist
Kerri-Ann Greaves, maneater
Kerri-Ann Greaves, maneater
Peter Harris and Human Trafficking
In love with my dentist
Kerry Forde
Kerry Forde
Sasha
Sasha
Blair Richards, Serial Rapist, Barbados
Deadbeat woman who breed for deadbeat man
Dexter, deadbeat father
Kathy Bailey
Allan Foster has a 15 y/o boy
Patrick Bennett cheap bulle
Chron Atkins
Condom Mishap
Orville Roachford, doctor and Rapist
Magic Johnson has talk for trump
Trump in the White House
Trump Tower
Magic Johnson’s son
Thankfully, his father was rich
Donald Trump’s children
Mercy Mokeira, Miss World Kenya, dead at 23 from unknown disease
Miss Haiti at Miss Universe
Miss Haiti
Miss Universe 2017, Miss France
Miss Barbados – LOSER
Miss Kenya at Miss Universe
Miss Haiti at Miss Universe
Terror attack in Canada
Pig head left outside of Islamic Centre after terror attack in Quebec City, Canada
David Ramsey in QEH, Barbados
David Ramsey was in QEH, Barbados
David Ramsey in QEH, Barbados
Blood on the floor
Dylan and Dylano
FOUR DEAD The three Vincentian victims of this morning’s fatal crash. From left, 19-year-old Aziza Awanna Dennie, 18-year-old Carianne Lee-New Padmore and 17-year-old …
FOUR DEAD: Andre Jabarry Gittens
FOUR DEAD The three Vincentian victims of this morning’s fatal crash. From left, 19-year-old Aziza Awanna Dennie, 18-year-old Carianne Lee-New Padmore and 17-year-old …
Kayla
Mr. and Mrs. Peter Wickham
Four dead
Four dead
THE LIST: Andrew Foster
Richard Sealy – Slave Economy not working!!!!
https://nakeddeparturecom.files.wordpress.com/2017/02/last-king-n-keke-2.mp3 https://nakeddeparturecom.files.wordpress.com/2017/02/keke-and-last-king-3.mp3
https://nakeddeparturecom.files.wordpress.com/2017/02/lastking-on-kekesweetss.mp3
https://nakeddeparturecom.files.wordpress.com/2017/01/vid-ufo-in-malaysia-3.mp4
Last Week in Photos BARBADOS (Naked Departure) -- LAST WEEK IN PHOTOS from Barbados and around the world!   Naked Departure
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Artifact Series W
W.B. Yeats's Glasses
W.C. Field's Juggling Balls *
W. D. M. Bell's Mauser C96
W. G. Grottendieck's Stones
W. Heath Robinson’s Boiler
Wabi-Sabi Rock Garden Singing Sand
Waldemar Haffkine's Vaccine
Wallace Hartley's Violin
Wall Mounted Bottle Opener
Wally Schirra’s Insignia Patches
Walt Disney's Paintbrush *
Walt Whitman's Chalkboard and Chalk
Walter Chrysler's Building Spire
Walter Frederick Morrison's Cake Pan
Walter Freeman's Orbitoclast
Walter H. Thompson’s Telegram
Walter Halloran’s Crucifix
Walter Potter's Taxidermy Knife
Walter Potter's Taxidermy Wire
Walter Raleigh's Smoking Pipe *
Walter Schlage's Lockpick *
Walter Winchell's Tie Clip and Cufflinks *
Wang Mian’s Plum Tree
Wangari Maathai's Seeds
Wanksy's Spray Paint Cans
Warehouse 13.1 Diorama *
Washakie's Rattle
Washington Irving's Saddle
Washington Roebling's Caisson
Watergate Scandal Lock Picks
Watson Monitor
Wat Tyler's Lance
Wat Tyler’s Money Sack
Waverly Brown's Police Badge
Wax Crocodile
Way Bandy's Tie Clip
Wayne Gretzky's Hockey Puck
Wayne Wheeler's Hayfork
The Web of the Tsuchigumo
Webb C. Ball’s Railroad Chronometer
Wei Jingsheng’s Ballpoint Pen
Wendigo Mask
Wenham Wykeman-Musgrave's Plank
Werner Thomas' Accordion
Wes Craven's Freddy Krueger Glove
West Side Story Debut Playbill
The Western Jin's Hunping Jar
Where'd-It-Go Garden Gnome
"Where's the Beef?" Lady's Dress
Where's Waldo Misprint
Whip from St. Mary of Bethlehem Asylum
Whistler's Mother's Rocking Chair *
White Fan
The White Kiswah
"Whose Line is it Anyway's" Scenes from a Hat's American Hat
Wicked Bible
Wickham Family Dollhouse
Wild Bill Hickok's Playing Cards
Wiley Post’s Pressure Suit
Willem Jansz's Boomerang *
Wilhelm Kühne's Glasses
Wilhelm Reich's Cloudbuster *
Wilhelm Rontgen's Monocle
Wilhelm Voigt’s Army Uniform
Wilhelm Wundt’s Laboratory
Will Eisner's Unfinished Comic Book
Will Wright's Emerald
William Abner Eddy's Kite
William Allen White's Notepad
William Batty's Ringleader Bullhorn
William Beadle's Carving Knife
William Beaumont, 2nd Viscount Beaumont's Battle Armor *
William Beebe's Umbrella
William Bickford's Safety Fuse
William Blake's "Ugolino and Sons in Their Cell"
William Bleckwenn's Stethoscope (canon)
William Burke’s Quill
William Byke's Top Hat
William Chaloner's Groat
William Chaloner's Lottery Ticket
William Charles Pitcher's Costume Trunk
William Coffin Coleman's Arc Lantern
William the Conqueror's Scabbard
Sir William Cornwallis Harris' Epaulettes
William Dampier's Eyeglass
William Edward Parry's Inukshuk (canon)
William Etty's Canvas
William Frank Carver's Glass Ball
William Garrow’s Wig and Bands
William Gilbet's Lodestone Amber *
William Golding's Pen
William Hanna and Joseph Barbera's Pens
William Harvey’s Lens
William Henry Harrison's Podium
William Hornaday's Zookeeper Cap *
William Howard Taft's Bathtub Valve
William Irving's 'Bowling Pins'
William J. Simmons’ Klan Cloak
William James Sidis' Bookcase
William Jennings Bryan's Gold Certificate
William Kempe's Pipe and Tabor
William Kent's Twelve Guineas
William Kidd's Chest
William Kogut's Playing Cards
William L. Allen's Leather Helmet
William Makepeace Thackeray's Gravy Boat
William Masters' Stethoscope
William Mulholland's Clipboard
William Murdoch's Boiler
William Newton McComb's Infantry Sword
William Oughtred's Slide Ruler
William Penn's Hat
William Randolph Hearst’s Bulletin Board
William Redington Hewlett's Printer
William Robinson's Chest
William S. Graves' Lighter
William S. Sadler's Chaise Lounge
William Safire’s Apollo 11 Speech
William Schwenck Gilbert's & Arthur Seymour Sullivan's Top Hats
William Seabrook's Cookpot
William Shakespeare's Chair from the Globe Theatre *
William Shakespeare's Lost Folio *
William Shakespeare's Neck Ruff
William Sianis' Goat Horns
William the Silent's Helmet
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William Still’s Notes
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William Sydney Porter's Watch Chain and Comb
William Tell's Crossbow *
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William Thomas Stead's Pocketbook
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Willis Conover’s Microphone
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Wilton Ivie's Notebook
Winchester Mystery House
Wind Forming Leaf Blower/Vacuum
Windscale Fire Milk Bottle
Wine Barrel used for George Plantagenet, 1st Duke of Clarence
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Winfield Scott's Coat Buttons
Wings of Daedalus *
''Wings'' Oscar Award
Winslow Homer's Boat Cleat
Winston Churchill’s Flask
Winthrop Kellogg's Plexiglass Pool
Winter Koi Painting
Wire Spool from the Dingo Fence
Witch Hat
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The Wright Brother's Wright Flyer
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Wooden Grail from Jerusalem
Woodrow Wilson's 'Peace in America' Badges
Woodstock Speakers
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WWI-era Nieuport biplane
WWII Tessen Fan *
WWII Viewmaster
Wyatt Earp's Lariat *
Wyatt Earp's Sheriff Badge *
Wyrd Water
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newseveryhourly · 6 years
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Class of 2018 Top Row (left to right): Aleister Crowley; René Magritte; Siegfried Sassoon Middle Row (left to right): Alice B. Toklas; Pierre Bonnard; Winston Churchill; M. P. Shiel Bottom Row (left to right): Jean Toomer; P. D. Ouspensky; Anna Wickham; Hans Fallada Pictured above is our top pick o... http://ift.tt/2z3msO4
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mado-science · 7 years
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Your R graphing bible. But like all bibles written by a human Your R graphics bible. This is very much a recipe book - look for the kind of graph you want and it will give you the working code to get you started. If you don't know what kind of graph you want then browse the book and it will give you some great ideas you might not have thought of. But like a good recipe book it's not just about how to generate graphs in R, it's also a pretty good primer on how to produce good graphs - which is after all what we are trying to do in the first place. Since getting this book I have pretty much stopped making any bar graphs but instead make Cleveland dot plots with line segments, and the people for whom I make the graphs love the change. Go to Amazon
Great book Even though I am really familiar with ggplot2, plyr and reshape, Winston Chang have some great tricks manipulating data and creating awesome graphics that I had never seen before. The recipe format of this book is great for beginners and advanced users because one can get straight answers without having to read too much. Go to Amazon
Very useful addition to my R library I have Hadley Wickham's book on ggplot2  Go to Amazon
essential for my own work and learning ggplot2 If you're ever fumbling around with data in R, you're probably familiar with the built-in, unattractive graphics. ggplot2's been increasingly recognized as a necessity for getting the most out of your imagery. It offers nearly complete control over your graphics output, building them layer by layer. Go to Amazon
SASGraph Relief Others have done a great job noting the strong points of this book for R programmers. Those aspects combine with another to help out converts from SAS, like my husband. Go to Amazon
Helpful with graphics and R in general. I have been using R on a Linux laptop. I keep statistics for an organization, and I use R to make displays. I worked with it to make displays equal to what I could do in my professional career using software not available to me now. My experience with R is through "R for Dummies", much practice, and using help for R available online. I found myself learning things as I read on page 3. I sat down to read a couple of chapters and then skimmed the book. I am pleased with the authors style of writing and his presentation of the data. It is helpful that he uses some example data sets used in the "R for Dummies" book. Also, the author introduces you to several other R packages that provide useful tools for handling data. In short, I am well pleased with this book, and it will be useful to me. Go to Amazon
Five Stars Worthwhile and therefore is a good companion volume Five Stars Four Stars Great book! Four Stars Four Stars This book is already outdated I would like to speak with the chef please...
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mahagnamahmod · 7 years
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Skip to content Search for:  CRIMES OF BRITAIN MENU SEPTEMBER 13, 2016 CRIMESOFBRITAIN AFGHANISTAN, BBC, CHINA, CRIMES OF BRITAIN, GREECE, INDIA, IRAN, IRAQ, IRELAND, KENYA, KURDISTAN, MIDDLE EAST, PALESTINE, RUSSIA, SAUDI ARABIA, SOUTH AFRICA, SUDAN, WW1, WW2 The crimes of Winston Churchill  England celebrates their genocides. The ‘Winston Churchill note’ has entered circulation. Honouring a man who swilled on champagne while 4 million men, women and children in Bengal starved due to his racist colonial policies. The trial of Churchill: Churchill was a genocidal maniac. He is fawned over in Britain and held up as a hero of the nation. He was voted ‘Greatest Briton’ of all time. Below is the real history of Churchill, the history of a white supremacist whose hatred for Indians led to four million starving to death, the man who loathed Irish people so much he conceived different ways to terrorise them, the racist thug who waged war on black people across Africa and in Britain. This is the trial of Winston Churchill, the enemy of all humanity.  THE TRIAL OF WINSTON CHURCHILL: Afghanistan:  Churchill found his love for war during the time he spent in Afghanistan. While there he said “all who resist will be killed without quarter” because the Pashtuns need “recognise the superiority of race”. He believed the Pashtuns needed to be dealt with, he would reminisce in his writings about how he partook in the burning villages and peoples homes: “We proceeded systematically, village by village, and we destroyed the houses, filled up the wells, blew down the towers, cut down the great shady trees, burned the crops and broke the reservoirs in punitive devastation.” – Churchill on how the British carried on in Afghanistan, and he was only too happy to be part of it. Churchill would also write of how “every tribesman caught was speared or cut down at once”. Proud of the terror he helped inflict on the people of Afghanistan Churchill was well on the road to becoming a genocidal maniac. Greece:  The British Army under the guidance of Churchill perpetrated a massacre on the streets of Athens in the month of December 1944. 28 protesters were shot dead, a further 128 injured. The British demanded that all guerrilla groups should disarm on the 2nd December 1944. The following day 200,000 people took to the streets, and this is when the British Army under Churchill’s orders turned their guns on the people. Churchill regarded ELAS (Greek People’s Liberation Army) and EAM (National Liberation Front) as “miserable banditti”, these were the very people who ran the Nazis out. His actions in the month of December were purely out of his hatred and paranoia for communism. The British backed the right-wing government in Greece returned from exile after the very same partisans of the resistance that Churchill ordered the murder of had driven out the Nazi occupiers. Soviet forces were well received in Greece, this deeply worried Churchill. He planned to restore the monarchy in Greece to combat any possible communist influence. The events in December were part of that strategy. In 1945, Churchill sent Charles Wickham to Athens where he was in charge of training the Greek security police. Wickham learned his tricks of the trade in British occupied Ireland between 1922-1945 where he was a commander of the colonial RUC, responsible for countless terror. In April 1945 Churchill said “the [Nazi] collaborators in Greece in many cases did the best they could to shelter the Greek population from German oppression” and went on to say “the Communists are the main foe”. India:  “I’d rather see them have a good civil war”. – Churchill wishing partition on India Very few in Britain know about the genocide in Bengal let alone how Churchill engineered it. Churchill’s hatred for Indians led to four million starving to death during the Bengal ‘famine’ of 1943. “I hate Indians. They are a beastly people with a beastly religion” he would say. Bengal had a better than normal harvest during the British enforced famine. The British Army took millions of tons of rice from starving people to ship to the Middle East – where it wasn’t even needed. When the starving people of Bengal asked for food, Churchill said the ‘famine’ was their own fault “for breeding like rabbits”. The Viceroy of India said “Churchill’s attitude towards India and the famine is negligent, hostile and contemptuous”. Even right wing imperialist Leo Amery who was the British Secretary of State in India said he “didn’t see much difference between his [Churchill] outlook and Hitler’s”. Churchill refused all of the offers to send aid to Bengal, Canada offered 10,000 tons of rice, the U.S 100,000, he just point blank refused to allow it. Churchill was still swilling champaign while he caused four million men, women and children to starve to death in Bengal. Throughout WW2 India was forced to ‘lend’ Britain money. Churchill moaned about “Indian money lenders” the whole time. The truth is Churchill never waged war against fascism. He went to war with Germany to defend the British Empire, he said this about India during WW2 “are we to incur hundreds of millions of debt for defending India only to be kicked out by the Indians afterwards”. In 1945 Churchill said “the Hindus were race protected by their mere pullulation from the doom that is due”. The Bengal famine wasn’t enough for Churchill’s blood lust, he wished his favourite war criminal Arthur Harris could have bombed them. Iran:  “A prize from fairyland beyond our wildest dreams” – Churchill on Iran’s oil When Britain seized Iran’s oil industry Churchill proclaimed it was “a prize from fairyland beyond our wildest dreams”. Churchill meddled in Iranian affairs for decades, he helped exclude Iranians from their natural resources and encouraged the looting when most lived in severe poverty. In June 1914 Churchill proposed a bill in the House of Commons that would see the British government become become the major shareholder of the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company. The company would go on to refrain from paying Iran its share of the dividends before paying tax to the British exchequer. Essentially the British were illegally taxing the Iranian government. When the nationalist government of Mohammad Mosaddegh threatened British ‘interests’ in Iran, Churchill was there, ready to protect them at any cost. Even if that meant desecrating democracy. He helped organise a coup against Mosaddegh in August 1953. He told the CIA operations officer that helped carry out the plan “if i had been but a few years younger, I would have loved nothing better than to have served under your command in this great venture”. Churchill arranged for the BBC to send coded messages to let the Shah of Iran know that they were overthrowing the democratically elected government. Instead of the BBC ending their Persian language news broadcast with “it is now midnight in London” they under Churchill’s orders said “it is now exactly midnight”. Churchill went on to privately describe the coup as “the finest operation since the end of the war [WW2]”. Being a proud product of imperialism he had no issue ousting Mosaddegh so Britain could get back to sapping the riches of Iran. Iraq:  “I am strongly in favour of using poisoned gas against the uncivilized tribes… it would spread a lively terror.” – Churchill on the use of gas in the Middle East and India Churchill was appointed ‘Secretary of State for the Colonies’ in 1921 and he formed the ‘Middle East Department’ which was responsible for Iraq. Determined to have his beloved empire on the cheap he decided air power could replace ground troops. A strategy of bombing any resistance to British rule was now employed. Several times in the 1920s various groups in the region now known as Iraq rose up against the British. The air force was then put into action, indiscriminately bombing civilian areas so to subdue the population. Churchill was also an advocate for the use of mustard and poison gases. Whilst ‘Secretary for War and Air’ he advised that “the provision of some kind of asphyxiating bombs” should be used “for use in preliminary operations against turbulent tribes” in order to take control of Iraq. When Iraqi tribes stood up for themselves, under the direction of Churchill the British unleashed terror on mud, stone and reed villages. Churchill’s bombing of civilians in ‘Mesopotamia’ (Kurdistan and Iraq) was summed up by war criminal ‘Bomber Harris’: “The Arab and Kurd now know what real bombing means within 45 minutes a full-sized village can be practically wiped out, and a third of its inhabitants killed or injured, by four or five machines which offer them no real target, no opportunity for glory as warriors, no effective means of escape”. – Arthur ‘Bomber’ Harris Ireland:  “We have always found the Irish a bit odd. They refuse to be English” – Churchill In 1904 Churchill said “I remain of the opinion that a separate parliament for Ireland would be dangerous and impractical”. Churchill’s ancestry is linked to loyalism to Britain, he is a direct descendent of the ‘Marquis of Londonderry’ who helped put down the 1798 United Irishmen rising. He would live up to his families reputation when it came to suppressing revolutionary forces in Ireland. The Black and Tans were the brainchild of Churchill, he sent the thugs to Ireland to terrorise at will. Attacking civilians and civilian property they done Churchill proud, rampaging across the country carrying out reprisals. He went on to describe them as “gallant and honourable officers”. It was also Churchill who conceived the idea of forming the Auxiliaries who carried out the Croke Park massacre, firing into the crowd at a Gaelic football match, killing 14. Of course this didn’t fulfill Churchill’s bloodlust to repress as people who he described as “odd” for their refusal “to be English”, he went on to advocate the use of air power in Ireland against Sinn Fein members in 1920. He suggested to his war advisers that aeroplanes should be dispatched with orders to use “machine-gun fire or bombs” to “scatter and stampede them”. Churchill was an early advocate for the partitioning of Ireland. During the treaty negotiations he insisted on retaining navy bases in Ireland. In 1938 those bases were handed back to Ireland. However in 1939 Churchill proposed capturing Berehaven base by force. In 1941 Churchill supported a plan to introduce conscription in the North of Ireland. Churchill went on to remark”the bloody Irish, what have they ever done for our wars”, reducing Ireland’s merit to what it might provide by way of resources (people) for their imperialist land grabs. Kenya:  Britain declared a state of emergency in Kenya in 1952 to protect its system of institutionalised racism that they established throughout their colonies so to exploit the indigenous population. Churchill being your archetypical British supremacist believed that Kenya’s fertile highlands should be only for white colonial settlers. He approved the forcible removal of the local population, which he termed “blackamoors”. 150,000 men, women and children were forced into concentration camps. Children’s schools were shut by the British who branded them “training grounds for rebellion”. Rape, castration, cigarettes, electric shocks and fire all used by the British to torture the Kenyan people under Churchill’s watch. In 1954 in a British cabinet meeting Churchill and his men discussed the forced labour of Kenyan POWs and how to circumvent the constraints of two treaties they were breaching: “This course [detention without trial and forced labour] had been recommended despite the fact that it was thought to involve a technical breach of the Forced Labour Convention of 1930 and the Convention on Human Rights adopted by the Council of Europe” The Cowan Plan advocated the use of force and sometimes death against Kenyan POWs who refused to work. Churchill schemed to allow this to continue. Caroline Elkins book gives a glimpse into the extent that the crimes in Kenya were known in both official and unofficial circles in Britain and how Churchill brushed off the terror the colonial British forces inflicted on the native population. He even ‘punished’ Edwina Mountbatten for mentioning it, “Edwina Mountbatten was conversing about the emergency with India’s prime minister, Jawaharlal Nehru, and the then colonial secretary, Oliver Lyttleton. When Lyttleton commented on the “terrible savagery” of Mau Mau… Churchill retaliated, refusing to allow Lord Mountbatten to take his wife with him on an official visit to Turkey”. Palestine:  “I do not agree that the dog in a manger has the final right to the manger.” In 2012 Churchill was honoured with a statue in Jerusalem for his assistance to Zionism. He regarded the Arab population Palestine to be a “lower manifestation”. And that the “dog in a manger has the final right to the manger”, by this he meant the Arabs of Palestine. In 1920 Churchill declared “if, as may well happen, there should be created in our own lifetime by the banks of the Jordan a Jewish State under the protection of the British Crown which might comprise three or four millions of Jews, an event will have occurred in the history of the world which would from every point of view be beneficial”. A year later in Jerusalem he told Palestinian leaders that “it is manifestly right that the Jews, who are scattered all over the world, should have a national centre and a National Home where some of them may be reunited. And where else could that be but in this land of Palestine, with which for more than 3,000 years they have been intimately and profoundly associated?”. At the Palestine Royal Commission (Peel) of 1937, Churchill stated that he believed in intention of the Balfour Declaration was to make Palestine an “overwhelmingly Jewish state”. He went on to also express to the Peel Commission that he does “not admit for instance, that a great wrong has been done to the Red Indians of America or the black people of Australia. I do not admit that a wrong has been done to these people by the fact that a stronger race, a higher-grade race, a more worldly wise race to put it that way, has come in and taken their place”. Four years later he wrote of his desire for a ‘Jewish state’to be established after the second war world. The establishment of the colonial settler state however was done on the watch of the British Labour Party under Attlee, who were always there to back their Tory counterparts when it came to British foreign policy. Saudi Arabia:  “My admiration for him [Ibn Saud] was deep, because of his unfailing loyalty to us.” – Churchill Prior to 1922 the British were paying Ibn Saud a subsidy of £60,000 a year. Churchill, then Colonial Secretary, raised it to £100,000. He knew of the dangers of wahhabism, but was content to use the House of Saud’s twisted ideology for benefit of British imperialism. Just as the British had done a few years earlier when they teamed up with Al-Saud and their wahhabism to wage an internal war in the Ottoman Empire. He described Ibn Saud’s wahhabis as “intolerant, well-armed and bloodthirsty’. Of course, as long as they were on the side of the British, Winston was happy. Churchill went on to write that his “admiration for him [Ibn Saud] was deep, because of his unfailing loyalty to us”.  Churchill meeting with Ibn Saud whom he showered with money and gifts. Britain foisted Wahhabism on the region. He gifted Ibn Saud a special Rolls-Royce in the mid 1940s. South Africa:  Thousands were sent to British run concentration camps during the Boer wars. Churchill summed up his time in South Africa by saying “it was great fun galloping about”. Churchill wrote that his only “irritation” during the Boer war was “that Kaffirs should be allowed to fire on white men”. It was Churchill who planted the seed to strip voting rights from black people in South Africa. In June 1906, Churchill argued that Afrikaners should be allowed a self-rule which would mean black people would be excluded from voting. He went on to state to Parliament that “we must be bound by the interpretation which the other party places on it and it is undoubted that the Boers would regard it as a breach of that treaty if the franchise were in the first instance extended to any persons who are not white”. Other mentions:  ‘BRITISH GUIANA’: Churchill ordered the overthrowing of the democratically elected leader of ‘British Guiana’. He dispatched troops and warships and suspended their constitution all to put a stop to the governments nationalisation plan. CHINA: “I think we shall have to take the Chinese in hand and regulate them” – Churchill His hope from this was for “Ayran stock to triumph”… ERICH VON MANSTIEN: Churchill donated funds for this Nazi war criminals defence when he was on trial after WW2. IMMIGRATION TO BRITAIN: Churchill suggested the motto “Keep England White” when debating the adoption of new laws limiting immigration from the Caribbean. MUSSOLINI: Churchill extolled Mussolini – “If I were Italian, I am sure I would have been with you entirely from the beginning” and “what a man [Mussolini] ! I have lost my heart!… Fascism has rendered a service to the entire world”. ON HIS OWN PEOPLE: Churchill suggested “100,000 degenerate Britons should be forcibly sterilised/others put in labour camps to halt decline of British race”. He also went on to suggest that “for tramps and wastrels there ought to be proper labour colonies where they could be sent”. SUDAN: Churchill bragged that he personally shot at least three “savages” whilst there. ROBERT EMMET (IRISH REPUBLICAN LEADER): Churchill plagiarised his famous “we shall fight on the beaches” from Emmet’s speech from the dock. RUSSIA: He urged the US to “wipe” out the Kremlin with an atomic bomb hoping it would “handle the balance of Russia”. WORLD WAR 1: “I love this war. I know it’s smashing and shattering the lives of thousands every moment”. WORLD WAR 2: Churchill’s cabinet during WW2 obsessed about British people viewing black GIs favourably. Share this: TwitterFacebook10K+Google  RELATED Winston Churchill on Wahhabism In "Crimes of Britain" British massacres of the 20th century In "China" Starvation is an imperial resource for Britain In "Biafra"  PUBLISHED BY crimesofbritain View all posts by crimesofbritain 63 thoughts on “The crimes of Winston Churchill” Frederick ring SEPTEMBER 13, 2016 AT 7:59 AM As you say in England he is considered the greatest Briton ever shame they are not aware of all this or am sure would think differently. Liked by 2 people REPLY DavidEdward (@AnAmericanBear) SEPTEMBER 15, 2016 AT 6:16 AM they know… Liked by 1 person REPLY AetM SEPTEMBER 15, 2016 AT 4:40 PM Very VERY few do, little is taught or available on the darker side of Churchill as not to tarnish of the “hero of WW2” 😦 Much as little seems to be known of the Iran-Contra affair among US youth. It is very difficult to find open discussion of much of Churchills views and activities pre WW2 other than the knowledge of his “black dog” depressive episodes. It is wrong to assume “they know”. Liked by 3 people Fiona Halloran SEPTEMBER 18, 2016 AT 9:15 AM I can assure you that at the age of 51, I had absolutely no idea how awful this man was. In Scottish schools we only got history from an English point of view. Only recently found out how despicable he was to the Irish people, never mind how he was to those other countries mentioned in this piece. WHY IS HE NOT BEING CHARGED WITH WAR CRIMES ALSO, LIKE TONY BLAIR?? Liked by 2 people Terence Dite SEPTEMBER 18, 2016 AT 5:49 PM Probably because he is dead. As are Hitler, Stalin and many other war criminals. They are all dead as well ! Like phil SEPTEMBER 13, 2016 AT 8:35 AM You left out what he did to Scotland. Glasgow in particular with regards to workers rights movements being forced down by tanks in george square etc Liked by 4 people REPLY JimDavidson SEPTEMBER 13, 2016 AT 9:15 AM Makes you ashamed to be part of the world this mad bastard came from, although he had machine guns turned on my ancestors red cyldeside march in George Square Glasgow. Liked by 2 people REPLY stuart SEPTEMBER 13, 2016 AT 9:30 AM He was also ordered tanks into George Square, Glasgow to forcibly quash a labour demonstration. Needless to say he didn’t field troops from Glasgow, a he suspected they would not follow the order: by 1 person REPLY John Da Prato SEPTEMBER 13, 2016 AT 11:21 AM What about his ‘collar the lot’ attitude to all the British Italians interned as ‘foreign aliens’ in WW2…….. Locking up old ice cream men who had spent most of their lives here and who had sons fighting for the British ! Look up The SS Arandora Star sinking please. Liked by 1 person REPLY J SEPTEMBER 13, 2016 AT 11:43 AM The Brits haven’t changed much over the years Liked by 2 people REPLY Clive Oakley SEPTEMBER 14, 2016 AT 5:37 AM That’s a bit of a sweeping generalisation. I think you mean British leaders have not changed much over the years. That lot are still cunts. Liked by 2 people REPLY george smith SEPTEMBER 15, 2016 AT 7:35 AM You mean the British corrupt Establishment hasn’t changed over the years. Corruption and Satanism is their forte. Liked by 3 people REPLY Pingback: The crimes of Winston Churchill – Crimes of Britain | circusbuoy Pingback: The crimes of Winston Churchill | sideshowtog Sheila MacIsaac SEPTEMBER 13, 2016 AT 4:54 PM Read: Churchill’s Sacrifice of the 51st Division – if he could abandon ‘our own’ Highland troops like this, in WW2, it’s not surprising what he did to other nationalities. My Father was one of them, left behind in France at the age of 17 – you could not mention Churchill’s, or Montgomery’s names in his hearing. Liked by 2 people REPLY O Taltas (@thrugateofhorn) SEPTEMBER 13, 2016 AT 6:14 PM He also spent His Life scared Shitless, That His being a “Puff” would be exposed!!! Liked by 1 person REPLY Josh Pattison SEPTEMBER 13, 2016 AT 6:48 PM Don’t forget that as Lord of the Admiralty he was also responsible for the terrible event at Gallipoli. Liked by 2 people REPLY In the Trenches SEPTEMBER 13, 2016 AT 6:49 PM Don’t forget that as Lord of the Admiralty he was also responsible for the terrible event at Gallipoli. Like REPLY Brad Barringer SEPTEMBER 14, 2016 AT 12:17 AM Typical so called elite born git-racist warmonger and history tries to paint him as a hero-he’s no hero what he was power drunk egomaniac and a coward to boot and as an addendum he is John Winston Howard’s hero-enough said! Liked by 2 people REPLY Ken Bradshaw SEPTEMBER 14, 2016 AT 12:18 AM If any of these commenters are standing on free British soil, then they should be ashamed of themselves. Like REPLY LJ DECEMBER 5, 2016 AT 5:16 PM You’d defend this murderous scum just because he is English? Then you should leave English soil, as you do not support the ideologies this country was built on. As home secretary he even killed British citizens demonstrating for jobs in the 1920’s. Hang your head in shame. Liked by 2 people REPLY thatta9293AZUR SEPTEMBER 14, 2016 AT 7:31 AM He said ” a good indian is a dead indian ” – what a ruthless , unscrupulous man – !!!- Liked by 1 person REPLY Steve Jack SEPTEMBER 14, 2016 AT 8:30 AM A very useful and simply presented summary – thanks. Liked by 1 person REPLY Pete Whittaker SEPTEMBER 14, 2016 AT 9:14 AM Always HATED the name “Winston Churchill”, only for the fact he purposefully sent Australian and New Zealand troops to a suicide mission, and, I believe ‘purposely’ because he did not want to help our greatest allies, the Russians. All this other stuff fits the character alright. When we read this we can understand better all the misery and chaos going on today – thanks a lot to this maniac Churchill who set up so much of the evil. Liked by 1 person REPLY Andy Smulian SEPTEMBER 14, 2016 AT 9:46 AM Is it true, as I’ve often heard, that he was a major shareholder in German ammunitions (Krupps?) throughout WWII and kept the war going an extra year to increase his personal wealth? Liked by 1 person REPLY Tommy Conway SEPTEMBER 14, 2016 AT 11:50 AM They still thrive. Soames… Liked by 1 person REPLY Steve Turner SEPTEMBER 14, 2016 AT 11:57 AM No mention of his repeated use of the military against striking workers in Britainas well as his role in the 1926 General Strike. Liked by 1 person REPLY Dave Garrick SEPTEMBER 14, 2016 AT 2:31 PM He also sent the army in to deal with striking miners in the 1911 Tonypandy riots in South Wales Liked by 4 people REPLY Howard Rees SEPTEMBER 19, 2016 AT 3:18 PM He sent the cavalry through the valleys, clubbing the miners’ wives and children from horseback, killing, maiming and severely injuring, so as to break the miners’ resolve. Those that still remember, or have heard from older generations, damn his accursed name and spit on the ground if we hear it spoken. Liked by 3 people REPLY philpott SEPTEMBER 14, 2016 AT 4:57 PM Fat bastard.2 million Indians fought for England in the second WW. Liked by 1 person REPLY Mohammad Fida SEPTEMBER 15, 2016 AT 2:16 AM He fought the war like an iron man in full confidence to win it along with his allied powers and it happened. If there were no Churchill we would have not free world and even no balance of power that UNO could manned for 70 years with USSR. It would be Nazi even swallowing Mussolini and even Japan…and the world would be just “hail Hitler”. Winston Churchill said “we will never surrenders” and he proved his worth for this great aim. In Iran and Potsdam conference he step by step steer the participants and hard to achieve was influences zone with USSR in East Europe. It was a great worth and transcendental political and war-front diplomacy that could settled down the world into two possible blocks so that issues be resolved peacefully in future without going to war…It happened as we saw the volunteer dissolution of USSR dawning a new world order which is yet to define itself. The low IQ world has indulged converted to Muslim faith so the replace USSR with Muslim fundamentalism but Churchill commitment will lead prudence to foil the ancient ‘fight to conquer’ religions…The sorrowful pictures of staving people recalls us the plight of Bengal in India which used to be one signal province then was divided in East Bengal and West Bengal again got united but to split once more whereafter East Bengal went to Pakistan and West Bengal to India and East Bengal is now Bangla Desh…Churchill has nothing to contribute to its save the people of Bengal were suffering for hailing from Urbanized west and rural East and both were reluctant to pay taxes which brought a plight unique in History…The Church and British Raj contributed to provide relief by amending laws etc which proved successful soon. Liked by 1 person REPLY Qamar Jafry SEPTEMBER 20, 2016 AT 4:31 PM you are, I am afraid, sadly mistaken like millions of brainwashed British and white commonwealth population in believing the myth that Churchill was the saviour of the western civilisation. Nothing is farther from the truth. Actually, If you read history with an open mind you would find that Hitler was not defeated by Allied powers but by USSR or rather by committing a monumental blunder of invading USSR during the middle of the war. The best equipped and trained and a substantially larger portion of the German army was deployed on Russian front. Do you know that the casualties suffered by USSR in defeating Germany was more than twenty times that suffered by the Allies. Liked by 1 person REPLY Mark DECEMBER 19, 2016 AT 12:05 PM Invading the Soviet Union was no mistake as Stalin was preparing to attack Germany in 1941. Liked by 1 person Churchill bitch SEPTEMBER 15, 2016 AT 3:20 AM If I ever go to England which is never I will piss on his grave. Liked by 2 people REPLY Atlee Whore SEPTEMBER 29, 2016 AT 11:22 AM He terrorised his own people too. That’s why this supposed hero was voted out by a landslide at the end of WW2. Liked by 1 person REPLY William Clarke SEPTEMBER 15, 2016 AT 7:31 AM My father told me that Churchill was loudly booed when he appeared on the news segments in cinema’s in mining areas during the war because of his attitude to miners. Even suggesting flooding the mines with the men in them in Wales. Liked by 2 people REPLY Michael Seignot SEPTEMBER 15, 2016 AT 8:47 AM Churchill was a big supporter of the Eugenics movement, who’s aim was to rid society of “useless people” who supposedly are a burden and a plague on the strength of humanity. Liked by 2 people REPLY Terence Dite SEPTEMBER 15, 2016 AT 9:07 AM I am simply amazed. As a war-time child who followed closely with interest the events of W.W.2 I have been an admirer of Churchill as long as I can remember. At 9 years old I could not understand how an “ungrateful” British public could have ousted him in favour of what I considered a ‘wet’ Clement Attlee. What I did not know until TODAY was the lifetime history of what in my naivety I had always considered ‘ a great man’. Yes, he may well have been the best Prime Minister to have lead us to victory over Nazi Germany, and Japan, but what a shameful record he appears to have have had before and after. I am now inclined to accept the evidence I have just read, with just the minimal reservation that there is such a thing as propoganda. Liked by 2 people REPLY Steve Jack SEPTEMBER 19, 2016 AT 9:42 AM It’s all true, Terence. Good for you, for being open-minded enough to listen to what didn’t conform to ‘received wisdom’. I hope there are many more like you. Liked by 1 person REPLY Alcwyn Evans SEPTEMBER 15, 2016 AT 10:02 AM The late great Welsh actor Ray Smith used to say about their visits to the cinema in Nelson South Wales as children just after the war, that their parents used to give them oranges to eat during the interludes, but to make sure to keep the peel, so that they could chuck them at the screen whenever Churchill would appear on Pathé News on the screen. Liked by 1 person REPLY frank SEPTEMBER 15, 2016 AT 7:43 PM I had a totally different impression of Churchill from my skewed reading of history. I WAS NOT GIVEN THE TRUE FACTS. if what is written is true, he was truly a white supremacist. Liked by 2 people REPLY frank SEPTEMBER 15, 2016 AT 7:44 PM I had a totally different impression of Churchill from my skewed reading of history. I WAS NOT GIVEN THE TRUE FACTS. if what is written is true, he was truly a white supremacist. Like REPLY mick cummins SEPTEMBER 15, 2016 AT 10:22 PM that’s why he hated the Nazi,s ‘ they were trying to cut in on his actions Liked by 2 people REPLY Giovanni Lutri SEPTEMBER 16, 2016 AT 12:30 AM I don’t know why, but I have always had an opinion of Churchill, very close to what I have now learned reading these revelations. A despicable man, an embarrassment to mankind. And the sad reality is that the “Establishment” keep on deceiving the people, all of which makes “It” even more despicable. And all for what? A self serving ideology, corrupt and corrupting, which regards sheer greed as a virtue. I fail to understand what the establishment finds so wrong with socialism, let’s say Scandinavian style, It is the only ideology which makes you feel that we really are all in this together. If Jesus were to come, who knows HE may well come suddenly any time, He would probably eject the money lenders from our presence, like He did once. Personally, being an agnostic, don’t believe it will happen, but it is a nice thought. Liked by 3 people REPLY Willie Allan SEPTEMBER 16, 2016 AT 9:30 PM Don’t forget he wanted to use gas and anthrax bombs in 1944 for revenge for the Germans using the V weapons Liked by 1 person REPLY Edward Carl SEPTEMBER 17, 2016 AT 9:04 AM His identity was rotten to the core: A British “Nobleman” representing the Marlbroough line of descent from Veentian oligarchs who took over England with William of Orange. They were known as “The Venetian Partty”k. I wouldn;’t be surprised to find out is he were related to Caligula, Nero, and … Dracula… Liked by 1 person REPLY Roger Lee SEPTEMBER 17, 2016 AT 7:07 PM the man was a complete horses arse, what he did to the various areas in South Wales was despicable. He should have been hanged for treason for those alone without taking into consideration what he perpetuated throughout the rest of Britain and Ireland, leave alone his crimes against the rest of the World. He held back civilisation and technological advancement for his own ego to the detriment of millions of people. Liked by 1 person REPLY karen whaley SEPTEMBER 17, 2016 AT 9:19 PM Yes, he was a swine. But when this country needed defending in WW11, he was the man for the job. I’m not sure this tiny island would have survived without his leadership. All we can do now is make sure history doesn’t repeat itself Like REPLY Fiona Halloran SEPTEMBER 18, 2016 AT 9:24 AM I can assure you that at the age of 51, I had absolutely no idea how awful this man was. In Scottish schools we only got history from an English point of view. Only recently found out how despicable he was to the Irish people, never mind how he was to those other countries mentioned in this piece. WHY IS HE NOT BEING CHARGED WITH WAR CRIMES ALSO, LIKE TONY BLAIR?? Liked by 1 person REPLY Eddie Lambert SEPTEMBER 18, 2016 AT 4:29 PM Obviously the man was a true shit. It’s about time the truth was told about him. Liked by 1 person REPLY don Quixote SEPTEMBER 23, 2016 AT 6:22 PM David Irving’s biographical history ‘Churchills War’ is a supurb expose of this monster.Be sceptical about the libel trial,held without Jury (on a matter of public reputation) and in which millions of dollars were spent by his enemies. against a stuborn,proud Englishman. Up to that point he ,an amateur historian,was considered foremost in the field of II W.W. study by many.Please look into this open-mindedly. Like REPLY Anju SEPTEMBER 26, 2016 AT 6:22 AM Next time I see a new £5 note I’ll pass on it, exchange it than send that to the poor in India or bangal. Like REPLY Peter sykes SEPTEMBER 30, 2016 AT 3:02 PM Some of this I knew albeit only recently. I’m not shocked to read the rest, he was a sub human and should have been hung. But his bloodline is safe and he was doing the work of his puppet masters. Liked by 1 person REPLY Leslie Wilson NOVEMBER 14, 2016 AT 12:23 PM Yeah, he was a megalomaniac who gloried in supposed “British superiority” and the blood shed trying to prove it. I cannot forget the abandoning of the 51st Division at St Valery. They were surrounded in the rear, facing the full force of the German army. Put in the rearguard to hold the Germans long enough to allow ” The miracle of Dunkirk” to happen. ( Something Churchill avoided speaking about) My father was captured there at 16 years old,( Joined up at 15 when he lied about his age)when they had to surrender due to lack of ammunition. He was fortunate as he escaped after capture on his own, what followed was many adventures across Vichy France, he was captured and escaped 12 times, the war ended for him when he was interned in Rabbat, Morocco by allied troops moving up North Africa. The only reason he did not try and escape Rabbat was simply that it was easy for him, prisoners were fed reasonable and allowed out at weekends! He ended up a interpreter in France for US forces, he had by then learned fluent French. He got the Military Medal from the king at Buckingham palace, the King said to him ” You are the chap who escaped 11 times” To which my father replied ” no, 12 times sir” It was all over by the time he was 20 years old. He was in many Newspapers of the time one calling him ” The man no prison camp could hold” He considered himself very lucky as most of the 51st was shipped to Germany to work and very many, never seen again. Like REPLY Mick W. NOVEMBER 30, 2016 AT 11:20 PM yeah, the rancid, alcoholic bastard also planned to drop anthrax bombs on Germany – which, with wind currents, could have killed millions across the continent….. http://www.fpp.co.uk/bookchapters/WSC/Bwar2.html Liked by 1 person REPLY veritas Dei vincit (@thesunisloud) DECEMBER 7, 2016 AT 7:49 PM Why is everyone so up in arms. Winston Churchill was just doing what white men have been doing since they left the caves of Europe. And that is going about, destroying the rest of the world Like REPLY Mark DECEMBER 19, 2016 AT 12:03 PM Churchill was a war criminal who began civilian bombing in both world wars. The Blitz happened because the RAF had already firebombed German cities since 10 May 1940. I don’t know why right-wing Britons praise him when he destroyed the UK as a world power, and signed away the British Empire in the Atlantic Charter. He should have been tried for war crimes. Like REPLY wendy yip JANUARY 2, 2017 AT 9:41 AM Eliminate all 5 pound notes and stop printing anymore, let this monster disappear in the world! Don’t want to hear this arsehole’s name again! Liked by 1 person REPLY Steve McHale JANUARY 11, 2017 AT 11:25 PM He truly was an evil man as my father spent 30 days in the glasshouse for not taking his cap off when he visited the ship he was serving on this was due in the 1926 strike his mother who went to help her sister in Fife .They were on their way with approx 300 women and children to give miners who were locked in the pit flasks of tea and food , but were set upon by 50 thugs with pick axe handles paid for by Churchill for his cronies who owned the mine,……. Nice one you fat drunk bastard hope your roasting with hitler Stalin and the Black and Tans .The scots Irish and Welsh will never forget . Liked by 1 person REPLY Pingback: 10 Terrible Things Done By Winston Churchill | Acne Jake JANUARY 22, 2017 AT 9:57 PM New president Donald Trump holds him up as his idol. Look out America! Liked by 1 person REPLY Jake JANUARY 22, 2017 AT 10:05 PM Also, he was first lord of the admiralty during WW1 when the Lusitania was sunk by German U Boat. There is some evidence, Churchill knew of the whereabouts and location of the sub but gave orders not to advise the captain of the subs location, in an effort to encourage the USA into the war. Liked by 1 person REPLY Mark FEBRUARY 2, 2017 AT 12:12 PM Churchill deliberately had RMS Lusitania loaded with war munitions and coal so it would burn faster. All passenger liners were carrying war munitions in violation of the Geneva Convention. Liked by 1 person REPLY Leave a Reply Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked * Comment  Name *  Email *  Website  POST COMMENT  Notify me of new comments via email. 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