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absentia-if · 11 months
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RO Quotes Beginning With ‘You May Not’…
Kade/Kara: “You may not be who you used to be, neither am I, but that doesn’t make you any less of the person I fell in love with. The person that I stood on that altar with and said I Do. We’re older now, and have a lot more baggage than we once did, but that doesn’t mean that I’m not willing to lend a hand to help you carry it. For however long you wish me to do so.”
Michael/Margot: “You may not have been my first love, sweetheart, but you are the love that has made all the rest irrelevant. I am yours until the end of time, or until you get sick of me, and that’s not something that’ll ever change. You’re my only star in the sky, the only thing that’ll ever guide me home.”
Blaine/Blaire: “You may not realize, but I’ve always felt like we were supposed to be best friends. That I’m supposed to be in your life and you’re supposed to be in mine. I knew it from the first time I saw you back in Pre-K. I knew it from the first time you smiled at me, because I knew in my heart I would always fight to make it appear again.”
Wren/Wynn: “You may not comprehend why I think this is a bad idea, why I’m fighting so hard against this, against us, but you will in time. You’ll understand when everything begins to fall to pieces and there’s nothing we can do to stop it. I-I’ve been there once, and I barely survived it, I wouldn’t be able to do so if it happened to you too.”
Nicholas/Natalie: “You may not understand what you’ve done for me, I don’t think I’ll ever be able to properly tell you, but you’re one of the few people that’s ever seen me for me. That’s ever looked at me and didn’t already have a preconceived story about me. You gave me a chance when you didn’t have to give me one, you were there for me when you didn’t have to be, and that means more to me than you’ll ever know.”
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beautifulfaaces · 2 years
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Masterlist - Female Green Eyes
2000s
Addy Miller
Ava Kolker
Amirah Johnson
Beatrice Kitsos
Caitlin Carmichael
Ella Ballentine
Ella Rubin
Isla Johnston
Larsen Thompson
Mackenzie Foy
Megan Scott
Melissa Collozo
Sky Katz
90s
Alana Boden      
Alba August
Aleece Wilson
Alexandra Tikerpuu
AJ Michalka
Ali Collier
Alicia von Rittberg
Alina Bobyleva
Alina Boz
Alina Kovalenko
Alycia Debnam-Carey
Allegra Carpenter
Amine Gülşe
Amy Forsyth
Anna Grace Barlow
Brec Bassinger
Breezy Eslin
Brenna O’Brien
Cailin Russo
Caitlin Carver
Camren Bicondova
Catherine Missal
Chloe Grace Moretz
Danielle Campbell
Dove Cameron
Eda Ece
Emma Appleton
Ester Expósito
Esti Ginzburg
India Gants
Frances Encell
Isabel Hodgins
Jella Haase
Jenna Boyd
Júlia Molins
Katerina Tannenbaum
Laura Bilgeri
Lauren Froderman
Lauren Jauregui
Lauren Potter
Leonie Benesch
Lexi DiBenedetto
Lilli Camille Schweiger
Lola Rodríguez
Louisa Connelly-Burnham
Lucy Boynton
Luna Marie Schweiger
Madeleine Coghlan
Madisen Beaty
Madison Davenport
Madison Lintz
Marielle Scott
Meredith Mickelson
Mia Healey
Natacha Karam
Nell Tiger Free
Paula Beer
Pauline Burlet
Pinar Deniz
Rachel Matthews
Riley Voelkel
Romi Van Renterghem
Sabrina Bartlett
Savannah Baker
Sophie Turner
Stephanie Styles
Tiera Skovbye
Ulrikke Falch
Vanessa Grasse
Willa Holland
80s
Abbey Clancy
Abbie Cornish
Alex Paxton Beesley
Alexa Chung
Alexa Davalos
Alexandra Turshen
Alissa Jung
Alison Sudol
Amanda Seyfried
Amy Winehouse
Ana Beatriz Barros
Ana de Armas
Angelina Häntsch
Avigail Harari
Bar Paly
Beren Saat
Carrie MacLemore
Claire Boucher
Clara Alonso
Darla Baker
Eliza Coupe
Elizabeth Knowelden
Elle Evans          
Emilia Clarke
Emily Baldoni
Emily Tremaine
Esther Povitsky
Felicity Jones
Genevieve Angelson
Georgia King
Haley Webb
Hannah Ware
Hilarie Burton
Isidora Goreshter
Jasna Fritzi Bauer
Jen Lilley
Jenna Dewan
Jessica Keenan Wynn
Jessica Lowndes
Joy Lauren
Julia Hartmann
Julie Marie Berman
Kate Lambert
Kate Phillips
Katie Cassidy
Katie Leclerc
Kayla Ewell
Krysten Ritter
Laura Bell Bundy
Lauren Cohan
Lindsey Kraft
Lucy Hale
Mallory Jansen
Marcella Lentz-Pope
Maria Sole Mansutti
Meg Steedle
Meghan Ory
Melissa McIntyre
Monika Reithofer
Paige Spara
Priscilla Quintana
Rachael Taylor
Razane Jammal
Rebecca Breeds
Sara Canning
Sarah Power
Shelley Regner
Tammin Sursok
Yasemin Kay Allen
70s
Adamari López
Alison King
Amber Valletta
Angela Kinsey    
Anna Torv
Artemis Pebdani
Becki Newton
Brandy Clark
Brooke Elliott
Charlize Theron
Christina Applegate
Constance Zimmer
Dorian Brown Pham
Erica Durance
Ginnifer Goodwin
Jennifer Morrison
Jessica Chastain
Jill Flint
Julia Parker
Kathy Kiera Clarke
Keri Russell
Leslie Bibb
Melissa McCarthy
Niki Karimi
Portia de Rossi
Sabrina Grdevich
Sarah Rafferty
Stephanie Waring
Traci Dinwiddie
60s
Alexandra Paul
Amy Ryan
Catherine Tate
Elisabeth Shue
Emily Procter
Francie Swift
Gia Cardis
Julianne More
Kelly Rutherford
Marcia Cross
Mary Page Keller
Melina Clarke
Natascha McElhone
Rebecca Stab
Sherry Stringfield
50s
Allison Janney
Chloe Webb
40s
Diane Keaton
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papermoonloveslucy · 1 year
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TV on TV!
Part 1 ~ The TV Shows of the Lucyverse
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Although it may seem redundant, the worlds created by Lucille Ball on radio and television frequently created and mentioned other TV shows!  Here are a few. 
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“Television” (1949)
Liz and George’s visit to their next-door neighbors, the Stones, turns into a disaster when George tries to repair the Stones’ new television set by himself.
“Television throws ‘My Favorite Husband’ for a loss, and the whole neighborhood into night courts.” ~  Mason City Globe-Gazette radio listing
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“Too Many Television Sets” (1949) 
Liz (Lucilll Ball) can’t get George (Richard Denning) interested in buying a television set, until they spend an evening at the Atterburys, who have one. With his interest piqued, George arranges one be sent over on trial. Little does he know Liz has done the same thing - as have the Atterbury’s!  
LIZ: “I never know who won the fights or what Kukla and Fran are doing to Ollie.”
“Kukla, Fran, and Ollie” was a children’s television show created by Burr Tillstrom that aired from 1947 to 1957. Kukla and Ollie were puppets and actress Fran Allison interacted with them. The show won a 1949 Peabody Award and went on to win two Emmys.
IRIS: “I did my knitting last night with Ed Wynn; I had breakfast with Tex and Jinx; and this afternoon I took a bath with Hopalong Cassidy!”
“The Ed Wynn Show” was a variety show broadcast from September 22,1949 to July 4, 1950 on the CBS Television Network. Comedian and former vaudevillian Ed Wynn was the star of the program. Lucille Ball and Desi Arnaz made their television debut as a couple on the show on Christmas Eve 1949, just a few weeks after this episode of “My Favorite Husband”.
“Tex and Jinx” were Eugenia “Jinx” Falkenberg and her husband John “Tex” McCary. The couple were popular radio hosts who began on television in January 1947.
“Hopalong Cassidy” made the leap from books and movies to the small screen on June 24, 1949, kicking off the legacy of the Western on television. These were not new, but simply cut-down versions of the feature films that were in cinemas from 1935 to 1948. 
Joe warns the Coopers not to sit behind Iris because they only have a ten inch screen. (Liz adds that Iris has a 16″ neck.) He advises that they visit the Schraders who watch “Pantomime Quiz” and serve sandwiches. “Pantomime Quiz” (later titled “Stump the Stars”), was a television game show hosted by Mike Stokey. Running from 1947 to 1959, it has the distinction of being one of the few television series to air on all four TV networks during the Golden Age of Television. Lucille Ball is reported to have been on the series in December 1947, which would make it her television debut.
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“Liz Appears on Television” (1950)
Liz and Iris (Bea Benadaret) make an appearance on a television show celebrating Friendship Week. Their friendship is tested, though, when they discover they've bought the same dress for the occasion. The name of the show is  “Love Your Neighbor” the host of which is played by Frank Nelson. The episode mentions two of the same television programs as “Too Many Television Sets” a year earlier. 
GEORGE: “I can see it now: ‘Kukla, Fran and Lizzie!”
LIZ: “Try Hopalong Cassidy. He looks good next to a horse!”
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“Lucy Does a TV Commercial” (1952)
RICKY: “You’ve never even been on a television show!” LUCY: “Maybe not, but I’ve watched them a lot.”  
Lucy gets hired to do a TV commercial on Ricky’s new show, not realizing the health tonic she has to consume is full of alcohol!
LUCY: “When Ricky comes home tonight you’re going to turn on that television set, and you know who’s going to be on it?”  FRED: “Well, I can only hope it’s Faye Emerson.”
Faye Emerson was a very glamorous stage and screen actress turned TV hostess who had her own variety show. She wore low-cut gowns bedecked with jewelry and had bleach blonde hair pulled back in a tight bun.
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The TV show Ricky hosts is titled “Your Saturday Night Variety”.  You can see Lucille Ball waiting in the wings, with the living room set behind her!  The TV camera has had its identifying information redacted and replaced by TVC (Television Camera)! 
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“Lucy Gets Ricky on the Radio” (1952)
When their TV breaks down, the gang tunes in to a radio quiz show. Surprisingly, Ricky correctly guesses the answers to all of the questions, so the next day Lucy signs them up to be on the show. Sitting the radio atop the malfunctioning TVV set, the gang stares intently at the radio, just as they would television. Before the TV breaks down, the foursome are watching a movie, despite poor reception. 
LUCY: “That little girl is Margaret O'Brien, isn’t it?” RICKY: “Look again - it’s Shirley Temple.” FRED: “Look again - it’s Mary Pickford!”
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“New Neighbors” (1952)
“That’s pretty corny dialogue, even for television. Well, it’s a living!”
New neighbors have just moved in to 323 East 68th Street. When Lucy gets stuck hiding in their closet, she overhears the couple practicing their lines for a TV show and jumps to conclusion that they are foreign spies! Hayden Rorke and K.T. Stevens play the acting couple. 
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“The Handcuffs” (1952)
To keep Ricky home, Lucy handcuffs them together - but then doesn’t have the key. Ricky needs to host a TV show that evening - “Your Favorite Celebrity Guest Stars on TV”.  Lucy has no choice but to be part of the act - if only her left arm!
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Ricky is interviewed and introduced by Veola Vonn, real-life wife of Frank Nelson.
“Readers keepers, losers go look at television!” ~ The Black Eye (1953)
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“Ricky and Fred Are TV Fans” (1953) 
Lucy and Ethel feel the boys are ignoring them to watch the fights on television. They go to elaborate lengths to stop their obsession. The championship boxing match that Ricky and Fred are watching pits 'The Kid' against Murphy. A heavyweight boxer named Irish Bob Murphy famously fought Jake LaMotta in June 1952. Kid Gavilán was a welterweight boxer from (unsurprisingly) Cuba, who was world champion in 1952. Naturally Ricky bets on 'The Kid', while Irishman Fred is in Murphy's corner.
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“Lucy and Ethel Buy the Same Dress” (1953)
“We have a whole half hour on television!”
Lucy and Ethel are excited to appear on TV with their club, until they buy the same dress, which tests their “Friendship”.
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Ricky’s solo on the TV show is "Vaya con Dios.” When Ricky is introducing his song, he says “It’s become quite popular in the last couple of months.”
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“Baby Pictures” (1953) 
Trying to impress the Ricardos about his TV station’s offering of motion pictures Charlie Appleby says:
CHARLIE: “We’ve got the newest moving pictures in town. I bought a block of films yesterday, and I want to tell you that they’re going to make television stars out of some of the actors. Now, just remember their names: Conway Tearle and Mabel Normand.”
Both were silent film stars and died in the 1930s! 
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“Million Dollar Idea” (1954) 
Lucy bottles her own salad dressing, then she and Ethel go on TV to sell it. 
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They appear on “The Dickie Davis Show,” a four-hour daily TV program produced at the station run by Caroline Appleby's husband, Charlie. Frank Nelson plays Dickie Davis. 
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“The Charm School” (1954)
The episode opens with a party where the men are in one room and the women in the other. At the party, the men talk about how soon color might be introduced on television. 
BILL: “Well, there are two schools of thought on that matter. Some people think it’s just around the corner. Others think it’s gonna be a year or two.”
In reality, it was just six months away - but not on CBS and not on “I Love Lucy.”  Ricky says he read an article by Harry Ackerman, a  TV producer who supported the filming of “I Love Lucy” in front of a live studio audience.
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“Home Movies” (1954) 
“If I want to see old movies, I’ll watch television.”
When his feelings get hurt that no one is interested in his home movies, Ricky refuses to include Lucy, Fred and Ethel in his new TV pilot film. Lucy, however, has a plan to get into the action anyway!
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“Ricky’s Hawaiian Vacation” (1954) 
Lucy plans to win a trip to Hawaii on a television quiz show so that she can go with Ricky on a work trip. 
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The TV show is called “Be A Good Neighbor” and it is hosted by Freddy Fillmore, who has finally made the leap from radio to television. In reality, many radio shows made the transition to television during the early 1950s. 
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“The Black Wig” (1954) 
When Ethel tries on Lucy’s wig, Fred says it looks more like life with Luigi. 
“Life With Luigi” was a radio comedy that transferred to television. It premiered on CBS one season after “I Love Lucy,” but was not a success, lasting only a year before briefly returning to radio. One of the 'Italian' characters was played by Alan Reed, who later voiced Fred Flintstone. Two years earlier, both “Luigi” and “Lucy” were part of “Stars in the Eye”, a 1952 CBS special that celebrated the opening of Television City Studios.
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“Tennessee Ernie Hangs On” (1954)
The gang and Ernie sing on television to make money to send him home. 
“Millikan's Chicken-Mash Hour” was a fictional country music TV program, but there were real-life examples as well, the first ever called “Village Barn,” broadcast from 1948 to 1950 from a New York City nightclub. Others included “Hayloft Hoedown,” “ABC Barn Dance,” “Saturday Night Jamboree,” “Windy City Jamboree,” “The Old American Barn Dance,” and “Midwestern Hayride” - all on rival networks. The most famous entry into the genre, “Hee Haw,” did air on CBS, but didn't come along until 1969.  
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“Mr. and Mrs. TV Show” (1954)
“This is going to be one of the biggest television programs to hit town in years!”
Ricky has a chance to do an ‘at-home' TV breakfast show, and naturally Lucy wants to be in it. Things go well until Lucy discovers Ricky only let her do the show because the sponsor insisted. Then revenge is what is served for breakfast!  The live show is named “Breakfast with Ricky and Lucy.” 
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“Breakfast with Ricky and Lucy” was inspired by "Breakfast with Dorothy and Dick."  This daily radio chat show aired from 1945 through 1963, and starred Dorothy Kilgallen, journalist and reporter, and her husband Richard Kollmar, a Broadway actor and producer. There was another popular husband and wife radio breakfast show called “Hi Jinx” that starred model and actress Jinx Falkenburg and publicist Tex McCrary, which made the leap to television in 1948.
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“Bullfight Dance” (1955)
When Lucy is asked to write an article for Photoplay about what it's like being married to Ricky, she uses it to blackmail him to get to perform in a TV benefit for the Heart Fund.
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The scenes of the benefit television show "Coast-to-Coast" for the Heart Fund, hosted by Ricky and featuring Lucy in the bullfight number of the episode's title, are introduced with an establishing shot of the newly-opened CBS Television City building at 7800 Beverly Boulevard in Los Angeles, California. Although “I Love Lucy” was one of CBS’s strongest shows, Desilu was already happily ensconced at Ren Mar Studios.
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“Face to Face” (1955)
Lucy and Ricky appear on a TV interview show from their apartment. But his new agent says the apartment is a dump, and urges them to move into ritzier quarters. The agent tells Ricky that he thinks he’s got him “planted on the Sullivan show next month”.  “The Ed Sullivan Show” (aka “Toast of the Town”) was a Sunday night staple on CBS. In addition to hosting performers on the stage of their New York theatre, celebrities would also be in the audience, and get introduced by Sullivan to get camera time. This is what is meant by “planted” on the Sullivan show.
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Ed Warren (Elliott Reid) is a parody of Edward R. Murrow (right), who hosted the interview show “Person to Person” from 1953 to 1959. Just like Murrow, Warren signs off by bidding the audience “Good night, and good luck!”
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“Lucy Meets Charles Boyer” (1956)
Lucy thinks every man she sees is film star Charles Boyer. When she spots the real Boyer, Ricky convinces him to pretend to be a second rate actor who just happens to look like the star. Boyer mentions “Four Star Playhouse” (1952-56), an anthology series sponsored by Singer and Bristol Myers. The premise of the CBS series was that Boyer, Ida Lupino, David Niven, and Dick Powell would take turns starring in episodes.
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“Lucy and Superman” (1957)
Lucy brags that she can get Superman for Little Ricky’s birthday party. When he isn’t available, Lucy dresses up as the man of steel instead. 
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As the episode opens, Ricky and Little Ricky are watching “Adventures of Superman” on TV. Superman fans have said that this excerpt was not from the original series, but created for “I Love Lucy” using Reeve’s double. The wires holding Superman up are clearly visible in the shot and it was commonly known that Reeve disliked using wires because of an incident early in the show’s creation.  
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“Lucy Gets Chummy with the Neighbors” (1957)
When a misunderstanding about the between Betty (Mary Jane Croft) and Lucy spreads to the boys, Ralph (Frank Nelson) rescinds his offer for Ricky to appear on one of his advertising agency's TV shows, saying “We'll get Cugat!”  For Ricky, this is the ultimate insult. In the early days of television, advertising agencies could dictate whether a show would be aired or not. Such was the case with “I Love Lucy” in 1951. Biou Advertising represented Philip Morris, the show’s sponsor during the first several years. 
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“Lucy Goes To Sun Valley” (1958)
When Ricky, Little Ricky and Fred have to stay home to work on a television show, Lucy reluctantly takes Ethel to Sun Valley. 
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“Lucy Goes To Alaska” (1959) 
The Ricardos and Merztes go to Alaska where Ricky and Fred have bought some land and Ricky is doing a TV show. When Red Skelton’s partner fails to appear, Lucy is recruited to perform with him. 
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“Lucy Wants a Career” (1959)
“I can’t believe it!  Lucy on television!” 
Looking for fulfillment outside the home, Lucy takes a job as a Girl Friday for Paul Douglas on the morning TV show “Early Bird.”  
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The first morning news program on television was “Three To Get Ready,” a local show hosted by comedian Ernie Kovacs that aired in Philadelphia from 1950 to 1952. Although it was mostly entertainment-oriented, the program did feature news and weather segments. Its success prompted NBC to look at producing something similar on a national basis and in January 1952 the "Today Show” premiered. CBS (Lucy's network) entered the field in 1954, but was never able to compete in the ratings. 
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“Lucy Meets the Mustache” (1960)
Near the end of the episode, Ernie Kovacs tells Ricky to "take a good look" at Crandall (aka Lucy in disguise). 
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“Take a Good Look” was the name of a TV quiz show Kovacs moderated at the time. It involved a panel guessing answers based on short skits.
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themomsandthecity · 1 year
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Bryce, Jordan, Jude, and 200+ More of the Best Gender Neutral Baby Names
There are plenty of reasons you might want a shortlist of gender neutral baby names. For instance, if you're not finding out the gender of your baby before their born, but you want to have a name decided on ahead of time - picking a name that works for any gender is the perfect solve. Or maybe you just prefer gender neutral names to baby names that are more traditionally masculine or feminine (although, of course, we love using a baby boy name for girls!) Gender neutral baby names cut across categories. You can find gender neutral names amongst Victorian-era baby names, trendy names, and more unique picks, which means you can find the perfect gender neutral baby name no matter what "vibe" of name you're going for. And to get your creativity going, we rounded up more than 200 unisex names that will suit your baby no matter what. Ahead, find some of our favorite gender-neutral names for babies, from A to Z. A * Adair * Adan * Addison * Ade * Adrian * Aiden * Ainsley * Alby * Alex * Ali * Amari * Andy * Angel * Ari * Ariel * Aries * Ash * Asher * Aspen * Atlas * Aubrey * August * Austen * Avery * B * Baker * Bailey * Bali * Banks * Bellamy * Beckham * Berkeley * Billie * Blaine * Blair * Blake * Bobby * Bowen * Brett * Briar * Brighton * Briley * Brinley * Brooklyn * Bryce * C * Caelan * Cairo * Camden * Cameron * Campbell * Carey * Carson * Carter * Casey * Cassidy * Celyn * Chandler * Charlie * Chris * Cody * Colby * Cole * Collins * Corey * Cove * D * Dakota * Dale * Dallas * Dana * Dane * Darryl * Declan * Delta * Devin * Dorian * Drew * Dylan * E * Easton * Eli * Elliot * Ellis * Ellison * Ember * Emerson * Emory * Evan * Ezra * F * Fallon * Finley * Florian * Flynn * Frances * Frankie * G * Gabriel * Gale * Glenn * Grayson * Grey * H * Harley * Harper * Hayden * Hunter * I * Indiana * Indigo * J * James * Jamie * Jayden * Jaylen * Jesse * Jordan * Jude * Julian * Juniper * Justice * K * Kaden, * Kai * Keegan * Kelly * Kendall * Kennedy * Kerry * Knox * Kyle * L * Lake * Landon * Landry * Lane * Lee * Lennon * Lennox * Lincoln * Linden * Logan * London * Lou * Lucian * Lumi * M * Mackenzie * Madison * Marley * Mason * Max * Maxwell * Micah * Milan * Mina * Monroe * Montana * Morgan * N * Nash * Nevada * Nico * Noah * Noel * O * Oakley * Ollie * Ore * Ozzie * P * Palmer * Paris * Parker * Pat * Perri * Peyton * Piper * Phoenix * Q * Quinn * R * Reagan * Reed * Reese * Reign * Remy * Rey * Riley * River * Roan * Robin * Rory * Roux * Rowan * Royal * Rudy * Ryan * Ryder * Rylan * S * Sage * Salem * Sam * Santana * Sawyer * Saylor * Scout * Seven * Shannon * Shawn * Shiloh * Skylar * Sloane * Spencer * Sterling * Stevie * Sunny * Sydney * T * Tanner * Tatum * Taylor * Terry * Theo * Tony * Tory * Tracy * Tyler * U * Umber * Unique * Uri * V * Val * Vesper * * W * Wallace * West * Winter * Wrennyn * Wyatt * Wynne * X * Xoan * Y * Yael * Z * Zion https://www.popsugar.com/family/Gender-Neutral-Baby-Names-34485564?utm_source=dlvr.it&utm_medium=tumblr
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colemckenzies · 2 years
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Books I read in August ranked best* to worst
The Story Girl by L. M. Montgomery
The Good Immigrant ed. by Nikesh Shukla
Treasure Island by Robert Louis Stevenson
House of Many Ways (howl's moving castle 3) by Diana Wynne Jones
Notes On A Scandal by Zoë Heller
The Time Machine by H. G. Wells
Sitcoms: Selling The American Dream by Gerard Jones
The Switch by Beth O'Leary
Extraordinary Insects by Anne Sverdrup-Thygeson
Rise Up by Amanda Li
Kill Joy (good girl's guide to murder 0.5) by Holly Jackson
Fen by Daisy Johnson
Looking for JJ by Anne Cassidy
Here The Whole Time by Vitor Martins
Finding Henry Applebee by Celia Reynolds
The Chain by Adrian McKinty
i also DNFed diary of a young naturalist by dara mcanulty :/
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a-s-fischer · 8 days
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March and April Readings:
Nonfiction:
Anti-Judaism: The Western Tradition - David Nirenberg
The Three-Cornered War: The Union, the Confederacy, and the Native Peoples in the Fight for the West - Megan Kate Nelson
Enough - Cassidy Hutchinson
How to Stand Up to A Dictator: The Fight for our Future - Maria Ressa
The Joy of Chemistry: The Amazing Science of Familiar Things - Cathy Cobb and Monty L. Fetterolf
Knowing What We Know: The Transmission of Knowledge from Ancient Wisdom to Modern Magic - Simon Winchester
Prequel: An American Fight Against Fascism - Rachel Maddow
The Art of the English Murder - Lucy Worsley
Fiction:
Pride and Prejudice - Jane Austen (Reread)
Howl's Moving Castle - Diana Wynne Jones (Reread)
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grizzledyoungimpact · 3 months
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Febuwhump Day #10: Killing In Self Defense
Febuwhump 2024 February 10th, 2024 Killing In Self Defense Drew Gulak/Tony Nese Western Verse TW: Violence, Character Death, Attempted SA
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Drew Gulak wasn't a killer. On the contrary, the bank clerk had never had a stomach for carrying guns, he never even liked to watch the tournament that the small town of Bullbranch held once a year. While the dregs of society would gather in the saloon to see who their competition would be in the yearly quick draw tournament, Drew did his best to stay away. It was too raucous, too much. All he wanted was the quiet of a little farmstead, someone to settle down with on the edge of town.
All Drew Gulak had ever wanted was Tony Nese.
Tony was everything that Drew had never been. While he tended to stick entirely to himself, Tony loved the attention of those around him. Its why he tended bar at the Red Dust Saloon, why he often took business in the bedrooms above the saloon. Drew and Tony had grown up together and Drew had always imagined the life they could live together. The siblings that Drew looked after like his own children, grown Wheeler and Wynn, liked to tease him about never letting Tony know how he felt.
𝑾𝒉𝒆𝒏'𝒔 𝒕𝒉𝒆 𝒃𝒂𝒄𝒉𝒆𝒍𝒐𝒓 𝒘𝒆𝒅𝒅𝒊𝒏𝒈? 𝑯𝒐𝒘 𝒎𝒂𝒏𝒚 𝒈𝒍𝒂𝒔𝒔𝒆𝒔 𝒐𝒇 𝒘𝒉𝒊𝒔𝒌𝒆𝒚 𝒅𝒐 𝒚𝒐𝒖 𝒕𝒉𝒊𝒏𝒌 𝒊𝒕'𝒍𝒍 𝒕𝒂𝒌𝒆 𝒇𝒐𝒓 𝒚𝒐𝒖 𝒕𝒐 𝒕𝒆𝒍𝒍 𝒉𝒊𝒎?
Drew had always laughed it off before the man he loved had drawn the attention of the big city duo who had recently arrived. "Big Bill" William Cassidy and Eric Arndt were exactly the type of men that Drew hated to see come to their little town. They were loud, arrogant. To Drew, the tournament pulled in too many men like that. Too many men who thought that Tony's job gave them the right to harass them.
Drew had been locking up the bank for the night when he heard the commotion in the alley the bank shared with the saloon. Men seemed to be arguing and he couldn't help but make his presence known. "What seems to be the problem, gentlemen?"
Just past the outline of Big Bill, Drew could make out the form of Tony pressed to the outside wall of the saloon. Eric seemed to have his hand on Tony's abs, pressing kisses to the bartender's neck. When Drew posed the questioned, Eric stopped to bark an order to his large companion. "Get him outta here!"
Drew backed up as Bill headed his way, fist clenching at his side, "You heard the man," the large brute spoke, "you didn't see a thing."
"Leave him alone," Drew protested, "he isn't for you to harass."
"This is your last warning," Bill clutched Drew's jaw in one of his hands, "Leave us-"
Drew bit into Bill's hand before scrambling away. He searched for something to use as a weapon cursing his refusal to carry a gun. Bill lunged at him and Drew quickly moved out of the way. Bill's weight carried him over, falling onto his hands and knees. Drew picked up a rock, moving quicker than he was sure he ever had before. With one good smash, Drew cracked the large rock in his hand into Bill's head. He had only meant to knock the large man out.
The splash of blood that sprayed onto his face and suit let Drew knew he had hit him much, much harder.
Eric let out a shriek, "Bill!"
Drew's hand shook as he backed up, fear on his pale face, "I...I didn't..."
"You're a dead man! You..." Eric reached for his holster, surprise when he couldn't find his gun.
A click sounded from behind Drew, revealing exactly where Eric's gun had gone. Tony pointed the firearm, face red and swollen, "Get. Away. From. Us."
Eric didn't need to be told twice. As Eric fled, Drew sank to his knees, shock still in his eyes as he watched the still bleeding corpse in front of him. He could feel Tony wrap his arms around him from behind, could hear him whispering in his ears, but shock had completely taken his senses.
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saturdaynightmatinee · 10 months
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CALIFICACIÓN PERSONAL: 6 / 10
Título Original: 1969
Año: 1988
Duración: 92 min
País: Estados Unidos
Dirección: Ernest Thompson
Guion: Ernest Thompson
Música: Michael Small
Fotografía: Jules Brenner
Reparto: Robert Downey Jr., Kiefer Sutherland, Bruce Dern, Mariette Hartley, Winona Ryder, Joanna Cassidy, Christopher Wynne, Keller Kuhn, Steve Foster, Mert Hatfield
Productora: Atlantic Productions
Género: War; Drama
TRAILER:
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grindhousefunhouse · 11 months
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THE BIG STEEL GLOVE OF DEATH! | The Glove (1979) | Free On TUBI | Movie Review
John Saxon. Rosey Grier. A big steel glove.
Is what awaits you in my movie review for 1979's "The Glove".
A bounty hunter (Saxon) is assigned to trackdown an angry ex-convict (Grier) who murders prison guards who made his life difficult when he was in the joint with a deadly glove made of leather and steel.
Directed by Ross Hagen and starring John Saxon, Rosey Grier, Joanna Cassidy, Aldo Ray, Jack Carter and Keenan Wynn.
A somehwat forgotten movie from John Saxon's filmography that you can watch for free on TUBI: https://tubitv.com/movies/698678/the-glove
You can also download a DVD RIP from the Internet Archive: https://archive.org/details/the-glove-1979
Physical Media wise, there's no Blu-ray but it's on a Drive-In Double Feature DVD from Dark Sky Films.
PLEASE LIKE! SHARE! & SUBSCRIBE!
Merch Store : https://www.etsy.com/shop/GrindhouseFunhouse
• INSTAGRAM: https://www.instagram.com/grindhousefunhouse • FACEBOOK: https://www.facebook.com/grindhousefunhouse • TWITTER: https://www.twitter.com/grindfunhouse • REDDIT: https://www.reddit.com/r/grindhousefunhouse
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lyrics2world · 2 years
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Closure Lyrics – Chris Brown & H.E.R.
Closure Lyrics – Chris Brown & H.E.R.
Closure Lyrics from Breezy is the latest English song sung by Chris Brown, Lil Baby.Closure song lyrics written by Adonis Gree, Cassidy Wilmot, A1, H.E.R., Joi Wynn, Mayila, Teezio, Young Yonny, Chris Brown and produced by Young Yonny. Closure Song Details Song: Closure Album: Breezy Singer: Chris Brown, H.E.R. Written: Adonis Gree, Cassidy Wilmot, A1, H.E.R., Joi Wynn, Mayila, Teezio, Young…
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absentia-if · 1 year
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RO Quotes Beginning With ‘You Have No Idea’
Kade/Kara: “You have no idea what I’ve done these last few years. Have no idea what I’ve had to do in order to make myself feel better about seeing the sunrise without you. I will never compare what I went through with what happened to you, because they can’t be compared, but it was hell. It may not have been your version, but hell isn’t the same for everyone.”
Michael/Margot: “You have no idea how much I’ve yearned for you. How I’ve waited with bated breath for you to just smile at me. To look at me with anything akin to love in your eyes. You have no idea how important you are to me— I don’t think there are enough words in this world that will be able to express it. To express how much I love you, but it’s not enough anymore. My love isn’t enough anymore.”
Blaine/Blaire: “You have no idea, huh? You truly can’t see how much this is hurting me? I hate what’s happened. I hate that you lost so much, and if I could trade places with you in a heartbeat I would. I hate knowing that you’ve been in pain, and I hate that I haven’t been able to be there for you in so long, but that doesn’t mean I’m going to let you hurt me too.”
Wren/Wynn: “You have no idea what you’re doing! You don’t know what you’re messing with, and because of that you’re going to pay the price! And, I promise you, it’s a price that’s going to be way too high. It’s going to hurt, and it’s going to create a wound that’s so deep it’ll never properly heal, and all you’ll have is yourself to blame for it being there.”
Nicholas/Natalie: “You have no idea who I am! You haven’t ever truly taken the time to know me. Did you really think I would thank you? That I’d be happy about what’s happened? They’re my best friend, and I may never see them again, speak with them again, because of what’s happened today. You have no idea how much you’ve just broken me.”
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blacktruthdotnet · 2 years
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NeNe Leakes Sued by Boyfriend's Wife, Who Claims RHOA Alum Broke Up Their Marriage
NeNe Leakes Sued by Boyfriend’s Wife, Who Claims RHOA Alum Broke Up Their Marriage
By: Kelly Wynne Article Reprint Cassidy Sparrow/Getty Images NeNe Leakes NeNe Leakes has been served. The Real Housewives of Atlanta alum is being sued by a woman named Malomine Tehmeh-Sioh, who is the wife of Leakes’ current boyfriend, Nyonisela Sioh. The lawsuit, obtained by TMZ, claims that Leakes, 55, was intimate with Sioh while he was still in a relationship with Tehmeh-Sioh, and…
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papermoonloveslucy · 4 years
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TOO MANY TELEVISION SETS
October 14, 1949
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"Too Many Television Sets” (aka “Liz and George Order a Television Set” aka “Television”) is episode #58 of the radio series MY FAVORITE HUSBAND broadcast on October 14, 1949.
This was the sixth episode of the second season of MY FAVORITE HUSBAND. There were 43 new episodes, with the season ending on June 25, 1950.
Synopsis ~ Liz can't get George interested in buying a television set, until they spend an evening at the Atterburys, who have one. With his interest piqued, George arranges one be sent over on trial. Little does he know Liz has done the same thing - as have the Atterbury’s!  
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“My Favorite Husband” was based on the novels Mr. and Mrs. Cugat, the Record of a Happy Marriage (1940) and Outside Eden (1945) by Isabel Scott Rorick, which had previously been adapted into the film Are Husbands Necessary? (1942). “My Favorite Husband” was first broadcast as a one-time special on July 5, 1948. Lucille Ball and Lee Bowman played the characters of Liz and George Cugat, and a positive response to this broadcast convinced CBS to launch “My Favorite Husband” as a series. Bowman was not available Richard Denning was cast as George. On January 7, 1949, confusion with bandleader Xavier Cugat prompted a name change to Cooper. On this same episode Jell-O became its sponsor. A total of 124 episodes of the program aired from July 23, 1948 through March 31, 1951. After about ten episodes had been written, writers Fox and Davenport departed and three new writers took over – Bob Carroll, Jr., Madelyn Pugh, and head writer/producer Jess Oppenheimer. In March 1949 Gale Gordon took over the existing role of George's boss, Rudolph Atterbury, and Bea Benaderet was added as his wife, Iris. CBS brought “My Favorite Husband” to television in 1953, starring Joan Caulfield and Barry Nelson as Liz and George Cooper. The television version ran two-and-a-half seasons, from September 1953 through December 1955, running concurrently with “I Love Lucy.” It was produced live at CBS Television City for most of its run, until switching to film for a truncated third season filmed (ironically) at Desilu and recasting Liz Cooper with Vanessa Brown.
MAIN CAST
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Lucille Ball (Liz Cooper) was born on August 6, 1911 in Jamestown, New York. She began her screen career in 1933 and was known in Hollywood as ‘Queen of the B’s’ due to her many appearances in ‘B’ movies. With Richard Denning, she starred in a radio program titled “My Favorite Husband” which eventually led to the creation of “I Love Lucy,” a television situation comedy in which she co-starred with her real-life husband, Latin bandleader Desi Arnaz. The program was phenomenally successful, allowing the couple to purchase what was once RKO Studios, re-naming it Desilu. When the show ended in 1960 (in an hour-long format known as “The Lucy-Desi Comedy Hour”) so did Lucy and Desi’s marriage. In 1962, hoping to keep Desilu financially solvent, Lucy returned to the sitcom format with “The Lucy Show,” which lasted six seasons. She followed that with a similar sitcom “Here’s Lucy” co-starring with her real-life children, Lucie and Desi Jr., as well as Gale Gordon, who had joined the cast of “The Lucy Show” during season two. Before her death in 1989, Lucy made one more attempt at a sitcom with “Life With Lucy,” also with Gordon.
Richard Denning (George Cooper) was born Louis Albert Heindrich Denninger Jr., in Poughkeepsie, New York. When he was 18 months old, his family moved to Los Angeles. Plans called for him to take over his father's garment manufacturing business, but he developed an interest in acting. Denning enlisted in the US Navy during World War II. He is best known for his  roles in various science fiction and horror films of the 1950s. Although he teamed with Lucille Ball on radio in “My Favorite Husband,” the two never acted together on screen. While “I Love Lucy” was on the air, he was seen on another CBS TV series, “Mr. & Mrs. North.” From 1968 to 1980 he played the Governor on “Hawaii 5-0″, his final role. He died in 1998 at age 84.
Gale Gordon (Rudolph Atterbury) had worked with Lucille Ball on “The Wonder Show” on radio in 1938. One of the front-runners to play Fred Mertz on “I Love Lucy,” he eventually played Alvin Littlefield, owner of the Tropicana, during two episodes in 1952. After playing a Judge in an episode of “The Lucy-Desi Comedy Hour” in 1958, he would re-team with Lucy for all of her subsequent series’: as Theodore J. Mooney in ”The Lucy Show”; as Harrison Otis Carter in “Here’s Lucy”; and as Curtis McGibbon on "Life with Lucy.” Gordon died in 1995 at the age of 89.
Bea Benadaret (Iris Atterbury) was considered the front-runner to be cast as Ethel Mertz but when “I Love Lucy” was ready to start production she was already playing a similar role on TV’s “The George Burns and Gracie Allen Show” so Vivian Vance was cast instead. On “I Love Lucy” she was cast as Lucy Ricarodo’s spinster neighbor, Miss Lewis, in “Lucy Plays Cupid” (ILL S1;E15) in early 1952. Later, she was a success in her own show, “Petticoat Junction” as Shady Rest Hotel proprietress Kate Bradley. She starred in the series until her death in 1968.
Ruth Perrott (Katie, the Maid) was also later seen on “I Love Lucy.” She first played Mrs. Pomerantz, a member of the surprise investigating committee for the Society Matrons League in “Pioneer Women” (ILL S1;E25), as one of the member of the Wednesday Afternoon Fine Arts League in “Lucy and Ethel Buy the Same Dress” (ILL S3;E3), and also played a nurse when “Lucy Goes to the Hospital” (ILL S2;E16). She died in 1996 at the age of 96.
Bob LeMond (Announcer) also served as the announcer for the pilot episode of “I Love Lucy”. When the long-lost pilot was finally discovered in 1990, a few moments of the opening narration were damaged and lost, so LeMond – fifty years later – recreated the narration for the CBS special and subsequent DVD release.
GUEST CAST
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Jay Novello (Joe Beckett, the Atterbury’s Neighbor) would appear on “I Love Lucy” as superstitious Mr. Merriweather in “The Seance" (ILL S1;E7), nervous Mr. Beecher in “The Sublease” (ILL S3;E31), and Mario the gondolier in “The Visitor from Italy” (ILL S6;E5). He also appeared on two episodes of “The Lucy Show,” but dapper Novello is probably best remembered for playing Mayor Lugatto on “McHale’s Navy” in 1965.
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Wally Maher (Mr. Trimble) appeared on radio as the title character in the series “The Adventures of Michael Shayne, Private Detective”. In 1947 he appeared on radio with Lucille Ball in “Dark Corner”. Earlier in 1949, he was heard on “My Favorite Husband” in “Vacation Time.” He was a regular on “Let George Do It” and “Lineup” and was frequently heard on “The Cavalcade of America” and “Lux Radio Theatre.” Maher passed away in December 1951, only 43 years old.    
Although the original Michael Shayne, the role was later played by Richard Denning (George Cooper). 
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Peter Leeds (TV Deliveryman) was born in Bayonne, NJ, and will also be heard on “My Favorite Husband in “Mother In-Law” in November 1949 and “Dance Lessons” in June 1950. He will be seen as the Reporter questioning the Maharincess of Franistan in “The Publicity Agent” (ILL S1;E31). He starred with Lucy in the films The Long, Long Trailer (1953) and The Facts of Life (1960) with Bob Hope. Coincidentally, he also appeared in “Lucy and Bob Hope” (ILL S6;E1) as well as an episode of “Here’s Lucy” in 1971.
EPISODE
ANNOUNCER: “As we look in on the Coopers, dinner is over. George Cooper is in the living room reading the paper. Liz Cooper is in the kitchen talking to Katie, the maid.”
Liz tells Katie that she has a plan to get George to buy her a television set. She is going to hold up a big glass pie plate in front of her face and pretend like she’s a television wrestler.  
LIZ: “Do I look like television?” KATIE: “Well your face is all wavy and distorted.” LIZ: “I look like television alright.”
Liz enters the living room with the pie plate in front of her face, but George thinks she is a washing machine. 
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Lucille Ball actually voiced a washing machine named Lina for a Westinghouse industrial film titled “Ellis in Freedomland” (1952).  In 1958, she hid inside a washing machine at the end of “Lucy Buys Westinghouse”, another industrial film for the appliance manufacturer. 
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In 1952′s “Lucy Does a TV Commercial” (ILL S1;E30), Lucy Ricardo dispenses with the pie plate and disembowels her television set to look like she’s on the air!  Like George, Ricky isn’t buying it. 
George guesses that Liz is supposed to be a sailor looking out of a port hole, but warns her that he is not going to buy a television set, effectively ending the conversation. Liz says she is a social pariah because she doesn’t have a television set. 
LIZ: “I never know who won the fights or what Kukla and Fran are doing to Ollie.” 
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“Kukla, Fran, and Ollie” was a children’s television show created by Burr Tillstrom that aired from 1947 to 1957. Kukla and Ollie were puppets and actress Fran Allison interacted with them. The show won a 1949 Peabody Award and went on to win two Emmys. 
George suggests Liz read the newspaper or listen to the radio instead. 
LIZ: “Television is taking the place of the newspaper.” GEORGE: “It is, huh? Well, I’d like to see you wrap the garbage in a television set!”
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Before the advent of plastic garbage bags, food waste from the kitchen was generally wrapped in old newspapers before being deposited in the trash bin outside the home. 
LIZ: “Every house on the block has an aerial. Our house looks positively naked.” 
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Before cable television and internet streaming, homes received television broadcast signals via an antenna (aerial) on the roof. In “Lucy Puts Up a TV Antenna” (TLS S1;E9) Lucy Carmichael decides to save the cost of an installation and erect the aerial herself - to disastrous results. 
George agrees to buy the aerial - but not the television set.
LIZ: “Oh, great, that’ll fool everybody. Before we go out at night we can peel onions so our eyes will be bloodshot!” 
Liz asks George to buy him an apple box instead. 
LIZ: “If I have to watch it [TV] through a store window, at least I’ll have something to sit on.”
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Before television sets became affordable to the general public, it was not uncommon to find people gathered in front of an appliance store window to view it from the street. 
Liz answers the telephone. It is Iris, who brags about her brand new television set, which was delivered the day before. 
IRIS: “I did my knitting last night with Ed Wynn; I had breakfast with Tex and Jinx; and this afternoon I took a bath with Hopalong Cassidy!” 
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“The Ed Wynn Show” was a variety show broadcast from September 22,1949 to July 4, 1950 on the CBS Television Network. Comedian and former vaudevillian Ed Wynn was the star of the program. Lucille Ball and Desi Arnaz made their television debut as a couple on the show on Christmas Eve 1949, just a few weeks after this episode of “My Favorite Husband”.
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“Tex and Jinx” were Eugenia “Jinx” Falkenberg and her husband John “Tex” McCRary. The couple were popular radio hosts who began on television in January 1947. 
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“Hopalong Cassidy” made the leap from books and movies to the small screen on June 24, 1949, kicking off the legacy of the Western on television. These were not new, but simply cut-down versions of the feature films that were in cinemas from 1935 to 1948. The film / TV series had William Boyd in the title role. A new TV series (also starring Boyd) with newly-filmed adventures, began  in 1952.  
Iris’s comment about “taking a bath with Hopalong Cassidy” gets a big reaction from the “My Favorite Husband” studio audience not used to salacious innuendo. 
Iris comes up with an idea to help Liz convince George to buy her a television set. She invites the Coopers to come over, where their TV will be showing a football game. George will naturally see the joys of owning a TV and give in! 
Instead of Iris or Rudolph, the Atterbury’s front door is answered by their neighbor, Joe Beckett (Jay Novello), the local TVM (television moocher).  He says they just missed the big brawl!
GEORGE: “Mr. and Mrs. Atterbury?” JOE: “No. The Terrible Turk and Gorgeous George!” 
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Wrestling matches were very popular on radio and early television, producing such colorful wrestlers as the Terrible Turk and Gorgeous George. George Raymond Wagner (1915–63), was known as Gorgeous George because of his long blonde hair. He was mentioned on “I Love Lucy” in “Pioneer Women” (ILL S1;E25) and “Ricky’s Movie Offer” (ILL S4;E6). In 1949, Republic Pictures released a film starring Gorgeous George. Laurence LeBell (1907-48) was known as Ali Alaba, The Terrible Turk, a name that was used by many wrestlers from the late 19th century onwards. He died in a car crash just weeks after this episode aired. 
Joe warns the Coopers not to sit behind Iris because they only have a ten inch screen. (Liz adds that Iris has a 16″ neck.) He advises that they visit the Schraders who watch “Pantomime Quiz” and serve sandwiches. The Andersons have beer, but you have to watch Western movies.
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“Pantomime Quiz” (later titled “Stump the Stars”), was a television game show hosted by Mike Stokey. Running from 1947 to 1959, it has the distinction of being one of the few television series to air on all four TV networks during the Golden Age of Television. Lucille Ball is reported to have been on the series in December 1947, which would make it her television debut. 
George realizes Liz’s scheme but is insistent that he won’t watch television. When he hears a football game is on, however, he is intrigued, and decides to see “how bad it looks”. 
Liz’s incessant chattering makes Mr. Atterbury miss several key plays in the game. Mr. Beckett is back but then the picture suddenly goes black!  They have to imagine the game and the commercials. 
ANNOUNCER: “Liz’s plan to get George interested in television has blown a fuse.  Right now, Liz is on her way downtown to drown her sorrows by buying a new hat...”
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On her way down Sheridan Boulevard, Liz stops in front of a Trimble’s Appliance Store to gaze at the television in the window. An elderly man stops to chat with her about the joys of television. He convinces her to go in and ask about buying one. Of course, he turns out to be Mr. Trimble himself. She tells him to send over a set on trial. 
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Later that day, George finds himself in front of the same store, where he encounters the same elderly man!  Needless to say, Mr. Trimble is successful in selling another set to George!  Mr. Trimble thinks the address sounds familiar, but isn’t sure.
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Still later, the Atterbury’s are doing the marketing when they stop in front of Trimble’s Appliance Store. Mr. Atterbury, already having a set, is convinced to send George Cooper. Mr. Trimble is now positive that he’s gotten the same address three times. He thinks he is being tricked and vows that he will only send over one TV set on trial, not three. 
After dinner, the Coopers decide to stay in for the evening. The doorbell rings. Unbeknownst to one another, they both are expecting a TV delivery, but instead, it is the Atterburys. A moment later the bell rings again and a deliveryman (and Mr. Beckett) is there with one new television set. Naturally, the Atterburys, Liz, and George, all think they are the ones who bought the set! 
The Atterburys think the Coopers are ungrateful and they decide to leave. Rudolph tries to take the TV set with him, but the set is damaged in the tussle.
LIZ: “You’re right Iris, this IS the television set you sent out!” 
This ending is reminiscent of when the Ricardos and Mertzes argue over who broke a TV set Fred and Ethel gave Lucy and Ricky as a gift. They, too, argue over ownership of the set, until it is irreparably damaged!
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LUCY: “Look what happened to YOUR television set!” 
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ferretfyre · 4 years
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grizzledyoungimpact · 2 years
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Pairing: Trent Baretta/Chuck Taylor/Wynn Yuta Quote: I love a story with food in it. Verse: Supernatural
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The world was bigger than Trent Baretta would have ever imagined.
He had grown up around other fae, though he had never known another just like himself. The mortals called his kind brownie, hard-working spirits who could become mischievous when not properly taken care of. That care included leaving an offering of food, mostly milk or cream, in exchange for all their hard work. Growing up, Trent had been lonely. Solitary. There were never any other brownies in the same house and it hadn’t been until moving to New York City that he met the other two beings, his roommates-to-be.
Orange Cassidy was unknowable, even after so many years of being his friend. Sometimes it seemed like he was also fae, something akin to a pixie. He was just as mischievous, after all. But that didn’t explain the sunglasses, the aversion he seemed to have to the sun, so Trent assumed Orange was some sort of vampire. Not that he cared either way. All Trent cared about when it came to Orange was that he took care of himself and that he paid the rent on time.
Chuck Taylor was on a different level.
Chuck was indeed like Trent, a fae folk. The Kentucky native had been excited to meet Trent, to know another figure who had his vices. Whereas Trent found his vice in sugar, in sweets, like most brownies, Chuck found his vice in alcohol like most clurichaun. The duo often found themselves trying to get more housework done than the other or trying to play tricks on the other. The more time the duo spent together, and with Orange, the more Trent couldn’t imagine spending his time with anyone else.
That was until he had been introduced to the Yuta siblings.
Orange had been seeing a new girl, a witch apprentice named Cherry, who had invited the trio to a sort of support group for creatures of the supernatural variety run by an old British vampire. It was a safe haven for all sorts of creatures and Trent was impressed by the variety. Kris, the trio’s upstairs neighbor and resident alien, was speaking rapidly with what appeared to be a human-sized moth that Kris would later introduce as Martina. The vampire who ran the group, another Trent, spoke rapidly with a large tattooed figure who later introduced himself as a werebear named Brody.
But it was the duo in the corner that attracted Trent’s attention.
The decidedly male figure didn’t interest Trent, though he could notice how Chuck seemed to watch him. While that did worry Trent, he decided he could use that to his advantage to speak to the other member of the duo, the one who did interest him. The other person was more feminine of face, but Trent was familiar with the form of someone who was binding, even if he was only use to it when other fae hid wings. This was different, of course, but that wasn’t what drew him in.
What drew him in was the faintest trace of gills underneath the collar of the figure's button-up shirt.
The brownie sat down next to his newest subject of interest, a grin across his lips, “Well. I’ve never seen you before, huh?”
The male figure raised an eyebrow, looking Trent up and down intently, “It might be because you’re new here.”
Trent raised an eyebrow of his own, “I wasn’t talking to you, was I? No. I’m talking to them. I’m talking to…” he trailed off, hoping the figure of interest would give him a name.
The corner of the others upper lip upturned, “You must think I’m dumb, sir. I can’t just give a fae my name.”
Trent laughed, “Clever. Very clever. I promise I won’t do anything terrible with it. I just want to know what to call you.”“That’s my brother, Wheeler. I’m Wynn,” they introduced, taking a sip of water from a paper cup, “And you are?”
“Trent. Trent Baretta,” the brownie grinned, “and you’re right, I’m fae. What are the two of you?”
Wheeler narrowed his eyes, seemingly protective of his sibling, “You can’t just ask that, especially here. This is a place for all creatures.”
“Woah, easy now,” Trent held up a hand to placate the other man, “not trying to be rude. You two aren’t hiding as well as you think you are.”
Wynn cocked their head to the side, arms crossing over their chest, “Excuse me, Mr. Baretta?”
“Your gills,” Trent brought a hand up to Wynn’s shirt collar, “Either get a higher collar or don’t hide them. In a place like this, you shouldn’t have to, right?”
Wynn ducked their head sheepishly, pulling away from Trent’s touch. “Thought I…it doesn’t matter. You should know what we are if you can see them, then. Right?”
“Never met someone like you before, a mer,” Trent charmed, offering his hand, “Mr. Seven’s about to start the meeting. My friend Cherry says he’ll be talking about how to curb non-human appetites and I love a story with food in it. Come sit with me?”
Wynn gave another smile, gently taking the brownie’s hand, “Can’t usually turn down an offer from a fae. I’m in.”
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doubleattitude · 3 years
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24/7 Dance Convention, Pittsburgh, PA: RESULTS
High Scores by Age:
Sidekick Solo
1st: Penelope LeMieux-’I’d Rather Go Blind’
2nd: Harper McCarey-’I Can Go The Distance’
3rd: Aleah Blair-’Heartbreaker’
3rd: Ava Edmonds-’Let ‘Er Rip’
3rd: Brynley Brett-’Let Me Entertain You’
4th: Elliana Macioce-’Dreamer’
5th: Ella Kirchoff-’VK Mashup’
6th: Gabriella Pallozolo-’Name Game’
7th: Cora Baney-’Work For It’
8th: Layla Bajek-’Free Little Bird’
Mini Solo
1st: Kensington Dressing-’Distant World’
2nd: Emily Polis-’Bloodthirsty’
2nd: Mya Lanigan-’Halo’
2nd: Avaleigh Mackaron-’On A Clear Day’
3rd: Channing Embry-’Blackbird’
3rd: Emmie Whyte-’New York, New York’
3rd: Lexus Natalie-’Shelter’
4th: Kendall Bruce-’Swing Phenomenon’
4th: Jordan Officer-’Wash & Set’
5th: Aili Joyce-’Hurricane’
5th: Giada Reino-’Nature Boy’
6th: Lily Tompkins-’Angel Standing By’
7th: Ava mcLendon-’Ready For War’
8th: Mia Bianco-’Business of Love’
8th: Ava Cutchall-’Wings’
9th: Kylie Pecoraro-’Every Season’
9th: Elyse Rost-’Love Is’
9th: Addie Changoway-’Variation of Don Quixote’
10th: Mia Rossa-’Arms Of The Angel’
10th: Charlize George-’What A Feeling’
Junior Solo
1st: Cameron Voorhees-’Unplugged’
2nd: Sean Detwiller-’Ain’t No Sunshine’
2nd: Caitie Polis-’Fallen Angel’
2nd: Adina Rooney-’Inhale Exhale’
2nd: Maura Matuska-’LJ’
2nd: Bella Rose Penrose-’Spine’
3rd: Julia Chavez-’Everything I Do’
3rd: Ella Way-’Glory’
3rd: Londyn LeMieux-’Human Touch’
3rd: Ivy Gang-’Stutter’
3rd: Joelle Cherry-’Through Water’
3rd: Shayla Blair-’To Be Free’
4th: Bria Burnett-’Lung’
4th: Fallyn Kauffman-’Marathon In Roses’
5th: Isabella Ginevra-’Fight Song’
5th: Avani Agrawal-’Spindra’
6th: Holly Miller-’After The Rain Stops’
6th: Brooklyn Corbett-’Feeling Good’
7th: Paige Borg-’Otto’
7th: Lauren Hudach-’You Are A Memory’
8th: Colette McIvor-’Cold Hearted’
8th: Penelope Ciminieri-’Connected Colors’
9th: Caroline McGowan-’I Love You Always Forever’
10th: Peyton Langworthy-’Ashes’
10th: Tessa Mattina-’Nature of Daylight’
Teen Solo
1st: Ying Lei Pham-’Empty Space’
2nd: Camila Cordero-’Fhantom’
2nd: Tatiana Hagee-’Harvest Moon’
2nd: Sarah Georgiana-’Lungs’
2nd: Isabella Pinkston-’Speaking Of The End’
2nd: Calico Reyes-’Trust In Me’
3rd: Beth Anne McGowan-’Heart Is As Black As Night’
3rd: Isabel Reese-’Inside’
3rd: Olivia Martin-’Smile’
3rd: Jeremy Powalowski-’You Worry Me’
4th: Ava Carroll-’Are You Sure’
4th: Elyse Wingertsahn-’I Cry For Daylight’
4th: Samantha DeFabio-’Multiple Self’
4th: Illiana Victor-’New Memory’
4th: Tori Shaner-’Youth’
5th: Zoey Schneiter-’Do You Feel Real’
5th: Maeve McCormack-’Maybe We’ll See’
6th: Taylor Strilesky-’Dynamite’
6th: Alaina Scabora-’Empty Spaces’
6th: Emily Yap-’Farewell’
6th: Kayle Shaner-’No Rights, No Wrong’
6th: Louise Hindsbo-’Reactor’
7th: London Mitchell-’Bitter Earth’
7th: Samuel Evans-’Coming To An End’
7th: Camryn Lanigan-’Fall Creek’
7th: Hailey Keaveney-’Listen Within’
7th: Shay Kaminski-’Once Upon Another Time’
8th: Isabella Klink-’Gemini Feed’
8th: Jocie Slesinski-’Illness as A Metaphor’
8th: Piper Embry-’No Middle’
9th: Maddie Enright-’Alps’
10th: Maggie Anzells-’Let Me Go’
10th: Taylor Higgins-’Ready’
Senior Solo
1st: Clara Thiele-’Opposing Truths’
1st: Gionna D’Allesandro-’Wish You Were Here’
2nd: Anna Miller-’Godspeed’
3rd: Raegan Stafford-’Villain’
4th: Jocelyn Wynn-’Ego’s Detached’
4th: Cassidy Reigel-’Musical Theatre’
5th: Sarah Beth Lentz-’I Remember Her’
5th: Julia Strasburg-’Never Go’
5th: Trinity Malgay-’Something Short & Sweet’
6th: Keira Fleming-’Oscillating In Time’
6th: Emmalyn Mackaron-’Sans Toi’
6th: Abby Griffith-’The War’
6th: Tori Stewart-’This Woman’s Work’
7th: Madelyn Gaba-’Enough Of Our Disease’
7th: Dana Miller-’Sad Day’
7th: Brooke Cheek-’The Beginning and the End’
7th: Mia Stockle-’Tumbling Lights’
7th: Kylie West-’What A Little Moonlight Can Do’
8th: Emma Girdany-’Flickers’
9th: Katrina Oschmann-’Polly’
9th: Ashley Veverka-’Right As Rain’
10th: Lila Bierman-’Cleo’
10th: Mackenzie Stephenson-’Come Back’
10th: Brooke Kosinski-’La Vie En Rose’
10th: Abbey Barron-’Once I Was Loved’
10th: Megan Kovach-’The Swan’
Sidekick Duo/Trio
1st: Evolve Dance Complex-’Fly Me To The Moon’
2nd: Evolve Dance Complex-’Beat’
3rd: Xtreme Tumbling and Dance Center-’Candy Girls’
Mini Duo/Trio
1st: Evolve Dance Complex-’Gallows’
2nd: Stars Dance Studio-’Rescue’
3rd: Xtreme Tumbling and Dance Center-’Dr. Beat’
Junior Duo/Trio
1st: Center Stage Dance Studio-’Rhythm’
2nd: Evolve Dance Complex-’Exiles’
3rd: Center Stage Dance Studio-’Dancing In The Dark’
3rd: Middletown Dance Academy-’Jilted’
3rd: Studio 412-’Nature Boy’
Teen Duo/Trio
1st: Ludovici Dance Academy-’Lash Out’
2nd: Evolve Dance Complex-’Still Life’
3rd: Middletown Dance Academy-’Ninjaness’
3rd: Center Stage Dance Studio-’The Come Down’
3rd: Evolve Dance Complex-’Wheel’
Senior Duo/Trio
1st: Dance Mechanics-’Bills, Bills, Bills’
2nd: Center Stage Dance Studio-’Enemy’
2nd: Center Stage Dance Studio-’Because of You’
3rd: Center Stage Dance Studio-’Let’s Fall In Love’
Sidekick Group
1st: Noretta Dunworth School of Dance-’Bon Appetit’
2nd: Evolving Artists Dance Studio-’Rainbow In Your Eyes’
3rd: Evolving Artists Dance Studio-’Trickle Trickle’
Mini Group
1st: Evolve Dance Complex-’Undertow’
2nd: Center Stage Dance Studio-’Mambo No. 5′
3rd: Noretta Dunworth School of Dance-’Quake’
Junior Group
1st: Center Stage Dance Studio-’Charge Up’
2nd: Evolve Dance Complex-’Hope There’s Someone’
3rd: Studio 412-’Afraid To Go’
Teen Group
1st: Evolve Dance Complex-’Debut’
1st: Evolve Dance Complex-’My Tears Are Becoming A Sea’
2nd: Evolve Dance Complex-’We Rise We Fall’
3rd: Ludovici Dance Academy-’Don’t Be So Hard On Yourself’
3rd: Dance Spectrum-’Don’t Worry’
3rd: Center Stage Dance Studio-’If You Went Away’
Senior Group
1st: Noretta Dunworth School of Dance-’Go Home’
2nd: Ludovici Dance Academy-’Runaway Baby’
3rd: Center Stage Dance Studio-’Senorita’
3rd: Center Stage Dance Studio-’Smoke Signals’
3rd: Center Stage Dance Studio-’So Many Signs’
3rd: Noretta Dunworth School of Dance-’That’s Life’
Sidekick Line
1st: Noretta Dunworth School of Dance-’Can You Feel It’
2nd: Noretta Dunworth School of Dance-’Reflection’
Mini Line
1st: Noretta Dunworth School of Dance-’Steam Heat’
2nd: Ludovici Dance Academy-’Straight To Memphis’
3rd: Xtreme Tumbling and Dance Center-’Little Red’
Junior Line
1st: Evolve Dance Complex-’Better Days Ahead’
2nd: Xtreme Tumbling and Dance Center-’Goodbye Yellow Brick Road’
3rd: Dance Spectrum-’Ice Ice Baby’
Teen Line
1st: Center Stage Dance Studio-’Are You Even Real?’
1st: Evolve Dance Complex-’Cruelest Month’
1st: Evolve Dance Complex-’Pump It Up’
2nd: Dance Spectrum-’Shining Star’
3rd: Center Stage Dance Studio-’Remember When’
Senior Line
1st: Noretta Dunworth School of Dance-’Fancy’
2nd: Noretta Dunworth School of Dance-’Hallucinations’
3rd: Noretta Dunworth School of Dance-’Misunderstood’
Junior Extended Line
1st: Center Stage Dance Studio-’Cha Cha Heels’
2nd: Center Stage Dance Studio-’B.E.P’
3rd: Center Stage Dance Studio-’Wash’
Teen Extended Line
1st: Center Stage Dance Studio-’Impacto’
2nd: Center Stage Dance Studio-’More Than Friends’
3rd: Dance Spectrum-’Coming In Hot’
High Scores by Performance Division:
Sidekick Jazz
1st: Noretta Dunworth School of Dance-’Can You Feel It’ 2nd: Evolving Artists Dance Studio-’Trickle Trickle’
Sidekick Tap
1st: Noretta Dunworth School of Dance-’Bon Appetit’
Sidekick Lyrical
1st: Noretta Dunworth School of Dance-’Reflection’ 2nd: Evolving Artists Dance Studio-’Rainbow In Your Eyes’
Mini Jazz
1st: Center Stage Dance Studio-’Mambo No. 5′ 2nd: Noretta Dunworth School of Dance-’Quake’ 3rd: Noretta Dunworth School of Dance-’Louder’
Mini Tap
1st: Ludovici Dance Academy-’Straight To Memphis’ 2nd: Noretta Dunworth School of Dance-’Big Band Sound’ 3rd: Noretta Dunworth School of Dance-’HSKT’
Mini Contemporary
1st: Evolve Dance Complex-’Undertow’ 2nd: Noretta Dunworth School of Dance-’Let The River Run’ 3rd: Noretta Dunworth School of Dance-’You’ve Got A Friend’
Mini Lyrical
1st: Ludovici Dance Academy-’A Safe Place’
Mini Musical Theatre
1st: Noretta Dunworth School of Dance-’Steam Heat’
Mini Specialty
1st: Xtreme Tumbling and Dance Center-’Little Red’ 2nd: Evolve Dance Complex-’Ramalama’
Junior Jazz
1st: Center Stage Dance Studio-’Charge Up’ 1st: Center Stage Dance Studio-’Cha Cha Heels’ 2nd: Noretta Dunworth School of Dance-’Trust’ 3rd: Dance Spectrum-’Makes Me Feel’ 3rd: Xtreme Tumbling and Dance Center-’Burlesque’
Junior Ballet
1st: Dance Spectrum-’Brazilian Rose’
Junior Hip-Hop
1st: Center Stage Dance Studio-’B.E.P’ 2nd: Dance Spectrum-’Ice Ice Baby’
Junior Tap
1st: Ludovici Dance Academy-’Love Myself’ 2nd: Center Stage Dance Studio-’Canned Heat’ 3rd: Dance Spectrum-’Crazy In Love’
Junior Contemporary
1st: Evolve Dance Complex-’Better Days Ahead’ 1st: Evolve Dance Complex-’Hope There’s Someone’ 2nd: Studio 412-’Afraid To Go’ 3rd: Evolve Dance Complex-’Hope’
Junior Lyrical
1st: Center Stage Dance Studio-’Yours’ 2nd: Dance Spectrum-’Fly’ 2nd: Xtreme Tumbling and Dance Center-’Goodbye Yellow Brick Road’
Teen Jazz
1st: Center Stage Dance Studio-’More Than Friends’ 2nd: Center Stage Dance Studio-’Breakin’ Dishes’ 3rd: Center Stage Dance Studio-’Step On Up’ 3rd: Dance Spectrum-’I Want You to Shake’ 3rd: Noretta Dunworth School of Dance-’Love Is Fire’
Teen Ballet
1st: Dance Spectrum-’Bataille’
Teen Hip-Hop
1st: Center Stage Dance Studio-’Impacto’ 2nd: Dance Spectrum-’Coming In Hot’ 3rd: Dance Spectrum-’What’s The Dillio?’
Teen Tap
1st: Dance Spectrum-’Shining Star’ 2nd: Center Stage Dance Studio-’Remember When’ 2nd: Ludovici Dance Academy-’Don’t Be So Hard On Yourself’ 2nd: Dance Spectrum-’Don’t Worry’ 3rd: Dance Spectrum-’Seven’
Teen Contemporary
1st: Evolve Dance Complex-’My Tears Are Becoming A Sea’ 1st: Evolve Dance Complex-’Debut’ 2nd: Center Stage Dance Studio-’Are You Even Real?’ 2nd: Evolve Dance Complex-’Pump It Up’ 2nd: Evolve Dance Complex-’We Rise We Fall’ 2nd: Evolve Dance Complex-’Cruelest Month’ 3rd: Center Stage Dance Studio-’If You Went Away’
Teen Lyrical
1st: Dance Mechanics-’Volcanic’ 2nd: Dance Spectrum-’We Choose’ 3rd: Studio 412-’Beautiful Mess’
Teen Acro 
1st: Dance Spectrum-’I Just Wanna’
Senior Jazz
1st: Noretta Dunworth School of Dance-’Fancy’ 2nd: Noretta Dunworth School of Dance-’That’s Life’
Senior Tap
1st: Ludovici Dance Academy-’Runaway Baby’ 2nd: Center Stage Dance Studio-’Senorita’ 3rd: Noretta Dunworth School of Dance-’Superstition’
Senior Contemporary
1st: Noretta Dunworth School of Dance-’Go Home’ 2nd: Center Stage Dance Studio-’Smoke Signals’ 3rd: Dance Mechanics-’As It Was’ 3rd: Ludovici Dance Academy-’Night Run’ 3rd: Noretta Dunworth School of Dance-’The End of the World’ 3rd: Noretta Dunworth School of Dance-’I’m Rising’
Senior Lyrical
1st: Center Stage Dance Studio-’So Many Signs’ 2nd: Ludovici Dance Academy-’The Last Goodbye’ 3rd: Dance Spectrum-’Station’
11 O’Clock:
Sidekick
Noretta Dunworth School of Dance-’Can You Feel It’
Mini
Center Stage Dance Studio-’Mambo No. 5′
Noretta Dunworth School of Dance-’Steam Heat’
Evolve Dance Complex-’Undertow’
Xtreme Tumbling and Dance Center-’Little Red’
Ludovici Dance Academy-’Straight To Memphis’
Junior
Ludovici Dance Academy-’Love Myself’
Studio 412-’Afraid To Go’
Evolve Dance Complex-’Better Days Ahead’
Center Stage Dance Studio-’Charge Up’
Dance Spectrum-’Crazy In Love’
Noretta Dunworth School of Dance-’Trust’
Teen
Dance Mechanics-’Final Goodbye’
Dance Spectrum-’Shining Star’
Evolve Dance Complex-’Debut’
Center Stage Dance Studio-’Impacto’
Studio 412-’A Broken System’
Ludovici Dance Academy-’Don’t Be So Hard On Yourself’
Senior
Dance Mechanics-’As It Was’
Ludovici Dance Academy-’Runaway Baby’
Noretta Dunworth School of Dance-’Fancy’
Center Stage Dance Studio-’Senorita’
Studio Showcase:
Noretta Dunworth School of Dance-’Fancy’
Ludovici Dance Academy-’Runaway Baby’
Evolve Dance Complex-’Debut’
Dance Spectrum-’Shining Star’
Center Stage Dance Studio-’Impacto’
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