Vain Glory ~ John Robert Stevens, Violent Intercession, The Walk ~ Documentary by Tony Cox
~~~ John Robert Stevens, Apostle Stevens, The Walk, Violent Intercession, J.R.S vision, Shape of things to come, Elitist, Manipulative, Submission, Demanding, Secretive, Controlling, Violent Prayer, Cult, Church of the Living Word, South Gate, Anaheim, Sepulveda, CA, Brazil, Iowa, Genesis Chapel, Grace Chapel, Brother Stevens, The Living Word Fellowship, Living Word Publications, Shiloh.
A short documentary about former cult leader John Robert Stevens of The Walk (Church of the Living Word), John Lennon, Yoko Ono,
Summer in Hong Kong
A film about belonging to places.
Tony Lui is a Hong Kongese man living in the UK. He misses his home but was convinced in moving by his girlfriend. Tony finds himself conflicted between the place where he belongs and the girl he once loved.
Jim Liu as 'Tony'
Mina Kweon as 'Faye'
Sam Landon as 'John'
Lemon Prabna as 'May'
Produced by Samuel Clark, Michael Dunbar, Jacob Elder
Written, Directed and Edited by Michael Dunbar
Script Supervisor Samuel Clark
Director of Photography Jacob Elder
Camera Operators Jacob Elder and Mike Rae
Sound Design Robin Farrow Yonge
Second Recordist Samuel Clark and Dominic Skelcey
Production Assistants Dominic Skelcey and Edward Grinyer
Original Music by Lucia Cavalieri Dunbar
Special Thanks to
David Edward
Bright Ameyaw
Valeria Levantino
John Hansard Gallery
Dim T Winchester
Ginger Two
Shot on Location in Winchester and Southampton
a Michael Dunbar film
Borstal Boy
Brendan Behan, a sixteen year-old republican, is going on a bombing mission from Ireland to Liverpool during the second world war. His mission is thwarted when he is apprehended, charged and imprisoned in Borstal, a reform institution for young offenders in East Anglia, England. At Borstal, Brendan is forced to live face-to-face with those he perceived as the enemy, a confrontation that reveals a deep inner conflict in the young Brendan and forces a self-examination that is both traumatic and revealing. Events take an unexpected turn and Brendan is thrown into a complete spin. In the emotional vortex, he finally faces up to the truth.
Director: Peter Sheridan
See more:
Hymn to the Fallen by John Williams
In honor of the soldiers who give us the freedoms we have today. Much love to family, friends and the rest of you who serve/served. I can't thank you enough. Support the troops and thank them every chance you get
These are American Cemeteries around the world and the number of those who gave the ultimate sacrifice (edit: I know Philippines is spelled wrong. I apologize. I'd change it if possible)
Greatest Warlords: Life Of William Wallace
Sir William Wallace (Gaelic: Uilleam Uallas; Norman French: William le Waleys; died 23 August 1305) was a Scottish knight who became one of the main leaders during the Wars of Scottish Independence.
Along with Andrew Moray, Wallace defeated an English army at the Battle of Stirling Bridge in September 1297. He was appointed Guardian of Scotland and served until his defeat at the Battle of Falkirk in July 1298. In August 1305, Wallace was captured in Robroyston, near Glasgow, and handed over to King Edward I of England, who had him hanged, drawn, and quartered for high treason and crimes against English civilians.
Since his death, Wallace has obtained an iconic status far beyond his homeland. He is the protagonist of Blind Harry's 15th-century epic poem The Wallace and the subject of literary works by Sir Walter Scott and Jane Porter, and of the Academy Award-winning film Braveheart (1995).
William Wallace was a member of the lesser nobility, but little is definitely known of his family history or even his parentage. Blind Harry's late-15th-century poem gives his father as Sir Malcolm of Elderslie; however William's own seal, found on a letter sent to the Hanse city of Lübeck in 1297, gives his father's name as Alan Wallace. This Alan Wallace may be the same as the one listed in the 1296 Ragman Rolls as a crown tenant in Ayrshire, but there is no additional confirmation. Blind Harry's assertion that William was the son of Sir Malcolm of Elderslie has given rise to a tradition that William's birthplace was at Elderslie in Renfrewshire, and this is still the view of some historians, including the historical William Wallace Society itself. However, William's seal has given rise to a counter claim of Ellerslie in Ayrshire. There is no contemporary evidence linking him with either location, although both areas had connections with the wider Wallace family. Records show early members of the family as holding estates at Riccarton, Tarbolton, and Auchincruive in Kyle, and Stenton in East Lothian. They were vassals of James Stewart, 5th High Steward of Scotland as their lands fell within his territory. Wallace's brothers Malcolm and John are known from other sources.
The origins of the Wallace surname and its association with southwest Scotland are also far from certain, other than the name's being derived from the Old English wylisc (pronounced wullish), meaning foreigner or Welshman. It is possible that all the Wallaces in the Clyde area were medieval immigrants from Wales, but as the term was also used for local Cumbric-speaking Strathclyde Welsh, it seems equally likely that the surname refers to people who were seen as being Welsh due to their Cumbric language
When Wallace was growing up, King Alexander III ruled Scotland. His reign had seen a period of peace and economic stability. On 19 March 1286, however, Alexander died after falling from his horse.
The heir to the throne was Alexander's granddaughter, Margaret, Maid of Norway. As she was still a child and in Norway, the Scottish lords set up a government of guardians. Margaret fell ill on the voyage to Scotland and died in Orkney on 26 September 1290. The lack of a clear heir led to a period known as the Great Cause, with several families laying claim to the throne.
With Scotland threatening to descend into civil war, King Edward I of England was invited in by the Scottish nobility to arbitrate. Before the process could begin, he insisted that all of the contenders recognise him as Lord Paramount of Scotland. In early November 1292, at a great feudal court held in the castle at Berwick-upon-Tweed, judgement was given in favour of John Balliol having the strongest claim in law.
Edward proceeded to reverse the rulings of the Scottish Lords and even summoned King John Balliol to stand before the English court as a common plaintiff. John was a weak king, known as Toom Tabard or Empty Coat. John renounced his homage in March 1296 and by the end of the month Edward stormed Berwick-upon-Tweed, sacking the then-Scottish border town. In April, the Scots were defeated at the Battle of Dunbar in East Lothian and by July, Edward had forced John to abdicate. Edward then instructed his officers to receive formal homage from some 1,800 Scottish nobles (many of the rest being prisoners of war at that time).
Some historians, such as Andrew Fisher, believe Wallace must have had some earlier military experience in order to lead a successful military campaign in 1297. Campaigns like Edward I of England's wars in Wales might have provided a good opportunity for a younger son of a landholder to become a mercenary soldier. Wallace's personal seal bears the archer's insignia, so he may have fought as an archer in Edward's army.
Restoration (2003) - Rescuing Heritage buildings in Britain. Dir. Simon Mansfield
Episode Four of the UK television series dedicated to the preservation of rare and unusual buildings around the UK. This episode's candidates, all in the northeast of England, were Ravensworth Castle near Gateshead, Harperley WW2 prison camp near Durham and Wentworth Woodhouse Conservatory with Stainborough Castle folly near Barnsley.
Other famous locations covered were Hadrian's Wall, Berwick-on-Tweed, Gormley's Angel of the North statue, Alnwick Castle and Dean Clough Mills, Halifax, with a brief nod to the Episode Three contenders, Banchory Sanatorium near Aberdeen, Kinloch Castle on Rhum, and Burra Croft on Shetland. Griff Rhys Jones presented the series. In this episode, contributions were made by the journalist Kate Adie, historian Michael Wood and gardener Rachel de Thame. This was an Endemol Production for the BBC, therefore not my work and only uploaded for your private edification and enjoyment. I rescued the programme from a remarkably well-preserved old VHS cassette.
The sad postscript to this programme is that many of the buildings featured have yet to be secured. Following massive investments, the Wentworth Estate and (in 2013) its conservatory were eventually rescued but failed to operate profitably, resulting in its closure in 2017. Harperley Camp remains largely unrestored but for a very recent effort to restore the theatre building. Despite an ambitious revival project, Ravensworth remains in a ruinous state and on the English Heritage At Risk Register. Banchory Sanatorium was destroyed by fire in 2016.
It has been the smaller and simpler buildings that have fared better; Burra Croft now operates as a small island museum. Kinloch Castle on the isolated Scottish Isle of Rhum was once criticised for its dull external design, yet it may well have been its simplicity that largely preserved its lavish interiors. It continues as a tourist attraction but currently requires significant investment following ownership transfer from Scottish National Heritage to a local Community Trust.
Produced with CyberLink PowerDirector 12
Walbottle Campus Design Vision
John Lennon tribute
28TH anniversary of john Lennon's death
john lennon was an English rock musician, singer, writer, songwriter, artist, actor and peace activist who gained worldwide fame as one of the founding members of The Beatles. Lennon along with Paul McCartney formed one of the most influential and successful songwriting partnerships and wrote some of the most popular music in rock and roll history.[1]
In his solo career, Lennon wrote and recorded many songs such as Give Peace a Chance and Imagine. Lennon revealed his rebellious nature and wit on television, in films such as A Hard Day's Night, in books such as In His Own Write, and in press conferences and interviews. He was controversial through his work as a peace activist, artist, and author.
Lennon had two sons: Julian Lennon, with his first wife Cynthia Lennon, and Sean Ono Lennon, with his second wife, avant-garde artist Yoko Ono. After a self-imposed retirement from 1976 to 1980, Lennon reemerged with a comeback album, but was murdered one month later in New York City on 8 December 1980. In 2002, respondents to a BBC poll on the 100 Greatest Britons voted Lennon into eighth place. In 2004, Rolling Stone magazine ranked Lennon number 38 on its list of The Immortals: The Fifty Greatest Artists of All Ti
me and ranked The Beatles at number one.
There are two versions of how Lennon and Ono met: On 9 November 1966, Lennon went to the Indica gallery in London, where Ono was preparing her conceptual art exhibit, and they were introduced by gallery owner John Dunbar. Lennon was intrigued by Ono's Hammer A Nail Piece: patrons hammered a nail into a wooden board, creating the art piece. Lennon wanted to hammer a nail in the clean board, but Ono stopped him because the exhibit had not opened. Dunbar then said to Ono, Don't you know who this is? Ono had not heard of The Beatles but relented, on the condition that Lennon pay her five shillings. Lennon then said, I'll give you an imaginary five shillings and hammer an imaginary nail. The second version is that in late 1965, Ono was in London compiling original musical scores for a book that John Cage was working on. She knocked on McCartney's door, but he declined to give her any manuscripts as he kept all his originals, but suggested that Lennon might oblige. When asked, Lennon gave the original handwritten lyrics to The Word from Rubber Soul to Ono. They were reproduced in Cage's book, Notations.
Lennon began his physical relationship with Ono—seven years his senior—in May 1968, after Lennon returned from India, where he had received numerous postcards from Ono, who was in London. As Cynthia Lennon was in Greece on holiday, Lennon invited Ono to his home, where they spent the night recording what would become the Two Virgins album, and later said they made love at dawn. When Cynthia returned home she found Lennon and Ono, who was wearing Cynthia's bathrobe, drinking tea together. Lennon simply said, Oh, Hi. Powell filed for divorce later that year, on the grounds of Lennon's adultery, which was proven by Ono's pregnancy. Ono later miscarried John Ono Lennon II on 21 November 1968.
During Lennon's last two years in The Beatles, he and Ono began public protests against the Vietnam War. Lennon sent back his MBE insignia in 1969, which Queen Elizabeth had bestowed upon him in 1965. He wrote: Your Majesty, I am returning this in protest against Britain's involvement in the Nigeria-Biafra thing, against our support of America in Vietnam, and against Cold Turkey slipping down the charts. With love. John Lennon of Bag. The couple were married in Gibraltar on 20 March 1969, and spent their honeymoon in Amsterdam campaigning for an international Bed-In for peace. They planned another Bed-in in the United States, but were denied entry. The couple then went to neighbouring Montréal, and during a Bed-in at the Queen Elizabeth Hotel recorded Give Peace a Chance. Lennon and Ono often combined advocacy with performance art, as in their Bagism, which was first introduced during a Vienna press conference. Lennon detailed this period in The Beatles' song The Ballad of John and Yoko.In April 1969, on the roof of Apple Records, Lennon changed his name to John Ono Lennon. After Ono was injured in a car accident, Lennon arranged for a king-sized bed to be brought to the recording studio as he worked on The Beatles' last album, Abbey Road. To escape the acrimony of The Beatles' breakup, Ono suggested they move permanently to New York, which they did on 31 August 1971. They first lived in the St. Regis Hotel on 5th Avenue, East 55th Street, and then moved a loft at 105 Bank Street, Greenwich Village, New York City, on 16 October 1971. After a robbery, they relocated to the more secure Dakota at 1 West 72nd Street, in February 1973.
The Unsolved Disappearance of Rico Harris: What Happened At Cache Creek?
Join us on Patreon:
Rico Omarr Harris, known to the world of basketball and all who followed his career as simply “Rico,” was an extroverted, athletic, and one time world renowned basketball prodigy. His energetic, entertaining skillset, followed by a courageous battle against addiction and apparent recovery, was cut short by an unexplainable, untraceable vanishing in October of 2014, leaving all who knew him, from college basketball fans in Los Angeles to the Harlem Globetrotters, grasping for answers in a sea of evidence that drowned us all in doubt. As a hope to provide more substantial reasoning built upon observable evidence and situational analysis, this is an examination of the disappearance of Rico Harris, and the mystery in Yolo County and the surrounding hills of Cache Creek...
#coldcase #truecrime
Cold Case Detective was created by TJ Ruesch and the team behind Top5s & DestinationDeclassified. Our aim is to educate and spread awareness on some of the most puzzling missing person cases in history...
If you would like us to research a specific case, or have a personal connection to a case, you can fill out our Cold Case form below and we will do our best to conduct an investigation into the case.
ColdCase Form
This is Cold Case Detective, shutting the blinds on unsolved mysteries as we seek to heat up another...
Follow ColdCaseDetective on social media to keep up to date on new information and upcoming episodes:
Instagram:
Twitter:
Special thanks to CO.AG for the music as usual! If you are looking for music for any video production, game, movie etc. He is the man to speak to so check out his channel or send him a personal message:
Thanks For Watching
Episode 2544.3 | Southern Museum & Galleries | Tennessee Crossroads
If one picture is worth a thousand words, then a long-ago McMinnville, TN man spoke volumes. In the early 1900's, W.S. Lively was one of the best-known photographers in the country. His work can be seen at the George Eastman House in New York, at the Smithsonian Institution in Washington and at a very special museum closer to home. Tennessee Crossroads visited the Southern Museum and Gallery which celebrates the history of Lively's hometown of McMinnville. Watch this and more episode segments of Nashville Public Television's Tennessee Crossroads.
Glasgow and Scottish Passions
Check your local public television station for this Rick Steves’ Europe episode or watch it on Glasgow, once an industrial powerhouse, offers a fun look at Scotland's vibrantly gritty urban side — full of edgy street art, trendy dining, and the striking architecture of Charles Rennie Mackintosh. Leaving town, we'll tap into Scottish passions as we tour historic Stirling Castle and nearby battlefields, sample a dram at the land's most beloved distilleries on the Speyside Whisky Trail, watch a sheepdog demonstration, and struggle to lift the Manhood Stone at a Highland Games.
Visit for more information about this destination and other destinations in Europe.
Check out more Rick Steves’ Europe travel resources:
“Rick Steves’ Europe” public television series:
“Travel with Rick Steves” public radio program:
European Tours:
Guidebooks:
Travel Gear:
Trip Consulting:
Travel Classes:
Rick Steves Audio Europe App:
Rick Steves, America's most respected authority on European travel, writes European travel guidebooks and hosts travel shows on public television and public radio.
If I Survive: Frederick Douglass and Family in the Walter O. Evans Collection
Celeste-Marie Bernier, professor of black studies and personal chair in English literature, School of Literatures, Languages and Cultures, University of Edinburgh, and co-editor-in-chief, Journal of American Studies, Cambridge University Press; in conversation with Walter O. Evans, collector
Walter O. Evans has spent decades collecting, curating, and conserving a wide variety of African American art, music, and literature in an effort to preserve the cultural history of African Americans. Part of his collection focuses on the nineteenth-century formerly enslaved statesman and abolitionist Frederick Douglass (c. 1818–1895). In addition to inscribed books from Douglass’s and his descendants’ libraries and printed editions of his speeches, the collection contains letters, manuscripts, and photographs. Much of the material is of a personal nature: correspondence between family members, family histories, and scrapbooks compiled by Douglass and his children; the scrapbooks, with their personal documents and familial relationships, illuminate Douglass in ways never before seen. In 2018 Celeste-Marie Bernier and Andrew Taylor of the University of Edinburgh published If I Survive: Frederick Douglass and Family in the Walter O. Evans Collection, a guide to the collection born of a longstanding collaboration between the authors and Dr. Evans. Within its pages they have reproduced letters, manuscripts, and photographs from the collection along with transcriptions and commentary that provide an invaluable resource for Douglass scholars. On Friday, April 26, 2019, in conjunction with the exhibition In the Library: Frederick Douglass Family Materials from the Walter O. Evans Collection at the National Gallery of Art, Bernier speaks with Evans about the role of his collection in scholarship on Douglass and the preservation of Douglass’s legacy for a new generation of Americans.
The Disturbing Murders at Keddie Cabin
We tackle a fresh case in the remote forests of Northern California
Credits:
Check out more awesome videos at BuzzFeedBlue!
GET MORE BUZZFEED:
BuzzFeedBlue
Sports, video games, Unsolved & more epic daily videos!
MUSIC
Licensed via Audio Network
STILLS
Evidence Box
BlakeDavidTaylor/Getty Images
computer generated equalizer bars in waveform audio spectrum
vitanovski/Getty Images
Handwriting
CSA Plastock/Getty Images
Policeman in office, portrait
Darrin Klimek/Getty Images
Community
Plume Creative/Getty Images
Psychic/Palm Reading dwelling, home, business.
Pete Starman/Getty Images
Close-Up Of Hammer Against White Background
Hendrik Sulaiman / EyeEm/Getty Images
Confident woman smiling against wall
Portra/Getty Images
Studio Portrait of a middle aged women
Jamie Garbutt/Getty Images
1970s BOY PORTRAIT STRIPED...
H. Armstrong Roberts/ClassicStock/Getty Images
Red Phone Receiver on a Spiral Cord on White
artpartner-images/Getty Images
Steak Knife
LongHa2006/Getty Images
Bloodied metal hammer and knife
korionov/Getty Images
Chef's knife
Siri Stafford/Getty Images
Old fashioned police station
ChrisSteer/Getty Images
Mystery cases and evidence files
EXTREME-PHOTOGRAPHER/Getty Images
Folder & Paper (w/path)
PeteWil/Getty Images
Retro photo frame isolated on white background
ExpressIPhoto/Getty Images
Digital abstract background
OlgaGroza/Getty Images
Portrait of psychologist in examining room
Smith Collection/Getty Images
Retro Reel Audio Recorder
tridland/Getty Images
1930s MONTAGEF 37 HEADS
H. Armstrong Roberts/ClassicStock/Getty Images
Blank lined sheet of paper on white
stockcam/Getty Images
Brown envelope torn open
Andrew Paterson/Getty Images
files.
Utamaru Kido/Getty Images
Policeman
JDC/Getty Images
Male police officer with crossed arms
UpperCut Images/Getty Images
Rear View Of Silhouette Police Standing By Car
Frederic Genest / EyeEm/Getty Images
Writer
ClaudioStocco/Getty Images
Sherlock wannabe
EXTREME-PHOTOGRAPHER/Getty Images
Evil man hold shiny knife, killer in action
stevanovicigor/Getty Images
Police badge
Tetra Images/Getty Images
Selective focus blurred view of abusive boyfriend holding girlfriends head ready to strike in kitchen
Mark Andersen/Getty Images
Beautiful woman who is sad but strong
Paris Jefferson/Getty Images
Tough Serious Mature Man
drbimages/Getty Images
Portrait of middle aged man looking serious
Klaus Vedfelt/Getty Images
Human skull
Joe Clark/Getty Images
Unrecognizable woman running for her life
SimonSkafar/Getty Images
Wedding cake visual metaphor with figurine cake toppers
Mike Kemp/Getty Images
Witch in forest
Thegoodly/Getty Images
Bloody investigations
Yuri_Arcurs/Getty Images
Children's bedroom with a bunk bed nside a residential log home, Laurentians, Quebec, Canada. This image is property released. CUPR0211
Perry Mastrovito/Getty Images
USA, New York State, New York City, Crime scene barrier tape
Tetra Images/Getty Images
Abandoned log cabin with open window
Linka A Odom/Getty Images
Portrait of boy
Jordi Boixareu/Getty Images
Teenage boy (15-17) with bob haircut, hands in pockets, portrait
James Woodson/Getty Images
Group of boys smiling
Flashpop/Getty Images
Group portrait of people smiling
Flashpop/Getty Images
Ending it all
Yuri_Arcurs/Getty Images
Hand holding blood covered knife
Simon Winnall/Getty Images
Candle lights memories
by calajava (Peter Chan Shu-kei)/Getty Images
Number 28 Mounted On Textured Wall Outdoors
Klaus Fenzl / EyeEm/Getty Images
Cabin Door
buburuzaproductions/Getty Images
Spooky cabin in the woods
Sjo/Getty Images
VIDEO
Footage provided by VideoBlocks
(
EXTERNAL CREDITS
Steve Mintz
+
Grant Henderson
The Suspicious Assassination of JFK
Season finale. The unexplained death of a president
Check out more awesome videos at BuzzFeedBlue!
GET MORE BUZZFEED:
BuzzFeedBlue
Sports, video games, Unsolved & more epic daily videos!
Credits:
MUSIC
SFX Provided By AudioBlocks
(
Licensed via Audio Network
STILLS
Group of multi-ethnic business people
Rawpixel/Getty Images
Old paper sheets, vintage photo frames and corners, open book
LiliGraphie/Getty Images
Bloodstain Set
zizar2002/Getty Images
Kennedy Assassination
Art Rickerby / Contributor/Getty Images
Two Business Men Walking and Talking Silhouette
JakeOlimb/Getty Images
Poland
Eye Ubiquitous / Contributor/Getty Images
Jack Ruby and Dancers Outside the Carousel Club
Corbis Historical/Getty Images
Magazine or newspaper printing.
nik3d/Getty Images
Close up of older Caucasian man
Sam Diephuis/Getty Images
It suits him to be successful
Yuri_Arcurs/Getty Images
Stars and Stripes
Joseph Clark/Getty Images
Mexico City Skyline (Complete, Detailed, Moveable Buildings)
Leontura/Getty Images
Grungy Flags of Soviet Union and USA
Klubovy/Getty Images
Male Portrait
drbimages/Getty Images
Top Secret
DNY59/Getty Images
High quality animation open and close isolate umbrella with mask
GoldenMike/Getty Images
1963: JOHN F. KENNEDY ASSASSINATION: DALLAS, TEXAS: QUESTIONABLE QUALITY: VS Motorcade w/ Presidential limousine w/ J.F.K. & others, shots fired (dramatized), secret service agent Clint Hill leaping onto limousine speeding away onto highway, signs.
The March of Time/Getty Images
close up gun with bullets on black background
wombatzaa/Getty Images
Man With Umbrella
Vectorig/Getty Images
Official Portrait of John F. Kennedy
Bachrach / Contributor/Getty Images
businessman with umbrella looking over city
David Malan/Getty Images
Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain Celebrating His 70th Birthday...
Keystone-France / Contributor/Getty Images
Portrait Of Senior Man Standing Against Wall
Bernard Van Berg / EyeEm/Getty Images
Seal in lobby at CIA headquarters in Langley, Virginia, USA
Danita Delimont/Getty Images
Allen Dulles
PhotoQuest / Contributor/Getty Images
Judith Campbell Exner at Press Conf
Bettmann / Contributor/Getty Images
Male worker opening wooden whisky cask in whisky distillery
Leon Harris/Getty Images
Joseph Kennedy
New York Times Co. / Contributor/Getty Images
Sam Giancana Arriving in Court
Bettmann / Contributor/Getty Images
files in a archive
Nikada/Getty Images
Audio Waveform Mono Blue
TheRadarLab/Getty Images
Silhouette Men Wearing Suits And Hats
Joseph Golby / EyeEm/Getty Images
Wealthy Criminal Sitting in an Armchair Between two Bodyguards
Digital Vision./Getty Images
Oswald's Rifle
Central Press / Stringer/Getty Images
Man in suit sitting at desk, two men standing behind him, portrait
Simon Battensby/Getty Images
Mobster Pointing Gun
powerofforever/Getty Images
Lee Harvey Oswald And Friends
Fotosearch / Stringer/Getty Images
President Johnson Working In White House
Bettmann / Contributor/Getty Images
Crime Scene Markers
BlakeDavidTaylor/Getty Images
Whispering into her ear
sbayram/Getty Images
Richard Nixon
Hulton Archive / Stringer/Getty Images
J Edgar Hoover
MPI / Stringer/Getty Images
Portrait Of RFK
PhotoQuest / Contributor/Getty Images
Acting AG Bork Speaks To Press
David Hume Kennerly / Contributor/Getty Images
Lyndon B. Johnson
Ed Clark / Contributor/Getty Images
USA Map Of All Fifty States
RobinOlimb/Getty Images
Fidel Castro at May Day Parade
Sven Creutzmann/Mambo Photo / Contributor/Getty Images
House Select Committee on Assassinations
The Washington Post / Contributor/Getty Images
Selma to Montgomery Alabama March
Stephen F. Somerstein / Contributor/Getty Images
Law and J
Catalyst dance, Heat and Life. First Performance 2004. Lost video recovered! Part 3 (end)
Conclusion
I had the rare opportunity to recover some lost video, and this is what I found! Filmed in 2004 at the Soap Factory, it is the first performance of the Catalyst Dance production, Heat and Life. They went on to tour the country with this dance. (iThink)
I'm thankful I was a videographer in the Gallery at this time, and honored I could create this video for them.
Music by JG Everest.
ENJOY!
The Invention Of Blue
Watch my newest video, Two Envelopes Paradox:
Vsauce2 Merch:
Curiosity Box:
Written, Produced, Edited and Hosted by Kevin Lieber
Instagram:
Twitter:
Website:
Contributing Researcher & Editor Matthew Tabor, Koala Fight Media
VFX by Eric Langlay
Select Music by Jake Chudnow
Special Thanks Paula Lieber
Vsauce2 Links
Twitter:
Facebook:
Website:
**** LINKS AND SOURCES ****
BOOKS
The Brilliant History of Color in Art by Victoria Finlay
Blue: The History Of A Color by Michel Pastoureau
Secret Language Of Color by Joann Eckstut and Arielle Eckstut
SPECIAL THANKS
Virginia Postrel
Victoria Finlay
Joshua J. Mark
Kidmograph
Outro Song “I Came Back For You” by Trevor Something
ARTICLES
Pigments Through The Ages
Color In Art
Harvard Color Vault
Little Snow White
A Story Of Blue
The Material History of the Color Blue
True Blue Stands Out in an Earthy Crowd by Natalie Angier
Why Is The Sky Blue?
Blue Through The Centuries
History Of Blue
William Gladstone And The Odyssey
No One Could See The Color Blue Until Modern Times by Kevin Loria
Why Is Blue The World’s Favorite Color?
It’s Not Easy Being Blue (For Plants) by Eric Dillalogue
Color Wavelengths
The Science Of Blue Flowers
First Blue-Eyed Human
Humanity’s Favorite Color
Color In Market Research
What’s Your Favorite Color?
Islamic Poetry
Starry Night, Edvard Munch
Newton And The Color Spectrum
Blue And Green Language Distinctions
Rainbows In Art
True Origin Of Snow White And The Seven Dwarfs
STUDIES
Russian Blues Reveal Effects Of Language On Color Discrimination
Ancient Color Categories
Philip Cohen
Scott Design Inc. Color Poll
ASSETS
Namakura Gatana 1917 restoration by sumerias1
Egyptian Blue Eye at The J. Paul Getty Museum
Indigo by Shisha-Tom
Archaemenid Bowl from David Aaron
Lapis Lazuli Eyes photo by Marie-Lan Nguyen
Lapis Lazuli Buddha
CSIC
Indus Valley Diorama by Biswarup Ganguly
Rainbows
Denim by Nikodem Nijaki
Blue Cat The British Museum
Woad by H. Zell
Lazurite by Didier Descouens
Cochineal by Dick Culbert
Cochineal by H. Zell
Portrait of Edvard Munch from National Library of Norway
Tekhelet by Mnavon
Pixabay
The deeper the blue becomes, the more strongly it calls man towards the infinite, awakening in him a desire for the pure and, finally, for the supernatural... The brighter it becomes, the more it loses its sound, until it turns into silent stillness and becomes white.
-Wassily Kandinsky
Watch My Latest Video:
How to tell if a painting is old or a reproduction
Tips on how to identify if a painting is old and original or a copy. Dr. Mark Sublette owner of Medicine Man Gallery shares his twenty five years of experience in the art world on what to look for. Examples of older paintings and what are keys to be looking for before you ever buy.
Website:
Facebook:
Instagram:
How to tell if a painting is old or a reproduction
I look at artwork every day of my life – often to buy and people need my advice of what their piece is, and if its original or not. Today I want to talk about: how do you tell an original piece of artwork, and I specifically kind of hone in on paintings, because what I see all the time are pieces that are reproductions or prints or flat-out fakes and frauds. So, some of the little highlights that you need to know if you're looking to purchase a piece of artwork or if you have a piece of artwork if it's original is: 1) if it's supposedly old and has a date on it, let's say it says 1923, well it should look like it's old. You should turn over the back of the painting, and look. The back of the painting, quite frankly, is going to tell you as much as the front of the painting. If the canvas is very white, and the little sticks that you'll see in the corners that are the little spacer or
the bars that you see around the edge of the painting, if those are very white and have not oxidized, it's not old – it's a new piece, and it's probably jaclay. A jaclay is a copy of an original oil painting piece of artwork. They can be very nice; they can have value, but they're a copy; a photographic copy put on canvas, and the idea is to make it look like the original. And quite frankly, from a photograph when I get them on the internet sometimes you can't tell because it can be a Charlie Russell, and it looks like a Charlie Russell because “Hey, guess what?” It is, but it's a copy; it's a jaclay. So, when you look at the piece in person, you should be able to see individual brushstrokes and thickness and texture to the paint. Those jacylays will often have the brushstrokes, but you'll see kind of a sheen on the top that really just doesn't look right. And then if you turn it around on the back you'll see staples where the canvas has been stapled to the stretcher bars. The stretcher bars, which are the foundation bars, will be. The canvas will be white, (and) there's no oxidation. Charlie Russell was painting at the turn of the century – if you've got that time frame, things are going to happen. Also, the frame will tell you something. If you look at a frame and it is got chips – again, the wood is oxidized, and you may see different holes where it's been used in the past; look at these things. If they look old and feel old and maybe even smell old; if they've been in a smoker’s home for 20-30 years, you'll smell the nicotine. Use your senses, and if that little voice says, “Something's wrong.” Guess what? It is. So, you can't just go buy a history, because I can tell you this: after twenty years of doing this, histories are very easy to fabricate, and people do this, or they just, you know, (have a) family lore (that) says, “Oh, this has been in our family for a hundred years.” Well, the realities of it, (is) take that into consideration, but it's probably the last thing. First, use your own eyes (and) your own senses. Does this feel like it's a painting that's old or not? Remember, people do make frauds and fakes. So, if you're buying older works you have to (and it looks old – well, it could be an old painting that they've signed a name on. I see all the time old paintings where somebody's put Maynard Dixon) you have to know your subject matter, and if it's obviously not his work, not his signature, not his style, then it's not right. The last thing I go on (with) a painting is the signature. That's the very last thing that I take into consideration because the signature is easier to fake than style, composition, and the way the painting looks like. You know, they can be a good forger of the name Maynard Dixon, but they can't do the palette; they can't do the structure
or the composition of the painting. Even if it's an old painting, it just doesn't hack it. So, when you look at these things, be very critical. Look for age, especially on old pieces; they should have a certain sensibility and if they don't, get an expert to look at it before you ever purchase it.
Margaret Tudor
Margaret Tudor (28 November 1489 – 18 October 1541), also known as Margaret, Queen of Scots, born at Westminster Palace, was the elder of the two surviving daughters of Henry VII of England and Elizabeth of York, and the elder sister of Henry VIII. In 1503, she married James IV, King of Scots. James died in 1513, and their son became King James V. She married secondly Archibald Douglas, 6th Earl of Angus. Through her first and second marriages, respectively, Margaret was the grandmother of both Mary, Queen of Scots, and Mary's second husband, Lord Darnley. Margaret's marriage to James IV foreshadowed the Union of the Crowns - their great-grandson, King James VI of Scotland, the child of Mary and Darnley, also became the king of England and Ireland on the death of Margaret's fraternal niece, Elizabeth I of England in 1603.
Born on 28 November 1489, Margaret was baptised two days later, on St. Andrew's Day, in St. Margaret's Church, Westminster. She was named after Margaret Beaufort, Countess of Richmond and Derby, her paternal grandmother.
This video is targeted to blind users.
Attribution:
Article text available under CC-BY-SA
Creative Commons image source in video
OFFICIAL VIDEO Dragons Disporting Pearls - Congo Faith Healers
Official music video for London based band Congo Faith Healers - their single Dragons Disporting Pearls.
Directed and edited by Lisa Downs
DOP: Andy Poulastides
Camera Op: Max White and Andy Poulastides
Make Up Designer: Kate Dunbar
TOLKIEN | Trailer 2 | FOX Searchlight
Now on Digital:
On Blu-ray & DVD August 6:
TOLKIEN explores the formative years of the renowned author’s life as he finds friendship, courage and inspiration among a fellow group of writers and artists at school. Their brotherhood strengthens as they grow up and weather love and loss together, including Tolkien’s tumultuous courtship of his beloved Edith Bratt, until the outbreak of the First World War which threatens to tear their fellowship apart. All of these experiences would later inspire Tolkien to write his famous Middle-earth novels.
On Digital July 23
On Blu-ray & DVD August 6
Directed by: Dome Karukoski
Written by: David Gleeson and Stephen Beresford
Produced by: Peter Chernin p.g.a., Jenno Topping p.g.a., David Ready p.g.a., Kris Thykier p.g.a.
Cast: Nicholas Hoult, Lily Collins, Colm Meaney, Anthony Boyle, Patrick Gibson, Tom Glynn-Carney, Craig Roberts, Laura Donnelly, Genevieve O’Reilly, Pam Ferris and Derek Jacobi
#TolkienMovie #NicholasHoult #LilyCollins #FoxSearchlight
Connect with Fox Searchlight Online:
Visit the Fox Searchlight WEBSITE:
Like Fox Searchlight on FACEBOOK:
Follow Fox Searchlight on TWITTER:
TOLKIEN | Trailer 2 | FOX Searchlight