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Gen. Colin Powell: Biden, Obama, Others Remember His Longtime Leadership and Friendship | News

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President Joe Biden praised retired Gen. Colin Powell as a close friend and as a national leader during his storied military career, joining others who have served in the White House in remembering him after his death Monday at age 84 of COVID-19 complications.
“Colin embodied the highest ideals of both warrior and diplomat. He was committed to our nation’s strength and security above all,” Biden said in a White House statement released Monday. Having fought in wars, he understood better than anyone that military might alone was not enough to maintain our peace and prosperity. From his front-seat view of history, advising presidents and shaping our nation’s policies, Colin led with his personal commitment to the democratic values that make our country strong.”
He announced that flags would be flown at half-staff at the White House and other federal buildings in Powell’s honor.

RELATED: Retired Gen. Colin Powell Publicly Supports Joe Biden At 2020 DNC
President Barack Obama joined Biden in remembering Powell’s contributions and legacy during his career.
“Everyone who worked with General Powell appreciated his clarity of thought, insistence on seeing all sides, and ability to execute. And although he’d be the first to acknowledge that he didn’t get every call right, his actions reflected what he believed was best for America and the people he served,” Obama said in a statement.

Powell, a four-star military general, was known best for his leadership in 1991’s Operation Desert Storm when the U.S. military invaded Kuwait to liberate it from Iraqi forces and for his role as U.S. Secretary of State during the George W. Bush administration. After learning of his passing, Bush also remembered Powell’s service and dedication to his country.
“Many presidents relied on General Powell’s counsel and experience,” Bush wrote in a statement. “He was such a favorite of presidents that he earned the Presidential Medal of Freedom — twice. He was highly respected at home and abroad. And most important, Colin was a friend and a family man.”

Former Secretary of State Condoleeza Rice, who succeeded Powell when he left the position in 2003, said he was a “trusted colleague and dear friend through some very challenging times. His devotion to our nation was not limited to the many great things he did while in uniform or during his time spent in Washington.”
Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin was among the first Monday morning to speak on the loss, noting that it was “not possible” to replace him.
“The world lost one of the greatest leaders that we have ever witnessed. [His wife] Alma lost a great husband, and the family lost a tremendous father. And I lost a tremendous personal friend and mentor,” Austin said.



HOMECOMING KING (Three Kings #1) by PENNY REID

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“Falling for you was like gravity.”

Penny Reid’s latest offering is a fun, flirty holiday sports romance with a smalltown vibe, and it’s a story that fit our mood perfectly! We fell head over heels for the gruff, blunt but incredibly sweet Rex McMurtry, star defensive end for the Chicago Squalls, and the quirky sweet Abigail McNerny.

Twenty-Eight-year-old Abby McNerny has been crushing on the ridiculously handsome Rex McMurtry for 13 years, falling for him as far back as elementary school. However, Abby never believed the feelings would ever be reciprocated.

‘I was being hugged. By Rex. And it was an experience like no other.’

After a disastrous relationship, Abby is now gun shy of relationships after a bad experience left her living by the ‘once bitten, twice shy’ adage, whilst Rex appears to be unlucky in love – the recipient of many setups and blind dates by friends and teammates.

After a boozy night in the bar Abby works in, in the small town of Alenbach, Austin, Rex approaches Abby with a proposition for a fake marriage. Rex believes it could benefit them both, plus he genuinely enjoys Abby’s company. Can he convince the dating shy Abby to give his arrangement a try?

“Wherever you are is where I want to be.”

The sexual tension between Rex and Abby was off the charts! The banter was sweet and funny, and little by little, Abby managed to pry open the pages of the closed book that was Rex McMurtry. It was an absolute delight to witness their relationship unfold.

“Maybe we both deserve some too good to be true people in our lives.”

There’s heat, laughs, sweetness, and ummm… lots of forearm porn. The fake marriage theme can be a bit of a hit and miss for us, but Homecoming King was a hit. We adored this book, which provided a much-needed escape.  We’re now desperate for the next two standalones in this series which will be Cyrus and Alaric’s books. We say…bring them on!

“Will you still want me when you discover I’m not too good to be true?”



Keanu Reeves in Talks to Lead Hulu’s The Devil in the White City Series

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According to Deadline, Keanu Reeves has entered negotiations to portray one of the leading roles in Hulu’s forthcoming series adaptation of Erik Larson’s 2003 historical thriller novel titled The Devil in the White City. The long-in-development project hails from Oscar winners and frequent collaborators Leonardo DiCaprio and Martin Scorsese, who have both been attached since 2010.

It’s still unclear which character Reeves is currently in talks for, but this would mark the John Wick star’s first major U.S. TV project as the lead. The project is being described as a big-budget adaptation, which was initially set to be adapted as a feature.

RELATED: John Wick: Chapter 4 Delayed to 2023, Video Unveils New Release Date

The Devil in the White City centers around two characters at the Chicago World’s Fair of 1893: a brilliant and fastidious architect, who’s racing to make his mark on the world; and a handsome and cunning doctor, who’s secretly a serial killer that seduces, tortures, and mutilate young women in his own murder castle.

Pick up a copy of the novel here.

The book’s official synopsis reads: “Two men, each handsome and unusually adept at his chosen work, embodied an element of the great dynamic that characterized America’s rush toward the twentieth century. The architect was Daniel Hudson Burnham, the fair’s brilliant director of works and the builder of many of the country’s most important structures, including the Flatiron Building in New York and Union Station in Washington, D.C. The murderer was Henry H. Holmes, a young doctor who, in a malign parody of the White City, built his “World’s Fair Hotel” just west of the fairgrounds—a torture palace complete with dissection table, gas chamber, and 3,000-degree crematorium.

“Burnham overcame tremendous obstacles and tragedies as he organized the talents of Frederick Law Olmsted, Charles McKim, Louis Sullivan, and others to transform swampy Jackson Park into the White City, while Holmes used the attraction of the great fair and his own satanic charms to lure scores of young women to their deaths. What makes the story all the more chilling is that Holmes really lived, walking the grounds of that dream city by the lake. The Devil in the White City draws the reader into the enchantment of the Gilded Age, made all the more appealing by a supporting cast of real-life characters, including Buffalo Bill, Theodore Dreiser, Susan B. Anthony, Thomas Edison, Archduke Francis Ferdinand, and others.”

RELATED: Appian Way Nabs Another Round Remake, Leonardo DiCaprio Eyed to Star

The series adaptation was first announced in 2019, with DiCaprio and Scorsese serving as executive producers. Oscar nominated filmmaker Todd Field has also signed on to direct the first two episodes.

Executive producers are Rick Yorn, Sam Shaw, Jennifer Davisson, and Stacey Sher. It is a production by ABC Signature, Appian Way, and Paramount TV Studios.

Naked Nirvana Baby’s Nevermind Pornography Lawsuit Dismissed

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A judge has dismissed a lawsuit alleging that Nirvana’s naked-baby artwork for Nevermind constitutes child sexual exploitation, the BBC reports and documents viewed by Pitchfork confirm. The baby in question, Spencer Elden, who is now 30, claimed he suffered “lifelong damages,” including loss of wages, as a result of the album cover, and described the enterprise as a “sex trafficking venture.” Last month, a lawyer for the band filed to dismiss the lawsuit, arguing that Elden’s claim “is, on its face, not serious.” The lawyer added that the statute of limitations on the claims had expired in 2011. Elden’s team had until December 30 to respond to the motion to dismiss, but missed the deadline.

The surviving members of Nirvana (Dave Grohl and Krist Novoselic), the estate of Kurt Cobain, Courtney Love, photographer Kirk Weddle, the labels that released Nevermind, and other parties were all named as defendants in the lawsuit. In the motion to dismiss, their lawyer said that long before the statute of limitations expired, “Elden knew about the photograph, and knew that he (and not someone else) was the baby in the photograph.” They argued that, for years, Elden had participated in paid campaigns recreating the cover image, in addition to getting the album’s titled tattooed on his chest. If Elden’s claim were true, they said, everybody who owned the album cover would be “guilty of felony possession of child pornography.”

Elden has until January 13 to refile the case with appropriate changes. Pitchfork has reached out to representatives and attorneys for Nirvana, as well as an attorney for Elden, for comment.

Read “A Brief History of Musicians Being Sued by Their Album Cover Subjects” on the Pitch.



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Teena Marie Dead At 54 – CNN's Don Lemon On Her Legacy

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Don Lemon shares his memories.

Real Art Tacoma Presents a live stream w/ The Cockaphonics and guests Wreckless Freeks

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Real Art Tacoma Presents a live stream w/ The Cockaphonics and guests Wreckless Freeks

Please donate what you can. Thank you

Please Donate to:
PayPal: booking@realarttacoma.com
venmo: @RealArtTacoma

jst a class in pineapple studios "neo nobody" swarf

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jst a fun routine b4 the year ends
good vibes in pineapple

বেলা ছাড়া কাগজের মত আটার পাতলা রুটি তৈরির রেসিপি। Patla Atta Ruti Recipe | Nasta Recipe | Breakfast

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বেলা ছাড়া কাগজের মত আটার পাতলা রুটি তৈরির রেসিপি, Patla Atta Ruti Recipe, Nasta Recipe, Breakfast Recipe, Sokaler Nasta Recipe, elisas cooking recipes, আটার পাতলা রুটি, atta ruti recipe, Folko Atta Ruti, bela chara patla atta ruti

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Space Force: Season Two; Netflix Sets 2022 Premiere for Steve Carell Series – canceled + renewed TV shows

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Space Force TV show on Netflix: (canceled or renewed?)

Space Force is returning for its second season! Netflix announced a premiere date for the Steve Carell comedy series for February. The seven-episode season will also feature John Malkovich, Ben Schwartz, Tawny Newsome, Diana Silvers, Jimmy O. Yang, and Don Lake.

Netflix shared the following about the return of the series in a press release.

“Season 2 of Space Force picks up with General Naird and his underdog team having to prove their worth to a new administration while dealing with interpersonal challenges. Will the group come together or fall apart under the pressure…? Space Force is only human after all.”

Check out a poster for Space Force season 2 below. The series returns on February 18th.

Space Force TV show on Netflix: (canceled or renewed?)

What do you think? Are you planning to check out the return of Space Force on Netflix next month?

Louisahhh and Matthew Williams on Daily Rhythms and Life in Paris

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To mark the release of  the deluxe edition of her album The Practice of Freedom, the DJ and singer Louisahhh tapped 1017 ALYX 9SM for a special t-shirt in celebration of love, chaos, and the Okra Project, an organization dedicated to protecting Black Trans people in face of crisis. The collaboration is a reunion of sorts, for Louisahhh and her fellow New Yorker Matthew Williams, the co-founder of 1017 ALYX 9SM and the creative director at Givenchy. The album is a blend of crunching electronic production and deep lyrics, finding function in places others may fail to see, kind of like Williams’s approach to fashion. This is not the first time the pair have teamed up, blending their styles and crafts. Louisahhh often curates playlists for Williams and DJs at his fashion shows. During a busy week, the two kindred spirits linked up to discuss vegetarianism, finding that good daily rhythm, and life as Americans in Paris.

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LOUISAHHH: Let’s fucking go! Thank you so much for doing this with us, with me. How are you today? I mean, aside from the obvious.

MATTHEW WILLIAMS: I’m in our home of New York City. Do you miss New York?

LOUISAHHH: Yes and no, because it feels like it’s such a different city than the one I grew up in. It’s evolved so much, and so it’s weird, I’m nostalgic for a place that doesn’t exist anymore. What are you up to there? And what do you love about it? Because I know that it’s really important to your creative identity.

WILLIAMS: It’s where I started ALYX, on St. Mark’s. It’s where many of my friends live, and I just consider it home. I lived here for most of my adult life, so it’s the place that feels the most like home to me. Also, my girlfriend lives here and we have an apartment. We spent Thanksgiving with her family this year and that was super nice.

LOUISAHHH: Oh, that’s beautiful! Especially after a year that was so challenging for travel and for relationships, to be able to really feel like you’re grounded with family stuff. 

WILLIAMS: Definitely. 

LOUISAHHH: We’ve both shared the experiences of being Americans in Paris, and I know that you’ve been kind of back and forth between Italy and America for a long time. How has getting settled here felt for you?

WILLIAMS: I’m still working on it because it was definitely in the middle of chaos and it wasn’t normal Paris because of COVID. Things were open and then closed and the environment was so much work. I feel like I just started to discover Paris in September or so. But yes, a slow start to getting used to living there.

LOUISAHHH: They talk about France as a coconut culture in that America can be like a peach, right? Soft on the outside and then there’s a center pit that’s hard to penetrate. Then France is the opposite; it’s very hard on the outside and then once you penetrate the shell it can be soft, gooey, and lovely. I think especially coming during COVID, it’s a full coconut, there’s a nuance about going outside. What a nightmare to be like, “And now I live here!”

WILLIAMS: I’ve spent so much time there [Paris] over the past 15 years, that I feel like I know it pretty well. I have a lot of friends there as well. I think more about making time to see friends and maybe just experiencing the city more. On the weekends I’ll go to the museum or the parks with my kids and things like that, and that’s super nice. I’ve been taking French classes but it goes in and out of being able to consistently do them and use what I’m learning in the classes. But it’s definitely on the bucket list to learn more next year.

LOUISAHHH: As a terrible, terrible expat American in Paris, my French progress is only at the snail’s pace, especially when everybody you work with speaks to you in English because they’re like, “Okay, this will be much faster.”

WILLIAMS: That’s how it is for me, too. But I feel like you found your routine in Paris, which is amazing. You have your horses that are outside the city. We’ve come and visited you a couple of times, which has been magical with the girls to see the horses, and you have stuff outside of music that has a nice balance for you.

LOUISAHHH: I think you might relate to this, in finding structures outside of work to making work feel better so it’s not just this all-encompassing thing. That has been really important. For me, it’s the horses and working out and yoga. Because I really like structure, and I was wondering, what’s your daily rhythm? You’re traveling so much and you’re working so hard that I imagine that it’s really important to cultivate a personal anchor.

WILLIAMS: Meditation in the morning and the evening and also exercise, going back and forth between yoga and just regular interval training. Obviously, health-wise, sobriety, being vegetarian, all those kinds of things allow my body and mind to deal with the pace of work and the pressure. It’s definitely a learning curve because each year things grow more and there’s more responsibility. You slowly get used to everything. I feel like I’m getting into a good rhythm now. There was a lot, and now I feel like it’s starting to level out, but all I can keep feeling is just grateful, to be able to have these experiences and create at this level, be able to make things that I’m really psyched on, and that other people enjoy. 

LOUISAHHH: I’m working out and doing yoga and meditating and I’m sober and a vegetarian. I’m like, “Are we the same person?!” I also know that you come from a background that deals with subcultures, and with exploring uncharted territories and darker spaces. How do you translate that to a much more mass-market brand?

WILLIAMS: I think it’s maybe a misconception that I have a dark inspiration in the projects that I do.

LOUISAHHH: I’m projecting, for sure. 

WILLIAMS: There are elements of that sometimes, and it can definitely be hard. Also, a lot of the time the music that I’m into, that I present my collections with, is hard and has intense energy to it.

LOUISAHHH: Emotional and aggressive.

WILLIAMS: Both. A lot of times it’s emotional, but in a way that’s specific to me. I think that can give a framework or a platform that gives another layer to the clothes. I come from a lineage of a tribe, there are people above me that I looked up to that helped me along the way. The clothes I make exist outside of the runway, outside of the photographs and the stores, and they take on another context. Sometimes, that’s the subculture. Those clothes exist outside of how I’m presenting them and they have a second life there, that can last years. There are products that I’ve made with ALYX that are like five or six years old and we’re still making them, they’re just a staple. 

LOUISAHHH: The work isn’t drawn from the subculture, the subculture is created from the work, which is really interesting. I really love that.

WILLIAMS: With ALYX, it’s much easier for it to be smaller and directional, because everything has been built from my personal story and what’s been important to me. But then with Givenchy, there’s 70 years of history and so many different people that the brand speaks to. So there’s a time for storytelling for each thing and there are so many collections. If you look at that last collection we did, there’s so much color, there’s so much lightness, there’s positivity. As much as I can ingrain positivity and lightness in what I do, that’s what I’m interested in doing right now.

LOUISAHHH: The world definitely needs it, and it’s amazing to have a platform where you can make intentional work that serves in a lot of ways. I loved what you were talking about with the tribe being built around the work as its own kind of organic functional thing, because I think a lot about music is like that, like when people ask me what goes into writing a song. In my experience, especially within your shows, it seems like you have a really strong universe that you’ve cultivated both personally, and then Givenchy and ALYX kind of branch off from it.

WILLIAMS: A lot of people don’t think about clothing in that way, but that was the thing that made me want to be a designer. It came from culture. I would go out to nightclubs, and music was a part of it, and how people dressed in real life. It was a combination of everything, the photography and the imagery, all coming together, and you present it in a show and it makes people feel something. That’s what a movie is, right? You’re using people and music, sound, lighting, photography, acting and storytelling. That’s what I like about fashion. All those elements exist within the creation and it allows it to continue to be a reflection of my life and what I’m living, and what I’m feeling today.

LOUISAHHH: You keep saying the word storytelling, which is really important.

WILLIAMS: That becomes what you start getting better at the more you do, is the storytelling. Maybe that’s something I could even be better at, actually, and I want to improve on it, too, because sometimes you don’t want to over-explain things. Sometimes things get missed if you don’t explain them really clearly and consistently. Sometimes the same idea needs to be repeated multiple times to understand.

LOUISAHHH: Theme and variation, as they say in classical music structures.

WILLIAMS: When I talk about the world giving another layer and context to the work, that’s a great barometer as well. What people are affected by, what they latch on to. 

LOUISAHHH: I know that a lot of times in writing music, I’ll come up with the idea and then I won’t know what it means until months or years after the thing I thought it meant actually evolves, the longer the song is in the world. It gets fed back to me like a prayer, and it can be a little bit scary.

WILLIAMS: Your live performances look incredible. How does it feel to be out there again with new music that you’ve been wanting to let the world hear for so long?

LOUISAHHH: Coming from a background of DJing and now doing this real rock show, it’s been something that I’ve wanted forever. We’ve been talking about it for five years. It’s finally here. To be totally candid, the live show is so much fun and so fulfilling. I don’t know about you, but I’m so anxious and in my head most of the time that it can be really difficult to ever have fun. Even though literally all I do every day is fun shit. Like you were saying, I ride horses and I DJ. Come on.

WILLIAMS: I wanted to ask if you had anything to say about the charity that we donated the proceeds of the t-shirt that we did together. It’s such a great charity that you put me on to.

LOUISAHHH: I know that ALYX has actually done several projects. You guys had some history in the altruism space, which I think is really cool. I think that you guys have worked with The Okra Project before, which put it on my radar. I know that you grew up in California, but that New York is your spiritual home. So to give to a New York-based charity that felt very human and connected to who it was serving, which is Black and people of color, trans and non-binary people who are in need of food. Delivering home-cooked, luxurious, really loving meals prepared, and especially during the pandemic, this is a community that was gravely affected. It wasn’t a big, massive charity that was helping everybody everywhere, but it felt really specific and really grounded in the community. That felt really important for this time.

WILLIAMS: I agree. The Okra Project is such a great charity and I’m really happy that we chose to work with them on this project.

LOUISAHHH: Really beautiful. I know you’re a busy man, you probably have to run, but it’s been so lovely catching up with you, Matt. I love you very, very much.

WILLIAMS: I love you too, Louisa.



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