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Alison Wonderland Plays Out Massive IDs for Temple of Wonderland at Red Rocks [WATCH]

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Alison Wonderland just took over two sold out nights at Red Rocks for her coveted Temple of Wonderland shows, complete with awe-inspiring production, killer setlists and some brand new IDs!

Anyone who has seen Alison Wonderland live knows she leaves it all on the stage and Temple of Wonderland sets the bar. Incorporating a live band, vocals, cello solos, and mashups/edits is all part of the quintessential AW experience.

Alison Wonderland’s Temple of Wonderland delivers her music in reimagined ways, as she surprises the crowd with fresh takes on staple productions and works in her most recent material. Which brings us to the IDs…

The first is a new signature-style cut that calls out “fuck you, love you, hate you, want you,” before erupting into a gritty, bass-forward trap drop. Another one called “Forever” is a synth-filled ballad with a massive, euphoric presence. Last but certainly not least, “Fear of Dying,” a heartfelt love note about the fear of losing someone close.

Wonderland sang all of these songs live, making the unreleased moments even more special.

See “Forever” and “Fear of Dying” play out below and hear the other ID via this tweet.

Photo via Rukes.com





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FIRST TIME HEARING | Portrait – Honey Dip | REACTION

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BELLITA'S PILON Bellita y Jazztumbata (CUBAN JAZZ)

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Bellita y Jazztumbata from Havana Cuba.
Music by Bellita Exposito.

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JAZZ PIANO EXPLAINED IN 20 MINUTES with Julian Bradley

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Download my free CHORD SYMBOL GUIDE here:

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IN THIS LESSON:
0:32 Jazz Chords
2:06 Types of 7th Chord
3:31 Chord Extensions (9 11 13)
5:35 Altered Extensions (b9 #9 #11 b13)
7:16 Chord Voicings
8:23 The ii-V-I Progression
11:06 Partial ii-V-Is
12:55 The Minor ii-V-I
16:03 Jazz Scales

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Best of Miniature Cooking | 1000+ Miniature Food Recipe Videos | Tiny Cakes

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▽ Story of the day: Good morning guys. This is a compilation of my best videos which you can know some recipes even though they’re cooked in my miniature kitchen. I hope you relax and satisfying with my video 🤩🤩🤩 Make sure to watch till the end! Have a nice day!

————–★★★★★—————-
00:00 Miniature Burger & Fries
04:47 Miniature New York Pizza
08:34 Miniature Spaghetti
12:10 Miniature Potato Cheese Ball
15:05 Miniature Broccoli Soup
20:01 Miniature Cheese Stick
23:33 Miniature Crispy Fried Fish
26:33 Miniature Spicy Fire Chicken With Cheese
29:20 Miniature Pumpkin Soup & Bread
35:01 Miniature Pepperoni Pizza
38:40 Miniature Tonkatsu Lunch Box
43:50 Miniature BBQ Chicken & Vegetable
49:43 Miniature Thai Coconut Shrimp Curry
53:23 Miniature Crispy Pan-Seared Salmon with Lemon Garlic Sauce
56:11 Miniature Spring Roll
59:49 Miniature Thai Fish
01:04:11 Miniature Guacamole Onion Rings
01:09:33 Miniature Mixed Steamed Eggs
01:13:52 Miniature Shrimp
01:17:13 Miniature Korea Bibimbap
01:23:49 Miniature Deep Fried Crab
01:27:12 Miniature Bento Box
01:35:57 Miniature Ramen
01:39:06 Miniature Spicy Grilled Squid
01:43:19 Miniature Hawaiian Pizza
01:50:01 Miniature Steak & Potato
01:52:44 Miniature Shaking Beef
01:55:45 Miniature Bread
02:00:19 Miniature Fried Fish
02:02:23 Miniature Chicken & Mushroom Soup

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▽ Best of Miniature Cooking | 1000+ Miniature Food Recipe Videos | Tiny Cakes

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Sex Education on Netflix: cancelled? season four? – canceled + renewed TV shows

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Sex Education TV show on Netflix: canceled or renewed for season 4?

(Photo: Sam Taylor/Netflix)

Vulture Watch

The Television Vulture is watching the Sex Education TV show on NetflixIs Otis’ education nearly over? Has the Sex Education TV show been cancelled or renewed for a fourth season on Netflix? The television vulture is watching all the latest cancellation and renewal news, so this page is the place to track the status of Sex Education, season four. Bookmark it, or subscribe for the latest updates. Remember, the television vulture is watching your shows. Are you?  
 

What’s This TV Show About?

Streaming on the Netflix subscription service, Sex Education stars Asa Butterfield, Gillian Anderson, Emma Mackey, Ncuti Gatwa, Connor Swindells, Aimee-Lou Wood, Kedar Williams-Stirling, Chaneil Kular, Simone Ashley, Mimi Keene, Tanya Reynolds, Mikael Persbrandt, Patricia Allison, Sami Outalbali, Anne-Marie Duff, George Robinson, Chinenye Ezeudu, Alistair Petrie, Samantha Spiro, Rakhee Thakrar and Jim Howick. Jason Isaacs, Dua Saleh, Indra Ové, and Jemima Kirke join for the third season. The show revolves around Otis Milburn (Butterfield), a socially awkward teenager who is ambivalent about sex — despite or because of his mother Jean (Anderson) being a sex therapist who is frank about all aspects of sexuality. In season three, Otis is having casual sex, Eric (Gatwa) and Adam (Swindells) are official, and Jean has a baby on the way. Meanwhile, new headteacher Hope (Kirke) tries to return Moordale to a pillar of excellence, Aimee (Wood) discovers feminism, Jackson (Williams-Stirling) gets a crush and a lost voicemail still looms.
 

O   F   F   I   C   I   A   L          S   T   A   T   U   S

As of September 17, 2021, Sex Education has not been cancelled or renewed for a fourth season. Stay tuned for further updates.

 

 

Telly’s Take

Unless they decide to publicize viewership, it is difficult to predict whether Netflix will cancel or renew Sex Education for season four. Since Netflix isn’t ad-supported, it can take a chance on series it believes in and stories that need telling, but sooner or later it comes down to production costs, versus viewership numbers. This series seems to have a healthy following so, my suspicion is that it will be renewed for a fourth and perhaps final season. Generally speaking, Netflix TV shows which are going to be renewed are usually picked up within a month or so of the season premiere. I’ll keep my ears open and an eye out for news, and will update this page with breaking developments. Subscribe for free alerts on Sex Education cancellation or renewal news.
 

Sex Education Cancellation & Renewal Related Links

 

What do you think? Do you hope the Sex Education TV show will be renewed for a fourth season? How would you feel if Netflix cancelled this TV series, instead?

Dave Navarro, Taylor Hawkins Form New Band NHC, Share Two Songs

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Annie Lennox – Little Bird – London Olympics 2012 – HQ – Good Sound.

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This performance was the highlight of the London Olympics for me.
Sadly all other videos available are low quality video, or low quality sound.

I have edited this together from a HQ video source plus HQ audio source for the enjoyment of all.

In no way is my intention to infringe upon copyright from any of the original IP owners.

Nikka Costa "Sueños" ("Midnight")

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Tercer single de su Lp “Loca Tentación” 1989, el albúm pasó prácticamente desapercibido a pesar de editarse tanto en España como en América Latina.

Profiling Chef Jackie Carnesi of Brooklyn’s Nura

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Jackie Carnesi at Nura in Greenpoint.
Photo: DeSean McClinton-Holland

“What I really want is something beautifully shellacked,” says the chef Jackie Carnesi. We are standing in the still-under-construction kitchen at Nura, a new Greenpoint restaurant where Carnesi will, in a matter of weeks, be the executive chef. Or, rather, I am standing. She is busy cleaving chickens.

Carnesi is four days deep into menu development, and so far, it has been, if she can say this, a parade of hits: a plate of fuchsia- and turmeric-tinted deviled eggs sprinkled with guaje seeds, designed for sharing. Pickled mussels in a punchy coconut broth. Radicchio salad with prickly-pear vinaigrette and cashew cream. And today, she’s attacking high-gloss chicken. A glaze could give her what she wants; she’s thinking guava and ssamjang. “I feel like that’s something a true artist makes,” she laughs, very slightly. “That’s the goal.”

All of this is new: the job, the ovens, the sheet pans, the veritable rain forest of potted plants that have just arrived from Queens, and the recipes, which carry with them the added burden of having to be both delicious and somehow distinct. Whatever makes the cut for the opening won’t only define Nura as a restaurant; the dishes will, in some ways, define Carnesi as a chef, at least in the eyes of New York diners, who almost certainly don’t realize how much of her food they’ve already had.

For the last decade, she has worked her way up through an array of high-caliber New York kitchens, but no casual eater would have known that. “My food has been reviewed plenty of times,” Carnesi says. “But never with my name attached to it.” At Nura, for the first time, the menu will be under her name. She has just bought her first pair of Crocs for the occasion. This is the dream for a chef, and like most dreams, it can be unsettling: The other day, her partner, Damian Higgins, asked if she was worried about critics’ reviews. “I’m like, Yeah. Shut the fuck up.”

Carnesi working on Nura’s shared egg dish.
Photo: DeSean McClinton-Holland

Carnesi distinctly understands the pressure that comes from having your name attached to a menu in New York because she’s been responsible for executing so many others. After growing up in Texas and graduating from culinary school in Napa, Carnesi got a job at Empellón Cocina, run by the chef Alex Stupak; within a year, she’d been promoted to sous-chef. “I remember my mom was like, ‘Oh, so now you’re a chef, because this person said you’re a chef?’” Carnesi recalls. “And I was like, ‘Yes, yes, exactly! Yes!’” Then she moved to other restaurants — Little Prince, Back Forty West — and at some point realized that after a year of Adderall-fueled, 80-hour workweeks, she was, like many kitchen workers, lonely and exhausted. A change came after she landed at Roberta’s in 2014 when it was the paragon of haute Brooklyn pizza.

“I was like, No way are they ever hiring me,” Carnesi remembers, despite the empirical evidence that, in fact, lots of people wanted to hire her. In the end, “I think that actually ended up being a good thing, having a little humility about my ability,” she explains. She stayed at Roberta’s — where she became acting chef de cuisine and would eventually help it expand with the stand-alone burger joint Burgie’s — for the next six years, longer than most restaurants even exist. “It was the best job I’ve ever had.”

But in January of this year, after her mom passed away, Carnesi knew it was time for another change. “They were really kind to me about being like, take whatever time you need,” she says. “I just felt like it was time.” She’d been offered an executive-chef job at a new restaurant in the West Village, and she took it. When that fizzled, she found the opening at Nura the old-fashioned way: through a help-wanted ad on Craigslist.

Carnesi is trying to perfect her chicken’s crisp exterior.

Breads are baked in the restaurant’s tandoor oven.

Carnesi’s striking take on a radicchio salad.

Deviled eggs.

Photgraphs by DeSean McClinton-Holland

Nura is the second project from Scott Hawley and Michelle Lobo-Hawley, the husband-and-wife team behind Otis, which is known both for its food (vaguely Mediterranean) and its vibe (very cool). Nura does not disappoint in terms of atmosphere: breezily industrial and skylit, with its onion-stained alpaca lampshades, brass trimmings, and de rigueur collection of potted plants. And the food, which is up to Carnesi, will be … well, that’s what she’s figuring out.

Two weeks away from opening, Carnesi is still thinking about the chickens. “We’re working on it,” she says, downing a second cortado. “We’re gonna work on that today.” When I’d seen her last, she’d been playing with a version of yogurt rice. “It was totally not right,” she says. “I knew it wasn’t right.” But on the bright side, she adds, with a self-deprecating eye roll, “it was a reminder that not everything I make is good — that’s what R&D is for.” (The deviled eggs, the mussels, and the radicchio all remain definitively on the menu.) After this, she’ll head off in search of chicken hearts at Food Bazaar, she tells me. “They have all the parts.”

Thinking through the menu with sous chef Aaron Willett and pastry chef Sam Short.
Photo: DeSean McClinton-Holland

It isn’t just about the food. As the opening approaches, Carnesi is thinking about the kind of kitchen she’ll run. Culinary excellence, she knows, is not actually contingent upon misery and uppers. “The thing that I’m trying to do here is create this kitchen that I really, really, really want to work in myself,” she says, which means a kitchen that is fun. “Cooking is so fun. It should be really fun,” Carnesi continues. “It’s really important to me that everybody is having such a good time that they have enough energy and mental capacity to do their jobs really well.” It is not just humane, but also practical: Only when people are not stressed out and resentful can they make — and she is aware that this sounds hopelessly saccharine — “food that’s legitimately made with love.”

Before that can happen, though, Carnesi must also consider her kitchen in a much more literal sense: During construction, a pair of workers ask her where they should drill the holes in Nura’s cement walls to mount some latex-glove dispensers. Carnesi has to think about it for a moment. “They’re asking me where these things should go,” she marvels. “And I’m like, Holy shit. That’s so definite.” It requires unexpected decisions, leadership. You can change your chicken prep after the fact, but the holes in the wall are pretty final.

Nura’s dining room.
Photo: DeSean McClinton-Holland



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