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Sundance Now Unveils February 2021 TV & Movie Slate

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Sundance Now Unveils February 2021 TV & Movie Slate

Sundance Now unveils February 2021 TV & movie slate

Sundance Now has revealed their February 2021 slate, including more episodes of A Discovery of Witches Season 2, the premiere of the Canadian police procedural The Murders starring Jessica Lucas (Gotham, Gracepoint), the Season 2 premiere of the Australian murder mystery series Playing For Keeps, and more. You can check out the full February lineup below!

RELATED: New to Stream: Starz February 2021 Movie & TV Titles Announced

Monday, February 1st

José 

19-year-old José (Enrique Salanic) lives with his mother (Ana Cecilia Mota) in Guatemala. His life is routine and aimless, until he finds passion, pain and self-reflection through a relationship with a Caribbean migrant, Luis (Manolo Herrera). (2018, Foreign Language)

16 Bars 

Inmates at a Virginia jail collaborate with Speech—singer of the hip-hop group Arrested Development—to write music and record songs. (2018, Documentary)

Living on Soul 

Filmed during a three-night, sold-out residency at the historic Apollo Theater, this hybrid docu-concert film features the late great Sharon Jones, Charles Bradley, and the rest of the Grammy-nominated Daptone Records family. (2017, Documentary)

Tuesday, February 2nd

The Night Caller, Episode 3 (Sundance Now Original)

Eric Edgar Cooke’s role in the Australia Day shootings is exposed, but the true extent of his crimes and their long-lasting effects on the community are only now coming to light, while new evidence prompts John Button’s legal team to seek an exoneration.

Thursday, February 4th

The Murders

EXCLUSIVE PREMIERE 

After an incident of negligence in a fellow officer’s death, rookie homicide detective Kate Jameson (Jessica Lucas, Cloverfield, The Covenant) starts seeking redemption in her investigations. Will she find it? Dylan Bruce (Orphan Black, Arrow) and Terry Chen (Almost Famous, Jessica Jones) also star in this thrilling and three-time Leo-Award-winning Canadian drama.

Cleaning Up, Episode 6

SERIES FINALE 

As Sam (Sheridan Smith, Cilla) risks losing everything, she faces the disastrous consequences of her actions. Running out of options, Sam must confront the network of inside traders.

Saturday, February 6th

A Discovery of Witches Season 2, Episode 5 (Sundance Now Original)

The second season sees Matthew and Diana hiding in time in the fascinating and treacherous world of Elizabethan London – here they must find a powerful witch to help Diana master her magic and search for the elusive Book of Life. In the present day however, their enemies have not forgotten them.

Monday, February 8th

Liyana 

Executive produced by Emmy-winner Thandie Newton (Westworld, Line of Duty), and produced by Oscar-winner Daniel Junge (Being Evel, Saving Face), LIYANA is a genre-defying documentary that tells the story of five children in the Kingdom of Eswatini who turn past trauma into an original tale about a girl named Liyana who embarks on a perilous quest to save her young twin brothers. The film weaves her animated journey together with poetic documentary scenes to create an inspiring story of perseverance and hope. (2017, Documentary)

I Am The Blues 

A tour of the juke joints and other venues of the legendary Chitlin Circuit in the Mississippi Delta, this documentary includes performances by aging blues musicians in their eighties who used to play the circuit. (2015, Documentary)

Shake The Dust 

From executive producer and rapper Nasir “Nas” Jones and journalist/filmmaker Adam Sjöberg, Shake the Dust chronicles the influence of breakdancing. It’s an inspiring tribute to the uplifting power of music and movement by showing how breakdancing strikes a resonant chord in developing nations and far beyond. (2014, Documentary)

Tuesday, February 9th

The Night Caller, Episode 4 (Sundance Now Original)

SERIES FINALE

Now cleared of murder, John Button’s case exposes a corrupt police force, prompting a Royal Commission and yet another exoneration, Daryl Beamish for the murder of Jillian Brewer, as Cooke’s crimes continue to reverberate across a community that will never again be the same.

Thursday, February 11th

The Bridge Season 1 

Two detectives work together to take down a serial killer operating on both sides of the Texas-Chihuahua border. Starring Diane Kruger (Inglorious Basterds, National Treasure) and Demián Bichir (The Hateful Eight, The Nun)

Saturday, February 13th

A Discovery of Witches, Season 2, Episode 6 (Sundance Now Original)

The second season sees Matthew and Diana hiding in time in the fascinating and treacherous world of Elizabethan London – here they must find a powerful witch to help Diana master her magic and search for the elusive Book of Life. In the present day however, their enemies have not forgotten them.

Monday, February 15th

In Between

Three Palestinian women living in an apartment in Tel Aviv try to find a balance between traditional and modern culture in this award-winning drama. (2016, Drama, Foreign Language)

Styx 

A busy doctor (Susanne Wolff, The Three Musketeers) plans to spend her annual vacation fulfilling her long-held dream of sailing from Gibraltar to the small island of Ascension in the Atlantic. But everything changes when she sees a damaged, overloaded boat full of refugees nearby. Knowing that at least a hundred people could drown, she begins to organize to help them but slowly begins to fear that it will be impossible to do so. (2018, Drama)

The Third Wife 

In 19th century rural Vietnam, May (Hong Chuong Nguyen, Between Shadow and Soul) is ready to become the third wife of a wealthy landowner. Little does she know that her hidden desires will force her to decide between living in safety and being free. (2019, Foreign Language)

Tuesday, February 16th

Who Killed Lt. Van Dorn? 

Lt. Wes Van Dorn, a 29-year-old United States Naval Academy graduate and the married father of two young sons, died when the helicopter he was piloting crashed off the coast of Virginia during a 2014 training exercise. Motivated by her grief, his wife Nicole sought an explanation for the cause of the disaster. Her efforts spurred an investigation that uncovered a long history of negligence and institutional failings around the 53E helicopter—the model Van Dorn was piloting when he was killed, and the deadliest aircraft in the US military. Through incisive reporting and interviews with Van Dorn’s colleagues and family, Who Killed Lt. Van Dorn? is at once a poignant picture of one family’s tragedy, as well as a revelatory inquiry into the murky inner-workings of the American defense establishment. (2018, Documentary)

Thursday, February 18th

Playing For Keeps, Series 2, Episode 1

Exclusive Season Premiere 

To be a footballer’s wife, it takes serious balls. Dive into the salacious world of Aussie Rules Football, unearthing secrets, lies, scandals, and murder. New episode every Thursday through April 8.

Saturday, February 20th

A Discovery of Witches Season 2, Episode 7 (Sundance Now Original)

The second season sees Matthew and Diana hiding in time in the fascinating and treacherous world of Elizabethan London – here they must find a powerful witch to help Diana master her magic and search for the elusive Book of Life. In the present day however, their enemies have not forgotten them.

Monday, February 22nd

Pigeon Kings 

This documentary explores the subculture of men in South Central LA who train pigeons for the competitive sport of avian acrobatics. (2020, Documentary)

RELATED: BritBox Unveils What’s Coming to the Streamer in February 2021

Tuesday, February 23rd

Jihad Jane 

This documentary tells the tale of two American women who went looking for love online and became the “new face in the war on terror.” (2019, Documentary)

Thursday, February 25th

Playing For Keeps Series 2, Episode 2

To be a footballer’s wife, it takes serious balls. Dive into the salacious world of Aussie Rules Football, unearthing secrets, lies, scandals, and murder. New episode every Thursday through April 8.

The Returned Series 1

In a small French mountain town where everyone knows each other, the dead begin to inexplicably return as if their deaths never occurred. The townsfolk are forced to confront their difficult past as they seek to understand this phenomenon.

Saturday, February 27th

A Discovery of Witches Season 2, Episode 8 (Sundance Now Original)

The second season sees Matthew and Diana hiding in time in the fascinating and treacherous world of Elizabethan London – here they must find a powerful witch to help Diana master her magic and search for the elusive Book of Life. In the present day however, their enemies have not forgotten them.



Armin van Buuren Drops ‘A State of Trance 1000 Celebration Mix’ [LISTEN]

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Armin van Buuren just unleashed A State of Trance 1000 – Celebration Mix, available now to stream on Spotify.

The brand new mix album follows up last week’s 1000th episode of the iconic radio show, a live broadcast audio-visual experience featuring imagery from ASOT events. For trance fans around the world, this is a trip down memory lane and an all-out celebration playlist featuring 1,000+ tracks over 65 hours, with the top 100 tracks fully mixed over 2 hours.

Chock-full of highlights and precious memories, the A State of Trance 1000 – Celebration Mix contains only the best in trance and progressive as voted for by the A State Of Trance community. Featuring music from Armin van Buuren, Above & BeyondTiëstoChicane, Ferry Corsten, Gareth Emery, John O’Callaghan, Paul van Dyk, Push, i_o, W&W, and so many more.

In addition, #ASOT1000 Celebration Weekend is completely sold out, primed to bring trance music to the main stage once again. The IRL festival is scheduled for September 3 & 4, at Jaarbeurs in Utrecht.

Listen here!

A State of Trance 1000 – Celebration Mix

 



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Teena Marie – Lovergirl

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Teena Marie performing Lovergirl

More great funk/soul music:

℗ 1984 Epic Records, a division of Sony Music Entertainment

#TeenaMarie #Funk #Classics

Cafe in Cuba || Cuban Instrumental Music Latin Salsa || Carter Institute

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Lady Bunny and Linda Simpson Contemplate the Future of Drag

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Sometimes, in order to move forward, you have to look back. Linda Simpson, the New York City nightlife legend has done just that with her photo book The Drag Explosion, a visual bible documenting New York’s momentous drag scene of the ’80s and ’90s. As drag exits the fringes of normativity due to the influence and impact of RuPaul’s Drag Race and the art form evolves along with the newer generations, books like The Drag Explosion (out now on Domain) serve as a roadmap to where drag has been and where it can go, not only as a form of self-expression but as a community of creative beings. On a recent Friday night kiki, Simpson got on the phone with her friend, the legendary Lady Bunny to talk about the new book, nostalgia for New York’s legenday nightclubs, and where drag goes from here. 

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LINDA SIMPSON: So, Bunny, do you remember the first time that you met?

BUNNY: I need for you to remind me of who you are and how you got my number, sir.

SIMPSON: Do you remember the specific incident?

BUNNY: I’ve scrubbed it from my brain, it was horrific. At the Pyramid Club in the ’80s.

SIMPSON: I don’t know if it was the very first time I met you. Remember for Halloween once, there was a haunted house down in the basement? You had on a bunny mask and I remember us sitting at the bar and it was a little ridiculous.

BUNNY: I discouraged you from trying drag.

SIMPSON: I was very in awe of the drag queens that were at the Pyramid. For instance you, Taboo, Happy Face, Sister Dimension, Hattie. But yes, you are older in your drag career than me.

BUNNY: I’m glad you made that specification. A lot of the Pyramid queens are legendary. D-Lite, RuPaul, Anohni, formerly known as Antony and the Johnsons, all came out of that scene. Very creative, very underground. Less celebrity impersonation and more becoming your own character. Lypsinka staged early plays there, Joey Arias, John Kelly, many who have passed away like Baby [Gerber], and Hattie Hathaway, of course.

SIMPSON: Ethyl Eichelberger.

BUNNY: Ethyl Eichelberger, who we were in awe of because her plays would be produced and well-reviewed by The New York Times. At a time when we were go-go dancing on the Pyramid bar with her. It showed us where drag could go. 

SIMPSON: That was the drag scene that I became familiar with and that I wanted to be part of. I didn’t start doing my party at the Pyramid until 1990. I have been doing this slide show for the past several years called The Drag Explosion. It tells the history of drag scenes from the late ’80s to the early ’90s. It’s all photos that I took, just for fun. In your reflection, Bunny, you of course talk about the era—the big clubs, and how great the music was back then.

BUNNY: [Laughs] A reflection? Is that what you call my masterpiece? If someone did ask me what could kids today learn about the ’80s and ’90s, it’s that the scene was always intertwined with dance music culture. I don’t mean  Top 40. We ran to the dance floor. We didn’t even check our coats. That was always a big part of the Pyramid Club with Sister Dimension as the reigning DJ. She is the reason that I started DJing so long ago.

SIMPSON: That was, of course, the era of big clubs and huge dance floors. People didn’t go out unless they planned on dancing. 

BUNNY: It wasn’t really until the 2000s that every gay club almost played top 40. We felt that we were part of something special that just belonged to that moment and we loved everything about it from the drag celebrities that emerged. We’d come, you from Minnesota, me from Atlanta, and found this magical place.

SIMPSON: There’s a picture of you in the book where you’re talking to the reporter from Entertainment Tonight. That was up in the tunnel. You were doing something on stage, but it was this big moment when drag was bursting through.

BUNNY: There are all kinds of rare photos in the book. Even one where I was thin. 

SIMPSON: You were racing around a lot, so maybe you were getting a lot of exercise. Hosting at those big clubs meant walking or running across these football field-sized dance floors.

BUNNY: My liver was getting a workout, I know that.

SIMPSON: Do you find that it’s ridiculous for us to be talking about the past as much as, at least I do? Is it too silly to be so nostalgic?

BUNNY: I think there’s a hunger for these scenes. People are looking online to see Nelson Sullivan’s videos of the scene, of New York, of club personalities. A pre-fame RuPaul, the Pyramid Club, whoever. Sylvia Miles, who is someone that was connected to the earlier Warhol scene and to Hollywood. A lot of clubs are lacking something that we had in spades back then. 

SIMPSON: I don’t want to brag or say that it was the best era ever, but it was a very exciting era. I think compared to today’s club scene, at least in New York, which seems so watered down, it was pretty spectacular. There were a lot of people who would move to New York just to be fabulous. They could get away with it back then.

BUNNY: If you live in New York now, you’re going to be working. It’s going to be harder for them to do experimental drag performances and art scene stuff that we saw at the Pyramid. I’m not saying we were the artsy-est. Some of it was like Anohni’s, or Antony and the Johnsons, they were really out there with Floyd and Constantine.

SIMPSON: Bunny, did you hear that Goddess Bunny died, by the way?

BUNNY: Yes I did. She was outrageous.

SIMPSON: Did you ever meet her?

BUNNY: I did. Vaginal Davis is the one who’s got the great stories about Goddess Bunny.

SIMPSON:  Yeah, that’s how I found out about her, to begin with.

BUNNY: She was a riot. Trust me.

SIMPSON: Bunny, this question gets asked a lot of drag queens in general, especially of our stature. Drag is such a cultural phenomenon now, at this point, especially with RuPaul’s Drag Race leading the way. How do you feel seeing drag evolve from fringe to mainstream popularity?

BUNNY: Sometimes I benefited from this and it’s great. But as you say, it’s mainstream. I was just talking about great music and gays who sought out dance culture as many generations did, and I’m looking a little bit at the first episode of season 13 of Drag Race and they were lip-syncing to “Call Me Maybe.” I don’t think I would pay to see anyone lip sync to “Call Me Maybe.” I’m not interested in that. Drag was subversive and now it’s not. I go on tours with the Drag Race queens and love them, I’ve spent the day tweeting jokes at Bianca and her followers. I love to be included in it. The individual queens who become known on the show can be much more interesting doing their own acts than I see them be on the show. We don’t come from that generation. As I said, I prefer to see the Drag Race queens doing their acts. Most of the time.

SIMPSON: It’s a double-edged sword. But the fact is drag is mostly about entertainment, and the mainstreaming of drag has meant that there are a lot more opportunities for people to make money, to make livings. I wouldn’t want to deny people’s work. In addition to RuPaul’s Drag Race, drag has broken into the mainstream in other ways, too. And there is that expression: a high tide raises all ships.

BUNNY: It is safe. I wonder if the emphasis hasn’t gone from performance.

SIMPSON: I think that in The Drag Explosion book what’s interesting is that it was a time when drag was not very careerist. That’s why most of the people in the book were just doing it for fun. Back then I think it was more about personal expression and just having fun with it.  

BUNNY: There were also a lot of super creative players who never had an act but who just brought something—it wasn’t a stepping stone to even a job, much less fame. Sometimes they would have the very best looks.

SIMPSON: In some ways, drag doesn’t change a lot. What do you think is next for drag in America?

BUNNY: Lady Bunny. Only.

SIMPSON: The next big drag thing will probably be something that comes from left field, some pop music sensation or some actress or something like that.

BUNNY: Pabllo Vittar, from Brazil. The funny thing is, trans performers were always popular in our world. I’m glad that everyone else has caught up and is now celebrating them along with us. 

SIMPSON: I hope Drag Explosion reflects that, too. That there were drag queens and trans people and all sorts of people under one umbrella, partying together.

 



CHARLIE PALMER TAPS CALIFORNIA NATIVE MICHAEL LEWIS AS EXECUTIVE CHEF OF DRY CREEK KITCHEN IN HEALDSBURG

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Just one month into the new year, Charlie Palmer is pleased to welcome newly appointed Michael Lewis to the position of executive chef at Dry Creek Kitchen.  The restaurant, with Lewis at the helm, reopens on Friday, February 5th for both takeout and outdoor dining on the spacious patio and adjacent Hotel Healdsburg grounds.

 

Lewis comes to the Healdsburg venue from The Lakehouse at Calistoga Ranch.  The Pasadena, California native is a graduate of Le Cordon Bleu College of Culinary Arts, and also brings extensive experience from the busy Los Angeles food scene, including turns at Bestia, Herringbone and Cento Pasta Bar, as well as San Francisco’s Boulevard.  Before heading to wine country, he was also chef and owner of Lewis Provisions, his private catering and bone broth company in L.A.

 

Like Palmer, Lewis is a firm believer in locally sourced ingredients and developing strong relationships with the farming community.  Of his new role, he says, “Dry Creek Kitchen embodies heritage, community and growth, and the key, intangible ingredient—genuine hospitality.  Chef Palmer and I want to continue to honor the loyal patronage of the Healdsburg community, as well as take them and the culinary experience we provide into the future.”

 

Palmer stated, “Michael has absolute respect for the quality of ingredients we have access to here and brings with him the great partnerships he’s developed with our providers.  We’ve worked together on a menu that reflects the best of the season and continues Dry Creek Kitchen’s tradition of exceptional dining, and I think our patrons will find it really exciting.  I know we’re all eager to get back to work and I look forward to reopening our doors with Michael in the kitchen.”

 

The newly tailored menu features such regional specialties as Bodega Bay mussels, seared wild-caught Glory Bay salmon, and whole spiced glazed Liberty duck for two with all the trimmings.  Top it off with dessert, including the always-in-season chocolate peanut butter bar. 

 

Of course, in wine country no meal is really complete without a generous pour from Sonoma County’s finest vineyards—or a well-crafted cocktail.  Dry Creek Kitchen’s Spirit Bar is open as well and will keep your glass full.

 

Dry Creek Kitchen offers a seasonal Dinner for Two To-Go menu featuring specialties such as 48-Hour Angus Short Rib and Herb Crusted Ora King Salmon, both served with family style salad and dessert for $90. The takeout menu also offers the popular DCK Smash Burger and Crispy fries.

 

Dry Creek Kitchen is open for dinner and takeout from 5:30 p.m. to 9 p.m. Sunday through Tuesday and from 5 p.m. to 9 p.m. Friday and Saturday.  Spirit Bar is open for wine, cocktails and bites from 5:30 p.m. to 9 p.m. Sunday through Tuesday and from 5 p.m. to 9 p.m. Friday and Saturday, with Happy Hour from opening until 7 p.m.  For reservations or additional information, please call (707) 431-0330 or visit www.drycreekkitchen.com.   





Time Flies | RECEIPTS | MICHAEL JORDAN is a different kind of PETTY

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Time Flies | RECEIPTS | MICHAEL JORDAN is a different kind of PETTY

Time Flies is a youtube show that talks about major events from a Hip Hop perspective. Hosts Brandon Daz and Bee go year by year remembering the impact of songs, sports, films, and news.

Executive Produced by Fokus Firm
Fokusfirm.com
@fokusfirm
@bee_westbrook
@onlybrandondaz
@time_fliestv

Time Flies | 2003 Films | Full Episode | Is the Chappelle show the funniest show ever?

Time Flies | OutKast | 2003 | Is Andre 3000 selfish?

Time Flies | WORD! | It pays to be dumb on TV, just ask Hollywood

Time Flies | 1996 Sports | Full Episode | Iverson was the #1 pick

Time Flies | 1996 Music | Full Episode | 2PAC’s Influence & Jay-Z’s Start

Time Flies | 1996 News & Trends | Full Episode | Simps, I’m doing this for you

Britney Spears Responds to Fans Who Say Her Dancing Isn’t “Perfect”

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Love her, hate her, say what you want about her, because Britney Spears is going to keep doing what she wants.

The music superstar took to Instagram on Monday, Feb. 1 to offer clarity about the motivation behind videos of herself dancing to pop songs with abandon, which she has been posting to social media throughout quarantine. 

“I’m trying to learn how to use technology in this technology driven generation,” she wrote. “but to be totally honest with you I can’t stand it [tears of joy emojis]!!! So … if my posts aren’t perfect … I’m doing this for fun !!!!”

She added that she’s done with feeling pressure to look a certain way when all she wants to do is just kick up her heels a bit.

“If you think I should look like I’m on a magazine cover when I dance …. sorry ain’t happening!!!!” the Grammy winner continued. 

The 39-year-old “If U Seek Amy” star certainly has not been letting any haters prevent her from showing off her moves of late. In the past seven days alone, she has shared videos of herself dancing to Billie Eilish‘s “i love you,” J Balvin‘s “Mi Gente” and Jay-Z and Justin Timberlake‘s “Holy Grail.”



MUCH ADO ABOUT YOU by SAMANTHA YOUNG

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‘Poor Evie. She’s in her thirties and still single. Shouldn’t she be working harder to find a man, not taking a break?’

Much Ado About You by Samantha Young is the most wonderful feel-good romance. It had us transported to a sleepy village on the English coast. We could smell the salty sea air, and the fish and chips dinners, whilst we read with a perma-smile on our faces. Really, it doesn’t get better than a bookworm heroine leaving her life in Chicago behind, flying cross the pond and renting a book shop, all the while falling in love with a bearded luscious farmer. No question about it, the picturesque and vividly written setting was a whole character just on its own.

‘He looked at me like a guy who wanted everything. It was seductive, compelling, and despite all my concerns about how a relationship might derail me from working out my future plans, I couldn’t deny myself him anymore.’

Evie is such a sweet, funny, and gutsy heroine, she was so real we immediately connected with her character. Her hang-ups, her struggles and her love for bookshops and disappearing into the written word. The realism of society’s expectations can be utterly ridiculous, yet they exist, and Evie is the victim of such nonsense. The judgements hurt and they cause anxiety and feelings of worthlessness. When you’re found wanting it’s easy to put that on yourself when really it has nothing to do with you, the problem is where the judgement originates from. We understood Evie’s need to find herself and figure her life out, away from everything and everyone, whilst doing something she loves. We were with her every step of the way.

“If you’re successful at something, celebrate that success. If you know you’re smart, then demand that other people treat you as someone of intelligence. If you look in the mirror and you like what you see, then halle-fucking-lujah!”

Roane was our kind of man, we could completely picture him walking through the hills of Alnster, Northumberland with his loyal sidekick, Shadow. Roane was a man who embodied loyalty and patience, and of course, we must mention the ‘tall dark and handsome’ with the yummy-licious beard too. The friendship between Evie and Roane was beautiful and it came with the addition of fiery sizzling chemistry that slowly burnt and singed the pages.

“Are you okay?”
“Are we about to have sex?” he asked bluntly.
“Yes,” I whispered.
“Then, aye, Angel. I’m fan-fucking-tastic.“

Much Ado About You was just what we needed; a real comfort read indulgence. We didn’t just fall in love with Evie and Roane; we fell in love with the village, the people living there and the beautiful setting. We felt like we knew everyone who lived there and had our own bar stool in The Anchor pub, ordering ‘our usual’ and settling in for the evening for the daily craic. We really do hope there’s more to come from the good people of Alnster!

“So much, Evie, I’m terrified you’ll disappear. I didn’t know this much happiness went hand in hand with fear.”



VANJHLI WAJA BY AMRINDER GILL

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