I've decided that I'm sick of the generic "WWE Attitude" ribbons for the Showcase characters and I was wondering if you guys had any suggestions for other ribbons in the game that would fit the individual characters? I'm using Tamina's for Haku right now, Steven Regal's for Bulldog, and any retro versions of characters are just getting their modern equivalent's ribbons, but I can't think of anything else that would work.
Is there a setting to add a ribbon of random movies to my plex home screen? Just like there's a ribbon of 'new movies', can I create a ribbon of movies in an order that is randomly shuffled every day/hour/week? Doesn't need anything fancy like selection criteria, just randomly shuffle my movie library and give me a new ribbon to mindlessly scroll through. To be clear, I'm NOT looking for a "press this button for a random movie to start playing", I just want randomly sampling of my collection displayed so get my selection juices flowing...
Life continues in an orderly fashion, as a gyroscope tilts and then rights itself. The baron steadies his people. The doctor resumes his practice, but is unaccountably cruel toward his mistress. The teacher teaches, and the students study, and they sing in the choir. Church services are attended. The white ribbon is worn by children who have been bad but will now try to be good. The crops are harvested. The teacher courts the comely village girl Eva (Leonie Benesch). And suspicion spreads.
Hooray for Hollywood and Movie night! Movie Night Ribbon printed on 7/8" gold ribbon features stars, film reels, and camera's on a black background. Elegant and sophisticated this ribbon is ready for your Oscar Party or any star struck film themed party!Our ribbon is printed using dye sublimation technology, and will not fade, peel or chip. It is washable, can be ironed and re-used. Designed and printed in the USA
The Brother 1030 Typewriter Ribbon is highly economical. It's also easily correctable and prints in black, offering admirable quality prints. The 1030's combined features make it the ideal ribbon for your home and office needs.
The Munich-born, Austria-raised Haneke, 67, has been called the supreme sadist of European art cinema. His 1997 Funny Games, which detailed the psychological and physical torture of a family by two interlopers in tennis whites, was an insolent, almost pedagogical exercise in audience abuse. The Piano Teacher (2001), in which Isabelle Huppert is involved in various forms of sadomasochism with her mother, her young beau and herself, took the Grand Jury Prize (second place) at Cannes. Four years later Caché, the study of a family victimized by a mysterious provocateur, won Cannes' Best Director award on its way to becoming an international hit. In an era when mainstream movies cozy up to their audiences, begging for acceptance, any director who challenges the viewer by boldly undercutting expectations may well be charged with mental cruelty. There's no doubt that Haneke's films are grim, and that they goad spectators to confront distasteful truths. But they are so expertly made that they carry their own cinematic wonder. And, given the state of the earth at this moment, we may ask which sort of filmmaker is more in touch with reality the cheerleaders who confect standard comedies and action films, or the ones like Haneke who insist you look head-on at the face of intolerance. It could look a lot like your parent's face, or your own.
"Father Told Me Not To"
The film takes its title from the ribbons the pastor forces his children to wear when he thinks they have disobeyed him. "The white color," he says, "was to remind you of innocence and purity." But this strict lesson, meant to inculcate the fear of God, doesn't always take root. In one early scene, the teacher sees Martin (Leonard Proxauf), the pastor's elder son, walking on the narrow rail of a wooden bridge above a stream. The teacher asks why he is risking his life, and the boy replies, "I gave God a chance to kill me."
And if buying a product with a pink ribbon on it would help end the epidemic, it should be over by now, given all the breast cancer shopping that people do. After all, if shopping could cure breast cancer, it would be cured by now.
One way to do raise those challenges is to Think Before You Pink. This is a campaign that was started in 2002 by Breast Cancer Action, the kick-ass organization I had the privilege of leading for 15 years. It focuses on cause marketing: the practice of companies putting a pink ribbon on products to try to increase sales of their products. It provides 5 questions to guide you as you think about these promotions:
Breast cancer is the most common form of cancer that afflicts mostly women. (A few men also get it.) That prevalence partially explains the rise of the pink-ribbon movement. But critics of the fund-raising campaigns argue that companies like Avon and Yoplait also are drawn to the breast-cancer cause by its, well, pinkness. Heart disease and lung cancer just don't seem as feminine.
Canadian director Lea Pool, who's best known for such fiction features as Set Me Free, takes a scattershot approach. In addition to the interviews, she includes animated sequences, vintage clips from news programs and public-service announcements, and coverage of pink-ribbon events: walks "for the cure" in D.C. and San Francisco, a pink-lighted Niagara Falls and Empire State Building, a jump by "Aerial Pink Force" skydivers.
Objections to such stunts are partially a matter of taste; although the movie devotes much of its attention to more substantive issues, it takes a few minutes to protest pink-ribbon kitsch and "the tyranny of cheerfulness."
Some of the pink-ribbon sponsors may even be implicated in rising cancer rates. Avon is a major supporter of the cause, yet certain cosmetics contain suspected cancer-causing agents. While encouraging customers to send in Yoplait lids in exchange for donations to breast-cancer research, the yogurt's manufacturer used milk that contained bovine growth hormone. (The substance, which is banned in many countries, was later eliminated.) The goal of such companies, allege their critics, is to "pinkwash" possibly carcinogenic products.
Such scientific arguments remain unresolved, and this unapologetically polemical documentary doesn't offer equal time for corporate viewpoints. But the movie's indignation seems justified on at least one point: that the pink-ribbon movement thus far has done more for marketing than for medicine.
The narrator's veiled connection is the first of many vagaries that take place in a small village where everyone seems to know each other's business. The film presents an interesting story of strange events, casting suspicion many directions before leaving the events open to discussion. There is no neat "ribbon" to tie this package together. Instead, the thought-provoking ending leaves unanswered questions dwelling in the minds of the audience.
Fantastic, seen twice. Seen other Haneke movies such as Amour and Cache. I just saw A Fortunate Man on netflix, also excellent, and some of the same themes as White Ribbon, although completely unique. Peace
According to the Facebook page, GQT Huntington 7 delivers movies, munchies and memories with the best in value, cleanliness and customer care. Featuring seven screens with all digital projection and all stadium seating. Doors open half hour before the first movie.
The Huntington County Chamber of Commerce welcomes GQT Movies to Huntington, and appreciates the investment they are making in our county. For more information or to schedule a party, call GQT Huntington 7 at (260) 358-0226 or email at Hunti...@GQTmovies.com.
Jeff Hyatt, F. E. Warren Army and Air Force Exchange Service manager, and Col. Christopher Coffelt, 90th Missile Wing commander, pose ceremonial scissors at the F. E. Warren Base Theater grand re-opening ribbon cutting March 15. (U.S. Air Force photo by Airman 1st Class Jason Wiese)
The new Christie digital movie projector used by the F. E. Warren Base Theater to play movies. The addition of the digital projector is a part of a $115,000 upgrade to the theater. (U.S. Air Force photo by Airman 1st Class Jason Wiese)
Originally organized in response to the murder of DEA Agent Enrique Camarena, supportive parents and youth began wearing red ribbons as a symbol of support and an ally in the fight to raise awareness of the devastating consequences that occur because of drugs in America. In 1998, NFP sponsored the first National Red Ribbon Celebration, and today it serves as a catalyst to unite communities to educate youth and encourage participation in drug prevention programs and activities.
The ribbon-cutting ceremony marked a key day for the Hippodrome cinema, recognizing its future and artistic role in the Gainesville community and honoring its partnership with the Gainesville community.
To welcome the Festival to Goleta, a ribbon-cutting was held on August 24 in front of the Metropolitan Fairview Theatre. The Santa Barbara South Coast Chamber organized the event which had a great turnout. Mayor Pro-Tempore Kyle Richards, 2nd District Councilmember Luz Reyes-Martín, 1st District Councilmember James Kyriaco, and City Manager Robert Nisbet attended the special event.
There's something about serving in the military that just makes veterans want to make movies -- movies about things they did, things they saw and maybe even themselves. Vets who head out to Los Angeles after their time in the service won't be alone, as there are many working in the entertainment industry there.
With the reinstatement of the film and television tax credit and its subsequent expansion last year, New Jersey is quickly growing in status as a shooting location. In 2019, film and television productions in the state resulted in more than $420 million in economic activity. With a host of new movies, television series and commercials, as well as the addition of studios like Cinelease, the state is on track to surpass that number in 2021.
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