In the olden days, if footage was not used in a film, it was either destroyed or erased so they could reuse the reel, because it was cheaper than storing unused film.
Google the BBCās lost archives to find out more.
Iāve seen a few compilations online that were made for holiday parties or wrap parties. That may be why we still have these today.
āOn the Senate floor late Thursday, Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.)Ā made a new and tantalizing claimĀ about whatās in the FBI documents onĀ Brett M. Kavanaugh that all senators have now reviewed. Senators are severely limited in what they can say about these documents, which are summaries of the interviews that the FBI conducted as part of their renewed background check into Kavanaugh, after Christine Blasey Ford went public with charges that he sexually assaulted her, which led to a host of new claims like that one and others about his drinking at the time.
ā’Senators have been muzzled. So I will now say three things that committee staff has explained are permissible to say without violating committee rules. ⦠One: This was not a full and fair investigation. It was sharply limited in scope and did not explore the relevant confirming facts. Two: The available documents do not exonerate Mr. Kavanaugh.
āāAnd three: the available documents contradict statements Mr. Kavanaugh made under oath.Ā I would like to back up these points with explicit statements from the FBI documents ā explicit statements that should be available for the American people to see. But the Republicans have locked the documents behind closed doors.ā
āWarren, then, appears to have consulted with Judiciary Committee lawyers and was seemingly told that per the rules, she could divulge just this much about what is in the documents, and not a syllable more. At a minimum, Warren appears to be suggesting that there is material gathered from these FBI interviews that demonstrates that Kavanaugh lied to the committee.
ā¦āItās more than a little troubling that the Senate is going to vote on something as important as a Supreme Court nomination with the American people entirely in the dark on the matter.ā [Stephen Vladeck, a law professor at the University of Texas at Austin]
So theyāve got him for perjury at least five times, then ...
serebii.net is wild. itās a relic. this dude has been running a pokemon news website continuously for damn near 20 years. who is he. how does he do it. what is his secret. how did he get so powerful. he terrifies me
reblogging this again because i found out today he started serebii when he was 13. imagine making a website dedicated to a game at 13 years old and it exploding enough to become the entire fandomās main source of information
Rick Riordan is also using his money and fame to lift marginalized authors. He started a whole imprint called Rick Riordan Presents. The books published there have mythology and folklore from all over the world, and theyāre written by authors who actually belong to those cultures. The first three books announced have stories based in Korean, Mayan, and Indian cultures, written by Yoon Ha Lee, Jennifer Cervantes, and Roshani Chokshi respectively.
Rick Riordan is pretty fucking cool. Ive never seen a YA put as much care and effort into growing as a writer, specifically with a focus on increasing diversity, as him.
The fact that heās a UT alum from San Antonio who taught middle school English just warms my heart.
PLEASE click on the link to his Stonewall acceptance speech my god you wonāt regret it
I just realized that the specific reason the 80s and 90s anti-racism preaching in the media failed is because it was entirely focused on emotions and bullying and self esteem, and now everyone thinks the only thing that racism affects is peopleās feelings.
but in reality, personal emotions about oneās self are the FINAL, smallest, most individual, personal step in what racism does. it ALSO does so much astronomically more than that, and anyone whoās experienced it knows that on some level. itās institutional; itās woven inextricably into the fabric of not only our country, but our global system, too. and people are utterly blind to that.
popular culture still suggests that racism is wrong JUST because saying racist stuff hurts peopleās feelings, and not because itās a cultural attitude that informs every level of how our society operates; there is little awareness that racism is about ACTIONS, actions with no conscious intent behind them, not beliefs, which are intangible.
and now that the alt-right has popularized the idea that feelings are objectively stupid, thereās no longer ANY reason not to say racist things. because who cares about hurting other peopleās FEELINGS? thatās the very last, smallest, most individual, personal thing you can possibly care about! š
thatās why people are convinced nowadays that a public figure with wide-reaching influence can say racist things unapologetically without ābeingā racist. because to them, ābeing racistā isnāt the same as ACTING RACIST. Itās some internal beliefāsome character flawāthat only crazy people have, and if youāre ironic enough about it, thereās suddenly no harm in being openly racist for laughs.
when the truth is, ACTIONS MEAN MORE THAN BELIEFS. virulent racists are createdandenabledby an almost unfathomably massive system of laws and conventions and tradition and lies that people tell themselves and each other. on a global scale.
people think racism is a thing people believe but somehow NOT a thing people DO.