Rechercher dans ce blog

Sunday, April 30, 2023

Hunter Biden’s twisted attempts to keep his little girl from using his name are now in a new realm - Fox News

little.indah.link

NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

On Monday, Hunter Biden will finally make it to Arkansas. The Natural State itself is not a favorite Biden family destination but there is one thing that would ordinarily be an attraction: Biden's daughter Navy Joan. 

In the Biden family, the 4-year-old girl remains "she who shall not be named" literally. Not only has President Biden refused to refer to her as a grandchild or even include a Christmas stocking with the other children, her father Hunter is fighting to prevent her from using the Biden name. Indeed, the only reason that Hunter is coming to the same state that his daughter lives in is to seek to reduce his child support.

The viciousness of the Biden family in dealing with this little girl is only matched by that of the media. Reporters who profess to support women and denounce deadbeat dads have either ignored this story or belittled her mother Lunden Roberts.

HUNTER BIDEN ORDERED TO APPEAR IN-PERSON FOR ARKANSAS PATERNITY CASE HEARING FOR UNCLAIMED 4-YEAR-OLD DAUGHTER

Roberts is widely dismissed as a "former stripper." That appears to be how she met Hunter, but it is often used to paint her in the same way that the media gleefully reported on former first lady Hillary Clinton denouncing the women who were involved with her husband as mere "bimbo eruptions."

The reason the media ignores Roberts is that it wants to ignore what the Bidens have done. 

Hunter Biden family stroll

Hunter Biden and wife Melissa Cohen with their son Beau stroll along South Carolina's Kiawah Island. (mom&paparazzi for Fox News Digital)

Yes, Roberts was an exotic dancer. She used that job to go to one of the most expensive colleges in the country, George Washington University, where I teach. 

The reason the media ignores Navy Joan's mother Lunden Roberts is that it wants to ignore what the Bidens have done. 

When she became pregnant, she decided to have her child and raise her on her own. She has raised this child without a father and fought one of the most powerful families in the world. 

When Navy Joan is older, there is every reason for her to be proud of the struggle that her mother went through in seeking a college education and raising her against all odds.

Despite Joe Biden long campaigning against deadbeat dads, his son had refused to acknowledge that he was the father of Navy Joan. After a court forced him to confirm his paternity through DNA testing, he continued to fight paying support for his child. Hunter's delay and evasion of filings and depositions led a court to repeatedly threaten sanctions. 

However, the effort to bar this child from using the Biden name has moved this scandal from the realm of hypocrisy to monstrosity. 

BIDEN AGAIN REFUSES TO ACKNOWLEDGE HUNTER'S OUT-OF-WEDLOCK DAUGHTER WHILE SPEAKING ABOUT GRANDCHILDREN

It is hard to imagine the pain that this child will experience upon learning of how the Bidens erased any reference to her and fought even her ability to claim to be a member of their family. (Even the Bidens' dogs and cats got stockings at Christmas but not their granddaughter Navy Joan, whom they have never asked to even see, let alone support.)

After opposing efforts to even establish that he is her father and his continued effort to limit child support, Hunter is telling the court that he would not want the child to bear his name for her own good and to guarantee her a "peaceful existence." 

If one were to combine all of Hunter's influence peddling, drug abuse, orgies and prostitution controversies, they would not hold a candle to the utter depravity shown toward this little girl.

Despite assembling a new Legion of Doom of high-priced lawyers and advisers, Hunter is claiming that he simply cannot meet demands for child support. 

Hunter Biden embraces his wife, Melissa Cohens

Hunter Biden embraces his wife, Melissa Cohen,, as their son Beau plays in the ocean. (mom&paparazzi for Fox News Digital)

Given his opposition to such support for years and reported millions in foreign dealings, it would seem transparently absurd. 

It is even more difficult to accept this excuse as he jets between his luxurious mansion in Malibu to digs at the White House. The public reportedly pays more for his security in his mansion than he does for monthly support for his daughter.

There is, however, a crushing karmic aspect to Hunter being forced to appear in Arkansas. His efforts to limit his child support may have backfired and could prove costly. 

HUNTER BIDEN'S CLOSE RELATIONSHIP WITH HIS DAD'S NEW CAMPAIGN CO-CHAIR REVEALED IN LAPTOP EMAILS

Hunter has struggled to conceal his finances, including money that he received from alleged influence peddling. Now the court is considering the laptop as possible evidence in millions of past assets. While a U.S. Attorney in Delaware is exploring criminal charges and House committees are looking into the influence peddling, his fight against this toddler could force a decision on the authenticity of the laptop.

In the last hearing, Hunter's counsel tried again to maintain deniability. 

Here is the exchange after Judge Meyer referenced Garrett Ziegle as a potential expert witness on the contents of the laptop:

Langdon: "There has never been, to my knowledge, an acknowledgment that this so-called laptop — he continuously calls it Hunter Biden's abandoned laptop ..."

Meyer: "Well, let's clear that issue up right now. Is it your client's laptop or not?"

Langdon: "Your honor, I'm not involved in all of that stuff. It's not my client's laptop as far as I know."

...

Meyer: "Is it your client's position, you're representing to this court, that it is not his laptop?"

Langdon: "Your honor, I am not in a position to even begin to answer that question."

BLINKEN AND WIFE EMAILED FREQUENTLY WITH HUNTER BIDEN, RAISING QUESTIONS ABOUT ROLE IN LAPTOP COVER STORY

It is bizarre to continue this obfuscation years after the release of the laptop. Hunter is facing the use of the laptop as evidence in this case as well as the federal prosecution and House investigations. Yet, his counsel is still claiming ignorance as to whether it is authentic.

It is the continuation of a long campaign of disinformation. Before the 2020 election, the media repeated the false claim that the Hunter Biden laptop was likely "Russian disinformation." 

Despite the denial of American intelligence and self-verifying emails on the laptop, the media accepted without question the dubious claims of former intelligence figures organized by longtime Democratic operatives.

It worked beautifully. 

It was not until two years later that NPR, the New York Times and other legacy media outlets got around to telling the public the truth.

CLICK HERE TO GET THE OPINION NEWSLETTER

Hunter has long refused to acknowledge ownership of the laptop. When asked years ago by CBS News, about its authenticity, he shrugged and said, "There could be a laptop out there that was stolen from me. It could be that I was hacked. It could be that it was the — that it was Russian intelligence."

In some ways, it is a continuation of Hunter's long denial of his child’s paternity. Yet, the DNA did not lie. 

Hunter could now be forced to accept this laptop as his own. That could prove far more costly than the child support that he is seeking to avoid in Arkansas.

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

None of this, of course, will get Navy Joan a stocking on next year's Biden family fireplace. According to Joe Biden, she is not one of his grandchildren despite being fathered by his own son. 

Nor will this make Hunter Biden a better person. However, if she succeeds in using the Biden family name, she will certainly prove the best of the lot.

CLICK HERE TO READ MORE FROM JONATHAN TURLEY

Adblock test (Why?)

The Link Lonk


April 30, 2023 at 04:45AM
https://news.google.com/rss/articles/CBMiZGh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmZveG5ld3MuY29tL29waW5pb24vaHVudGVyLWJpZGVucy10d2lzdGVkLWF0dGVtcHRzLWtlZXAtbGl0dGxlLWdpcmwtdXNpbmctbmFtZS1uZXctcmVhbG3SAWhodHRwczovL3d3dy5mb3huZXdzLmNvbS9vcGluaW9uL2h1bnRlci1iaWRlbnMtdHdpc3RlZC1hdHRlbXB0cy1rZWVwLWxpdHRsZS1naXJsLXVzaW5nLW5hbWUtbmV3LXJlYWxtLmFtcA?oc=5

Hunter Biden’s twisted attempts to keep his little girl from using his name are now in a new realm - Fox News

https://news.google.com/search?q=little&hl=en-US&gl=US&ceid=US:en

Saturday, April 29, 2023

Review finds little evidence to support some claims of gender bias - Inside Higher Ed

little.indah.link

Women scientists in higher education with doctoral degrees have similar chances as men to get hired for tenure-track jobs and have their grant applications funded and journal submissions accepted, according to a new report that challenges common assumptions about gender bias in academe.

sanjeri/E+/Getty Images

Claims of widespread gender bias in tenure-track hiring, grant funding and journal acceptances in the academic sciences are not supported by the data, a new study finds.

The paper published in Psychological Science in the Public Interest looked at two decades of research regarding biases that tenure-track women have faced since 2000. In the end, the authors determined tenure-track women in science, technology, engineering or math were at parity with men in tenure-track positions in the same fields when it comes to grant funding, journal acceptances and recommendation letters.

Women did have an advantage in the hiring process for the tenure-track jobs, though the evidence did show a bias against women in teaching evaluations and salaries. The salary gap, according to the report, was concerning but smaller than the oft-quoted statistic that women in STEM fields make 82 cents for every dollar that men earn. On average, the gap was 9 cents on the dollar, although the gap shrank to less than 4 cents when controlling for experience, type of institution and productivity, among other factors.

“We’re getting really close to an equitable landscape,” said Wendy Williams, a professor in the department of human development at Cornell University and an author of the paper. “We’ve come 90 percent of the way, and so what stands between us and that is not an insurmountable task anymore. It’s really important for young women in college who are considering going to grad school and women in grad school who are considering becoming professors.”

Williams said the discourse about sexism in higher education can discourage some women from choosing a career in the academy.

Williams co-wrote the paper with Stephen Ceci, a professor of developmental psychology at Cornell, and Shulamit Kahn, an associate professor of economics at Boston University. The paper was “an adversarial collaboration,” bringing together researchers with different viewpoints. Williams and Ceci have written often to rebut frequent talking points on gender bias in STEM, while Kahn has a history of revealing gender inequities in her field.

The trio spent the last five years reviewing hundreds of studies published from 2000 to 2020 about gender bias in STEM, looking specifically at empirical evidence related to claims of gender bias in tenure-track hiring, grant funding, teaching ratings, journal acceptances, salaries, recommendation letters and journal productivity. They focused on women with a doctoral degree in STEM and who are interested in tenure-track academic careers in science. (Many people with a Ph.D. in STEM aren’t looking for a job in academe.)

“Even when limiting ourselves to a consideration of STEM tenure-track jobs, there are nevertheless many contexts in which women may face barriers to success in entering and succeeding in these jobs,” they wrote in the report, which is peppered with similar caveats.

A spokeswoman for the Association of Women in Science, which works to address gender bias in higher education, said she hadn’t read the report yet. The American Association of University Women did not respond to a request for comment on the paper. Both groups have maintained that there is gender bias in science.

Ceci acknowledged that there were many topics that the trio didn’t take on, such as tenure and promotion, and other systemic factors that could affect a women’s career trajectory.

Kahn said she was surprised at the equality they found in hiring, grant funding and journal acceptances.

“This emphasis on looking exclusively for gender bias in all aspects of science academia is actually doing a disservice to women and to science, perpetuating myths that the weight of the evidence doesn’t support,” Kahn wrote in a summary.

Kahn said in an interview that she hoped that the paper would lead institutions and higher education to realize that they’re looking at the wrong thing. Rather they should be addressing why the careers of men and women develop differently, she said.

“It’s the system of tenure and postdocs,” she said. “That’s the problem.”

Similarly, Ceci said the report shows that institutions are putting money where it’s not needed, such as the trainings aimed at rooting out bias on hiring committees. He and Williams questioned if the trainings are needed given that women are receiving an advantage in the hiring process.

“It’s important to get a grip on what’s going on today and not what was going on in 1985,” Williams said, adding that institutions should be able to acknowledge when efforts to address gender disparities in certain areas have worked.

Beyond the specific findings in their report, the trio chided other researchers in their paper for what they see as taking evidence out of context and called on the research community to do better.

“We all have to do a better job of verifying facts,” the report says. “Despite our finding of little bias against women in four of the domains we examined (and a pro-female bias in tenure-track hiring), many scholars and advocates appear to believe, state, and write otherwise … In support of their beliefs, the authors selectively cited congruent evidence and ignored contrary findings, which they may hold to a higher standard of evidence because of their prior beliefs.”

Adblock test (Why?)

The Link Lonk


April 27, 2023 at 11:03AM
https://news.google.com/rss/articles/CBMifWh0dHBzOi8vd3d3Lmluc2lkZWhpZ2hlcmVkLmNvbS9uZXdzL2ZhY3VsdHktaXNzdWVzL2RpdmVyc2l0eS1lcXVpdHkvMjAyMy8wNC8yNy9yZXNlYXJjaC1maW5kcy1uby1nZW5kZXItYmlhcy1hY2FkZW1pYy1zY2llbmNl0gEA?oc=5

Review finds little evidence to support some claims of gender bias - Inside Higher Ed

https://news.google.com/search?q=little&hl=en-US&gl=US&ceid=US:en

Hunter Biden's twisted attempts to keep his little girl from using his name are now in a new realm - Fox News

little.indah.link

NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

On Monday, Hunter Biden will finally make it to Arkansas. The Natural State itself is not a favorite Biden family destination but there is one thing that would ordinarily be an attraction: Biden's daughter Navy Joan. 

In the Biden family, the four-year-old girl remains "she who not be named" literally. Not only has President Biden refused to refer to her as a grandchild or even include a Christmas stocking with the other children, her father Hunter is fighting to prevent her from using the Biden name. Indeed, the only reason that Hunter is coming to the same state that his daughter lives in is to seek to reduce his child support.

The viciousness of the Biden family in dealing with this little girl is only matched by that of the media. Reporters who profess to support women and denounce deadbeat dads have either ignored this story or belittled her mother Lunden Roberts.

HUNTER BIDEN ORDERED TO APPEAR IN-PERSON FOR ARKANSAS PATERNITY CASE HEARING FOR UNCLAIMED 4-YEAR-OLD DAUGHTER

Roberts is widely dismissed as a "former stripper." That appears to be how she met Hunter, but it is often used to paint her in the same way that the media gleefully reported on former first lady Hillary Clinton denouncing the women who were involved with her husband as mere "bimbo eruptions."

The reason the media ignores Roberts is that it wants to ignore what the Bidens have done. 

Hunter Biden family stroll

Hunter Biden and wife Melissa Cohen with their son Beau stroll along South Carolina's Kiawah Island. (mom&paparazzi for Fox News Digital)

Yes, Roberts was an exotic dancer. She used that job to go to one of the most expensive colleges in the country, George Washington University where I teach. 

The reason the media ignores Navy Joan's mother Lunden Roberts is that it wants to ignore what the Bidens have done. 

When she became pregnant, she decided to have her child and raise her on her own. She has raised this child without a father and fought one of the most powerful families in the world. 

When Navy Joan is older, there is every reason for her to be proud of the struggle that her mother went through in seeking a college education and raising her against all odds.

Despite Joe Biden long campaigning against deadbeat dads, his son refused to acknowledge that he was the father of Navy Joan. After a court forced him to confirm his paternity through DNA testing, he continued to fight paying support for his child. Hunter's delay and evasion of filings and depositions led a court to repeatedly threaten sanctions. 

However, the effort to bar this child from using the Biden name has moved this scandal from the realm of hypocrisy to monstrosity. 

BIDEN AGAIN REFUSES TO ACKNOWLEDGE HUNTER'S OUT-OF-WEDLOCK DAUGHTER WHILE SPEAKING ABOUT GRANDCHILDREN

It is hard to imagine the pain that this child will experience upon learning of how the Bidens erased any reference to her and fought even her ability to claim to be a member of their family. (Even the Biden's dogs and cats got stockings at Christmas but not their granddaughter Navy Joan whom they have never asked to even see, let alone support).

After opposing efforts to even establish that he is her father and his continued to effort to limit child support, Hunter is telling the court that he would not want the child to bear his name for her own good and to guarantee her a "peaceful existence." 

If one were to combine all of Hunter's influence peddling, drug abuse, orgies and prostitution controversies, they would not hold a candle to the utter depravity shown toward this little girl.

Despite assembling a new Legion of Doom of high-priced lawyers and advisers, Hunter is claiming that he simply cannot meet demands for child support. 

Hunter Biden embraces his wife, Melissa Cohens

Hunter Biden embraces his wife, Melissa Cohens, as their son Beau plays in the ocean. (mom&paparazzi for Fox News Digital)

Given his opposition to such support for years and reported millions in foreign dealings, it would seem transparently absurd. 

It is even more difficult to accept this excuse as he jets between his luxurious mansion in Malibu to digs at the White House. The public reportedly pays more for his security in his mansion than he does for monthly support for his daughter.

There is, however, a crushing karmic aspect to Hunter being forced to appear in Arkansas. His efforts to limit his child support may have backfired and could prove costly. 

HUNTER BIDEN'S CLOSE RELATIONSHIP WITH HIS DAD'S NEW CAMPAIGN CO-CHAIR REVEALED IN LAPTOP EMAILS

Hunter has struggled to conceal his finances, including money that he received from alleged influence peddling. Now the court is considering the laptop as possible evidence in millions of past assets. With a U.S. Attorney in Delaware is exploring criminal charges and House committees looking into the influence peddling, his fight against this toddler could force a decision on the authenticity of the laptop.

In the last hearing, Hunter's counsel tried again to maintain deniability. 

Here is the exchange after Judge Meyer referenced Garrett Ziegle as a potential expert witness on the contents of the laptop:

Langdon: "There has never been, to my knowledge, an acknowledgment that this so-called laptop — he continuously calls it Hunter Biden's abandoned laptop ..."

Meyer: "Well, let's clear that issue up right now. Is it your client's laptop or not?"

Langdon: "Your honor, I'm not involved in all of that stuff. It's not my client's laptop as far as I know."

...

Meyer: "Is it your client's position, you're representing to this court, that it is not his laptop?"

Langdon: "Your honor, I am not in a position to even begin to answer that question."

BLINKEN AND WIFE EMAILED FREQUENTLY WITH HUNTER BIDEN, RAISING QUESTIONS ABOUT ROLE IN LAPTOP COVER STORY

It is bizarre to continue to this obfuscation years after the release of the laptop. Hunter is facing the use of the laptop as evidence in this case as well as the federal prosecution and House investigations. Yet, his counsel is still claiming ignorance as to whether it is authentic.

It is the continuation of a long campaign of disinformation. Before the 2020 election, the media repeated the false claim that the Hunter Biden laptop was likely "Russian Disinformation." 

Despite the denial of American intelligence and self-verifying emails on the laptop, the media accepted without question the dubious claims of former intelligence figures organized by longtime Democratic operatives.

It worked beautifully. 

It was not until two years later that NPR, the New York Times, and other legacy media outlets got around to telling the public the truth.

CLICK HERE TO GET THE OPINION NEWSLETTER

Hunter has long refused to acknowledge ownership of the laptop. When asked years ago by CBS News, about its authenticity, he shrugged and said, "There could be a laptop out there that was stolen from me. It could be that I was hacked. It could be that it was the — that it was Russian intelligence."

In some ways, it is a continuation of Hunter's long denial of his child’s paternity. Yet, the DNA did not lie. 

Hunter could now be forced to accept this laptop as his own. That could prove far more costly than the child support that he is seeking to avoid in Arkansas.

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

None of this, of course, will get Navy Joan a stocking on next year's Biden family fireplace. According to Joe Biden, she is not one of his grandchildren despite being fathered by his own son. 

Nor will this make Hunter Biden a better person. However, if she succeeds in using the Biden family name, she will certainly prove the best of the lot.

CLICK HERE TO READ MORE FROM JONATHAN TURLEY

Adblock test (Why?)

The Link Lonk


April 30, 2023 at 04:45AM
https://news.google.com/rss/articles/CBMiZGh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmZveG5ld3MuY29tL29waW5pb24vaHVudGVyLWJpZGVucy10d2lzdGVkLWF0dGVtcHRzLWtlZXAtbGl0dGxlLWdpcmwtdXNpbmctbmFtZS1uZXctcmVhbG3SAQA?oc=5

Hunter Biden's twisted attempts to keep his little girl from using his name are now in a new realm - Fox News

https://news.google.com/search?q=little&hl=en-US&gl=US&ceid=US:en

Friday, April 28, 2023

Fresh Take: Putting A Little Spring In Your Step - Forbes

little.indah.link

Ramps. Peas. Asparagus. Mushrooms. Rhubarb. Springtime’s bounty is just getting started. I hope these seasonal favorites have been showing up in your fridge.

I’ve been trying to soak it all up. This week kicked off with a favorite of my sister and I, scrampi — or, rather, shrimp scampi with ramps. That’s the only way I can get through a Monday. Then there was ramp bread, topped with (maybe too much) grass-fed butter. Up next, I’m looking at garlic scape pesto and asparagus sprinkled with lemon zest and served over toast. Sautéed morels and other mushrooms. Peas and probably more pasta, maybe with some prosciutto or guanciale.

While I take in all the spring sunshine, I’ve been watching a bee hang out around my strawberry plant — pollinating and readying my terrace garden for strawberry season. In New York City, spring is over as quick as it comes. Enjoy it while it lasts.

— Chloe Sorvino, Staff Writer


Order my book, Raw Deal: Hidden Corruption, Corporate Greed and the Fight for the Future of Meat, out now from Simon & Schuster’s Atria Books.


This is Forbes’ Fresh Take newsletter, which every Friday brings you the latest on the big ideas changing the future of food. Want to get it in your inbox every week? Sign up here.


What’s Fresh

Your Couch Is Probably Toxic. The Furniture Industry Is Finally Dealing With It. The supply chain is scrambling to rid itself of ‘forever chemicals’ before restrictions take effect in California and other states, reports Amy Feldman.

Here's Why Chipotle Stock Is Soaring (It's All About Higher Prices—And Avocados). As Derek Saul reports, Chipotle posted a record $2.4 billion in sales last quarter as customers remained hungry despite higher prices.

Ground Beef Burger Recall: 2,122 Pounds After Complaints Of Rubber-Like Material. As Bruce Y. Lee reports, Weinstein Wholesale Meats is dealing with a big one.

Get Ready For Another Hellish Summer Of Air Travel. Remember the thousands of flight cancellations, endless lines and lost baggage nightmares from last year? Experts warn it could be even worse in 2023. Here’s how to book smarter and fly right in the midst of another Air-mageddon, writes Suzanne Rowan Kelleher.


Chloe Sorvino leads coverage of food and agriculture as a staff writer on the enterprise team at Forbes. Her book, Raw Deal: Hidden Corruption, Corporate Greed and the Fight for the Future of Meat, published on December 6, 2022, with Simon & Schuster’s Atria Books. Her nearly nine years of reporting at Forbes has brought her to In-N-Out Burger’s secret test kitchen, drought-ridden farms in California’s Central Valley, burnt-out national forests logged by a timber billionaire, a century-old slaughterhouse in Omaha and even a chocolate croissant factory designed like a medieval castle in northern France.

Thanks for reading the 69th edition of Forbes Fresh Take! Let me know what you think. Subscribe to Forbes Fresh Take here.

Adblock test (Why?)

The Link Lonk


April 29, 2023 at 02:07AM
https://news.google.com/rss/articles/CBMiZWh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmZvcmJlcy5jb20vc2l0ZXMvY2hsb2Vzb3J2aW5vLzIwMjMvMDQvMjgvZnJlc2gtdGFrZS1wdXR0aW5nLWEtbGl0dGxlLXNwcmluZy1pbi15b3VyLXN0ZXAv0gEA?oc=5

Fresh Take: Putting A Little Spring In Your Step - Forbes

https://news.google.com/search?q=little&hl=en-US&gl=US&ceid=US:en

6 British Castles Where You Can Stay for as Little as $230 a Night - The New York Times

little.indah.link

As the coronation of King Charles III unfolds in London, you can get your own taste of nearly 1,000 years of pomp and lore for as little as $230 a night.

When King Charles III is crowned on May 6, the world will witness, for the first time since his mother’s coronation in 1953, a ceremony that packs more than 1,000 years of British pomp and pageantry into a single day. But for some people, one day might not be enough.

Britain teems with castles that offer travelers a chance to walk the same halls and sleep in the same quarters as monarchs of days gone by. Those who revel in the grand spectacle unfolding in Westminster Abbey may also want to soak in the noble lore in the old stone walls of some of those castles.

“The sheer drama of the past thousand years of royal history in Great Britain is like a long-running soap opera,” said Tracy Borman, a London-based royal historian and the author of “Crown & Sceptre,” a history of the British monarchy from William the Conqueror to Charles III. “You’ve got the king who marries six times, the virgin queen, the crown changing hands numerous times on the battlefield, abdication, usurpations, scandal. It’s basically the best drama you could ever hope for.”

Sleeping in a castle can feel like playing a bit part in that sweeping tale. “When people stay in a castle they never forget it,” said Roger Masterson (a.k.a. the Castle Man), founder of Celtic Castles, a travel company and booking platform that works with more than 100 castles across the United Kingdom.

In the past year, Mr. Masterson said he had noticed an increase in Scottish castle bookings in particular, which he attributed to the coverage of Queen Elizabeth II’s funeral and the royal family’s journey back to London from Balmoral Castle, where the queen often spent her vacations. “It really showed off Scotland at its best,” he said.

These six British castles may not be Balmoral, but they still give travelers a chance to steep themselves in history and get a taste of living, if not like royalty, at least like nobility.

A 700-year-old structure with a storied history, Hever Castle is about 35 miles from Buckingham Palace.Hever Castle and Gardens

Set in Kent, the “Garden of England,” just 35 miles from Buckingham Palace, Hever Castle transports guests 700 years back in time with fairy-tale architecture that features a medieval sandstone gatehouse, a double moat and two portcullises reached via a drawbridge.

But it’s the castle’s storied history as the childhood home of Anne Boleyn, the second wife of Henry VIII, that makes it a popular day trip from London. “Anne decided to marry Henry when she was living here in 1526, which ultimately led to her own coronation via the break with the Catholic Church in Rome — a decision that changed the face of Europe and the course of history,” said Owen Emmerson, Hever Castle’s historian.

Hever Castle was the childhood home of Anne Boleyn, the second wife of King Henry VIII.Hever Castle and Gardens

Visitors overnighting at the 27-room bed-and-breakfast or the four-bedroom cottage nestled within the estate’s 125-acre grounds receive complimentary access to relic-filled exhibition rooms and a four-acre Italianate garden. The castle’s oak-and-walnut-paneled rooms house artifacts including a prayer book belonging to Boleyn that bears her inscriptions and signature. On exhibit through November are coronation robes worn by Cate Blanchett in the 1998 film “Elizabeth.”

Rooms from 185 pounds ($230) on weekdays, £210 on weekends; day passes to the castle and gardens cost £23.10, including tax.

Scone Palace, in Scotland, dates to the 12th century and once functioned as the Scottish Parliament. More than 40 Scottish kings were crowned on its grounds. The palace is available to rent out to groups.Scone Palace

More than 40 Scottish kings, including Macbeth, were crowned at Moot Hill, on the grounds of Scone Palace in central Scotland.

The Gothic edifice, which dates to the 12th century and functioned as the seat of the Scottish Parliament for centuries, has been the established residence of a long line of earls from the Murray family (which still owns the castle today). Travelers can rent the private wing, which sleeps 16 guests in eight bedrooms. An atmosphere of nobility reigns in the dining room, drawing room and long gallery, which are filled with regal furnishings, including ivory, porcelain, royal portraits and silk brocade wall coverings. Outside, the estate’s 100 acres charm visitors with flowering gardens, 250-year-old Douglas fir trees, and a star-shaped maze of green and copper beech hedges designed to evoke the Earl of Mansfield’s family tartan.

A star-shaped beech maze on the 100-acre grounds of Scone Palace is designed to evoke the Earl of Mansfield’s family tartan.Scone Palace

On guided tours, visitors can see a replica of the Stone of Scone, a sacred throne that was used during the coronation ceremonies of Scottish kings. “In 1296, it was taken by King Edward I of England and brought to Westminster Abbey,” said Stephen Brannigan, the head of Scone Palace.

Perhaps the most famous visit to the palace came in 1842 when Queen Victoria and Prince Albert stayed on their way to the Highlands (at considerable expense to the Fourth Earl, who expressed in a letter the inconvenience of the visit, but also knew that declining was not an option). Prices start at £4,500 per night (two-night minimum) for 10 people, including breakfast and tax; each additional guest is £450 per night.

Thornbury Castle, in Bristol, England, grew from an 11th-century manor house into a fortified castle in the early 1500s. Guests at the 27-room property can indulge in medieval pastimes like archery and hatchet throwing.Lee Searle

Originally an 11th-century manor house built for a Saxon lord in the Bristol countryside, Thornbury Castle was converted into a fortified castle by Edward Stafford, the third Duke of Buckingham, in 1510 with the permission of King Henry VIII.

Guests overnighting at the castle, a 27-room Relais & Châteaux property, are met with an impressive stone facade studded with medieval-style battlements and gunports, oriel windows, and manicured Tudor gardens within the 15-acre grounds. Opulent interiors include period décor, four-poster beds and silk wall hangings. Outdoors, guests can partake in traditional country pastimes like archery and hatchet throwing, and even enjoy a falconry display.

Manicured Tudor gardens complement medieval-style battlements and gunports, along with opulent interiors, at Thornbury Castle.Lee Searle

“The Buckingham story is a microcosm of the Tudor era — politics, religion and beheadings,” said Tony Cherry, a local historian and author who leads guided tours of the castle, recounting its rich history, royal links and architectural details. “Stafford, a potential successor to the throne, conspicuously flaunted his wealth and royal blood, which made him a threat to the king, who had him tried for treason and beheaded in 1521.” Subsequently, Henry VIII became the owner of the castle for 33 years and visited in 1535 with his second wife, Anne Boleyn, who lost her own head the next year; guests can book a lavish suite named in Henry’s honor. Rooms, with breakfast, from £280, including tax.

Glenapp Castle, set along the Ayrshire coast of Scotland, has 110 acres of gardens and woodlands and views of the Irish Sea.Glenapp Castle

“When our guests arrive, they comment on how it is like arriving at a grand home because there is no reception desk or no bar,” said Jill Chalmers, managing director of Glenapp Castle, a Relais & Châteaux property perched on the rugged Ayrshire coast of southwestern Scotland.

Panoramic views of the Irish Sea and the volcanic island Ailsa Craig complement a storybook facade topped with turrets, towers and crenelations, and a 110-acre private estate full of gardens and woodlands.

“We have personal hosts and butlers that tend to guests,” Ms. Chalmers said, adding that Glenapp Castle’s owner will often give guests a personal history tour of the castle. A four-bedroom penthouse with a personal butler, a private chef and a sauna was recently added to the hotel’s 17 suites.

Behind the storybook facade of Glenapp Castle, personal hosts and butlers tend to guests in its lavishly decorated suites. The owner of the castle will often give guests a personal history tour.Glenapp Castle

Guests can dine at the castle’s new restaurant, in a 130-year-old greenhouse that echoes a similar conservatory at Balmoral. Epicures can also join the chef to forage for Scottish ingredients like wood sorrel, wild garlic and apple blossom within and around the property.

Traditional country pursuits like trout fishing and pheasant shooting are some of the more than 70 experiences Glenapp offers. Guests can also concoct a personal scent from 21 botanicals with a master perfumer and explore the Hebrides islands on an overnight trip in the castle’s private boat with a personal chef and a butler. Low season rates from £323 per night for a garden-view suite, including a full Scottish breakfast and tax.

Amberley Castle, in West Sussex, England, near the rolling hills of South Downs National Park, dates to the 12th century.Andrew Brownsword Hotels

Originally a hunting lodge dating back to the early 12th century, Amberley Castle was transformed into a fortified manor house during medieval times and has hosted King Henry VIII, King Charles II and Queen Elizabeth II over the centuries.

Located in the West Sussex hamlet of Amberley, known for its thatched cottages, the Relais & Châteaux castle still flaunts its original stone curtain walls with crenelations, a working portcullis and twin-tower gatehouse. The interiors showcase large wood-burning fireplaces, barrel-vaulted ceilings and mullioned stone windows, while 19 guest rooms feature exposed beams and the original stonework.

“The castle’s location is everything,” said Mr. Masterson, the Celtic Castles founder. “It’s close to London in a beautiful English village, and you have really good access to the south coast of England and Arundel Castle, which is another super visitor attraction nearby.”

Visitors to Amberley Castle’s 12-acre grounds may see one of the property’s resident peacocks.Andrew Brownsword Hotels

Guests can stroll the 12-acre grounds alongside resident peacocks or enjoy a game of croquet, tennis or golf on the 18-hole putting course. Nearby, South Downs National Park’s rolling hills, river valleys and woodlands — ideal for horseback riding, hiking and cycling — remain as timeless as the castle. Rooms from £260, based on double occupancy, including breakfast and tax.

Forter Castle, a 16th-century stronghold in the Scottish Highlands, draws many families with ancestral links to Scotland to rent it out an exclusive-use basis.Forter Castle

Family, royal or otherwise, is everything at Forter Castle, a 16th-century fortress about 80 miles north of Edinburgh in the Scottish Highlands.

“It very much feels like a family home,” said Katharine Pooley, the owner and interior designer, who personally selected every design detail as she and her father meticulously restored the castle.

Inside Forter Castle, rustic elements like wrought-iron chandeliers and antler candelabras share space with family portraits and heirlooms.Forter Castle

Goatskin chairs, antler candelabras, wrought-iron chandeliers and tartan rugs share space with Pooley family photographs and heirlooms. Five of the six bedrooms are named for her father and the four siblings with designs that reflect their respective personalities. Furnishings include antiques and four-poster beds with Ralph Lauren linens. Ms. Pooley also commissioned a hand-painted mural depicting the history of the castle on the Great Hall’s ceiling. A large Pooley sword hangs above the Great Hall’s fireplace — a tribute to the family’s history of producing high-quality swords that the royal family uses during some ceremonial events.

The tightknit vibe is a draw for other families, too. “Many of our guests are multigenerational families with some sort of ancestral link to Scotland,” said Maryln McInnes, the castle’s manager.

In one intriguing transformation, a former dungeon has become a designer kitchen stocked with Le Creuset cookware where guests can prepare their own meals, or book a private chef.

Other extras include a private bagpipe performance, traditional ceilidh dancing and Highland pastimes like archery, air-rifle practice and ax throwing. Low-season long-weekend rates for up to 12 people start at £3,812 (three-night minimum) on an exclusive-use basis, including tax.


Follow New York Times Travel on Instagram and sign up for our weekly Travel Dispatch newsletter to get expert tips on traveling smarter and inspiration for your next vacation. Dreaming up a future getaway or just armchair traveling? Check out our 52 Places to Go in 2023.

Adblock test (Why?)

The Link Lonk


April 28, 2023 at 04:00PM
https://news.google.com/rss/articles/CBMiSWh0dHBzOi8vd3d3Lm55dGltZXMuY29tLzIwMjMvMDQvMjgvdHJhdmVsL2Nhc3RsZXMtY29yb25hdGlvbi1icml0YWluLmh0bWzSAQA?oc=5

6 British Castles Where You Can Stay for as Little as $230 a Night - The New York Times

https://news.google.com/search?q=little&hl=en-US&gl=US&ceid=US:en

Amazon Shares First Look at Merry Little Batman - MovieWeb

little.indah.link

[unable to retrieve full-text content]

Amazon Shares First Look at Merry Little Batman  MovieWeb The Link Lonk


April 28, 2023 at 10:00PM
https://news.google.com/rss/articles/CBMiRWh0dHBzOi8vbW92aWV3ZWIuY29tL2FtYXpvbi1zaGFyZXMtZmlyc3QtbG9vay1hdC1tZXJyeS1saXR0bGUtYmF0bWFuL9IBAA?oc=5

Amazon Shares First Look at Merry Little Batman - MovieWeb

https://news.google.com/search?q=little&hl=en-US&gl=US&ceid=US:en

Thursday, April 27, 2023

What Little Richard Deserved - The New Yorker

little.indah.link
Little Richard with arms raised above his head wearing a white patterned vest and matching pants
Little Richard pioneered a sound, a style, and a performance technique that would help to define modern rock-and-roll music.Photograph by Gijsbert Hanekroot / Courtesy Magnolia Pictures

What Little Richard Deserved

Because the story of Little Richard is inextricable from the story of what other artists took from him, it can be tempting to forget that he, too, absorbed and emulated the talent that came before him. One virtue of the moving and expansive new documentary “I Am Everything,” directed by Lisa Cortés, is how thoughtfully it catalogues the influences that shaped his artistry. Born Richard Penniman to a large, poor family in the religious small town of Macon, Georgia, Richard took in the gospels and spirituals he saw as a boy in church—both with his mother at Baptist services, which were neat, seated, and driven by the voice, and with his father, a minister, at the African Methodist Episcopal Church, where the proceedings were rich with raucous instrumentation and dancing in the aisles, and where to sit was unforgivable. Witnessing these two modes of worship at an early age seemed to give Richard a blueprint for the opposing impulses that he held within: he was a performer who sometimes lived in every inch of the world and who sometimes retreated.

“They wouldn’t let me sing that much, ’cause I wouldn’t stop,” Richard says in one clip early in the film, which weaves interview and performance footage of Richard (who died in 2020) with commentary from scholars, old friends and bandmates, and the artists indebted to him, including Mick Jagger. (Unfortunately, it includes only still imagery of Richard as a boy; a youngster shown singing passionately in a church choir is someone else.) When Richard was fourteen, Sister Rosetta Tharpe, the Queen Mother of Rock and Roll—shown in a couple of exuberant archival performance clips—saw him singing backstage when she did a gig in Macon and was so impressed that she let him open the show and gave him a little pocket money. To escape his home town, Richard toured in minstrel tent shows and eventually looped into the informal network of Black clubs and bars known as the Chitlin’ Circuit, where he’d sometimes don a dress and perform under the name Princess Lavonne. While on the road, he met and grew close to the blues singer Billy Wright, who helped him get his first recording contract, in 1951. An openly gay Black performer who also sometimes performed in drag, Wright also schooled Richard on the importance of self-presentation, of caking one’s makeup and greasing one’s pompadour just so. Not long after, at a bus station back in Macon, Richard met Esquerita, a queer, tall, magnetic rock-and-roll piano player who taught him how to hit the keys with percussive ferocity. In one interview, Richard recalls that industry executives wanted him to sound like Ray Charles or B. B. King. “Me and those young kids, we was tired of all that slow music,” he says.

As any Little Richard chronicle must, “I Am Everything” unravels the central injustice that looms over his career, which is that what Richard accomplished as a performer was far greater than what he ever got for it. He is not unique in this; many Black artists of many eras could, of course, say the same. But, in Richard’s case, the sheer size of the gap is so jarringly wide that it feels like a predicament all its own. Richard not only pioneered a sound, a style, and a performance technique that would help to define modern rock-and-roll music—driving, unpredictable, pushing the limits of pace and volume simultaneously—he also generously nurtured other musicians, including Jimi Hendrix, who began his career in Richard’s band, and the Beatles, who opened a series of shows for him in 1962. But Richard was also the poor Black kid who once worked in a restaurant at a Greyhound station where, owing to Jim Crow, he wasn’t allowed to eat or even use the bathroom. When the owner of Specialty Records, Art Rupe, purchased the rights to “Tutti Frutti,” which would become Richard’s first hit, he paid fifty dollars, and Richard’s contract gave him half a cent for each record that got sold—a fraction of what white stars at the time were getting. Richard’s father, Bud, had been shot and killed when Richard was nineteen, leaving the family desperate. In a 1984 interview, Richard recalled, “I was a dumb Black kid and my mama had twelve kids and my daddy was dead. I wanted to help them, so I took whatever was offered. Rock and roll was an exit for me.” Again, he wasn’t alone: white record labels capitalizing on the desperation of Black artists is an unavoidable part of the story of American music. But an aggravating of the wound, for Richard, was having to watch white artists such as Pat Boone climb higher on the charts singing sanitized, slowed-down versions of the same songs.

The conventional wisdom was that Black music would do just fine, so long as there wasn’t a Black person singing it. But when Little Richard did perform his own stuff, audiences couldn’t get enough of his untamed flamboyance and his command of the stage. Richard was not only beautiful but confident in his beauty; he knew his angles and didn’t have to work hard to find good light. He was beautiful while sweating, while his perfect hair became gradually undone in a whirl of movement. He wore the labor of performance well. Before Elvis or the Beatles, Little Richard had women, overwhelmed by his magnetism, flinging their underwear onstage. There’s a price to being a Black performer who’s that free and that beautiful. In Amarillo, Texas, after Richard took off his shirt onstage, a D.A. had him arrested on charges of lewd behavior. In “I Am Everything,” Richard describes another incident, in Augusta, Georgia, where he was beaten by police and told, “ ‘You’re singing nigger music to white kids.’ ” At a time before venues were integrated, white kids would sneak in on nights designated for Black audiences to hear him play. Richard recalls this in the film with a sort of wide-eyed enthusiasm, which is understandable given his craving for affirmation. But it is also painful to think of Black concertgoers adhering to the horrors of segregation, attending a night that was supposed to be theirs, only to discover that it didn’t really belong to them, just as Richard’s music would no longer be his.

Hip to the co-opting of “Tutti Frutti,” Richard wrote and performed his next hit, “Long Tall Sally,” at a frantic tempo which could not hope to be duplicated by the cardigan-clad likes of Pat Boone. The lyrics collapsed atop one another into a single run-on sentence: “WelllongtallSallyshe’sbuiltforspeed / ShegoteverythingthatUncleJohnneed.” Of course, that didn’t stop other artists from doing their own dampened versions: Boone, the Beatles, the Kinks. In the documentary, the writer and sociologist Zandria Robinson floats a term that she finds more befitting of Richard’s case than appropriation: obliteration. When it comes to the matter of legacy—which versions of which songs are remembered, and who is credited—history was not kind to Little Richard. Even if you knew this already, as I did, to see it laid out in “I Am Everything” feels freshly devastating. Because Richard ended up leaving his contract at Specialty Records early, he received no royalties for the hits he’d made with the label. A couple of decades later, he was selling Bibles on television, making a hundred and fifty dollars a week.

When it comes to Black artists, I am not very interested in the performance of humility. To remind people of all you’re capable of, and all you’ve done, may not stop you from being erased, but it might at least hang some shame around the necks of those doing the erasing. The special heartbreak of Little Richard, though, was that his declarations curdled over time from joyful boasting, or even a kind of self-amazement—I’m so good even I can hardly believe it—into a more frantic, resentful kind of attention-seeking. In one clip shown in the film, Richard is onstage presenting the award for Best New Artist at the 1988 Grammys. He pretends to scan the envelope in his hands, then looks up and pronounces, “Me.” I’ve seen the clip countless times, but what happens next never ceases to fascinate me. Richard veers from playful to plaintive: “Y’all ain’t never gave me no Grammy, and I been singing for years! I am the architect of rock and roll, and I have never received nothing!” (He was eventually granted a lifetime-achievement award, in 1993.) The audience responds first with laughter, as if Richard were joking, and then with waves of applause, a standing ovation, clapping over Richard’s protests until he can barely be heard. It’s a show of appreciation but an empty one, a crowd reacting to the spectacle of Richard but not the substance. It’s the sound of laudatory noise threatening to diminish and then vanish for good.

A second clip, of Little Richard inducting Otis Redding into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame a year later, is even harder to watch. Richard had been inducted into the Rock Hall in 1986, but he’d missed the ceremony owing to a car crash in Los Angeles that nearly took his life. So the induction of Redding became sort of a de-facto tribute to himself. His speech was sometimes funny—“Y’all should record me, I don’t know why you’re not! I’m still here, and I look decent!”—but also self-indulgent, obsessed with settling the score, with pressing against the immovable walls of history. (I was reminded of another Richard tribute, in Rolling Stone in 2005, in a special issue naming the hundred greatest artists in music history. For every musician chosen, a peer or admirer would write a small encomium—for instance, Bono wrote about Elvis, who was ranked third. Little Richard was ranked eighth and wrote about himself.) Near the end of the proceedings, Richard calls Redding one of the greatest composers and singers who’d ever lived, and then he paused, and it seemed as if he might let that tribute linger in the air. But then he continues, “That’s including me. And everyone else. Jimi Hendrix and all them that’s been with me. James Brown, the Beatles,” and then, furrowing his brow and peering out at the crowd, he adds, “Mick Jagger. He don’t ever mention it, but he was with me, too. Mick, you remember that!”

I don’t find that moment sad because Richard used the occasion to turn the spotlight back onto himself, or even because Richard had generally lost an ability to be discerning about the time and place of it all. It is sad because there was good reason for his urge to correct the record, and because the urge seemed to consume him. One of the most poignant clips in the film is from 1997, when Richard was honored at the American Music Awards with the Award of Merit, for artists who’ve made “truly exceptional contributions” to the industry. Overcome with emotion, he can barely make it through his speech. He admits, plainly, “I been waiting.”

In October of 1957, Little Richard allegedly looked up, during a performance in Sydney, Australia, and saw an orb of light tearing across the sky, obliterating an expanse of darkness. It was Sputnik 1, just launched into orbit, but Richard was convinced that it was a divine vision. If you believe that this world is temporary, and that there is an eternal world on the other side of it, then maybe it doesn’t take much for you to believe that God is delivering a sign, inviting you to get right before he waves the gates open. And so Little Richard cut his tour short and abruptly turned back to the Lord, leaving the secular music industry to train for the ministry. In 1959, the same year that he broke his label deal, he married a secretary from Washington, D.C., named Ernestine, whose voice is featured in “I Am Everything” saying, “He was always positive, loving and caring.” (The union lasted four years.)

The film devotes a good portion of its ninety-eight-minute run time to Richard’s complicated relationship to faith and sexuality. The well-known story of “Tutti Frutti” is rehashed: how the song’s original lyrics, before the label cleaned them up, were an ode to anal penetration: “Tutti frutti / Good booty / If it don’t fit / Don’t force it / You can grease it / Make it easy.” Richard’s road manager Keith Winslow recalls having to sleep in the bathtub in a hotel because the suite was so full of naked people. “He’d be sitting there with the Bible right there beside him,” he says. But with Richard’s return to religion in the late fifties, he moved to renounce his sexuality—not as explicitly as he would in future years but enough to smooth the pathway between who he was and who he envisioned himself becoming. His career from then on repeated this process: breaking from his past self only to rebuild a bridge and tenderly cross back, either to the heights of the holy or to the depths of sin. For a stretch in the seventies he was deep into PCP and heroin, and claimed to be doing around a thousand dollars’ worth of cocaine a day.

Throughout his career, Richard released a number of gospel albums, most notably 1961’s “The King of the Gospel Singers” and 1979’s “God’s Beautiful City.” His voice still had a stunning forcefulness, but in his performances—such as one shown in the film from a fund-raising telethon, in 1983—he was clearly holding himself back. At one point, he purchased his own secular records and destroyed them to prevent others from listening. In the name of faith, he seemed to be performing an excavation, a type of surgery on the self. When Richard was a child, his father had thrown him out of the house for being gay; he was bullied at school, in part because of a physical deformity that made his limbs uneven and in part owqing to mannerisms that got him labelled a “sissy” and worse. As the years went on, his attempts to find a balance between versions of himself faltered. He would make remarks about how he had been gay but God had healed him, because, as he told David Letterman, repeating a tired homophobic slogan, God “made Adam to be with Eve, not Steve.” One of the most devastating lines in the documentary comes from Richard’s friend, the trans performer and activist Sir Lady Java. “I feel he betrayed gay people by saying he’s not,” she says, and adds matter-of-factly, “But I do understand. You’re not strong enough to take it. I understand that.”

To its credit, the film doesn’t attempt to neatly corral the multitudinous nature of Little Richard. In my home, I have two photos of him hung next to each other. One, from a pre-show rehearsal at Wembley Stadium in 1972, shows Richard wearing a top consisting of little more than a thin strap of fabric down his torso and two poofy metallic sleeves. He’s making peace signs with both hands and grinning, his mouth agape, like he could have been in the middle of one of his infamous runs of language. The second photo–a version of which is seen briefly in the film–is from nine years later and shows Richard pointing skyward, mid-sermon. He is wearing a pale three-piece suit and tie, with his hair in a neat Afro. A large sign behind him reads “YOUR BIBLE SPEAKS CRUSADE,” and also, in fine print in the bottom corner, “Hear ‘Little Richard’ sing.” I’ve always been fascinated by the quotation marks around his name, signalling that how he was known was no longer who he was. But the truth is that Richard was both of those people. His father preached the word of God and bootlegged moonshine at the same time. Some of us understand inherently that there are many masters to serve, that life is too hard, and too long, to serve only one. Richard was more conflicted. In “I Am Everything,” the writer and scholar Jason King sums the problem up with brilliant concision: “He was very, very good at liberating other people through his example. He was not good at liberating himself.”

“I Am Everything” spends little time on the dwindling decades of Richard’s career, during which he took on gigs such as officiating celebrity weddings and singing the theme song for “The Magic School Bus.” In the years before his death, from bone cancer, at the age of eighty-seven, he was balding and barely recognizable save for the fabulous suits he’d still wear. He lived in the penthouse of a Nashville hotel, and I remember a couple of people I know saying they’d spotted him during his infrequent outings. If you went up to speak with him, he might have handed you a pamphlet bearing some exhortation about the Lord, about the end of the world that was surely coming, imparting the same message he’d received when he saw a streak in the sky in 1957, or when he sat in church as a boy watching his father preach the word. It would be inaccurate to say that Richard became an evangelist as his time on earth became scarce. He was always outside the doorway of someplace holy, calling for you to come in, shouting that he had something he wanted you to see. He was an evangelist as a teen in Macon, with Sister Tharpe smiling in the wings, and he was an evangelist with one leg thrust atop a piano on television, and he was an evangelist during one of my favorite live performances of all time, in Paris in ’66, glistening with sweat, shirtless, scanning an audience of men and women with their mouths open, waiting to see what he would do next. ♦

Adblock test (Why?)

The Link Lonk


April 27, 2023 at 12:56AM
https://news.google.com/rss/articles/CBMiS2h0dHBzOi8vd3d3Lm5ld3lvcmtlci5jb20vY3VsdHVyZS9jdWx0dXJlLWRlc2svd2hhdC1saXR0bGUtcmljaGFyZC1kZXNlcnZlZNIBAA?oc=5

What Little Richard Deserved - The New Yorker

https://news.google.com/search?q=little&hl=en-US&gl=US&ceid=US:en

Featured Post

Nikki Haley's super PAC spent big to fuel her rise. It started 2024 with little left. - NBC News

little.indah.link The super PAC backing former U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley entered the election year in January with just $3.5 million in...

Popular Posts