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1000 results for “nilesh”

  1. 🤲🌍 "Investing time, energy and advocacy in the is critical to its growth and development" – Setu Bandh Upadhyay, Nikesh Balami, Tomoaki Watanabe, Thanisara Ruangdej, Nurunnaby Chowdhury and Apoorv Anand, from the Open Knowledge Asia Hub, are part of the 13th conversation.

    👉🏾 Check it out: blog.okfn.org/2024/08/22/open-

  2. “Newport has seen and presented every development in jazz since 1954. I’m so proud and happy to be involved with that legacy. And that legacy will very surely carry on.” - Christian McBride

    We conclude our series of interviews leading up to the 2024 Newport Jazz Festival by again sitting down with Artistic Director/extraordinary bassist Christian McBride.

    #christianmcbride #newportjazzfestival #newportjazzfest #newportjazz #jazz #music #art #postgenre #jamjawn #music #art #fredwesley #nilesrodgers #elviscostello #brittanyhoward #sunraarkestra #marshallallen #stanleyclarke #jaleelshaw #jazzisdead

    postgenre.org/christian-mcbrid

  3. Saapui #Dressmann'ista kiitossähköposti eilisestä käynnistäni siellä: ”Toivottavasti olet tyytyväinen uusiin alusvaatteisiisi!” Kuvituskuvassa on bokserimallisia alushousuja.

    Ilmeisesti kirjoittaja on #NilesCrane, sillä en ostanut alusvaatteita vaan T-paitoja, joita ajattelin käyttää kotona ja konttorissa ihan päällysvaatteina. Näin siis koska #Espoo''seen iski helleaalto, ja pienessä yksiössäni alkoi neulepaidoissa olla hikistä. #kotijuttuja #miehenelämää

  4. Great turnout for Nitesh Surana's #BlackHat2023 session "Uncovering Azure's Silent Threats: A Journey into Cloud Vulnerabilities". His team's work in Azure security is yielding tremendous results. Watch for the replay at a later date. blackhat.com/us-23/briefings/s

  5. 🕵🏻‍♀️ 🌍 "Even though we have laws, it’s not always easy to " – Setu Bandh Upadhyay, Nikesh Balami, Tomoaki Watanabe, Thanisara Ruangdej, Nurunnaby Chowdhury and Apoorv Anand, from the Open Knowledge Asia Hub, are part of the 13th conversation.

    👉🏾 Check it out: blog.okfn.org/2024/08/22/open-

  6. 🎛️ 🌏 "Open knowledge is still seen as very technical in , which excludes a lot of people"

    Setu Bandh Upadhyay, Nikesh Balami, Tomoaki Watanabe, Thanisara Ruangdej, Nurunnaby Chowdhury and Apoorv Anand, from the Open Knowledge Asia Hub, are part of the 13th conversation.

    👉🏾 Check it out: blog.okfn.org/2024/08/22/open-

  7. Mars Will Send No More @marswillsendnomore.wordpress.com@marswillsendnomore.wordpress.com ·

    A Monster’s Quest to be Human: Frankenstein Alive, Alive! by Bernie Wrightson

    Bernie (formerly stylized as “Berni”) Wrightson rose to prominence in the world of comic books with his work on horror stories for Creepy and Eerie, both published in black-and-white magazine format by Warren Publishing. He co-created DC’s Swamp Thing with Len Wein for House of Secrets 92, and his artwork on the first thirteen issues of Swamp Thing is horrifically beautiful. He won critical acclaim for his lavishly illustrated edition of Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein, where his designs for both Frankenstein and the monster seem to be based on his earlier short piece, The Muck Monster.

    Bernie returned to Frankenstein’s monster with his friend and collaborator, author Steve Niles, in the four-issue Frankenstein Alive, Alive! Here, the monster is haunted by the specter of his creator and seeks peace for his tormented soul in the lava flow of a massive volcano, where he is encased in stone before being dug up years later.

    He makes friends with another “scientist” who happens to be using dubious methods based on old-timey, bunk science to make some kind of elixir of eternal life. This guy has an impossibly massive house full of libraries, laboratories, specimens, and skulls, joined by castle-like cavernous tunnels of stone and wood—all deliciously rendered in exquisite detail as only Wrightson could do.

    Eventually, the scientist’s methods bring the monster to a moral dilemma which pits his loyalty to his new friend against his developing sense of ethics, a choice that represents a situation many of us have experienced at least in spirit if not in the sense of the literal facts of this story. While Bernie died before completing the first issue, his hand-picked successor Kelley Jones did a marvelous job working from Bernie’s rough layouts and thumbnails to bring the final issue to life—not with as much intricate detail as Bernie, but certainly with the right mood and compositional style for the occasion.

    This visually splendid work has two minor shortcomings. First, it begins with what appears to be a framing sequence apparently set in 1930s-era America during the Great Depression before proceeding to tell the main tale as a flashback. But we never return to the framing sequence at the end, which feels a little off despite the emotionally satisfying ending to the central story. Second, external circumstances relieve the monster of the full duty of resolving his ethical dilemma. While the resolution is dynamic and well-told, I can’t help but feel that having the choice made for him does a disservice to the monster by robbing him of the responsibility of making a tough call on his own.

    Regardless, Frankenstein Alive, Alive! is a great work that showcases the talents of an artistic master still working at peak ability right up until his final year, and it’s perhaps the most awesome of many horror collaborations between Wrightson and Niles. You can often find the original single issues or the collected paperback edition, though the digital edition has the advantage of displaying the double-page spreads without any gutter or staples interrupting the incredible artwork.

    Collector’s Guide: Enjoy Frankenstein Alive, Alive! in the increasingly rare single-issue format, the more readily available paperback edition, or the inexpensive digital edition.

    Rate this:

    #BerniWrightson #blackAndWhite #bookReview #frankenstein #graphicNovel #horror #IDWPublishing #indieBox #IndieComics #SteveNiles
  8. Mars Will Send No More @marswillsendnomore.wordpress.com@marswillsendnomore.wordpress.com ·

    A Monster’s Quest to be Human: Frankenstein Alive, Alive! by Bernie Wrightson

    Bernie (formerly stylized as “Berni”) Wrightson rose to prominence in the world of comic books with his work on horror stories for Creepy and Eerie, both published in black-and-white magazine format by Warren Publishing. He co-created DC’s Swamp Thing with Len Wein for House of Secrets 92, and his artwork on the first thirteen issues of Swamp Thing is horrifically beautiful. He won critical acclaim for his lavishly illustrated edition of Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein, where his designs for both Frankenstein and the monster seem to be based on his earlier short piece, The Muck Monster.

    Bernie returned to Frankenstein’s monster with his friend and collaborator, author Steve Niles, in the four-issue Frankenstein Alive, Alive! Here, the monster is haunted by the specter of his creator and seeks peace for his tormented soul in the lava flow of a massive volcano, where he is encased in stone before being dug up years later.

    He makes friends with another “scientist” who happens to be using dubious methods based on old-timey, bunk science to make some kind of elixir of eternal life. This guy has an impossibly massive house full of libraries, laboratories, specimens, and skulls, joined by castle-like cavernous tunnels of stone and wood—all deliciously rendered in exquisite detail as only Wrightson could do.

    Eventually, the scientist’s methods bring the monster to a moral dilemma which pits his loyalty to his new friend against his developing sense of ethics, a choice that represents a situation many of us have experienced at least in spirit if not in the sense of the literal facts of this story. While Bernie died before completing the first issue, his hand-picked successor Kelley Jones did a marvelous job working from Bernie’s rough layouts and thumbnails to bring the final issue to life—not with as much intricate detail as Bernie, but certainly with the right mood and compositional style for the occasion.

    This visually splendid work has two minor shortcomings. First, it begins with what appears to be a framing sequence apparently set in 1930s-era America during the Great Depression before proceeding to tell the main tale as a flashback. But we never return to the framing sequence at the end, which feels a little off despite the emotionally satisfying ending to the central story. Second, external circumstances relieve the monster of the full duty of resolving his ethical dilemma. While the resolution is dynamic and well-told, I can’t help but feel that having the choice made for him does a disservice to the monster by robbing him of the responsibility of making a tough call on his own.

    Regardless, Frankenstein Alive, Alive! is a great work that showcases the talents of an artistic master still working at peak ability right up until his final year, and it’s perhaps the most awesome of many horror collaborations between Wrightson and Niles. You can often find the original single issues or the collected paperback edition, though the digital edition has the advantage of displaying the double-page spreads without any gutter or staples interrupting the incredible artwork.

    Collector’s Guide: Enjoy Frankenstein Alive, Alive! in the increasingly rare single-issue format, the more readily available paperback edition, or the inexpensive digital edition.

    Rate this:

    #BerniWrightson #blackAndWhite #bookReview #frankenstein #graphicNovel #horror #IDWPublishing #indieBox #IndieComics #SteveNiles
  9. Review: Red Sonja Empire of the Damned #1
    It's been a while since I have checked in on the buxom barbarian known as Sonja, even longer since I bought a book.  This week sees the launch of a new Sonja series, Red Sonja Empire of the Damned from Dynamite Entertainment.

    Following a standard night out for Sonja, she finds...
    comiccrusaders.com/review-red-
    #Dynamite entertainment #Indie Books #Joseph Michael Linsner #Joshua Middleton #Salvatore Aiala #Steve Niles

  10. According to the #Wikipedia 'List of fictional shared universes in film and television', #Cheers, #Seinfeld, #Friends and more are all in the same universe.
    As are #DadsArmy, #AreYouBeingServed, #HiDeHi! and more.
    We just need one episode where Niles Crane discovers he's the love-child of Sgt Wilson (plausible) and you finally get the most ambitious crossover event in history.♥️♥️

  11. Hrithik Roshan defends Ranbir Kapoor’s Ramayana amid ‘bad VFX’ debate: ‘Maybe it’s just a style you didn’t expect?’ | Hindi Movie News

    The teaser of Nitesh Tiwari’s Ramayana starring Ranbir Kapoor has sparked a divided response, with a section of…
    #NewsBeep #News #Celebrities #Baahubali #badVFX #Entertainment #Hrithik #HrithikRoshan #kalki #niteshtiwari #ramayana #ramayanabadvfx #RanbirKapoor #UK #UnitedKingdom #visualeffects
    newsbeep.com/uk/513755/

  12. Hrithik Roshan defends Ranbir Kapoor’s Ramayana amid ‘bad VFX’ debate: ‘Maybe it’s just a style you didn’t expect?’ | Hindi Movie News

    The teaser of Nitesh Tiwari’s Ramayana starring Ranbir Kapoor has sparked a divided response, with a section of…
    #NewsBeep #News #US #USA #UnitedStates #UnitedStatesOfAmerica #Movies #Baahubali #badVFX #Entertainment #hrithik #HrithikRoshan #kalki #NiteshTiwari #Ramayana #ramayanabadvfx #RanbirKapoor #VisualEffects
    newsbeep.com/us/564885/

  13. Hrithik Roshan defends Ranbir Kapoor’s Ramayana amid ‘bad VFX’ debate: ‘Maybe it’s just a style you didn’t expect?’ | Hindi Movie News

    The teaser of Nitesh Tiwari’s Ramayana starring Ranbir Kapoor has sparked a divided response, with a section of…
    #NewsBeep #News #US #USA #UnitedStates #UnitedStatesOfAmerica #Movies #Baahubali #badVFX #Entertainment #hrithik #HrithikRoshan #kalki #NiteshTiwari #Ramayana #ramayanabadvfx #RanbirKapoor #VisualEffects
    newsbeep.com/us/564885/