MTBowers

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MTBowers

MTBowers

@bardolator

Conservative lady. Pro-life. Roman Catholic. Artistic Director, Shakespeare scholar. Favorite Aunt. Retired HS teacher. Dog lover. No DMs.

Beigetreten Mart 2011
3.9K Folgt2.6K Follower
MTBowers
MTBowers@bardolator·
@LouDPhillips I was teaching in East L. A. when it came out. One of my students knew someone associated with the film and invited me to the screening at Mann’s. Great memory and a great film.
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HazelFlagg2
HazelFlagg2@FlaggHazel2·
Rewatching Housekeeping. If you like stories about oddballs and freedom, this is a tremendous film.
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MTBowers
MTBowers@bardolator·
@mrmckee Such a likable guy! I hate that he was treated poorly by fans this year..
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Chris McKee
Chris McKee@mrmckee·
When you listen to players talk, Matt Fitzpatrick seems to be one of the few players who is universally liked and respected. Every single comment I've heard from the world's best in recent weeks about Fitzy is nothing but admiration and respect.
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SweetMarie
SweetMarie@Oceanbreeze473·
Being an adult is basically figuring out what to cook with ground beef and chicken for the rest of your life.
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MTBowers
MTBowers@bardolator·
@mikemoviez I love Bringing Up Baby. Always makes me happy.
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Mike David
Mike David@mikemoviez·
Which of these 1930s films do you like most?
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MTBowers
MTBowers@bardolator·
@Noahs_Arc_98 All the Grant appreciation is prompting me to read either his autobiography or Chernow’s biography. Any suggestions for which to start with?
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Noah Paul ⚓️
Noah Paul ⚓️@Noahs_Arc_98·
One of the greatest Americans who ever lived.
Echoes of War@EchoesofWarYT

He won the Civil War, broke the Klan, went bankrupt at 62, got terminal throat cancer, and wrote one of the greatest books in American literature in the final year of his life. He finished it 5 days before he died. Ulysses S. Grant was born 204 years ago today. His name wasn't even Ulysses S. Grant. He was born Hiram Ulysses Grant in Point Pleasant, Ohio on April 27, 1822. The congressman who nominated him to West Point wrote down the wrong name. Grant kept it. The "S." stands for nothing. He hated his father's tannery and loved horses. Graduated 21st of 39 at West Point. Fought in the Mexican-American War, then came home convinced it was an unjust war designed to expand slavery. He later said he believed the Civil War was divine punishment for it. He married Julia Dent in 1848, into a slave-owning Missouri family. His abolitionist father refused to attend the wedding. In 1859, broke and desperate, Grant freed the one enslaved man he'd briefly owned instead of selling him. He could have gotten a year's wages. In the Civil War he became what no other Union general was: relentless. Vicksburg (July 4, 1863) split the Confederacy in half. Lincoln then gave him every Union army. His Appomattox surrender terms: officers kept sidearms, men kept horses for spring planting, no one prosecuted. As president (1869 to 1877) he did something no president would do again until LBJ: used federal troops to crush the Ku Klux Klan. He suspended habeas corpus in 9 South Carolina counties, prosecuted Klansmen before predominantly Black juries, and broke the first Klan. His presidency was also rocked by scandal: Black Friday 1869. Crédit Mobilier. The Whiskey Ring. Belknap. Grant himself never took a dime. He was just disastrously loyal to corrupt friends. The pattern damaged his reputation for a century. After the White House, he toured the world for 2 years. Dined with Queen Victoria. Met the emperor of Japan. Then in 1884, a Wall Street partner named Ferdinand Ward ran what we'd now call a Ponzi scheme. Grant was wiped out. 62 years old. Penniless. Weeks later he was diagnosed with terminal throat cancer. Mark Twain offered to publish his memoirs. Grant wrote in agony, sometimes 50 pages a day, racing the disease to leave Julia an inheritance. He finished the manuscript July 18, 1885. He died July 23. The book made Julia $450,000, about $14M today. It's now considered one of the finest memoirs in the English language. For decades historians ranked Grant a failure. Since 2000 he's jumped 13 spots in the C-SPAN survey, the biggest rise of any president. Happy birthday, General 🇺🇸

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Manisha Sinha
Manisha Sinha@ProfMSinha·
Historian of the Civil War and I agree 💯 Grant was a better General than Lee, valorized in Lost Cause mythology, as President he supported Reconstruction. On the defensive in his second term but his memoir is a literary masterpiece. #theriseandfallofthesecondamericanrepublic
Echoes of War@EchoesofWarYT

He won the Civil War, broke the Klan, went bankrupt at 62, got terminal throat cancer, and wrote one of the greatest books in American literature in the final year of his life. He finished it 5 days before he died. Ulysses S. Grant was born 204 years ago today. His name wasn't even Ulysses S. Grant. He was born Hiram Ulysses Grant in Point Pleasant, Ohio on April 27, 1822. The congressman who nominated him to West Point wrote down the wrong name. Grant kept it. The "S." stands for nothing. He hated his father's tannery and loved horses. Graduated 21st of 39 at West Point. Fought in the Mexican-American War, then came home convinced it was an unjust war designed to expand slavery. He later said he believed the Civil War was divine punishment for it. He married Julia Dent in 1848, into a slave-owning Missouri family. His abolitionist father refused to attend the wedding. In 1859, broke and desperate, Grant freed the one enslaved man he'd briefly owned instead of selling him. He could have gotten a year's wages. In the Civil War he became what no other Union general was: relentless. Vicksburg (July 4, 1863) split the Confederacy in half. Lincoln then gave him every Union army. His Appomattox surrender terms: officers kept sidearms, men kept horses for spring planting, no one prosecuted. As president (1869 to 1877) he did something no president would do again until LBJ: used federal troops to crush the Ku Klux Klan. He suspended habeas corpus in 9 South Carolina counties, prosecuted Klansmen before predominantly Black juries, and broke the first Klan. His presidency was also rocked by scandal: Black Friday 1869. Crédit Mobilier. The Whiskey Ring. Belknap. Grant himself never took a dime. He was just disastrously loyal to corrupt friends. The pattern damaged his reputation for a century. After the White House, he toured the world for 2 years. Dined with Queen Victoria. Met the emperor of Japan. Then in 1884, a Wall Street partner named Ferdinand Ward ran what we'd now call a Ponzi scheme. Grant was wiped out. 62 years old. Penniless. Weeks later he was diagnosed with terminal throat cancer. Mark Twain offered to publish his memoirs. Grant wrote in agony, sometimes 50 pages a day, racing the disease to leave Julia an inheritance. He finished the manuscript July 18, 1885. He died July 23. The book made Julia $450,000, about $14M today. It's now considered one of the finest memoirs in the English language. For decades historians ranked Grant a failure. Since 2000 he's jumped 13 spots in the C-SPAN survey, the biggest rise of any president. Happy birthday, General 🇺🇸

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sarah
sarah@realitysea_·
Things I need back on #Survivor 51 & up: -themes -night challenges -two tribes -the maze challenges -better rewards (visiting locals, helicopter rides, spa day, movie night) anything but the sanctuary -normal idols -ponderosa footage
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MTBowers
MTBowers@bardolator·
@mikemoviez No excuse for that level of unprovoked rudeness. The guy’s a jerk.
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Mike David
Mike David@mikemoviez·
Dumb Fuck of The Day 🤣 "I get a woman almost every night, Ma!"
John Beard@JohnBea59958156

@mikemoviez Mike, Is this your life, asking mundane questions very few people give a shit about? Get yourself a Woman.

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MTBowers
MTBowers@bardolator·
@For_Film_Fans It lost for Best Miniseries to War and Remembrance. That’s when I stopped taking the Emmys seriously.
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Michael Warburton
Michael Warburton@For_Film_Fans·
One of the best TV mini-series ever made. LONESOME DOVE (1989) This 4-part adaptation of Larry McMurtry’s novel was based upon a screenplay by Peter Bogdanovich & McMurtry and starred ROBERT DUVALL & TOMMY LEE JONES. It was nom’d for 19 Emmy’s & won 7.
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MTBowers
MTBowers@bardolator·
@BestMovieMom I love films set in the Victorian period and The Prestige struck me almost immediately with its authentic feel. Nolan just hits the period so right.
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Best Movie Moments 🍿
Best Movie Moments 🍿@BestMovieMom·
Christopher Nolan wanted The Prestige to have an authentic Victorian atmosphere, so he used soft, natural lighting whenever possible, especially in theaters and workshops, to ground the story in a tangible, period-accurate world.
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MTBowers
MTBowers@bardolator·
@For_Film_Fans Before you started posting about it, I’d never heard of it.
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Michael Warburton
Michael Warburton@For_Film_Fans·
My favourite Movie of all time. A MATTER OF LIFE AND DEATH (1946)
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MTBowers
MTBowers@bardolator·
@mikemoviez I totally get your outrage. People are jerks for no reason…just because they can be. I never noticed it either…
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Mike David
Mike David@mikemoviez·
I woke up and chose violence today. Yesterday, I posted about Psycho and the fact I hadn't noticed his mother's superimposed skull at the end. You know, just an innocent fun fact. Nineteen people, NINETEEN fucking people felt the need to shit on me for not having noticed. And so nineteen people have been blocked 🙂 I love doing what I do here but goddamn, some people are just so unbelievably negative. I'm trying to share fun facts and foster discussion and some people, at least nineteen of them, are compelled to instead go off track and chastise me. People are so strange. "Were you on your phone the whole time?" "Wow, you're the only one, everyone knows that." "Why would you admit that publicly? It's so easy to see." "You're not a movie fan if you haven't noticed that before." "You obviously weren't paying attention." It's so fucking fascinating to me that certain people read a post and they decide that instead of contributing or even just continuing to scroll, the thing to do is not to participate, not to be productive, but to criticize because they just can't resist. I am in love with the block button and this one man regime will continue to censor the endless tide of fuckwits on this garbage heap of a website. The rest of you, I love. Have a lovely day.
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MTBowers
MTBowers@bardolator·
@DannyDrinksWine And that supporting cast! Claude Rains alone is spectacular.
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DepressedBergman
DepressedBergman@DannyDrinksWine·
Robert Towne on what makes "Casablanca" (1942) a great movie: "I love 'Casablanca' (1942). It’s one of the most romantic American movies ever made. This is one of the greatest and most entertaining movies ever made. It’s virtually set in one setting, but there are a variety of characters and a richness of characters. There is a kind of absolute perfection in the wit of the screenwriters of the 1940s. They could come up with the words. Then you have the pairing of Bogart and Bergman. It’s one of the most brilliant teamings of all time." ("You Gotta See This", Cindy Pearlman, 2007)
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James Melville 🚜
James Melville 🚜@JamesMelville·
Apparently moustaches are making a comeback. Who is the greatest moustachioed of them all? My top four: Sam Elliott Tom Selleck Sean Connery Burt Reynolds
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MTBowers
MTBowers@bardolator·
@Britannia_Royal When do we tell her that the special relationship isn’t so special anymore…
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Britannia_ Royal
Britannia_ Royal@Britannia_Royal·
Queen Camilla’s brooch is extraordinary
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MTBowers
MTBowers@bardolator·
@RobHasApodcast No more celebrity tie ins. They are obnoxious. How about an advantage that ties into the challenge? For example, if the player is in the top 3, it’s immunity. If he/she wins, it’s immunity PLUS secret immunity for another player. If in bottom 3, there’s a penalty (lose vote?).
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RHAP
RHAP@RobHasApodcast·
Do you have an idea for a #Survivor advantage? Do you want to attribute it to your favorite (or least favorite!) celebrity? We're doing a podcast tomorrow and we want to hear from YOU! Drop your suggestions below. ⬇️
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Michael Warburton
Michael Warburton@For_Film_Fans·
MAXIMILIAN SCHELL on his way to a Best Actor Oscar in Stanley Kramer’s excellent JUDGMENT AT NUREMBERG (1961)
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