
Art Is Groovy
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Does anyone know the photographer and perhaps their contact info??
Aesthetics@aestheticspost_
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@AlexTran677026 And not one single person who saw the film doubted Craig was a superb player.
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The production hired professional poker advisor Tom Sambrook to run a “poker school” on set so every actor at the table would look like they knew what they were doing.
The cast played between takes, in the hallways of Barrandov Studios, even hit up a real casino in Prague one night.
Daniel Craig never joined. Mads Mikkelsen put it bluntly: Craig had no clue how to play and never once sat in on a game. The guy who wins the biggest hand in Bond history couldn’t actually play poker.
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Ronald McDonald is hiding from RFK, Jr.
Gitmo (Health is a Wealth) 🇺🇸🇮🇱@Gitmo99
Why you and your children should never eat McDonald's French fries. #.HIAW 🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸
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@burtoncummings Although Canadian 😉, The Guess Who are in my Top 10 greatest of all time bands of the 60's and 70's. Absolutely untouchable.
Clearly, will have to catch their Summer 2026 tour date.
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A criminal ran from the police in Garland, TX yesterday and crashed his vehicle in the process.
He then attempted to carjack the vehicle shown here and the driver, with his family in the car, told them to run whilst he handled the armed criminal.
Handle him he did. The driver pulled his concealed carry gun and shot the armed would be carjacker - killing him on the side of the road 🇺🇸
Police have stated they don't expect the father to face any criminal charges.
Carry accordingly....
#CityLife #2nd #Garland #FAFO #civilrights #crime #justice #education #learning #texas #2a
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Art Is Groovy retweetledi

Jordan Peterson revealed the uncomfortable truth about what women really desire in men:
1. Women don’t just look for a man they love. They look for a man they can respect, rely on, and build a future with when life gets serious.
2. A strong woman doesn’t want a weak man she has to carry. She wants someone who can stand beside her, challenge her, and still make her feel safe.
3. The more successful a woman becomes, the smaller her dating pool gets. Not because success makes her unattractive, but because her standards naturally rise with her own level.
4. Highly accomplished women don’t intimidate men on purpose. But their intelligence, ambition, beauty, and status can make most men feel like they have no chance.
5. Men are more afraid of rejection than women realize. When a woman looks like she already has endless options, many men don’t even try.
6. Women often look across and above their own level. They naturally desire men who are equal or higher in confidence, competence, maturity, status, or stability.
7. No woman wants to build a life with a man she has to parent. She wants support because marriage, children, and family demand a man who can carry responsibility.
8. Men and women experience time differently in dating. A woman near 30 may think seriously about children, while a man of the same age may still feel he has years to decide.
9. A young woman is often valued immediately. A young man usually has to build himself before the world starts paying attention to him.
10. That’s why men are forced to develop depth. They build skill, confidence, money, personality, discipline, and status because looks alone rarely carry them.
11. A real man is not just older, richer, or dominant. He is emotionally stable, mentally strong, and capable of making a woman feel protected without controlling her.
12. Modern dating is painful because desire is not politically correct. People can say whatever they want, but biology, age, ambition, status, and attraction still shape choices.
13. The hard truth for men is simple. Don’t complain about women’s standards. Become the kind of man who can meet them.
14. The hard truth for women is also simple. Success gives freedom, but it can also shrink your options when you expect a man above your level.
15. Peterson’s point is not that men or women are wrong. It’s that attraction has rules, and ignoring those rules creates confusion, resentment, and loneliness.
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Idiots come in all colors...hair colors, that is.
Gunther Eagleman™@GuntherEagleman
LOL! President Trump just posted this Beauty! 🤣🤣🤣
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@Jeremybtc Take time to watch Frank speaking to Google employees, revealing his "life story" change quickly beginning at his 16th year. I watched this years ago before knowing his fraud. He is quite the storyteller.
youtu.be/vsMydMDi3rI?si…

YouTube
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A man invented a $2.5 MILLION crime spree, sold it to Hollywood and charged $30,000 per speech to explain how he did it. It was all lies.
> Frank Abagnale claimed he spent 5 years as a teenage fugitive.
> Impersonating a Pan Am pilot, a Harvard trained doctor and a Louisiana attorney general while forging $2.5 MILLION in bad checks across 26 countries.
> Steven Spielberg turned it into a 2002 blockbuster starring Leonardo DiCaprio and Tom Hanks.
> It became one of the highest grossing films of that year.
> Broadway turned it into a musical.
> The FBI hired him as a consultant.
> AARP named him their official Fraud Watch Ambassador.
> He charged between $20,000 and $30,000 per speaking engagement for decades telling audiences how he pulled it all off.
> For 40 years nobody seriously questioned any of it.
> Then in 2020 a journalist named Alan Logan spent three years pulling every public record prison document newspaper archive and court file he could find.
> Pan Am's own security department told a journalist as early as 1978 "This never happened. You don't forget $2.5 MILLION in bad checks."
> Prison records showed Abagnale was behind bars for most of the years he claimed to be a fugitive.
> The Georgia hospital had no record of him.
> The Louisiana attorney general's office had no record of him.
> His only confirmed crime was check fraud totalling less than $1,500.
> Logan's conclusion the entire story was not embellished but fabricated.
> Abagnale had not committed the con by impersonating pilots and doctors.
> He committed it by convincing Hollywood, the FBI and the entire world that he had.
The most valuable skill Frank Abagnale ever had was the ability to make people so entertained by a story that they forgot to verify it. That skill made him MILLIONS legally.
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@XStrangeHistory Elon could step in and create the ultimate alternative...XTube
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YouTube no longer seems interested in indie creators. They’re pivoting to become a distribution platform for big productions, networks, and established media companies.
Their business model is shifting. They’re making it harder for smaller creators to earn money, and it feels like they’d prefer us gone entirely. That way, they could keep 100% of the ad revenue without sharing it with anyone.
What makes it worse is the lack of real competition. Rumble isn’t a viable alternative for most—it’s largely known for political livestreams, and mainstream audiences rarely go there. I wish that weren’t the case, but it is.
I’ve been uploading original videos and podcasts here on X, even though they mostly get ignored for now. But that won’t last forever. X has the potential to become the go-to platform for videos and podcasts, and I’m really hoping it does.
YouTube doesn’t want us anymore. They got what they could out of us. We made them lots of money at no cost to them at all. Our value to them has come to an end.
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@BurkeSwenson @MovieEndorser The Bond franchise's goofiest 'bad guy'.
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@MovieEndorser Goldeneye was my favorite...then Casino Royale came along...no more cartoon character. Instead, a kickass brute.
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@anishmoonka I attended a fantastic semester college course on Music Publishing. One of the guys that wrote the 1965 hit, "I Want Candy"/The Strangeloves, spoke about the music publishing industry & MONEY. One of many amazing speakers relating business practices.
youtu.be/w4LQYNZdY9U?si…

YouTube
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In 1981, Paul McCartney showed his friend Michael Jackson a notebook of songs he had bought from other artists. They were earning him $40 million a year. Four years later, Jackson used that advice to buy 251 Beatles songs for $47.5 million.
He now owned Yesterday. Hey Jude. Let It Be. Strawberry Fields. Every hit Lennon and McCartney had ever written. McCartney could have bought them himself but thought the price was too high. Jackson didn't think so. McCartney later said about the deal: "To be someone's friend, and then buy the rug they're standing on."
The Beatles had lost their rights decades earlier, when Lennon and McCartney were barely out of their teens. In February 1963, John Lennon and Paul McCartney walked into a small house in Liverpool. John was 22. Paul was 20. A music publisher named Dick James handed them a contract. He told them it would set them up for life. They signed it without a lawyer in the room. They didn't read it. McCartney later called it a "slave contract."
The contract created a company called Northern Songs. Northern Songs would own every song Lennon and McCartney wrote together. Dick James and his business partner got 50% of the company. Lennon and McCartney each got 20%. Their manager Brian Epstein got 10%. George Harrison and Ringo Starr weren't part of the deal at all. The Beatles didn't own their own songs.
In 1965, Northern Songs went public to help the Beatles save on taxes. Their shares dropped to 15% each. In 1969, Dick James quietly sold his half of the company to a British media giant called ATV without telling the Beatles. Lennon found out from a newspaper headline while on his honeymoon with Yoko Ono. He called Paul in a panic. They tried to outbid ATV. They lost.
ATV is what Michael Jackson bought in 1985 for $47.5 million. He then sold half of it to Sony in 1995 for $95 million. Sony bought the other half from his estate in 2016 for $750 million. The catalog was worth more than a billion dollars by then.
In 2017, McCartney sued Sony. His lawyers had found a clause buried in an old American copyright law from 1976. It said songwriters could take back the rights to their old songs after 56 years. Sony settled out of court. On October 5, 2018, the rights to "Love Me Do" came back to McCartney. By 2026, every song he ever wrote with Lennon will be his again.
A 20-year-old signed a contract in 1963 without reading it. It took 56 years and an obscure American law for him to take it all back.
Michael Guy Bowman@mguybowman
the Beatles are a band where three guys have the world’s most normal names and one guy has a name you absolutely never hear and somehow he’s not even the main guy
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@Mericamemed Ferris Bueller's Day Off is a masterclass movie.
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Everyone is going to want a ~$30K Tesla Cybercab when it becomes available, they just don’t know it yet.
• Much safer than human driving.
• No steering wheel or pedals.
• Have the ability to legally sleep as it’s driving you to your destination.
• Two-seater design, with tons of legroom
• Great for elderly individuals who are no longer able to drive, as well as people with disabilities.
• Work as are you being driven, or watch movies/play games.
• Send off to run errands (pick up kids, pick up someone at the airport, etc).
• The ability to add/subtract from the Tesla Robotaxi fleet to earn passive income.
• You could buy a fleet and run your own business.
• Send to pick up groceries, or other orders.
• Have the ability to send home after getting dropped off your location, eliminating the need for parking.
• Send for service autonomously when needed.
• Autonomous Home Delivery
• Virtually Zero Maintenance
• $0.20 or less per mile operating costs
• Wireless charging capabilities with well above 90% efficiency.
This car will revolutionize the transportation industry and car ownership.
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@007 A very good movie. Favorite Bond until Casino Royale came along.
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