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(J)Bustin - (comms OPEN)
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(J)Bustin - (comms OPEN)
@JBusti_Cre4tive
I post doodles (NSFW sometimes). Personal Account: @JBusti_454_ / 'Mili & Sunny: mini-histories' Coming Soon...
Peru Katılım Ocak 2025
706 Takip Edilen198 Takipçiler

@fuuung__ Entiendo la emoción, aun recuerdo mi primera comision, fue un buen dia
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Oda solo dibuja y escribe el manga, que el estudio de animacion encargado de adaptar la obra haya hecho que el ritmo sea tan lento en la serie no es culpa de Oda
GIF
Animelover@BhdAnkur
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@JBusti_Cre4tive @anishmoonka Gracias Jorgie, por hacérmelo saber :4
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For more than half a century, horror fans believed a 1968 BBC vampire film was so frightening the network had every copy destroyed. Then a film collector opened a dull silver can from the back of an old cinema, the kind that usually gets thrown out, and there it was.
The film is called No Such Thing as a Vampire. It opened a series named Late Night Horror, the first scary show the BBC ever made in color, and it came from a story by Richard Matheson, the American who wrote I Am Legend. For years the only explanation for its disappearance was that it scared people too much to survive. The truth is far more ordinary, and a little embarrassing for the BBC.
The reason was money. Between the mid-1950s and the mid-1970s, the BBC erased around two-thirds of everything it made. Videotape was so expensive that the people running it valued the blank reels more than the shows on them, so once a program aired they taped over it and reused the reel. A film expert later called it good housekeeping. The same habit wiped out more than 90 episodes of early Doctor Who.
The "too scary" story does not survive a look at the records either. The BBC ran its own viewer surveys, and the audience gave the vampire episode a lukewarm 53 out of 100. Its own review panel said the series needed to rethink what counted as horror. Viewers did complain, and the show was never brought back, but a one-season program that annoyed a few viewers is a long way from a film so dangerous it had to be burned.
The burning story probably grew out of something real but far less sinister. Before wiping a tape, the BBC often copied a show onto cheap black-and-white film to sell to TV stations abroad. When those copies came home, they were stamped with a "certificate of destruction" and fed into the incinerator. Every returned print met the same fate, frightening or not. This film survived because one of those throwaway copies slipped out and ended up in a cinema storeroom in Dorset, its title scrawled on the can in marker.
So it outlived the BBC's own archive for the most boring reason imaginable. It was the cheap copy nobody bothered to track, while the expensive originals were quietly recorded over and forgotten.
New York Post@nypost
Film buff finds lost 1968 vampire TV movie that was rumored to be so scary it was ordered destroyed trib.al/nMZ3tYB
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@Arthurbarrett_ Muchas gracias lo tendré en cuenta 🙏
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@JBusti_Cre4tive youtu.be/_F1BlpEsuPI
Este video ha sido casi mi biblia para el coloreo

YouTube
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Pasen tutoriales de coloreo, quiero mejorar en eso
(J)Bustin - (comms OPEN)@JBusti_Cre4tive
Carrot (commission for @GodSunjiYHP )
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Tantas veces que vi esta imagen y recién me doy cuenta que Piccolo se esta fumando un porro JAJAJAJAJAJAJAJAJAJAJAJA

Dragon Ball Daily@DBZdaily_
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Recuerdo que una vez me vino un CD con el juego de la película Rio, se perdió con el tiempo pero me dio buenos momentos...🙏
Kashi@JackSablier
"En mis tiempos los cereales venían con CDs llenos de juegos para tu computadora."
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