David Cercone 2 retweetledi
David Cercone 2
17K posts

David Cercone 2
@MacBookHo
I'm like the gay Tintin, wait I think Tintin IS gay...Bibliophile, Cinephile, & Lovecraftian. Anti-Fascist
Washington DC Katılım Haziran 2009
682 Takip Edilen243 Takipçiler

How Garry Trudeau’s Doonesbury cartoons captured America: ‘One of our nation’s greatest journalists’ | Books | The Guardian theguardian.com/books/2026/may…
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David Cercone 2 retweetledi

John Dall (b. 26 May 1920) was an American stage and film actor best remembered for playing complex, intense, and intellectually arrogant characters. Despite a brief Hollywood career consisting of only eight feature films, he left a lasting mark on cinema history starring in multiple iconic cult classics.
Dall made his film debut playing a gifted young Welsh mining prodigy opposite Bette Davis in The Corn Is Green (1945), earning an Oscar nomination for Best Supporting Actor. In 1948, he delivered his most famous performance as Brandon Shaw, the cold, charismatic, and chillingly rational thrill-killer in Alfred Hitchcock's highly experimental, and gay-coded film, Rope. Though the movie's subtext had to be subtle enough to pass the Hollywood Hays Code, Hitch slyly cast two homosexual actors in the lead roles -- Dall, who was gay, and Farley Granger, who was bisexual -- and was written by the gay screenwriter, Arthur Laurents. Dall then followed Rope with the Dalton Trumbo penned, Gun Crazy (1950), in which he starred as a gentle, firearm-obsessed man drawn into a destructive crime spree by a trigger-happy femme fatale (played as a lethal blonde by the ferocious Peggy Cummins). The movie is celebrated as a definitive film noir masterpiece. And in 1960, he appeared as the Roman commander Marcus Publius Glabrus in Stanley Kubrick’s historical epic Spartacus.
Born in New York City, Dall spent part of his childhood in Panama where his father was a civil engineer. After his dad committed suicide in 1929, the family returned to New York City where John attended the Horace Mann School and briefly enrolled at Columbia University. Deciding that acting was his true vocation, he left Columbia and studied at the Theodora Irvine School of Theater, the Pasadena Playhouse, and the Petit Theatre in New Orleans. As a classically trained stage actor, he regularly prioritized theater over film. He made notable Broadway appearances in shows like Dear Ruth (1944) and Jean-Paul Sartre's Red Gloves (1948).
Like so many homosexual actors of his generation, in Hollywood, Dall remained discreetly closeted. But unlike some of his gay contemporaries, he forewent the “lavender marriage”, and quietly lived with his longtime companion, actor Clement Brace.
As his Hollywood career waned in the 1950s and 1960s, Dall transitioned to television, frequently guest starring in anthology dramas and making four separate appearances on Perry Mason. While visiting London in late 1970, he suffered a serious fall and subsequently passed away at the age of 50 from a heart attack on January 15, 1971, at his home in Beverly Hills.


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David Cercone 2 retweetledi
David Cercone 2 retweetledi

Given that the pope has now cited Gandalf to make a similar point, I will repost my article on the dragons within us.
snyder.substack.com/p/tolkiens-dra…
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David Cercone 2 retweetledi

Read the whole thread, updated
Martin Laine@Martinlaineolen
Newly hacked files offer rare insight into Kremlin propaganda operations. These include planting bloody pig heads in front of mosques in Paris; election interference campaigns and propaganda laundering through Israeli media. Let’s dive into #FactoryofFakes🕵️♂️AGAIN! 1/10
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Christopher Olah, a Canadian billionaire businessman and researcher who co-founded AI giant Anthropic, sitting in the Synodal Hall and speaking next to Pope Leo said, closing his speech:
"I'd like to close with a request.
We need more of the world - religious communities, civil society, scholars, governments - to do what His Holiness has done here: to take this seriously, to look closely, and to push events in a better direction.
We need informed critics who will tell the labs when
we are failing. We need moral voices that the incentives cannot bend.
Today is just the beginning - the start of a long collaboration between those of us who are building this and those who can see what we, from inside, cannot.
Today is a powerful illustration of the form this global project of good will might take.
Let it also be a decisive first step toward a hopeful future for magnificent humanity."
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David Cercone 2 retweetledi
David Cercone 2 retweetledi

In leaked audio recordings, Peter Thiel revealed he told JD Vance to ignore Pope Leo XIV on moral issues, including the development of ethical AI.
Calling Leo XIV the “woke American pope,” he also suggested the American pope was a tool of the Antichrist.
Now, Pope Leo XIV is releasing what’s expected to be an historic encyclical addressing AI tomorrow morning. thelettersfromleo.com/p/new-jd-vance…
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David Cercone 2 retweetledi
David Cercone 2 retweetledi
David Cercone 2 retweetledi
David Cercone 2 retweetledi
David Cercone 2 retweetledi

Maria Theresa Thaler in Trieste atlasobscura.com/places/maria-t…
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The filmmaker behind Pulse and Cure goes into whodunnit mode with the engrossing period piece The Samurai And The Prisoner. Our Cannes review:
avclub.com/the-samurai-an…
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Big science and uncanny prescience: Laurie Anderson’s greatest songs – ranked! | Culture | The Guardian theguardian.com/culture/2026/m…
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