D. Till

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D. Till

D. Till

@SkoobyD93

Photographer 📸 Creator and Owner of Till infinity Multimedia LLC

Katılım Mayıs 2009
2K Takip Edilen2.2K Takipçiler
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TouchGrassMusicFest
TouchGrassMusicFest@TGMusicFest·
Set your reminders, Festival lineup and tickets go live this Friday, April 3rd! Early bird tickets will be limited so turn on notifications and/or sign up to the mailing list so you don’t miss out!!
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Greg Berge
Greg Berge@GregBerge·
Overprotected kids become unprepared adults. Dawn Staley nailed it.🔥 You can’t shelter your child from every hard moment and then expect them to handle adversity when it counts. Hard is the lesson. Watch. Share. Bookmark.
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COOLEE BRAVO 🥞🧇
COOLEE BRAVO 🥞🧇@ItalianFiesta·
Frieza sounded like young Eartha Kitt and Cell sound like old Eartha Kitt. Dis shit crazy
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Nicole's View 🇺🇲
Nicole's View 🇺🇲@BLKLiberation84·
I always love hearing variations of “Human Nature” and how it’s sung. Shout out to @BrandonsBooth who appears to be a high school music teacher out of Baltimore showcasing his talented students.❤️😊🔥 #Michaelmovie
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Brian Allen
Brian Allen@allenanalysis·
🚨 Official count confirmed: More than 8 million people participated in No Kings Day today. One of the largest single-day demonstrations in American history. 3,000 cities. Every state. Every coast. Philadelphia. Atlanta. Dallas. St. Paul. DC. San Francisco. San Diego. New York. London. Tel Aviv. Scotland. And counting. To put 8 million in context: The Women’s March in 2017 — the previous record — drew an estimated 3-5 million. Today more than doubled it. 8 million Americans didn’t just protest today. They sent a message that cannot be ignored, cannot be dismissed, and cannot be spun. The founders settled the kings question in 1776. 8 million Americans settled it again today.
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AFRICAN & BLACK HISTORY
AFRICAN & BLACK HISTORY@AfricanArchives·
Jackie Tonawanda, 1970s women's boxing pioneer and one of the first women to be granted a professional boxing license in the state of New York. She was known in her prime as ‘The Female Ali’. She was an incredible woman who boxed for years before women were allowed to fight in sanctioned bouts. She was one of the great pioneers of women’s boxing, being one of the first women awarded a boxing licence in New York. She lost her only professional fight but holds an impressive record from her underground bouts. She was even named the No. 1 light heavyweight by Boxing Illustrated in 1979 and 1980. Even after she hung up her gloves, she went on to coach champions and prove that women were just as fierce in the ring as any man. Tonawanda was born in 1933 in New York. When she was just 8 years old she became an orphan and by age 13 she had begun boxing in Gleason’s Gym in Brooklyn. She trained hard and relentlessly, sparring against male opponents who she kept up with. Weighing in at 175 pounds Tonwanda was a legitimate heavyweight and struggled to find women in her weight class. She continued to spar with men as she stated women “couldn’t take my power.” Due to the majority of her fights being unsanctioned as women were not allowed to prize fight her record is hard to determine. Sources claim it anywhere from 23-0 to 36-0. Despite this uncertainty Tonwanada’s achievements go far beyond her boxing record. She was the first woman to box in Madison Square Garden in 1975. Her opponent was kickboxer Larry Rodania whom she knocked out in the second round with a strike that broke his jaw. A man fighting a woman in such a public venue was unheard of, however it pushed female fighters into the spotlight and Tonawanda received many more offers to fight other men for the publicity. Tonawanda’s greatest achievement however was her resilience in facing the New York State to legalise and license female boxers. In 1974 she began her application for a boxing license, women could already legally be pro-wrestlers and boxing managers in the State so when her application was denied she fought hard to make it right. Ed Dooley, the head of the Athletic commission was outspoken in his beliefs that women would bring down the view of the sport. Rumours began to circulate about the danger of blows to women’s chests causing breast cancer. Tonawanda faced the sexism head on and set out to prove that women were more than capable as pugilists. She sued the state for discrimination and the state supreme court ruled in her favour, urging her to sue once again to have the laws preventing women from boxing to be revoked. Tonwanda did not pursue further legal action, in the coming years she would continue to fight in underground bouts and in 1976 she was invited to attend a training camp for Muhammad Ali. Tonawanda was awestruck and is quoted as saying he made her so nervous she couldn’t eat. Her movement to recognise women’s boxing as legitimate was taken further by fellow boxer Cathy Davis in 1978 which lead to Davis, Tonawanda and Marian Trimiar to be the first women to receive boxing licenses in the state of New York. After gaining her licence and being allowed to fight professionally Tonawanda was much older than her contemporary opponents. She fought one professional bout against Diane Clark and lost in the 6th round by split decision, making her professional record 0-1. In 1986 she was injured in a car accident which forced her to officially retire, ending her professional career. She became the first female member of Ring 8, the Veterans Boxing Association which inducted her into its Hall of Fame. She also continued to coach for the military boxing team and trained heavyweight hero Israel Carlos Garcia. She was also an advisor to Jackie Frazier, daughter of heavyweight champion Joe Frazie..
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Cinema CLT 👷🏻
Cinema CLT 👷🏻@cinemaclt·
🔎 CURIOSIDADE | Drew Barrymore sobre sua infância e seu caminho para a recuperação da carreira graças a Adam Sandler. "Aos 13 anos eu fui levada em plena madrugada para um lugar que era mais uma instituição psiquiátrica do que uma reabilitação. Colocaram-me um colar com arame farpados, e ao atravessar aquelas duas portas... Não podia mais sair. Se você se comportava mal, você era colocada em um quarto acolchoado ou amarrado em uma maca. Eu estava desesperada demais, dizia para as outras garotas: 'A minha vida vai acabar neste lugar, essas pessoas não se importam com a gente!'. Minha mãe não sabia como lidar comigo. Eu tinha me tornado um monstro que ela própria criou. Fui colocada em um lugar que me deu 18 anos de educação em apenas um ano e meio. Ela simplesmente não podia ser mãe. Quando saí, tentei refazer minha vida, mas ninguém falava comigo. Estava vetada do mundo do cinema. Ela era "a puta louca do hospital psiquiátrico". Mas meus amigos me levantaram do chão. Parecia impossível, mas eu queria trabalhar com Adam Sandler. Pedi para ir tomar um café com ele. Surpreendentemente ele aceitou. Então, nesse dia, ele chegou de calções largos e camisa gigante. Eu de saltos rosa, casaco de leopardo e cabelo roxo. Então eu disse: 'Olhe além disto. Eu sinto que você e eu podemos fazer algo especial'. E ele acreditou em mim apesar de tudo. Ele foi a minha salvação na minha carreira. Hoje eu tenho uma família que eu escolhi. Amigos que me ensinaram o que é fazer parte de algo. E se eu consegui sobreviver a tudo isso, é porque eu tive essas pessoas. Agora eu sei que também posso ajudar outros a sair de seus próprios infernos. Finalmente, me sinto livre. E se eu puder oferecer algo ao mundo, quero que seja segurança. Que quem estiver perto de mim sinta isso: um lugar seguro."
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MugenLord
MugenLord@MugenLord·
Bro, as someone who was gaming in the 90's, I had no idea that Crash Bandicoot was nearly impossible to run on the PS1. The developers found a way to get around the PS1 limitations, and the way they did it was sick! This is what optimization looks like, and somehow, most modern game developers can't seem to pull it off. youtube.com/shorts/LvQ2hYk…
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PROXIMITY MEDIA
PROXIMITY MEDIA@proximitymedia·
To our growing community, thanks for riding with us 🤎
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Joey Iwanaga
Joey Iwanaga@joeyiwanaga·
THE FURIOUS hits theaters May 29th in the US 🇺🇸🔥 Powered by LIONSGATE. My first debut on the big screens in America… and we’re coming in LOUD. Blood. Sweat. Sacrifice. This one means everything. Let’s run it up. 🎬💥 #TheFurious #May29 #Lionsgate
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flexxico
flexxico@ripflexxico·
ODD FUTURE KRUMPING BATTLE (2012)
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TouchGrassMusicFest
TouchGrassMusicFest@TGMusicFest·
The wait is over, we are proud to announce the first ever TouchGrass Music Fest! One day. Two stages. Music, community and good vibes! Bringing together some of your favorite artists, creators and personalities, we invite you to emerge from behind the screen and come touch grass this October 3rd in Orlando, FL! Lineup and tickets go live on Friday, April 3rd so make sure to follow to keep up to date. You won’t want to miss this!!
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Jaynit
Jaynit@jaynitx·
Kobe Bryant: "Failure doesn't exist, it's a figment of your imagination" An interviewer asks: "Are you someone who loves to win or hates to lose?" Kobe responds: "I'm neither. I play to figure things out. I play to learn something. Because if you play with a fear of failure or you play with the will to win that supersedes fear, I think it's a weakness either way. If you play with fear of failing, you'll capitulate to that fear. If you play with the sense of 'I want to win, I want to win,' then you have the fear of what happens if you don't. But if you find common ground in the center, you're unfazed by either. That enables you to stay in the moment and not feel anything other than what's in front of you." The interviewer asks: "How did you become someone who doesn't seem afraid of failing?" Kobe responds: "What does failure mean? It doesn't exist. It's a figment of your imagination." He explains with an analogy: "Let's use happy endings. Everybody wants a happy ending, right? Snow White finds her prince and lives happily ever after. Well, I call BS on that because two months later, they had an argument and he's sleeping on the couch. The point is: the story continues. So if you fail on Monday, the only way it's a failure is if you decide to not progress from that. If I fail today, I'm going to learn something from that failure and try again on Tuesday. That's why failure doesn't exist." The interviewer asks: "If you finished your career without a championship, would you have looked at that as a failure?" Kobe: "No. I would look at it as being extremely disappointed, because I had a dream and goals I wanted to accomplish. If I didn't accomplish those goals, I'd have to ask myself why. Poor leadership? Failure to communicate with my teammates? Lack of preparation? Those would be reasons why I didn't win. So I'd have to analyze that. And as I evolved post-basketball into business, those same weaknesses would reveal themselves there too. If I don't learn from that, I'm going to struggle again." He concludes: "I can take those situations and learn from them and have them make me a better person later in life. But if I don't take that stuff and apply it someplace else, that's failing. The worst possible thing you can ever do is to stop. It's to not learn."
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D. Till
D. Till@SkoobyD93·
@Wegmans hey can you help me understand what’s going on here? This is the second time I just opened this brand of yogurt to discover mold within 2 days. It’s also well before the “Best By” date
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Dream Con
Dream Con@dreamconvention·
Dream Con Madness is back with the Marvel edition!! 😈 👊🏽💥 Y’all selected the characters & we’re ready to see the top 16 go head-to-head. Plus, your chance to WIN TWO (2) Dream Con 2026 Weekend Badges! How to enter: 1️⃣ Check the bracket & pick the Marvel character you think will win the entire bracket 2️⃣ Submit your choice in the GOOGLE FORM. forms.gle/H6CNuWQ3jtUne4… 3️⃣ If your pick wins, you’ll be entered into a raffle for the prize. 4️⃣ Deadline: Friday, March 27 at 9am CST/10 am EST #DreamCon #MarchMadness #Marvel
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Mas Pur
Mas Pur@rasjawa·
Bukti bahwa Stephen Chow sangat mengidolakan Bruce Lee, ia mencopy adegan2 legend film2 Bruce Lee ke beberapa filmnya.
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