#muhammed ali

LIVE

short video that lists the top 10 mysteries of ALL TIME. This shits crazy.

#mystery    #top 10    #history    #awesome    #wonder    #kanye west    #muhammed ali    #kobe bryant    #lebron james    #daily show    

Voting for Mitt Romney? check this out.

#mitt romney    #election    #election 2012    #republican    #virginia    #barack obama    #willard mitt romney    #starbucks    #iphone 5    #applel    #youtube    #tax cuts    #occupy wall street    #washington dc    #white house    #capitalism    #communism    #lil wayne    #muhammed ali    #rock the vote    #romney    #hussien    #nicki minaj    

“Why Obama NOW"  if you don’t know, now you know. a must watchhh.

muhammed ali
1928 - 1945: Generation Cancer (Silent Generation)Pluto was mostly in CancerPluto in Cancer people f1928 - 1945: Generation Cancer (Silent Generation)Pluto was mostly in CancerPluto in Cancer people f

1928 - 1945: Generation Cancer (Silent Generation)

Pluto was mostly in Cancer

Pluto in Cancer people finds their power through emotional intensity and deep relationships. They are very possessive towards those they love. They may even try to control their emotions. It is difficult for them to let go of possessions and people. When it is inevitable, they try to control how it ends. They might have experienced deeper traumas concerning mothers and family-life. Cancer Pluto hangs doggedly onto childhood beliefs, even though experience tells them otherwise. It may help them to learn a little detachment now and then. They feel a deep need to have their own home. They are the ones who campaign on family values. They are sensitive and sympathetic. They are very protective. Cancer Pluto can be healing, nurturing and caring. They can also be responsible for escalating dangers by trying to always be the one who is passive-aggressive. It is their overprotective nature that keeps them striving to protect those they love. Family helps them feel needed and wanted. Individuals born when Pluto was in Cancer are destined to go through many changes that may affect their sense of security. They may develop compulsive emotional needs due to not getting their needs met during childhood. Music and art, in general, are the most soothing outlets for them. They just want the security, the peace and sincerity they were promised by the generation before them but the happiness was a facade now they want something sincere. With this generation greater respect for women-hood was born. These people started to get involved with Structuralism more. Structuralism: a method of interpretation and analysis of aspects of human cognition, behavior, culture, and experience, which focuses on relationships of contrast between elements in a conceptual system. Perhaps they had an innate desire to dig deep into their Canceristic intuition.

(source: alwaysastrology)

1928 - 1934: Kids of Aries Progress in Initiation (Uranus in Aries)

1934 - 1941: Kids of Taurus Progress in Values (Uranus in Taurus)

1941 - 1948 (-1945): Kids of Gemini Progress in Intellect (Uranus in Gemini)


Post link
1978: Superman vs. Muhammad Ali Source

1978: Superman vs. Muhammad Ali

Source


Post link

Everybody talks about they wantin’ a piece of the pie, well I don’t. I want the goddamn recipe.

Sam Cooke, One Night in Miami… (2020)

muhammed ali
Andy Warhol Find from The New York TimesBy Alice Newell-HansonMay 2, 2018Recently, Pat Hackett, a NeAndy Warhol Find from The New York TimesBy Alice Newell-HansonMay 2, 2018Recently, Pat Hackett, a NeAndy Warhol Find from The New York TimesBy Alice Newell-HansonMay 2, 2018Recently, Pat Hackett, a NeAndy Warhol Find from The New York TimesBy Alice Newell-HansonMay 2, 2018Recently, Pat Hackett, a NeAndy Warhol Find from The New York TimesBy Alice Newell-HansonMay 2, 2018Recently, Pat Hackett, a NeAndy Warhol Find from The New York TimesBy Alice Newell-HansonMay 2, 2018Recently, Pat Hackett, a NeAndy Warhol Find from The New York TimesBy Alice Newell-HansonMay 2, 2018Recently, Pat Hackett, a NeAndy Warhol Find from The New York TimesBy Alice Newell-HansonMay 2, 2018Recently, Pat Hackett, a NeAndy Warhol Find from The New York TimesBy Alice Newell-HansonMay 2, 2018Recently, Pat Hackett, a NeAndy Warhol Find from The New York TimesBy Alice Newell-HansonMay 2, 2018Recently, Pat Hackett, a Ne

Andy Warhol Find from The New York Times

ByAlice Newell-Hanson

May 2, 2018

Recently, Pat Hackett, a New York-based writer and editor, opened an unassuming three-ring binder in her Gramercy Park apartment and discovered 83 unpublished photographs by Andy Warhol. The images — which depict, among other subjects, Brooke Shields, Muhammad Ali, Farrah Fawcett, Jean-Michel Basquiat and Warhol’s two pet dachshunds, Archie and Amos, seated with Lou Reed — had been gifted to Hackett by Warhol not long before his death, in 1987, and had not left her home since.

Hackett was one of Warhol’s frequent collaborators and confidantes; she contributed to Interview, co-wrote his final film, “BAD” (1977), and later edited his posthumously published “Diaries” (1989). While working on another project, Warhol’s arch entertaining manual “The Party Book” (1988), she took home a selection of the artist’s photographs — casual portraits of friends and vivid snapshots of New York nightlife — to review as possible illustrations. “A few days later, when I mentioned that I would bring them back soon, he said, ‘Oh you don’t have to.’ He’d noticed how much I loved them,” recalls Hackett.

The previously unpublished and unexhibited images, which will go on show for the first time on May 3 at Hedges Projects in Los Angeles, are all one-of-a-kind silver gelatin prints that capture their subjects in stark black and white. “Oddly, as much as Andy is known as ‘the master colorist,’ there is a whole powerful, primitive area of his work that was exclusively black and white,” says Hackett.

Warhol turned to photography more and more in the years before his death, and “you could see how much it excited him,” she adds. “His whole view of the world and of art had always been that reality could not be improved upon. That made photography a natural next big step in his evolution as an artist.”

Correction: May 2, 2018An earlier version of this article misstated the year Andy Warhol’s film “Bad” was released; it was 1977, not 1987.

“Through Andy’s Lens: Never Before Seen Works From the Collection of Pat Hackett,” May 3-June 10 at Hedges Projects, 305 North Laurel Avenue, Los Angeles, hedges-projects.com.


Post link
thebristolboard: Classic cover by Joe Kubert (layout) and Neal Adams (finished art) from Superman vsthebristolboard: Classic cover by Joe Kubert (layout) and Neal Adams (finished art) from Superman vsthebristolboard: Classic cover by Joe Kubert (layout) and Neal Adams (finished art) from Superman vsthebristolboard: Classic cover by Joe Kubert (layout) and Neal Adams (finished art) from Superman vs

thebristolboard:

Classic cover by Joe Kubert (layout) and Neal Adams (finished art) from Superman vs. Muhammed Ali(All New Collector’s Edition #7) published by DC Comics, 1978.

QEPD Neal Adams (1941-2022).


Post link
“It was the toughest fight I’ve seen in my life.”- Ali’s cornerman Angelo Du

“It was the toughest fight I’ve seen in my life.”

- Ali’s cornerman Angelo Dundee


Post link
muhammed ali
muhammed ali
muhammed ali
muhammed ali
loading