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This Teddy Bear belongs to Mr Bean.

Teddy is Mr. Bean's teddy bear, generally regarded as Mr. Bean's best friend. The bear is a dark brown, knitted oddity with button eyes and sausage-shaped limbs, invariably ending up broken in half or in various other states of destruction and disfiguration. Although Teddy is inanimate, Bean occasionally pretends it is alive. For example, when Mr. Bean hypnotizes Teddy, he snaps his fingers and the bear's head falls backwards as if it has fallen asleep instantly (Bean used his finger to prop Teddy's head up). Certainly, Bean behaves as if the bear is real, buying it a Christmas present or trying not to wake it in the mornings. The bear is often privy to Mr. Bean's various schemes and doubles as a good dish cloth or paint brush in an emergency; it has been decapitated ("Mr. Bean in Room 426") and shrunk in the wash ("Tee Off, Mr. Bean").

 

Over the years, Teddy has undergone several changes. When it debuted on 'The Trouble with Mr. Bean", it had a smaller head. Two episodes later its head reached its current size, but its "eye" wasn't present until Bean placed gold thumb tacks on its face. The "eyes" have since been replaced with two small white buttons sewn over Teddy's face, giving it a distinct image.

 

Mr. Bean loves Teddy, and Teddy is his only friend. Teddy will go everywhere with Mr. Bean. When Mr. Bean interacts with Teddy, he often pretends he is alive. He will talk to the bear, often including him in Bean's schemes and plans. Usually, this will end up in Teddy getting hurt in some way - be that by his head being ripped off or him being cut in half. However, he always ends up ok in the end or will be back to normal in the next scene

 

www.pinterest.com/pin/766949011521856626/

 

mrbean.fandom.com/wiki/Teddy

  

Happy Teddy Bear Tuesday!

"....I wondered if Rowan Atkinson and Mr. Beans the same person. I guess not the same person. what do we see Mr. Beans on the show will be different from Rowan Atkinson fighting for her best work, these are two extraordinary individuals in one body. Like a gold coin in two different sides..."

 

---------------------------------------------------- rant 73 . Febro. 24, 2021

This collection of images was taken in and around Brick Lane, London. This is an area full of New and Old Architecture, markets, people, graffiti, doors, churches and much more. We went up with members of the Photographic Club, had a brilliant time, never stopped clicking. Thanks to all for the good company. This is the first of many postings.

A spontaneous one hand camera shot (me? no officer) on a stretch of road approaching home.

 

Talking Heads - The Great Curve (2005 Remaster)

A pub in Islington which is home to the Angel Comedy Club.

 

Here we see Whoopi Goldberg and Rowan Atkinson as Mr Bean. Neither of whom have performed here, I assume. Murals by street artist Zabou.

‘Come On Mate, You’re Going My Way! A mural by Yakuzart Creations.

This mural appears to be Mr. Bean riding a tandem along Chulia Street and refusing to give the pedestrian a lift to the ‘Grand Swiss Hotel’

 

...seconds after she was gone. I assure you it was a big one, with wonderful head, perky ears, clever stern eyes and a most beautiful multi-colored plumage pattern on her wings. And she looked right at me.

 

I aspire to make "a photo a day", to help me build a sort of diary. This would become it. A unique one! Wildlife capture at the nick of time.

You don't get to see the owl, but why?

 

► █░▓ FURTHER NOTES ARE ON WHY my son used to call me "Mr. Bean". Here is how I "photographed" this owl.

Biking over the dike in the sunset, looking left and right for the birds and attractive cast. Than I saw this big owl fly over from the bushes right towards me and land on this curved pole. No cars, no people around. Naturally, I stopped to make a snapshot. There was even a low traffic sign just at just the right spot to rest your camera on while shooting. But the bird was about 20 meters away and I had the 30mm prime lens attached. So, first I had to replace it with the kit zoom that goes all the way to 60mm (at f/5.6). Then the lens cap flew out of my hands and I couldn't find it in high grasses. Then the bicycle fell over the dike slope.

When I finally got all things back and properly in place, including the lens swap, the owl was gone. Not surprisingly.

Later on, I found out that the lens I swapped was not the 30mm but the 60mm prime. They look the same. At f/2.8 the ready-to-shoot prime was two stops faster than the kit zoom I fitted with that much fiddle. It was just the right lens for the occasion. So the owl had neatly offered herself, waited for a while until I made preparations. But I made a total mess out of it for no reason at all, so she flew away from the weird would-be wildlife photographer. She had patience, but it was all too much even for an owl.

 

Took place in the NATURE RESORT DE AVELINGEN.

A Tuk-tuk, 3-wheeled taxi, is waiting at the railway station in Trang, Thailand. You could believe you are in a Mr. Bean movie

Angel Comedy Club at The Bill Murray pub, Raleigh Street, Islington

Mr.Bean…ist eine britische Comedyserie,in der #Rowan Atkinson#….die gleichnamige Figur spielt.Die Serie wurde von 1989 bis 1995 produziert und besteht aus 15 Episoden,die im Fernsehen ausgestrahlt wurden, und zwei Specials.

Mr Bean mural, Brick Lane. By street artist Benzi Brofman.

 

I'd really loved Rowan Atkinson's earlier TV work when he was one of a group of alternative, satirical comedians shaking up British TV comedy at the beginning of the 1980s. Shows like Not The Nine O'Clock News and Blackadder felt completely fresh, original and the antithesis of the tired, smug sitcoms that were the standard comedy fare of the time.

 

But a decade later I was more than disappointed when Mr Bean came along. Gone were the razor sharp comedy lines; instead it was all sight gags and 'funny faces'. Not my thing. I didn't watch it, even when it became a huge hit.

 

It took having kids to change my mind. Somehow Mr Bean wriggled his way into my kids' TV viewing (blame the YouTube algorithm) and they instantly loved him. Sight gags, funny faces, the whole lot.

 

And watching them watching Bean, I suppose my view of him changed. I began to appreciate his genius. He is the personification of British social embarrassment, and embarrassment is the wellspring for so much comedy goodness.

 

So it was nice to see this new mural on Brick Lane. It's Bean in his early nineties prime. I look at him and immediately think of what is perhaps his finest hour: the Steak Tartare sketch.

Mr. Bean on Leicester square, London

This is an awesome minifigure sized canyon I found a few years back near my home. It’s about a 10 minute hike.🙌

 

#legomrbean #cowboybean #western #mrbean #wheresteddy #minifigurehq @minifigurehq #afol #lego #toy_photographers #utahtoycrew #toyoutsiders #redrock #cedarcityutah #desert #utah

... the lean, mean, team of Mr. Bean's investigative clones have been given the job of doing a thorough search of an abandoned, condemned property, including the main building and all the surrounding area. Their assignment was to find one thing good about such an ugly piece of property.

 

After days and days of intense search, the cry they've all been waiting to hear rings out, "I've found it!"

 

The good thing found will be revealed after the clone contest ends this coming Sunday.

 

Stand by for further developments and if you'd like to join in a secondary contest, try to guess what the good thing Mr. Bean 7 found. Put your guess in a comment.

My winning chop for Worth1000 Photo Effects Advanced contest "Completely Oblivious 6"

 

"Oh no no - I'm driving!"

Shot for Looking Close on Friday, theme "Stuffed Toys/Peluches"

 

Happy Friday everybody!

Fascinating, this rubber-faced lifeform either has the immense mental strength to resist a Vulcan mind probe...

 

... or there's nothing in there at all!

In Leicester Square.

Tower Bridge, London 2012 Summer Olympics

 

On the eve of the 2016 Olympics in Rio de Janeiro I thought I'd repost this slightly improved image as a reminder of the games that London staged.

 

As a nation we Brits are generally a cynical lot. From the announcement that London would be the host city for the 2012 Olympic Games right up to the start there was much pessimism nationwide. The press and media had a field day... costs would running away; tickets will be too expensive for the ordinary man; it will be a disaster; we won't win anything; the country can't afford it! The BBC even produced a spoof documentary series leading up to the games called "Twenty Twelve", which played to our stereotype of a bumbling, disorganised and underachieving nation (we don't mention England's dismal performance in the Euros as that is a given and a whole subject on its own).

 

However, the seedlings of optimism started to grow when Sir Bradley Wiggins won the Tour de France on the 22nd July, the week before. A glorious triumph of preparation, team working and behind the scenes man-management masterminded by Sir David Brailsford of Team Sky. But this was nothing compared to what would follow on the night of 27th July 2012.

 

From the moment the opening ceremony began even the most cynical could not fail to be impressed with the vision unfolding in the Olympic Stadium... a show orchestrated by Danny Boyle (the man who turned down his knighthood on the grounds he couldn't take credit for the achievements of thousands... a top man in my book). We showcased our history, culture, music, achievements - who will forget Kenneth Branagh as Isambard Kingdom Brunel and the Industrial Revolution changing the green landscape before our eyes and forging the rings that ascended into the night sky to form the five Olympic rings. The National Health Service, Sir Tim Berners-Lee - the inventor of the World Wide Web (WWW) and not forgetting Mr Bean, known the world over.

 

The Stadium, designed by Populous and built on time and on budget, the aquatic centre designed by the brilliant and sadly late Zaha Hadid. And not forgetting the stunning design for the Olympic Cauldron, by Thomas Heatherwick. How quickly the mood of a nation changed in those four hours and the following morning, the press and media had turned full circle with positive headlines and double page colour spreads of the spectacle that was the Opening Ceremony.

 

The opening day of competition saw a million people line the course for the men's road cycling race, every sport and venue packed to the rafters and when Team GB won their first gold (Bradley Wiggins - cycling time trial), we were on our way. The sporting achievements of Team GB surpassed all expectations and I couldn't do justice to them all in my little write-up but we finished the games with 65 metals (29 Gold, 17 Silver, 19 Bronze), third overall behind the superpowers of the US and China.

 

The London 2012 Olympics Games are our finest national moment in modern times in terms of infrastructure, organisation, support as well as the sporting achievements. 1966 doesn't come anywhere close for the simple reason these were the games for the people. Thousands volunteered not just for the two ceremonies, but to organise visitors at every event, station, tube line, railway station, the underground. London was packed with volunteers working for free to make these Games the greatest in the modern era of the Olympics and the benchmark for those that follow. Given the opportunity and the right people to lead, Great Britain once again showed the world what we are capable of achieving as a nation.

 

So Rio, you have a tough act to follow and the world will be watching... good luck!

 

1979 Austin Morris Mini "Mr Bean"

Owned by the Helpless Mr Bean played by Rowan Atkinson, This car first appeared in Series 3 shows in 1991.

 

All of photographs published here are copyright © Anthony Fosh All Rights Reserved. They may not be reproduced and/or used in any form of publication, print or the Internet without my written permission

Here is Mr.Bean's Chibi Mini...

Or is it the ChiBeani?

Chimini perhaps?

 

Reference image here.

In the Gare de Lyon (12e) since 1901, the original restaurant 'Le Train bleu' in the splendid style of the 'Fin de Siècle' displays over 40 wall and ceiling paintings to go with its fine cuisine, impressively anticipating the destinations of those who could afford a train journey to the French south at the beginning of the last century.

Paris, France 17.08.2018

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Le_Train_Bleu

www.le-train-bleu.com/fr/

www.youtube.com/watch?v=uOpfb4lyAIs

www.youtube.com/watch?v=4vcT4r7Tljk

 

Das seit 1901 im Gare de Lyon (12e) original erhaltene Restaurant 'Le Train bleu' im prachtvollen Stil des 'Fin de Siècle' zeigt zu einer feinen Küche über 40 Wand- und Deckengemälde, die die Ziele derer, die sich zu Beginn des letzten Jahrhunderts eine Zugreise in den französischen Süden leisten konnten, eindrucksvoll vorwegnehmen.

Paris, Frankreich 17.08.2018

de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Le_Train_Bleu

www.le-train-bleu.com/fr/

www.youtube.com/watch?v=uOpfb4lyAIs

www.youtube.com/watch?v=4vcT4r7Tljk

Stephens Street, Kitsilano, Vancouver. July 23, 2022.

A painting that totally failed and confused me , with a lot of positive thinking i saw different animals and people,

lesson 1 try to see the funny aspects in life.

with Thanks to Mr Bean

have a nice week everybody

... I mean, literally. I want the armchair with a particular design and in a particular color but at least so far, the parts required seem to be a rather rare commodity and almost impossible to find in a single place. I'll obviously be back on this one.

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