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To make the children’s daily walks more fun during these lockdown days people are putting teddy bears in their windows and on walls.This little bear was perched on a wall surrounded by wisteria flowers.
Worcester
“Society wants to believe it can identify evil people, or bad or harmful people, but it’s not practical. There are no stereotypes.” ― Ted Bundy
Those who know me well are aware of my love of true the crime genre. I am absolutely fascinated by what makes the criminal mind tick, especially in the cases of serial killers, who seem almost driven to commit their atrocious acts.
For this project my ex-husband Keith kindly agreed to model as Ted Bundy in a dramatized mugshot reenactment. Keith donned a Ted Bundy signature turtleneck sweater, as well as an $8.99 wig, and I changed his eyes from hazel to Bundy blue in Photoshop.
©2019 Linda Sue Kocsis - StudioCandelabra.com
Ted is having a bad day, he suffers from depression, indicated by the massive frown constantly adorning his face.
Ted is having a very bad day. He works in "Human Resources" and has recently transferred to a different branch. Since then he's settled in nicely, but his co-workers have had a very difficult time remembering Ted's name. This doesn't make Ted very happy, not happy at all.
Ted's interests include: ClockTowers, High-Powered Rifles, and the safety and well-being of his co-workers.
Juguetes y adornos siempre quedan atrás cuando una familia debe abandonar el que era su hogar para poder continuar. En caleta Candelaria Tumbes.
ODC - With age comes, the joy of grandchildren. Watching Roni play and interact with her toys never fails to delight me.
British Wildlife Centre - Lingfield in Surrey. On a photographic Day we went inside the Foxes enclosure to meet with Ted.
DRS 37610 "T.S.(TED) CASSADY" top and tails with classmate 37612 during a Northern Belle coaching stock turning move from Crewe Carriage Sidings and back via Basford Hall and Gresty Bridge.
finally have the clubman back home. here he is sitting beside ted in our underground carpark. amazing to see the size difference between a 1972 and 2014 'mini'
Spotted this guy and his great suit today, and he kindly let me take his picture.
"Its an original suit from the 50's" he said, "only cost fifty quid!"
If his mates and him hadn'tve been in such a rush to get to their matinee, I might've actually remembered to get his name. Anyhow, if you're reading this, thanks Mr Ted!
She looked so radiant and electric at night in the courtyard of the TED conference, with the neon backlit waterfall, that I had to try an extreme shot without tripod (100mm, f/2, ISO 6400).
I met so many Model S owners there. An Apple engineer noted my interest and gave me a Serbian bill with Tesla on it, from a roll of bills he had with him to hand out to Tesla fans.
Ted
Happy Easter, y'all
I have decided to devote this photostream to the gang here at the Marshside Menagerie. You're all invited to check out my other photos at LateNightPhotographer
Whenever Ted stops by for a visit, I can always count on him to clean up after himself.. Dispite his reputation as a wild man - he's quite polite and curtious...
German postcard by Filmbilder-Vertrieb Ernst Freihoff, Essen, no. 611. Photo: Ernst Schneider.
German singer and film actor Ted Herold (1942) was billed as The German Elvis in the late 1950s and early 1960s. With his Rock ‘n Roll covers, he appeared in several Schlagerfilms between 1959 and 1963. In 1977 he made a surprise come-back.
Ted Herold was born as Harald Walter Bernhard Schubring in Berlin-Schöneberg; in 1942. He was the son of a plasterer. In 1951 his family moved to Bad Homburg. As a boy already had a passion for music, especially for US Rock 'n' Roll songs by Bill Haley, Buddy Holly, and most of all Elvis Presley. At the age of 14, he had gotten his first guitar as a Christmas present. At school, he started to play these songs. In 1958 a girlfriend from school mediated a contract for him with the record company Polydor. That same year followed his first single with two cover versions of Elvis hits, Ich brauch' keinen Ring (Want you to wear my ring around your neck) and Lover Doll. His producer Bert Kaempfert came up with the pseudonym Ted Herold. After his first success, he moved on to top producer Gerhard Mendelson, who already managed the career of teen idol Peter Kraus. While Kraus got more success with milder songs, Herold was build up as the new ‘German Elvis’. Till 1960 Herold sang mainly German covers of Presley hits. With a line from his song Ich bin ein Mann (I am a man), the then 17-year-old singer caused a sensation in prudish postwar-Germany. The German radio refused to play the song.
Ted Herold broadened his song repertoire in 1960 with more mild titles, just like his role model Elvis. Among his hits were covers like Ich bin ein Wanderer (The Wanderer) and Da Doo Ron Ron. The ballad Moonlight became with 500,000 sold singles his biggest hit and climbed to #1 in the hit parade. Herold, who still had the image of a rebel rocker, did not get any engagements from the conservative German television till the mid-1960s. But between 1959 and 1963 he was often seen in several musical films. He made his film debut in the musical comedy La Paloma (Paul Martin, 1959) with Bibi Johns and Karlheinz Böhm. He sang the song, Texas Baby. That same year followed Immer die Mädchen/Always the Girls (Fritz Remond, 1959) in which he sang Hula-Rock, and Mein Schatz, komm mit ans blaue Meer/My Darling, Come to the Blue Sea (Rudolf Schündler, 1959) with Gus Backus, in which Ted sang Küss mich. The success of Schlagerparade (Franz Marischka, 1960) with Herold, Vivi Bach, Rex Gildo, and many other Schlager stars led to sequels as Schlagerparade 1961 (Franz Marischka, 1961) and Schlagerrevue 1962 (Thomas Engel, 1961). Other films of the same genre include Davon träumen alle Mädchen/That’s What All The Girls Dream About (Thomas Engel, 1961) with Marion Michael, Drei Liebesbriefe aus Tirol/Three Love Letters from Tyrol (1962, Werner Jacobs) with Ann Smyrner, and Sing, aber spiel nicht mit mir/Sing,But Don’t Play With Me (Kurt Nachmann, 1963). In 1963 military service interrupted his career. His following singles had less success than before, also because of the upcoming beat wave. He started a study to become a radio and tv technician and married in 1965 Karin Höhler. In 1966 he recorded his last single with Polydor and then retired to run a radio and television repair service.
In 1977 Ted Herold became a surprising offer from German rock singer Udo Lindenberg to cooperate on a title of his LP Panische Nächte, and to join him on a tour through Germany. Ted got a new record deal with Teldec and started to produce new titles, including Rockabilly-Willi, Bill Haley, Die Besten sterben jung and Rock'n'Roll For President. He sang them with his old classics during many gigs at the height of the Rock 'n' Roll revival. He was the guest of many TV shows and appeared as a rock singer in the German-American coproduction Judgment in Berlin (Leo Penn, 1988) starring Martin Sheen. Ted Herold married in 2002 his longtime companion Manuela. In 2005 he had a new hit with 1958 - wir waren dabei (1958 – we were there). He made guest appearances in the tv series Die Kommissarin (2000) and Lindenstraße (2007). Last year his 26th album was presented, Jukebox Jeans Rock'n'Roll. Fifty years earlier, when Elvis Presley was posted in Germany by the U.S. Army, the German Elvis had met the original once in the streets of Bad Homburg. Herold had talked to his big idol for some moments and had given him some of his own records.
Sources: Wikipedia, Dieter Moll (IMDb), Ted Herold-Die Legende des Rock ’n Roll, and IMDb.
And, please check out our blog European Film Star Postcards.