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AC/DC plays Madison Square Garden during their "Black Ice" tour on Nov 13th, 2008
see video clips here:
DC Direct Batman from the Unmasked/Secret Identity Series. I can now say I have my old school definitive DC Comics Trinity figures.
KLM DC-6 overflying the city of Hamburg in 2007 !
Thank to the people at Classic Flight in England I have had the pleasure of flying this DC-6 and make air to air photos of it.
Taoiseach Enda Kenny talks with US President Barack Obama during a meeting in the Oval Office of the White House, on Thursday, March 17, 2011, during his visit to Washington, DC. (Photo by Leslie E. Kossoff/LK Photos)
USA Jet Douglas DC-9 on static display at Thunder over Michigan 2012, sadly they parked a bank of portaloos behind this exhibit.
People convening in Freedom Plaza after evacuating their office buildings after a 5.8 Richter scale earthquake struck 80 miles south of the Federal City. One of the more interesting things I noticed was the earthquake's effect of spontaneously mixing together people of all modes of life in a shared instant: chefs talking with lobbyists, janitors with lawyers.
Washington, DC / August 23, 2011
Results are uncertain even among the more experienced photographers.
- Matthew Brady
To view large robertmillerphotography.smugmug.com/On-the-street/Washing...
Milano AC/DC mediolanum forum
URAGANO AC/DC - Quei ragazzotti venuti dalla provincia musicale australiana erano destinati a far tremare il pianeta con il loro hard rock. Lo hanno capito le tre generazioni che hanno riempito il Mediolanum Forum, godendosi uno show iperbolico tra memorie e fradicia sbronza visionaria. Un lungo video in apertura rimbalza tra cartoon e videogame, e poi una vecchia locomotiva è lì a dominare il mega palco. L'irrefrenabile chitarra di Angus non vuole darsi tregua: il carismatico leader degli AC/DC saltella col suo “passo d'oca” a ridosso della voce di Brian Johnson, ruvida come la carta vetrata per l'apertura in gran stile di Rock 'n roll Train. Sembrano schegge impazzite e se ne accorgono gli sbarbatelli sotto il palco che forse ciondolavano ancora nella culla quando gli Ac/DC hanno cantato l'ultima volta in Italia.
BLACK ON ICE - Lapilli di rock dall'ultimo album Black on Ice e, senza tregua, la feroce rincorsa a saccheggiare le radici con Back in Black e You Shook Me, tirando il fiato per qualche secondo prima dell'ultima discesa agli inferi. Una campana gigante rimbomba sul palco e il coro dei quindicimila canta Hells Bells, aspettando di risalire con Let there be rock, Tnt, Shoot to thrill. Il basso di Williams e la batteria Rudd ci danno dentro e, quando sparano i cannoni, l'apoteosi si rischiara con il finale di For Those About To Rock. Fuochi d'artificio, effetti speciali, grande lezione di musica, ma il tempo è passato troppo in fretta. Troppo presto per riflettere sui giganti della storia del rock, troppo veloce per evitare di tornare nelle nostre gabbie quotidiane, ancora più difficili da smantellare se non ci fosse stata la musica degli Ac/Dc, per una sera, ma anche per una vita intera.
FOTO: FRANCESCO PRANDONI
People convening in Freedom Plaza after evacuating their office buildings after a 5.8 Richter scale earthquake struck 80 miles south of the Federal City.
Washington, DC / August 23, 2011
People convening in Freedom Plaza after evacuating their office buildings after a 5.8 Richter scale earthquake struck 80 miles south of the Federal City.
Washington, DC / August 23, 2011
Old industrial building in the neighbourhood 'Navy Yard' in Washington, DC seen from 4th Street SE
Altes Industriegebäude im Viertel 'Navy Yard' in Washington, DC von der 4th Street SE aus gesehen
DSC07726
The National World War II Memorial is a National Memorial to all Americans that served in the armed forces and on the home front during World War II. It is located on the National Mall in Washington, D.C., on the former site of the Rainbow Pool at the eastern end of the Reflecting Pool, between the Lincoln Memorial and the Washington Monument. It opened to the public on April 29, 2004, and was dedicated by President George W. Bush on May 29, 2004, two days before Memorial Day.
A nationwide design competition drew more than 600 submissions. Friedrich St. Florian's initial design was selected in 1997. Over the next four years, St. Florian's design was altered during the review and approval process required of proposed memorials in Washington, D.C. The final design consists of 56 pillars, each 17 feet (5 m) tall, arranged in a semicircle around a plaza with two 43-foot (13 m) arches on opposite sides. Each pillar is inscribed with the name of one of the 48 U.S. states of 1945, as well as the District of Columbia, the Alaska Territory and Territory of Hawaii, the Commonwealth of the Philippines, Puerto Rico, Guam, American Samoa, and the U.S. Virgin Islands. The northern arch is inscribed with "Atlantic"; the southern one, "Pacific." The plaza is 337 ft, 10 in (103.0 m) long and 240 feet, 2 inches (73.2 m) wide, is sunk 6 feet (1.8 m) below grade, and contains a pool that is 246 feet 9 inches by 147 feet 8 inches (75.2 × 45.0 m). The memorial includes an engraving typical of the Kilroy graffiti: "Kilroy was here" pictured here