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Developed on the basis of the winning Audi in 2000. Bentley scored a 6th victory in 2003, highlighting the brand's return to the forefront of the premium car market. It covered 5.145,39 km in 24 hours, averaging 214,33 km/h.

 

24 Hours of Le Mans 2003

Team Bentley

n° 7

Result : Winner

5.146,050 km - 214,419 km/h

Engine : 3.596 cc - V8

Rinaldo Capello (I)

Tom Kristensen (DK)

Guy Smith (GB)

 

In the spotlight : 24H of Le Mans : 100 Years of Race History

01/04/2023 - 28/05/2023

 

Autoworld

www.autoworld.be

Brussels - Belgium

May 2023

Dr. Jerry McGinn, left, principal deputy director of the Office of Manufacturing and Industrial Base Policy in the Office of the Undersecretary of Defense for Acquisition, Technology and Logistics, discusses technology capabilities with an attendee of ta VISTA showcase, held April 12-13 at Fort Belvoir, Virginia. (Photo by Kay Stephens, CERDEC NVESD)

[Tel Aviv, Israel] The two Co-Founders of DeveloPic. We're a start-up so no office for now, most our meetings are at the local café placed next to Rabin Sq. in the city center (in the background).

Shot with an Olympus 35RC

Olympus E. Zuiko 42mm f/2.8 lens

Kodak Portra 800 film

Shot at EI 800 and developed normally

Developed and scanned by The Darkroom

ANTALYA, TURKEY - MAY 29: Senior officer of Ministry of Environment and Forest Resources of Togo, Abiziou Paul Tchinguilou attends the "Climate Change in the Least Developed Countries" session as part of the Istanbul Programme of Action for the Least Developed Countries in Antalya, Turkey on May 29, 2016. Mustafa Kamacı / Anadolu Agency

A vacuum cleaner developed by CIA in the sixties accelerates the life and problems of the main characters in this graphic novel by Tor Ærlig. His silent everyday life and love for books suddenly is challenged. He also gets to explore the life and mind of the girl living next door.

Pentax MX | SMC Takumar 55mm f/1.8 | Kodak Colorplus 200

Home developed and scanned

Lake Katsurazawa, Mikasa, Hokkaido,

Canon FTb, Tefnon 70-210mm,

Negative

From September 15th to 19th the second of the four JCOM Masterclasses, educational programmes aimed at an international audience and held by international experts takes place. For the 20 selected participants this interactive course represents a unique opportunity to discuss the state-of-the-art of science exhibition development with particular focus on the possible different design approaches, helping participants to reflect on the relationship between the different media, contents and visitors' experience.

From September 15th to 19th the second of the four JCOM Masterclasses, educational programmes aimed at an international audience and held by international experts takes place. For the 20 selected participants this interactive course represents a unique opportunity to discuss the state-of-the-art of science exhibition development with particular focus on the possible different design approaches, helping participants to reflect on the relationship between the different media, contents and visitors' experience.

Developing seeds in my back garden Wildflower Meadow.

 

Canon EF-S 60mm f/2.8 USM Macro

From September 15th to 19th the second of the four JCOM Masterclasses, educational programmes aimed at an international audience and held by international experts takes place. For the 20 selected participants this interactive course represents a unique opportunity to discuss the state-of-the-art of science exhibition development with particular focus on the possible different design approaches, helping participants to reflect on the relationship between the different media, contents and visitors' experience.

ISO 26000 Developing country Workshop

To the south. So far I haven't seen lightning (just lots of rain and that short hailstorm,) but the updrafts have been pretty strong, causing some crazy clouds to form.

Lunch break, Oxford.

 

Yashica Electro 35

Eastman Double X

Developed in Kodak D76 1+1

Pakon scan

PENSHURST PLACE

 

Overview

 

Heritage Category: Park and Garden

 

Grade: I

 

List Entry Number: 1000153

 

Date first listed: 01-May-1986

 

National Grid Reference: TQ 53019 44868

  

Details

A C16 and C17 walled garden, restored and developed in the C19 and C20, set within a medieval deer park with additional surviving C18 and C19 landscape features.

 

HISTORIC DEVELOPMENT

 

Sir John de Pulteney built the present house at Penshurst in 1341 on estate land which had been owned in the C13 by Sir Stephen de Penchester. Sir John died in 1349 and Penshurst became the property of Sir John Devereux who enclosed the manor with its defensive curtain wall and turrets. His descendants sold the estate in c 1430 to Henry IV's third son, John, Duke of Bedford (CL 1972) on whose death it was granted to his younger brother, Humphrey, Duke of Gloucester and then in 1447 to Humphrey Stafford, first Duke of Buckingham. On the beheading of the third Duke of Buckingham for treason in 1521, Penshurst became Crown property and was used by Henry VIII. In 1552, Edward VI gifted it to the Sidney family who were later created Viscounts De L'Isle and Dudley; the estate remains (1997) in private hands.

 

DESCRIPTION

 

LOCATION, AREA, BOUNDARIES, LANDFORM, SETTING Penshurst Place lies to the west of the B2188, c 5km south-west of Tonbridge and on the immediate north-east edge of Penshurst village. The registered site comprises a formal walled garden of c 4ha and a further c 178ha of parkland and woodland. The house and formal garden lie on the level floor of the Medway valley, the river running from south-west to north-east some 100m beyond the site's southern boundary. North and north-west of the house the parkland is laid out on land which forms a gently rising contoured bowl, from the rim of which there are extensive views to wooded ridges on the south-east side of the Medway and westwards to the Eden valley and the Sussex Weald. Woodland encloses the site to the north. Penshurst Road skirts the immediate west and north boundaries while to the east the site's woodland and farmland, enclosed by an avenue of trees and agricultural fencing, merge into a similar landscape beyond. To the south a fringe of trees encloses the site from the open pasture landscape of the river valley.

 

ENTRANCES AND APPROACHES The present principal private entrance, which seems to have been established in the C19 with the building of North Lodge (probably (Newman 1969) by J B Rebecca, listed grade II), is from Penshurst Road, c 200m north-west of the house. The drive follows an easterly route then turns south to approach the King's Tower on the main entrance front across an apron of lawns enclosed within mature yew hedges and a walled ha-ha. The western length of the ha-ha was built by 1833 (anon sketch reproduced in Colvin and Moggridge 1994); the remainder of it and the present turning circle were complete by 1866-9 (survey date of OS 1st edition). Kip's early C18 view (Harris 1719) shows the house approached from both the north and east boundaries by formal avenues which still existed in 1758 (Eyre). C18 and early C19 views (see Colvin and Moggridge 1994) of the north front show open parkland extending up to the house until the reintroduction of the present enclosure. The present public entrance is at the southernmost corner of the site along a drive which enters at a gatehouse (mid C19 but incorporating older material, listed grade II) and runs for 380m parallel to the south wall of the garden before turning northwards to the car park and entrance buildings at the former Place Barn Farm.

 

PRINCIPAL BUILDING Penshurst Place (listed grade I) lies in the south-west corner of the site and forms a visual ensemble, when viewed from the park, with St John the Baptist's church, 60m to the south-west. The house is built in sandstone of varying colours, with some brickwork; the elevations are mostly battlemented but with some steeply pitched roofs visible. The plan of the house is extensive: the oldest part, the hall house or Baron's Hall built in 1341, forms the core, to the south-west of which a second hall, known as the Buckingham Wing, was added in the mid C15. The towers and sections of curtain wall which surround the house survive from the complete fortification of his manor house by Sir John Devereux in 1392 (Newman 1969; CL 1972). Considerable alterations took place in the C16: the south-west wing with an upper long gallery was added in 1574-5 and the King's Tower, in the centre of the north front, was built or remodelled as an entrance tower in 1585 (Newman 1969). The north front and part of the west front were refaced by J B Rebecca in 1818 and the stable range, with wrought-iron gates of c 1729 brought from Wingerworth Hall (ibid), added east of the King's Tower in 1834. Further extensive restoration was carried out by George Devey (1820-86) in the mid C19 and again after war damage in 1945.

 

GARDENS AND PLEASURE GROUNDS The formal gardens lie within a slightly south-eastward sloping rectangular walled enclosure (listed grade II*), built in the early C16 and C17, of which the house occupies the western quarter. The enclosure is quartered by two main axes, recreated in the 1850s, the longer running south-west to north-east and the shorter south-east to north-west. Gardens existed on the site in the C14; the present main divisions and axes were established by the beginning of the C18, as shown on Kip's view (Harris 1719) although these may date from the C16 or C17 (guidebook). After a period of neglect in the C18 the gardens were restored in the 1850s by the second Lord De L'Isle and the architect George Devey who modelled his work closely on Kip's view.

 

The house opens from the south-east front onto a grassed courtyard with, on its south side, the Garden Tower (listed grade I), which overlooks the southern quarter of the garden. The south-west half contains the Italian Garden, laid out in the 1850s by Devey on a level platform dating from the late C16 with a raised terrace walk of the same date along its south-west side (ibid). The central focus is an oval lily pond (designed to appear from the house as a perfect circle) set within a garden quartered and surrounded by gravel paths and four rectangular symmetrical panels edged and infilled with box and bedding. The north-east half of this quarter, separated from the Italian Garden by high yew hedges, is itself subdivided by hedges into two enclosures: the one to the north-west is laid out with spring and autumn borders beneath trained nut trees while the Rose Garden to the south-east is laid to a formal design of purple and grey plants with standard and bush roses, designed by John Codrington in the 1960s (CL 1972). The two gardens are divided by a broad path lined with borders of foliage plants, designed by Lanning Roper in 1968 (under restoration in 1997). To the east of these gardens the main paved, south-east to north-west axis is flanked by wide herbaceous borders backed by fruit trees and yew hedges and is focused at the south-east end on the view through wrought-iron gates in the garden wall. At the north-west end, at the crossing with the south-west to north-east axis, is a small paved garden with a pool and four clipped plum trees.

 

The eastern quarter has mainly been developed since 1945 on the site of the former kitchen garden, although a number of the yew-hedged subdivisions survive from their planting in the 1850s. A long border of peonies and lilacs runs along the south-east garden wall; abutting it to the north-west and enclosed by hedges are two orchard gardens, one with formal rows of trees surviving from before 1945, the other, designed by John Codrington (guidebook), planted with Kentish cobs and crabs around a central glade with a rustic pergola supporting climbing plants. North-west of the formal orchard are three separate, hedged enclosures, developed in the 1970s to designs by John Codrington. From the west the first is the Magnolia Garden, with a central statue, laid out on the site of the former glasshouses (ibid). The second is the Stage Garden with a grass theatre and ramp designed by Lord De L'Isle, and the third a grey and silver garden. The long south-west to north-east axis runs along the north side of these gardens from the house to the hedged enclosure containing Diana's Bath (50m distant). The rectangular stone basin, shown in this form on Kip's view (Harris 1719) and all subsequent maps, was restored in 1890. The axial path, flanked by clipped domes of yew, terminates at the north-east garden wall in a small pool (guidebook).

 

Of the northern quarter, the south-west half is laid out as a kitchen garden flanked on the north-east side by an apple avenue while the north-eastern 0.8ha contains the Union Flag Garden, the flag laid out in a pattern of roses and lavender, surrounded by pleached lime trees and overlooked by a small viewing mount set in a rectangle of pheons (broad arrowheads) depicted in dwarf box.

 

PARK The park lies to the north and north-east of the house and walled garden, on ground rising to the rim of the contoured bowl which then extends northwards over a higher plateau. Within the bowl, the western half is grazed pasture, open in character with a scatter of clumps and individual trees and, towards the northern end, small areas of woodland. The eastern half is under arable cultivation with two major wooded clumps and a few individual trees. On the plateau north of the rim the majority of the parkland is planted with sweet chestnut coppice and coniferous forestry. A private deer park is first mentioned at Penshurst in 1290 and the whole of the present park covers the site of the paled medieval Old Park, shown on Burgess' survey of 1740 (Colvin and Moggridge 1994). Kip's view (Harris 1719), although compressing the landscape, confirms the appearance of the park in the early C18 and its complete separation from the formal garden. The enclosure of the east side of the park for agricultural use occurred between 1743 (Estate valuation, reproduced in Colvin and Moggridge 1994) and 1758 (Eyre plan). The Tithe map of 1842 shows the present landscape structure of the park established, with the new areas of woodland in the eastern half. Park woodland had expanded further by the late 1860s (OS 1871), although only one plantation had encroached on the northern plateau. The present extent here of commercial forestry and chestnut coppice dates from after 1945.

 

The parkland is cut by several major avenues; a central one, with trees of mixed age including some replanted in the 1990s, extends over 1.7km from the north-east boundary to the north-east corner of the walled garden. A second one, c 650m in length and completely restored in the 1990s, runs parallel to the western boundary as far south as the entrance drive and is focused on the church tower. A third runs along the park's eastern boundary. All are shown on Kip's view (Harris 1719) and there is an intention to replant the fourth, shown by Kip as running east to west and meeting the south end of the central avenue.

 

On the north side of the north-west wall of the garden a lime avenue lines the path from the car park to the house. This is shown on Burgess' plan of 1740 and was restored in the 1990s. Some 150m north of the entrance front of the house the cricket ground, with an early C20 pavilion, is laid out on the site of the early C18 bowling green (Harris 1719); 180m further north is a lake with a semicircular hedged enclosure, restored in the 1990s, on its north side. Known as Lancup Well, the lake is shown on Kip's view with a semicircular enclosure laid out with paths winding through blocks of planting which survive as woodland (called The Rookery) on the OS map of 1937. North of Lancup Well (160m distant) is the Sidney or Bear's Oak, now (1997) in poor condition but established as over 400 years old (Colvin and Moggridge 1994). Further ancient trees (chestnut and beech) shown in formal lines on Burgess' map of 1740 survive in that form at Collinses Tol, 150m within the north boundary. To the north-east of the walled garden and Place Barn Farm are two fishponds, shown on Kip's view but apparently silted up by 1870. These were restored in the 1990s.

 

REFERENCES

 

J Harris, The History of Kent (1719) Country Life, 5 (18 March 1899), pp 336-8; 9 (9 February 1901), pp 172-3; 30 (2 December 1911), pp 844-54; (9 December 1911), pp 894-902; 151 (9 March 1972), pp 554-8; (16 March 1972), pp 618-21; no 25 (21 June 1990), pp 124-9 J Newman, The Buildings of England: West Kent and the Weald (1969), pp 436-40 T Wright, The Gardens of Britain 4, (1978), pp 78-84 Penshurst Place and Gardens, guidebook, (1993) Penshurst Place Park, History and Restoration Management Plan, (Colvin and Moggridge 1994)

 

Maps William Burgess, Survey of Penshurst Place, 1740 (in Colvin and Moggridge 1994) Edward John Eyre, A Map of the Manor of Penshurst, 1758 (in Colvin and Moggridge 1994) Tithe map for Penshurst parish, 1842 (in Colvin and Moggridge 1994) Tithe map for Leigh parish, 1842 (in Colvin and Moggridge 1994)

 

OS 6" to 1 mile:1st edition surveyed 1866-9, published 1871 2nd edition published 1898 3rd edition published 1909 1937 edition OS 25" to 1 mile:1st edition published 1882 3rd edition published 1909 1937 edition Illustrations J Kip, engraving (in Harris 1719)

 

Description written: May 1997 Amended: January 1999 Register Inspector: VCH Edited: November 2003

  

historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1000153

 

----------------------------------------------

 

Penshurst Place and Gardens.

 

The House, once the property of King Henry VIII, was left to his son King Edward VI and granted to my forebear Sir William Sidney in 1552. The Sidney family have been in continuous occupation for more than 460 years since. It is still a family home and all who live and work here welcome visitors to discover the charm of Penshurst in the State Rooms, Gardens, Parkland and beyond.

 

-------------------------------------------

 

One of the finest fortified manors in England.

 

Poet Sir Philip Sidney wrote of his family home that it was 'built of fair and strong stone, not affecting so much any extraordinary kind of fineness as an honourable representing of a firm stateliness; handsome without curiosity and homely without loathsomeness'. In other words, Penshurst Place does not overawe nor underwhelm; it is what it is; one of the best examples of a fortified medieval manor house in England.

 

While you're visiting Penshurst don't miss the chance to enjoy the parish church of St John the Baptist, where the Sidney Chapel boasts tombs to members of the family dating back to Sir Willliam Sidney, the first member of the family to live here.

wouldn't that be handy?

The Postcard

 

A Solograph Series De Luxe Photogravure postcard that was published by E. A. Sweetman & Son Ltd. of Tunbridge Wells.

 

The card was posted in Newquay using a 2d. stamp on Thursday the 25th. August 1949. It was sent to:

 

Miss Hartnell,

4, South Street

Wincanton,

Somerset.

 

The pencilled message on the divided back of the card was as follows:

 

"c/o Mrs. Richardson,

Market Street,

East Looe,

Cornwall.

Dear May,

We are at Newquay for

a day having come from

Looe by coach.

Looe is a pretty place.

We are staying at Looe

until the 3rd. September,

then on the 10th. we go

to Emmie Silver's wedding

party, she is having a big

do.

Lots of love to all,

Dolly & Mum."

 

Newquay

 

Newquay is a town on the North Atlantic coast in Cornwall, England. It is a seaside resort, regional centre for aerospace industries with an airport and a spaceport, and a fishing port.

 

The town is bounded to the south by the River Gannel and its associated salt marsh, and to the north-east by the Porth Valley. The western edge of the town meets the Atlantic at Fistral Bay.

 

The town has been expanding inland (south) since the former fishing village of New Quay began to grow in the second half of the nineteenth century.

 

-- Newquay People

 

William Golding, author of Lord of the Flies, was born in Newquay.

 

So was Alexander Lodge (1881–1938). He was an English inventor who did early work and held some patents on the spark plug.

 

Richard Long, 4th. Viscount Long, lived at The Island, a house on a rock linked to the mainland by a private suspension bridge.

 

Singer-songwriter James Morrison grew up in the Newquay area: he attended Treviglas College.

 

Phillip Schofield attended Newquay Tretherras School.

 

-- Newquay in the Media

 

The Headland Hotel next to Fistral Beach has been used in several films, including Wild Things (1998) and The Witches (1990).

 

The Beatles filmed part of the Magical Mystery Tour film in Newquay. Scenes were filmed at the Atlantic Hotel and Towan Beach.

 

Lies During Jury Selection

 

So what else happened on the day that the card was posted?

 

Well, on the 25th. August 1949, Judge Harold Medina refused to declare a mistrial in the Smith Act trial.

 

This was despite defense contentions that juror Russell Janney, author of The Miracle of the Bells, had discussed the case out-of-court.

 

They also claimed that Janney had answered falsely about having an anti-Communist bias during the jury selection process.

 

A New Converter for Color TV

 

Also on that day, RCA reported that they had developed a color television which could be adapted to existing black-and-white receivers through the use of a converter.

 

Martin Amis

 

The 25th. August 1949 also marked the birth in Oxford of Martin Amis.

 

Sir Martin Louis Amis FRSL was an English novelist, essayist, memoirist, screenwriter and critic. He is best known for his novels Money (1984), London Fields (1989), and The Information (1995), (commonly referred to as the London Trilogy).

 

At 5 feet 6 inches (1.68 m) tall, he referred to himself as a "short-arse" while a teenager. He graduated from Exeter College, Oxford, with a congratulatory first in English:

 

"The sort where you are called in for a

viva and the examiners tell you how

much they enjoyed reading your

papers".

 

According to Martin, his father was deeply critical of certain aspects of his work:

 

"I can point out the exact place where

he stopped reading my novel Money

and sent it twirling through the air;

that's where the character named

Martin Amis comes in."

 

His father Kingsley complained:

 

"Breaking the rules, buggering about

with the reader, drawing attention to

himself."

 

He received the James Tait Black Memorial Prize for his memoir Experience, and was twice listed for the Booker Prize (shortlisted in 1991 for Time's Arrow and longlisted in 2003 for Yellow Dog).

 

Amis was a professor of creative writing at the University of Manchester's Centre for New Writing from 2007 until 2011.

 

In 2008, The Times named him one of the 50 greatest British writers since 1945.

 

Amis's work centres on the excesses of "late-capitalist" Western society, whose perceived absurdity he often satirised through grotesque caricature. He was portrayed by some literary critics as a master of what The New York Times called "The New Unpleasantness".

 

Martin was inspired by Saul Bellow and Vladimir Nabokov, as well as by his father Kingsley Amis.

 

-- The Death of Martin Amis

 

Martin became a grandfather in 2008. He later described his new status as:

 

"Like getting a telegram

from the mortuary".

 

A life-long smoker, Amis died from oesophageal cancer at his house in the U.S. state of Florida on the 19th. May 2023. He was 73 when he died - the same age as his father.

 

The New York Times wrote after his death:

 

"To come of reading age in the last three

decades of the 20th century – from the

oil embargo through the fall of the Berlin

Wall, all the way to 9/11 – was to live, it

now seems clear, in the Amis Era."

 

Martin Amis was knighted in the 2023 King's Birthday Honours for services to literature, with the knighthood being backdated to the day before his death.

 

Gene Simmons

 

Also born on the 25th. August 1949 was Gene Simmons. Simmons is an American musician, entrepreneur and founding member of the hard rock band Kiss.

 

Also known by his stage persona "The Demon", Gene was also the bassist and co-lead singer of Kiss, which he co-founded with Paul Stanley, Ace Frehley and Peter Criss in the early 1970's, and which lasted until their retirement in 2023.

 

Simmons was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2014 as a member of Kiss.

 

-- Gene Simmons - The Early Years

 

Simmons was born as Chaim Witz at Rambam Hospital in Haifa, Israel, to Jewish refugees from Hungary. His mother, Florence "Flora" Klein, later Lubowski (1925–2018) was born in Jánd. She survived internment in Nazi concentration camps from November 1944 until her liberation from the Mauthausen camp in Austria in 1945.

 

Flora and her brother, Larry Klein, were the only members of the family to survive the Holocaust.

 

Simmons' father, Ferenc "Feri" Yehiel Witz (1925–2002), was a carpenter whom Klein married in 1946. The couple moved to Israel the following year.

 

Gene spent his early childhood in Tirat Carmel and was raised in a practicing Jewish household. He has said that his family was "dirt poor", scraping by on rationed bread and milk. At the age of seven, he began to pick wild fruit and sell it at the roadside together with a friend.

 

At the age of eight, after his parents’ divorce, he and his mother emigrated to the United States, settling in Queens, NYC. His father remained in Israel, where he had another son and three daughters.

 

In the United States, Simmons changed his name to Gene Klein, adopting his mother's maiden name. When he was nine, he briefly attended a Jewish religious school, Yeshiva Torah Vodaas, before transferring to a public school.

 

Gene graduated from Newtown High School. He later attended Sullivan County Community College in New York, and Richmond College in Staten Island, New York where he graduated with a BA in Education in 1970.

 

Before his musical career began, Klein worked a variety of jobs in the city. A proficient typist, he served as an assistant to an editor of Vogue, and spent 6 months as a sixth grade instructor on the Upper West Side.

 

The Beatles had a significant influence on Simmons:

 

"There is no way I'd be doing what I do now

if it wasn't for the Beatles. I was watching The

Ed Sullivan Show and I saw them.

Those skinny little boys, kind of androgynous,

with long hair like girls. It blew me away that

these four boys from the middle of nowhere

could make that music."

 

-- Gene Simmons' Career

 

Simmons became involved with his first band, Lynx, when he was 15 in 1964 – 1965. Eventually, he disbanded the band in order to form the Long Island Sounds, the name being a pun on the Long Island Sound.

 

In this band was also future Wicked Lester guitarist Steve Coronel, and future lawyer/author Alan Stuart Graf who convinced Simmons to buy his first bass as the band needed a bass player.

 

In 1967, after losing Graf the band morphed into The Love Bag. While Gene played in these bands, he worked at odd jobs on the side to make more money, including trading used comic books.

 

From 1968 to 1970 Simmons attended Sullivan County Community College in Loch Sheldrake, New York for two years. He joined a new band, Bullfrog Bheer, and the band recorded various home demos includig Leeta; this was later included on the Kiss box set. The band existed until 1970 with various line-ups.

 

Simmons, Coronel and Brooke Ostrander who was in their 1969 band Coffee formed the rock band first known as Rainbow and later Wicked Lester in 1970 with Stanley Eisen and recorded one album which was never released in its entirety.

 

Dissatisfied with Wicked Lester's sound and look, Simmons and Stanley attempted to fire their band members. Met with resistance, they instead quit Wicked Lester, walking away from their record deal with Epic Records, as they decided to form the "ultimate rock band" in its place.

 

Looking for a drummer, Simmons and Stanley found an ad placed by Peter Criss, who was playing clubs in Brooklyn at the time; they joined and started out as a trio.

 

Ace Frehley responded to an ad they put in The Village Voice for a lead guitar player, and soon joined them. Kiss released their self-titled debut album in February 1974. Stanley took on the role of lead performer on stage, while Simmons became the driving force behind what became an extensive Kiss merchandising franchise.

 

The eye section of Gene's "Demon" makeup with Kiss came from the wing design of comic book character Black Bolt.

 

In 1983, when Kiss's fame was waning, the members took off their trademark make-up and enjoyed a resurgence in popularity that continued into the 1990's.

 

At this time, Peter Criss, the original drummer, was voted out of the band, and a replacement was sought to fill his vacancy. The new drummer was Eric Carr, who played for Kiss from 1980 until his death in 1991.

 

The band hosted its own fan conventions in 1995, and fan feedback about the original Kiss members' reunion influenced the highly successful 1996–1997 Alive Worldwide reunion tour.

 

In 1998, the band released Psycho Circus. Since then, the original lineup has once again dissolved, with Tommy Thayer replacing Ace Frehley on lead guitar and Eric Singer replacing Peter Criss on drums.

 

-- Gene Simmons on TV and Film

 

Gene Simmons has been involved with such projects as:

 

-- My Dad the Rock Star, a cartoon by the Canadian animation company Nelvana, about the mild-mannered son of a Gene Simmons-like rock star.

 

-- Mr. Romance, a show created and hosted by Simmons on the Oxygen cable television channel.

 

-- Rock School, a UK reality show in which Simmons tries to make a rock band out of a group of students from Christ's Hospital School in the first season, and in the second, a group of kids from a comprehensive school in Lowestoft.

 

-- Gene Simmons Family Jewels, a reality show documenting the personal lives of Simmons, his wife, his son and daughter.

 

-- Scooby-Doo! and Kiss: Rock and Roll Mystery. Gene Simmons and the other members of Kiss appear in this animated movie of Scooby Doo where the gang is attacked by a monster in a Kiss amusement park and Kiss saves them.

 

-- In 1978, Simmons appeared in a made-for-television movie, Kiss Meets the Phantom of the Park.

 

-- In 1981, Simmons auditioned at ABC for a role in a new Marcy Carsey produced show called Grotus and was offered his own TV show, which he declined as the pay was lower than what he made with Kiss at the time.

 

-- In 1985, Simmons appeared on the TV series Miami Vice in an episode titled "The Prodigal Son".

 

-- Simmons performed in the 1984 Michael Crichton thriller Runaway starring Tom Selleck, Cynthia Rhodes and Kirstie Alley.

 

-- He also took part in the 1987 Gary Sherman action film Wanted: Dead or Alive starring Rutger Hauer.

 

-- Gene also guest-starred as himself in the 2014 CSI: Crime Scene Investigation episode "Long Road Home."

 

-- In March 2015, Simmons founded the film production company Erebus Pictures and announced as the first project the Horror-thriller film Armed Response.

 

-- In 2022, Simmons became a judge of the talent competition show Yoshiki Superstar Project X, airing on Hulu Japan and produced by Japanese musician and composer Yoshiki.

 

-- On the 14th. September 2023, Simmons was one of the guest speakers chosen to introduce Yoshiki at his imprint ceremony at the TCL Chinese Theatre.

 

-- Other Gene Simmons' Projects

 

Simmons had his own label, Simmons Records. Simmons Records has released albums by such bands as Kobra and the Lotus, Silent Rage, Gypsy Rose and House of Lords as well as Gene's own solo releases.

 

In 1976–77, Simmons signed a management and production contract with the band Van Halen. He produced a Van Halen demo tape and attempted to find a record deal for the band with a variety of major record labels. However when no deal materialized, Gene released them from their contract.

 

In 1989, Simmons managed the recording side of Liza Minnelli's entry into mainstream pop.

 

In 2002, Simmons launched Gene Simmons' Tongue, a men's lifestyle magazine. However the magazine only lasted five issues before being discontinued.

 

From 2006 to 2008, Simmons served in a marketing and publicity role with the Indy Racing League.

 

In 2012, Simmons headlined the Rock N Roll All Stars tour which performed in stadiums across South America. The project featured several other Rock N Roll Hall of Famers including Def Leppard's Joe Elliot, Guns N' Roses' Duff McKagan & Matt Sorum.

 

Other participants included Deep Purple's Glenn Hughes, as well as Collective Soul's Ed Rolland, Sebastian Bach, Alice in Chain's Mike Inez, and the Cult's Billy Duffy.

 

The tour was featured on Simmons Family Jewels' series finale episodes.

 

In 2012, Simmons partnered with Paul Stanley and three other investors to form the restaurant franchise Rock & Brews.

 

In August 2013, Simmons, Paul Stanley and manager Doc McGhee became a part of the ownership group that created the LA Kiss Arena Football League team, which played their home games at the Honda Center in Anaheim, California. The team has since folded.

 

In 2017, Simmons launched "The Vault" which is a compilation of all of his major works selling for $2,000.

 

In 2018, Simmons was named "Chief Evangelist Officer" of the Canadian cannabis company Invictus MD Strategies. Simmons also holds a large investment stake in the company.

 

Gene also spearheaded the drive to licence more than 5,000 pieces of Kiss-branded merchandise, including motorbikes, pinball machines and even a brightly airbrushed coffin known as the Kiss Kasket.

 

-- Gene Simmons' Artistry

 

Simmons plays bass, and lead vocals are split between Simmons and rhythm guitarist Paul Stanley in most Kiss songs. Some notable songs featuring Simmons singing lead include "God of Thunder", "Rock and Roll All Nite", "Deuce", "A World Without Heroes", "I Love It Loud", "Calling Dr. Love", "Unholy", "You Wanted the Best," and "Christine Sixteen", among others. Simmons possesses a baritone voice.

 

Simmons has expressed his preference for "memorable simplicity" in music as opposed to technical complexity:

 

"I don't consider myself—and was never

really interested in being—a bass virtuoso.

I don't like show-offs in music.

I'm much more attracted to things that are

memorable. It's part of the joy of music for

me."

 

Gene has also said that while he appreciates the technical skill of jazz musicians, he believes they do not have appeal over a wide audience, saying:

 

"You can be a jazz player and be

respected by musicians, but the

rest of the world doesn't care."

 

-- Gene Simmons' Stage Antics and Persona

 

In addition to playing bass, Simmons is known for his long tongue, which he frequently sticks out while performing. Some publications have reported that his tongue measured up to 7 inches long, and that he had it insured for $1 million, although Simmons himself has not commented on this.

 

Gene is also known for his demonic figure on-stage where he spits fire and vomits stage blood.

 

-- Gene Simmons' Personal Life

 

Gene Simmons resides in Los Angeles with his wife Shannon Lee Tweed, a Canadian actress and former Playboy Playmate. Although they began dating in 1983, they did not marry until 28 years later.

 

Simmons often joked that he and Tweed were "happily unmarried" for over 20 years. He also often paraphrased Groucho Marx, saying:

 

"Marriage is an institution, and I

don't want to live in an institution".

 

Simmons and Tweed wed on the 1st. October 2011, at the Beverly Hills Hotel. They have two children: Nick and Sophie.

 

Gene formerly had live-in relationships with Cher and Diana Ross, revealing that he fell in love with Ross while dating Cher.

 

Simmons has boasted many times about having bedded thousands of women. In 2010, he claimed the tally stood at 5,000, and that he has a Polaroid picture of each liaison, including the hotel key where it took place.

 

After their wedding, when Shannon found the key for the lockboxes containing the photos (confirming at least that much of the rumors), after a "loving confrontation" with Gene, she had every single Polaroid burned on national television during the final season of their reality show Gene Simmons Family Jewels.

 

Simmons is multilingual, and is able to speak Hungarian, German, English, Hebrew, and some Japanese.

 

Simmons believes that he is an "outcast" in the rock music community due to his open disdain for drug and alcohol use, and has proudly claimed many times to have never been drunk or high on a substance in his life.

 

He has said that the reason for his sober lifestyle was his mother, who was a Holocaust survivor. He said:

 

“I’m my mother’s only child. I was

concerned I had no right to harm

my mother. Life did that enough.”

 

However, he has admitted to once accidentally becoming intoxicated on marijuana after mistakenly eating pot brownies.

 

Simmons is a science fiction and comic book fan, and has published several science-fiction fanzines, among them Id, Cosmos (which eventually merged with Stilletto to become Cosmos-Stilletto and then Faun), Tinderbox, Sci-Fi Showcase, Mantis and Adventure.

 

-- Gene Simmons' Personal Views and Politics

 

Simmons was a supporter of the foreign policy of the George W. Bush administration. He supported the 2003 invasion of Iraq, writing on his website:

 

"I'm ashamed to be surrounded by people

calling themselves liberal who are, in my

opinion, spitting on the graves of brave

American soldiers who gave their life to

fight a war that wasn't theirs, in a country

they've never been to, simply to liberate

the people therein."

 

In a follow-up, Simmons explained his position and wrote about his love and support for the United States:

 

"I wasn't born here. But I have a love for this

country and its people that knows no bounds.

I will forever be grateful to America for going

into World War II, when it had nothing to gain,

in a country that was far away... and rescued

my mother from the Nazi concentration camps.

She is alive and I am alive because of America.

And if you have a problem with America, you

have a problem with me".

 

In 2010, Simmons said he regretted voting for Barack Obama and criticized the 2009 health care reforms.

 

Following Obama's 2011 speech on the Middle East in which he called on Israel and the Palestinians to negotiate a settlement based on the 1967 lines with mutually agreed swaps, Simmons told CNBC that Obama was gravely misguided:

 

"If you have never been to the moon, you can't

issue policy about the moon.

For the president to be sitting in Washington

and saying, 'Go back to your '67 borders in Israel' –

how about you live there and try to defend an

indefensible border – nine miles (14 km) wide?"

 

Simmons also accused the United Nations of being "the most pathetic body on the face of the earth".

 

In an April 2012 interview, Gene endorsed Republican Mitt Romney for President:

 

"America should be in business and

it should be run by a businessman."

 

In an August 2021 interview, regarding the honesty of Donald Trump and his presidential administration, Simmons said:

 

"We all lie to some extent, but what happened

the last four years was beyond anything I ever

thought imaginable from people who had lots

of power — not just him, but the administration,

everybody."

 

On the 10th. November 2021, he stated that people who refused to get the COVID-19 vaccine are "an enemy" and called them "evil".

 

-- Gene Simmons' Views on Israel

 

In March 2011, Simmons visited his birth country, Israel. He described the trip as a "life changing experience". He talked about how he still feels that he is an Israeli:

 

"I'm Israeli. I'm a stranger in

America. I'm an outsider".

 

While there, Simmons met his half-brother Kobi, and triplet half-sisters Drora, Sharon and Ogenia. He also visited his estranged father's grave.

 

Simmons has taken Kiss to Israel, for the first time in 2015 with a concert in Tel Aviv.

 

He has said that he is an ardent supporter of Israel. At a press conference in Israel, he spoke in both Hebrew and English. During his visit to Israel in 2011, he also stated that the artists refusing to perform in Israel for political reasons are "stupid".

 

During the 2006 Lebanon War between Israel and Hezbollah, Simmons sent a televised message of support (in both English and Hebrew) to an Israeli soldier seriously wounded in fighting in Lebanon, calling him his "hero".

 

On the 6th. November 2015, he attended a Friends of the Israel Defense Forces gala in Beverly Hills, which raised more than $31 million.

 

-- Jean Simmons' Views on Islam

 

In a 2004 interview in Melbourne, Australia, regarding Islamic extremists, Simmons described Islam as a "vile culture", saying that Muslim women had to walk behind their husbands, and were not allowed to be educated or to own houses. He said:

 

"They want to come and live right

where you live and they think that

you're evil."

 

Muslim media personality Susan Carland argued that Simmons' stereotyping of Muslims was inaccurate. Simmons later clarified his comments on his website, saying he had been talking specifically about Muslim extremists.

 

-- Controversies Associated With Gene Simmons

 

(a) The NPR Interview

 

During an interview on the National Public Radio (NPR) program Fresh Air on the 2nd. February 2002, Simmons told Terry Gross:

 

"If you want to welcome me with

open arms, I'm afraid you're also

going to have to welcome me

with open legs."

 

Gene was paraphrasing a lyric from the Who's 1981 song "You Better You Bet".

 

Gross replied:

 

"That's a really obnoxious

thing to say".

 

At the time, Simmons refused to grant permission for NPR to make the interview available online. However, it appears in print in Gross' book All I Did Was Ask, and unauthorized transcripts are available. NPR re-broadcast part of the interview in August 2007.

 

In a 2014 interview with The Huffington Post, Simmons noted that he was upset over what he perceived as Gross's "holier-than-thou" attitude, which included mislabeling his band Kiss as "The Kiss".

 

(b) The File-Sharing Controversy

 

In 2007, Simmons openly spoke out against music piracy, and called for file-sharers to be sued. A year later, he threatened further lawsuits, and to withhold new recordings, if file-sharing continued.

 

In 2010, Anonymous staged a DDoS on his website, prompting Simmons to hit back with provocative comments once he was back online, at which point Anonymous staged a second DDoS, taking Simmons's site down again.

 

In September 2014, Simmons said:

 

"The death of rock was not a

natural death. Rock did not

die of old age.

It was murdered".

 

Simmons blames file-sharing, and that no one values music enough to pay you for it for the decline of the rock music scene.

 

(c) Gene Simmons' Comments on Suicide and Depression

 

In July 2014, Simmons made comments in an interview with Songfacts that encouraged those with depression to kill themselves. He said:

 

"I never understand, because I

always call them on their bluff.

I'm the guy who says 'Jump!' when

there's a guy on top of a building

who says, 'That's it, I can't take it

any more, I'm going to jump.'

Are you kidding?

Why are you announcing it?

Shut the f*ck up, have some dignity

and jump! You've got the crowd."

 

The comments drew criticism from Nikki Sixx of Mötley Crüe, who had suffered from depression in the past.

 

Following his comments, both Triple M and Winnipeg radio station Power 97 stated that they were pulling all Kiss songs from their lineup in protest.

 

Simmons later clarified his comments, and apologized for the incident.

 

(d) The Fox & Friends Incident

 

On the 16th. November 2017, Simmons made an appearance on Fox & Friends in order to promote a new book, but shortly afterward, he burst into a staff meeting uninvited, unbuttoning his shirt and telling jokes.

 

The next day Fox News announced that Simmons was banned for life from their program, as well as from entering any of the company's properties.

 

Simmons later issued a statement saying that he had a tremendous amount of respect for the company's workers, and apologized for "unintentionally offending" any staff members during his visit.

 

(e) Sexual Assault Allegations Against Gene Simmons

 

In 2018, Simmons settled a sexual assault lawsuit with an unnamed radio personality, who accused him of touching her inappropriately.

 

The woman claimed that:

 

"Simmons touched me and turned

standard interview questions into

sexual innuendos."

 

Despite the settlement, Simmons denied the allegations.

 

In 2019, Ace Frehley, who played together with Simmons for years in Kiss, stated that Simmons had groped his wife, stating:

 

"Simmons is an asshole

and a sex addict".

 

-- Gene Simmons' Philanthropy

 

Simmons is a known advocate for ChildFund International's work. He traveled to Zambia during his Gene Simmons Family Jewels show in order to visit several of his sponsored children, of whom he has more than 140.

 

Simmons said:

 

"The trip was a stark reminder

that life doesn't treat everyone

the same."

 

Simmons' family received the MEND Humanitarian Award for their philanthropic efforts and support for Mending Kids International at the organization's annual gala on the 9th. November 2013. The award was presented by Mel Gibson.

 

In his acceptance speech, Simmons spoke of his own difficult childhood in Israel in a bullet-riddlen house. He recalled his mother's excitement when they received a CARE box one day.

 

Simmons helped found "The Children Matter", which is a collaborative initiative with the charity MATTER that fights to give children around the world access to health care.

 

Gene was an advocate for public safety during the coronavirus pandemic, encouraging people to wear face masks and follow social distancing protocols.

 

-- Gene Simmons' Awards and Recognition

 

On the 28th. January 2011, Simmons was in Dallas, Texas, in order to host the Aces & Angels Salute to the Troops charity event.

 

Simmons was presented with the key to the city, and a street (Gene Simmons Boulevard) was named for him.

 

Simmons and Tweed also visited the U.S. Army base at Fort Hood in order to support the troops as a part of the Aces & Angels event.

 

On the 15th. June 2011, Gene was given the key to the city of Winnipeg, Manitoba.

 

In 2012, Simmons was awarded the Golden God award by Revolver magazine.

 

In 2013, the Smithsonian National Museum of American History accepted an autographed Gene Simmons Axe bass into their collection from John Upshaw Downs Jr.

 

The Smithsonian wrote, in part:

 

"The bass will now be cared for in our permanent

collections. We are happy to include the Axe bass,

as it relates to the impact Mr. Simmons and his

band Kiss have had on American culture, especially

in the creation of a unique and iconic brand that has

been embraced by fans worldwide.

The story of Mr. Simmons' American experience

deserves to be preserved.

An immigrant and son of a Holocaust survivor, he

used creative vision and entrepreneurial acumen

to make a significant impact for our nation's popular

culture, becoming an iconic figure in American

music and entertainment."

 

Simmons is an honorary board member of Little Kids Rock, a national nonprofit organization that works to restore and revitalize music education in disadvantaged U.S. public schools.

 

A&E's Gene Simmons Family Jewels visited a Little Kids Rock classroom, and featured the segment on the show. Gene also decorated a guitar for auction with his son Nick.

 

On the 15th. December 2014, Simmons was awarded the Golden Medal by the Royal Artistic Circle of Barcelona.

 

In 2020, Simmons won two Guinness World Records for the highest flame projection in a music concert and the most flame projections launched simultaneously in a music concert.

 

Both of the records were established at the KISS 2020 Goodbye concert.

 

Thoughts From Gene Simmons

 

Gene had opinions on a wide range of topics, as evidenced by the following:

 

"My eyesight’s good. My schmeckle

works. What else do you want?"

 

"Mortality? It helps to be delusional."

 

"I’ve got to do two hours of make-up

preparation, then wear 40 pounds of

armour and studs, and then seven-inch

platform heels."

 

"I also learned that I love making

money. Anyone who is not afraid

of work will be happy with the

money they make."

 

"The sad thing is most people have

to check with someone before they

do the things that make them happy.

We're all passing through; the least

we can do is be happy, and the only

way to do that is by being selfish."

 

"If you think about it, critics are an

unnecessary life-form on the planet

Earth, and here's why: because it's

a job without credentials.

You don't have to go to school."

 

"The Beatles weren't like any other

band. Everybody in the band sang,

which is why you knew everybody

in the band."

 

"Kiss is a Fourth of July fireworks

show with a backbeat."

 

"I've always been anti-marriage for

men until they become mature.

As a species we don't mature until

we're in our 60's."

 

"My mother had a horrific life.

At fourteen, she was in the Nazi

concentration camps.

Her sense about life now is, every

day above ground is a good day."

 

"I'm fascinated with myself, and love

hearing the sound of my own voice.

I'd like to hear what I have to say.

A lot of people don't like being

alone because they truly don't like

themselves, but I love me."

 

"Life is too short to have anything

but delusional notions about yourself."

 

"I don't wait for the calendar to

figure out when I should live life."

 

"Fiscally, I'm very conservative.

I don't believe in welfare states.

I believe in giving people jobs."

 

"Never underestimate the power

of being popular in pop culture. You

have to be able to do something.

You can have a good seat at the

restaurant, but you still have to pay

for the meal. Fame is important, but

to be rich is more important."

 

"When you really think about it, I'm

not delusional enough to think that

what I do is important to life as we

know it on this planet. No.

But neither is what you do."

 

"I was never interested in being

a rock star. I always wanted to be

Boris Karloff."

 

"I refuse to stand up in front of a

rabbi and my friends and the

woman I love - who I will tell you

I can love with all my heart - and

promise she will be the only one

I will ever have until the day I die.

That's a lie."

 

"I'd like to think that the boring lady

who's talking to me now is a lot

sexier and more interesting than the

one who's doing NPR.

You know, studious and reserved,

and - I bet you're a lot of fun at a

party."

 

"My skin is more beautiful than yours.

I would be quite more popular in jail

if I so chose."

 

"I'm forbidden fruit. Once you go to

certain households, mommy doesn't

want you to see that dirty man who

sticks his tongue out and spits out

blood and all that stuff."

 

"The root of all evil isn't money;

rather, it's not having enough

money."

 

"I voted for President Bush, I voted

for President Clinton, and, although

I do want my vote back, I voted for

President Obama."

 

"People who are the salt of the earth

get up and go to a job that they hate."

 

"England is a profoundly bizarre place

that has produced thousands of bands

the world has worshipped."

 

"If you look at the CEOs of some the

most successful companies in the

world like IKEA, they never fly first

class. They always go economy."

 

"The best you can do is set your kids

on the right track; staying on it without

falling is up to the kids."

 

"You can't go through life and leave

things the way they are. We can all

make a difference, and if I die today,

I know I made a difference."

 

"If someone likes you, they'll buy

what you're selling, whether or

not they need it."

 

"If you're the greatest, it's okay to

say you're the greatest.

My suggestion to everybody is to

be their own greatest fan.

Weaker personas and personalities

define that as egotistical or arrogant,

but what it means is their self-esteem

isn't that strong."

 

"I wanted to be in a band that gave

bang for the buck. I wanted to be in

the band who didn't look like a bunch

of guys who, you know, should be in

a library studying for their finals."

 

"I'm in a weird band. We've done very

well. The American Dream is alive and

well."

 

"James Bond has a license to kill,

rockstars have a license to be

outrageous."

 

"When you look at Clark Kent when

he's working at the Daily Planet, he's

a reporter.

He doesn't fly through the air in his

glasses and his suit."

 

"I want to do everything. I want to be

the president, I want to learn Tae Kwan

Do, I want to climb mountains.

I'm always bugged by the notion that

I can't do everything."

 

"The biggest financial pitfall in life is

divorce. And the biggest reason for

divorce is marriage."

 

"Sugar-free ice pops are an invention

of God. They hardly have any calories

since they're mostly water.

I eat about 15 pops every two days."

 

"I know that you like to see a man in

the kitchen, but I'm skeptical of men

who cook.

A man should be focusing his attention

on the woman, and not what's on the

stove."

 

"I fly economy. I do often fly first class,

but I don't travel with a posse, or

bodyguard, or an assistant."

 

"It's in the history books, the Holocaust.

It's just a phrase. And the truth is it

happened yesterday.

It happened to my mother.

I never met my grandmothers or my

grandfathers. They were all wiped up

in the gas chambers of Nazi Germany."

 

"My mother is probably the wisest

person I've ever known.

She's not schooled, she's not well-

read.

But she has a philosophy of life

that makes well-read people seem

like morons."

 

"You know why I'm pulling your leg?

Because I can't touch it from where

I am."

 

"When you walk through a bad

neighborhood, you don't want

a poodle by your side.

You want a Rottweiler."

 

"First, when I was 12, I saw a Spanish

girl jumping rope.

I never saw her face, but it was still

the most beautiful sight I'd ever seen."

 

"If you're building a house, or doing

anything, time is what you've got.

Well, there's effort, but you need time.

The more time you put into something,

the better stuff you can make."

 

"Well, I'm like most Americans, we don't

vote by party, we both by the person,

because a person is bigger than the party,

which is why sometimes the Democrats

get in and sometimes the Republicans

get in."

 

"I crave ideas, and when an idea hits

me, it grips me and it tortures me until

I master it."

 

"Live and think like a poor man

and you'll always be OK."

 

"I worship scones and danishes.

If I never had another meal, I

wouldn't care as long as I could

eat pastries and jelly doughnuts."

 

"I fail all of the time. It means nothing."

 

"I would urge all bands that say they

only care about credibility and don't

care about money to send Gene

Simmons every dollar that they don't

want. I'd be happy to take it off them."

 

"Don't believe bands who say it's all

about the fans and they want to give

their music away for free.

The result is they will continue to live

in their mother's basement."

 

"Everyone in Kiss is replaceable.

My ego will tell you that I am not,

but that's not so."

 

"The only jobs kids have are to do well

in school, to be charming and polite,

and be thankful.

That's it. I'll house you, protect you, I'll

even give my life for you, and in return,

you will behave."

 

"I am an entrepreneur in the classic mold.

No matter what I do - outside of sticking

my tongue out - I tend to make money,

and quite a bit in non-KISS stuff."

 

"I work for everything I've got. I started

off as a very poor kid. I want to get paid."

 

"I don't wanna go on vacation. There's

nothing about it that appeals to me.

People look forward to doing that;

I look forward to getting up every day

and doing something."

 

"I think it's pathetic that women and

men treat each other worse than we

treat our pets. It's love or hate."

 

"Personally I support 14,000 kids in

Zambia - I feed and clothe them -

but I don't hold press conferences

about it. I don't do it so you'll think

what a nice person I am; it's private."

 

"I like to approach every day like

it's the only day I will ever have."

 

"Never negotiate with kids. They don't

have life experience, and they don't

have repercussions for bad decisions;

they still get fed and housed."

 

"When you are a rock star in front of

20,000 people, you receive instant

gratification. A rock star on tour is a

king in his domain."

 

"I have to have an emotional connection

to what I am ultimately selling because it

is emotion, whether you are selling religion,

politics, even a breath mint."

skyscraper develop on sky background

A developing Supercell across far Northeast Wisconsin on July 1 2017. Only isolated storms were expected, but this beast began to develop along an old outflow boundary from a storm early in the afternoon. Aiding in the development was a lake breeze boundary. The updraft was so explosive.

Developed on site with my backpack wet plate kit.

Developed in Fomadon R09

Website institucional Wallpaper Revestimentos. (www.wallpaper.com.br)

Marcos Rey: Tiago Rodrigues.

Marlon Lemes: Design gráfico / interface | Flash + Actionscript 2.

Elloa Lisboa: HTML / CSS.

Agência: TA Comunicação. 2010.

Developing Thunderstorm exploding during the mid afternoon hours on June 27 2013. Marinette County WI.

Canon AE1-Program

Canon FD 50mm, f1.4

Kodak Vision3 250D

Tetenal Colortec C41 kit

Reflecta RPS 10M

Colorperfect, Photoshop, Lightroom.

Ilford hp5+ @1600 developed in a half-stand rodinal bath.

From September 15th to 19th the second of the four JCOM Masterclasses, educational programmes aimed at an international audience and held by international experts takes place. For the 20 selected participants this interactive course represents a unique opportunity to discuss the state-of-the-art of science exhibition development with particular focus on the possible different design approaches, helping participants to reflect on the relationship between the different media, contents and visitors' experience.

Nikon F3, 50mm f2 lens. Shot on Kentmere 400 developed in Rodinal.

From the banquet on the first evening of the fair.

From September 15th to 19th the second of the four JCOM Masterclasses, educational programmes aimed at an international audience and held by international experts takes place. For the 20 selected participants this interactive course represents a unique opportunity to discuss the state-of-the-art of science exhibition development with particular focus on the possible different design approaches, helping participants to reflect on the relationship between the different media, contents and visitors' experience.

Developed using darktable 2.6.2

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