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This is a Horror Reel for Anastasia Potapov
It was made in the shadow of Eleven from "Stranger things"
Basically run away government testing labs of gifted kids.
There are many movies that reflect this:
E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial (1982) & Firestarter (1984) With Drew Barrymore
Super 8 (2011) With Ellie Fanning
The X-Files (1993) David Duchovny, Gillian Anderson
The Shining (1980)
Poltergeist (1982) Heather O'Rourke
** Warning ** These are shots used for giving starting actors and models a look to get roles in the Horror genre.
** Disclaimer ** No Children ( Or Parents ) was harmed in this photoshoot, all prop use, Outfits, and poses was done with strict parental supervision.
www.instagram.com/anastasia_marie_potapov/
www.facebook.com/anastasiapotapovofficial/
#Ghost #AmericanHorrorStory #Portrait #filmmaking #Headshots #kidsofhorror #Hollywood #filmmaker #Haunting #actors #vampire #video #childactor #Zombies #movies #Girl #Photography #Child #Actress #Casting #Horror
Dozens of Greater Manchester’s faith and community leaders stood together against hatred as they signed a new statement pledging their commitment to encouraging strong, diverse communities.
Leaders, including GMP Chief Constable Ian Hopkins, Councillor Carl Austin-Behan, Lord Mayor of Manchester, Rt Revd David Walker, Bishop of Manchester, Mrs Sharon Bannister, President, Jewish Representative Council of Greater Manchester and Region, Mr Qadir Chohan, Chair, Manchester Council of Mosques and many others came together at Manchester Cathedral to sign the statement, created as a result of a rise in hate crimes following the EU referendum result.
Greater Manchester saw a 23 per cent increase in hate crime in the week after the country chose to leave the European Union at the end of June.
Chief Constable Ian Hopkins said: “I believe in a democratic society people should be safe, both from physical harm, but also from hatred. Sadly we are seeing a significant number of people across Greater Manchester being subjected to hate incidents and hate crimes. This is totally unacceptable. Today is an important step in uniting our communities and am pleased to see so many other influential people standing with us to end hate crime and discrimination.
“This statement very clearly reinforces our commitment to encouraging inclusive communities, whilst recognising the difference people bring to Greater Manchester that help make it such a wonderful place. It is also, however, a very strong message to those who go against this – there is absolutely no place for hatred or discrimination in Greater Manchester. We will do all we can to take action against anyone who commits hate crimes.”
Faith Leaders’ Secretary, Canon Steve Williams, said: “The speed with which Faith Leaders acted shows how serious we consider the situation to be. But it also shows that people in our communities want to make a positive difference – to support people who’ve suffered in this way, and to promote good-news stories of acts of kindness and inclusion that build bridges, not barriers.”
The statement is part of GMP’s We Stand Together’ campaign which encourages people to come together as one and celebrate their differences in order to build safer and stronger communities.
It was signed at an event hosted by the Diocese of Manchester on Tuesday, 12 July, which saw speeches from Chief Constable Ian Hopkins, the Dean, Bishop David Walker, The Lord Mayor and the Police and Crime Commissioner.
Anyone who experiences hate crime is encouraged to report it by calling the police on 101, Crimestoppers anonymously on 0800 555 111 or using the True Vision website (www.report-it.org.uk).
To find out more about Greater Manchester Police please visit www.gmp.police.uk
You should call 101, national non-emergency number, to report crime and other concerns that do not require an emergency response.
Always call 999 in an emergency, such as when a crime is in progress, violence is being used or threatened or where there is danger to life.
You can also call anonymously with information about crime to Crimestoppers on 0800 555 111.
Crimestoppers is an independent charity who will not want your name, just your information. Your call will not be traced or recorded and you do not have to go to court or give a statement.
Kenneth Anderson with Dr. Susan Collins, UW Seattle, researcher at DESC's 1811 Eastlake Housing First Project - the so-called wet house
selby game fair 2010 venue
History of the House and Family.
At the time of the Domesday Survey it was recorded as being held, along with 93 other Yorkshire manors, by Robert de Brus. This great holding was gradually subdivided over the following centuries. When Peter de Brus died in 1268 Carlton passed to his sister Laderine and her husband John de Bellew. On the latter’s death in 1301 it was inherited by Nicholas Stapleton, son of Sir Miles Stapleton and Sibyl de Bellew.
The Stapletons came originally from Stapleton-on-Tees near Darlington. They were a prominent family in the Middle Ages. Sir Miles Stapleton fought in Scotland under Edward I, was Steward of the Household to Edward II and died at Bannockburn in 1314.
He had two sons, Nicholas who inherited Carlton, and Sir Gilbert. The latter’s sons were among the most distinguished members of the family. Sir Miles, the eldest, was one of the original 24 Knights of the Garter, a friend of the Black Prince and an expert tilter. Sir Brian, the younger son, was Warden of Calais and also a Knight of the Garter. He acquired the family crest, a Saracens head, by killing an infidel at a tournament in the presence of the Kings of Scotland, England and France. From him Carlton passed to his grandson, Brian, and he was the first of the family to live there.
In about 1476 Brian Stapleton of Carlton married Joan, the niece and co-heiress of the second and last Viscount Beaumont. The Beaumonts were descended from the princely Frankish house of Brienne, which had produced the last Christian King of Jerusalem. (John I, b. 1148). This made the Stapletons heirs to the barony of Beaumont, a barony in fee, which could pass through the female line and be held by women. The last English titles in fee were created at the coronation of Richard II in 1377 and most later English titles are entailed on heirs male only. The title was not, however, re-claimed for over 300 years.
Although there is known to have been a house on the site from at least the 14th century, nothing visible remains, nor are there any documentary records of it. There is no evidence; for instance, that there was a private chapel in the medieval house at Carlton, but the village church was a manorial chantry chapel associated with the Stapleton family. Somehow it survived the suppression of Sir Miles’s kinsman, Fr. Thomas Thwing, who was accused of treason as part of the same plot, being a priest was refused a special jury and was condemned to death on the perjured evidence of a couple of notorious informers. He was hanged, drawn and quartered on 23rd October 1680 at Knavesmire just outside York, the last Catholic priest to be martyred in England.
At the time of James II’s flight from the throne in 1688 there was a further wave of anti-Catholic feeling and on 16 December a mob armed with guns and pitchforks broke into the house and carried off Sir Miles and some of his household as far as Ferry Bridge where they were released without being harmed. Miles married twice but had no sons. On his death in 1705 the baronetcy became extinct and Carlton was left to his sister’s son, Nicholas Errington of Pontiland, Northumberland, who took the name of Stapleton. His grandson, Thomas Stapleton, who succeeded in 1750 improved the estate and altered the house. He landscaped the park to a plan by Thomas White in 1765 and added the long East Wing, designed by Thomas Atkinson of York, to contain a new Neo-classical chapel and extensive stables, in 1777. Barred by his religion from entering politics or the army Thomas Stapleton devoted himself to the turf. He was a keen breeder of horses, and pictures of some of them survive with their names inscribed -‘Tuberose’, ‘Miss Skeggs’, ‘Beaufremont’,‘Magog’ and ‘Cannibal’. He raced in partnership with Sir Thomas Gascoigne and together they won the first St. Leger with ‘Hollondaise’ in 1778. Next year Thomas Stapleton won it on his own with ‘Tommy’. Some of their racing cups can be seen at Lotherton Hall, near Leeds, a former home of the Gascoignes.
In 1795 Thomas Stapleton laid claim to the dormant barony of Beaumont. The matter was referred to the Committee of Privileges and the claim was allowed in 1840 when his great-nephew, Miles Thomas Stapleton, was called to the Lords as 8th Lord Beaumont. He celebrated his ennoblement by gothicising the house in 1842 to his own design. He also had literary aspirations, writing some rather poor plays and poems, but his chief interest was politics. Like several of the old Catholic families he objected to the restoration of the Catholic hierarchy in England in 1850, and in protest joined the Church of England.
On his death in 1854 his eldest son was only six years old. Henry, 9th Lord Beaumont, belonged to the generation of the great Catholic revival in England. He was up at Oxford with the 3rd Marquess of Bute, whose conversion to Catholicism inspired Disraeli’s novel Lothair, and David Hunter-Blair who also became a Catholic, a Benedictine monk and eventually Abbot of Fort Augustus. Like many of his contemporaries Henry was building mad and soon after coming of age he began the megalomaniac transformation of Carlton which occupied him for the rest of his life in between military adventures in distant lands. His extravagance led to the sale of the greater part of the estate. He married, in 1888, Violet Wootton Isaacson, but there were no children of the marriage and on his early death from pneumonia in 1892 Carlton passed to his brother Miles, a regular soldier then commanding the 20th Hussars, having first joined the Coldstream Guards.
In 1893 Miles married Ethel, daughter and heiress of Sir Charles Henry Tempest of Broughton Hall, Skipton, and Heaton in Lancashire. She brought to Carlton many of the most interesting pictures and her fortune saved the house and remaining estate.
The 10th Lord Beaumont was tragically killed in a shooting accident, only three years after inheriting. He was succeeded by his eldest daughter, Mona, who was then only a year old. She married in 1914, the 3rd Lord Howard of Glossop, great-grandson of the 13th Duke of Norfolk who until his death in 1972 was heir presump tive to the dukedom. They had eight children, ‘the eight M’s: Miles, Michael, Mariegold, Martin, Miriam, Miranda, Mirable and Mark.
Lady Beaumont owned Carlton for 76 years, a period, which saw two world wars and great social changes. In the Second World War the house was used as an auxiliary military hospital but suffered little damage and was carefully restored to its original condition afterwards at a time when many other large Victorian houses were being demolished.
Her eldest son, Miles Francis Stapelton Fitzalan Howard,inherited both the beaumont and Howard of Glossop baronies and in 1975 suceeded his cousin as 17th Duke of Norfolk and Earl Marshall of England.
Major General Miles Francis Stapleton Fitzalan Howard (1915-2002) was married to Anne Mary Constable - Maxwell, great grand-daughter of the 10th Baron Herries. They had two sons and three daughters - Edward William (18th Duke of Norfolk), Lord Gerald Fitzalan Howard, Lady Tessa (Countess Balfour), Lady Carina Frost and Lady Marsha George. Lord Gerald Fitzalan Howard, his wife Emma and their children, Authur, Florence and Grace, now live at Carlton Towers.
So the other day it was Self harm awareness day and they say to write Love on your arm so that's what I did.
day 27/365.
i did this a couple days ago but of course picked at it and made it bleed again. i tell most that i do it because it's something i can control but in reality, i can't control it. it's an old habit that comes around whenever it feels like it. cutting is what i do the least. i hit myself almost daily. people don't notice it because it just looks like i accidentally hit the table or accidently cut the corner too quick and hit my shoulder on the wall. there's always a reason inside my head for me to hurt myself. i've lost sooo many people in my life because once they find out about it, they wanna distance themselves from me. they can't handle it. and really, i understand. it's hard to come to terms that someone you know is a little bit crazy. but i, on the other hand, would never leave someone that's not ok. i would only make myself more available to them. sometimes just smiling at someone can make their day. when someone takes the time to compliment me or just say something positive to me, it makes my day. it really does. it's the little things that count some times. so if you have a friend that self harms or you think might self harm, smile at them. tell them they look really pretty one day. text them in the morning and just say "good morning, hope you have a good day!". waking up to something like that changes my whole day. if i start my day happy, i can usually go a whole day without hurting myself. some times i can go weeks without hurting myself just because of one person making my day, every day.
Maybe it's semantics, but it is important to me..
No one willingly "gives up their life" for their country. They fight for their country. They sacrifice for their country. They stand up and put themselves at risk for their country. They willingly submit to the stupidity of the system for their country. And far too often, they do die for their country.
But they don't "lay down their lives for their country. At least, I hope not. I hope they go down fighting, tooth and nail, doing everything in their power to survive. I think it may have been General Patton who said that every soldier's duty, is to do his best not to die for his country, but to make the enemy die for his.
That said, soldiers do die. And they do put themselves in harm's way for their country, their way of life, and their friends and their futures.
For that, and for them, we are deeply indebted, and thankful..
Comil Campione Vision 3.45 / Volkswagen 17-230EOD / Jaguarão, Uruguay.
©2019 PABLO PHOTO BUSS - Pablo Chagas / Se prohibe su difusión con alteración u omición de créditos.
From a shoot i did with the Trash Metal band Harm from Norway.
Check them out at www.myspace.com/harmmetal
The pictures was taken at an old german plane hangar from WW2. Actually a cool location, but way packed with this and that.
Check out the behind the scenes pictures:
I will post some more pictures from this session, so stay tuned!.
Strobist:
2x Bowens 500w in Stripboxes back right and left for rim
1x Hensel Porty 12 boomed over camera. medium size octabox
Prime Minster Theresa May travelled to France for the Online Harms Summit held at the Élysée Palace, Paris.
28/08/2020. Ladies European Tour 2020. Tipsport Czech Ladies Open. Golf Club Beroun, Czech Republic. August 20-30 2020 Leonie Harm of Germany during the first round. Credit: Tristan Jones.
28/08/2020. Ladies European Tour 2020. Tipsport Czech Ladies Open. Golf Club Beroun, Czech Republic. August 20-30 2020 Leonie Harm of Germany during the first round. Credit: Tristan Jones.
Self Harm: AS Coursework.
THE EVENT THIS IMAGE SHOWS IS FAKE.
I am addressing issues for A-level coursework and the first issue I am exploring is Mental Health.
Tommy Harmer is sitting next to Danny Blanchflower. Harmer the ;charmer; was a great in his day as many older fans will testify Already the makings of the double side were starting to flower as 8 members of this team created history in the following few years.Billy Nick had his vision on how he would see things to be.The push and run system would dictate on how his vision would unfold.lt certainly made a benchmark for a good while .love the Badge
30/08/2020. Ladies European Tour 2020. Tipsport Czech Ladies Open. Golf Club Beroun, Czech Republic. August 20-30 2020 Leonie Harm of Germany during the final round. Credit: Tristan Jones.
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