View allAll Photos Tagged troublemaker
Momma Stella on the right, her baby, Troublemaker on the left. I purchased the two to replace my elder Layla, who had been my horse’s buddy, before she passed. As I observed the baby grow from 2 months to now over 2 years old, the love between the two has also grown and momma continues to be ever protective of her offspring. This love truly displays why humans should be vegan. Dairy farming is vicious, and totally inhumane. Do you want to endorse stripping a baby calf from its mother cow, listen to them scream for each other, then force her to produce her baby’s milk all for a piece of cheese? Please say no.
The Troublemakers Film Project is a new initiative that brings young LGBT2Q+ filmmakers together to create a series of mini-documentary portraits on change-making seniors. A partnership with Vancouver Queer Film Festival & Out in Schools and made possible by the BC Arts Council!
This is just a fun video for Greyhound lovers. These are old photos back when I got my first DSLR and was learning how to take action shots. When I took these Bailey was just recently adopted and was having the time of his life with his new sister, Googie. We lost Googie to cancer in 2016 not long after this.
Thanks for watching.
Title: We Are All Connected
Length: 60 Sec
Client: WWF - World Wildlife Foundation
Agency: Ogilvy & Mather Mexico
VP Creative Director: Jose Montalvo
Creative Directors: Victor Alvarado, Fernando Carrera
Agency TV Producer: Juan Pablo Osio
Production Company: www.Troublemakers.tv
Director / Art Director: Mato Atom
Producer: James Hagger
Assistant Producer: Mélanie Aguilar Fauconnier
Storyboarder: Leonardo Weiss
Post Production: Digital District
Post Producer: Peggy Tavenne
Managing Director: David Danesi
SFX: Thomas Marqué
Animation: Romuald Caudroit
Modeling: Jimmy Cavé, Kevin Monthureux
Lighting / Renders: Nicolas Belin
Compositing / Flame: Seif Boutella
Assistant Flame: Amandine Moulinet
Music: Human
First Aired: 04/02/2011
Watch this video on Vimeo. Video created by vimeo.com/troublemakers.
The Troublemakers Film Project is a new initiative that brings young LGBT2Q+ filmmakers together to create a series of mini-documentary portraits on change-making seniors. A partnership with Vancouver Queer Film Festival & Out in Schools and made possible by the BC Arts Council!
Hamburg-Wandsbek
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i spend the morning witht this little guy.
he is so happy, so hyper and adorable!
[sorry for the -not- so sharpen picture, he thought it was fun to move around while taking his picture]
twenty four of a hundred
Sometime early summer chips started to spit out of the gearbox on my big lathe with no apparent reason. When inspecting the dammage, it turned out that one cog, and one axle with machined cog had been severly damaged. Luckily I managed to find new parts (for a lathe from '52!), but the reason for the whole incident was a mystery up until yesterday evening. Turned out that these two nuts had come loose, and then the inner one (towards the bracket) had thightened and then seized the whole threading axle. Which in turn transferred to the gearbox and ate the gears. One more problem to fix, but one mystery left to be solved.
The Troublemakers Film Project is a new initiative that brings young LGBT2Q+ filmmakers together to create a series of mini-documentary portraits on change-making seniors. A partnership with Vancouver Queer Film Festival & Out in Schools and made possible by the BC Arts Council!
The Troublemakers Film Project is a new initiative that brings young LGBT2Q+ filmmakers together to create a series of mini-documentary portraits on change-making seniors. A partnership with Vancouver Queer Film Festival & Out in Schools and made possible by the BC Arts Council!
This photo isn't all that great, but it marks the third time in two weeks I got hassled for shooting pics in Atlanta's public transport system.
This thing (I'm not even sure what it is) is at the bottom of the escaltor at the exit of the train station. I was barely IN the station. I looked around to be sure I was alone, and I took two shots before I heard a transit cop shouting at me from the top of the stairs.
I have no idea where he came from, unless he had been following me for a long stretch. There was no way he was hidden somewhere near the stairs.
Fortunately, a couple of buses had just pulled up nearby, and I pretended the noise of the engines prevented me from hearing. I put the camera down and calmly and slowly walked away. I was hoping my slow pace would indicate that I was doing nothing culpable. I hoped the cop would then be too lazy to come all the way down the stairs and hassle me.
But no such luck. The cop caught up with me and stopped me. He lectured me about needing a permit to shoot photos. I listened blankly. My only response was something like, "Oh, ok."
After staring at me for a couple of seconds the cop let me go. At least he wasn't like the assholes I encountered previously.
I remain convinced the transit system has no legal basis for stopping me from shooting there. I probably will call the Public Communication Office to ask about getting permission. But I kind of don't want to. I'm not a troublemaker-- or at least I've never been much of one until now-- but it pisses me off the transit authority enforces this policy of questionable legality.
I'm becoming tempted not to seek a permit, and just make it a game.
The Troublemakers Film Project is a new initiative that brings young LGBT2Q+ filmmakers together to create a series of mini-documentary portraits on change-making seniors. A partnership with Vancouver Queer Film Festival & Out in Schools and made possible by the BC Arts Council!
I was never a troublemaker in school, but I was paddled once and sent to the principal's office. My sin? Failing to hear the teacher when she told us to put our story books away. I was lost in my books, and no amount of punishment could change that.
Or so I thought. Becoming a writer and editor changed everything, from what I read to how I read. Eventually, it sapped the freedom from my greatest escape. Reading for pleasure was a luxury I couldn't afford, and when I did grab a book, I felt like it had to be high-minded and serious. My adult stresses and worries swam between the lines, destroying whatever pleasure I found.
Last night, I turned off my iPhone, picked up my Kindle, and downloaded a book I swore I would never read. And to my surprise, I was quickly captivated.
Is 44 too old to read Harry Potter for the first time? Maybe. Probably. But you're never too old to rekindle an old flame.
The Troublemakers Film Project is a new initiative that brings young LGBT2Q+ filmmakers together to create a series of mini-documentary portraits on change-making seniors. A partnership with Vancouver Queer Film Festival & Out in Schools and made possible by the BC Arts Council!
Vintage Trouble @ Highline Ballroom, NYC - 03/04/13
shot for www.live4ever.uk.com
all rights reserved © www.rockographer.com
Savannah's saga continues. While maintaining her extreme photogenic cuteness, the little troublemaker has settled back in to her life here with us in Manhattan, turning up her cuddling charm and generally causing us to forget why we'd not been able to make it work in the first place. Three weeks ago we began twice-daily steroid pills (hidden in these -- a miracle invention) which has seemingly had a significant impact on her breathing and well-being, keeping the cancer at bay at least for now. A few final days turned into a few final weeks turned into ... who knows how many more nights gracing my lap with her curling ball of purr?
So last weekend we decided to bring Jolene back too. Her stay in New Jersey was never meant to be long-term, and with Savannah's life now extended longer than we'd anticipated, we needed to see if these two could cohabitate in our 596 square feet.
We knew we had to be patient. We knew we should employ various tips and tricks and time-honored techniques to integrate a new pet into an existing-pet household. After volunteering at a cat shelter for years in Boston and living with pets my whole life -- I knew all this.
The first night that Jolene was back with us, locked in the bathroom overnight, Savannah peed on our bed. While we were in it. Right on top of my legs, through the comforter, on the sheets and into the mattress. In the 6 am chaos we tried to let them see each other, resulting in Jolene savagely attacking Savannah and us being subjected to the loudest howling, screeching, and caterwauling I've ever heard. The first whole week that Jolene was back, she stayed in the bathroom (we have no other rooms -- this is Manhattan after all) where we visited frequently and provided as many toys and scratching posts as could fit. There was hissing underneath the door, puffy tails and many suspicious looks thrown our ways as we tried to let them get accustomed to each other's sounds and smells.
Yesterday, a full week later, we decided we'd try again and see if this thing could really work. We'd switched their environments, moved beds back and forth, and followed advice online on how to prepare for the eventual meeting. What we weren't prepared for was the scene that transpired, summarized most succintly as a Class A catfight, culminating in a blur of Savannah and Jolene racing up the loft stairs, tumbling balls of screaming fur, chasing each other out onto the top of our 10-foot-tall shelving where Savannah eventually lost her footing and fell all 10 feet to the floor, hitting a chair on her way down. Needless to say this was all awful and traumatic to witness, like watching someone about to get hit by a car, paralyzed by the inability to help. We brought her immediately to the vet -- I mean, she has fluid in her chest still and despite the steroids, is not exactly in the kind of shape to handle a tumble like that -- where they x-rayed her again and assured us that at least for the moment, she was ok.
We have a 48-hour window in which to watch her carefully for signs of bleeding into the lungs or any leakage of the existing fluid. So here we sit, vigilant once again, watching the little shaved chest go up and down. Jolene's back in the bathroom, happy to be safe and free I think from her mortal enemy. We'll figure out our next steps later -- for now we need to get to 3 pm on Monday without further incident.
Never a dull moment, I will say that.
The Troublemakers Film Project is a new initiative that brings young LGBT2Q+ filmmakers together to create a series of mini-documentary portraits on change-making seniors. A partnership with Vancouver Queer Film Festival & Out in Schools and made possible by the BC Arts Council!
The Troublemakers Film Project is a new initiative that brings young LGBT2Q+ filmmakers together to create a series of mini-documentary portraits on change-making seniors. A partnership with Vancouver Queer Film Festival & Out in Schools and made possible by the BC Arts Council!