Innovative Souls PR & Media group continues to develop and produce content for television, create publicity for people and products, marketing, branding and talent booking. We had a blast booking Gary Busy and all star lineup for Jon Lovitz "Lovitz or Leavits", to booking Amy Pohler, and comedian "Heather McDonalds on CBS "Women That Soar Awards". We are a creative think tank. We've produced "Hollywood's Master Storytellers", "Psychic Cab" and "Juicy & Jaded" radio show, just to name a few. We're highly experienced in PR and Marketing and live, eat and breath entertainment. Nadine Christine Hamdan
I grew up reading the X-Men as a child and I related so much being a gay in place where literally being gay could get you killed. I would never forget some scenes in the comics that shaped my life. For example -" born this way" jubilee saying it to her parent. - Rogue couldn't touch the boys she liked because it might get them killed. - scarlet witch struggling with mental problems. 😢. I am not sure he meant those messages or just a byproduct of him wanting money still thank you and Rip.
He never created the X-Men to be about anything. When he created it he wasn't thinking social justice or civil rights it was basically so he could be a lazy writer.
Oh Stan definitely meant in that way. He talked bout how the story was anti-bigotry and how he subconsciously wrote with those themes. There's also Chris Claremont who created Jubilee, Gambit and Rogue. Chris rebooted the comics to be much more obvious with those themes.
@@shulamitwhatsittoya6550 I agree Stan's X-Men stories really touch bigotry, politics, racism etc. though they did tend to be more subtle, and the plots were more about superhero stuff . Claremont was the guy who really focused on the social topics.
Despite some of the effects being aged, the original Terminator remains a much tighter and focused film than T2. The Cyberdyne subplot initially meant to be a part of T1 too makes the antagonist in T2 disappear completely for like a fully 30+ minutes plus, which never once remotely happend in the original. It seems to be in general that working around constraints is actually one of Cameron's biggest strenghts, as his movies alongside to rising budgets went more bloated. Maybe something he picked up from working at Roger Corman's studio, the king of budget restraints. I mean, even the liquid metal terminator -- he was brilliantly portrayed by Robert Patrick. But the focus on the struggle of a vulnerable human against a seemingly unstoppable machine is a dramatically more interesting one than the machine vs machine clash in T2. Plus, to this day nothing conveys the Terminator's terror as a force better than the badly damaged T-800 at the end of T1, barely able to walk, his skin smelling of of burn, rot and decay -- but still carrying on with his mission until he's finally truly terminated, fucker. The more any sequel tried to infuse the Terminators with even more advanced tech and gadget in a bid to top what's come before -- the more they feel like the generic kind of action you get from any kind of over the top super hero movie these days.
She lived at 1223 7th Ave North according to her obit. At 1224 6th Ave North, across the alley, lived Sanford Clark who was her mailman. His adopted teenage son was her paperboy. Look up Sanford Clark and you go down a whole other rabbit hole. DNA not belonging to Alexandra was supposedly found. Time to use genealogical DNA search. Even if reveals this all as an amazing coincidence.
@@maceygreymonsoon5674 pretty sure the family still considers him a suspect. There was a cbc article on the 60th anniversary where the family said they think it’s one of three people, saying one had been cleared by DNA (Clark’s adopted son who co-wrote his bio was tested in 2004), one was dead, and a third they don’t describe at all. Genealogical DNA search would probably solve this no matter who it is.
There's a psychic medium Barb Mather who describes the killer to an artist and the rendition and her description of him resembles Colin Thatcher, it makes the most sense considering he was well protected and he drove a red sports car at the time and one described as such was seen there at the time of the murder
@@maceygreymonsoon5674 I don’t believe in psychics but I think the undescribed suspect is either him or another guy who was the son of another big time local politician. I’m amazed they haven’t done a genealogical dna search. I wonder if the fact they’re still only asking for witnesses means they’re worried the DNA will open a whole can of worms.
I went to see ALIENS EXPO , which was first time all ALIENS cast got together after 30 years. Paxton said that he was told when James was writing Terminator and Aliens (etc) in his garage.. He would eat sweet/sour candy when doing Aliens and savoury chips and food when writing Terminator.
Crazy how so few have seen this and now that jon Voight has come out very brutally attacking liberals maybe more should be paying attention. In between his silliness is alot of truth and I believe the blind will not move on into the new world.
Half of the Marvel comic characters are similar to DC characters: Batman and Iron Man, Atom and Ant-Man, Catwoman and Black Cat, Darkseid and Thanos, Brainiac and Ultron, Green Arrow and Hawkeye. Some are coincidences, some aren't.
Aliens was legend because there wasn't major cgi used if any. If aliens were remade with full cgi it would be awful and would never honor it's original.
Nonsense. Quality CGI by passionate artists would look so convincing that you wouldn't even realize it wasn't real. It's a sad reality for VFX artists that only the worst CGI gets noticed and all the good stuff flies by unbeknownst to the viewer.
"I'm going to take the cowardly way out, if I say that my heroes are mutants and they were just born that way I don't have to explain anything" That's genius hahahaha !!
Yes, we met him and had dinner with him prior to his Q&A. He is easy going and a lot of fun. He was a wonderful guest at our show. I don't know about the bad attitude, but he certainly didn't have one when we were with him.
@@kytim89 I hope not. I'm in the entertainment industry and it's challenging. All I know is how he was with us. It couldn't be easy being a director. But totally get what you're saying.
i'm totally the opposite i like being in camera (': and when the person in fifth avenue church i went to record the video. while i was part of a christmas events or drama class at that church i goes to. i don't mind :')
Sheila E. with Kat Dyson (Guitar), Rhonda Smith (Bass), Cassandra O'Neal (Keys) and Cora Coleman Dunham (Drums), all from the Prince School of Music...what a talent
Priya Pitre maybe they just laugh that way? I hate it when people say "jimmy's laugh sounds so so fake". Well maybe he laughs that way. I don't think he stands in front of the mirror practicing a fake laugh. Dafak?
i believe it was based on the cilvil rights movement with charlers being martin luther king taking a non violent approach to his oppressors while magneto takes the stance of malcom X. not only that but little things like cyclops directly feeding from the sun when the only things that does that to such an extent in reality is melanin.
+Rayshard Small it was actually based on the struggle blacks faced during the civil rights movement the creator of x-men admitted this but he used the word 'struggle' rather than racist which I would've preferred because the racists will still deny it's about racism. They don't accept truth anyway so maybe it doesn't matter, me personally, I think I know what he meant. And him admitting he based it of the struggled blacks faced during the civil rights movement is enough, that he did clearly say and yet racists still try to claim to mutants aren't black or its not about racism.
Stan Lee and Jack Kirby based The X-Men concept on McCarthyism and the nuclear age, which is why in the early books were based on the fear that anyone could be a mutant (similar to how "anyone could be a Russian"). It's the reason Lee and Kirby dubbed the team "Children of the Atom." It's only in the 1990s when Magento made some yin/yang comparison of him and Charles Xavier in "X-Men 1" that people started trying to make a cumbersome parallel Magneto and Professor X with Malcolm X and Martin Luther King Jr., respectively.