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The Fall of the House of Usher could be one of the greatest shows Netflix has adapted—or not??? Join our review and let's find out together.We will also be covering our favorite announcements from Netflix Geeked Week 2023. There were a lot of great announcements and trailers.Don't forget to like, share, and subscribe to our channel for more contentYou can also listen to the podcast on your favorite platform and visit the Los Wise Guys website below!loswiseguys.comhttps://linktr.ee/loswiseguysAnd be sure to follow the guys at:Dan - @lwg_danrosadoEslam - @lwg_eslamDisco - @emperor.disco#netflix #netflixgeekedweek #thefallofthehouseofusher #edgerallanpoe
The House Of Usher by Edger Allan Poe
Hello Boils & Ghouls Welcome to another episode of the Rotten Reviews Podcast, We are going back to TUBI to watch another movie, this time it's another Romero movie alongside Dario Argento doing two tales based on Edger Allan Poe tales. tonight's movie is Two Evil Eyes from 1990, so get a drink and grab a snack sit back, and let the movie begin. As well, as always the outro music is done by Toronto Horror-based band, Blood Opera, make sure to check out their links below! Click the links below to check them out! https://www.instagram.com/bloodoperainc/ https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCYh05m0XvlJBiFQg6iVZazA https://open.spotify.com/artist/4C1tojZjawQYajuFiPGCwn?si=jCJN6bE7RCCZWxZ-1r8yjQ Also, check these links below to check out more of my stuff as well!
It's trivia; it's a list; it's my comeback episode from paternity break. Is there a better way to come back than to lay out some facts that sound unreal, but are in fact, true? I don't think so. That's why I recorded this little ditty. Because if I thought of someway better, then wouldn't I have done that instead? Think about it [insert listener name here]. I know you're better than that [insert listener name here]. Topics include sunflowers and other flora, Edger Allan Poe's secret stash of hidden hearts, and an ancient way early humans figured out the equator's circumference; if that kind of thing is important to you in a description. Music from (Ncrtnm). Song: Friction Available at: https://freemusicarchive.org/music/Nctrnm My Socials Spotify: https://spoti.fi/3cIgMjE Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/backtworadio Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/backtworadio/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/back2radio Twitch: https://www.twitch.tv/back2radio Website: https://www.back2radio.org/ --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
We are uploading this short story in Tasneef Haider's voice.
A new episodeSupport this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/witchs-tale/donations
Computer analysis of Edgar Allen Poe's work attempts to determine his state of mind.
Americans have a love of booze, and booze sure has a love of us at least according to all the flags they put in their commercials. But what most of us big city folks don't understand is that wide swaths of American, nearly 5% nation wide live under an oppressive regime of mandatory sobriety in the form of Dry Counties. Today we'll explore the who what where when why and huh of dry counties, sober states and teetotaling towns. Also featuring special guest David Lewis, and a discussion about his time undercover in Seattle's White Nationalist Movement, how they screen out people with mental health issues, and how Edger Allan Poe died of Voter Fraud
Ben and Garth review the Wikipedia page for Public Domain. Check out the Humour Door YouTube channel, (Click Here) coming 29/03/2018 Public Domain Confessions character include but not limited to Aladdin, Beauty, the Beast, Ebenezer Scrooge, everything Charles Dickens, Shakespeare, Beethoven, Silence Films, Robin Hood, Dracula, Martians, Canadians, Jane Austin, Lewis Carroll, Edger Allan Poe, the raven, H.G. Wells, any character from War of the Worlds if there’s any, the nut cracker, Guido of Arezzo, the first horse gif, William Wallace, Ned Kelly, Zorro, Dracula, the Mummy, Sherlock Holmes, John Carter, Frankenstein’s monster, Eugen Polly, Tarzan, Zombies, the Scarecrow, Dorothy Gale, the Tin Man, the Cowardly Lion, Quasimodo, King Kong, Ivanhoe, Alice, the White Rabbit, the March Hare, the Mad Hatter, the Door Mouse, Twiddle Dum, Twiddle Dee, the Queen of Heart, the Caterpillar, Jack Pumpkin Head, Gravestone, The Protectors, Doodle, Yank, Man of War, Mars God of war, Damocles, Dr. Jekyll/ Mr Hyde, Kathooloo, Yahweh, Thor, Herculeses, Zeus, Sampson, Achilles, the Hittites, Natty Bomppo, Paul Bunyan, the old women who lived in a shoe, Babe the Blue Ox, Long John Silver, Mrs. Moore, the Wizard of Oz, Fire Hair, Captain nemo, King Arthur, Merlin the Wizard, the Rainbow Serpent, Jesus, the Woogle Bug, Mystico, Chester Cat, Wilhelmina Murray, Brad Spencer (wonder man), Achilles, Nyarlathotep, Red Comet, Allan Quatermain, Atom Man, Hellen of Troy, Mouth Piece, Moby dick, Captain Ahab, Ishmael, the Wicked Witch of the West, Victor Frankenstein, Sinbad, the Sphinx, the Headless horseman, Esau Cairn, Abraham Van Helsing, Aries, Mohamad, Aladdin, Abdul Alhazred, C. Auguste Dupin, Ayesha, Buddy, Beowulf, Bride of Frankenstein, the Creature from the Black Lagoon, Cyclone, Doran Grey, Dagger the Desert Hawk, Don Quixote, Gulliver, Grendel, the Green Giant, Grendel’s Mother, D’Artagnan, Huckleberry Finn, ‘n word’ Jim, Aramis, Porthos, James Moriarty, Judy of the Jungle, the Loch Ness Monster, Moon Girl, Magno, Hugo Danner, the Green Lama, the Fighting Yank, Octobriana, Odysseus, Little Red Riding Hood, Scheherazade, Rapunzel, Rumpelstiltskin, Rosie the Riveter, Rocketgirl, She, the Yellow Kid, Oliver Twist, the Artful Dodger, the Wolf Man, Thor, the Pied Piper, the Mummy, Tom Sawyer, the time traveller, Death but not Mickey Mouse. https://comicvine.gamespot.com/profile/elderfingolfin/lists/best-public-domain-characters/18883/ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Public_domain#Public_domain_books Theme: I Live For The Bass Drum - DJ S3rl https://djs3rl.com/song/i-live-for-the-bass-drum 7th April – 8PM – The Coronation Hotel Jacob Linguard, Dalton Whiskey, Sandeep Totlani & Adam O’Sullivan Hosted by Andrew Dawson Address: 254 Brisbane St, West Ipswich QLD 4305 Facebook: Comedy at the Coronation Hotel Phone: (07) 3281 4470
In this episode of The Comics Alternative, the third of what promises to be an unprecedented five consecutive shows for a single week, Derek and Andy W. discuss four new #1 and one-shot issues. First, they look at Christopher Sebela and Chris Visions's Dead Letters (BOOM! Studios), focusing on the story's clever use of narrative gaps and art-driven action. Then they turn to Shutter (Image Comics), a new series from Joe Keatinge teams up with debut artist Leila del Duca. The guys love the initial setup, but nonetheless wanted more story in this inaugural issue. From there they delve into JC De La Torre and Ray Dillon's Star Mage from IDW Publishing, and what promises to be an intriguing new sci-fi title. Finally, Derek and Andy wrap up with a long discussion of Richard Corben's latest adaptation, Edgar Allan Poe's The Premature Burial (Dark Horse Comics). They point out that the issue also includes an adaption of “The Cask of Amontillado” — in fact, “Cask” takes up more of the issue than does the titular feature — and that it works in similar ways to the other recent Corben adaptations of Poe for Dark Horse, leading up to the fall publication of the collection, Edgar Allan Poe's Spirit of the Dead (Dark Horse Books). The Two Guys had a great time discussing these new comics, and you can join in on the fun as well by lending your ear to this week's review show.
The modern newspaper is not as old as you think. Until the early nineteenth century, they were thin and expensive. It was only with the advent of the penny press circa 1830 that the truly mass broadsheet was born. Yet selling a paper for a cent was not a straight-forward business proposition. In order to turn a profit, you needed to sell a lot of copy. You won’t be surprised to learn that the best way to move papers was to give the people what they wanted–scandal, outrage, marvels, miracles and outright inventions. In The Sun and the Moon. The Remarkable True Account of Hoaxers, Showmen, Dueling Journalists, and Lunar Man-Bats in Nineteenth-Century New York (Basic Books, 2008) shows how the early masters of the trade invented the modern paper by telling the public that the moon was inhabited by the recognizable ancestors of “Bat Boy.” Goodman marches a gallery of rogues across the book’s pages–an astronomer with an over-active imagination, an editor with an invented past, a horde of street urchins hawking papers and eating oysters. P.T. Barnum and Edger Allan Poe make appearances! This is a terrifically entertaining book, popular history at its best. And, of course, it’s ALL TRUE! Now put down The Weekly World News and go buy The Sun and the Moon! Please become a fan of “New Books in History” on Facebook if you haven’t already. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
The modern newspaper is not as old as you think. Until the early nineteenth century, they were thin and expensive. It was only with the advent of the penny press circa 1830 that the truly mass broadsheet was born. Yet selling a paper for a cent was not a straight-forward business proposition. In order to turn a profit, you needed to sell a lot of copy. You won’t be surprised to learn that the best way to move papers was to give the people what they wanted–scandal, outrage, marvels, miracles and outright inventions. In The Sun and the Moon. The Remarkable True Account of Hoaxers, Showmen, Dueling Journalists, and Lunar Man-Bats in Nineteenth-Century New York (Basic Books, 2008) shows how the early masters of the trade invented the modern paper by telling the public that the moon was inhabited by the recognizable ancestors of “Bat Boy.” Goodman marches a gallery of rogues across the book’s pages–an astronomer with an over-active imagination, an editor with an invented past, a horde of street urchins hawking papers and eating oysters. P.T. Barnum and Edger Allan Poe make appearances! This is a terrifically entertaining book, popular history at its best. And, of course, it’s ALL TRUE! Now put down The Weekly World News and go buy The Sun and the Moon! Please become a fan of “New Books in History” on Facebook if you haven’t already. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
The modern newspaper is not as old as you think. Until the early nineteenth century, they were thin and expensive. It was only with the advent of the penny press circa 1830 that the truly mass broadsheet was born. Yet selling a paper for a cent was not a straight-forward business proposition. In order to turn a profit, you needed to sell a lot of copy. You won’t be surprised to learn that the best way to move papers was to give the people what they wanted–scandal, outrage, marvels, miracles and outright inventions. In The Sun and the Moon. The Remarkable True Account of Hoaxers, Showmen, Dueling Journalists, and Lunar Man-Bats in Nineteenth-Century New York (Basic Books, 2008) shows how the early masters of the trade invented the modern paper by telling the public that the moon was inhabited by the recognizable ancestors of “Bat Boy.” Goodman marches a gallery of rogues across the book’s pages–an astronomer with an over-active imagination, an editor with an invented past, a horde of street urchins hawking papers and eating oysters. P.T. Barnum and Edger Allan Poe make appearances! This is a terrifically entertaining book, popular history at its best. And, of course, it’s ALL TRUE! Now put down The Weekly World News and go buy The Sun and the Moon! Please become a fan of “New Books in History” on Facebook if you haven’t already. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
The modern newspaper is not as old as you think. Until the early nineteenth century, they were thin and expensive. It was only with the advent of the penny press circa 1830 that the truly mass broadsheet was born. Yet selling a paper for a cent was not a straight-forward business proposition. In order to turn a profit, you needed to sell a lot of copy. You won’t be surprised to learn that the best way to move papers was to give the people what they wanted–scandal, outrage, marvels, miracles and outright inventions. In The Sun and the Moon. The Remarkable True Account of Hoaxers, Showmen, Dueling Journalists, and Lunar Man-Bats in Nineteenth-Century New York (Basic Books, 2008) shows how the early masters of the trade invented the modern paper by telling the public that the moon was inhabited by the recognizable ancestors of “Bat Boy.” Goodman marches a gallery of rogues across the book’s pages–an astronomer with an over-active imagination, an editor with an invented past, a horde of street urchins hawking papers and eating oysters. P.T. Barnum and Edger Allan Poe make appearances! This is a terrifically entertaining book, popular history at its best. And, of course, it’s ALL TRUE! Now put down The Weekly World News and go buy The Sun and the Moon! Please become a fan of “New Books in History” on Facebook if you haven’t already. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices