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Category Archives: Rockall

Hear ‘Come and Take It’ From Ted Nugent’s New ‘Detroit Muscle’ LP – Ultimate Classic Rock

Posted: November 13, 2021 at 11:12 am

Ted Nugent has announced a new studio album, Detroit Muscle, due on April 29.

He also officially unveiled the LP's first song, a pro-gun anthem named "Come and Take It," which you can hear below.

Nugent previewed the track during a live video stream earlier this year, and is also selling hats and flags featuring the slogan and song title on his website. "In these bizarro, desperate, treacherous times, it is now more important than ever for we the people to make our stand against tyranny and fascism," he declares on his website, "and nothing says it better than the historical colloquialism 'come and take it!'"

The Detroit-born rocker's 16th solo studio effort is his first since 2018's The Music Made Me Do It. It features his current live band, bassist Greg Smith and drummer Jason Hartless. You can hear a minute-long preview of another Detroit Muscle track, "American Campfire," on Deer and Deer Hunting's Pinterest page.

Nugent is scheduled to return to the road in July 2022, after postponing his summer 2021 tour plans "in light of current events" and to protect "the safety of fans, venue staff and crew." You can keep up with his concert announcements at TedNugent.com.

Ted Nugent, Detroit Muscle Track Listing

"Detroit Muscle""Come and Take It""Born in the Motor City""American Campfire""Driving Blind""Just Leave Me Alone""Alaska""Winter Spring Summer Fall""Leave the Lights On""Feedback Grind Fire""Star-Spangled Banner"

From AC/DC to ZZ Top, from 'Bridge Over Troubled Water' to 'London Calling,' they're all here.

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Hear 'Come and Take It' From Ted Nugent's New 'Detroit Muscle' LP - Ultimate Classic Rock

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Album: Damon Albarn – The Nearer The Source, More Pure The Stream Flows – The Arts Desk

Posted: November 11, 2021 at 5:33 pm

The deliberate austerity of its predecessor, Everyday Robots (2014), was shown when accompanying, full-band gigs revealed the bright pop song finery beneath the albums bleak camouflage. Where others go solo to satisfy band-cramped egos, solo Damon is a place of anticlimax and indirection, where his gift for melody is befogged and hazy.

The Nearer The Source, More Pure The Stream Flows began as an orchestral project inspired by Albarns sometime Reykjavik home, played by Icelandic musicians. The cheap, irritant pulse of a Casiotone drum-machine betrays its homemade, lockdown finish. The title is a line by John Clare, the working-class Romantic poet whose early enraptured accord with rural rhythms became so fractured he was committed to an asylum in Albarns native Essex; a Syd Barrett-style walk back to his Northamptonshire home has added to his sanctity as an artist of the brokenly beautiful, lonely and lost. The title track is accordingly infused with mourning and wistful remembrances. Couched in Clares antique language, its sluggish and near-numb with loss, inspired by the death of Albarns friend and bandmate, the great drummer Tony Allen.

The following track, The Cormorant, updates Seventies Bowies influence on Nineties Blur to the shivery end-games of The Next Day and Blackstar. Inspired by a bird hed see daily on the Devon coast near his home studio, Albarns voice takes on Bowies theatrical quaver and latter-day, wounded wooziness as he recounts days when we were happy here, on the beach/We played with our children... An uncharted cruise ship floats by the songs island battered Albion, here as desolate as Rockall. By the end of Royal Morning Blues, its uptempo funk brass has evaporated like morning mist, leaving him aching for company at the end of the world. Daft Wader comes closest to the bittersweet anthems Blur conjured in such terrain, observing a Lancelot in his beaten up old car; Particles, too, with its relatively fulsome romantic plea: I have cried for you, darling/Are you coming back to me?

The Tower of Motevideo speaks directly to lockdowns state of exile, already fading now, its lessons unlearned. Once there were cinemas, and we had parties, Albarn murmurs, as music and footsteps become phantoms, and a sax soars in an empty Argentine ballroom.

This is an insular and hypnotic, intimate yet distant album, lapped by literal, musique concrete waves. The frayed strands of melodic beauty Albarn allows into his solo retreat are themselves ghostly, reaching out to touch the listener from the hermetic place where the former Britpop king conducts his private experiments, like Dr. Dee, or Robinson Crusoe.

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Album: Damon Albarn - The Nearer The Source, More Pure The Stream Flows - The Arts Desk

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Lace up your hiking boots and pay a visit to Enchanted Rock – The Killeen Daily Herald

Posted: at 5:33 pm

FREDERICKSBURG A little over 100 miles southeast of Killeen-Fort Hood sits one of the states most historic and treasured natural attractions that has produced any number of tall tales and legends since it opened in 1978.

Enchanted Rock is a 640-acre pink granite dome that rises 425 feet above the ground and also stretches another 62 miles beneath the surface. Designated as a state Historical Landmark and National Natural Landmark, it is the largest pink granite monadnock (isolated rock hill, knob, ridge or small mountain) in the country, and a part of the Texas state park system.

More than 400 archeological sites have been identified at the 1,644-acre park that encompasses Enchanted Rock. All these sites are protected, and 120 of them are designated State Archeological Landmarks.

One of the most visited parks in the state system, more than 250,000 people come here each year to see the rock up close and climb it and experience the enduring legends and secrets it is said to contain.

Human beings reportedly camped in this area for 12,000 years, and one lasting sign of their presence are bedrock mortars found throughout the park, where prehistoric people ground or pounded their food on granite rocks, leaving impressions in the stone. Spaniards first explored the area in the 1700s, mounting raids against the Lipan Apache and attempting to establish colonies. Germans and Americans arrived by the mid-1800s, drawn by dreams of having land of their own and tales of gold and silver.

Capt. John Coffee (Jack) Hays was a surveyor and legendary Texas Ranger who was attacked by Indians while surveying near Enchanted Rock in 1841. Cut off from a group of men working with him, Hays climbed the rock and holed up for three hours at the summit, fighting his attackers until help arrived. Look for a historical marker about Hays as you climb the rock.

Among the many Enchanted Rock legends were ghost fires that Tonkawa Indians believed flickered atop the dome. One tall tale speaks of the spirit of an Indian maiden who still haunts the rock after she threw herself off the top upon seeing her tribe killed by an enemy. Another story tells of a young Spanish soldier who rescued his true love just as Comanches were about to burn her at the base of the rock.

Activities at this historic park include caving, hiking, primitive backpacking, camping, picnicking and of course the main attraction climbing the rock.

It takes an average 30 to 45 minutes and 1.3 miles of walking to reach the very top. About a quarter-mile into the trek, the trail gradually disappears and some find themselves wondering which way to continue. No worries. Just keep heading up the incline.

Near the summit, the rock starts to level off and stunning views of the surrounding landscape open up. Watch your step here to avoid little vernal pools (seasonal pools of water that provide habitat for certain plants and animals). Look closely at these waterbeds and observe such things as fairy shrimp (inch-long translucent relatives of lobsters and crabs).

Other creatures to be found here and there are such things as rock squirrels and fox squirrels, armadillos, rabbits, white-tailed deer, lizards, vultures and a variety of bird species. Bird lovers can ask for a bird checklist at park headquarters.

Along with hiking and climbing, another popular activity at Enchanted Rock is star gazing. The park has been designated as an International Dark Sky Park by the International Dark-Sky Association. Area skies are dark enough to see the constellations, shooting stars and even the Milky Way.

There are a number of interesting places to grab a bite to eat not too far from Enchanted Rock, including Old 290 Brewery and Restaurant in nearby Johnson City. Combining Hill County craft beers with Texas-inspired cuisine, this spot offers a menu that includes:

Jalapeno crab cake, brisket flat bread, Texas chili, jumbo shrimp, filet mignon, prime rib, pasta, house-smoked ribs, blackened salmon, burgers and sandwiches, cheesecake, pecan pie, bread pudding, chocolate torte, cheesecake, iced tea, lemonade, sparkling water and soft drinks.

Happy trails and good eatin.

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Lace up your hiking boots and pay a visit to Enchanted Rock - The Killeen Daily Herald

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10 Best College Football Predictions Against The Spread: Week 10. Righting The Wrong – College Football News

Posted: at 5:33 pm

What college football games appear to be the best bets and the bestpicks against the spread going into Week 10? After one of the wildest weekends ever, were righting the wrong.

Week 10 Fearless Predictions, Game Previews CFN Week 10 Experts Picks: College CFN Week 9 Experts Picks: NFL Week 10 Schedule, Game Times, Game PreviewsACC | Big Ten | Big 12 | Pac-12 | SECCollege Football Playoff Rankings Breakdown

Contact/Follow @ColFootballNews& @PeteFiutak

Im a professional.

Ive seen it all, done even more, and I know well enough that when a pick goes the wrong way, you have a short memory, brush it off, and move on.

Last week was something different.

I was already mad that the over didnt come in my absolute lock of Wisconsin-Iowa at 36.5 it stalled at 34 when both teams basically quit with 13 minutes to play and had a TON of chances to score.

Fine. It happens.

So Oregon and Cincinnati didnt play like teams that really want to make big national statements against bad teams. Okay, no big deal.

That didnt bother me, but Wyoming and San Jose State was going absolutely nowhere until the Cowboys scored in the final moments to hit the over on the 41.

And then there was the game that will live in infamy.

Everyone had a part of Clemson and Florida State one way or another.

The under on the 48 was supposed to be a rock, all was fine, and well, you know what happened.

I literally had to take a walk around the block on that one.

But thats the deal. This is the life weve chosen. The belief systems are sound, you dont stray from what you know to be right, and thats why these picks are all correct.

I think.

We deserve it after the Death Valley Disaster.

So how do we get over this? We start with a pick that I know in my heart is probably wrong, but

Results So Far ATS:58-42-1

Click on each game for the preview

LINE 77 Point TotalATS PICK Under

This pick is wrong, but a man is nothing without his principles.

When finalizing the picks in the game previews, I always go with the score before looking at the lines I dont want to be influenced one way or the other.

In this, we went with a shootout that goes just over the 77-point total. But if youve been with this piece all year, you know that over the long haul, if you do the same thing every time you will be up if

You ALWAYS go under on a massive point total of 80 or more, and 77 is close enough.

Wake Forest games are wild, North Carolina has thrown a couple of 59 spots on the board, but and there are no such things as jinxes or curses I think weve nailed this dead-cold this year when going with the unders on massive totals.

Like the under on Wake Forest-Duke last week, which came at 51 on the 71.5.

As always, if its wrong, then youre paying for the entertainment of a wild game, and enjoy the show.

(Everyone, now take a deep breath, because were diving right back in and about to right a horrible, horrible wrong.)

If you have kids around, please dont let them look at this NSFW pick

CFN Week 10 Experts Picks: College

LINE 46.5 Point TotalATS PICKUnder

Yeah, this is an all-timer YOU OWE ME, WORLD of a chaser, but like Clemson -4, and if its not too soon for you I still have leftover trays of meats and cheeses sent to me by close friends and acquaintances after the day of mourning go back in on the point total.

We were right. We were ALL right.

Of course the under was the play last week on Florida State-Clemson.

OF COURSE it was.

It took an all-timer of a final play brilliantly broken down by Scott and Steve on their Bad Beats segment for us to lose that.

The pick didnt come in. It doesnt mean we were necessarily wrong, and the same belief still holds.

Clemson games are really, really, really low scoring. Take out that putrid late touchdown, and the Tigers scored 23 points or fewer in every FBS game.

The Louisville defense isnt playingthatpoorly, and the offense only came up with 13 on NC State. Its not likely to crank it up in the high 20s here.

While were purging all of last weeks pain and suffering by begging for more of it, lets go with another before moving on to more mature picks for serious people.

Wisconsin, lets go.

CFN Week 9 Experts Picks: NFL

LINE37 Point TotalATS PICK Over

Its the SAME thing.

It took something catastrophic to lose the Florida State-Clemson point total, and it took something totally weird to get the Iowa-Wisconsin total wrong.

Just like you always go under on the massive point totals, you always go over on the puny ones. Too many things can go right, and in this, theres one thing that might really make this work.

Wisconsin could hit the 37 all by itself.

The Badger offense is still awful, and it would be more than happy to get up 23-3 and sit on the ball for the last half hour of the game.

I know, three of the last four Wisconsin games havent hit 35, much less 38. I know, the last two Rutgers games made college football sad and they didnt get to 35, either.

Michigan State scored 31 on Rutgers. Ohio State got to 52.

Fiiiiiiiiiine, the under is the smart, sensible call considering how amazing the Badger D is, but all youre asking for is 27-10 to get there, and anything else to go over.

Never let a point total of 37 go to waste.

Next, a point total that shouldnt be right, and if it is, its not your fault

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10 Best College Football Predictions Against The Spread: Week 10. Righting The Wrong - College Football News

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Soccer teams open PSAC tournament with wins THE GANNON KNIGHT – Gannonknight

Posted: at 5:33 pm

Layton Bingham picked a most opportune time to score his first goal of the season Tuesday.

Binghams late goal helped the 19th-ranked Gannon University mens soccer team open Pennsylvania State Athletic Conference tournament action with a 2-1 victory over Seton Hill at McConnell Family Stadium.

On the womens side, Gannon also prevailed, beating visiting Slippery Rock, 5-3, in a quarterfinal game to earn a semifinal berth against the winner of Tuesdays Kutztown-Millersville game. Fridays game will be played either at Kutztown ranked No. 3 in Division II and the top seed in the PSAC East or Millersville.

On the mens side, Bingham headed home Toby Gowers long free kick in the games 78th minute to snap a 1-1 tie and move the No. 2 seed Knights into Fridays 4:30 p.m. semifinal match against Lock Haven. The game will be played at Mercyhurst, which finished first in the PSAC West regular season and is the tournament host.

The winner of Fridays match will advance to the tournament championship match Sunday at Mercyhurst.

Seton Hill, which finished 9-8-2, opened the scoring with a goal by Wilfred Munn in the 10th minute of play. But Gower pulled the Knights now 15-2-2 overall even with a goal off an assist from Magnus Clausen a little more than a minute later. Gowers goal also was his first of the season.

Gannon dominated play throughout, holding a 20-7 advantage in shots, six of which were on goal, and the Knights added seven corner kicks to none for Seton Hill.

Gannon goalkeeper Maximiliano Rocco had just one save, but it was a big one as he stopped a point-blank shot in the 62nd minute, and teammate Bautista Corti deflected a follow-up shot that Rocco ultimately cleared from the box.

Tuesdays womens game was a rematch of Saturdays regular-season finale, which wound up in a 0-0 double-overtime tie. Goals were not as hard to come by Tuesday, however.

The Knights jumped to a 1-0 lead a little over three minutes into the game as Taylor Lewis put one past Slippery Rock goalkeeper Emma Yoder.

But The Rock came back to tie the score at 1-1 in the games fifth minute, with Minda Jordyn converting a corner kick from Katy Ericson.

Gannon snapped the 1-1 tie 10 minutes later when Megan McCartney converted a penalty kick, and Kayla Bevacqua made it 3-1 when she scored in the games 28th minute, getting an assist from Lewis.

Lewis set up the Knights next goal as well, assisting on a shot by Sarah Falls that found the upper left part of the net at the 51:53 mark, making it 4-1.

Falls added her second goal of the game 15 minutes later, this time getting an assist from Bevacqua to increase the lead to 5-1.

Slippery Rock trimmed that lead to 5-2 less than a minute later when George Nagucki got one past Gannon goalkeeper Kennedy Solymosi.

The Gannon men finished regular-season play Saturday with a hard-fought 2-1 victory over visiting Slippery Rock.

Sophomore Charlie Petersen was the deciding factor as he netted an absolute rocket of a shot from 35 yards out in the 34th minute of the first half.

Petersen was assisted by redshirt junior Sergio Del Castillo.

Del Castillo scored a few minutes earlier in the match to answer back a third-minute Slippery Rock goal by freshman Joey Moeller.

Redshirt sophomore goalkeeper David Syntelien got the start for Gannon over Rocco since Rocco was booked the prior match.

Syntelien recorded three saves for Gannon in the winning effort.

The Knights outshot Slippery Rock 17-7 and had four more corner kicks than The Rock (6-2).

On the womens side, Gannons scoreless tie with Slippery Rock enabled the Knights to lock up second place in the PSAC West.

Gannon got off to a fast start, pushing The Rocks limits as it forced nine shots and five corner kicks within the first 22 minutes of the match.

Slippery Rock held its ground with a bend-but-dont-break mentality and kept the game scoreless.

Gannon defender junior Leah Bermudez got a red card in the 39th minute of the half, giving Slippery Rock all the momentum.

However, the Knights didnt let that be a factor and went into the break scoreless.

The next 65 minutes of the match were much of the same for both squads as neither team could break the scoreless tie.

The Knights outshot The Rock 25-11 and held the edge in corner kicks 8-6.

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Soccer teams open PSAC tournament with wins THE GANNON KNIGHT - Gannonknight

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Johnny Rotten Sings Alice Cooper on ‘The Masked Singer,’ Hopes to Make Wife With Alzheimer’s Laugh – Loudwire

Posted: at 5:33 pm

Sex Pistols / PiL legend John Lydon (Johnny Rotten) revealed himself to be The Jester on The Masked Singer last night, but before you get up in arms about cringe or selling out, Lydon did the show to entertain his wife, who is suffering from Alzheimers.

Lydon and wife Nora have been together for over 45 years. The former Sex Pistol even considered taking care of his ailing wife his full-time job for quite some time. Nora has Alzheimers... I am her full-time carer and I wont let anyone mess up with her head, Lydon recently told The Mirror. For me the real person is still there. That person I love is still there every minute of every day and that is my life. Its unfortunate that she forgets things, well, dont we all?

Lydon sang Alice Coopers Schools Out and I Am a Man of Constant Sorrow by Soggy Bottom Boys before revealing himself as the man behind the mask. In his unmasked interview, Lydon spoke beautifully about his wife and folks with Alzheimers.

My wife is very ill, she has Alzheimers, but shes not insane. I love her very much. This kind of thing will make her scream with laughter. I hope she spots me. If she doesnt, she will at some point because weve been together now 45 years, we know each other intimately well and no illness will get in the way of that. Thats a lesson I want to share with all of you dont let situations get you down. Use them to your benefit. This show will benefit not only my baby, but hopefully all the other babies out there that need love and affection and attention and a constant reminder that they are a human being after all, even though their memory turns to Swiss cheese.

In a separate interview with Billboard, Lydon spoke about being a fan of Alice Cooper before he joined the Sex Pistols. It's one of the things when I first joined the band later to be known as the Sex Pistols that I mimed to. Alice Cooper's School's Out and Im Eighteen -- so Alice Cooper is integral to my entire history.

Watch Lydons Masked Singer performances below and click here to order his newest book I Could Be Wrong, I Could Be Right.

See Loudwire's picks for the Top 66 Hard Rock + Metal Frontmen of All Time

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Johnny Rotten Sings Alice Cooper on 'The Masked Singer,' Hopes to Make Wife With Alzheimer's Laugh - Loudwire

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Rod Stewart, ‘The Tears of Hercules’: Album Review – Ultimate Classic Rock

Posted: at 5:33 pm

At 76, Rod Stewart isn't about to let go of his rapscallion ways - at least not in song.

But as he cries The Tears of Hercules on his 31st studio album, and first set of new material in three years, Stewart is both rascal and rhapsodist, taking in across its 12 songs the full measure of a life that ranges from a schoolboy doing time with "Maggie May" to a senior who's comfortably moving to the rhythm of his rock 'n' roll heart.

Coproduced and mostly cowritten with longtime band member Kevin Savigar, with a kind of sterile garage-y/GarageBand sound, Hercules ticks off most of the boxes that Stewart has made his musical stocks in trade over the course ofmore than fivedecades. He kicks up a libidinous storm in tracks such as "One More Time," "Gabriella" and "Kookooaramabama" - the latter a kind of slapdash take on George Michael's "I Want Your Sex" that's as gleefully silly as its title suggests. His take on Soul Brothers Six's "Some Kind of Wonderful" is faithful and buoyant, and "Born to Boogie (A Tribute to Marc Bolan)" name-checks T. Rex's biggest hits before declaring that "when I die, I'll be rockin' up in heaven beside him."

If those leave you wiping a bit of sweat off the brow, then hang on to the hanky for Hercules' second half to take care of the tears. Stewart shifts, somewhat abruptly, into sentimental territory, loving on his wife Penny Lancaster in "I Can't Imagine" and saluting his late father in the album-closing "Touchline." The title track, though written by Marc Jordan for his own version in 2004, is a Celtic-flavored stock-taking about the eternal conflict between home and wanderlust. Stewart treads, lightly, into sociopolitical terrain with "Hold On" and a cover of Johnny Cash's "These Are My People," while "Precious Memories" breaks the sobriety with some lighthearted doo-wop.

The Tears of Hercules' blend and spirit certainly recalls classics such as Every Picture Tells a Story and Never a Dull Moment without replacing them or necessarily offering songs that will find a place in the upper echelon of Stewart's catalog. That's a tough task anyway, so let's be satisfied and perhaps even a little surprised by 45 or so minutes of solid listening, and revel in the fact that even this far down the road this blonde still wants to have more fun.

From AC/DC to ZZ Top, from 'Bridge Over Troubled Water' to 'London Calling,' they're all here.

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Rod Stewart, 'The Tears of Hercules': Album Review - Ultimate Classic Rock

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NOVA Gets Festive With A Christmas Station Hosted By Kylie! – B&T

Posted: at 5:33 pm

In an Australian radio first, NOVA Entertainment launches a Christmas streaming station hosted by Kylie Minogue Kylie Christmas.

NOVA Entertainment has built a radio station to house all of the listeners favourite Christmas songs, hosted by global pop icon Kylie Minogue.

On-air now until Saturday 25 December. Kylie Christmaswill provide the perfect soundtrack to celebrate with friends and family and feel good this festive season.

Peter Clay, head of programming for Nova 969 & smooth network, said: We didnt just want to provide a playlist of Christmas tunes, rather we wanted to create something special.

Kylie has previously hosted her own show on smooth and has also appeared as a guest on Nova many times, we were thrilled Kylie agreed to host her very own streaming radio station.

I would like to personally thank Kylie Minogue, her team and the Mushroom Group for helping us to create something special for listeners leading into Christmas.

Whether you like to Jingle Bell Rock all night or want to relax to Silent Night,Kylie Christmasis the only soundtrack listeners need this festive season.

With much-loved Christmas hits from George Michael, Nat King Cole, Frank Sinatra, Mariah Carey, Michael Bubl and Kylie Minogue herself,Kylie Christmasis the perfect mix of modern and classic festive favourites.

Listeners can tune in to Santas favourite stationKylie Christmasvia the Nova and smooth Players and can stream the station on smart devices.

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NOVA Gets Festive With A Christmas Station Hosted By Kylie! - B&T

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‘Eternals’ Review: Chloe Zhao introduces new brand of flawed but relatable superheroes – MEAWW

Posted: at 5:33 pm

Contains spoilers

Superheroes might be the ones to save the world from any form of threat there is, but they are not necessarily perfect. And sometimes that's the way it works. Chloe Zhao's 'Eternals' are the latest heroes foraying into the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU) and they are just like the Avengers flawed and relatable. What sets the film apart is the classic Zhao touch of making things larger than life, a raw display of emotions, and a grand setting that just mesmerizes throughout the film.

'Eternals' isn't about the classic good vs bad. It is a celebration of life. And considering all that the world has gone through since last year, there's no harm in just taking a moment to celebrate all those responsible for bringing in a semblance of normalcy in the world. In Zhao's work, the appreciation of the world's evolution to what it is now is admired by the Eternals who have watched the world war, celebrate, love, live, and laugh. They watched in silence as Thanos snapped half the world from existence. They watched Tony Stark make the supreme sacrifice, and they watched just about every piece of history that shaped the world into what it is.

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Alternating between time periods that rock all the way back to the BC, 'Eternals' shows how the cosmic heroes created by Arishem, a Celestial have played their part in balancing the universe. And while they may be greater than Gods, they aren't immortal. The ensemble cast comprising Ajak (Salma Hayek), Sersi (Gemma Chan), Ikaris (Richard Madden), Thena (Angelina Jolie), Klingo (Kumail Nanjiani), Sprite (Lia McHugh), Phastos (Brian Tyree Henry), Makkari (Lauren Ridloff), Druig (Barry Keoghan) and Gilgamesh (Ma Dong-Seok) all share enough screentime to provide a sense of knowing to their relatively unknown past.

Their abilities aren't out of the box. It's standard-issue flight, laser beams, self-healing, fighting skills that can make Thor bleed, super speed, mental manipulation, and the works. And yet, they are complex beings that are just designed as pawns and not somebody who can make their own decisions. If anything, Zhao's Eternals are just peacekeepers watching over as the earth, their home for 7000 years will crumble to give birth to a new Celestial.

And when that realization finally dawns, they fight. They turn on each other, they bawl and cry for each other, but that's the best they can do, and it comes with consequences. There are deaths. Not all of the Eternals walk away damaged goods. But that said, the movie has an identity of its own. For a world that has seen a lot of Marvel's famed names over the last decade, 'Eternals' are the new breed, as ancient as their presence is. If 'Shang-Chi' sets the tone, then this cosmic flick shoulders the weight of expectations but does drop the barbell down at times.

There's a pinch of everything that goes in making a quintessential Marvel movie with Action, humor, and eye-captivating cinematography. There are also glaring mistakes. The writing gets clunky at specific points, the pace slows down to practically a walk, and characters fade in and fade out abruptly, but those are challenges of having an ensemble cast, something the Russo brothers have been quite adept at handling. There's enough to make it a non-Marvel movie what with the gay kiss (first of its kind) and a gentle sex scene that hides as much skin as possible.

But it's all good. Zhao locks in what she needs to and while there is enough going on in each frame, she never loses sight of the larger picture. The post-credits scenes are also part of the movie's storyline and do not necessarily branch out. The cast selection is justified with Madden playing Ikaris to perfection. Jolie's Thena oozes sexy in every frame she's in while Hayek is in a rather motherly role as opposed to her "Grandma casting" which does enough to dub her performance as nearly perfect.

McHugh, Tyree Henry, and Ridloff with Nanjiani evoke different emotions and do so without breaking into a sweat. There's more to Nanjiani's Kingo than just that jaw-dropping transformation for his role. His character brings in the much-needed comic relief even as she shoots crisp beams from his fingers when not showcasing his acting chops.

'Eternals' isn't a solid film, especially when compared to any of the top movies of the Infinity saga. But it isn't too paltry to be mocked either. This one takes time to grow, and when these heroes make a second and subsequent appearance in the MCU, the whistles and cheers won't dip. Surely.

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'Eternals' Review: Chloe Zhao introduces new brand of flawed but relatable superheroes - MEAWW

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Yesterday and Today: The day of the Schoellkopf power plants disaster – StCatharinesStandard.ca

Posted: October 24, 2021 at 11:54 am

In 1853 entrepreneurs in Niagara Falls, N.Y., with a view to developing power generation capabilities of the Niagara River, began work on a hydraulic canal that would cut across the village of Niagara Falls, from an inlet above the American Falls to a site on the Niagara Gorge about 460 metres downriver from where the Rainbow Bridge is today.

The canal was completed in 1857 but the potential it offered was not put to good use until the Gaskill Flour Mill was built on the edge of the gorge in 1875. By the end of the 19th century that first facility had been joined by two other flour mills, three pulp mills and a silver plating factory.

At about the same time the water power also began to be used by the Schoellkopf family to generate power for the entire community. This undertaking resulted in the construction, between 1905 and 1924, of three huge Schoellkopf power generation plants at the rivers edge below those industries. Our old photo this week shows what the scene looked like in September 1925 the factories at the top of the gorge, the three power plants along the river.

However, one thing seems not to have been taken into consideration in all this. The water from the canal, after powering the mill wheels atop the gorge, passed through channels bored into stone before emptying into the gorge. Photos from the late 19th century show numerous mini-falls created by water that was pouring from the gorge wall into the river again. But the canal itself, the canal basin and those channels below the mills had never been given protective linings to prevent water from penetrating into the rock. All of that gushing water ended up honeycombing and destabilizing the gorge walls.

The result: on June 7, 1956, a significant part of the gorge wall above those power plants suddenly collapsed. In the morning power plant workers began to notice cracks developing in the buildings walls and foundations and a worrying amount of seepage of water through those cracks. During the day the cracks grew in size, the flow of water increased and rocks began to fall from the gorge wall onto the roofs of the power plants.

And then in little more than 10 minutes, starting at about 5:10 p.m. that day, the entire side of the gorge collapsed onto the three power plants, completely crushing two of them and seriously damaging the third. That one plant was partially returned to service in the next year, but the other two were total losses. The New York Power Authoritys Robert Moses power facility, which began operations in 1961 across the gorge from our Sir Adam Beck facility in Queenston, ultimately replaced the hydro power lost in this 1956 disaster.

Eventually the surviving Schoellkopf plant was demolished and the rubble from all three plants was removed. Today the place where the three Schoellkopf power plants once stood is a large open space used as a maintenance and storage area for the Maid of the Mist tour boat company.

Continued here:

Yesterday and Today: The day of the Schoellkopf power plants disaster - StCatharinesStandard.ca

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