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Cooley Hurd

Cooley Hurd's Journal
Cooley Hurd's Journal
September 24, 2016

Chia Trump, Chia Clinton, Chia Obama and Chia Sanders!



I want them all, but one will be hitting a wall!
September 24, 2016

Wanting to watch something cool and for free on YouTube? Eleanor and Franklin, The WH years!



Outstanding Made for TV movie! In HQ, as well!

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eleanor_and_Franklin:_The_White_House_Years

Eleanor and Franklin: The White House Years is a 1977 American made-for-television film and a sequel to Eleanor and Franklin (1976). Originally airing on March 13, 1977, it was part of a two-part biopic directed by Daniel Petrie based on Joseph P. Lash's Pulitzer prize-winning biography chronicling the lives of the 32nd U.S. President and the First Lady. Joseph Lash was a secretary and confidant of Eleanor and wrote other books on the couple.

Eleanor and Franklin focused on their respective childhoods, school years, courtship and the lead up to his election. Seven members of the original cast returned for the sequel, including the two main characters portrayed by Jane Alexander and Edward Herrmann. It won 7 Primetime Emmy Awards, including Outstanding Special of the Year. Daniel Petrie, who won Director of the Year – Special for the first installment, won the same exact award again. Both films were acclaimed and noted for historical accuracy.

Edward Herrmann – Franklin D. Roosevelt (FDR), 32nd President of the United States

Jane Alexander – Eleanor Roosevelt, 34th First Lady of the United States

Priscilla Pointer – Marguerite Missy LeHand. Long-time secretary to Franklin and considered part of the family.

Walter McGinn – Louis Howe, intimate friend to both Roosevelts and political advisor to Franklin

Rosemary Murphy – Sara Delano Roosevelt, Franklin's mother

Blair Brown – Anna Roosevelt, Eleanor and Franklin's eldest child

David Healy – Theodore Roosevelt, 26th President of the United States, uncle to Eleanor and 5th cousin to Franklin

Peggy McCay – Grace Tully, long-time friend/secretary to Eleanor and became Franklin's top secretary after Missy died.

Donald Moffat – Harry Hopkins, one of Franklin's closest advisers and architect of the New Deal. He was an important liaison between FDR, Winston Churchill, and Stalin meeting personally with the leaders and setting up negotiations during World War II.

Toni Darnay – Malvina Thompson, Eleanor's personal secretary

Barbara Conrad (Barbara Smith Conrad) – Marian Anderson, an American contralto singer. The Daughters of the American Revolution refused to allow her to perform before an integrated audience in their Constitution Hall, spurring First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt to resign from the organization and to aid in arranging for Anderson to sing from the steps of the Lincoln Memorial. Anderson went on to sing at the inaugurations of Presidents Dwight D. Eisenhower and John F. Kennedy.

Morgan Farley – William Plog, managed the Roosevelts' Hyde Park estate

Mark Harmon – Robert Dunlap, a soldier

Anna Lee – Laura Delano, FDR's cousin

Linda Kelsey – Lucy Mercer, mistress of FDR

Colin Hamilton – Ike Hoover, Chief Usher of the White House; served both Roosevelt presidents

Ray Baker – James Roosevelt, oldest son of the Roosevelts who served as a secretary in his father's White House and went on to become a U.S. Marine serving in World War II. He later became a Congressman from California for 10 years.

Brian Patrick Clarke – John Aspinwall Roosevelt, youngest child of the Roosevelts

Don Howard – Elliot Roosevelt, son of the Roosevelts who served in World War II

Joseph Hacker – Franklin D. Roosevelt Jr., son of the Roosevelts who also served in the war

Charles Lampkin – Irvin McDuffie, FDR's African-American valet during the White House years

Arthur Gould-Porter – Sir Winston Churchill, Prime Minister of the United Kingdom

Robert Karnes – United States Supreme Court Justice Charles Evans Hughes, frequent opponent of FDR in the courts. He also swore him in first 3 of the 4 times he was inaugurated.

David Lewis – United States Supreme Court Justice Melville Weston Fuller, who swore in Teddy Roosevelt.

Gregory Koontz – Curtis Roosevelt, eldest grandson of the Roosevelts; Anna's son from first marriage

Davy Muxlow – John Roosevelt Boettiger, Roosevelt's grandson and Anna's son from second marriage

September 23, 2016

Very sad news: Python Terry Jones diagnosed w/ Dementia

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2016/09/23/monty-pythons-terry-jones-has-been-diagnosed-with-dementia/

The comedy genius behind Monty Python Terry Jones has been diagnosed with dementia.

The news came as Bafta Cymru announced he had been given a special award for outstanding contribution to film and television.

A representative for the writer and director said: "Terry has been diagnosed with primary progressive aphasia, a variant of frontotemporal dementia.

"This illness affects his ability to communicate and he is no longer able to give interviews. Terry is proud and honoured to be recognised in this way and is looking forward to the celebrations."




September 16, 2016

Michelle Obama laments having to pack when leaving the WH...

...and having to clean things up so they get their security deposit back.



*Speaking now on MSNBC*

September 15, 2016

Secretary Clinton giving press conference on CNN now:

They just broke in...

September 15, 2016

Daredevil plans replication of Evel Knievel's Snake River Canyon Jump on Saturday

http://www.cnn.com/2016/09/14/us/evel-knievel-jump-eddie-braun-snake-river/index.html


Stuntman Eddie Braun, left, and Kelly Knievel in 2015 with Braun's "Evel Spirit" rocket.

(CNN)On September 8, 1974, Evel Knievel climbed into a steam-powered "rocket cycle" and blasted off a cliff over Idaho's Snake River.

He failed to reach the other side when his craft's parachute deployed too soon and landed him -- largely unhurt -- at the bottom of the canyon, but the much-hyped stunt only added to Knievel's daredevil legend.

Now, 42 years later, veteran Hollywood stuntman Eddie Braun plans to pay homage to the late Knievel by making the jump himself. After years of planning, Braun says he will attempt the Snake River Canyon leap on Saturday with the same type of aircraft and technology.

<snip>

Some people, including Kelly Knievel and a Twin Falls city councilman, have been vocal about their doubts that Braun can pull it off.

"I wouldn't get in a piece of tin and blast off over a cliff," Knievel told CNN. "If he makes it, he'll be honoring my dad's legacy. If he splats his brains out in the canyon it'll be a different story."

</snip>


Crazy? Perhaps...
September 14, 2016

115 years ago tomorrow. Theodore Roosevelt sworn in as 26th POTUS upon death of Pres McKinley

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theodore_Roosevelt#Presidency_.281901.E2.80.9309.29



On September 6, President McKinley was shot by an anarchist acting alone while in Buffalo, New York. Initial reports suggested that his condition was improving, so Roosevelt, after visiting the ailing president, embarked for the west. When McKinley's condition worsened, Roosevelt rushed back. McKinley died on September 14, and Roosevelt was sworn in at the Ansley Wilcox House.

</snip>
September 13, 2016

Stanley Sheinbaum, L.A. liberal lion who shaped decades of political dialogue, dead at 96

Source: LA Times

For more than four decades, Stanley Sheinbaum regularly gathered moguls, presidents, celebrities and activists in his Brentwood living room to sip wine and debate the issues of the day. King Hussein and Queen Noor of Jordan, Bill and Hillary Clinton, Norman Lear, Barbra Streisand and Warren Beatty were among the many famous faces who participated in the vibrant salons Sheinbaum and his wife, Betty, held at their art-filled home on exclusive Rockingham Avenue.

But more than a high-powered host, Sheinbaum often was a change agent, whose fingerprints can be found on a remarkable array of notable events.

In the 1960s he engineered the release of Andreas Papandreou, the Greek leader who had been imprisoned by a military junta. In the 1970s he was the chief fundraiser for Daniel Ellsberg’s defense in the Pentagon Papers trial. In the 1980s he led a delegation of American Jewish leaders who persuaded Palestine Liberation Organization Chairman Yasser Arafat to renounce terrorism and accept Israel as a state. And in the 1990s he headed the Los Angeles Police Commission after the beating of motorist Rodney King and helped drive controversial police Chief Daryl Gates from office.

“He’s a pot boiler,” Lear once said of his longtime friend and ally. “Something is always brewing in Stanley.”

Sheinbaum, who said “helping to keep a liberal voice alive” was the overarching goal of a lifetime of activism, died Monday at his home in Brentwood, according to his assistant Marti Maniates. He was 96.

Read more: http://www.latimes.com/local/obituaries/la-me-stanley-sheinbaum-snap-story.html



Cross gently, Mr Sheinbaum, and THANK YOU!!!

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