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The year 2049, the great dystopia: The world after the fall of Ukraine

13 June 2026 at 04:00
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When did Europe go wrong? For decades, we thought the European project would disappear due to external threats… but we never imagined that this would happen because of the irresponsibility of its leaders, nor because of the inaction of its citizens. Nobody thought that Europe would cease to be the horizon that the rest of the world aspires to reach.

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  • ✇Antiques and Vintage - flickr
  • Super Furry Animals (Flyer) My Music Memorabilia
    My Music Memorabilia posted a photo: SUPER FURRY ANIMALS ON TOUR IN APRIL / MAY Fri 26 Middlesbrough Arena Sat 27 Wolverhampton the Varsity Sun 28 Gloucester Guildhall Mon 29 Exeter Cavern Club Tue 30 Southampton Joiners Arms Sun 2 Aberystwyth University Mon 3 Blackwood Institute Tue 4 Bangor University Sun 12 Cardiff University NEW SINGLE GOD! SHOW ME MAGIC OUT APRIL 29 SFA Fuzzy Logic In May (1996)
     

Super Furry Animals (Flyer)

My Music Memorabilia posted a photo:

Super Furry Animals (Flyer)

SUPER FURRY ANIMALS

ON TOUR IN APRIL / MAY
Fri 26 Middlesbrough Arena
Sat 27 Wolverhampton the Varsity
Sun 28 Gloucester Guildhall
Mon 29 Exeter Cavern Club
Tue 30 Southampton Joiners Arms
Sun 2 Aberystwyth University
Mon 3 Blackwood Institute
Tue 4 Bangor University
Sun 12 Cardiff University

NEW SINGLE
GOD! SHOW ME MAGIC
OUT APRIL 29
SFA

Fuzzy Logic In May

(1996)

  • ✇Antiques and Vintage - flickr
  • John Ericson in Bad Day at Black Rock (1955) Truus, Bob & Jan too!
    Truus, Bob & Jan too! posted a photo: Spanish postcard by CyA, no. 81. Photo: Metro Goldwyn Mayer. John Ericson in Bad Day at Black Rock (John Sturges, 1955). The Spanish film title was Conspiración de silencio. German-American film and television actor John Ericson (1926-2020) started in the 1950s as a young hunk with wavy-haired good looks and an athletic build. He made a series of popular films for MGM, including Teresa (19, 51) and The Student Prince (1954). Later, Ericson worked mo
     

John Ericson in Bad Day at Black Rock (1955)

Truus, Bob & Jan too! posted a photo:

John Ericson in Bad Day at Black Rock (1955)

Spanish postcard by CyA, no. 81. Photo: Metro Goldwyn Mayer. John Ericson in Bad Day at Black Rock (John Sturges, 1955). The Spanish film title was Conspiración de silencio.

German-American film and television actor John Ericson (1926-2020) started in the 1950s as a young hunk with wavy-haired good looks and an athletic build. He made a series of popular films for MGM, including Teresa (19, 51) and The Student Prince (1954). Later, Ericson worked mostly for television, most memorably as the partner of Anne Francis in Honey West (1965-1966).

John Ericson was born Joachim Alexander Ottokar Meibes in Düsseldorf, Germany, in 1926. He was the son of Carl F. Meibes, a German chemist and Ellen Wilson, a Swedish actress and opera singer. Escaping from the Nazi regime, his family emigrated to the U.S. when he was three. At first, living in Detroit, they eventually settled in New York, where his dad (according to a 1955 newspaper article) found lucrative employment as president of a food extract company. After graduating from Newton High School, John enrolled at the Academy of Dramatic Arts in New York, financially supporting his studies by working at a Walgreens drug store. Most sources, including Wikipedia, incorrectly cite his acting debut as being in 'Stalag 17' on Broadway, but Ericson himself stated (in a 1989 interview with Skip E. Lowe) that his career kick-started with the romantic wartime drama Teresa (Fred Zinnemann, 1951), filmed in Italy by Metro Goldwyn Mayer. Afterwards, he made the decision not to sign a studio contract for fear of being typecast as 'boy-next-door' types. On the strength of his performance in Teresa, producer/director José Ferrer offered Ericson not only what amounted to being the nominal lead in 'Stalag 17' (1951), but the opportunity to play an initially unsympathetic part as the slick, cynical gambler J. J. Sefton. The coveted film role was eventually assigned to William Holden, who won an Academy Award. Between 1954 and 1955, Ericson was under contract at MGM and made four films for the studio: Rhapsody (Charles Vidor, 1954) opposite Elizabeth Taylor and Vittorio Gassman, Green Fire (Andrew Marton, 1954), co-starring Stewart Granger and Grace Kelly, who had been in his class at the Academy. and the seminal Spencer Tracy Western Bad Day at Black Rock (John Sturges, 1955) as a nervy hotel clerk.

During the next three decades, John Ericson worked as a freelance actor. His wavy-haired good looks and athletic build were not lost on the industry. He co-starred with Barbara Stanwyck in Forty Guns (Samuel Fuller, 1957). His career continued mostly on television. He co-starred with Anne Francis in Honey West (1965), a short-lived series apparently modelled on the British series The Avengers (1961). It featured a crime-solving, judo-savvy lady detective (even wearing Diana Rigg-style jumpsuits) and her right-hand man. The show only lasted for 30 episodes, but has since gained a minor cult following. Ericson's frequent TV guest appearances included Rawhide (1959), Bonanza (1959), Burke's Law (1963), The FBI (1965) and The Invaders (1967). For the big screen, he went to Italy and Spain. There he starred in the Peplum Io Semiramide / Slave Queen of Babylon (Primo Zeglio, 1963) about Semiramis, a queen of the Neo-Assyrian Empire (Yvonne Furneaux). He also starred in the James Bond pastiche Agente S 03: Operazione Atlantide / Operation Atlantis (Domenico Paolella, 1965) and Spaghetti Westerns. In the U.S., he had leads in thrillers such as The Money Jungle (Francis D. Lyon, 1967) with Lola Albright, Westerns like Day of the Badman (Harry Keller, 1958) with Fred MacMurray, and Science Fiction B-graders like The Destructors (Francis D. Lyon, 1968) starring Richard Egan, and The Bamboo Saucer (Frank Telford, 1968), which was Dan Duryea's last film. Ericson also starred as the titular 1930s Depression-era gangster in Pretty Boy Floyd (Herbert J. Leder, 1960). He appeared in the Disney film Bedknobs and Broomsticks (Robert Stevenson, 1971) and posed for the nude centrefold in Playgirl magazine's January 1974 issue. On the stage, he played King Arthur to Kathryn Grayson's Guinevere in a 1967 production of the musical 'Camelot'. A reviewer commented that what Ericson lacked in the vocal department, he more than made up for by a 'masterful performance'. His dramatic theatrical credits included 'Richard III', 'Mr. Roberts' and 'A Streetcar Named Desire'. In his spare time, John Ericson took up painting landscapes and still lifes. He was also a sculptor and a keen amateur photographer. Until he died of pneumonia in 2020, he resided in New Mexico with his second wife, Karen Huston, whom he married in 1974. With his first wife, Milly Ericson Courye, he had two children, Brett and Nicole. John Ericson was 93.

Sources: I.S. Mowis (IMDb), Wikipedia and IMDb.

And, please check out our blog European Film Star Postcards.

  • ✇Openclipart
  • Huashan Rock Art j4p4n
    These are some of the very old art drawn on Huashan mountain in China, rock art that goes back to the distant past with little modern record of how or why they were drawn high up on the mountain face
     
  • ✇Antiques and Vintage - flickr
  • Caves Clock icpcat
    icpcat posted a photo: Cave's Clock. April2026. Newly renovated, the reflection is of the Union Plaza Building. This clock is a historic landmark located at the intersection of Main Street and Capitol Avenue in downtown Little Rock. Originally erected in the early 1930s by Thomas M. Cave, owner of Cave’s Jewelers, the old clock has neon lighting and is a symbol of the city's downtown history. Fomapan100push400. FujicaST801. M42-Fujinon55mm. PolarizingFilter. DiafineDeveloper5+5. Washed:AGOFi
     

Caves Clock

By: icpcat
25 May 2026 at 04:26

icpcat posted a photo:

Caves Clock

Cave's Clock. April2026. Newly renovated, the reflection is of the Union Plaza Building. This clock is a historic landmark located at the intersection of Main Street and Capitol Avenue in downtown Little Rock. Originally erected in the early 1930s by Thomas M. Cave, owner of Cave’s Jewelers, the old clock has neon lighting and is a symbol of the city's downtown history. Fomapan100push400. FujicaST801. M42-Fujinon55mm. PolarizingFilter. DiafineDeveloper5+5. Washed:AGOFilmProcessor. CameraScan:FujifilmXH1.

  • ✇Deadline
  • Grizz Chapman Dies: ’30 Rock’ Actor Was 52 Glenn Garner
    Grizzwald ‘Grizz’ Chapman, the fan-favorite 30 Rock star who played Grizz on the NBC sitcom for its seven-season run, has died. He was 52. The actor’s longtime rep Saideh A. Brown told TMZ that Chapman died on Friday. Other details, including a cause of death, were not immediately made available. Born April 16, 1974 in […]
     

Grizz Chapman Dies: ’30 Rock’ Actor Was 52

23 May 2026 at 02:52
Grizzwald ‘Grizz’ Chapman, the fan-favorite 30 Rock star who played Grizz on the NBC sitcom for its seven-season run, has died. He was 52. The actor’s longtime rep Saideh A. Brown told TMZ that Chapman died on Friday. Other details, including a cause of death, were not immediately made available. Born April 16, 1974 in […]

Led Zeppelin Officially Broke Its Post-Breakup Vow — and Set a Ticket-Sales Record

29 May 2026 at 12:00

When Led Zeppelin’s founding drummer, John Bonham, died due to an alcohol overdose in 1980, the classic-rock band broke up, and its three surviving members vowed to never reunite. Guitarist Jimmy Page, vocalist Robert Plant, and bassist John Paul Jones did so informally a few times, mostly for tribute events.

It’s been 50 years since the ‘most important concert of all time’... and everyone who saw it would fit inside Bad Bunny’s ‘casita’

4 June 2026 at 15:13

At a time when tens of thousands of people flock each night to see Bad Bunny in Madrid and share millions of videos capturing his every move, it feels strange to think that on this very day, exactly 50 years ago, a concert took place that was likely attended by fewer people than those dancing each night in the Puerto Rican star’s casita — and yet may have changed popular music forever.

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Image from the film '24 Hour Party People' by Michael Winterbottom.

© Paul Welsh (Redferns)

Steve Jones, Johnny Rotten and Glen Matlock of the Sex Pistols playing on June 4, 1976, in Manchester.
  • ✇Collider
  • Hozier's Most Successful Album 'Unreal Unearth' Was Inspired by a Literary Classic Val Barone
    In 2013, suddenly and unexpectedly, the world discovered Hozier.Andrew Hozier-Byrne was a young college drop-out who had timidly put out his first single to the world. He couldn't have known that the song would become a viral success and change his life almost overnight. "Take Me to Church" quickly became an anthem. Recorded in Hozier's parents' attic, the soul track changed modern pop as we knew it.
     

Hozier's Most Successful Album 'Unreal Unearth' Was Inspired by a Literary Classic

10 June 2026 at 11:30

In 2013, suddenly and unexpectedly, the world discovered Hozier.Andrew Hozier-Byrne was a young college drop-out who had timidly put out his first single to the world. He couldn't have known that the song would become a viral success and change his life almost overnight. "Take Me to Church" quickly became an anthem. Recorded in Hozier's parents' attic, the soul track changed modern pop as we knew it.

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