a3.6

(last updated: 23 July 2025)

1)

[ 1 | 2 ]

1B)

[ 1 | 2 ]

P.M. Dawn - Under The Bridge

2)

[ 18 Feb 2019 ] [ now ]

Flashlight - Bass & Drums Groove (6)

1

3)

[ 19 Dec 2019 ]
[ RX-7 banner ]

4)

[ ~March, 1997 ]
[ Champion Hoodie / Vintage / Gray ]

5)

[ 29 Oct 2019 ]
[ G9X Mark II ]

The Prodigy - Mindfields HD 720p

6)

[ 3 Jan 2022 ]

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7)

[ 3 June 2016 ]

Bobby Brown - Roni Live (Jimmy Kimmel) (2004)

8)

[ 7 Feb 2020 ]

9)

[ 8 May 2016 ] [ 9 Jan 2018 ]

Girl Right Here (Bobby Brown + Michael Jackson + SWV)

Bobby Brown - Girl Next Door (Live At Soul Train 1987)

10)

[ 2006 ]


[ Cartier spectacles / vintage ]

11)

[ 15 Jul 2013 ]

Led Zeppelin (1973-2025) Then and Now #ledzeppelin #rockband #thenandnow #epicfamous

12)

[ 15 Feb 2019]
[ Lamborghini cap ]

Led Zeppelin - I Can't Quit You Baby (Live at The Royal Albert Hall 1970) [Official Video]

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13)

[ May 2008]

Led Zeppelin - Moby Dick Drum Solo (Madison Square Garden 1973)

14)

[ July 2002] [ Feb 2003]

Justin Timberlake - "Señorita" LIVE (2002) [HD]

✓ 2 weeks ago

From New Hollywood to Blockbusters (exhibit text)

Summer 1975 (USA) – Beaches were deserted and cinemas were full as America was gripped in terror by the attack of Jaws.

With profits dwindling, Hollywood studio moguls tried to reach out to younger audiences by recruiting a fresh crop of filmmakers in the late 1960s. These directors – Francis Ford Coppola, Martin Scorsese and others – made edgy, personal films that drew on European cinema earning the name ‘New Hollywood.’

As the New Hollywood filmmakers reached their prime, a young director named Steven Spielberg was assigned to a film called Jaws, which featured a killer shark. Spielberg worried that the film lacked sophistication, saying “Who wants to be known as a shark-and-truck director?”

Boosted by an unprecedented level of television advertising, it became the highest grossing film ever at the time: a record that was broken by George Lucas’ Star Wars (1977.) These blockbusters marked the end of an era for New Hollywood: instead of supporting the artistic vision of particular directors, studios focused on repeating successful formulas and appealing to the broadest possible audience.

George Lucas on Hollywood's Blockbuster Mentality (Oct. 17, 2014) | Charlie Rose

✓ 7 years ago