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  • Georgia Flood, Thierry Frémont Join Disney Plus Series ‘Nautilus,’ Production Underway in Australia

    Georgia Floodand Thierry Frémonthave joined Disney Plus original U.K. series “Nautilus.”

    The series, inspired by Julie Verne’s novel “20,000 Leagues Under The Sea,” stars Shazad Latif(“Star Trek: Discovery”) in the lead role. Shooting is underway in Australia’s Queensland-based Village Roadshow Studios.

    The series switches the viewpoint on Verne’s classic story, giving viewers the chance to see things from Captain Nemo’s point of view for the first time. Nemo is an Indian Prince who is removed from his home, family and birthright and taken prisoner by the East India Mercantile Company.

    Focused only on revenge against those who have ruined his life, Nemo sets sail on the Nautilus, aided by a ragtag bunch of sailors, and soon finds himself battling not only his enemies but also discovering a mindblowing underwater world.

    Flood (“Anzac Girls”) will play Humility Lucas, a privileged upper class product...

    See full article at Variety Film + TV

    Niki Aken celebrates the era of richer screen diversity

    Niki Aken.

    When screenwriter Niki Aken started writing TV shows seven years ago, she was the only one with an Asian or non-white heritage in the room.

    That situation did not change until two years ago when the writer, who has a Malaysian father and an Aussie mother, and Benjamin Lawbegan developing a show for Fremantle.

    “For the first five years nearly everyone I worked with was middle class, Anglo and aged 40-plus,” she tells If.

    As a founder member of Australian Writers’ Guild’s Diversity and Inclusion Action Committee alongside Law, Kodie Bedford, Jaime Browne, Mithila Guptaand Que Minh Luu, she has been heartened by the much greater diversity on screen and in writers’ rooms in the past couple of years.

    One show she is developing with Ian Collie’s Easy Tiger is emblematic of the advances in pluralism across the industry. Based on an idea by Collie,..

    What Happened To The Beanie Bubble's Real Maya

    The movie "The Beanie Bubble" is loosely based on the true story, following the lives of three women who played crucial roles in the success of the Beanie Baby craze in the '90s. Maya is based on a famous entrepreneur and inventor, who came up with innovative ideas like giving each Beanie a birthday and personalized poems.

    Warning! This article contains Spoilers for The Beanie BubbleAfter the happy ending in The Beanie Bubble, many people wonder what happened to the real Maya. On July 28, 2023, Apple TV Plus release the movie The Beanie Bubble. The movie tells the story of three women, Robbie (Elizabeth Banks), Sheila (Sarah Snook), and Maya (Geraldine Viswanathan), who played a pivotal part in the Beanie Baby craze. Although Ty Warner's net worth makes him one of the richest people on the planet, these three contributed to the ultimate success of the '90s fad...

    See full article at ScreenRant

    Ten Minutes, but a Few Meters Longer: Mia Hansen-Løve's Memories in Locations

    Mia Hansen-Løve's One Fine Morningis now showing exclusively on Mubifrom June 16, 2023, in many countries—including the United Kingdom, India, and Turkey—in the series Luminaries.One Fine Morning.Legend has it that the art of memory was born from death—when the ceiling of a Thessalian nobleman’s dining hall collapsed and killed all but Simonides of Ceos. He was able to identify his fellow guests, smooshed beyond recognition, by remembering their seat at the table, thus associating each person with a locality. The pre-Socratic poet soon began to experiment with localizing abstract ideas to objects in an imaginary house, which he could pick up one by one—each a symbol of fragmented thought that formed a full memory in aggregate. In the 16th century, King Francis I of France commissioned the construction of an elaborate physical version of Simonide’s phantom house, coined a Theatre of Memory.

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    1955–Fall ’18 Class Letter

    Submitted by: Olivia Heck

    1955

    Ripon, WI

    Class Letter

    1955–Fall ’18 Class Letter

    Art Lundeberg

    Class of 1955

    Ripon, WI

    Class Letter

    Dear Class of 1955,

     

    Hope each of you has had a great summer, and will be looking forward to the beautiful trees, followed by the beautiful snow falling on the beautiful trees. Looking forward to the beautiful snow is optional.

     

    Ripon Fund

    Has everybody sent in their donation? We must continue to keep our Alma Mater Strong.

     

    #OneDayRally

    After just 18 hours and 51 minutes and thousands of social media shares on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram, Ripon College’s first ever #OneDayRally giving day campaign came in 221 percent ahead of goal, raising a total of $656,626 from 940 donors.

     

    Campus Notes

    College Days

    We all remember our student newspaper. It has won 11 awards from the Wisconsin Newspaper Association in the 2017 WCMA Better Newspaper Contest Awards. The publication won an honorable mention in the category of General Excellence, the top award available, indicating that it is judged to be one of the best overall college papers in the state.

     

    Financial Success

    Ripon College has been named the No. 1 School in Wisconsin whose grads earn the most in mean wages 10 years after graduation.

    The study was published by Zippia, a new website dedicated to helping recent graduates with their career choices.

    Zippia says they used the most recent college scorecard data to determine the school in each state with the highest average earners 10 years after entry. This report has been shared by news media across the country.

     

    Expanded Edition

    Hawthorne Books and Literary Arts released a second, expanded edition of Autobiography of a Recovering Skinhead: the Frank Meeink Story, as told by Jody Roy, this fall.

    Roy is a professor of communication and the Victor and Carrie Palmer Endowed Chair for Lead

    Featuring the voices of: Logan Lerman, Helena Bonham Carter, Gerard Depardieu, Nick Rulon, Jordan Beck, Brian Cook, Jim Pharr and Jason Ezzell.
    Writers: Richard Lanni and Mike Stokey.
    Director: Richard Lanni

    Rating: 3.5/5

    He was one of the finest American heroes of The War to End all Wars; a unwaveringly stoic soldier who served beside his countrymen, the troops of the 102 Infantry Regiment, in the trenches of France against a determined German army. He saw 17 close-quarters combat situations, usually by the side of his best friend, Private Robert Conroy. Upon his return to the U.S., he was lauded as a national hero, met with The Commander in Chief and was rewarded for his bravery by being bestowed the rank of Sargeant, the first four-legged officer in American military history.

    Yes, four-legged. This soldier was a Boston terrier, with a short stubby tail, an appendage that earned him the name ‘Stubby’. To coincide with the 100 anniversary of his nation’s entry into the European theatre of WWI, the spirited all-American mutt has been reborn as a bigscreen hero in director Richard Lanni’s computer-animated version of his dog’s life.

    It is fair to say that Lanni’s film is one of the more unusual cartoon features in recent years. A co-production between Ireland, The U.K., France, Canada and The U.S.A., it lovingly renders the period, capturing with an artist’s eye Stubby’s early life in the picturesque Connecticut countryside, his voyage to Europe and, with a particularly evocative sense of location, the trenches of the Western Front. A more stark design palette, recalling classic war film imagery, is employed to convey troop movements and geographical data; in one instance, the menacing shadow of a German ‘bird of war’ descends upon the European front. (Ed: This is a kids film, right?)  

    The director is an accomplished war documentarian and for his first animated feature he h