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Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her

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YOU ARE THE REASON
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@fythebeatles
dating the beatles
(the beatles x reader)
john: cheats on you
paul: cheats on you
george: cheats on you
ringo: cheats on you
““There was something about seeing them [Jane and Paul] together that was magical,” says Tony Barrow. “With those two gorgeous faces and all that incredible charisma, they looked like a couple of Greek gods.” Everywhere the couple went, people gravitated to them. They attracted a circle of friends from among London’s grooviest and most free-spirited. “Both of them came with plenty of their own flash,” says John Dunbar, who lived around the corner from the Ashers and was one of London’s leading young scenemakers. And they were inseparable. Friends began saying that you were as likely to see Paul with Jane as with John. They spent every night “out and about” on the town and then, afterward, talking or necking in the Ashers’ downy parlor. If it got too late, Paul would simply sack out in the little music room on the top floor of the town house, next to Peter’s bedroom, where a guest bunk was always made up. Even without the personal touches, it sure beat the dormitory-like Green Street, which was becoming more objectionable to him with each passing day.”
— the beatles: the biography, bob spitz (via pivoinesque)
Visits to Paul and Jane Asher weren’t quite as relaxed as those Mick and I spent with George and Pattie. With hindsight I can see that they were rather uptight. There were constant little frictions. Mick and I were very close and we would never have done anything like fret about windows being open or closed, or any- thing as petty as that, but this is what happens when couples start to come apart. In any case I was in a very different position to the one Jane found herself in. I’d done what Paul wanted Jane to do, and given up my career. I wasn’t going on tour with the Old Vic; I wasn’t taking any more movie roles and very few parts in plays. I gave up everything I’d been doing, apart from a little bit of theatre. Jane was a serious actress and wanted to continue her career, but Paul had other ideas. That’s why Linda was so perfect for Paul; she was just what he wanted, an old-fashioned Liverpool wife who was completely devoted to her husband. In a way, that’s what Mick wanted, too, and for a while I acquiesced, but in the end it kicked back very badly.
On the other hand, Paul isn’t exactly the regular bloke he appears. For one thing, he was al- ways intellectually curious. Not only was he into electronic music and Stockhausen and all of that, but he was into Magritte, pop art, the Expressionists and even avant-garde theatre. I believe it was Paul who first thought of Joe Orton as the screenwriter for the next Beatles movie. He’d been to see Loot, Orton’s outrageous phallic farce, and liked it. He encouraged Brian Epstein to arrange a meeting with Orton, and in Orton’s diary he describes getting on famously with Paul.
— Memories, Dreams and Reflections, by Marianne Faithfull.
“Paul McCartney and girl friend Jane Asher, right, followed by Ringo Starr and his wife Maureen, stroll through the woods at Rishikesh, India, on February 23, 1968, where they were learning transcendental meditation under Maharishi Mahesh Yogi”
George and Pattie at Twickenham Studios
June 17, 1964 | July 13, 2019
Paul McCartney in photo booths
George V Hotel, París, France
Paul in Copenhagen, Denmark. 1967.
paulie in france, 1966
he used his moustache as a disguise, yeah that went well paul
John Lennon, 1963.