
Product Placement
Stranger Things

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taylor price

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2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
h
Sweet Seals For You, Always
occasionally subtle
AnasAbdin
NASA
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open

#extradirty
TVSTRANGERTHINGS
noise dept.
Mike Driver
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸
ojovivo
Cosimo Galluzzi
Monterey Bay Aquarium

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seen from T1
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@sunqueen78
“The Beatles’ tours were like Fellini’s Satyricon. If you could get on our tours, you were in. Wherever we went there was a whole scene going. When we hit town, we hit it, we were not pissing about. You know, there’s photographs of me groveling about, crawling about in Amsterdam on my knees, coming out of whore-houses and things like that, and people saying, “Good morning, John,” and all of that. And the police escorted me to the places because they never wanted a big scandal. I don’t really want to talk about it because it will hurt Yoko, and it’s not fair. Suffice it to say, just put it like they were Satyricon on tour and that’s it, because I don’t want to hurt the other people’s girls, either, it’s just not fair.”
John Lennon, Lennon Remembers (1971)
"I have some juicy stuff I could tell about John. But I wouldn't. Not when Yoko's alive, or Cynthia." - Paul McCartney
(Source: Hunter Davies, "off-the-record" telephone conversation with Paul, May 3, 1981)
“He (Paul) confessed to me that The Beatles had made up about 50% of their history. And they did it to protect their wives, and girlfriends and family members from some of the darker side of The Beatles’ story. (…) There are plenty of secrets, there are things I chose not to include in this book.”
(Source: Bob Spitz interview for FaceCulture, 20/11/2006)
"I don't really want to talk about it because it will hurt Yoko, and that's not fair."
I'm sorry, is this the John Lennon who went to a party with Yoko then popped into a nearby bedroom and had *very loud sex* with a random other woman whilst Yoko had to listen on?! 🤦♀️
I'm obsessed with how John seemed to embody a crazy range of archetypes in Paul's mind. The Teddy Boy boyfriend, the girlfriend from "Build Me Up Buttercup", Brother John, Emperor of The Universe, his naughty child with beautiful hands, the other dead wife haunting the narrative and a bunch of things I must be forgetting because he's still saying words.
Please, take a minute and help me :)
Look at this!
Paul uploaded this video today, so i made an screenshoot to take a better look of his portraits in the background
But here’s the thing:
Im pretty sure that the first one it’s a candid with Mal Evans, taken circa 1968
But the second one ….. (?) Looks like middle of the 70s and i never seen that before, so my question is:
Is that John? Is that possible? or Ringo? Maybe. What do you think?
Just hoping for some opinions!
I think it’s a photo of John and Paul in 1969. Maybe even taken by either Ringo or Linda…
Alan O’Duffy
My friend was at a bar on Bugis St, Singapore in 1978.
John was sitting at the table next to him.
The photo was taken with a Polaroid.
John was gracious enough to sign it and draw his signature nose & glasses.
This has never been seen before.
Enjoy.
Robert Arizona.
Some more
My heart ❤️ this song is really special for him.
👀👀👀
“But Paul would always give in to his dad. His dad told him to get a job, he fucking dropped the group and started working on the fucking lorries, saying, "I need a steady career." We couldn't believe it. So I said to him-my Aunt Mimi reminded me of this the other night-he rang up and said he'd got this job and couldn't come to the group. So I told him on the phone, "Either come or you're out." So he had to make a decision between me and his dad then, and in the end he chose me. But it was a long trip.”
- John Lennon, interview w/ Peter McCabe and Robert Schonfeld. (September, 1971)
So here is John in 1971 on the phone to Aunt Mimi saying ‘something’ that prompted her to remind him that Paul came back and chose him. Would’ve loved to have overheard that conversation 👀👀👀
#honestly John! You are killing me!!!!!
It’s been years and years since I’ve posted! So out of the loop. I’ve been watching get back and something Michael Lindsay Hogg says is driving me crazy. I know there is discourse about it but I cannot locate it, so if anyone can point me in the right direction i would greatly appreciate it.
MLH is talking to John about how he and Paul are not getting on as good as they whete and he says” whatever the wound is” and John says yeah.
Is this discussed anywhere?
Thanks
I really love John like really love him, but it annoys me that after the Beatles broke up he said, sung and did all that horrible shit about Paul and just expected him to forgive him. Like I'm not being funny I know they were really close but if I was Paul I would have blown up and not forgiven him like at all. The same goes for George
I’m with you! The thing is, I don’t think loving someone excludes being critical of their actions, should they behave like an idiot. There’s a special place in my heart for all four of the boys, and yet I recognize that neither one of them were perfect. And I mean, literally none of them. They each had done things that have me shaking my head and sighing exasperatedly as I stare into the camera like I’m on the office. What happened after the breakup specifically is just one of the examples, and honestly I find it a great strength of character that Paul had it in him to forgive them. I’m with you on this one, I don’t know what would have to have happened for me to forgive such treatment. Not to say that he’s perfect, because he’s not, but that particular example makes my blood boil whenever I research it.
I would love a list. Numbered. Of all the "horrible" things John said about Paul. Actually said. From his own mouth.
Look @sunqueen78 it’s that love cloud we’ve heard so much about.
I too find my fingernails more interesting 🤣
the typical words that some beatles blogs use to throw shit at the mclennon fandom that i’ve read are:
“please read before spreading lies”
“the mclennon fandom is the worst”
“let’s add the tag so they can read”
and they make their posts like they’re spreading the real truth, because they feel superior to everyone else and always believe they’re right, and add the mclennon tag so that they can feel better while throwing shit at the fandom, and while their friends reblog and agree.
can you believe how pretentious and shitty they are?
get a life.
Jack Sweeney, a modern-languages teacher who had been a contemporary of Arthur Evans at Cambridge, was Paul’s form master in the sixth form.
Bill Kentwright, an institute contemporary of Paul‘s who is today a millionaire theatrical impresario, told Jack Sweeney how “Paul McCartney lived up the road from us and we used to go in on the bus together. Now when we meet we always chat about the school. We loved it. The Institute has this incredible family feeling about it.”
Sweeney is sure such a feeling must have been important for Paul McCartney. “Because I think he was always insecure. And there was this cozy family feeling about the school: the refusal to nag, the ineffectual discipline. And yet it got far more effective results than the schools that are run like police states, like John Lennon experienced.”
Jack Sweeney is not alone in noting the insecurity and sensitivity behind Paul McCartney’s breezy façade. Alan Durband saw it also and traces its first appearance to around the time of Mary McCartney‘s death. But perhaps it was also the sense of inadequacy he felt as a boy from a housing project in this academic environment.
[…]
“It is no exaggeration that Paul is said to have been held in very high regard at the Institute. He was – his sheer charm ensured that. You might have thought that the charm was a self-defense mechanism. But it wasn’t: it was absolutely natural, quite extraordinary and quite irresistible.
“Paul is a very complex person. People feel that it was John who was the complex Beatle. But in the first place, Paul has this extraordinary dualism: at any given moment he could be so easy-going and so casual yet there was also this toughness: he would hold the class entranced. He was a born leader, so gregarious, so popular.
“ And he had this extraordinary faith in his own star. Yet at the same time he had an ironic detachment from what he was doing. In fact, I think the most important thing I have to say about the whole man is that he had that quality: he was able to view it all dispassionately. I think it takes a remarkable man who can do just that. I bumped into him in the city center once the Beatles were enjoying their first success and I said ‘What’s all this about this sudden fame?’ And he laughed and replied ‘It’s a giggle, isn’t it? An absolute giggle.’ He was laughing at his own success. And I think this is something that comes from his sheer intelligence for he was very, very bright. Irony is an elusive gift and quite rare, particularly when it is so self deprecating.
“But he could also be as sardonic as John Lennon. I remember this from when he was holding forth in class; he could deliver the sardonic, the devastating comment even at that age. But because he such a decent bloke he wouldn’t cultivate this, he wouldn’t make a thing of it as John Lennon would. Lennon loved hurting people and stirring them up. Paul could do all of that, too. Everything that John said he could have said, but he didn’t.
“And this idea that he was just nice…. He was very complex: yes, he could be so nice but he was also the most astute of them all – the toughest and the shrewdest right from the start. There is this absurd oversimplification that it was John, the creative complicated bloke and Paul, the easy-going extrovert. No such thing. Paul is both. And a clever man to be able to wear two hats.
-Jack Sweeney
McCartney, the Definitive Biography by Chris Salewicz
While I did enjoy this book, as it gives paul the respect he deserves, I do think it is at John's expense. He is doing exactly what alot of other beatle authors do.. put one down to raise the other. (Generally at Paul's expense)
Why can't we get a book that can praise both at the same time?? Is it too much to ask?
Special tribute show to Paul McCartney and The Beatles, including an exclusive interview.
Special tribute show dedicated to Sir Paul McCartney and The Beatles including an exclusive interview + Scottish celebrities pick their favourite Beatles and Paul McCartney tracks.
Brian Epstein talking about Paul’s bad temper, and beginning by a great anecdote
“ I don’t have a favorite Beatle, they understand it today, even if it wasn’t always the case. A manager who cares for a group of four very close members must try to be as fair and careful as a father is with his four children.
One evening, while we had been working together for a short time, this aspect was reminded to me with violence:
In 1962, the Beatles had a van where they stored their equipment and which was used from time to time to go to their concerts.
I preferred, when I could, to pick them up from their homes and drive them myself.
That night, I called John first, then George and finally Paul, Pete Best used the van.
George gets out of the car and knocks on Paul McCartney’s door, on the little Allerton street where he lived.
He knocks several times but Paul still doesn’t come. After a while, Paul answers and asks him to tell me that he is not ready. It took him a few more minutes.
George comes back to the car and tells me what Paul said. I told him that he should have been ready, that I told him that we would come by at eight o'clock and that it was after eight o'clock.
George goes back to Paul’s house, comes back a minute later, without Paul.
I told him to tell Paul that we are going to have a drink at the Beehive and that he would just have to take the bus to the city centre, the train to Birkenhead and another bus to the Technical College.
It was very important because we were finally making money, and the Technical College was a good contract, in a good venue and crowned a series of three successful concerts for Liverpool University.
Also, we had another concert scheduled later that night at the New Brighton Tower.
We went to the Beehive Pub, where one of the Beatles called Paul back. I think it was John. He came back to us and told us that Paul no longer wanted to come and that he was very annoyed to have to take a train and a bus. I was worried, angry, and disappointed. I could already see myself telling Paul that I wouldn’t bother taking care of the Beatles anymore if that’s how they behaved in the future. I went into my office at the Nems to call Paul, and the other Beatles went home.I talk to his father, a kind and charming man, who tells me that Paul is upset and is not able to handle the concert. Paul finally calmed down, the other Beatles got together, and rushed to the New Brighton Tower to do the concert and catch up with the university concert.
This is the one and only time one of the Beatles has refused to play and it couldn’t happen again today. […] Paul is versatile, moody and difficult to manage, but I know him as well as he knows me.
This means that we either make concessions or fight each other.
He is very strong not to hear what he doesn’t want to hear and when he doesn’t want to hear, he closes up, sits on a chair, crosses his legs and pretends to read the newspaper with a deliberately impassive look.
Paul is endowed with an immense talent, he hides a great inner tenderness and a formidable sensitivity under angry outside. In my opinion, it is the one that most appeals to strangers, autograph hunters, fans and even other artists. He has a beautiful smile and a formidable enthusiasm that he uses, not to be laughed at, but because he knows that these are assets that can make people around him happy.
Paul is a true world star, with a melodic sense and a more harmonious voice than John’s, which makes him more commercially acceptable. Moreover, and this is essential to me, he shows great loyalty to the Beatles and their organization. Therefore, I do not take into account his mood swings and hold him in high esteem. I would not want to lose his friendship under any circumstances.”
From Brian Epstein’s A Cellarful of Noise, 1964.
Amazing shots of The Beatles larking around on the beach in the Bahamas and high in the Alps during production of their madcap fantasy Help!, released in UK cinemas 50 years ago.
These are wonderful 😍
This is a documentary about Lennon and McCartney in the 1970s. It’s a complex and intimate story, which I’ve tried to tell with respect and empathy. Here are...
Brilliant.