The Honeymooner's bed - Peter Hackett
New Zealander , b. 1960 -
Oil on canvas , 125 x 172 cm.
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seen from United States
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seen from United States
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The Honeymooner's bed - Peter Hackett
New Zealander , b. 1960 -
Oil on canvas , 125 x 172 cm.
StarCanWrecked Sexyman Bracket Round 1C Matchup 20/22
Peter Hackett
Elmo Keep
“A mother who would go to any lengths for her daughter. That is true heroism.” Lost Girls (2020)
Academy Award winner for Best Adapted Screenplay of 1935
Random side note: There’s a character in this story, and in the movie his name’s Dennis, but in the book his name is Peter Hackett. At first I was like, why does this name seem so familiar? Do I know someone named Peter Hackett?
Then it hit me
'Peter Hackett', 1985, as painted by Alan Barlow. From here.
Edmonton Journal columnist Todd Babiak interviewed Peter Hackett, a member of Alberta's Institute of Nanotechnology, on the current state of scientific and commercial innovation in Canada. I've been a consummate reader of Babiak's columns (and his debut novel Choke Hold), a local pundit who starts from arts or entertainment perspective and expands it to wider cultural-social commentary on Alberta and Canadian society. Peter C. Newman he is not but the man is still young and the servings in the Edmonton daily are quite tasty. Praises aside, Hackett says provincial and federal governments are only paying lip service to innovation, and not actually helping growing companies become international players in innovation. Whether it is true companies like Research in Motion or Bioware are exceptions in Canadian business landscape rather than norms is the topic of debate, but with the coming Grant MacEwan Univerisity Student Business Conference addressing innovation on March 1, this article couldn't have been more timely.