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Post by TotalInformation on Dec 5, 2012 17:41:07 GMT -5
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Post by TotalInformation on Feb 13, 2012 15:11:46 GMT -5
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Post by TotalInformation on Jul 8, 2011 2:28:31 GMT -5
Her Majesty and JPM's vocals for Day in the Life and She's Loving Home were all recorded before he was violently assassinated in September 1966.
That is not Paul. Paul was assassinated three decades earlier. That is a con man, bullshitting you.
Hope this helps.
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Post by TotalInformation on Jun 24, 2010 14:47:03 GMT -5
Ha, good luck with that! Barry is a natural-born British subject, the usurper-in-chief. He is aiding and abetting in the current ongoing British WMD attack on Louisiana & America. It is only right & proper that he be rewarded with a serenade by the one of the Queen's knights while the genocide in the Gulf continues. His service to the monarchy has been outstanding; perhaps even better than Sir Poppy Bush. The Bush administration made some choices in the last term that I did not agree with, IMO, and I voted for Obama and I want Obama to help our country if he is able to. Wish in one hand and crap in the other, and see what piles up first. It boggles the mind how one can't learn after years on a forum like this.
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Post by TotalInformation on Jun 24, 2010 13:26:06 GMT -5
This is article is posted in the wrong forum; this forum is about James Paul McCartney, RIP, not the imposter Sir PAUL MCCARTNEY.
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Post by TotalInformation on Feb 3, 2010 21:20:06 GMT -5
15 Sept 1964, VOGUE Magazine page 100-101: BRITISH BEAUTY: the new confidence that's catching
The way our girls are looking now is affecting good looks around the globe. Where influence once came from Hollywood, then from the Left Bank (with a bit of Bardot), then from Italian films, English girls now not only have the nerve to be themselves but can enjoy watching others copy them. Our models - Jean Shrimpton, Celia Hammond, Tania Mallet to name but three - are a rave in New York. The list of young actresses who are more and more in demand (e.g. Hayley Mills, Sarah Miles, Susannah York, Smantha Eggar) is getting longer each month (American Vogue writes . . . "dream looks from London where rising fashion spirit is larky, romantic, British to the core"). This new self-confidence is catching. Nothing succeeds like success and it's certain that self-confidence is the most important ingredient of good looks, just as it is of being a Beatle or a Rolling Stone or a desingner like Mary Quant or Gerald McCann. In those big beauty competitions the English girls were, like Daisy Ashford's heroines, "pretty in the face" but they often failed to please the judges because of sloping shoulders or a flat look through the diaphragm. Now nearly every girl enjoying a holiday success in the Mediterranean could measure up to James Bond specification in length of her leg and handsomeness of torso. This is not to say they are narcissi-like in their new goold looks. Their self-confidence extends to not thinking it neccesary to gild the lily overmuch. But if they go light on make-up they are fussy about all the details. They put their eye make-up on using magnifying mirrors; they are particular about the precise kind of pale pearliness of their nails, they try all the new perfumes to get the one that sings. They're worth watching. JANE ASHER is more than a chum of Beatle Paul McCartney and sister of Peter, the other half of Gordon. At eighteen, her luminous little face has shone in a dozen feature and TV films. Asked how she would describe her looks she says, "I don't". Pressed further, she admits, "Although I hate the idea, they could be rather Alice In Wonderland". Her looks remain as they were pre-Beatle. Her hair is the stunning feature - very straight, very long, very red. She wears it just as it grows - but brshed and clean (Breck shampoo for dry hair) and goes now and then to Vidal Sassoon to get fringe and ends snipped. She also posesses a brown wig, straight and a little shorter than her own hair which she wears for occasional amusement. Her problem is a skin so fair and fine that five minutes sun is more than enough. her freckles don't fade, even in winter, and she finds Max Factor pancake in Cream 2 helps even up th colour. She swears by Leichener eye make-up, never uses shadow but likes mascara. Currently she is not using lipstick.
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Post by TotalInformation on Feb 3, 2010 21:19:34 GMT -5
16 Magazine (1965)
FULL REAL NAME: Jane Asher BIRTHDATE & PLACE: Born on April 5, 1946, in London, England PERSONAL DATA: Five feet and five inches tall; weighs 112; has red hair and blue eyes. FAMILY INFO: Father is a physician; mother is a classical musician; one older brother, Peter, and one younger sister, Claire. HOME INFO: Lives in a large private home in a fashionable section of London. SCHOOLS ATTENDED: London private schools.
FAVORITES
SINGING GROUPS: The Beatles. INDIVIDUAL SINGERS: Too many to list. ACTOR & ACTRESS: Lawrence Olivier TV SHOWS: Juke Box Jury. COLORS: Black and blue. FOODS: Chinese food, caviar and smoked salmon HOBBIES: Sewing and knitting SPORTS: None WHAT LOOKED FOR IN A BOY: A sense of humor, intelligence and sincerity. WHAT DO YOU LIKE TO DO ON A DATE?: Enjoys going to the theatre, then having a snack at a "disco". BUSINESS PLANS & AMBITIONS: To become a tharoughly accomplished actress PERSONAL PLANS & AMBITIONS: To marry and have several children ADRESSES: 11 Blenheim St. New Bond St. London, W 1, England
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Post by TotalInformation on Feb 3, 2010 21:18:44 GMT -5
1966 - Teen Life Magazine: "MY LIFE WHIT PAUL" by Jane Asher
EDITOR'S NOTE: It is with prode that we present this once-in-a-lifetime SCOOP from the heart of beautiful and tallented JANE ASHER. Like millions of other girls, Jane flipped for Paul almost from the moment their eyes met! But Paul was ALMOST too busy to notice. Will there be a fairytale ending for this famous couple ... wedding bells? What do YOU think? And now, read, read Jane's OWN story of their love. How they met. As he was then. As he is NOW.
In 1960, in Liverpool, all the boys around twenty years of age were wearing long hair, tight jeans and zippered high boots with pointed toes. Most of them played the guitar on Saturday night and Sunday in the innumerable clubs in the city. They didn't make much money then, but later found national popularity and became a craze. My brother, PETER knew some of these musicians, many of whom were beatniks, and for a while he replaced an absent member in one of these groups.
The most famous group in Liverpool were called THE BEATLES. They dressed in fashionable outfits, played at the Cavern Club and became very popular
with the girls. Peter had known them when they were called THE QUARRYMEN and he was friendly with JOHN LENNON who was doing the guitar accompaniment. As for me, I knew by sight the bass guitarrist, PAUL McCARTNEY as we had been to the same school. We'd fisrt met some three years back but he'd never really talked to me. Perhaps he didn't remember me. One night I went down to the Cavern with my brother. I had just taken off my coat when Peter said to me: "Jane, this is John and Paul." I was the first to put my hand out. Paul opened his eyes wide with suprprise - and I smiled. "I never thought that you were Peter's sister," he said. "you have changed! How are you?" I found myself feeling a little ridiculous and didn't know what to say to him. He looked at me with that superior air he affects so well and laughed. He didn't wear his hair so long in those days and his baby face attracted the attention of all the girls. And although I had no right to be, I was jealous of that! One night Peter said to mother: "May I invite two friends for dinner tomorrow? They are leaving for Germany and I doubt if I'll see them for several months." Peter then told me that the two friends were John and Paul. I slept very little that night. I was convinced thet Paul wouldn't remember me. I had no right to say anything but ... yes, I liked him. The dinner was difficult for all of us and it was obvious that the two Beatles were leaving Liverpool with some regret. They had to accompany heir singer, TONY SHERIDEN, to Hamburg as he had decided to make career in Germany. I found it difficult to hide the way I felt about Paul, and wondered if he would notice. When he left the house he gave me an adress ... Star Club, Hamburg, Germany. During those long months I wrote him a long letter every week, but he didn't write me much. He had been very successful, making money, letting his hair grow... What a little idiot I had been occupying myself with him! I was just one of many grils trying to win his heart! I decided I was going to make myself get over this and persuaded my mother to accompany me to London. I would work in the theater. This was at the end of 1961. Live in the capital was more hurried than in Liverpool. I became another person. I started taking a course in dramatics and applied myself to Shakespeare and the poems of Lord Byron. Then, more news from Paul! He was coming back in July! I received a brief telegram: "I will be returning on the 15th. I kiss you. Paul." I was overcome with joy. It wasn't till the 18th that I got a telephone call. Paul told me that he would be returning to Liverpool for three months. They were going to sign a contract with a young man called Brian Epstein. When my vacation came around nothing would keep me in London. My parents were staying in a country house about ten miles from the city. Paul and I dated twice. This was when I began to think of myself at his gril friend. Their first record had been made, then came Please Please Me and I Saw Her Standing There, two compositions by John and Paul, wich did very well. From the start they were very popular. But my Paul was also the Paul dear to thousands of other girls. This was the reason that I had to keep my secret. My existence had to be kept from jopurnalists. The same thing for CYNTHIA, John's wife. At the begining of 1963 I left for London. John, Paul, GEORGE and RINGO had preceded me by several weeks. She Loves You, their great success, was at the top of the hit parade. They had become the most popular musical group. They were triumphant. Paul called me on the phone every day. When he was on tour I lived in an appartment in London's Belgravia and kept the adress a State Secret. It was gayly decorated and a little showy, but I had some rare objects: an ancient barometer, a bronze lamp, a painting by a well-known painter and many things in Regency style. By contract, the kitchen was ultra modern and American style. Some believe that Paul is a little snobbish and shy. This is not completely true. His sense of humor is sharp and precise. His smile, when he lets himself smile, is difficult to resist. Once, on a Saturday morning, he just went off by himself for a stay of the south coast. He returned on the Monday. I didn't ask him a single question. I have never sopken to him about this trip. Soon afterwards I had to change my appartment. His fans never let up. The phone rang every five minutes. Then Paul bought a house ten miles north of London - a villa with fifteen rooms which looked like a castle. He was isolated from the world and his telephone number was changed every week. I helped him decorate it in the romantic style of the nineteenth century. It is very charming. In order to drive through London, Paul always uses his little Cooper-S wich is a two seater. When we are free we visit the homes of the other three Beatles. This evening, for example, we shall go to the Scotch Club in order to hear some good music: the ANIMALS and MICK JAGGER have appeared there. Paul is working hard at the moment. He hopes to be finished with the music of their third film, A Talent For Loving, in about a month. As for me, I'm currently working in the London theater. Paul was able to come to the premiere and there isn't a day when he doesn't ask me about the success of the play. My beatle, for me, is not afraid to be tender, attentive and delightful."
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Post by TotalInformation on Feb 3, 2010 21:17:36 GMT -5
"Peter and Jane (Asher, not Fonda)" - 1967 - july - Teen Set Magazine Share Saturday, January 23, 2010 at 6:56am With the January arrival of Jane Asher in Boston to begin her tour of America starring in "Romeo and Juliet," Americans had their first opportunity to see her-the most famous sister in the pop world-in person. This despite the rumors which have had her altar-bound in Seattle, backstage with Peter and Gordon in Atlantic City or in the dugout at Shea Stadium. For three years we U.S. girls have read about her, wondered about her and envied her. We have gone to see her films, written her countless thousands of letters, both kind and extremely rude, and taken up staring at her pictures in fan magazines trying to decide whether to become as much like her as possible, become her exact opposite in the hope that HE (Paul McCartney) might like a change-or just give up and committ suicide. And in the end solving the whole thing by drawing a moustache on her photo and constructively blacking out three of her front teeth. In February, her brother, Peter Asher, followed Jane to America for his ninth tour of this country with his partner, Gordon Waller. By combining the innocent appeal of say, Peter Noone, and the graphic sexiness of Mick Jagger ("Girls want to mother me, " Peter one said, "and Gordon"), Peter and Gordon have remained top favorites with us as many of their countrymen (The Moody Blues, The Searchers, The Zombies, Gerry and the Pacemakers) have faded into relative obscurity. Jane and Peter (and their younger sister Clare) inherited their mother's red hair. They were reared in a highly cultured, upper class home in London. Their father is an eminent Wimpole Street physician and their mother is a professor of the oboe at the Royal Academy of Music. They encouraged their children to use their mind and make their own decisions. Jane and Peter, who, at any rate, didn't need much encouragment in that direction, early possessed agile intelligence startling to those unprepared for it. They were sent to excellent schools, Jane to a small exclusive academy and Peter to Westiminster. Jane, who has been acting since childhood, decided not to go on to university and became a full time actress when she finished school at 16. Peter, though already singing with his classmate Gordon, went on for two years of philosophy at Kings College before chucking it to become a full time pop star. You were aware of all of the aforementioned. Right. They share many traits. Both are stubbornly independent and highly selective of their friends, keeping a small number of close ones virtually forever. Some call them snobbihs, but they aren't really, of course. They've been exposed too long to those who would know them not for what they are, but forwho they are. They share an aura of remoteness, and their reactions are very tricky to decipher in their steady blue gazes. In fact, practically impossible. What makes it even more difficult is that Jane, particularly, is extremely adept at portraying emotions she does not feel. If she smiled warmly at you and two hundred and seven of your noisiest friends waiting outside the stage door ready to pounce on her en masse to get what souvenirs you could-she probably didn't mean it. Would you? If, however, you persuaded a hotel switchboard operator to ring Peter's room at 3 a.m. and you were crunched and resentful that he sounded sleepy and cross-well, he probably was. The Ashers respect the privacy of others (he wouldn't wake you in the middle of the night) and zealously cherish their own. Fans writing to Jane Girlfriend receive no reply; as far as she is concerned there is no such person and the envelopes might as well be marked "Not Known At This Address." Letters to Jane Asher are treated in the nammer one would expect from a young lady who is very pleased that others buy tickets to her films and performances and watch her on television. They get on well together, Jane and Peter, and always have, much to the amazement of the "Robin Hood" producer who broke his rule about casting siblings to act together and pessimistically expected them to do nothing but quarrel. They didn't then, don't now. When she's in London, Jane is a loyal customer of Indica Books, of which Peter is a director. A bookshop was a natural business for Peter to establish, and for Jane to frequent, because they both read last thing at night, no matter how late the hour, and first thing on waking, perferring to rush about later to meet appointments. Aside from qualifying for a discount at Indica because of her relationship to one of the directors, she also more than earned it by helping Peter, John Dunbar and Miles paint the shop and build bookshelves. Many English TV viewers remember the night three years ago when a newly released record was played to the Juke Box Jury panel, with Jane sitting on the panel. The producers of the show had promised not to play the record, because the guest panelist felt that she couldn't really be objective about it, but they had naturally broken their word and played it. It was "World Without Love" by a new duo, Peter and Gordon. In front of millions of people and to the laughter of the other members of the jury-because she was seventeen and her boyfriend had written the song and her brother sang it-Jane not only said that it was a hit, which was all she was required to say, but also, "It's going to be number ONE, I know it is," No one really remembers how the others voted after they had finished falling about laughing, but less than three weeks later Peter and Gordon knocked the Beatles from their positiion at the top of the pops with their very first record, a Lennon-McCartney compositon. And Jane Asher, who by then was quite accustomed to being right (for instance, about an up and coming group with a misspelled name and funny hair cuts), had two reasons to be happy that she was right again. Peter and Jane Asher
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Post by TotalInformation on Feb 3, 2010 21:17:07 GMT -5
Yesterday at 7:16pm Since Jane Asher met Paul McCartney in Spring '63 she's had a problem. She's obviously very fond of Paul and terribly proud of him. But she's been an actress since she was five and is determined to make a success of her career on her own. As soon as her name was linked with Paul's, the news was flashed around the world and she was instantly famous - but not for herself and not as an actress. Any girl whose name had been romantically tied with Paul's would have been as well known. It was a terrible blow. How, in future, would she be able to tell whether people wanted to see her because of her power as a performer or merely for her friendship with a Beatle? Paul encourages her to continue with her career because he thinks she has terriic talent and goes to see her perform whenever he can. After the newspapers found out about Jane and Paul, fans began to collect outside her home. Being in the heart of London, it was easy for any Beatle-fan girl to find. Nauturally Paul - and the other boys, too - were frequent visitors to Jane's home when they were in town. They used to play discs and write songs down in the basement. Once, the exasperated Mrs. Asher threw some water at some persistent girls to try to persuade them to go away. Inside the Asher home, the phone kept ringing and unknown female voices asked for Paul. When told he wasn't there, they just hung up. Jane's father, a medical man who has to have his number in the phone book, found it all very wearing. And all Jane wanted was to be friends with Paul and go on being as good an actree as she knew how. Rumours about Jane's friendship with Paul started in October, 1963, though they had met about six months previously when she went back stage at a pop concert at London's Royal Albert Hall. After that she was often seen with The Beatles when they went to photo sessions and to parties. When she and Paul went out they were recognised and their dates became world wide news. For instance, in December, 1963, they went to see Never Too Late at the Prince of Wales theatre in London. They both enjoy plays but because Paul was spotted and mobbed they had to go home without seeing the last act. Next morning, in the newspapers, there was a picture of them both sitting in the stalls. Good publicity maybe, but it's not easy to run a boy-meets-girl friendship in the full glare of big time publicity. Jane was the first Beatle girl to become really well known, probably because she was already familiar to the public. Everyone knows her from films, television plays and appearances on panel games. Being a good conversationalist, a girl with decided and original views and a forthright but charming way of putting her opinions over, she'salways been well liked. Despite the fact that she's a sophisticated and quite a worldly person she's still very human and understanding towards other people. Maybe this is the reason for being the most poular Beatle girl. Being so very attractive to look at must have something to do with it, too. (Paul particularly loves her long, red hair.) Paul and Jane are very well suited for both are mature, straightforward and have, under all their charm, a take-it-or-leave-it approach to things. Both are toughies at heart. Jane has earned herself considerable respect for her adamant attitude to publicity which is only connected with her Beatle boy and not with her acting. It's paradoxical that Paul unavoidably has made it more difficult for her to make her own way in the world and prove herself in her own right. Before she met Paul, Jane had, of course, been dated by many attractive boys, including actor Albert Finney and poster Craig Douglas. Both those dates didn't make news. But in Freruary, 1964, stories leaked out, linking Paul's name with Jill Haworth, the beautiful American actress. He phoned back to England from Miami to reassure Jane that the papers had got it wrong. As soon as he got back, he drove down to Cantebury where Jane was appearing in The Jew Of Malta, to make it plain that she was the girl in his life. When they went to see a movie at the Empire Cinema in Leicestr Square, London, that same month, they had to leave seperatlely and go off in individual taxis, because they were recognised and the crowds started closing in on them. So unless they go to clubs where the people are mostly in show biz, like the Ad Lib, dates have to be carefully planned. They may go for a drive in his car or take a taxi and get out and walk round one of the quieter shopping areas, looking at clothes - both men's and girl's. They like to be quiet and they tend to be rather a serious couple when they're on their own. Marriage? There have been lots of rumours, including one that the ceremony took place on board ship, in Paris and in Kensington last year. Jane herself said, back in '63: "I'm not going to get married until I'm twenty." She was nineteen on 5th April this year.
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Post by TotalInformation on Jan 7, 2010 5:02:06 GMT -5
www.contactmusic.com/new/xmlfeed.nsf/story/adjani-to-sue-newspapers-over-defamatory-statementsFrench actress ISABELLE ADJANI is to sue several publications over photographs of her with close pal DR STEPHANE DELAJOUX, claiming the press have made "defamatory statements" about him. Adjani has been romantically linked to surgeon Delajoux, who recently hit the headlines over allegations he pretended to lose the use of his legs for an insurance scam. The French National Medical Council subsequently banned Delajoux from practice for six months. SUBWAY beauty Adjani, 50, has begun legal proceedings against several magazines and newspapers, her lawyer OLIVIER BARATELLI confirms. Baratelli says, "My client, who intends to have her rights to her image and to her private life respected, has decided to take action against all magazines and newspapers which have published snatched or unauthorised pictures of her and her companion. "These articles, seriously defamatory, not only aim to call into question the professional competence of Dr Stephane Delajoux, neurosurgeon, esteemed and recognised by his peers, but also to damage seriously his honour, his privacy and his personal life, and that of those close to him." 17 October 2005 19:46
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Post by TotalInformation on Dec 3, 2009 4:31:58 GMT -5
Note that the version aired on the History Channel has 16 of 60 minutes cut and the audio horribly botched for the first 35 of the 44 minutes they did air. The YouTube clips feature the entire 60 min.
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Post by TotalInformation on Nov 27, 2009 17:08:11 GMT -5
do you know which cip of 7 the geo martin quote is in?
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Post by TotalInformation on Nov 27, 2009 16:55:49 GMT -5
Proboards is a harsh mistress. You've done quite well with it, though
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Post by TotalInformation on Nov 23, 2009 21:06:30 GMT -5
Still seems to be flukey... Is it tied to IP numbers by any chance?
Ignoring only papers over the problem of course-- these true believers can be very dangerous.
A somewhat prominent BEATLES fundamentalist recently admitted to me that he suffers from severe debilitating mental illness. And keep in mind that is not someone who spends their free time stalking BEATLES researchers like the fundie inmates over at the Macca Nuthouse; this is someone whose pursuits are far more outwardly stable.
I still don't understand why these dangerously unstable stalkers are allowed to post their telepathic fantasies here, but it is what it is... I understand another former poster here was recently locked up for his delusional threats... I'm not sure when/if he was banned or if a killfile would have helped matters... Hopefully these fundamentalists will get the mental health care they need before they get violent.
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Post by TotalInformation on Nov 20, 2009 14:32:29 GMT -5
Testing this out now on one of the stalker nutbags... I notice that it doesn't seem to be retroactive unlike a USENET kill file....
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Post by TotalInformation on Nov 16, 2009 3:28:57 GMT -5
Paul employed doubles during the last year or so of his life before he was assassinated: 1965-66.
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Post by TotalInformation on Nov 9, 2009 12:39:23 GMT -5
This is airing on PBS in most American markets tonight
How the Beatles Rocked the Kremlin
Despite singing a song called "Back in the U.S.S.R.," the Beatles never actually performed in the Soviet Union. That didn't stop their music from making an impact behind the Iron Curtain. In this special, filmmaker Leslie Woodhead talks to Russians who grew up listening to the Beatles and found hope and inspiration in their music and their message of rebellion — which may have played a role in the downfall of communism. 9 p.m., PBS and KPTS, Channel 8.
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Documentary which tells the extraordinary unknown story of how the Beatles helped to destroy the USSR.
In August 1962, director Leslie Woodhead made a two-minute film in Liverpool's Cavern Club with a raw and unrecorded group of rockers called the Beatles. He arranged their first live TV appearances on a local show in Manchester and watched as the Fab Four phenomenon swept the world.
Twenty-five years later while making films in Russia, Woodhead became aware of how, even though they were never able to play in the Soviet Union, the Beatles' legend had soaked into the lives of a generation of kids. This film meets the Soviet Beatles generation and hears their stories about how the Fab Four changed their lives, including Putin's deputy premier Sergei Ivanov, who explains how the Beatles helped him learn English and showed him another life.
The Soviet authorities were alarmed by the seditious potential of rock and roll, with the Beatles a special target and denounced as 'bugs' in official papers. Their smuggled records were destroyed and their music was banned, but the myth blossomed as bootlegs and photos were covertly traded and even rented amongst fans.
Soon there were thousands of rock bands across the USSR, trying to make music with crude home-made guitars. Speakers on lampposts installed to broadcast propaganda were grabbed by rock hopefuls, while reports that an electric pickup could be cannibalised from a telephone led to phone boxes being raided and disabled.
Millions of young people fell in love with the Beatles and the culture of the Cold War enemy, and defected emotionally from the Soviet system. The Beatles prepared the cultural way for the fall of the Berlin Wall and ultimately helped to wash away the foundations of that system.
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Post by TotalInformation on Oct 9, 2009 17:52:29 GMT -5
What makes you think this was a Paul song?
From what I can tell it was first recorded as a demo in 1970, four years after Paul was assassinated.
Do you have any information indicating this was written by Paul before he was assassinated?
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Post by TotalInformation on Sept 7, 2009 16:50:29 GMT -5
Holy crap, when did that show up?
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Post by TotalInformation on Sept 7, 2009 16:49:06 GMT -5
Their chronological age doesn't mean those 18-35 year-olds don't have a juvenile mindset.
The infantilization of the West was part of the Tavistock agenda BEATLES were entwined in, after all.
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Post by TotalInformation on Sept 7, 2009 16:43:26 GMT -5
Saw an ad over the weekend Entertainment Tonight is doing a show about the BEATLES every night this week.
The promo clip had Mary Hart telling Sir fPAUL: "We first met in 1964!" And FAUL reacting all like Huh? Oh."
So, keep an eye out for that.
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Post by TotalInformation on Aug 13, 2009 4:16:58 GMT -5
There shall be weeping and gnashing of teeth.
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Post by TotalInformation on Aug 5, 2009 19:05:22 GMT -5
So, are you intimating Sir FAUL killed Keith Moon? That would be a precedent for the time George Harrison caught a rapidly-acting brain cancer the week he spent an evening with Sir FAUL and Lady Pegleg.
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Post by TotalInformation on Jul 27, 2009 20:11:06 GMT -5
Leave the textual analysis to the grownups...
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