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Elle

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Everything posted by Elle

  1. Elle

    Dua Lipa

    “1 WEEK - BREAK MY HEART - 27.03.2020”
  2. Yesterday, Lana Del Rey and her friend Annie Tomberlin were seen out together on Beverly Boulevard in Los Angeles, California. ​Lana may be the Serene Queen, but perhaps not the Quarantine Queen! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mNz1WdX_Zgg More photos:
  3. Elle

    Song vs. Song

    Cherry vs Wait for Life
  4. Here's the full article in case somebody can't view the link from The New York Times: Policeman. Reality Star. Recent Ex-Boyfriend. Sean Larkin of "Live PD" wants you to think about thinking differently about police officers For most of the last two years, Sean Larkin has worked six days a week — four days in the gang unit of the Tulsa, Okla., police department, where he is an officer, and two days in New York City to film episodes of “Live PD,” a live reality TV show about policing. On Sundays, he traveled. For much of the fall and winter, he’d go out to Los Angeles to see a new girlfriend, the singer and songwriter Lana Del Rey. He escorted her to the Grammys. He joined her on tour. But sometimes she came to Tulsa, too. Mr. Larkin, 46, who goes by Sticks, didn’t plan for this weird life. He likes simple things: CrossFit, mountain biking. He grew up the son of active duty military parents, and he attributes his interest in law enforcement to his structured home life and to life in the Bay Area during the late ’80s and early ’90s. “That’s when criminal street gangs manifested into what they turned into,” he said. He moved to Oklahoma for college, where he spent two years at Rogers State University and then transferred to Langston University for night classes, while he worked full-time during the day. “I planned on just going to get a degree and then go back to the West Coast and being a cop, because I was a West Coast kid,” Mr. Larkin said. But after he did an internship with the Tulsa Police Department, in 1997, he got hired right away. Nearly 20 years later, “Live PD” premiered on A&E in 2016, and the Tulsa Police Department was one of six police departments that signed on. From the start, Mr. Larkin was one of the officers whom the cameras followed on rounds and in the field. Now he’s in the studio, helping to host the show with Dan Abrams (of broadcast news fame), analyzing the footage on “Live PD” much like a sportscaster. “Live PD” cuts between footage of police officers around the country as they make traffic stops (suspected D.U.I.s, busted taillights), respond to calls (domestic disputes, gunshots) and go on high speed chases (on foot, by car). It’s all brought to the viewer live-ish. There’s a delay, in case something unusually gruesome happens. The mission of the “Live PD” is to provide “transparency of policing in America,” said Elaine Frontain Bryant, the executive vice president and head of programming for A&E. “It feels like entertainment with purpose,” she said. The reality presented is not a fabricated competition, but that doesn’t mean there aren’t winners and losers. Especially if you’re one of the people featured on the show who would rather not be. It’s not uncommon to hear people say they don’t want to be filmed, curse out the camera operator or shield their faces. There’s no cutaway when these things happens. The show gets by with showing some of the worst moments of people’s lives without their consent because it’s live, according to an A&E spokeswoman. “‘Live PD’ follows news gathering standards like any news organization — your local nightly news show or newspaper — would in covering a story,” she wrote in an email. There is a disclaimer before the show: “Not all outcomes are known or final. All suspects are presumed innocent unless proven guilty in a court of law.” But the audience never finds out what happens to those who are arrested. There are some people on the show who seem happy, or at least OK, about getting their 15 seconds of fame this way. They notice the cameras and ask “Is this ‘Live PD’?” or wave and say “Hi Mom!” Mom very well may be watching. According to Nielsen data, “Live PD” averaged nearly 2.4 million viewers last season, which was its third. It airs for three hours, every Friday and Saturday night. It’s so in demand that now there’s even more. There’s “Live PD Presents: PD Cam,” which Mr. Larkin hosts, and “Live PD Presents: Women on Patrol” and “Live PD: Roll Call” and “Live Rescue.” There’s “Live PD: Wanted” and “Live PD: Police Patrol” and “Alaska PD.” And there’s “America’s Top Dog” — which features “top K9 cops and civilian dogs alongside their handlers as they compete nose-to-nose,” according to the show’s website. Mr. Larkin helps decide what viewers see. If a disturbance in Tallahassee gets a little boring, he’ll cut to an abandoned car in Richland County, S.C., or a knife fight between brothers in Lawrence, Ind. You can try to get Mr. Larkin to tell you how he met Del Rey, but he won’t. (They crossed paths through work in New York and “just kind of hit it off from day one,” he said.) But it didn’t take long for Del Rey to confirm the relationship, in an interview with The Los Angeles Times that was published the month after. “I didn’t know we were being photographed,” she said of their first date, a Central Park stroll that was captured by the paparazzi. “I would’ve worn something different.” When Del Rey started dating Mr. Larkin, she was about to release the biggest and certainly most critically acclaimed album of her career. But “a lot of people are like, ‘Oh, did you even know who she was?’” Mr. Larkin said. “Like, of course I knew who she was.” They did “boyfriend, girlfriend type of things together,” Mr. Larkin said. In L.A., they went to the beach and watched people surf. They went shopping and grabbed coffee. In Tulsa, they ran errands. They went to Target. It was “very low key,” he said. But of course there was some glamour. “I was asked if I was nervous and not at all,” Mr. Larkin said after the Grammys, where he walked the red carpet with Del Rey. “We drive cars 120 miles per hour, and I don’t want to sound like a tough guy, but I mean, when you’re behind a known shooting suspect and he jumps out the car running, you’ve got to get out chasing.” The Grammys, by comparison, were more tame. “Taking pictures and answering questions. I’m not trying to sound like a bravado tough guy, just like, you know,” he said, and paused. “It was enjoyable, for sure.” Mr. Larkin says the relationship was pretty normal. “When we were in Tulsa we hung out with my law enforcement friends and their spouses. We all Super Bowl partied together, dinners and things like that,” Mr. Larkin said. “Normal things couples do with their friends.” Still, telling his 17- and 22-year-old children about “Dad’s new girlfriend” got the expected reaction, Mr. Larkin said: “They were kind of blown away.” Mr. Larkin finds out about new music from his kids, which he said “helps me stay relevant. As silly as it sounds, even in my job as a police officer.” “If you stay on top of music that some of these guys are listening to, it’s something relatable,” Mr. Larkin said of people he encounters in the course of his work. “If you stop them in a car and they’ve got whoever playing the radio, and you know who it is, you start talking to them about it, and it’s kind of an icebreaker.” In any event, he’s not seeing any musicians at the moment. “Right now, we’re just friends,” he said of Del Rey. “We still talk and whatnot, we just have busy schedules right now.” The most viewed police footage of the past decade has been scenes of brutality against black and brown people, much of it captured on phones. Philando Castile’s death was witnessed on Facebook Live; a bystander filmed the choking death of Eric Garner. It’s clear why police departments might want to participate in a TV show that is filmed from their vantage point. Plus, Mr. Larkin pointed out, “Live PD” could offset preconceived notions that come from entertainment, too. “A movie like ‘Training Day’ came out, great movie, loved it. But it painted police in a bad light. ‘The Shield,’ which was a TV show that was used to be on FX, great show,” he said. “But the cops are these rogue guys who run around stealing drugs, and committing murders and things like that.” “It makes great for TV,” Mr. Larkin said, but for people who have had bad experiences with police or in life or “just whatever reason, they see these things and they think that’s how the cops really are.” And if some cops act illegally, Mr. Larkin doesn’t want that to be how all are perceived. “Look, that’s a different cop. Doesn’t mean that I’m that same cop.” Del Rey, who did not respond to a request for comment for this article, described Mr. Larkin to The Los Angeles Times as “a good cop. He gets it. He sees both sides of things.” He’s not naïve enough to think the backlash toward police from many black and brown communities comes from fiction. But Mr. Larkin sees “Live PD” as a tool, a way to let the public see what policing is like, beyond cellphone footage. “I think that if we get the whole story and the officer was in the wrong, hey, he was in the wrong,” he said. Because it’s live, he added, the public gets to see what happened in an encounter with police from start to finish, a chance for the audience to say, “‘Well, the reason the officer did this is because we saw what the officer had to do.’” Some U.S. cities have begun to see it differently. Several police departments have ended their cooperation with “Live PD” over concerns about bad publicity. When Bridgeport, Conn., decided not to renew its contract with the show in 2018, a spokesman for the city’s mayor told The Associated Press: “If that’s the only thing that’s being publicized nationally about our city, it can have a negative impact.” Mr. Larkin’s own department in Tulsa pulled out of the show for two years beginning in 2017 after facing backlash from community activists before returning this season, according to the Tulsa World. It’s been a hectic few years. Now, Mr. Larkin is on a bit of a sabbatical, taking a leave of absence from the Tulsa Police Department. He is still working on “Live PD” but wants to spend more time with his son before he goes off to college. Plus, everyone deserves a break.
  5. This is funny because my best friend for years thought it was "holler through the yard" and I heard her sing that along to the song and I was like ??? what are you saying lol. She had no idea the lyric was "hallelujah" until I told her. I thought it was hilarious that that's what she thought it was for so long x
  6. Bonnaroo has been postponed: ” Bonnaroo Music & Arts Festival will be rescheduled to take place September 24-27, 2020 out of an abundance of caution and for the health and safety of all Bonnaroovians, artists, staff and our community. All current tickets and onsite accommodations (camping, tent rentals, RV, etc.) will be honored for the new weekend. Fans with off-site accommodations and shuttles purchased through the festival will be contacted directly with updates. Rest assured, we will share updates as quickly as possible via email, our website, and on our social accounts. Please continue to radiate positivity through this uncharted time in our world. Thank you for your continued support and we look forward to seeing you on The Farm this fall. - ❤️Bonnaroo”
  7. Swan Song just never did it for me, and it's really been my least favourite of hers since the first time I heard it. I'm sure it's my least played song from her released discography. However, I feel like Love Song may end up stealing that title.. just because it's unlistenable for me. I remember when the snippets were shared by Lana and was dubbed "In Your Car" I had recently split from my girlfriend at the time, and upon first listening to the snippet I burst into tears lol. I couldn't even go back and re-listen to that snippet afterwards like I did with the other songs she had been sharing snippets of because it was too painful to listen to. We ended up getting back together like a week after the snippet was shared, so I became more excited for that song and being able to relate to it while in love. Well, we ended up splitting again for good about a month before it was released on NFR, and so now listening to the song makes me unbearably sad so I have no choice but to skip it lol. It's just always been a sad omen for me. Not because it's intended to be a sad song at all, it's quite the opposite, but I'm just so far from that feeling she sings about, it breaks my heart. I kind of turn my nose up at it - fck love. Who knows, maybe if I ever love again I'll appreciate the song more lol x
  8. Elle

    MARINA (and The Diamonds)

    Wow, Like China Dolls seems to be an early conceptual version of what became Obsessions! So cool to hear the first idea of what this melody was used for, later to become her first official single x
  9. Has there been any official statement about this? I can’t seem to find one x
  10. Elle

    MARINA (and The Diamonds)

    Marina has cancelled her April "inbeweenie tour" dates due to coronavirus concerns. The following shows are affected: April 11th - Las Vegas, NZ @ Brooklyn Bowl April 14th - Santa Barbara, CA @ Arlington Theatre April 15th - San Diego, CA @ Humphrey's April 17th - Phoenix, AZ @ The Van Buren Her April 12th & April 19th dates at Coachella are likely to be rescheduled for the new dates of the festival, yet to be announced.
  11. Elle

    Instagram Updates

    Here are the recent posts embedded for this who haven’t seen them - (6 photos in this post - tap arrows for the others) http://instagram.com/p/B9yito9J1S9/ http://instagram.com/p/B9yjMorpACg/
  12. Elle

    Instagram Updates

    Wow! Deleting the photo of them at the Sylvee & changing the “keeping what I’ve got” caption on the red truck picture is sort of telling... no matter what’s going on behind the scenes, I hope she’s doing alright x
  13. Never say never.. remember Pretty When You Cry & Black Beauty were finally added to the setlist nearly 4 years later x
  14. Elle

    Song vs. Song

    Us Against the World vs Kinda Outta Luck
  15. In result of all the cancellations/suspensions, this will be Lana's next upcoming performance, and as of now Hangout Fest plans to continue on with the festival: "Dear Beachgoers, Hangout 2020 is over two months away and is currently moving forward as planned. Safety is our number one concern for our fans, employees, vendors and the community of Gulf Shores, Alabama. We will continue to work with the appropriate authorities to produce a safe and healthy festival. Stay tuned for more information on updated guidelines, protocols and resources to ensure the health and safety of all attendees. See you on the beaches of Gulf Shores! Team Hangout"
  16. The festival has announced that it will be postponed -
  17. Added to the OP, Video of her leaving church with paps asking her about the coronavirus & cancellations, but she didn't say anything - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vuQzWa-6o8Q
  18. I haven't seen any official word yet from the festival or anyone else from that matter, so it seems too early to certainly declare this as postponed, although it likely will be x
  19. Elle

    Song vs. Song

    California vs Cruel World
  20. The New York Times posted an article about Jack, noting that Lana was actively working with him in late-January: "On that day during Grammys week, he arrived at the studio in the afternoon. The previous day, he had devoted the morning to working on the new Bleachers album; in the evening, Del Rey swung by for a session."
  21. Of course being upset over cancelled concerts is such a first world problem considering how badly this is affecting people’s health, but I just got word that the HANA show I was meant to attend on Sunday has been cancelled due to coronavirus concerns Super bummed since I’ve been waiting nearly 5 years to see her again & the venue is super intimate - 330 cap & no barricade! Coronavirus is the worst thing to have ever happened to concerts/festivals lol In all seriousness though, I hope everyone is staying safe and making efforts to protect themselves from getting or spreading the virus x
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