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WWW.GAMEBLOG.FRCes devs sont des lgendes Crimson Desert s'offre encore une norme mise jour avec des nouveauts trs attenduesCrimson Desert reoit l'norme mise jour 1.06 avec du nouveau contenu gratuit et des fonctionnalits trs demandes qui vont changer beaucoup de choses.0 Commentarios 0 Acciones 62 Views -
Open-Source Intelligence (OSINT) Market: Transforming Data into Actionable Insights To Forecast 2025-2032The Open-Source Intelligence (OSINT) market Size has witnessed significant growth in recent years as organizations increasingly rely on publicly available data to gain actionable insights. OSINT refers to the collection, analysis, and interpretation of information gathered from publicly accessible sources such as social media platforms, news outlets, blogs, government reports,...0 Commentarios 0 Acciones 139 Views
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YUBNUB.NEWS1 American Tests Positive for Hantavirus, Another Showing Symptoms: HHSPassengers evacuated from the Dutch flagged hantavirus-stricken cruise ship MV Hondius prepare to board a plane bound for the United States at the Tenerife Sur-Reina Sofia airport on the island of Tenerife0 Commentarios 0 Acciones 49 Views -
YUBNUB.NEWSTrump Says Polish, Moldovan Detainees Released by Belarus, Russia With US HelpPresident Donald Trump flashes a thumbs up while walking to board Air Force One at Joint Base Andrews, Md., on May 1, 2026. Jim Watson/AFP via Getty ImagesU.S. President Donald Trump said on May 10 that0 Commentarios 0 Acciones 49 Views -
ALLTHATSINTERESTING.COM33 Rare Titanic Photos From Before And After The SinkingClick here to view slideshowIt's been more than a century since the Titanic -- nicknamed the unsinkable ship -- made its fatal descent into the depths of the North Atlantic. At the time, the ship was the largest passenger ship on the seas and the largest man-made moving object on Earth, measuring 882-feet in length. At its maximum capacity, the ship could carry 3,547 people on board in both passengers and crew.However, only 16 wooden lifeboats were brought aboard the ship. That was only enough to carry one-third of the ship's capacity. When the ship hit a 100-foot-tall iceberg, more than 1,500 souls went down with the luxury liner in the early morning hours of April 15, 1912.From pets to one of the world's richest men in John Jacob Astor IV, very few survived the unforgiving coldness of the Atlantic. Even Edward Smith, the ship's captain, met his end, with his famous last words being: "Well boys, you've done your duty and done it well. I ask no more of you. I release you. You know the rule of the sea. It's every man for himself now, and God bless you."However, thanks to the RMS Carpathia's rescue efforts, some survived. Sadly, only 306 bodies were found after the sinking.News of the rescue reached the public later that day, and crowds descended upon the docks to greet those who survived.When the survivors hit land in New York's Pier 54 on April 18, the press scurried to interview and photograph them, some of whom you can see in the Titanic photos above, images that portray the full story of the doomed ship.Enjoy these Titanic photos? Next, check out the only known video footage of the Titanic. Then, have a look at some astounding Titanic facts that most people don't know.The post 33 Rare Titanic Photos From Before And After The Sinking appeared first on All That's Interesting.0 Commentarios 0 Acciones 50 Views -
ALLTHATSINTERESTING.COM52 Photos Of The Enthralling Life Of Frida KahloClick here to view slideshowDuring her lifetime, Frida Kahlo produced some 200 striking works of art, which have been widely described as surrealistic. But the iconic Mexican painter never saw her pieces as things that she imagined."I don't paint dreams or nightmares, I paint my own reality," Kahlo said.Kahlo lived a colorful life: She traveled the world for work, grew a fantastical garden, and enjoyed infamous affairs with both men and women. Yet she was tormented by the endless pain caused by a horrible accident that changed her life.The Early Life Of Frida KahloGetty ImagesFrida Kahlo painting one of her portraits of an unidentified woman.Before she became "Frida," she was born Magdalena Carmen Frieda Kahlo y Caldern. She came into the world on July 6, 1907, as the third child of four daughters.Although most often identified by her Mexican heritage, Frida Kahlo was also German on her father's side. He was an immigrant named Guillermo Kahlo, who had moved to Mexico in 1891. Her mother was Matilde Caldern, a devout Catholic of primarily indigenous as well as Spanish descent. Frida Kahlo was a remarkably bright child with an adorable face. Her intelligence and bold temperament deepened her emotional bond with her father, with whom she remained close to even as she got older. Kahlo's physical health, however, plagued her entire life. Wikimedia CommonsFrida Kahlo was the third of four sisters.After contracting polio at age six, Kahlo's right leg was withered and her right foot was stunted. Nevertheless, she maintained an active childhood playing soccer, swimming, wrestling, and more. To explore her creative side, her photographer father also taught her proper camera techniques at an early age. She also took drawing lessons from a family friend.In 1922, Frida Kahlo enrolled in Mexico's elite National Preparatory School, where she met muralist Diego Rivera, who later became her husband. In his autobiography My Art, My Life, Rivera recalled their encounter at her school where he had been asked to work on a project. He wrote, "All of a sudden the door flew open, and a girl who seemed to be no more than ten or twelve was propelled inside... She had unusual dignity and self-assurance, and there was a strange fire in her eyes."FlickrFrida Kahlo (far left) was a bright and active child who occasionally enjoyed dressing up in trousers and suits.Sadly, three years later, Kahlo found herself the victim of a horrible accident between a bus and a streetcar where she was impaled by a steel handrail. It went in near her hip and came out the other side. She suffered horrendous injuries, especially to her spine and pelvis.In many ways, it was a miracle she had survived, though she had to go through an intense recovery phase, which forced the active tomboy to be bedridden for months. But it was during the initial year of recovery that she first put brush to canvas, and expressed her pain both physical and emotional through art.Frida Kahlo's PortraitsGetty ImagesFrida Kahlo began focusing on painting while she recovered from her accident.As an artist, Frida Kahlo is known for her distinct surrealist style imbued with vibrant colors, which harken to her indigenous heritage. It is a technique that was formed as she began to acquaint herself with the canvas during her recovery years. The accident had indelibly changed the young creative.To her then-boyfriend Alejandro Gmez Arias, Kahlo wrote:"Life will reveal [its secrets] to you soon. I already know it all... I was a child who went about in a world of colors... My friends, my companions became women slowly, I became old in instants."Her injury was so severe that she was unable to sit up straight for months, and she was required to wear a stabilizing corset made out of hard plaster. Hulton Archive/Getty ImagesMuch of Frida Kahlo's art reflected the severe pain she endured due to her injuries.To allow her daughter's creativity to flourish while confined to the bed, Kahlo's mother set up a portable easel and installed a mirror to the underside of Kahlo's bed canopy, which enabled her to paint herself while laying down. Many of Frida Kahlo's paintings were self-portraits."I paint self-portraits because I am so often alone, because I am the person I know best," the artist confessed years later. Indeed, it is estimated that about 55 of her paintings she produced during her life were self-portraits.Getty ImagesFrida Kahlo with her famous "The Two Fridas," which some have interpreted as a depiction of her torn identities as Diego Rivera's forlorn wife and a carefree Mexican artist.The personal anguish she magnificently translated into her art resonated with the public. As a result, Frida Kahlo's self-portraits later became her most popular paintings. Among her most esteemed works are the The Two Fridas (1939), Self-Portrait With Thorn Necklace and Hummingbird (1940), and Broken Column (1944).Much like the style of dress she became known for, Frida Kahlo's art was imbued with her politics. As she became comfortable in her skin as an artist in post-revolutionary Mexico, many of the country's intellectuals whom Kahlo befriended were embracing Mexico's traditional roots or "Mexicanidad."Her communist beliefs and Mexican nationalism are visibly ensconced in paintings like her Self-Portrait on the Borderline Between Mexico and the United States (1932) and My Dress Hangs There (1933).Frida And DiegoGetty ImagesDiego Rivera and Frida Kahlo married in 1929, divorced in 1939, then remarried in 1940.Another significant influence on Frida Kahlo's art was her tumultuous relationship with her husband, the acclaimed Mexican artist Diego Rivera. After their serendipitous encounter at Kahlo's school, Kahlo and Rivera who were 20 years apart in age began an affectionate relationship as the two ran in similar social circles. When Kahlo began to pick up the paint brush more frequently as she recovered, Rivera visited her at her family's Casa Azul more often. Rivera was already an established artist at the time. But he was enamored by Kahlo's natural gift and encouraged her artistry as much as possible. Getty ImagesKahlo and Rivera had a troublesome relationship but they remained devoted to each other until the end."It was obvious to me," Rivera later wrote, "that this girl was an authentic artist." Frida Kahlo's friends were displeased with their courtship and made their feelings plainly known. A friend of Kahlo's called Rivera "a pot-bellied, filthy old man." When she and Rivera married in 1929, her parents referred to the union as "marriage between an elephant and a dove," an obvious jab at the couple's mismatched appearance. But Kahlo's and Rivera's spirits were inseparable and they shared a strong love and respect for each other. Yet that did not prevent woes in their marriage. "It is not worthwhile to leave this world without having had a little fun in life."Frida KahloDiego Rivera was a renowned philanderer as was Frida Kahlo, who had affairs with both men and women during their troubled marriage. Their union was also tormented by Kahlo's miscarriages its symbolisms apparent in her paintings due to infertility possibly caused by her accident. The couple divorced in 1939 only to remarry the following year.Alberto Pizzoli/AFP via Getty ImagesAn exhibit visitor views one of Frida Kahlo's corsets that the artist wore when she was alive."There have been two great accidents in my life," Kahlo once said. "One was the streetcar, and the other was Diego. Diego was by far the worst." Still, they remained devoted to their love and their art. Rivera wrote tenderly of his wife's work while recommending the paintings to his friend:"I recommend her to you, not as a husband but as an enthusiastic admirer of her work, acid and tender, hard as steel and delicate and fine as a butterfly's wing, loveable as a beautiful smile, and profound and cruel as the bitterness of life."The Legacy Of Frida KahloGetty ImagesFrida Kahlo continues to be celebrated as one of the most talented artists of the 20th century.Frida Kahlo died at the age of 47 on July 13, 1954. The official cause of death was pulmonary embolism set on by pneumonia, but some people suspected that she had overdosed on painkillers and committed suicide.After her death, Frida Kahlo's portraits have become some of the most recognizable artworks in the world. While she sold few paintings during her life, her work is now exhibited alongside esteemed artists like Salvador Dal and Georgia O'Keefe. Her individual pieces now sell for millions of dollars. As Janet Landay, a curator at the Museum of Fine Arts in Houston, put it: "Kahlo made personal women's experiences serious subjects for art, but because of their intense emotional content, her paintings transcend gender boundaries. Intimate and powerful, they demand that viewers men and women be moved by them."Valery SharifulinTASS via Getty ImagesFrida Kahlo's popularity has spurred discussions about the commodification of art and the artist.Kahlo's gripping artwork has also found its way into the pop culture lexicon of the 21st century. But the adoration for her work has also given way to an obsession that borderlines commodification of the artist's image. In 2002, Mexican actress Salma Hayek portrayed the late painter in the feature film Frida. Nowadays, items like bags, T-shirts, and mugs with Frida Kahlo's unmistakeable face are highly sought-after merchandise.Miguel Medina/AFP via Getty ImagesKahlo's art and her images are showcased all over the world.The capitalization of an anti-capitalist artist is an irony that many observers have pointed out and sparked critical discussion about art, remembrance, and the self-autonomy of women artists. Nevertheless, fans of her work can rejoice in the fact that an indigenous queer artist like Frida Kahlo has become such a recognizable talent even though it happened decades after she passed. Now that you've witnessed the life of Frida Kahlo, check out the quintessential photos of surrealist artist Salvador Dal. Then, read how Picasso's electrician hoarded 271 of the artist's works in his garage.The post 52 Photos Of The Enthralling Life Of Frida Kahlo appeared first on All That's Interesting.0 Commentarios 0 Acciones 50 Views -
ALLTHATSINTERESTING.COMAstounding Bigfoot Facts That Delve Into The Legend Of The Notorious Ape-ManClick here to view slideshowWhile deeply embedded in modern American culture, the legend of Bigfoot originates long before the 21st century. Indigenous tribes across Northwestern America have spoken for centuries of a furry, bipedal beast that stole from fishermen and lived in isolation.But Bigfoot as modern Americans have come to know the creature first took newspapers by storm in the early 1900s, though the actual name "Bigfoot" was only coined decades later in a 1958 Humboldt Times article concerning 17-inch-long footprints found in Bluff Creek, California.Then, in 1967, documentarians Bob Gimlin and Roger Patterson released a short film that seemed to feature the beast itself. Though often brushed off as a hoax, the iconic film nonetheless spawned a collective quest to find Bigfoot.Ever since, scholars, anthropologists, and self-described Bigfoot experts claim to have learned everything there is to know about the creature, from its diet and hunting habits to its paranormal abilities. Explore some surprising though unverifiable Bigfoot facts in the gallery above.Facts About Bigfoot's HistoryBefore it was called "Bigfoot," the mysterious beast was referred to as Sasquatch. This term was an Anglicization of sasq'ets, or ssquac, a word from the Halq-emeylem language of the First Nations peoples in parts of southwestern British Columbia.A still of Bigfoot's gait from the infamous 1967 Patterson-Gimlin video.According to Idaho University professor Jeffrey Meldrum, Sasquatch generally referred to the various behaviors of the creature, like shaking trees or eating clams.Meanwhile, several tribes across the North American continent have their own name for the beast, with most of them describing the creature as a "wildman of the woods."One of the first documented Bigfoot sightings was reported in California's Antioch Ledger in 1870, concerning a terrified hunter. He alleged that he had returned to his campsite one night to find it in tatters with enormous footprints nearby.He hid within viewing distance of the site, hoping that the perpetrator would return. When it did, the man was horrified to see that it was a bipedal ape-man.Then, there was that shocking Humboldt Times article. Years later, however, the children of the man who'd spotted the massive prints admitted that their father told him he'd made the whole story up. No matter, the legend of Bigfoot was already cemented in common knowledge, and the name nonetheless stuck.The notorious Patterson-Gimlin film of Bigfoot, stabilized for clearer viewing.Besides, loggers, hunters, and unsuspecting campers continued to report seeing the elusive beast in forests across the country. Perhaps the most famous sighting remains the Patterson-Gimlin film of 1967. It spans less than a minute and shows an ape-like man walking on two legs along the banks of a remote riverbed in Washington state. Although the video is considered a clear hoax to most, numerous experts have deemed the musculature and limb ratios of the beast too precise to be forged. While some experts scoff at the idea of Bigfoot and gesture to hoaxes like the one from 1958, primatologists as renowned as Jane Goodall are open to its existence. Even the FBI once waded into the subject of Bigfoot when it received a small piece of skin with 15 hairs on it that an obsessive researcher wanted them to identify. The results were finally declassified in 2019 and showed that "the hairs are of deer family origin." Ultimately, Bigfoot continues to live in a netherworld between debunked conspiracy and yet-unproven fact.Common Beliefs On The BehemothOregon Historical SocietyA cast, allegedly of a Sasquatch foot, that was taken on Mount Saint Helens in 1974.Over the last several decades, many reported sightings of Bigfoot have come with visceral descriptions of his stench. Witnesses claimed that the beast emitted a foul odor comparable to that of a skunk.Others have reported tree trunks ripped from the ground or broken in half at heights too tall for a person to reach. Based on this information, it's estimated that Bigfoot averages around six to nine feet tall. Its footprints have been rumored to measure as long as 24 inches.Some believe Bigfoot is a singular creature, while others are confident that there are thousands of Sasquatches roaming America and even the Himalayas. The Yeti, for instance, is considered by some to be a snowy version of Bigfoot although others insist that they're different beasts. In Florida, the "Skunk Ape" also bears a resemblance to Bigfoot.Still, others have claimed that Bigfoot is actually a species of early modern human that has thus far gone largely unknown to us.To that last point, witnesses claim to have captured recordings of unnerving whooping sounds in the dead of night, as well as unidentifiable languages. However, none of these recordings have been conclusively tied to a creature like Bigfoot.Yet, the intrigue continues. "Interest in the existence of the creature is at an all-time high," said paleontologist Darren Naish, even though "there's nothing even close to compelling as goes the evidence."Today, there's no shortage of Bigfoot merchandise, podcasts, and reality television empires. Animal Planet's Finding Bigfoot spanned 11 seasons without actually making good on its title and on April 20, 2021, Hulu released the documentary series Sasquatch, which will follow one investigative journalist's quest to find the elusive beast.Though many have tried to attach science and reason to the study of Bigfoot, any information on the creature remains speculative. But we can enjoy some of the most intriguing Bigfoot facts, unverifiable as they might be, in the gallery above.After learning about 23 Bigfoot facts that capture the imagination, read about 10 terrifying prehistoric creatures that weren't dinosaurs. Next, discover seven cryptids way cooler than Bigfoot.The post Astounding Bigfoot Facts That Delve Into The Legend Of The Notorious Ape-Man appeared first on All That's Interesting.0 Commentarios 0 Acciones 63 Views
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WWW.GAMEBLOG.FRDisney+ : les sorties de la semaine avec un film trs attendu et une srie lgendaireDisney+ fait le plein de nouveaut avec un film sur l'un des anti-hros favori de Marvel, et le retours de sries apprcies dont une licence lgendaire qui a travers plusieurs gnrations.0 Commentarios 0 Acciones 48 Views -
WWW.GAMEBLOG.FR10 ans aprs sa sortie, The Witcher 3 pourrait crer la surprise cette anneAprs plusieurs mois de silence, le potentiel futur DLC de The Witcher 3 Wild Hunt refait soudainement parler de lui au travers dune nouvelle dcouverte intressante.0 Commentarios 0 Acciones 48 Views