Ask Ed: Marijuana Success brings together twenty articles derived from Ed Rosenthal's backyard experiments, travels, and access to large commercial operations. Q&A submitted to the Ask Ed marijuana advice column rounds out the information that Ed shares with readers. Most growers start as home gardeners, pleased to bring in a harvest. Some become hobbyists, interested in new techniques to improve the results. Others take the experiences from their backyard and pursue a position in the fast-growing cultivation industry. Whatever your intent, Ed Rosenthal's new book, Ask Ed: Marijuana Success, delivers useful ideas on how to reach your goals. Ed Rosenthal lives in Oakland, California.--Ed Rosenthal
Wonder and wit meet in Templeton's unflinching photographs Tangentially Parenthetical is a selection of photographs from Ed Templeton's vast street photography archive—curated, arranged and then rearranged by the man himself. The next chapter to his previous book of photos (Wayward Cognitions, 2014), Tangentially Parenthetical picks up where the latter collection ended. By combining intimate, accidental and unconnected moments into one linear piece of work, he tells hundreds of new stories through the thoughtful arrangement of semi-related yet completely unfastened imagery. "I'm out there shooting photos all the time that don't necessarily fall under any theme other than general life," says Templeton, "which is a lame title for a book." With a wink to the absurd, sandwiched between a cover of patterned parentheses and with an afterword built from his own stream-of-consciousness storytelling, Templeton delivers a visual mountain from an archive of stunning molehills—the images are carefully chosen, shuffled by hand and laid out with the dueling impulses of wonder and wit. Born in 1972 and raised in the suburbs of Orange County, California, Ed Templeton is a painter, photographer and a respected cult figure in the subculture of skateboarding. His work has been exhibited worldwide.
Ed & Livvy: In the Name of Justice Edwin White works as a corrections officer in the county jail as a way to provide for his family. For years he's been passed up for promotions, had to work more than one job to make ends meet, and put up with beratement from a less than grateful wife. He gets up at the crack of dawn, works day in and day out, all for what? He's forced to live with in-laws, in atown where he isn't trusted being one of few Black men in town, and he just doesn't think anything willever change for the better. Today, something changed all that. Today, he met Olivia, Livvy to her friends, a nurse in the trauma department at the local hospital that saved his life. She not only helps him heal from near-death injuries, but helps him see there's more out there than just taking the hits as they come. He's known for years that the justice system in the U.S. is unfair to people like him. He's been taken advantage of for the last time. For today, Ed finally gets what he's long overdue for. What if you knew you could get away with murder in a small town, would you get even?
Ed Leviner, a young female pitcher who's broken every collegiate pitching record, is desperate to make it to the Major Leagues. But someone in the idyllic Southern town of Cook, South Carolina, has threatened to kill her if she pitches in her next big game. Which is in a few days. Which doesn't give private eye and ex-ballplayer Eli Sharpe much time to identify the source of these threats. Ed has lots of admirers but few friends and several enemies and detractors in this conservative community. Then there's her feuding divorced parents, her spurned tutor, a disgraced coach turned evangelical minister, and the local sheriff, a bully whose son is one of Ed's discarded boyfriends. Though local law enforcement is oddly unhelpful, Eli is not alone in his search for answers. The TV news team covering the protests is headed up a beautiful anchorwoman from Eli's past. Is she on his side or not? As usual, Eli is busy raising hackles in a town where there's more than one mad dog in disguise.
A collaboration in abstract painting and poetry.Over the early days of the Covid-19 pandemic, a poet/curator and a painter correspond in their own mediums, developing a conversation across space and time during lockdown. Part monograph, part poetry collection, Letters Apart presents unusual events of language and a progression of abstracted imagery. In this beautiful and intimate book, personal memories, early Expressionism, lightness and darkness, fear and flights of fancy coexist.
LearningEd Says is a book of essays. Some address national issues such as too many shootings and black lives matter. Others focus on more personal issues like gift giving or retirement planning. While yet others challenge us with questions like why didn't Sears become Amazon or what only I can do. These essays, plus random thoughts that pop up in their midst, are cleverly arranged to cause the reader's thinking to cope concurrently with multiple ideas. This in turn provides the reader with the opportunity to pair ideas and create new ones. Perhaps the reader will see a here to fore unimagined solution to a long standing problem. In other words, this book is intended to be a blessing by sharing ideas, seeing problems differently, and perhaps visualizing a brand new solution. One that has never been seen previously. Ultimately, this book will help the reader "see in the dark".
*Includes pictures *Includes their own quotes about their lives and careers *Includes online resources and a bibliography for further reading From the day television existed as an entertainment medium, giant companies have battled each other for viewers, but in the history of television programming, no show was as consistently excellent in the ratings as The Ed Sullivan Show, a variety show that brought on all kinds of acts, from dancers to artists and singers. It was the longest running show to maintain one time slot, and today it is widely remembered for introducing the nation to the likes of Elvis Presley and The Beatles. When Elvis was on the show in 1956, over 82% of the nation's entire television audience tuned in, a rating that would make even the Super Bowl blush. Indeed, being booked on The Ed Sullivan Show became so important for performers that Aretha Franklin once noted, "And I was booked once to go on 'Ed Sullivan' and I got bumped and ran out the back door crying." The Ed Sullivan Show has been commemorated as one of the most influential programs in the history of American television, and behind it all was the seemingly unassuming man whose name was on it. Even after Ed Sullivan had become an American institution on the strength of his show, one critic from Time asked, "What exactly is Ed Sullivan's talent?" Or as comedian (and frequent guest) Alan King put it, "Ed does nothing, but he does it better than anyone else in television." Of course, Ed Sullivan did have plenty of talent, especially when it came to identifying others', and over the course of nearly two decades, he became America's biggest starmaker. While Elvis and The Beatles are most remembered, Sullivan helped open the door to Motown acts, and his show was so culturally significant that Reverend Al Sharpton said of those performances, "I grew up in the 1950s and '60s, when it was almost a holiday when a black act would go on Ed Sullivan." Perhaps the most ironic aspect of Sullivan's fame is that almost everyone tended to agree that he was stilted and unnatural in front of cameras. In 1955, one writer for Time colorfully described Sullivan as "a cigar-store Indian, the Cardiff Giant and a stone-faced monument just off the boat from Easter Island. He moves like a sleepwalker; his smile is that of a man sucking a lemon; his speech is frequently lost in a thicket of syntax; his eyes pop from their sockets or sink so deep in their bags that they seem to be peering up at the camera from the bottom of twin wells." At the same time, however, the writer conceded, "Yet, instead of frightening children, Ed Sullivan charms the whole family." Among America's comedians, few if any have had the kind of influence on pop culture and society like Johnny Carson, the iconic host of The Tonight Show from 1962-1992. In addition to winning too many awards to count, Carson is proof that imitation is the sincerest form of flattery, as admitted by subsequent comedy show hosts like Jay Leno and David Letterman, who not only vied to replace Carson but also used his format for their own shows (and still continue to do so). For several years during the 1950s, Carson rotated around various daytime shows as host, meeting important friends like Ed McMahon along the way, but he made it big when he replaced Jack Paar as host of The Tonight Show in 1962. For the next 30 years, his mix of monologues, skits, and interviews would make his show must-see television on weekday nights, turning him into the highest paid television personality of the 1970s, and giving him the creative freedom to bring others along with him. In addition to bringing along his sidekick McMahon, Carson let guests host the show occasionally as well, thereby giving the spotlight to comedians like George Carlin, Letterman, Leno, and Joan Rivers. On the 25th anniversary of his debut on The Tonight Show, Carson earned a Peabody Award that labeled him "an American institution,"
This Ed Sheeran Diary for the academic year 2019 enables you to keep organised and up to date, with plenty of space to write notes, lists or appointments, Diary runs from 1st january 2019 to 31st december 20
An educational but funny picture book of rhyme.Learn about the life cycle of a frog from egg to adult & interesting water facts.Drawings are delightfully silly.For children ages 3-7.Visit www.artzoo.co.za for Ed themed printable crafts.
This is the story of Ed (an inept, Lovelorn inventor), Kanna (a misanthropic fey with a violent streak) and Rocco (an internet billionaire and former megalomaniac, trapped in the body of a toy raccoon)...
Ed, a former police officer, was set up for a crime he did not commit. Now released from prison, he is down and out until he finds a job through serendipitous circumstances, leading him to rediscover trust in his intuition. As part of his new employment, he is led down a path of intrigue as he attempts to get his old life and job back. Ed discovers that a company called Quantum Futures is experimenting with people's consciousness and wants to learn more about what is actually happening. Volunteering as a test subject to be experimented upon, he starts to build theories about the company's intriguing plans to explore the atomic connections between the quantum computer and the human brain.
Ed. Manet: etude biographique et critique / Emile Zola; accompagnee d'un portrait d'Ed. Manet par Bracquemond; et d'une eau-forte d'Ed. Manet d'apres "Olympia"Date de l'edition originale: 1867Ce livre est la reproduction fidele d une uvre publiee avant 1920 et fait partie d une collection de livres reimprimes a la demande editee par Hachette Livre, dans le cadre d un partenariat avec la Bibliotheque nationale de France, offrant l opportunite d acceder a des ouvrages anciens et souvent rares issus des fonds patrimoniaux de la BnF.Les uvres faisant partie de cette collection ont ete numerisees par la BnF et sont presentes sur Gallica, sa bibliotheque numerique.En entreprenant de redonner vie a ces ouvrages au travers d une collection de livres reimprimes a la demande, nous leur donnons la possibilite de rencontrer un public elargi et participons a la transmission de connaissances et de savoirs parfois difficilement accessibles.Nous avons cherche a concilier la reproduction fidele d un livre ancien a partir de sa version numerisee avec le souci d un confort de lecture optimal. Nous esperons que les ouvrages de cette nouvelle collection vous apporteront entiere satisfaction.Pour plus d informations, rendez-vous sur www.hachettebnf.fr