06

ponedjeljak

veljača

2012

THE 13TH FLOOR URBAN LEGEND. THE 13TH FLOOR


The 13th floor urban legend. Bathroom additions floor plans.



The 13th Floor Urban Legend





the 13th floor urban legend






    urban legend
  • An urban legend, urban myth, urban tale, or contemporary legend, is a form of modern folklore consisting of apocryphal stories believed by their tellers to be true.

  • Urban Legend is the third studio album by the rapper T.I., released on November 30, 2004, which instantly generated crossover success with the hit single "Bring Em Out."

  • A humorous or horrific story or piece of information circulated as though true, esp. one purporting to involve someone vaguely related or known to the teller

  • a story that appears mysteriously and spreads spontaneously in various forms and is usually false; contains elements of humor or horror and is popularly believed to be true





    13th floor
  • The Thirteenth Floor is a 1999 science fiction film directed by Josef Rusnak and loosely based upon Simulacron-3 (1964), a novel by Daniel F. Galouye, and Welt am Draht (1973) (World on Wires), a German two-part television film by Rainer Werner Fassbinder.

  • The 13th Floor is the fourth full-length album by the Norwegian Gothic metal band Sirenia and first with Spanish vocalist Ailyn. It was released on January 23, 2009 through Nuclear Blast.











Jack Palance




Jack Palance





Jack Palance (1919 - 2006)
Actor who epitomised the hard-man cowboy in such films as Shane and City Slickers

JACK PALANCE was first nominated for an Oscar in 1953 as Joan Crawford’s scheming husband in the film noir Sudden Fear. He secured a second nomination the following year as the villain in Shane, regarded by many as the best western ever. The gaunt, skull-faced actor went on to play hard men in a string of westerns and he set an Oscar record for the longest gap between first nomination and first win when he finally collected the award for best supporting actor for the comedy City Slickers in 1992, in which he had some fun with his screen persona as a wheezy, tough, old cowboy.
He was 73 by the time of the ceremony and seemed unsure what to say, so he dropped to the floor and did a series of one-handed push-ups instead, to prove he was in better health than his character Curly Washburn, who dies in the film. The episode provided Oscar host and City Slickers co-star Billy Crystal with the material for a running gag that he kept going all night. At one point he suggested Palance was away bungee-jumping off the Hollywood sign.

In a curious footnote to his win, Palance became the centre of an enduring Oscar myth the following year when it was widely rumoured that he read out the wrong name, either by accident or design, when presenting the award for best supporting actress. It was one of the biggest upsets in Oscar history when Marisa Tomei (My Cousin Vinny) beat Vanessa Redgrave (Howards End), and it was suggested that it was too embarrassing for the Academy to correct.

Palance was born in 1919 in the Pennsylvania town of Lattimer Mines. His surname was Palahnuik, though there are several variations on the spelling. His given forenames were apparently Walter and Vladimir. In his early films he was Walter Jack Palance, before finally becoming plain Jack Palance. His father worked in the local coal mines and his parents were immigrants from Ukraine. Palance was fiercely proud of his roots, though he continually had to disabuse people of the notion he was Russian.

He refused an award at a Russian film event in Los Angeles in 2004 and he and his wife, Elaine, walked out. “I think that Russian film is interesting, but I have nothing to do with Russia or Russian film. My parents were born in Ukraine: I’m Ukrainian. I’m not Russian. So, excuse me, but I don’t belong here,” he said.

A genuinely tough individual, he worked briefly in the mines and boxed professionally. But he was no slouch intellectually either. He went to the University of North Carolina on a sports scholarship and studied Journalism at Stanford University on the GI Bill, after serving in the US Air Force during the Second World War. At Stanford he also pursued his interest in acting.

After he became a star, it was widely reported his unusual features were the result of plastic surgery following a terrible plane crash — his eyes were narrow, his nose wide and his skin looked as if it had been stretched a little too tightly across his face. But Palance set the record straight in 1984 when he told an interviewer the story was a studio invention.

“One flack created the legend that I had been blown up in an air crash during the war, and my face had to be put back together by way of plastic surgery,” he said. “If it is a ‘bionic face,’ why didn’t they do a better job of it? The only plastic surgery I’ve ever had in my life was a ten-minute operation to open my nasal passages because my nose had been broken during my career as a heavyweight boxer.”

Palance got his break on Broadway when he took over from Marlon Brando in A Streetcar Named Desire in 1949, but it is another urban myth that he engineered the opening by sparring with Brando and breaking his nose. The story is true in all but one detail — Brando’s opponent was a stagehand, not Palance. The play’s director Elia Kazan promptly provided Palance with his first film role as well, that of a plague-carrying criminal in the memorable thriller Panic in the Streets (1950).

It was an auspicious debut, followed by a starring role alongside Richard Widmark in the war film Halls of Montezuma (1951). In Sudden Fear he played an actor who is turned down for a part by Joan Crawford, but subsequently courts and marries her. His ex-girlfriend reappears on the scene and the film develops into a deadly game of cat and mouse.

In the mytho-poetic Shane Palance helped to refine the image of the taciturn, cold-hearted gunman, hired by a cattle baron, to force honest Van Heflin off his land, before meeting his match when he faces off against Alan Ladd in a classic showdown. Palance was nervous of horses, hence his slow, deliberate action in mounting, which seemed to add even more menace to the character.

Although he seemed perfect as tough, often exotic villains, and played Attila the Hun in Sign of the Pagan (1954), Palance showed a more sensitive side as the officer in the war film Attack! (1











Tallest Building in Baltimore




Tallest Building in Baltimore





Well, it supposedly was the tallest building in town when it was built in 1911. We were told that a giant 17 ton steel framed bottle of Bromo Seltzer originally graced the top of the tower. It was illuminated at night with over 500 light bulbs and, urban legend has it, that it was visible from the eastern shore. The "bottle" had to be removed circa 1936 because it was causing structural damage to the building.

The tower was built to house the corporate offices of the Bromo Seltzer factory, which was located next door where the fire station currently resides. There are approximately 15 floors from the ground level up to the botttom of the clock portion of the tower. With only a 900 square foot footprint, each floor only measures about 30' x 30'. It definitely posed a major challenge to the architects seeking to restore its historic character while finding a modern use for the tower.

The tower is currently being renovated into artists studios. They are also planning to put some sort of non-franchise retail in the first floor level (Starbucks need not apply here).

Fact: there is no 13th floor in the tower.









the 13th floor urban legend







See also:

you me and the dance floor

killing floor port

floor screed mix

electric boiler underfloor heating

party floor plan

rubber floor tiles kitchen

terrazzo flooring tile

copper floor lamp

hardwood flooring install

underfloor heating devon



<< Arhiva >>