User: hoodpolitics |
The Wire Clip: Omar and Mouzone take out Stringer Bell Omar and Brother Mouzone take out Stringer Bell. Them two working together could take out any crew or anyone on the block. Besides Stringer turned into a snitch and was a snake too. Snitches and snakes always meet the end of the road, was just a matter of time for Stringer Bell. Tags: Omar Brother Mouzone Stringer Bell The Wire Season3 snitch |
User: JimmehAH |
Stringer's 'product' meeting The meeting from the first episode of season 3 where Stringer Bell explains how product is now more important to the crew than territory. Tags: the wire product stringer bell |
User: pjsteer47 |
David and Goliath - Col Stringer Col Stringer puts an Aussie slat on the David and Goliath story while speaking on his 800 Horsemen DVD Tags: david goliath col stringer anzac 800 light horsemen funny bible pjsteer |
User: themandingo23 |
The Wire -- Stringer & Avon Avon and Stringer reminiscing. Tags: The Wire Stringer Avon Barksdale |
User: univgurl |
The Wire -- Avon and Stringer Avon and Stringer's relationship starts to crumble. Tags: The Wire Russell Stringer Bell Avon Barksdale Wood Harris Idris Elba Drama |
User: theonlyduda |
Duda makes glass beads - encased stringer Just a quick video to show how I make encased stringer. This is a great way to add fancy stringer decoration to your glass beads. Tags: glass lampwork bead encased |
User: danielstringer |
I Have a Dream Project - Daniel Stringer The I Have a Dream Project is a collaborative dedication to Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. In honor of the holiday, take a minute, tell us your dream myspace.com/danielpstringer Tags: MLK Martin Luther King Dream Civil Rights African-American danielstringer |
User: hotglass |
Ribbon Cane and Twisty Stringer Demo II (This is a re-posting with what I hope is better audio) In this video I show several ways to make glass ribbon cane for use in other projects. I use Bullseye brand COE-90 glass. Tags: flameworking glasswork glassblowing beadmaking fusing beads twisties twisty cane stringer |
User: themandingo23 |
The Wire: Stringer and McNulty (none) Tags: The Wire Stringer McNulty |
User: hollywoodtv |
Howard Stringer - Sony Chairman How to make the world better Tags: Howard Stringer Sony CEO Chairman Hollywood Bollywood Sheeraz Hasan |
User: hotglass |
Rave-Up Bead Pt1 Stringer Building a multi-color stringer on metal rods. This is part one of a two part beadmaking video. Tags: flameworking lampworking glass beadmaking |
User: docathail |
For once, its not a dive Stringer slapped by Troncon Tags: Rugby Ireland Leinster |
User: ChrisVarick |
The Wire - Stringer Bell learns the basics of Macroeconomics Season 1 - Episode 8 Tags: The Wire Stringer Bell Macroeconomics business |
User: creativeglassguild |
Creative Glass Guild - Stringer Bending Learn how to bend glass fusing stringers by www.creativeglassguild.co.uk Tags: creative glass guild bend fusing stringer sheet training course |
User: WarrenBaerg |
Biomass/Hay Grinder & D-Stringer System Grinder & Twine Removal System for Bales of Hay, Switchgrass, Biomass Products, etc. Tags: Grinder and Twine Removal for Bales of Hay Biomass Switchgrass |
User: expertvillage |
Learn to Arc Weld: Tips & Techniques for Beginners: Free Video Instruction : Overlapping Stringer Beads: Arc Welding for Beginners Learn how to properly overlap stringer beads when arc welding. Perfect for novice welders, this free instructional video has tips & techniques for beginner stick welding. Tags: arc welding weld beginner metal safety iron work steel build shield free video |
User: dalazenjunior |
STRINGER,BURT REYNOLDS FILM,ENDING. Directed by KLAUS BIEDERMANN and starring ELIE SEMOUN, BURT REYNOLDS and EDIE FALCO. This is quite an interesting film and, along with 1999's Pups, one of the best movies Burt Reynolds made in his post-Boogie Nights career period. It is a shame Stringer never got a United States release, because I found it a surprisingly gritty, dark and atmospheric independent little film that reminded me a lot of David Cronenberg's early work. Had the producers worked harder back in 1999, the time the film was being distributed, it could end up being a Festival favorite and making quite an impression, specially for the critics that tend to look away from Burt Reynolds, an obviously talented actor who happens to pick up bad scripts. Fortunately, that's not the case with Stringer, a fine, elegant look into human's darkness and our gradual descent into madness, as a society. With a pony tail and his usual cynicism, Burt plays Wolko, a sleazy TV producer who manipulates an innocent French stringer into capturing the most horrifying, brutal images he can get, even if these images cost him his sanity. His character is quite similar to his Jack Horner in Boogie Nights in terms of the laid-back, easy-going, ironic attitude that only Burt knows how to perform, with the important difference that Boogie Nights' Jack Horner actually cared for Mark Wahlberg's character and both went on to build a father-son relationship through the course of the picture, and Stringer's Wolko is the devil itself disguised as a human being: he couldn't care less for Elie Semoun's character. He wants disgrace on screen, at any cost. The cinematography is gorgeous (New York never seemed so dark, strange and hostile), capturing the ugly part of life in the big city, the performances are over all great, director Klaus Biedermann has an eye for interesting imagery, and the final product is a depressing, true-to-life portrayal of the direction humanity is going to, in this film that packs a punch in the guts, with scenes that will haunt you forever, like an entertained Burt Reynolds laughing and screaming to Semoun's character to shot a store being consumed by flames and the agony of an innocent family, or the scene in which a mentally challenged girl sings "Amazing Grace" at the top of a building, and as the firemen try to get closer to help her, she jumps to her death. Tags: stringer burt reynolds elie semoun gritty violence underworld new york taxi driver disgrace blood suicide death rape |
User: trorb |
StreetFilms - Scott Stringer Speech From Manhattan on the Move: A Transportation Agenda for a Growing City Tags: manhattan traffic boro president cars gridlock bike pedestrian conference transportation |
User: suree4 |
The Stringer (excerpt) An excerpt from a documentary short by Suree Towfighnia. The filmmaker takes us into the little-known world of "stringers" as she explores the world of Pauly LaPointe, a Chicago man who listens to police scanners and chases down breaking news in an attempt to be the first on the scene to get the story. Tags: stringer documentary short pauly lapointe suree towfighnia |
User: loveydoveypeace |
Clay Davis hustles Stringer Bell "Then we see the man with his hand on the faucet..." Tags: The Wire Stringer Bell Clay Davis Andy Krawczyk Avon Barksdale Swindle Dupe Punk Fraud Cheat Money Property Developer Con |
User: allmightantdawgs |
The Wire - Stringer Orders Slim Charles To Hit Somebody Season 3, Ep. 11 "Middle Ground"- The relationship between Avon and Stringer continues to crumble as Stringer orders Slim Charles to carry out an order. Tags: The Wire Avon Barksdale Stringer Bell Slim Charles Clay Davis |
User: WireLover |
The Wire - Wee-Bey, Avon and Stringer Discuss Kima's Shooting Wee-Bey is shocked to discover from Stringer the shorty he and Little Man shot in Orlando's car was a cop. Then Avon and Stringer decide what to do about the police money they now have. (Season 1, Episode 11 "The Hunt") Tags: the wire HBO avon barksdale stringer bell wee-bey brice little man kima greggs orlando blocker organization shooting murder wood harris idris elba hassan johnson season one |
User: dalazenjunior |
STRINGER,BURT REYNOLDS FILM,PART 6. Directed by KLAUS BIEDERMANN and starring ELIE SEMOUN, BURT REYNOLDS and EDIE FALCO. This is quite an interesting film and, along with 1999's Pups, one of the best movies Burt Reynolds made in his post-Boogie Nights career period. It is a shame Stringer never got a United States release, because I found it a surprisingly gritty, dark and atmospheric independent little film that reminded me a lot of David Cronenberg's early work. Had the producers worked harder back in 1999, the time the film was being distributed, it could end up being a Festival favorite and making quite an impression, specially for the critics that tend to look away from Burt Reynolds, an obviously talented actor who happens to pick up bad scripts. Fortunately, that's not the case with Stringer, a fine, elegant look into human's darkness and our gradual descent into madness, as a society. With a pony tail and his usual cynicism, Burt plays Wolko, a sleazy TV producer who manipulates an innocent French stringer into capturing the most horrifying, brutal images he can get, even if these images cost him his sanity. His character is quite similar to his Jack Horner in Boogie Nights in terms of the laid-back, easy-going, ironic attitude that only Burt knows how to perform, with the important difference that Boogie Nights' Jack Horner actually cared for Mark Wahlberg's character and both went on to build a father-son relationship through the course of the picture, and Stringer's Wolko is the devil itself disguised as a human being: he couldn't care less for Elie Semoun's character. He wants disgrace on screen, at any cost. The cinematography is gorgeous (New York never seemed so dark, strange and hostile), capturing the ugly part of life in the big city, the performances are over all great, director Klaus Biedermann has an eye for interesting imagery, and the final product is a depressing, true-to-life portrayal of the direction humanity is going to, in this film that packs a punch in the guts, with scenes that will haunt you forever, like an entertained Burt Reynolds laughing and screaming to Semoun's character to shot a store being consumed by flames and the agony of an innocent family, or the scene in which a mentally challenged girl sings "Amazing Grace" at the top of a building, and as the firemen try to get closer to help her, she jumps to her death. Tags: stringer burt reynolds elie semoun gritty violence underworld new york taxi driver disgrace blood suicide death rape |
User: dalazenjunior |
STRINGER,BURT REYNOLDS FILM,PART 4. Directed by KLAUS BIEDERMANN and starring ELIE SEMOUN, BURT REYNOLDS and EDIE FALCO. This is quite an interesting film and, along with 1999's Pups, one of the best movies Burt Reynolds made in his post-Boogie Nights career period. It is a shame Stringer never got a United States release, because I found it a surprisingly gritty, dark and atmospheric independent little film that reminded me a lot of David Cronenberg's early work. Had the producers worked harder back in 1999, the time the film was being distributed, it could end up being a Festival favorite and making quite an impression, specially for the critics that tend to look away from Burt Reynolds, an obviously talented actor who happens to pick up bad scripts. Fortunately, that's not the case with Stringer, a fine, elegant look into human's darkness and our gradual descent into madness, as a society. With a pony tail and his usual cynicism, Burt plays Wolko, a sleazy TV producer who manipulates an innocent French stringer into capturing the most horrifying, brutal images he can get, even if these images cost him his sanity. His character is quite similar to his Jack Horner in Boogie Nights in terms of the laid-back, easy-going, ironic attitude that only Burt knows how to perform, with the important difference that Boogie Nights' Jack Horner actually cared for Mark Wahlberg's character and both went on to build a father-son relationship through the course of the picture, and Stringer's Wolko is the devil itself disguised as a human being: he couldn't care less for Elie Semoun's character. He wants disgrace on screen, at any cost. The cinematography is gorgeous (New York never seemed so dark, strange and hostile), capturing the ugly part of life in the big city, the performances are over all great, director Klaus Biedermann has an eye for interesting imagery, and the final product is a depressing, true-to-life portrayal of the direction humanity is going to, in this film that packs a punch in the guts, with scenes that will haunt you forever, like an entertained Burt Reynolds laughing and screaming to Semoun's character to shot a store being consumed by flames and the agony of an innocent family, or the scene in which a mentally challenged girl sings "Amazing Grace" at the top of a building, and as the firemen try to get closer to help her, she jumps to her death. Tags: stringer burt reynolds elie semoun gritty violence underworld new york taxi driver disgrace blood suicide death rape |
User: dalazenjunior |
STRINGER,BURT REYNOLDS FILM,PART 7. Directed by KLAUS BIEDERMANN and starring ELIE SEMOUN, BURT REYNOLDS and EDIE FALCO. This is quite an interesting film and, along with 1999's Pups, one of the best movies Burt Reynolds made in his post-Boogie Nights career period. It is a shame Stringer never got a United States release, because I found it a surprisingly gritty, dark and atmospheric independent little film that reminded me a lot of David Cronenberg's early work. Had the producers worked harder back in 1999, the time the film was being distributed, it could end up being a Festival favorite and making quite an impression, specially for the critics that tend to look away from Burt Reynolds, an obviously talented actor who happens to pick up bad scripts. Fortunately, that's not the case with Stringer, a fine, elegant look into human's darkness and our gradual descent into madness, as a society. With a pony tail and his usual cynicism, Burt plays Wolko, a sleazy TV producer who manipulates an innocent French stringer into capturing the most horrifying, brutal images he can get, even if these images cost him his sanity. His character is quite similar to his Jack Horner in Boogie Nights in terms of the laid-back, easy-going, ironic attitude that only Burt knows how to perform, with the important difference that Boogie Nights' Jack Horner actually cared for Mark Wahlberg's character and both went on to build a father-son relationship through the course of the picture, and Stringer's Wolko is the devil itself disguised as a human being: he couldn't care less for Elie Semoun's character. He wants disgrace on screen, at any cost. The cinematography is gorgeous (New York never seemed so dark, strange and hostile), capturing the ugly part of life in the big city, the performances are over all great, director Klaus Biedermann has an eye for interesting imagery, and the final product is a depressing, true-to-life portrayal of the direction humanity is going to, in this film that packs a punch in the guts, with scenes that will haunt you forever, like an entertained Burt Reynolds laughing and screaming to Semoun's character to shot a store being consumed by flames and the agony of an innocent family, or the scene in which a mentally challenged girl sings "Amazing Grace" at the top of a building, and as the firemen try to get closer to help her, she jumps to her death. Tags: stringer burt reynolds elie semoun gritty violence underworld new york taxi driver disgrace blood suicide death rape |