Ziyu I get you.
Forgetting your lines while seeing tain Ohh boy I know I know, That's TAIN XUNING

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Ziyu I get you.
Forgetting your lines while seeing tain Ohh boy I know I know, That's TAIN XUNING

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
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This is how it went right?
Sherlock: (furiously whipping a corpse) ... Molly: (to the camera) Look, I know it looks bad but he's sweet! He rarely ever whips corpses and (winces as a particularly loud smack is heard)- and I'm sure he has his reasons! Anyway, I'm gonna go ask him if he wants to go out for coffee. Been crushing on him forever now so wish me luck! (Enters Sherlock's temple of solitude) Molly: Sooo! Bad day huh? Hahaha... (Sherlock doesn't laugh, she stops laughing) I wanted to know if you wanted to get a coffee sometime? Sherlock: A venti with a double shot of whipped cream and sprinkles Molly: SoRrY? Sherlock: (contemplatively) Rainbow sprinkles. (The camera seems to sigh and walk away as Molly runs after it trying to explain the virtues of the man of her dreams, all murderous tendencies aside)
Lovely color, eh?
17-Jun-2025
Well, it’s not complicated.
29-May-2025
Audrey Hepburn and Peter O'Toole
How to Steal a Million (1966) directed by William Wyler
Audrey Hepburn as Nicole Bonnet
Peter O'Toole as Simon Dermott
*** The first scenes to be filmed were, in fact, those in which Audrey and Peter are scrunched up in a museum broom closet as they carry out the heist. This part of the film took eleven days to film, and according to one of Audrey’s biographers, the two stars kept getting fits of the giggles and spoiling take after take by laughing.

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
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Your first pages - 5 #speculativefiction manuscripts critiqued at @Litopia by literary agent @AgentPete @AJ_Dickenson and me!
Your first pages – 5 #speculativefiction manuscripts critiqued at @Litopia by literary agent @AgentPete @AJ_Dickenson and me!
I’ve just guested again at Litopia, the online writers’ colony and community. Each week they have a YouTube show, Pop-Up Submissions, where five manuscripts are read and critiqued live on air by literary agent Peter Cox @agentpete and a guest, or sometimes two. This time the other guest was Andy Dickenson @AJ_Dickenson, ITV reporter and YA author. The format is simple. Five manuscripts, each…
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First scene!
The sun had set when Valent finally came upon NameofCity. He paused, caught by the city walls glowing cherry from the fading sunset. His gaze traced the shape of the towers and rooftops, reflections from the windows like bright embers, and immediately understood why his aunt had described the city as a shining jewel with a tone usually reserved for handling a newly discovered piece of raw lazuli.
He paused again for an entirely different reason a few minutes later. He could barely see the outline of two willowy figures, heads bent together and furiously whispering. Their clothes were fine, and standing nearby was saddled horse idly nosing the browning grass. Valent deliberately adjusted his pack so that his tin dishes attached at the back jangled; he didn’t want to intrude on what looked like a private, and intense, conversation. Their heads jerked towards him. In the dim light their faces looked eerily similar, angular cheekbones, proud forehead, and strong jaw. The shorter had a cap on his head and a furrowed brow.
“Pardon me,” Valent apologized, gesturing at the road, “I’m to join the exploration to the mountains but am unfamiliar with this area. And I didn’t mean to intrude,” he added. The taller one’s expression was still thunderous, but the shorter one’s expression smoothed out and he strode forward to grasp Velant’s arm.
“Well met,” he said to Valent. “My cousin and I are also on our way there. You are close; it is over that low ridge,” he gestured toward the rise in the path. “My name is Arne, and this is my cousin, Jone.”
“Well met and thank you. I am Valent,” he returned, looking the youth full in the face. His eyes were a stormy hazel, with pale lashes and serious mouth, which turned up slightly at Valent’s strong grip and earnest smile. Valent felt skittering, violent heat dart up his spine, there and gone in a flash.
“I’d offer to accompany you, but you’ll be much faster on horseback,” Valent said, his mouth dry. “Perhaps I’ll see you both at the encampment.” he nodded to them, and went on his way. The whispered debate resumed almost immediately. Valent told himself firmly to mind his own business, though his thoughts lingered on Arne’s sharp features.
Your first pages - 5 more book openings critiqued at @Litopia by literary agent @agentpete , reader @kaylie_finn and me!
Your first pages - 5 more book openings critiqued at @Litopia by literary agent @agentpete , reader @kaylie_finn and me! #writingcommunity #publishing
I’ve just guested again at Litopia, the online writers’ colony and community. Each week they have a YouTube show, Pop-Up Submissions, where five manuscripts are read and critiqued live on air by literary agent Peter Cox @agentpete and a guest, or sometimes two. This time the other guest was one of Litopia’s longtime members Kaylie Finn, who knows her way around a critique. The format is simple.…
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