about. it is people that are listening to these lyrics and saying this is exactly how i felt my entire adult life. this guy is saying it better than i could. not just the message in the lyrics of the song but it is his voice. if i sang the song nobody would be moved and i m a good singer. this guy has passion. i remember i lived in cambridge when tracy chatman was singing, she would sing on the streets of cambridge. people would stop. it was a talent story. this is a talent story. when you hear his voice he has it. not just the thing. not just the message. what s the magic line in the song? it is not. this is talent. he is tangible. bill: with social media and technology and everybody on apple tunes, spotify or both. songs can catch fire quickly. this is a really good example of how that just shot to number one.
Lantana: ‘It will always be relevant as long as human nature stays the same’
We’re sorry, this service is currently unavailable. Please try again later.
Dismiss
Normal text size
When
Lantana premiered at the Sydney Film Festival on the evening of Sunday, July 8, 2001, with the creators and most of the ensemble cast present, no one knew what to expect from an Australian drama that interwove a police investigation with a telling dissection of conflicted relationships. The film’s director, Ray Lawrence, was simply grateful the movie had been made, while the screenwriter, playwright Andrew Bovell, foresaw cult appreciation.
“I thought we’d made a difficult, little independent film that would have a small following,” Bovell says. “We weren’t expecting the response we got. It took me a while to realise that it had caught the zeitgeist and that people were talking about this film. It was thrilling to see that conversation build – without social media.”
WINCHESTER Heritage Open Days will now be the responsibility of a new charitable incorporated organisation. Hampshire History Trust is set to take the reins, starting this year, as well as create a new festival based in the city. This new CIO will also run other community projects such as a Blue Plaque Scheme and Hampshire HistBites, the county’s history podcast channel. Nicky Gottlieb and Becky Brown, two of the three founding trustees, said they were delighted that the new charity had been approved by the Charity Commission. “This is the start of an exciting journey for us,” said Nicky.
This Christmas season became brighter for one Twinsburg family thanks to an unexpected response to their annual holiday lights display from an international pop star.
For more than 20 years, the Bailey family has been lighting up their front yard on Burton Drive and adding holiday music to the scene, Sarah Bailey said.
Bailey recently shared photos of the display on Twitter and tagged Taylor Swift, whose song Christmas Tree Farm is among the featured holiday tunes.
Bailey, a 2014 graduate of Twinsburg High School and herself a singer/songwriter, also mentioned that her family was collecting donations for Our Community Hunger Center, a Twinsburg group that provides food and hygeine items for those in need.