There is a long history of television and film in New Jersey, which is considered the birthplace of the movie picture industry. The roots of the industry started in Newark with Hannibal Goodwin's patent of nitrocellulose film in 1887. Motion picture technology was invented by Thomas Edison, with early work done at his West Orange laboratory. Edison's Black Maria, where the first motion picture to be copyrighted in the United States, Fred Ott's Sneeze, was shot. The Centaur Film Company of Bayonne was the first independent movie studio in the USA. America's first motion picture industry started in 1907 in Fort Lee and the first studio was constructed there in 1909. The nation's first drive-in theater opened at Airport Circle in 1933. DuMont Laboratories in Passaic, developed early sets and made the first broadcast to the private home. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Television_and_film_in_New_Jersey
Alice Guy-Blaché: Cinema’s First Woman Director in Newspapers January 26, 2022by Amber ParanickAlice Guy-Blaché is a name you likely
have never heard. She was a pioneer of
the French and American film industries during the silent era and the first
woman to have a career as a director, yet her work
and career have largely been overlooked throughout history. She was among the very first to use film to
tell a narrative
story,
although for years she was largely uncredited as compared to Georges
Méliès and the Lumière brothers. Only recently, has she been acknowledged for
influencing many directors that came after her. Let’s take a look at articles on her life
and career in
our historic newspaper collection, Chronicling America. “HOW A WOMAN MAKES A FORTUNE OUT OF
‘MOVIES’,” New-York Tribune (New York, NY), November 24, 1912. Alice
Ida Antoinette Guy was born in Saint-Mandé, in Paris, France on July 1, 1873,
to French parents Marie and Emile Guy. During
her childhood, the Guy family moved between Chile and France. After the family was struck by multiple
tragedies in her adolescent life, Alice sought employment outside the home in
order to support her family. In 1894,
she worked as a stenographer (or, secretary) to French inventor, engineer, and
industrialist, Léon
Gaumont. Gaumont
is considered a premier film producer who established the Gaumont Company, the
first and oldest film company in the world. Guy was inspired by the premiere of the
Lumière brothers’ Cinématographe
motion picture https://blogs.loc.gov/headlinesandheroes/2022/01/alice-guy-blache/
Oat
Risotto with Peas and Pecorino Chef
Graham Elliot cooks steel-cut oats risotto-style to make a savory porridge. For a quicker version, Grace Parisi simmers
steel-cut oats risotto-style in chicken stock until they're tender, then stirs
in nutty pecorino cheese and sweet baby peas. https://www.foodandwine.com/recipes/oat-risotto-with-peas-and-pecorino
Oat Risotto With Parmesan and Peas
Steel cut oats take the place of
Arborio rice in this creamy risotto-inspired dish. It’s actually less hands on than traditional
risotto. For a different taste, try
pecorino or Romano cheese in place of the parmesan. Link to recipes such as oatmeal
chocolate chip edible cookie at dough: https://oatseveryday.com/recipes/wprm-oat-risotto-with-parmesan-and-peas/
Laetiporus sulphureus is a species of bracket fungus (fungi
that grow on trees) found in Europe and North America. Its common names are crab-of-the-woods, sulphur polypore, sulphur shelf, and chicken-of-the-woods. Its fruit bodies grow as striking
golden-yellow shelf-like structures on tree trunks and branches. Old fruitbodies fade to pale beige or pale
grey. The undersurface of the fruit body
is made up of tubelike pores rather than gills.
Laetiporus sulphureus is a saprophyte and
occasionally a weak parasite, causing brown
cubical rot in the heartwood of trees
on which it grows. Unlike many bracket
fungi, it is edible when
young, although adverse reactions have been reported. Laetiporus
sulphureus was
first described as Boletus sulphureus by French
mycologist Pierre Bulliard in 1789. It has had many synonyms and was finally given
its current name in 1920 by American mycologist William Murrill. Laetiporus means
"with bright pores" and sulphureus means "the
colour of sulphur". See pictures at
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Laetiporus_sulphureus
The
theropod (meaning "beast-footed") dinosaurs are a diverse group of
bipedal saurischian
dinosaurs.
They include the largest terrestrial
carnivores ever to have made the earth tremble. What most people think of as theropods
(e.g., T. rex, Deinonychus) are extinct today,
but recent studies have
conclusively shown that birds are
actually the descendants of small nonflying theropods. Thus when people say that dinosaurs are
extinct, they are technically not correct.
See pictures at https://ucmp.berkeley.edu/diapsids/saurischia/theropoda.html
http://librariansmuse.blogspot.com Issue 2614 December 30, 2022