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LataraSpeaksTruth

Richard Pryor did not just tell jokes. He cracked open the world and forced people to look at the parts they liked to pretend were not there. On December 10, 2005, the stage lost a voice that reshaped modern comedy. Pryor died in Los Angeles at sixty five after years of health struggles, but the mark he left behind did not fade. It grew. He rose during a time when honest conversations about race, pain, addiction, and survival were pushed into silence. Pryor rejected that silence. He turned his life into storytelling that felt like sitting with an elder who refuses to sugarcoat anything. He was sharp and vulnerable at the same time. He made people laugh while making them think harder than they expected. He spoke on racism, poverty, violence, and joy with a rhythm that felt almost musical. It was raw, real, and unforgettable. His career shifted the culture. His stand up specials became blueprints for everyone who came after him. His film and television work showed he could move between comedy and drama without losing the spark that made him Richard Pryor. Even with fame, he never hid his flaws. He owned his mistakes and spoke them aloud before anyone else could twist them. That honesty inspired generations of comedians who learned that authenticity is stronger than perfection. On this day we remember a man who refused to hide. A man whose voice opened doors for countless performers. A man who showed that humor can be healing and truth telling at the same time. His chapter ended, but his legacy is still loud, still powerful, and still shaping the stage today. #RichardPryor #OnThisDay #ComedyHistory #BlackHistory #LegendsLiveOn

Lashaun 🏳️‍🌈

Home alone : DID YOU KNOW? 1. The movie was inspired by a real family trip. The movie's writer, the venerable John Hughes, was on his way to Europe for the first time with his family and just happened to think, "What if one of the kids were left behind?" As his son James Hughes recounts, he jotted it down, and wrote the first draft of the movie's script in just nine days (!) after he got back home. 2. Snow was not in the film's budget — but then a blizzard happened. The producers really couldn't afford it, but after snow covered the entire set on the second day of shooting, they had no choice but to call in the snow machines for the remainder of the film's production. 3. The "evil furnace" also involved movie magic. In the movie, the furnace's movements — and growls — terrified Kevin. In reality, the scene was created by two crew members with flashlights and fishing lines #HomeAlone #HomeAwayFromHome #MovieFacts #HomeWithAStory #HomeAloneStyle #HomeAloneHouse

Albrecht Entrati

ghost hunting and photos of ghosts.

Do I believe in ghosts , yes I believe very much in Ghost mainly cuz I have ghost photos that other people don't have and it's been tried to be proven wrong or that it was a CGI crap but that never came out as they could not explain my photos even some very well-known Ghost hunters and so on they could not explain my photos and all I did was take it with a cheapy camera it was a video type camera but you could take stills with it and yeah I got some good photos they're on over on photo bucket I'm currently trying to get back in my photo backup because I lost my password but if you go looking through ghost pictures you'll find it as one of an old lady sitting in a chair was Big easy chairs and then there's a little orb things I've got a bunch of pictures of those and the current apartment I'm living in I'm going to be taking photos here to see what I can find because people have died here in this place so yeah I believe in ghosts.

ghost hunting and photos of ghosts.
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