Especially for a woman who once dated General Custer.
(Bullshit aside, she is 52.)
Uncle Scoopy's world-weary musings about naked celebrities, sports, humor and other important, manly things.
Especially for a woman who once dated General Custer.
(Bullshit aside, she is 52.)
Drawings? AI images? I don’t know, or care very much.
Nice see-through selfie by Canadian Olympic swimmer Penny Oleksiak!
Ciao! Manhattan is the semi-biographical tale of 1960s counterculture icon Edie Sedgwick. The film follows young Susan Superstar (Sedgwick) through her tumultuous party years in Manhattan as one of Warhol’s Superstars. Through actual audio recordings of Sedgwick’s account of her time in Warhol’s Factory in New York City, paired with clips from the original unfinished script started in 1967, Ciao! captures the complete deterioration of Sedgwick’s fictional alter-ego. The striking similarities between Sedgwick and Susan’s life story, especially when recounted by Sedgwick in the midst of drug-induced audio interviews, make the film’s candid depiction of excess and celebrity especially haunting. The film is dedicated to the memory of Sedgwick and ends with the headlines announcing Sedgwick’s (not Susan Superstar’s) death, thus inseparably associating the fictional and the genuine figure.
The quote above is from Wikipedia. If you aren’t familiar with Edie or the story behind the film, the entire article is well worth your time. It is a fascinating microcosm of the hippie era, 1967-74, an era marked by liberation, drugs, rebellion, drugs, cultural revolution, and of course more drugs. If you watched the news in the late 60s and early 70s, there was a pretty good chance you’d see a story about a celebrity suicide or overdose: Brian Jones, Brian Epstein, Lenny Bruce, Frankie Lymon, Jim Morrison, Janis Joplin, Jimi Hendrix, Judy Garland … and Edie Sedgwick.
From the comments section:
It appears she did full frontal for the film but it was cut. The still did end up in a book about her.
You can borrow it on archive.org in case anyone’s interested. It’s on page 395.
Ten-part Spanish mini-series released in two five-part drops. Only the first five episodes are currently available.
Ana turns 30 on New Year’s Day with her life still unresolved: she lives in a shared flat, she doesn’t like her job, and often changes friends. Oscar turns 30 on New Year’s Eve with his life almost resolved: he’s a doctor with faithful friends, but in a relationship that comes and goes. The night they both turn 30, they meet, fall in love, and begin a relationship that ebbs and flows for ten years.

Johnny’s remarks:
Not a lot of nudity in part two but there’s quite a bit of nudity in the horror thriller Fragment and some decent scenes in the true drama In Her Skin (see below) and the horror parody The Director’s Cut. Also another early appearance from Margot Robbie.
Kate Bell in In Her Skin
Ruth Bradley in In Her Skin
We had a friend, a neighbor who would air-drop turkeys to my family and to other families in the neighborhood. That was just such a huge impact on my life and others in the community.
I think we have film:
A bride-to-be is invited to her fiancé’s bachelor party, but when uncomfortable details of their relationship are exposed, the night takes a feral turn.
The Guardian called this:
A nightmarish Australian film about a buck’s party weekend in the bush that becomes a terrible cocktail of fighting, power plays, verbal grenades and druggy mayhem.
Caroline McQuade
Shabana Azeez
Whitecaps’ comments:
While I wouldn’t call this super HQ, a 1080P Australian DVD of The Camomile Lawn was released a couple months ago
The Camomile Lawn is a four-part (five on DVD) television adaptation of the 1984 book of the same name by Mary Wesley, produced for Channel 4. It was first broadcast in 1992, and was nominated for the BAFTA TV Award for Best Drama Serial in 1993.
The basic premise, from Wikipedia:
The Camomile Lawn is a 1984 novel by Mary Wesley beginning with a family holiday in Cornwall in the last summer of peace before the Second World War. When the family is reunited for a funeral nearly fifty years later, it brings home to them how much the war acted as a catalyst for their emotional liberation. The title refers to a fragrant camomile lawn stretching down to the cliffs in the garden of their aunt’s house.
All captures by Whitecaps
Jennifer Ehle
Videos –
Scoop’s note: As regular readers know, Jennifer Ehle’s nude performance in this show is among my top ten favorites.