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-   -   The So-Called "Royal" Wedding-WTF? (https://gfy.com/showthread.php?t=1020415)

ShellyCrash 04-29-2011 09:06 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by SallyRand (Post 18095987)
The only member of the British "Roayl" family with any integrity at all was The Duke of Windsor; Edward VIII, who abdicated for love and even he maintained questionable political leanings.......................

I think being a nazi sympathizer negates any possible integrity one gains through any other channels in life.

:disgust

brassmonkey 04-29-2011 09:10 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Indecent (Post 18095918)
lmao.. those crazy hats kill me.

http://msnbcmedia1.msn.com/j/MSNBC/C...5.grid-5x2.jpg

Princess Eugenie of York and Princess Beatrice of York arrive to attend the royal wedding of Prince William to Catherine Middleton at Westminster Abbey. (Pascal Le Segretain / Getty Images)

wtf is that on her head? a christmas wreath? :1orglaugh

xholly 04-29-2011 09:12 AM

Location: Oprah's Vagina

thats some scary shit! haha

DVTimes 04-29-2011 09:12 AM

they riped of Sarah Margaret Ferguson "Fergie" got about £70k out of her divoce as they fiddeled the figurs and only paid her out based on what he was earning (on his army pay
).

Diane got somthing like £10 million out of her divorse.

I wonder how much cate will get?

DVTimes 04-29-2011 09:19 AM

Alexander Thynn, 7th Marquess of Bath

This is the best Royal: http://www.lordbath.co.uk/

he is nutty as they come.

http://www.photo-elite.co.uk/wp-cont...s/lordbath.jpg

http://i.telegraph.co.uk/multimedia/...-_1076722a.jpg

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/property/...h-my-lord.html

As the Marquess of Bath's interior designer, Claire Rendall thought she'd seen it all - until his lordship unveiled his psychedelic vision for the Great Hall at Longleat

Alexander Thynn, 7th Marquess of Bath, peered thoughtfully at my swatch book and went straight for the boldest colours. "Process yellow, process blue, magenta and there, look, that's a nice bright orange." We were standing in front of the ornately carved stone fireplace in the Elizabethan Great Hall at Longleat. "Yellow hair for the figures and I think we should use the orange on the architectural pieces." He was choosing the paints that he would like to use for the fireplace and dark wood panelling that lines the room, as well as the ornate screen from behind which visitors enter.

Not many trippers to Longleat realise that the Great Hall is one of the few architecturally original rooms left in the house. Longleat was built between 1560-80 for Sir John Thynne as a magnificent Renaissance palace. In Sir John's day, if you weren't convinced of the extraordinary wealth and prestige of its owner as you approached the impressive façade, the Great Hall would have left you in no doubt. It was a glamorous, brightly coloured salon, the setting for extravagant feasts and entertainment.

Pigments were rare and expensive, so they would have been used in abundance to show off. Gold and silver leaf would have sparkled in the candlelight. There are traces of murals where the fine but predictable Woottons now hang (the paintings were commissioned by Thomas Thynne, Viscount Weymouth, in the 1730s and are now owned by the Tate), and on the stone of the fireplace itself one can still make out a faint glow of red paint. It was a room with pizzazz.

The Victorians, however, had other ideas. In an attempt to stress the venerable antiquity of the family, they stripped off the bright colours and daubed the panelling a thick, muddy brown. A room that was once impressive for its lavish decoration as well as its size was turned into a dour, oppressive barn.

Lord Bath's scheme is anything but dour. It would transform the Great Hall into a psychedelic vision straight out of The Beatles' Magical Mystery Tour. One visitor has described my mock-up of it as "bonkers" - that was the printable bit. Another called it "an LSD version of tartan". It is a palette very few of us would entertain in the privacy of our own homes, let alone a space which 2,000 visitors a day walk through. But Lord Bath has nurtured ambitions for the Great Hall since inheriting Longleat in 1992 and would love to impose his "1960s style".

He seems unlikely to get his way however. Even a comparatively modest change was vetoed by the area inspector from English Heritage, who had to break it to him that it was out of the question in a GradeI listed house.

After 13 years, it is still a thrill to work at Longleat, where nothing comes as standard, especially the client. I have grown used to his exuberant love of colour. It is not arbitrary. I recall asking him, horrified, why he had chosen crimson for his penthouse curtains? "Because it contrasts so well with the green of the Capability Brown parkland outside," was his answer. And one can't argue with that. "Colour brings richness, joy and excitement. It is spirit-lifting," he says. I have recently installed a 23ft-long, 10ft-high cabinet, made from the most exquisite, rippled sycamore. It has a glass screen in the centre with 2,500 coloured LED lights around the edge. Needless to say, Lord Bath prefers the pulsating mode so that every colour flashes in sequence, alarming the campers across the lake who can see the extraordinary light show through his window at night.

"The decoration of Longleat has shown the touch of each generation's contributions," says Lord Bath. What if the 4th Marquess hadn't been allowed to cover the walls of what must have been very beautiful Tudor rooms with Genoese velvet in the 1870s, or to install the highly decorated gilded ceilings? Beautiful they may be, but they're not to everyone's taste.

"It is important that the 1960s leaves its mark too," Lord Bath insists, "and it would be a vast improvement on the subdued colours of the Victorian era."

There are those who would contend that he has done quite enough hippie daubing already in his private apartments. These grand rooms, which he started painting in a thick mixture of oils and sawdust in 1964, are covered from floor to ceiling in a breathtaking myriad of colour.

The ceilings too are either brightly painted or covered in intricate mirror mosaics by Lord Bath's nephew, Alexander Thynne. All life is here, from teenage angst to the erotica of the famous Kama Sutra bedroom - a natural subject for a man who has had 74 "wifelets".

The billiard room best reflects what Lord Bath would like to achieve in the Great Hall. Here bright, acid colours live alongside portraits of his ancestors and family photographs in the smorgasbord of history and styles that brings great houses alive.

There is a debate about where we should draw the conservation line and why. It is now planning policy not to allow Victorian windows to be replaced by the original, smaller-paned Georgian versions. This is because it is said that the large, out-of-proportion Victorian windows are part of the history of a building. I can see the point, but wouldn't the Royal Crescent in Bath, for example, look fabulous if all the Georgian panes were restored? John Wood the Younger, 230 years ago, designed this unique facade to look a particular way; who has the moral authority to override him?

Under Lord Bath's stewardship, Longleat last year attracted more than 750,000 visitors. So why shouldn't he have his own way - and restore the Great Hall to colourful extravagance?

Lord Bath's father, Henry, also had ideas about lifting the heaviness of the Victorian brown and found traces of burgundy, blue, red, green and gold on the ornate screen at the end of the hall. With a good deal of expensive investigation, it would be possible to restore the Great Hall to something like it was in Sir John's day. But so much has been destroyed that we couldn't be accurate and it would end up as a pastiche. Far better, in Lord Bath's eyes, to go for a new scheme that is true to the original spirit.

As we cannot, my solution has been to digitally alter a photograph of the Great Hall and display a metre-long print in situ to show the proposed colour scheme. Lord Bath has asked that a book be placed nearby over the summer for visitors to put down their comments. Perhaps optimistically, he hopes there will be a groundswell of popular support with which he can approach English Heritage again.

Whatever happens, my hope is that visitors will leave understanding what the room was originally about - entertaining and showing off.

ottopottomouse 04-29-2011 09:25 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Indecent (Post 18095918)
lmao.. those crazy hats kill me.

http://msnbcmedia1.msn.com/j/MSNBC/C...5.grid-5x2.jpg

Princess Eugenie of York and Princess Beatrice of York arrive to attend the royal wedding of Prince William to Catherine Middleton at Westminster Abbey. (Pascal Le Segretain / Getty Images)

Beertrix has lost A LOT of weight

Quote:

Originally Posted by ShellyCrash (Post 18096243)
I think being a nazi sympathizer negates any possible integrity one gains through any other channels in life.

:disgust

Easy to say with hindsight though.

DVTimes 04-29-2011 09:34 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ShellyCrash (Post 18096243)
I think being a nazi sympathizer negates any possible integrity one gains through any other channels in life.

:disgust

though one must remeber that america was friends with the Nazis at the start of the war. It was only near the end when you got involved when Japan bombed you.

Then after the way you went in and took all the Nazies you wanted to build up america. You would not be in space if it had not been for a certain nazi would you?

DVTimes 04-29-2011 09:36 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by DVTimes (Post 18096302)
though one must remeber that america was friends with the Nazis at the start of the war. It was only near the end when you got involved when Japan bombed you.

Then after the way you went in and took all the Nazies you wanted to build up america. You would not be in space if it had not been for a certain nazi would you?

I belive he is considered a hero now in the USA.

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedi...Braun_crop.jpg



Wernher Magnus Maximilian Freiherr[1] von Braun (March 23, 1912 ? June 16, 1977) was a German rocket scientist, engineer, space architect, and one of the leading figures in the development of rocket technology in Nazi Germany and the United States during and after World War II.

A former member of the Nazi party, commissioned Sturmbannführer of the paramilitary SS and decorated Nazi war hero, von Braun would later be regarded as the preeminent rocket engineer of the 20th century in his role with the United States civilian space agency NASA.[2] In his 20s and early 30s, von Braun was the central figure in Germany's rocket development program, responsible for the design and realization of the deadly V-2 combat rocket during World War II. After the war, he and some of his rocket team were taken to the U.S. as part of the then-secret Operation Paperclip. Von Braun worked on the US Army intermediate range ballistic missile (IRBM) program before his group was assimilated by NASA, under which he served as director of the newly-formed Marshall Space Flight Center and as the chief architect of the Saturn V launch vehicle, the superbooster that propelled the Apollo spacecraft to the Moon.[3] According to one NASA source, he is "without doubt, the greatest rocket scientist in history. His crowning achievement was to lead the development of the Saturn V booster rocket that helped land the first men on the Moon in July 1969."[4] In 1975 he received the National Medal of Science.

Dr. von Braun developed the idea of a Space Camp that would train children in fields of science and space technologies as well as help their mental development much the same way sports camps aim at improving physical development.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wernher_von_Braun

nico-t 04-29-2011 09:36 AM

shut the fuck up you schizophrenic old fart.

SallyRand 04-29-2011 11:03 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by DVTimes (Post 18096310)
I belive he is considered a hero now in the USA.

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedi...Braun_crop.jpg



Wernher Magnus Maximilian Freiherr[1] von Braun (March 23, 1912 ? June 16, 1977) was a German rocket scientist, engineer, space architect, and one of the leading figures in the development of rocket technology in Nazi Germany and the United States during and after World War II.

A former member of the Nazi party, commissioned Sturmbannführer of the paramilitary SS and decorated Nazi war hero, von Braun would later be regarded as the preeminent rocket engineer of the 20th century in his role with the United States civilian space agency NASA.[2] In his 20s and early 30s, von Braun was the central figure in Germany's rocket development program, responsible for the design and realization of the deadly V-2 combat rocket during World War II. After the war, he and some of his rocket team were taken to the U.S. as part of the then-secret Operation Paperclip. Von Braun worked on the US Army intermediate range ballistic missile (IRBM) program before his group was assimilated by NASA, under which he served as director of the newly-formed Marshall Space Flight Center and as the chief architect of the Saturn V launch vehicle, the superbooster that propelled the Apollo spacecraft to the Moon.[3] According to one NASA source, he is "without doubt, the greatest rocket scientist in history. His crowning achievement was to lead the development of the Saturn V booster rocket that helped land the first men on the Moon in July 1969."[4] In 1975 he received the National Medal of Science.

Dr. von Braun developed the idea of a Space Camp that would train children in fields of science and space technologies as well as help their mental development much the same way sports camps aim at improving physical development.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wernher_von_Braun


CaptainHowdy 04-29-2011 11:05 AM

Don't feed the transvestite, er, troll ...

Amputate Your Head 04-29-2011 11:08 AM

http://brokenzombie.com/junk_bin/gfy/oldman.jpg

DVTimes 04-29-2011 11:20 AM


baddog 04-29-2011 11:24 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by SallyRand (Post 18095780)
A revolution was fought and won to rid the American people of the tyranny of the British "Royal" family, so I fail to understand the apparent fascination with the antics of that whole lot!

Did a red coat steal your girlfriend or something? 300 years is quite a while to hold a grudge.

DBS.US 04-29-2011 11:27 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by SallyRand (Post 18095780)

Why is a wedding of a member of a family which "earns" its living from inheirited wealth derived from the backbreaking labor of and the theft of properties, money and freedom from its "subjects" the object of adoration, interest and delight?

Because people with no lives have to believe they are part of something going on.:2 cents:

seeandsee 04-29-2011 11:27 AM

finally its over so i can watch more other news, princess was sexy

merina0803 04-29-2011 12:01 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by SallyRand (Post 18095780)
A revolution was fought and won to rid the American people of the tyranny of the British "Royal" family, so I fail to understand the apparent fascination with the antics of that whole lot!

The so-called "Royal Couple" are the foremost representatives of one of the most repressive, totalitarian and brutal empires in the history of the world and during Worlld War One, that same family even changed its names to be more acceptable as the King of England had gone to war with his COUSIN, the German Kaiser, which war was then joined by yet ANOTHER cousin, Nicholas, Czar of All The Russias!

"Just as children can take their surnames from their father, so sovereigns normally take the name of their 'House' from their father. For this reason, Queen Victoria's eldest son Edward VII belonged to the House of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha (the family name of his father Prince Albert). Edward VII's son George V became the second king of that dynasty when he succeeded to the throne in 1910.

In 1917, there was a radical change, when George V specifically adopted Windsor, not only as the name of the 'House' or dynasty, but also as the surname of his family. The family name was changed as a result of anti-German feeling during the First World War, and the name Windsor was adopted after the Castle of the same name.

At a meeting of the Privy Council on 17 July 1917, George V declared that 'all descendants in the male line of Queen Victoria, who are subjects of these realms, other than female descendants who marry or who have married, shall bear the name of Windsor'."

"Unless The Prince of Wales chooses to alter the present decisions when he becomes king, he will continue to be of the House of Windsor and his grandchildren will use the surname Mountbatten-Windsor."

"The Mountbatten surname derives from the German town of Battenberg, in Hesse. Prince Louis of Battenberg changed his surname to Mountbatten (its literal English translation) during the First World War at the request of King George V. When then-Prince Philip of Greece and Denmark, a member of the House of Schleswig-Holstein-Sonderburg-Glücksburg (the royal house of Denmark and Norway and the deposed royal house of Greece) took British citizenship, he used this surname since he descends from the Battenberg family through his mother, Princess Alice of Battenberg.

The name Windsor was adopted by the British branch of the House of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha in 1917."

"Prince" Phillip is Greek, by the way.

Why is a wedding of a member of a family which "earns" its living from inheirited wealth derived from the backbreaking labor of and the theft of properties, money and freedom from its "subjects" the object of adoration, interest and delight?

please sit in traffic thank you

SallyRand 04-29-2011 02:00 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by DBS.US (Post 18096579)
Because people with no lives have to believe they are part of something going on.:2 cents:

Thank you for your kind, appropriate and responsive reply.

You are also 100% spot on I think.

Vick! 04-29-2011 02:09 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by SallyRand (Post 18096007)
Over 300 AMERICANS dead in storms in the USA and the top story in the media is the coverage of a wedding between an effete British snob and a gold digger.

http://www.cnn.com/interactive/2011/...ex.html?hpt=T2

http://www.cnn.com/2011/US/04/29/tor...ex.html?hpt=T2

No wonder the USA is in such pitiable condition!

What you are trying to say by writing Americans in caps?

Quote:

Originally Posted by Evil Chris (Post 18096110)
Japan, Haiti, Libya, oh and that little leak in the Gulf? Well, those stories just aren't as interesting anymore.

+1

papill0n 04-29-2011 02:14 PM

oh youre back you fucking douchenozzle

sup marion ??

papill0n 04-29-2011 02:16 PM

a guy, pretending to be a woman,on a porn forum,complaining about the royal family

safe to say that you are an utter failure :1orglaugh

RadicalSights 04-29-2011 02:16 PM

I would do Kate Middleton


http://www.oddpedia.com/wp-content/u...up-skirt-1.jpg

Buzz 04-29-2011 02:58 PM

royal wedding is something that comes thorugh centuries and stays untouched (well, almost). What's so bad about people's interest towards the beautiful ceremony? That gives people chance to get their tiny piece of fairy tale.

As for the royal money - you're quoting an opinion of some ignorant peasant. Ruling a country - and we're talking about something used to be a huge empire - ruling a country, keeping the power, being responsible of a whole nation - that is'nt walk in a park. Windsors are spending money their fathers 'd earned for them.

As for cousins, relatives and family - I'd be the first to beat the shit out of my cousin if I knew he's going to hurt my kids or my kids' interests.


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