Los Angeles: the freeway capital of the universe

 

los angeles7

Postcard from the 1960’s.

The Southern California freeways are a network of interconnected freeways in the megaregion of Southern California, serving a population of 22 million people. A comprehensive freeway plan was produced in 1947 and with construction beginning in the 1950s. The plan hit opposition and funding limitations in the 1970s and by 2004 some 61% of the original planned network had been completed.

los angeles8

 

The Judge Harry Pregerson Interchange is a stack interchange near the Athens and Watts communities of Los Angeles, California.

Los_Angeles_-_Echangeur_autoroute_110_105

 

los angeles

.

los angeles9

The Inland Empire (I.E.) is a region in Southern California. The term may be used to refer to the cities of western Riverside County and southwestern San Bernardino County. A generally broader definition will include eastern Los Angeles County cities in the Pomona Valley, and/or the desert community of Palm Springs as well as its surrounding area; a much larger definition will include all of San Bernardino and Riverside counties.

The term “Inland Empire” is documented to have been used by the Riverside Enterprise newspaper (now The Press-Enterprise) as early as April 1914. Developers in the area likely introduced the term to promote the region and to highlight the area’s unique features. The “Inland” part of the name is derived from the region’s location, about 60 miles (97 km) inland from Los Angeles and the Pacific Ocean. The area has a population of approximately 4.2 million people.

 

los angeles1

 

los angeles2

 

los angeles3

 

los angeles5

 

los angeles4

 

Amazing Park in New Zealand with a Dormant Volcano

Mount Taranaki, also known as Mount Egmont, on the west coast of New Zealand’s North Island, is said to be one of the most symmetrical volcanic cone in the world (another candidate is Mavon Volcano). The volcano was born 120,000 years ago and erupted last in 1775, but it’s not done yet. Volcanologists agree that Taranaki is only lying dormant, waiting, biding its time.

egmont2

The volcano is located at the center of the nearly circular Egmont National Park, whose boundary appears as a dark green circle in satellite and other high-altitude pictures, because of the difference in vegetation between inside and outside the park. The dark shade represents native forest while the light green areas are pasture land that butts right up to the park’s circular boundary. Most of New Zealand’s lowland forests have been cleared for agriculture, leaving only small fragmented pockets of native forest filled with old growth trees. The circle of Egmont National Park is about 19 km across.

 

egmont1

 

egmont

 

egmont3

 

egmont4

 

egmont5

 

egmont6

 

egmont7

 

egmont8

 

egmont9

 

Classic and never-before-seen photos of Marilyn Monroe

Milton H Greene photographed some of the biggest movie stars in the world during the Golden Age of Hollywood: Cary Grant, Sophia Loren, Audrey Hepburn, Frank Sinatra, Ava Gardner, Marlene Dietrich.

But to this day, nothing sells like his iconic work with Marilyn Monroe.

“She’s lived on from generation to generation to generation,” said Milton’s son, Joshua, who has restored many of his late father’s photos for a new book, “The Essential Marilyn Monroe”.

The book is made up of 284 images, “of which 176 have never seen the light of day,” Joshua Greene said. Many of these photos were long thought to be lost for good.

The film had deteriorated over the years, Joshua Greene said, and his father “died believing all his work was ruined.” But with new technology, the photos were able to be salvaged — albeit with hours and hours of restoration work.

 

This photo of Marilyn Monroe, never published before, is the limited-edition cover of the new book “The Essential Marilyn Monroe.” It was taken in October 1953 during a shoot for Look magazine, but it was never used. “That was like a found diamond,” Joshua Greene said. “You’ve got to realize that all these pictures were in such bad condition. And It’s not until you really get down and work on them do they start coming back to life. It’s like restoring an old car.”

Milton Greene first met Monroe on an assignment for Look magazine in the fall of 1953. They struck an immediate friendship and later formed a business partnership when Greene helped Monroe get out of her studio contract with 20th Century Fox.

The two created Marilyn Monroe Productions, giving Monroe more say over what films she would do and what roles she would play. They produced two films — “Bus Stop” and “The Prince and the Showgirl” — and took thousands of photos together.

The images in the new book come from 50 different photo shoots — some of which are familiar to Monroe fans, and some that have never been seen before.

 

This photo, taken in September 1953, is the main cover of the book. Monroe is wearing a negligee adorned with fur and a diamond bracelet.

“Milton would do a lot of these sittings not particularly while under assignment, but more to explore her range and to give her a sense of confidence and also show how good she was as a chameleon, if you will, how good she was in creating characters,” Joshua Greene said. “So a lot of his focus was to make her look like a character.”

Some of the photos were taken on the set of Monroe’s films. Others were taken in a private studio session or on the back lots of a movie studio. Some were serious, maybe sensual — others were fun and playful.

“She had a great sense of humor. My father had a great sense of humor,” Greene said. “They enjoyed each other’s company and were able to really relax and explore and play and create these images that were all fantasy, you know?

 

Monroe is dressed as a palm reader after she and photographer Milton H. Green ransacked the 20th Century Fox costume department in April 1956.

“You put on an outfit that looks like a ballerina dress. You put on an outfit that you look like a peasant and you go shoot on the back lots of 20th Century Fox in an environment that looks like a town in the countryside in France, in Europe at the time of the war. So there’s these environments that they would use to play off of.”

Joshua Greene was just a few years old when he met Monroe, but he remembers her being like part of the family when she stayed at their Connecticut home after moving from Los Angeles.

“She would take care of me when my parents would go to the movies or give me bubble baths,” he said. He recalled jumping on her bed often, right into her arms. “She would tickle me and I’d get up and do it again over and over like a dog,” he laughed. “There are some fond memories.” It wasn’t until he got older when he became aware of just how famous she was.

 

Monroe wears her favorite outfit, a white terrycloth robe, just after finishing her makeup in March 1955.

Monroe’s business partnership with Milton Greene ended shortly after her marriage to playwright Arthur Miller, but Greene kept the film and the rights to all the photos they took together. And now, thanks to his son’s painstaking work, we are able to get a different look at one of the biggest icons in entertainment history.

“Her natural ability shows in the pictures,” Joshua Greene said. “And it’s not just with my dad. I mean, she’s a wonderful muse. …

“He loved photographing her. She was gifted, truly gifted in that way, and it shows.”


 

This photo of Monroe wearing a sweater coat was taken by Greene during their first sitting for Look magazine in September 1953. Many of the photos from the shoot were considered too risqué and weren’t published.

 

 

Monroe wears a jacket and matching trousers for a studio shoot in March 1955. This retro style became a signature look for her.

 

 

Monroe wears a red cashmere sweater in July 1955.

 

Monroe looks up at Laurence Olivier on the set of “The Prince and the Showgirl” in 1956
 

Monroe poses with Pekingese dogs that were part of a Look magazine shoot in February 1955.

 

 

Monroe wears a black cape in October 1955. Greene had selected two outfits from a fashion shoot and used Monroe as a model while setting up lights for two shooting environments to be used the following day. “She was a young woman that was a sponge who wanted life to come in and show her what she had to do,” Amy Greene, Milton’s wife, said in the book. “She was ready for anything. That’s why she had such a great sense of humor. And she lived every day in the present.”

Coca-Cola Toys

Coca-Cola is a world corporate behemoth with an unrelenting marketing campaign.  Coca-Cola is sold in stores, restaurants, and vending machines in every country except Cuba and North Korea.  Based on Interbrand’s best global brand 2016, Coca-Cola was the world’s most valuable brand. Being the world’s most valuable brand makes Coke recognizable everywhere. Pervasive merchandising also keeps the brand in the unconscious of the masses.  And toys are a major part of this merchandising.

A few examples of the toys and games:

coke

 

coke1

 

coke2

 

coke3

 

coke4

 

coke6

 

coke7

 

Ken and Barbie join the fun

coke8

 

coke10

 

coke11

 

coke12

 

coke13

 

coke14

 

coke15

 

coke17

 

coke16