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>https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Don_Johnson
Donnie Wayne Johnson (born December 15, 1949) is an American actor, producer, director, singer, and songwriter.[1] He played the role of James "Sonny" Crockett in the 1980s television series Miami Vice, winning a Golden Globe for his work in the role. He also had the eponymous lead role in the 1990s cop series Nash Bridges. As of 2021, Johnson currently co-stars in Kenan.
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Johnson's first major role was in the 1969 Los Angeles stage production of Fortune and Men's Eyes, in which he played the lead role of Smitty.[7][8][9] The play included a "shockingly realistic prison rape" scene portrayed by Johnson.[10] This exposure led to the quickly forgotten film The Magic Garden of Stanley Sweetheart (1970). Johnson continued to work on stage, film and television without breaking into stardom. His notable films from this period were Zachariah (1971), The Harrad Experiment (1973) (a film in which Johnson displayed frontal nudity),[11][12] Lollipop and Roses (1974) and A Boy and His Dog (1975). In 1976, Johnson was the roommate of actor Sal Mineo at the time Mineo was murdered.[13]
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In 1984, after years of struggling to establish himself as a TV actor, Johnson landed a starring role as undercover police detective Sonny Crockett in the Michael Mann/Universal Television cop series, Miami Vice.[14] The show ran from 1984 to 1990.[15] Miami Vice made Johnson "a major international star".[16] According to Rolling Stone, "No one had more swagger in the Reagan era than Don Johnson. As Miami Viceโs Sonny Crockett, the undercover detective and professional stubble-cultivator who lived on a houseboat with his pet alligator Elvis, he embodied masculine cool in the era of coke binges and Lamborghinis".[17] The Sonny Crockett character typically wore thousand-dollar Versace and Hugo Boss suits over pastel cotton T-shirts; drove a Ferrari; wore expensive timepieces by Rolex and Ebel; and lived on an Endeavour yacht.[citation needed] Miami Vice was noted for its revolutionary use of music, cinematography and imagery; and for its glitzy take on the police drama genre.[citation needed] In the show, Crockett's partner was Ricardo Tubbs, played by Philip Michael Thomas.[18]
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Johnson has been married five times to four women. Three of his marriages were brief; the first two were annulled within a matter of days.[1][38] The names of Johnson's first two wives have not been made public, though they are said to have been a dancer and a "rich bimbo".[39]
Circa 1971, Johnson lived with self-described "groupie", Pamela Des Barres.[40]
During the first half of 1972, Johnson met Melanie Griffith, the 14-year-old daughter of his Harrad Experiment co-star Tippi Hedren.[41] When Griffith was 15, she and Johnson began living together in a rented house in Laurel Canyon.[41] On her 18th birthday they became engaged, and were married in January 1976; they separated that July and divorced in November.[42][43] They reunited close to the start of 1989, and gave birth to a daughter,[41] Dakota Johnson (born October 4, 1989) and were married again from that year until 1996.[44]
In 1980, Johnson dated Sally Adams, mother of actress Nicollette Sheridan.[45]
In January of the following year, he met former Warhol model Patti D'Arbanville at a Los Angeles restaurant.[46] The pair lived together from 1981 to 1985, but never married.[43] Johnson and D'Arbanville have a son, Jesse Wayne Johnson (born December 7, 1982).[47]
Cybill Shepherd has written of a liaison with Johnson during the making of the television miniseries The Long Hot Summer (1985).[48]
Johnson next had a relationship with Barbra Streisand, lasting into at least September 1988.[41]
Just days after breaking up with Streisand, Johnson, then 38, was linked to 18-year-old Uma Thurman.[49]
He was also briefly involved with Dead Bang co-star Penelope Ann Miller before reuniting with Griffith.[49]
In 1996โ1997, Johnson dated Jodi Lyn O'Keefe, who played his daughter on Nash Bridges.[50] Johnson was 47 at the time, while O'Keefe was 18.
On April 29, 1999, Johnson married San Francisco socialite and Montessori nursery school teacher Kelley Phleger, former longtime girlfriend of Governor Gavin Newsom,[51] at the Pacific Heights mansion of Ann and Gordon Getty.[52] Actor Robert Wagner served as best man, and Mayor Willie Brown presided over the civil ceremony.[52] Johnson and Phleger have three children together: a daughter, Atherton Grace (born December 28, 1999),[53] and two sons, Jasper Breckinridge (born June 6, 2002),[54] and Deacon (born April 29, 2006).[55][56]
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>Melanie Griffith
>https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Melanie_Griffith
Melanie Griffith[2][3] (born August 9, 1957) is an American actress and film producer. She began her career in the 1970s, appearing in several independent thriller films before achieving mainstream success in the mid-1980s.
Born in New York City to actress Tippi Hedren and advertising executive Peter Griffith, she was raised mainly in Los Angeles, where she graduated from the Hollywood Professional School at age 16. In 1975, a then 17-year-old Griffith appeared opposite Gene Hackman in Arthur Penn's neo-noir film Night Moves. She later rose to prominence for portraying an actor in pornographic films in Brian De Palma's thriller Body Double (1984), which earned her a National Society of Film Critics Award for Best Supporting Actress. Griffith's subsequent performance in the comedy Something Wild (1986) garnered critical acclaim before she was cast in 1988's Working Girl, which earned her a nomination for the Academy Award for Best Actress and won her a Golden Globe.
The 1990s had Griffith in a series of roles that received varying critical reception; she received Golden Globe nominations for her performances in Buffalo Girls (1995), and as Marion Davies in RKO 281 (1999), while also earning a Golden Raspberry Award for Worst Actress for her performances in Shining Through (1992), as well as receiving nominations for Crazy in Alabama (1999) and John Waters' cult film Cecil B. Demented (2000). Other credits include John Schlesinger's Pacific Heights (1990), Milk Money (1994), the neo-noir film Mulholland Falls (1996), as Charlotte Haze in Adrian Lyne's Lolita (1997), and Another Day in Paradise (1998).
She later starred as Barbara Marx in The Night We Called It a Day (2003), and spent the majority of the 2000s appearing on such television series as Nip/Tuck, Raising Hope, and Hawaii Five-0. After acting on stage in London, in 2003, she made her Broadway debut in a revival of the musical Chicago, receiving celebratory reviews. In the 2010s, Griffith returned to film, starring opposite then-husband Antonio Banderas in the science-fiction film Autรณmata (2014) and as an acting coach in James Franco's The Disaster Artist (2017).
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Melanie Richards Griffith[2] was born on August 9, 1957[1] in Manhattan, New York City, to actress Tippi Hedren and Peter Griffith, a former child stage actor and advertising executive.[4] Griffith's paternal ancestry is Welsh, while her maternal ancestry is Swedish, Norwegian, and German.[5] Her parents separated when she was two years old, after which she relocated to Los Angeles with her mother;[6] they divorced two years later, when Griffith was four.[7] After divorcing Hedren, her father married model-actress Nanita Greene and had two more children: Tracy Griffith, who also became an actress, and Clay A. Griffith, a set designer. Her mother married agent and producer Noel Marshall when Griffith was seven years old.[6]
During her childhood and adolescent years, she lived part of the time in New York with her father and part-time in Antelope Valley, California, where her mother formed the animal preserve Shambala.[8] Griffith appeared in advertisements and briefly worked as a child model before abandoning the career, citing extreme shyness as the reason. She appeared in the Hitchcock film Marnie (1964) in a flashback scene portraying her mother's character as a young child.[7] While attending the Hollywood Professional School, Griffith was advanced in her studies, which allowed her to skip a grade level and graduate at age 16.[4][9]
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Griffith supports the efforts of Children's Hospital Los Angeles helping to lead Walk for Kids, a community 5K, to raise funds as part of the hospital's community awareness efforts in support of the opening of a new state-of-the-art pediatric inpatient facility. She also participated in the hospital's 2012 Noche de Niรฑos gala as a presenter of a Courage to Care Award.[91]
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>https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BFvvZneahaI
CFR Blues
>or<
The Role of Trust in Pandemic Preparedness
>or<
<roll yur own>
>420 views | Mar 28, 2022 | Council on Foreign Relations
Numerous research studies point to the outsized role that trust has played in the COVID-19 pandemic. Public compliance with expert recommendations for social distancing, mask wearing, school closures, and vaccinations have been linked to the perceived trustworthiness of government, its agencies, and other citizens. In this Council on Foreign Relations roundtable, Dr. Margaret Levi and Dr. Michael Bang Petersen discuss the role of trust in current and future COVID-19 crisis response and what governments can do to build trust before the next health emergency emergesโas it inevitably will.
>recommend consuming the first half, questions are sheis
Roundtable Series on Global Health, Economics, and Development
Speakers
Margaret Levi
>https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Margaret_Levi
Sara Miller McCune Director of the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences (CASBS) and Professor of Political Science, Stanford University
Michael Bang Peterson
>https://www.hbes.com/hbes-2021-petersen/
Professor of Political Science, Aarhus University
Presider
Thomas J. Bollyky
>https://www.cfr.org/expert/thomas-j-bollyky
Senior Fellow for Global Health, Economics, and Development, Council on Foreign Relations
>Add Tommy Bolly to the listโฆ
>all assets deployedโฆ
SKIPPY
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<44 missing>
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