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Game of Thrones: Jon Snow-Battle of the Bastards Bust Game of Thrones Melisandre Figure Game of Thrones: Daenerys Targaryen Mother of Dragons Figure Game of Thrones Character Magnet Set 3 Game of Thrones Journal: Daenerys Targaryen Mother of Dragons Game of Thrones Magnetic Bookmark Set #3 Game of Thrones: The Three-eyed Raven Snow Globe Game of Thrones: Dragon Egg Shot Glass Set Game of Thrones 2.25'' Magnet: Arryn Game of Thrones 2.25'' Magnet: Baratheon Game of Thrones 2.25'' Magnet: Bolton Game of Thrones 2.25'' Magnet: FreyNEW YORK—Saying the series’s latest dramatic turn caught them completely off guard, fans of the HBO series Game Of Thrones reacted with shock to Sunday night’s episode in which some little goblin or something was killed off. “Man, I knew they had some big surprises in store, but to kill off that enchanted hobgoblin or mage or whatever? That was insane,” viewer Adam Koskei said of the episode’s unexpected climax, which not only featured the death of some sort of little warlock-type character, but also included a major secondary plot twist in which the centaur Stonebane Darkwind or maybe Kyrus Valorheart finally cast an ancient spell or something to that effect.
“And it was so crazy how he was killed with that cursed rune or a fire-axe or a similar thing in that vein! I thought for sure he was going to get that chair, but now it seems like the Grand King or Magic Duke or whoever will get it instead.” The show’s fans added that they could barely wait to see whether the dragon-riders could protect the castle from the gorgons or whatever-the-fuck in next week’s season finale.We’ll have to wait longer for the next season of “ Game of Thrones ,” but that doesn’t mean we have to wait long to journey back to the land of Westeros because the hit HBO series is coming to South Florida. The series announced a 28-city live concert tour, which will be headlined by the show’s composer Ramin Djawadi, and will feature “an immersive music and visual experience that will bring the Seven Kingdoms to life on a scale never seen before,” according to Entertainment Weekly. The tour will be making two stops in Florida — March 11 in Fort Lauderdale and March 12 in Tampa.
According to EW, the concert will feature a “live journey through Westeros and Essos” with footage being featured that hasn’t been seen on the show. “For seven years, Ramin has been blowing our mind with his music’s force, subtlety, and endless inventiveness,” executive producers David Benioff and D.B. Weiss said. “The ‘Game of Thrones’ Concert Experience will be unique in the history of concert tours, an eye-popping, ear-splitting, phantasmagoric blend of the show’s visuals and Ramin’s powerful compositions. dental chair price in uaeWe are more excited about it than anyone.”table and chair rentals laguna hills The concert tour will kick off on February 15 in Kansas City, Mo., with tickets for all the shows going on sale starting on Aug. 10 at 10 a.m.kitchen chairs for sale saskatoon
Read more at Entertainment Weekly. Game of Thrones & Druid Peak - Your Plans For Tonight By East Orlando Post on April 08, 2014 Fillmmaker Marni Zelnick in town for screening and will  hold a Q&A session following the 6PM screening at the Regal Cinema in Winter Park Village with Executive Producer Maureen Mayer. By now, you should already know a lot about Druid Peak. We have conducted interviews with the Spencer Treat Clark who plays the lead role, Executive Producer Maureen Mayer, and writer and director Marni Zelnick. blue chair bay rum marketingLast weekend, local filmmaker Jason Jack Underwood and I attended the films southeastern premiere at the Enzian Theater in Maitland.replica eames chair parts Maureen Mayer, who executive produced the film was kind enough to let us sit at her table as the film captivated a full house. adirondack chairs for sale in mn
Afterwards, she and her husband Dr. Thom Mayer who serves as the medical director of the NFL Players Association, shared with us some behind the scenes details about the making of Druid Peak - details that her and Marni were looking forward to sharing with the audience at tonights showing during the post-film question and answer. Without giving away too much, what I can tell you is that the group that provided the real live wolves for Druid Peak also provided the mammoth of a grizzly bear that Brienne of Tarth fought off last season in Game of Thrones.second hand barber chairs for sale philippines I don't want to give away or spoil Druid Peak for anyone, but let's just say it has more than a few curveballs that you won't see coming and is insanely beautiful & worthwhile - both in the landscapes being filmed and the performances by a truly talented cast. wooden chair hire brighton
FACT - it will be the best $11 you spend this month. Cancel your plans tonite & make new ones. Leave your boyfriend, girlfriend, husband, or wife at home if they don't want to come. You owe it to yourself to see Druid Peak and have the chance to really learn how a film is made during the Q&A with the filmmaker and executive producer.It may have taken less effort to secure a seat on the Iron Throne. For the last two weeks, Donn Gurule had been searching for a Chicago bar that shows "Game of Thrones," HBO's popular fantasy drama.eames lounge chair for sale toronto The first bar he visited turned him away because there was no room, Gurule said. The second bar he tried wasn't showing an episode that week. Finally, on Sunday, he entered mecca: The Burlington bar in the Logan Square neighborhood was airing "Game of Thrones" on two televisions. Gurule, who recently moved from California to the Lakeview neighborhood, snagged a coveted fold-out chair and watched the episode among 40-plus other patrons.
Nevermind that Gurule, 46, is an HBO subscriber and could watch "Game of Thrones" at home. "(The show) is so much more fun with an audience," Gurule said. "It makes you appreciate the humor and some of the details you wouldn't otherwise see." Boisterous "Game of Thrones" watch parties, where bar patrons cheer the show's gruesome deaths and laugh at Tyrion-delivered one-liners, may be dying a slow death as HBO cracks down on public screenings of the show. Geek Bar Beta in Wicker Park received a cease-and-desist letter last month from HBO after advertising its free Season 5 premiere watch party on Facebook. And it is not the only establishment to be told "Game" over. HBO sent a similar letter to a Brooklyn bar two weeks ago, according to media reports, and has sent at least five takedown notices to Twitter concerning its Periscope live-streaming service after some fans used the app to broadcast the show for free to online followers. HBO's crusade to shut down public screenings of its shows is not new but has become recently heated as the network battles piracy of "Game of Thrones" (a record 8 million viewers watched the April 12 Season 5 premiere) and new technologies such as Periscope and Meerkat, which allow anyone with an iPhone or computer to follow along with live broadcasts (and
, in the case of Periscope, watch the videos up to 24 hours after they are posted). A decade ago HBO sent cease-and-desist letters to bars and restaurants, including some in Chicago, that showed "The Sopranos." HBO spokesman Jeff Cusson said in a statement that HBO is a pay subscription service that "should not be made available in public establishments. When it does happen, it is of particular concern when there is an attempt by such places to profit off of programming on the service." Northwestern University law professor Peter DiCola said it is HBO's right to threaten penalties because screenings of the show at bars and via live-streaming services can be considered unauthorized public performances, which are illegal under federal law. DiCola said Periscope users who live-stream the show "are almost certainly engaging in public performances on their face, because the videos they are created are being 'transmitted' to the public." Twitter took down the flagged "Game of Thrones" broadcasts on Periscope.
Meerkat, an app similar to Periscope, but whose videos are not saved, has received no complaints from HBO as of last week, Meerkat founder Ben Rubin said. So why are bars allowed to show out-of-town sporting events? DiCola said bars can show some TV shows and live sports if they pay their cable or satellite provider a commercial fee, which is typically more than a residential fee. A DirecTV spokesman said the prices for showing its NFL Sunday Ticket package for out-of-market football games, for example, vary based on the size of the bar but could be 10 times what a fan at home pays for the season-long service. Still, some users have found a way to illegally screen these shows as well. DirecTV spokesman Robert Mercer said his company has had instances where bars have used a residential account to get a lower rate on sports packages, which violates federal law. HBO, meanwhile, is intended to be watched at home, Cusson said. Even though some fans may host large watch parties at their houses, HBO is targeting the bar screenings.
"You can have friends over (to watch the show), but when you're at a bar with people, many of whom of are strangers, that's different," said DiCola, who specializes in music copyright law. "If you're a bar owner, your disagreement is with Congress, not with HBO." But Geek Bar owner David Zoltan said his beef is with HBO. He said the cease-and-desist letter was a "huge surprise" because "Game of Thrones" is so entrenched in geek culture. "It's like they're thumbing their noses at geeks," Zoltan said. "The geeks are the core audience. Without the geeks, 'Game of Thrones' would have never gotten this far." Despite the letter, multiple "Game of Thrones" posters decorate the walls and windows of Geek Bar, which opened in October, because "we love the show and it's part of what the people are talking about in the bar," Zoltan said. So on Sundays, Geek Bar closes for a private event at 8 p.m., which is the time "Game of Thrones" airs, and stops serving food and drink, Zoltan said.
As to whether "Game of Thrones" is screened at the bar, Zoltan is coy. "What happens at that private event is anybody's guess," Zoltan said. "We have to be very careful. We can't afford to fight HBO's legal team." It's unclear how many Chicago bars show "Game of Thrones" to their customers because not all of them advertise their watch parties online. Burlington bartender Sean Loftus said the bar began hosting "Game of Thrones" watch parties last year after screening "Breaking Bad," AMC's popular show about a drug-dealing high school chemistry teacher. Loftus said The Burlington also showed two episodes of HBO's crime drama "True Detective" last year, but it's "Game of Thrones" that has drawn the biggest reaction from patrons. One party even went viral after Loftus videotaped the bar's reaction to a particularly gruesome death. "It's a big draw for Sunday," Loftus said. Loftus said he thought the screenings were legal because the bar does not charge a cover for the party and the TV's screen is smaller than 55 inches, but HBO rules don't mention anything about TV size.