SDCXTRA RADIO

Tuesday, October 25, 2016

A little bit of US History in Pictures from the 1800's

Borax and the 20 mule team
Death Valley, so appropriately named, is home to the lowest area in the western hemisphere, at 282 feet below sea level. One of the hottest places on Earth, the grounds are known to churn up a temperature of 190 degrees. Investors with 20 mule teams traveled to the sparse area looking to cash in on borax, a mineral known to exist in areas of Death Valley.

Couple during the frontier having lunch
An emigrant is one who leaves one country for another to start a new life. This photo shows an emigrant couple from Kansas enjoying their lunch by their covered wagon and horses. This must be the 1800's equivalent of the new age tiny house!
Pearl Hart
Pearl Hart gained a ton of attention for being a female outlaw, and dressing as a male, mostly. When she was jailed for robbing a stagecoach and getting caught on the run while sleeping, she made the most of her situation. Pearl was given better prison quarters as well as a lot of attention by the media, fellow inmates and jailers. Hart was eventually released for unknown reasons.
Rose Dunn
Rose Dunn was the sibling of two older brothers. In the early years, her brothers became wrapped up in a gang while Rose was around, and she had eyes for one of the guys, George Newcomb. During her relationship with Newcomb, her brothers became law abiding bounty hunters. After a shootout, many say Rose jumped in to help Newcomb escape by firing live rounds. Newcomb was eventually ambushed and Rose Dunn is known as the girl of an outlaw.
Sierra Nevada mountain trail
Locked up in the Sierra Nevada Mountains, this crew is on the go. Because transportation by prominent fellows through rough terrain was risky business in some circumstances, hired hands were available to secure the travel from A to B.
Tibercio Vasquez
Tibercio was a hispanic outlaw, successful in fleeing through a 20 year crime spree. He was eventually captured and hung in 1875.
Wyatt Earp, sitting, with his friend, Bat Masterson
Wyatt Earp is a legend of the Wild West, notable so for his sory in the movie, Tombstone. After moving out west to California, Earp became a US Deputy Marshal in order to avenge his brother's murder. Wyatt had many occupations during his long life, such as a saloon owner, farmer and even boxing referee. Earp had three wives, the last for almost 50 years.
Olive Oatman
When Olive was just 14, her family was murdered by Indians. Olive and her sister, the only survivors, became slaves and were sold to the Mohave tribe. After her sister died from starvation, Olive somehow left the Indian tribe. She was left to go on from the experience with just a story to tell and a facial tattoo given to her by the tribe.
The Paiute Tribe
The Great Basin is known as the area around southeast Oregon, eastern California, and western Nevada. The tribes of Paiute Indians lived here. Many were separated into different tribes and spoke other languages. The Indians who were closest in language and culture were considered part of the band, while others with the same genealogy but different cultural-wise were not. After running them around, they finally gained their rights to reservation land.
Canyon de Chelly
Among the mountains of the west lies the Canyon de Chelly National Monument in Colorado. This photograph was taken by Timothy O' Sullivan, a prominent photographer in the late 1800's. Today, this area is still a part of the Navajo Indian tribes. While people can go hiking and on tours, Navajo people still live there, as they have for thousands of years.
Buffalo Soldier
Black Americans who were a part of the US Army were given the nickname, Buffalo Soldier by Indians in 1866. This became a staple in American history. The oldest living Buffalo Soldier passed in 2005 at the age of 111.
Indian Teepees
As time went on with the settling of the West, Indians were further put out. They were made to live on Reservations while the settlers inhabited the remainder of the land. They were given a monthly payment which the Indians often had to turn round and spend back to the settlers for goods. This practice is still going on today.
Indian overlooking the Transcontinental Railroad
The Pacific Railroad, also known as the First Transcontinental Railroad, was built in order to connect the west to the east. Between 1863 and 1869, the railroad was built from San Francisco to the existing railroad in Iowa. The completion of the railroad revolutionized transportation, trade and settlement to the West.
Custer's black hills expedition, 1874
Lieutenant Colonel George Custer and his crew left from North Dakota to search for a route to the southwest and find gold. They also wanted to find a spot to make a fort in the Black Hills of South Dakota.
Chinese workers building the Great Northern Railway
Chinese workers came to work on the Great Northern railway. While the white workers made $1.50 to $2.50 per day and had meals included, the Chinese workers were paid a dollar per day and still had to buy their own food and set and transport their own camps, even in terrible weather. Many became sick and injured, and probably really sad.
Pahranagat Mining District in Nevada
This is another photograph from Timothy O'Sullivan, famous for documenting the life and settlement of the frontier in the late 1800's. Gold mining was big business, and that meant a lot of effort went into doing it better. An ore car would be operated by a pulley, at this Illinois mine, connected to the tracks to aide in mining.
Navajo family
This famous photograph depicts Navajo Indians on their horses at the turn of the century. The picture was taken by Edward Curtis at Canyon de Chelly.
Charles Siringo and W.O. Sayles
Charlie Siringo is best known for writing the book, "A Cowboy Detective," about his experiences as a detective at the famous Pinkerton Detective Agency. Siringo would travel all over the US as an undercover agent in order to gain intelligence, solve crimes and capture gang members. After leaving the agency, Pinkerton kept going out of their way to stop the publishing of his books. Oftentimes, Siringo would change the names and places of the stories he wrote to satisfy the detective agency and protect the identity of others in his stories.
William Anderson aka Bloody Bill, 1864
In William Anderson's short 24 years of life, he managed to get a name for himself. A southern guerrilla with a revenge out for union workers, William got the nickname Bloody Bill. After becoming the leader in his gang, Quantrill's Raiders, he set out to wreak havoc on the union. One would guess his rage was due to a judge killing his father at a young age, and then his sister was killed while in custody by the union. His best remembered rampage was when he took over a train and killed over 20 union members, then went on a tirade and killed 100 more. He was soon killed a year after. The carte de visite was made after finding this photograph on his dead body.

Sunday, August 28, 2016

Traycee Lynn




Skillfully fusing hip-hop and soul, Traycee Lynn is an engaging artist that moves the crowd to head nods and tears. 

Philadelphia-based and self described as the hip-hop songstress, Lynn has been writing since she was eight years old. A prodigy on the horizon, at the tender age of 8, Lynn would create hip-hop rhythms and verses while beating rhythms on tables, windows, and walls - a "tomboy hobby" she picked up from her older brother. 

She would later develop a knack for songwriting through her soprano and alto roles in her hometown church in Harrisburg, PA. After attending Temple University, Lynn stayed in Philadelphia and was mentored and nurtured artisitically by witnessing the Black Lily arts movement. 

With no formal training, she started her own newspaper, Writer Blocks, for independent artists and writers. The newspaper was formed out of her own passion for music, writing and understanding of the struggles of marketing for independent artists.

It would later form powerful connections through icon interviews with signed and unsigned artists and become a promotional vehicle for Lynn and the rest of the underground arts scene in Philadelphia. In 2006, Lynn decided to put the newspaper on hiatus and delve into her own artistry more seriously. 

She had over 50 songs and a dozen beats (ranging from hip-hop to song) that she had been writing and composing since she began the newspaper, and was inspired by some of the interviews she had conducted to team up with local artists and musicians to manifest her first "serious project" titled THE AWAKENING (released in 2006). It was instantly accepted overseas and heralded as "organic soul with an edge" by London's Soul Brother Records. 

The leading track from the album, MUSIC OF MY MIND, was written and produced by Lynn in 2004. She had just begun learning major chords and composed the music at Tainted Lab Studios (now Control Tracks) during a frustrating time when Lynn was silenced by her wisdom teeth being removed. She co-produced the rest of the project with Dap Stallion Productions, a local production team that assisted Lynn with music arrangement for some of the album.

Although her catalog has diverse sound, Lynn says she feels most kinship with hip-hop, "I'm a child of hip-hop, 80s feel-good music, and Madonna-pop" says Lynn, who is still charged and currently working on a few multi-media projects and collaborations. Her next album will be out in 2008.

For more info please visit www.myspace.com/trayceelynn
Contact 267.471.5221
email: traycee2012@aol.com


Traycee Lynn
The Awakening
traycee2012@aol.com
Soul, R&B

Wednesday, August 10, 2016

Thrillkiller




Created by Rob Bradley alongside Maxim Sobchenko, Thrillkiller mixes elements of rock, metal, funk, and pop into a viciously unique style of music.

The members of the band have toured from Virginia to Connecticut to Ohio, shared the stage with Sebastian Bach, The Protomen, Dio Disciples ft. Tim Owens (Judas Priest, Iced Earth), and Symphony X, and played festivals such as MagStock (where Thrillkiller recently performed) and The Exposed Music Fest. 


"I can't think of anything that sounds like this" Gary Thorn, Shockwave Magazine

"If you are a fan of music at all, you owe it to yourself to give Thrillkiller a listen and meet your new favorite band of 2016." C., Metal To Infinite Webzine 

"Thrillkiller has the chance to be the breakout band of 2016" Andy Davis, Heavy Metal Time Machine


http://listen.samcloud.com/w/72170/SDC-RADIO-ONE

Thrillkiller
Showdown
ThrillkillerMusic@yahoo.com
Pop Rock
Michael Jackson
Michael Jackson
BMI (USA)
Unsigned
Geographic
riva
United States
Yes
 
Band Description
An electric blend of rock, pop, funk, and metal, that brings about a style of music that's viciously unique.

Monday, May 2, 2016

Ladies in Retirement (1941) - Ida Lupino, Louis Hayward, Evelyn Keyes, Elsa Lanchester





In the late nineteenth century, Ellen Creed works as the live-in companion to Miss Leonora Fiske, a retired actress who lives in the English countryside and who still retains her theatrical mannerisms. 

Ellen receives notice that the landlady of her two sisters, Emily Creed and Louisa Creed, who currently live in London, is threatening to call the police to haul them away to an asylum because of their disruptive behavior due to their mentally deranged state. 

Ellen will not allow her sisters to be institutionalized, and convinces Miss Fiske to allow them to stay with them for a couple of days. Miss Fiske was unaware of their deranged mental state when she agreed and is also unaware that Ellen hopes to make their stay permanent. 

Both issues eventually become apparent to Miss Fiske, who cannot tolerate how Emily and Louisa disrupt her home life. However, Ellen "convinces" Miss Fiske to take an extended leave from the house, while Ellen tells her sisters that she bought the house from Miss... Written by Huggo


Thursday, April 21, 2016

Saving Mr. Banks


http://xmovies8.tv/movie/saving-mr-banks-2013/

Storyline: When Walt Disney's daughters begged him to make a movie of their favorite book, P.L. Travers' Mary Poppins (1964), he made them a promise - one that he didn't realize would take 20 years to keep. In his quest to obtain the rights, Walt comes up against a curmudgeonly, uncompromising writer who has absolutely no intention of letting her beloved magical nanny get mauled by the Hollywood machine. But, as the books stop selling and money grows short, Travers reluctantly agrees to go to Los Angeles to hear Disney's plans for the adaptation. For those two short weeks in 1961, Walt Disney pulls out all the stops. Armed with imaginative storyboards and chirpy songs from the talented Sherman brothers, Walt launches an all-out onslaught on P.L. Travers, but the prickly author doesn't budge. He soon begins to watch helplessly as Travers becomes increasingly immovable and the rights begin to move further away from his grasp. - See more at: http://xmovies8.tv/movie/saving-mr-banks-2013/#sthash.PQfU0ZLZ.dpuf

Sunday, April 10, 2016

Meryl Mercer



Released on October 20, 1933: Randolph Scott is Dr. Morley, a man who abandoned his newborn son, but six hears later fights for custody from Mom and Pop Miller, who have raised him as their own.

Directed by Robert G. Vignola

The Actors: Randolph Scott (Doctor Robert Morley), Martha Sleeper (Martha Morley), Beryl Mercer (Aunt Hilda Miller), Joseph Cawthorn (Uncle John Miller), Buster Phelps (Billy Morley), Charlotte Merriam (Grace), Sidney Bracey (Hopkins), Adele St. Mauer(Mademoiselle), Phyllis Lee (nurse), Martin Burton (Paul), Clarence Geldart (Doctor Flemming), Edward LeSaint (Judge Harvey E. Blake), Finis Barton (Gladys), Sam Flint(Doctor Greenwood), George Nash (unknown), Bradley Page (unknown).

Sunday, March 27, 2016

Star Trek Beyond Official Trailer Breakdown

FAKE GOLD & SILVER - Exposing the Fake Silver & Gold Bullion Coming Out ...

BLOOD ALLEY - The 1955 Movie filmed on Belverdere Island, CA

BLOOD ALLEY 

Phantoming the wood-burning sternwheeler riverboat from the 1955 movie "Blood Alley" starring John Wayne now floating on the Sacramento River about 15 miles north of downtown on the east bank from Brad's Baja Hammer 12.14.2013! It is slated to be restored and turned into a John Wayne floating museum! I have many pictures from all over the boat on all decks from 2 years ago before it was "rescued" from sinking.





DIRECTED BY WILLIAM A.WELLMAN/JOHN WAYNE (uncredited)
BATJAC PRODUCTION
WARNER BROS

http://i27.photobucket.com/albums/c187/john-wayne/John%20Wayne/bood_alley.jpg..http://i27.photobucket.com/albums/c187/john-wayne/John%20Wayne/MOVIE_TVFOTOPHOTO00198PHOTOBC.jpg

INFORMATION FROM IMDb

Plot Summary
Wilder(John Wayne), an adventurous merchant marine captain, who knows every current,
port and prevailing wind in the far east, is approached by oppressed villagers
,to lead them to the saftey of Hong Kong.

Full Cast
John Wayne .... Capt. Tom Wilder
Lauren Bacall .... Cathy Grainger
Paul Fix .... Mr. Tso
Joy Kim .... Susu, Cathy's maid
Berry Kroeger .... Old Feng (as Berry Kroger)
Mike Mazurki .... Big Han
Anita Ekberg .... Wei Ling
George Chan .... Mr. Sing (uncredited)
W.T. Chang .... Mr. Han (uncredited)
David Chow .... Boat man (uncredited)
Chester Gan .... Ferry Boat Captain (uncredited)
Lowell Gilmore .... British officer (uncredited)
James Hong .... Communist soldier (uncredited)
Eddie Luke .... Feng's #2 nephew (uncredited)
Henry Nakamura .... Tack, engineer (uncredited)
Walter Soo Hoo .... Feng's #1 nephew (uncredited)
Victor Sen Yung .... Cpl. Wang (uncredited)

Stunts
David Chow .... stunts (uncredited)
Gene Coogan .... stunts (uncredited)
Evelyn Finley .... stunts (uncredited)
Duke Green .... stunts (uncredited)
Tom Hennesy .... stunts (uncredited)
Stubby Kruger .... stunts (uncredited)
Sharon Lucas .... stunts (uncredited)
Shirley Lucas .... stunts (uncredited)
Harvey Parry .... stunts (uncredited)
Regis Parton .... stunts (uncredited)
Peter Peterson .... stunts (uncredited)
Jack Sterling .... stunts (uncredited)
Terry Wilson .... stunts (uncredited)

Writing Credits
Albert Sidney Fleischman novel Blood Alley
Albert Sidney Fleischman screenplay

Original Music
Roy Webb

Cinematography
William H. Clothier

Trivia
Robert Mitchum was originally cast as Capt. Wilder. He was fired from the film after an altercation in which he shoved the film's transportation manager into San Francisco Bay. Gregory Peck subsequently turned down the role of Capt. Wilder, and Humphrey Bogart wanted a $500,000 salary, which would have put the film over budget. Without a major male star involved, Warner Bros. contacted producer John Wayne, threatening to pull out of their distribution deal for the film unless he took the role himself. To keep his new production company Batjac afloat, Wayne agreed to play Capt. Wilder.

Average Shot Length = ~6.2 seconds. Median Shot Length = ~5.6 seconds. Both of these figures are fast for an early CinemaScope film, and much faster than William A. Wellman's first CinemaScope film, The High and the Mighty (1954).

John Wayne appeared in an episode of "I Love Lucy" (1951) to promote this film.

There was some surprise when Lauren Bacall agreed to make the movie since she was a left-wing Democrat and the film was right-wing propaganda.

Goofs
* Revealing mistakes: When Captain Wilder leans against the window, the wall moves.

* Continuity: Bacall tells Wayne that the map he had been making was burned in the kitchen because there was no time to hide it before the troops arrived. A short time later, Wayne is seen writing on the same map (note the human anatomy on the front side of it).

* Continuity: When Wilder says "Half the Red navy's out there ...", the position of the wheel and the placement of his hands on it changes between shots.

* Revealing mistakes: In three scenes with Captain Wilder and Big Han are talking, the sampan is not moving. The trees reflected in the water behind the sampan are the give away.

* Revealing mistakes: Two scenes were definitely "low budget" and were obviously scale mockups that weren't believable: 1. When the wood goes through the paddle, this is obviously a 2x4 going through a small model. 2. As the paddleboat comes into Hong Kong, it is clearly models and a fake city.

* Revealing mistakes: When the ferry pulls into Hong Kong, they encounter a Royal Navy vessel with close-ups of the sailors. Ordinarily, British sailors wear a tally on their caps with the name of their ship printed on it. However, the sailors' tallies only have "HMS" on them and no ship's name.

Memorable Quotes (http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0047889/trivia?tab=qt&ref_=tt_trv_qu)

Filming Locations
Belvedere Island, California, USA
Colusa County, California, USA
San Francisco, California, USA
San Rafael, California, USA
Stockton, California, USA

Watch the Trailer

uUyorJ6RGi4
ethanedwards
January 20th, 2006, 05:07 PM
Blood Alley is a 1955 seafaring adventure movie
starring John Wayne and Lauren Bacall set in China.

The film was written by Albert Sidney Fleischman from his novel,
directed by William Wellman and was produced by Wayne's Batjac Productions.
Location filming took place in and near China Camp, a shrimp fishing village in the San Francisco Bay.

The real Blood Alley was located in Shanghai where Fleischman had visited as a sailor
on the USS Albert T. Harris (DE-447).
He was paid $5000 for the rights for his novel and allowed to do the screenplay.

Wayne plays a Merchant Marine captain in a role originally intended for Robert Mitchum
prior to an altercation with the producers.
Mitchum was fired from the production by Wellman.
Wayne took over the lead after Gregory Peck turned the film down
and Humphrey Bogart requested a large amount of money to assume the role.

Swedish actress Anita Ekberg and movie thug Mike Mazurki play Chinese roles.

Well, Well, what does everyone think of Duke and this film??
It is of course commonly known that, Humphrey Bogart, was Dukes choice for this film,
but when his price was too high, he signed Robert Mitchum,
ironically casting, Bogie's wife Lauren Bacall, to play opposite him!!
I think Mitchum, would probably, have been more suited to the role of Wilder.

However Big Mitch fell out with Director Wellman.
and Duke had to step in, to save the film!
This being Batjac's first venture.

Personally, although I enjoyed the film, I don't think Duke seemed right in the part,
and I think from the looks of it, he probably felt the same!!
Critics, found the film, slow moving, and that Duke, hadn't added perceptibly, to his acting range!
Although not a box office smash, it did well enough to more than recover Batjacs costs!!

User Review

Barrelling Down Blood Alley With The Duke At The Helm!
23 March 2006 | by gary-peterson (Omaha, Nebraska)

I was sparked to comment after reading another user comment here that contended Blood Alley is one of John Wayne's worst films. It may not be at the top of the heap, but it's far from the bottom. It well accomplishes what it sets out to do--entertain: fun, engrossing, action-packed and--on the wide-screen edition DVD I have--beautiful to behold.

The reviewer especially criticized Wayne's frequent side comments to "Baby" and the film's having non-Orientals playing the Chinese. I didn't find either factor a deterrent to my enjoyment. First, I took Baby to be Wayne's guardian angel more than an imaginary girlfriend. And I think his occasional comment to her was fitting. Yeah, the Captain Wilder got a little dotty after spending all those years alone in that cell. His hangup about "tennis shoes" was another example of his having gone a bit stir crazy.

Having non-Orientals play Chinese or Japanese was not uncommon in the Hollywood of yesteryear. Remember Charlie Chan and Mr. Moto? And closer to our time David Carradine in Kung Fu. I never understood why this is a stumbling-block for some people. And in Blood Alley the American actors playing Chinese did a great job.

Paul Fix first and foremost gets a nod. He made Mr. Tso a distinct character through mannerisms and distinctive sage-like speech. I especially liked the scene where Captain Wilder told him to toss that ornate sculpture in the furnace to fuel the ship, "That'll burn" Duke says, but Fix calmly notes how a craftsman put 10 years of his life into creating it. Here was a man who respected and had appreciation for the intangible things, like beauty and like freedom, which is what Mr. Tso was risking his life to help his townspeople regain.

Mike Mazurki also gets kudos for putting in a great performance as Big Hans. No, he didn't really look Oriental, but he brought weight to his part, especially in his first scene. You could tell that he was a guy you could count on. And for film buffs familiar with Mazurki, wasn't it nice to see him playing a good guy for a change?

Finally, the reviewer said Lauren Bacall was wooden. Well, was she ever among Hollywood's most dynamic actresses? I thought she did a good job with what she had to work with. She did seem tacked onto the film and her story was secondary to the main plot. I never did get a firm grasp on the subplot involving her father or why she ran off in the ship graveyard. However, she did sizzle in the scenes in the pilot house, especially when coming between Wilder and the ship's wheel. Yes, this film was not her finest hour, but Bacall certainly redeemed herself in The Shootist and proved she did indeed have an on-screen chemistry with Wayne.

Admittedly Blood Alley does not have a place in the crowded pantheon of GREAT John Wayne films, but it is certainly not among his worst! And as a huge fan of the Duke I can't even suggest a film for that dishonor. For me, any film featuring John Wayne is going to be better than most anything else on at the same time
DukePilgrim
January 20th, 2006, 05:20 PM
Ive always thought Blood Alley was okay. There is enough to keep the viewer interested but as you say the role was written for Mitchum or Bogart in mind and it shows. John Wayne liked working with Lauren Bacall and her strong role helped the movie.
ethanedwards
February 3rd, 2006, 02:52 PM
Thought it might help if I transfered these earlier comments, to the new forum
Dec 11 2005, 10:38 AM
Hi,
AISSA WAYNE in her book JOHN WAYNE- My Father
Says that Pilar was so annoyed with Mitchum, for falling out with Wellman!!
Because of this, it meant Duke was to be away, filming, again, when she didn't expect him to be!
When later, the Mitchums, were house guests, she was less than friendly.
Duke was wary of his new wifes toughness,

"It was one of the reasons, my father adored her"

Keith

arthurarnell
post Dec 12 2005, 06:39 AM
Hi

In his book Them Ornery Mitchum Boys John Mitchum states that the incident with his brother Robert when he threw the transport manager into San Francisco Bay was contrived. He argues that John Wayne owed Warners a picture and by getting Mitchum fired they could then get Wayne to star.

Friday, January 29, 2016

Janey Reynolds Pin-Up Art in High Demand from Collectors


MEMPHIS TN (IFS) -- By the end of the 1960's, a lost art of the WWII pin-up girl was all but over.  Most of the great pictures we have of these beautiful women are in Black & White.  These images once considered "taboo" and just pornography is up for the high dollar price for original copies of these photos.  After the Paris Hilton, Pamela Anderson, and everyone one else in the picture with a porno video, this ledge is considered the bottom of the barrow for collectors.  However, "soft porn pin-up girls" is what the market is demanding right now.  Single lens reflex action with a good eye and a fast finger have given these ladies of a log ago and bye gone era just that -- memories of these women  fixed in time is priceless for collectors.

EBay.com's bins are overloaded with "soft pron" memories from WWII.  But whose pictures dominate the listing and the sample sites. .  . Janey Reynolds.  You will pay a pretty penny for these reprints from the original negatives and slides.

In the early 1950's the famed "Pin-Up Models" from WWII carried over into the new era of photography.  The boys of the war only got the "clean" image photos that you could send home to mother.  But now, the estates of many of these actresses, i.e., Hedy Lamarr's full color photos of her in the nude in various positions, is a little to much to believe, as this girl invented the US Navy's torpedo.

Not much is known about Ms. Janey Reynolds from Canada.  She has changed her name as many times as some countries.   Ms. Reynolds photographs have appeared in over 1,000 magazines all over the world.  She is considered the most photographed woman in the world.

Let's not just point fingers at the "bad" girls, as one must exclude Ms. Lamarr's full nude from the other girls who just wanted to get their pictue taken, and exclude the one girl that is that most photographed woman in the world at that time was Miss Janey Reynolds.

The pictures of these glorious females in all their abundant beauty and form is all that is left of these media industry pioneers.  There are very few stories of these ladies, especially Miss Janey Reynolds of Canada.





The color film and the new cameras of the day were made for each other.  The topless form of photography with female models was known as "soft porn".

Ms. Reynolds, by far was the most photographed pin-up girl ever.
Also known as:     Janey Reynolds, Janie Reynolds,  Joanne Frawley,  Marli Evans

Born:     1943 Canada
Nationality:     Canadian   
Body Measurements:     43-25-38
Boobs:  Natural
Body type:     Average
Hair:     Brunette
Performances Shown:   Topless

Joanne Frawley aka Janey Reynolds and friend. Busty brunette & popular canadian born model from the mid 60s. She is known also by names Jane Frawley, Janey Reynolds, Janey

Frawley, Ginny Cutrone.

Joanne Frawley aka Janey Reynolds and friend. Busty brunette & popular canadian born model from the mid 60s. She is known also by names Jane Frawley, Janey Reynolds, Janey

Frawley, Ginny Cutrone.

Mr. Magazine- Nov. 1965
w/ Unique Fold-Out Cover
Featuring Janey Frawley 43-25-38 (on cover also)
listed as Masli Evans in this issue!
A cute, girl-next-door type brunette with bosoms that were hardly girl-next-door like, Janey Frawley (aka Janey Reynolds, Janie Reynolds, Joanne Frawley and Marli Evans in

"Fling") was a Canadian girl born circa 1943 who measured 43-25-38. She made a healthy number of appearances in various big-bust pinup mags during the span of her career, which seems to have lasted roughly five years, from 1963-1968.

Reviewer: Satyaban - favoritefavorite - July 23, 2015
Subject: Where are her tits today?
I know where her tits are today, dow around her knees. Ha Ha Ha
Reviewer: janeyfan - favoritefavoritefavoritefavoritefavorite - August 30, 2013
Subject: Janey Rules
The most gorgeous tits I've ever seen. Unbelievable tits. So succulent, massive and soft.
Reviewer: tbonestone - favoritefavoritefavoritefavoritefavorite - July 14, 2011
Subject: Amazing!
I'm not saying, I'm just saying. This movie is pretty fantastic. Her breasts are epic! Oh if only I could find more of Janey...
Reviewer: long20k - favoritefavoritefavoritefavoritefavorite - February 12, 2010
Subject: She's My Favorite
For me, she's the best of the best. Also see "Naked at Home."
Reviewer: Classic_TV_and_Radio_Fan - favoritefavoritefavoritefavoritefavorite - November 8, 2008
Subject: BEST FILM EVER
I like her boobs!

Janey Frawley was a Canadian pin up model, who made a healthy number of appearances in various big-bust pinup mags in her career. She also did a fair number … Tribute to vintage and retro porn from years gone by, an era when a pussy really was a pussy you could get lost in!