![]() This license represents an exclusive right to use the downloaded media, but such exclusivity will only last for a limited period of time. Physical Items for Resale/Distribution: includes the right to use the photos or stills comprising media for T-shirts, postcards, greeting cards, mugs, mousepads, posters, calendars, framed artwork that is to be sold to other customers for an unlimited number of copies (applies as a total of each type of usage). Note that the other restrictions still apply. This is an additional license to the rights included within the regular Royalty-Free license. Maximum number of electronic items is unlimited (applies as a total of each type of usage). ![]() The number of copies allowed is unlimited for each designer/employee.Įlectronic Items for Resale/Distribution: this license includes the right to use the media in webtemplates that are sold to more customers, screensavers, e-cards, powerpoint presentations or as wallpapers on cell phones. The U-EL license is applied only for the staff of the organization that holds the account. It is an additional license to the usage included within the regular Royalty-Free / Editorial license that awards rights for a single person within the same company. 2 - Jane Fonda, writing her memoirs decades later, discovered her mother had been sexually abused as a child.This license extends our regular Royalty Free / Editorial license to an unlimited number of seats within the same organization. Maybe I was too quick to forgo the cemetery tour, but tell me who’s repairing that statue and I’ll be the first to put my contribution directly into their marble-dust-covered hands.ġ - Yes, that’s its real name. At some point, either by vandals or natural means, the statue’s head has come off, along with one of the hands. I later discover that “Italia” has not fared very well. It reminds me a bit of Père Lachaise in Paris, historic, sobering, haunted. 1, built in 1833, where most of these pictures were taken. Still curious about New Orleans cemeteries, we take a streetcar out to the Garden District and Lafayette Cemetery No. If you have a relative buried there, you can apply for a permit to visit. We later find out that the Roman Catholic Diocese of New Orleans closed the cemetery to the public in 2015 but allowed tour companies to pay the diocese for rights to conduct for-pay tours. “Oh, yes,” says the hotel concierge upon our return. A sign at the gate says tour proceeds are used for the cemetery’s upkeep, but it looks as though most of the money is going elsewhere. I’m rather stunned at this, and I kvetch to Linda on our way back to the hotel. “You have to pay to look around the cemetery?” ![]() 1 and a woman sitting at a card table just inside says, “That’ll be $20 for the tour.” Peter was 10 years old.Īs the camera rolled, he used that awful memory to get into his character’s bad trip while sitting on “Italia” in the Italian Benevolent Society Tomb, a mausoleum that was built in 1857 at Cemetery No. I’m looking for the large statue that Fonda climbed on, and - using real, personal angst to drive his character in the film - began talking about his mother’s suicide.įrances Ford Seymour, the second wife of actor Henry Fonda and mother of actors Peter and Jane Fonda, committed suicide 2 on April 14, 1950. Filming took place without permission and the Catholic Church, which owns the cemetery, was reportedly scandalized when the movie opened. 1 1, which opened in 1789 in the French Quarter. Those scenes were shot in New Orleans Cemetery No. There’s a memorable - some say confusing - New Orleans sequence in which Fonda and Hopper and two prostitutes (Karen Black and Toni Basil) drop acid in a cemetery, have sex, and generally freak out. The 1969 classic, starring Peter Fonda, Dennis Hopper (who also directed) and Jack Nicholson, follows two long-haired chopper riders from Los Angeles to New Orleans. I like to ride motorcycles, so it stands to reason I watch motorcycle movies, though most are admittedly dreadful.īut I will watch Easy Rider every now and again. 15 | Day 9: We didn’t ride to New Orleans because of Easy Rider, but since we were there anyway, why not visit a site that was featured in the movie?
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