The Pie Hole is a fictional restaurant in the ABC comedy-drama Pushing Daisies.
Employees
*Ned is the owner and head pie maker of this eating establishment. He always makes sure his pies have the freshest fruit as long as he only touches the dead ones once.
*Charlotte Charles is the assistant pie maker.
*Olive Snook is the waitress. Everyday, she picks a pie and concentrates all her love on that pie because she believes that if she loves it, someone else will love it and she will have sold more pies than any other in the bakery.
Appearance
The most recognizable feature of the Pie Hole is its exterior. It is circular, with a snazzy neon sign mounted on a large crust-like addition that runs all the way around the restaurant. The exterior of the first floor has green walls with several man-sized circular windows, with a spiral decorative trees between each one. The golden door also has a similar circular window. The exterior of the second floor, the apartments of Olive, Ned and Chuck, above the crust, resembles a more typical residence, with drab white and gray walls and normal windows.
Pies
The following pies are known to be carried by The Pie Hole
*Apple Pie
*Three-Plum Pie
*Rhubarb Pie
Pies can be served a la mode.
Employees
*Ned is the owner and head pie maker of this eating establishment. He always makes sure his pies have the freshest fruit as long as he only touches the dead ones once.
*Charlotte Charles is the assistant pie maker.
*Olive Snook is the waitress. Everyday, she picks a pie and concentrates all her love on that pie because she believes that if she loves it, someone else will love it and she will have sold more pies than any other in the bakery.
Appearance
The most recognizable feature of the Pie Hole is its exterior. It is circular, with a snazzy neon sign mounted on a large crust-like addition that runs all the way around the restaurant. The exterior of the first floor has green walls with several man-sized circular windows, with a spiral decorative trees between each one. The golden door also has a similar circular window. The exterior of the second floor, the apartments of Olive, Ned and Chuck, above the crust, resembles a more typical residence, with drab white and gray walls and normal windows.
Pies
The following pies are known to be carried by The Pie Hole
*Apple Pie
*Three-Plum Pie
*Rhubarb Pie
Pies can be served a la mode.
Reverend Adrian Lee Dixon (born May 7, 1979) led the development of the Spiritual Care Department at in 2003. Duke Raleigh Hospital, located in Raleigh, North Carolina is part of the prestigious . Reverend Dixon has served as the Director of the Spiritual Care Department since 2006. He is a graduate of (B.A. in Religion) and (Master of Divinity). He is currently working on a doctorate degree at in Alexandria. In addition to his full-time role at Duke Raleigh Hospital, Reverend Dixon is also the Founding/Lead Pastor of in Knightdale, North Carolina. Reverend Dixon is a member of the Association of Clinical Pastoral Education, the Association of Professional Chaplains and the North Carolina Chaplain's Association. He serves on the Board of Directors for located in Fayetteville, North Carolina and serves on the Commission on Church Planting.
"Fort Frolic" is a location found in Rapture, a fictional underwater utopia that acts as setting for the 2007 2k Games shooter Bioshock.
Fort Frolic was (and to a handful of Splicers, remains) ostensibly the entertainment district for the now-derelict city of Rapture, presumably meant to provide its citizens with a plethora of earthly pleasures; whether a Rapturite desires to take in a torch-song at its sizable theater, indulge in some first class shopping, or cavort with a frisky lady of the night.
The complex's overseer and self-styled impresario, Sander Cohen, manages Fort Frolic and its constituent parts, which include:
Fleet Hall
Rapture's only theater, reminiscent of a scale model of traditional Broadway theatres such as the Lyceum Theatre. Like most of Rapture, it follows a distinct Art Deco aesthetic and sports a wide stage where a small variety of musical revues would take place in the days prior to Rapture's collapse.
Eve's Garden
Local cathouse and once a popular place for the men of Rapture to drink, socialize and-- for the right price-- "come bite the apple."
Poseidon Plaza
Rapture's fully-featured shopping mall, consisting of an Upper and Lower Gallery. Includes watering hole and gambling joint Sir Prize Games of Chance, the eminent Golden Pharoah Casino, a number of boutiques and the most well-stocked fine wine and liquor store in the city.
Fort Frolic was (and to a handful of Splicers, remains) ostensibly the entertainment district for the now-derelict city of Rapture, presumably meant to provide its citizens with a plethora of earthly pleasures; whether a Rapturite desires to take in a torch-song at its sizable theater, indulge in some first class shopping, or cavort with a frisky lady of the night.
The complex's overseer and self-styled impresario, Sander Cohen, manages Fort Frolic and its constituent parts, which include:
Fleet Hall
Rapture's only theater, reminiscent of a scale model of traditional Broadway theatres such as the Lyceum Theatre. Like most of Rapture, it follows a distinct Art Deco aesthetic and sports a wide stage where a small variety of musical revues would take place in the days prior to Rapture's collapse.
Eve's Garden
Local cathouse and once a popular place for the men of Rapture to drink, socialize and-- for the right price-- "come bite the apple."
Poseidon Plaza
Rapture's fully-featured shopping mall, consisting of an Upper and Lower Gallery. Includes watering hole and gambling joint Sir Prize Games of Chance, the eminent Golden Pharoah Casino, a number of boutiques and the most well-stocked fine wine and liquor store in the city.
Blacktro
Blacktro is black new wave, the sound of the early 1980s when electronics were introduced in pop. Blacktro is black electro – blacktro..
Characteristics
Blacktro music is characterized by sweaty bass lines, soulful vocals, funky synths, guitars and heavy electronic beats. Blacktro's retro roots give it a familiar ring while still being very much today's music through the use of new experimental sounds. The futuristic sounds and beats combined with melodic retro influences of Funk and Soul make Blacktro very dancable. The Blacktro style is best described as "retro-futuro".
History
At the start of the 1980’s, the prevailing mood among youngsters in the ‘industrialized West’ was not up. Economic decline, established industries becoming obsolete, the Cold War in full swing, conservative politicians – like Ronald Regan (USA) and Margaret Thatcher (UK) – in the driver’s seat, students trained for the dole: the optimism of the 1960s and ‘70s had evaporated. Life was grim. What future?
This sense of doom was expressed by British post-punk bands like Joy Division and The Cure. The attitude: party like there’s no tomorrow. ‘The world’s falling to pieces, grab as much fun while you can.’ Representing this attitude in particular were white and frequently well-trained youngsters. In the early 1980’s, new wave appeared to be a predominantly white middle class affair.
Retro-Futuro
But looks deceive, for a new spirit was spreading among the black music culture as well. New wave’s arsenal of electronic tools (analogue synthesizers, drum computers, primitive samplers) and attitude (party like there’s no tomorrow) were working their charm in the black underground community.
Prince was doing funk on synths, his track Controversy (recorded in 1981) is the archetypical Blacktro track. Obviously inspired by the likes of James Brown and George Clinton, though updated in sound and driven by a different attitude: not idealism, but individualism.
In Harlem, New York black youngsters from the projects started fooling around with turntables and using them like instruments – the start of hip hop. This new music was partly inspired by Jamaica’s dj culture of sound systems, dubplates and toasting, the prototype of rapping.
In Western Europe new wave bands started to use synthesizers to produce tracks for the dancefloor, the start of electro. In their earliest incarnations, hip hop and electro were the same type of music, produced in communities that were divide by a socio-economic rift: hip hop black, electro white. Add them up and mix them - Blacktro is the result.
The roots of Blacktro is the rich history of 20th century Afro-American music: rhythm & blues, soul, funk. Music that is build on the groove, music for the dancefloor, party music. That’s the retro part of Blacktro. However, Blacktro is produced with electronic gear and references the future. That’s its futuro element.
Blacktro is retro-futuristic. It’s science fiction music for the dancefloor. Black new wave.
Parties
In 2006 a couple of Blacktro parties where organized in the Sugarfactory in Amsterdam. The first party was emphesized on Blacktro-retro music, followed up by the second party were Blacktro-futuro was the central theme of the night. The third party , had the goal to let the DJ's give their own interpretation of the Blacktro style.
DJ's
The music genre Blacktro is supported by many DJ's like Felix da Housecat, who just published a new album called "Virgo Blaktro" , which is dedicated to the Blacktro style. Other DJ's who are playing Blacktro are categorized by Retro and Futuro style.
Blacktro-retro:
* Afrika-Bambaata
* Arabian Prince
* Cybotron
* Kraftwerk
* Prince
* Egyptian lover
* LA Dream Team
* The Jonzun Crew
* Arthur Baker
* Hashim Man
* Parrish
* The Rocksteady Crew
* Cameo
* Jazzy Jay
* Mantronix
* Whodini
* Captain Rock
* Kurtis Blow
* Midnight Star
* Unknown DJ
Blacktro-futuro:
* 2020Soundsystem
* Comtron
* Jimmy Edgar
* Stijn
* AUX88
* Detroit Grand Pubahs
* Jordan Dare
* Reeno
* Ben Mono
* Discokaine
* Lotterboys
* The Trickaz
* Captain Funk
* DMX Krew
* Chreomeo
* Felix da Housecat
* Seymour Bits
Blacktro is black new wave, the sound of the early 1980s when electronics were introduced in pop. Blacktro is black electro – blacktro..
Characteristics
Blacktro music is characterized by sweaty bass lines, soulful vocals, funky synths, guitars and heavy electronic beats. Blacktro's retro roots give it a familiar ring while still being very much today's music through the use of new experimental sounds. The futuristic sounds and beats combined with melodic retro influences of Funk and Soul make Blacktro very dancable. The Blacktro style is best described as "retro-futuro".
History
At the start of the 1980’s, the prevailing mood among youngsters in the ‘industrialized West’ was not up. Economic decline, established industries becoming obsolete, the Cold War in full swing, conservative politicians – like Ronald Regan (USA) and Margaret Thatcher (UK) – in the driver’s seat, students trained for the dole: the optimism of the 1960s and ‘70s had evaporated. Life was grim. What future?
This sense of doom was expressed by British post-punk bands like Joy Division and The Cure. The attitude: party like there’s no tomorrow. ‘The world’s falling to pieces, grab as much fun while you can.’ Representing this attitude in particular were white and frequently well-trained youngsters. In the early 1980’s, new wave appeared to be a predominantly white middle class affair.
Retro-Futuro
But looks deceive, for a new spirit was spreading among the black music culture as well. New wave’s arsenal of electronic tools (analogue synthesizers, drum computers, primitive samplers) and attitude (party like there’s no tomorrow) were working their charm in the black underground community.
Prince was doing funk on synths, his track Controversy (recorded in 1981) is the archetypical Blacktro track. Obviously inspired by the likes of James Brown and George Clinton, though updated in sound and driven by a different attitude: not idealism, but individualism.
In Harlem, New York black youngsters from the projects started fooling around with turntables and using them like instruments – the start of hip hop. This new music was partly inspired by Jamaica’s dj culture of sound systems, dubplates and toasting, the prototype of rapping.
In Western Europe new wave bands started to use synthesizers to produce tracks for the dancefloor, the start of electro. In their earliest incarnations, hip hop and electro were the same type of music, produced in communities that were divide by a socio-economic rift: hip hop black, electro white. Add them up and mix them - Blacktro is the result.
The roots of Blacktro is the rich history of 20th century Afro-American music: rhythm & blues, soul, funk. Music that is build on the groove, music for the dancefloor, party music. That’s the retro part of Blacktro. However, Blacktro is produced with electronic gear and references the future. That’s its futuro element.
Blacktro is retro-futuristic. It’s science fiction music for the dancefloor. Black new wave.
Parties
In 2006 a couple of Blacktro parties where organized in the Sugarfactory in Amsterdam. The first party was emphesized on Blacktro-retro music, followed up by the second party were Blacktro-futuro was the central theme of the night. The third party , had the goal to let the DJ's give their own interpretation of the Blacktro style.
DJ's
The music genre Blacktro is supported by many DJ's like Felix da Housecat, who just published a new album called "Virgo Blaktro" , which is dedicated to the Blacktro style. Other DJ's who are playing Blacktro are categorized by Retro and Futuro style.
Blacktro-retro:
* Afrika-Bambaata
* Arabian Prince
* Cybotron
* Kraftwerk
* Prince
* Egyptian lover
* LA Dream Team
* The Jonzun Crew
* Arthur Baker
* Hashim Man
* Parrish
* The Rocksteady Crew
* Cameo
* Jazzy Jay
* Mantronix
* Whodini
* Captain Rock
* Kurtis Blow
* Midnight Star
* Unknown DJ
Blacktro-futuro:
* 2020Soundsystem
* Comtron
* Jimmy Edgar
* Stijn
* AUX88
* Detroit Grand Pubahs
* Jordan Dare
* Reeno
* Ben Mono
* Discokaine
* Lotterboys
* The Trickaz
* Captain Funk
* DMX Krew
* Chreomeo
* Felix da Housecat
* Seymour Bits