J.K. Rowling's Emotional Speech at the Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 2 London Premiere

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Uploaded by on Jul 7, 2011

This is the Emotional Speech of the Creator of the Harry Potter Universe J.K. Rowling!!!

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  • I cried watching these interviews... But as Dan said: Everybody out there will carry these movies from generation to generation. I'll never forget THIS fucking amazing time. Harry Potter will ALWAYS be in my bookshelf and in my heart of course... Even when I'll be grown up I will go home to Hogwarts. 'Cause this is true: Hogwarts will always be there to welcome you/us home! Thank you JK Rowling and Thanks to the movie crew as well!!!

  • "when I'm 80 years old and sitting in my rocking chair, I'll be reading Harry Potter. And my family will say to me, 'After all this time?' and I will say, 'Always.'"

    LONG LIVE HARRY POTTER

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  • @starlitewishes11 Now there is my stories, their missing artwork, and written work; about 1000 inventions design drawings and several hundred stories, set out as story-boards for programs, animations, and films. Some years passed as I noticed products I had designed appear on sale, on TV, or on the cinema screening list. I noticed the LED monitors, PLASMA and LED TV sets, on the market. One being named Viera, made by PANASONIC. I bought one recently. It didn't work, so I wrote a silly article!

  • @starlitewishes11 I named the Plasma TV design Viera, after a lady I knew years earlier. The Plasma TV appeared on the market after my designs and drawings of my projects got stolen from my home. I had been asked many questions about my TV concepts by Alan Page. The theft of my artwork had been going on for some years. Among my art were drawings of my plasma, LED and optic fiber, lighting concepts. One drawing showed Harry Potter dueling with Lord Voldemort, using sabers of carbon plasma arc!

  • @starlitewishes11 When I was a boy I had placed two wires across a piece of sintered chaecoal I had taken from a filter of a face mask and when I connected a power source to the wires I observed the charcoal gave off a very bright light. Years later, in 1978, I found the same principle of generating a bright light was used in old carbon arc projectors. I gave myself a goal to make the best small light for torches and I investigated and drew everything I could that gave off light.

  • @starlitewishes11 Compared to the warm white light from carbon arcs, zenon lamp light was better and required no adjustments to the arc, as was required by the carbon arc lighting system. After I left the Army I began drawing the artwork for my stories. I realized some months later that I was drawing my inventions as pictures and they appeared to reflect part of a story, so I built my stories with my many drawings being seen as story-boards that appeared set out as film frames.

  • @starlitewishes11 So bright their light that they had special dark green lenses to allow one to strike-up the arc, which happened about a dozen times per screening session for two films. The projection room was dimly lit by projection lamp light reflecting off the lens and port holes. The atmosphere was hot as hell at times, dark often, noisy, but I enjoyed my work. Another light source was a zenon lamp. It didn't require the process of striking-up the lamp. They also ran cooler.

  • @starlitewishes11 I have never said I manufactured one of my inventions. My work followed from an idea of an invention and that required years of thought, reading relevant technologies, research and design, redesign, then draw the concept in different views, followed by writing-up the technical details of a project. The plasma TV stemmed from my knowledge. I was a cinema projectionist and I learnt on RCA 78 Highlight projectors that used carbon-arc rods to produce the light. They were bright.

  • @starlitewishes11 What has been written by me is true. You don't underestimate the inventiveness of an inventor and then say he didn't invent without you denying yourself knowing and ever learning what the inventor actually did. One invention is the end product but the work that goes into thinking, designing, creating, an invention is enormous. There follows; Cover imaging, packaging, distribution, branding and marketing. Then there are advertising. To make that happen requires people power.

  • 'not gonna cry.. not gonna cry.. shit i've just drowned myself.'

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