Yeah no, NWO was always a wingnut conspiracy. Truthers may have been mostly on the left but their theory was the attacks were a false flag to justify US imperialism. NWO was more on the Tim McVeigh end of things.
Yeah no, NWO was always a wingnut conspiracy. Truthers may have been mostly on the left but their theory was the attacks were a false flag to justify US imperialism. NWO was more on the Tim McVeigh end of things.
As a queer person, I didn’t read it as a Bury Your Gays at all – they didn’t die because of homophobic brutality or tragedy, they died because they were old and content, it’s really the most beautiful, sweet, and sad episode of TV I’ve seen in a long time.
Yeah, they confirmed on the podcast that while they left it intentionally vague, it was supposed to be ALS or something similar.
A very good episode. The only misstep was playing Max Richter’s On the Nature of Daylight, which has become an overused cliche to signal the waterworks in shows and movies. But very lovely and tender scenes with two fantastic actors. I was blown away by Offerman, showing Bill’s longing, trepidation, and vulnerability.…
It took me a while to remember that in 2003, people ranting about the “New World Order” tended to be hardcore liberal 9/11 truthers rather than Qanon freaks.
“Arby’s didn’t have free lunch; it was a restaurant.” First legit LOL line of the season.
This was my interpretation as well — Frank is suffering from a terminal disease that had no effective treatments in 2003, when modern medicine collapsed. The line about “we didn’t know how to treat it even before the world went to shit” suggests that it’s not cancer, because we had treatments for most cancers in 2003.
that strawberry scene totally smacked me back of the head with some emotions.
Frank, in the final stages of cancer
Soylent Green is made of very people! VERY PEOPLE!
Those people are so very.
Or a film that people who are more people-like than normal, very people, appear to have seen?
a film that very people appear to have seen
Just want to go on the record and say that putting a wire across a parking lot seems really bad. Not Jay’s fault.
The CNBC show wasn’t great anyway. It was a car show for people who weren’t car enthusiasts. The real deal is his YouTube channel.
I’m starting to feel this might be a Dabney Coleman/Short Time situation for Jay Leno.
Comedians In Cars Getting Injured
Every time I watch The Specialist, I think *that poor woman*. There’s no way that wasn’t an uncomfortable shoot.
Would “The Sixx” have been better?