Anonymous ID: e20b65 Oct. 22, 2020, 3:46 p.m. No.11221455   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1778 >>1864

wow. this stewartson fag is very loud

<Qanon is a death cult preparing for mass violence. It is being run by a group of theocratic fascists, ruthless grifters and literal sociopaths in conjunction with Russian intelligence.

 

Dig a bit. not muc at all really

and find

Billionare Philanthropist Patrick Soon-Shiong

 

Patrick Soon-Shiong (born July 29, 1952) is a South African/American transplant surgeon, billionaire businessman, bioscientist, and media proprietor. He is the inventor of the drug Abraxane, which became known for its efficacy against lung, breast, and pancreatic cancer.[1] Soon-Shiong is the founder of NantWorks, a network of healthcare, biotech, and artificial intelligence startups;[2] an adjunct professor of surgery and executive director of the Wireless Health Institute at the University of California, Los Angeles; and a visiting professor at Imperial College London and Dartmouth College.[3][4][5] Soon-Shiong has published more than 100 scientific papers and has more than 230 issued patents worldwide on advancements spanning numerous fields in technology and medicine.[5]

 

Soon-Shiong is the chairman of three non-profit organizations: the Chan Soon-Shiong Family Foundation, which aims to fund research and erase disparities in access to health care and education;[6] the Chan Soon-Shiong Institute for Advanced Health, which is focused on changing the way health information is shared;[7] and the Healthcare Transformation Institute, a partnership with the University of Arizona and Arizona State University.[2] He has been a minority owner of the Los Angeles Lakers since 2010, and since June 2018, he has been the owner and executive chairman of the Los Angeles Times and The San Diego Union-Tribune.[8] As of March 2020, Soon-Shiong is estimated by Forbes to have a net worth of US$6.9 billion.[1] He has committed to the Giving Pledge and has pledged to give away at least half of his wealth to philanthropy.[6]

 

Early life and education

 

Soon-Shiong was born in Port Elizabeth, Union of South Africa,to Chinese immigrant parents, who fled from China during the Japanese occupation in World War II.[9][10] His parents were Hakka originally from Mei County in Guangdong province.[10][9] His ancestral surname is Wong (Huang 黃).[10]

 

>>11219264 Moar on the TED talk on Q

Anonymous ID: e20b65 Oct. 22, 2020, 3:56 p.m. No.11221778   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>11221455

^^^^^

PB

 

As the CEO and Founder of Fourth Wall Studios, Jim Stewartson provides the vision, strategy, and business execution for the company.

 

Stewartson has twenty years’ experience in the innovative development of technology and interactive entertainment. Prior to Fourth Wall, Stewartson was a founder of 42 Entertainment where he designed, developed and delivered solutions for massive branded entertainment projects including the pioneering alternate reality game, I Love Bees for Halo 2, Vanishing Point for Windows Vista, and Year Zero for Nine Inch Nails. These projects garnered him a number of prestigious awards including an Innovation Award at the Game Developers Conference, the Grand Prix at the Cannes Lions International Festival of Creativity, as well as two Webbys.

 

Previously, as the President and Founder of Shout Interactive, Stewartson also invented the first commercial 3D game to be delivered over the Web for Star Trek: First Contact, and has headed numerous award-winning online experiences for notable properties including, Titanic, Lost in Space and Starship Troopers, CNN, Sony, IBM, France Telecom, NBC and the Olympics.

 

Stewartson worked with Spielberg

 

I Love Bees is the latest in a series of so-called alternate reality games – immersive, endlessly intricate hybrids of scavenger hunts and role-playing adventures. The genre began with The Beast, an online mystery

loosely connected to the 2001 Steven Spielberg film "A.I."

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Continue reading the main story

Similarly, I Love Bees is set on the margins of the world surrounding Halo, the biggest-selling game for Microsoft's Xbox. Microsoft hired the brains behind The Beast, 4orty2wo Entertainment, to create the Bees game to stir interest in Halo's sequel, Halo 2, to be released on Tuesday.

But I Love Bees, which comes to an end today, has become far more popular than any of its predecessors, with Internet traffic 10 times that of The Beast. More than a quarter-million visitors went to ilovebees.com on the day it opened in August. As many as 500,000 gamers returned to the site every time the game was updated,

according to Jim Stewartson, 4orty2wo Entertainment's chief technology officer.

 

First-time visitors to the site may have found the whole thing terribly confusing, a mishmash of coded recipes and cryptic messages. But fans have assembled a guide to the mystery, at ilb.extrasonic.com/index.php/Quick-Start. The complete audio drama can be found at ilovebees.com/humptydumpty.html.

 

https://archive.is/Qrf8F#selection-1953.0-2003.299