Anonymous ID: 365d4b Jan. 23, 2021, 12:27 p.m. No.12685651   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5666 >>5673 >>5758

George Webb if ya need him

Says Q was Operation Trust that the Soviets pulled.

 

https://youtu.be/6IKnvwEB6YU

10:00

does have some interdasting views that DC is occuppied and resembles Berlin Wall

 

after a coup you have an occupation

 

https://youtu.be/6IKnvwEB6YU?t=609

Anonymous ID: 365d4b Jan. 23, 2021, 12:46 p.m. No.12685893   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>12685664

>>12685634

some digs on qresear.ch

saget is pedo scumbag

 

>https://www.thestar.com/entertainment/stage/2012/07/19/bob_saget_hosts_jfl_xxx_the_ultimate_nasty_show.html

 

A lot of people want to believe that all the years Saget spent working on Full House and America’s Funniest Home Videos is what spurred his naughty gene, but he makes it clear that he was just taking a giant money-making detour.

 

“I started doing stand-up when I was 17 in Philadelphia. I did music comedy, I’d play a song called ‘Bondage,’ a whips-and-chains, 50 Shades of Grey, kind of thing.

 

“I got picked up real quick.Harvey Weinstein was my manager, I did the Rodney Dangerfield young comedians’ special, but then things stalled. Because you couldn’t do the kind of humour I wanted to do back in those days. I did a lot of Merv Griffins and you couldn’t curse on those.”

 

But when Saget came out the other end of the G-rated tunnel, he was rich and famous, but worried.

 

“I was afraid I might have lost my edge, all the stuff that made me really good at the beginning.”

 

So he plunged into raunchy stand-up comedy and sketchy guest appearances until 2005, when he became famous and infamous once again in the same year.

 

That was when How I Met Your Mother first appeared. Saget is heard (but not seen) every week as the voice of the 2030 Ted Mosby, giving him a small but effective mainstream window.

 

But that was also the year that The Aristocrats got released, a documentary film about the most famous dirty joke of all time, which allowed a galaxy of famous comedians to ad lib their darkest, raunchiest versions of the anecdote that fuels the film.

 

Classic smut-mongers like Gilbert Gottfried, Sarah Silverman, Don Rickles and Andy Dick all did their best, but — by common consent —Saget was the most unquestionably offensive of the bunch.

 

“You know, I had never even heard the joke before they asked me to make the movie,” he admits, “but once I got in there, they kept spurring me on and urging to make it ranker and ranker, and so I did.

 

“I remember thinking, ‘This will ruin me,’ but it really didn’t. It did the opposite, in fact.”

 

Saget may seem like a take-no-prisoners kind of guy, but he has some pretty firm standards as to what he will and won’t do in the name of comedy.

 

“I don’t like to do hurtful stuff, I don’t like to play with people’s feelings, I don’t do anything racist. Anything that comes from actual rage or harm, I won’t have anything to do with.

 

“You know how they say when you go on a date you don’t discuss religion or politics?

 

“Well, I’m the same way about comedy. I like to keep everything below the waist where it’s safe.”

 

For someone who deals in so much sexual content, it’s also nice to hear him say that he doesn’t go in for attacking non-heterosexuals.

 

“I spent my whole childhood being called ‘Saget the Faggot,’ just because it rhymed. . . .

 

“I know bullying exists, but it’s not as acceptable as it used to be or as popular, and that’s good.”