Anonymous ID: 5ca9e2 Jan. 25, 2021, 6:10 p.m. No.12714086   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4180 >>4431

all pb

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Looks likeMarley Clementsis going to fail again

Couldn't take down trump

won't find out who Qanon is

>https://www.vanityfair.com/hollywood/2018/05/donald-trump-russia-documentary-active-measures-jack-bryan

Is This the Documentary That Can Take Down Trump?

How Jack Bryan parlayed rich-kid know-how into Active Measures, the very first feature-length doc about Trump and Russia.

By Tom Roston

May 1, 2018

 

Jack Bryan was your average Upper East Side-raised son of a millionaire trying to get his filmmaking career started when Donald Trump began persistently popping up in his life. In New York City’s social circuit, Bryan’s father, Shelby Bryan—a telecom mogul and Democratic donor—was friendly enough with Trump, perhaps because both are relative outsiders (Bryan being from Texas, and Trump being Trump). On vacation in Palm Beach in 2008, the Bryan family was immersed in the scuttlebutt about how a then financially strapped Trump had curiously managed to sell a Palm Beach estate he’d bought for $41 million to Russian oligarch Dmitry Rybolovlev for $95 million. Around 2012, Shelby Bryan shared a car to the U.S. Open with the real-estate tycoon, after which he told his son, “That guy sure does like Russia.” The elder Bryan (who is also the longtime partner of Condé Nast’s artistic director, Anna Wintour)also brought his sons, Jack and Austin, on a golfing trip to the United Kingdom, where Trump gave them early access to his Trump International Golf Links course in Scotland and chatted with them after their game.

Anonymous ID: 5ca9e2 Jan. 25, 2021, 6:18 p.m. No.12714180   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4431

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To Jack, Trump registered as a “harmless clown who would appear in the tabloids.” But as Trump’s political ambitions solidified, the younger Bryan began to take notice. A self-described “pragmatic lefty,” he had often texted with his friend and fellow politics junkie Marley Clements about world affairs. When Clements proposed that Russians may have been involved in the hacking of the Democratic National Committee during the summer of 2016, Bryan expressed skeptical interest.

 

Then, in March 2017, former F.B.I. agent Clint Watts testified to the Senate Intelligence Committee that Trump himself had engaged in “active measures”—a term that describes the Russian propaganda tactic of using disinformation and manipulation of events to promote its foreign policy. That’s when Bryan said to Clements, “Somebody needs to make a film about this.”

 

Active Measures, a dizzying and rigorously researched documentary, premieres at Toronto’s Hot Docs film festival this week, where C.A.A. is representing the film in its hunt for a distributor. It is 33-year-old Jack Bryan’s effort to connect the dots between Trump and Russia, including Vladimir Putin himself. “I want to alert people, and I knew no one else was going to do it in time for the midterm elections,” he said over beers at Williamsburg’s Radegast Hall recently. “I felt like I could.”

 

womp womp