Moar GREEN comms.
Biden had GREEN comms yesterday.
Green Screen's are also used for the CGI scenes.
Everything fake, everyone acting?
MOVIE TIME?
>pfizer says
END OF SENTENCE. Rest is just zzzzZZZzzzz
Mental Illness is listening to any of them anymoar.
E & M "Snow White"
Just came across this drop, since the end of the Delta's YESTERDAY.
Next 4 yr Delta is the 29th and it's Snow White.
Next 3 yr Delta is also the 29th.(Hotel Stringer)
Next 2 yr Delta is 12-2 (Sedition)
Next 1 yr Delta is 12.8 (Song. We're not gonna take it)
She's got lots of green comms going as well.
Interesting. Bryan Adams is in ITALY.
Justice Roberts and the Briefcase in Malta rings a bell…
Sumting spoopy in Ital[Y]?
'Dukes of Hazzard' star John Schneider on General Lee, cancel culture: 'We don't belong in that country club'
John Schneider is hitting the road.
The actor, best known as Bo Duke from the hit series "Dukes of Hazzard," is keeping busy this holiday season with two new films premiering on the same day. For starters, he’s rolling the dice with "Poker Run," where he served as writer, director and leading man. It’s a sequel to fan-favorite "Stand On It," a "Smokey and the Bandit" tribute that was released in 2020. The 61-year-old is also starring in the new Lifetime film "Christmas in Tune" alongside Reba McEntire where they find themselves sharing the stage.
Still, Schneider is eager to reflect on his past as being one of the good old boys. "The Dukes of Hazzard" aired from 1979 until 1985 and starred Schneider alongside Tom Wopat and Catherine Bach. In its initial run, the series drew as many as 20 million viewers per episode and, by its third season, had become the second-biggest show on TV, The Hollywood Reporter shared.
Still, the outlet noted that the show has been criticized for its use of the Confederate battle flag painted on the roof of General Lee, a ’69 Dodge Charger. In 2020, there was renewed interest to erase the flag from the series, which has been a symbol of Southern pride to some and hatred to others.
Schneider spoke to Fox News about the show’s legacy, how he feels about cancel culture and what it was like to work with McEntire, 66.
Fox News: In 2020, "Dukes of Hazzard" was faced with controversy. Did it surprise you that the current generation wanted to erase the flag from the series after all this time?
Schneider: It was the older, uneducated generation that wanted to remove it from the series, from the airwaves. There’s a group of people that seem to base their values on removing what they’re against. I’ve always placed people’s values on what they are for.
… It had been attacked maybe 20 years ago. And then that attack went away. I guess the critics found another hobby. So no, it didn’t surprise me. But I tell you, my wife and I dirt track race. We are out among people from coast to coast all year round… And there are still children playing with General Lees in the dirt regardless of cancel culture trying to cancel it. And I think it’s because parents save their General Lees and pass them down to another generation.
It’s funny. "The Dukes of Hazzard" is still out of date and as relevant as it ever was. You should see how kids react when they realize I’m Bo Duke. It depends where you are, but from where I stand, none of the cancel culture antics is going to diminish what the show has represented to families who grew up on it. It brought families together. It was never about division. For years, I’ve had people from all walks of life come up to me and say how the show brought their families together. Generations watched it. And they still do.
Fox News: What do you make of cancel culture?
Schneider: Someone asked me the other day, "What do you think about all this cancel culture business?" And I quoted Groucho Marx. Simply put, why would I want to belong to a country club that would have me as a member? Cancel culture is very short-sighted and it’s very much against everything I believe in concerning freedom of speech and freedom of expression. I’m looking forward to the day when the wind finally comes out of the sails of all that nonsense.
Fox News: It sounds like you would want cancel culture to be canceled.
Schneider: Absolutely. My grandparents used to say, "Give them enough rope and they will hang themselves." And you know, I saw something on Facebook that was just astonishing. Someone had put a Bible verse with praying hands like the picture your grandparents used to have in their homes. And over this picture, it said, "Some may find these words and this picture offensive." But you have to click on it to see the picture. It was praying hands and it mentioned "God." There's just no way in the world that a free society is going to allow that to continue any longer. It has gotten way out of hand.
So yes, I look forward to that day. But until then, we do our own thing. Every day, we tell the stories we want to tell. And we distribute them the way we want to distribute them. We don’t belong in that country club. We have removed our shovels and our buckets from their sandbox to build our own sandbox. And we play there every day, all day.
more
https://www.yahoo.com/news/apos-dukes-hazzard-apos-star-100058320.html
Dubs confirm SHOTS KILL
Also, 17 sec vid AND a 9 on the shirt. ) or is that a 6 mirror, watch your 6?
Autopsy report shows Fillmore Councilwoman Larson's cause of death: ‘It was all a shock’
Former Fillmore Councilwoman Ari Larson died on Sept. 17 from a health condition that neither she nor her family knew about.
Larson died from coronary artery disease, according to a Ventura County Medical Examiner's Office autopsy report. Undiagnosed Type 2 diabetes was a contributing factor to her death.
Larson's husband Pete Larson said he and his wife were unaware of the heart condition or diabetes.
"It was all a shock," he said. "Ari didn't know she had any of those things. One of the reasons she didn't know was she never went to a doctor."
Pete Larson, 53, said they had been married for 24 years before she died in September. Larson was told there were a number of factors leading to his wife's death including clogged arteries, a previous heart attack they were not aware of, diabetes and a lung tumor.
"I've learned a lot in the last two months as far as medical conditions," he said. "I was pretty naïve."
According to the autopsy report, Larson, 56, was not under the care of a physician and took no medication. She complained of shortness of breath over the week prior to her death. She was not known to drink alcohol, smoke cigarettes or use illicit drugs.
She was last known to be alive on the night of Sept. 16, and the next morning she was found unresponsive on a couch, according to the report. The autopsy demonstrated severe narrowing of the three main coronary arteries due to atherosclerosis, or plaque deposition on the inner lining.
Her manner of death was ruled natural, the autopsy report says.
Additionally, Larson was sick with COVID-19 in January andvaccinated in April, according to the report.
more
https://www.yahoo.com/news/autopsy-report-shows-fillmore-councilwoman-140114631.html
>my first attempt in the casino
>I was not able to get in at the 14 dollar mark
Same. Always leery of stonks.
Bought high, got caught up in hive excitement, shouldn't have.
>they will ALL go through this.
Exactly, why? Because they STILL trust the Dr's, who are the ones handing out Kill Shots like candy, with false glimmers of hope, failing to pull heads out of collective asses, as see, it IS THOSE THEY TRUST THE MOST…