>>20300434
>>20300434
>time travel
#19890338 at 2023-11-10 01:36:09 (UTC+1)
Q Research General #24422: E-Bake Seeking Passing Baker Edition
>>19890239
"Time travel is fun" Q 3555
https://golfweek.usatoday.com/2022/07/31/why-delorean-car-time-machine-from-back-to-the-future-liv-golf-trump-bedminster/
same place ex-wife was buried… golf course
And dont forget Biff Tannen was based on Trump, per the writers…
https://www.nme.com/news/back-to-the-future-writer-reveals-biff-tannen-was-inspired-by-donald-trump-2560286
https://www.huffpost.com/entry/trump-is-biff-tannen_n_5627978be4b0bce347031f84
https://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/films/news/michael-j-fox-trump-biff-back-to-the-future-b1760681.html
https://www.rollingstone.com/politics/politics-news/back-to-the-future-writer-biff-is-donald-trump-190408/
AND Gremlins 2 is based on Trump
https://nypost.com/2015/08/19/that-time-donald-trump-was-parodied-in-gremlins/
https://www.wired.com/2016/03/gremlins-trump/
"presidential hopeful with a character called Daniel Clamp"
Warner Bros. had promised Dante full creative control for part two, and while he had a setting (New York) and a storyline (Gremlins getting Gremlinish in a super-smart midtown building), he needed inspiration for the movie's villain, a vain and wealthy real estate developer with a carefully tamed coif and a brash Manhattan manor. "At that time in New York City," remembers Dante, "there was one major character who was Mr. Billion"—Donald Trump.
Which is how Dante-with co-screenwriter Charlie Haas (Over the Edge) and producer Michael Finnell-cooked up the character of Daniel Clamp (played by John Glover), a suit-clad bajillionaire who has a foothold in everything from sports teams to construction companies to jams and jellies, and whose own buildings hawk copies of his very Trump-like autobiography.
Though the character wasn't wholly based on the Donald-in a nod to Ted Turner, Clamp also owns a vast, niche-focused cable network-his merchandising-mad mindset and man-about-town demeanor is clearly indebted to Trump's end-of-the-decade persona. As the '80s came to a close, Trump was famous enough to have earned his own board game and a spot alongside the Ramones and Rick Moranis in a primo Bobby Brown video. Yet he also was under increased scrutiny in his hometown, most notably from Spy magazine, which famously labeled Trump a "short-fingered vulgarian" and questioned his financial dealings.
At the time, Trump was "overbearing and obviously kind of goofy," says Haas. "He was an emblem of what was going on in the '80s and '90s with greed and money and crassness, and [the idea of] the whole world being for sale. But he still seemed sort of harmless."
"Who knew? We never imagined he'd run for president," says director Joe Dante, who parodied Donald Trump as a major character 25 years ago in the horror comedy sequel "Gremlins 2: The New Batch."
John Glover receives third billing as "Daniel Clamp," a wacky, publicity-loving real estate developer and best-selling author who wants to level part of downtown New York to create the "Clamp Chinatown Center, where business gets oriented."
Much of the action takes place at the mogul's brand-new "Clamp Premier Regency Trade Center" in Midtown - obviously modeled on the Trump Tower on Fifth Avenue, which opened in 1983 - where the logo outside shows the world held in a vise.
"It was pretty obvious from the name who we were talking about," says Dante, "though Clamp is also part Ted Turner, since he runs a cable empire as well. Clamp was originally supposed to be the megalomaniac villain of the piece, but he was so oddly endearing, he ended up becoming a semi-heroic figure."