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During a conversation with Evolution of Horror, the host pointed out that the last two installments leaned heavily into gore and carnage, asking what audiences should brace themselves for in #SCREAM7. ๐Ÿ˜ถโ€๐ŸŒซ๏ธ Neve Campbell responded thoughtfully: โ€œI think itโ€™s not as gory, but there are definitely scenes that are...

273,803 views โ€ข 4 months ago โ€ขvia X (Twitter)

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Trump: I think itโ€™s very sad, actually. Iโ€™m surprised that it wasnโ€™tโ€”you knowโ€”the public wasnโ€™t notified a long time ago, because to get to stage 9, thatโ€™s a long time. I just had my physical. You saw that. You saw the results of that particular test. I think that test is standard to pretty much anybody getting a physicalโ€”a good physical. We had the doctors at the White House and over at Walter Reed, which is a fantastic hospital, do it. I did a very complete physical, including a cognitive test. Iโ€™m proud to announce I aced it. I got them all right. You proud of me? Your husband would be proud of me for getting them all right. Itโ€™s a little risk. If I didnโ€™t get them all right, these people would be after me. It would be not a good situation. But I think, frankly, anybody running for president should take a cognitive test. They say itโ€™s unconstitutional, but I would say in that particular case, having a cognitive test wouldnโ€™t be so bad. But when you take testsโ€”medical, as a maleโ€”that test is very standard. I donโ€™t know if itโ€™s given to everybody, but itโ€™s given just about. And it takes a long time to get to that situationโ€ฆ to get to a stage 9. I think that if you take a look, itโ€™s the same doctor that said that Joe was cognitively fine, there was nothing wrong with him. If itโ€™s the same doctor, he said there was nothing wrong there. Thatโ€™s been proven to be a sad situation. And the autopen is becoming a very big deal. You know, the autopen is becoming a big deal because it seems that maybe it was the presidentโ€”whoever operated the autopen. But when they say that was not good, they alsoโ€”you have to look and you have to say that the test was not so good either. In other words, there are things going on that the public wasnโ€™t informed [about], and I think somebody is going to have to speak to his doctorโ€”if itโ€™s the same or even if itโ€™s two separate doctors. Why wasnโ€™t the cognitive abilityโ€”why wasnโ€™t that discussed? And I think the doctor said heโ€™s just fine, and itโ€™s turned out thatโ€™s not so. Itโ€™s very dangerousโ€ฆ this is dangerous for our country. Look at the mess we are in. You talk about all these questions on Ukraine and Russia. That wouldโ€™ve never happened, as an example, if I were president. It wouldโ€™ve never happened. The other thingโ€”you have to say: Why did it take so long? I mean, this takes a long time. It can take years to get to this level of danger. Itโ€™s a very, very sad situation. I feel very badly about it. And I think people should try and find out what happened. Because Iโ€™ll tell you, I donโ€™t know if it had anything to do with the hospital. Walter Reed is really good. Theyโ€™re some of the best doctors Iโ€™ve ever seen. I donโ€™t even know if they were involved. But a doctor was involved in each case. Maybe it was the same doctor. And somebody is not telling the facts. Thatโ€™s a big problem.

Acyn

656,574 views โ€ข 1 year ago

Jimmy Page - The Battle of Evermore. โ€œThe blues โ€“ I mean, itโ€™s just undeniable,โ€ Page says. โ€œIt was just an undeniable element of everything that was going on in Led Zeppelin. If there hadnโ€™t been that sort of movement in Chicago, back in the โ€™50s, and all that sort of riffing, then you wouldnโ€™t have got what came through in various bands later โ€“ certainly for me and how it affected me in Led Zeppelin. โ€œIn those days, all the guitarists were learning from records. I was lucky that I had a blues collector called Dave Williams. Through him I got to hear stuff like Elmore James. You werenโ€™t going to hear that on the radio.โ€ Given his legacy, Page doesnโ€™t owe anything to anyone as a guitarist, but he waves away the notion. โ€œI owe it to all of them,โ€ he explains. โ€œThatโ€™s how I learned. My breakthrough was when I understood how to do bottleneck guitar. Thatโ€™s the point when open tunings first come in for me. Boom! Thatโ€™s it. And that whole world opened itself up for me. I wasnโ€™t actually trying to play note for note what anyone else had done.โ€ โ€œAs far as the material for the first Zeppelin album goes,โ€ Page recalls, โ€œI definitely knew that I really wanted to do โ€˜I Canโ€™t Quit You Baby.โ€™ โ€˜Dazed and Confused,โ€™ too. And thatโ€™s not blues, I know. But it is! If you have the harmonica playing that riff, you know that itโ€™s blues all right. And also โ€˜Babe Iโ€™m Gonna Leave You.โ€™ All of these things. I could just list them and list them. โ€œWell, itโ€™s the atmosphere and itโ€™s the attitude thatโ€™s created on something like Muddy Watersโ€™ โ€˜Standing Around Crying,โ€™โ€ Page says. โ€œItโ€™s like Howlinโ€™ Wolf: When you hear Wolf, heโ€™s not messing about. Itโ€™s like, โ€˜Iโ€™m coming at you โ€“ and Iโ€™m gonna get you!โ€™ And thatโ€™s why I love him.

๐ŸŽธ Rock History ๐ŸŽธ

226,882 views โ€ข 1 year ago

Jimmy Page - The Battle of Evermore. โ€œThe blues โ€“ I mean, itโ€™s just undeniable,โ€ Page says. โ€œIt was just an undeniable element of everything that was going on in Led Zeppelin. If there hadnโ€™t been that sort of movement in Chicago, back in the โ€™50s, and all that sort of riffing, then you wouldnโ€™t have got what came through in various bands later โ€“ certainly for me and how it affected me in Led Zeppelin. โ€œIn those days, all the guitarists were learning from records. I was lucky that I had a blues collector called Dave Williams. Through him I got to hear stuff like Elmore James. You werenโ€™t going to hear that on the radio.โ€ Given his legacy, Page doesnโ€™t owe anything to anyone as a guitarist, but he waves away the notion. โ€œI owe it to all of them,โ€ he explains. โ€œThatโ€™s how I learned. My breakthrough was when I understood how to do bottleneck guitar. Thatโ€™s the point when open tunings first come in for me. Boom! Thatโ€™s it. And that whole world opened itself up for me. I wasnโ€™t actually trying to play note for note what anyone else had done.โ€ โ€œAs far as the material for the first Zeppelin album goes,โ€ Page recalls, โ€œI definitely knew that I really wanted to do โ€˜I Canโ€™t Quit You Baby.โ€™ โ€˜Dazed and Confused,โ€™ too. And thatโ€™s not blues, I know. But it is! If you have the harmonica playing that riff, you know that itโ€™s blues all right. And also โ€˜Babe Iโ€™m Gonna Leave You.โ€™ All of these things. I could just list them and list them. โ€œWell, itโ€™s the atmosphere and itโ€™s the attitude thatโ€™s created on something like Muddy Watersโ€™ โ€˜Standing Around Crying,โ€™โ€ Page says. โ€œItโ€™s like Howlinโ€™ Wolf: When you hear Wolf, heโ€™s not messing about. Itโ€™s like, โ€˜Iโ€™m coming at you โ€“ and Iโ€™m gonna get you!โ€™ And thatโ€™s why I love him.

๐ŸŽธ Rock History ๐ŸŽธ

432,185 views โ€ข 1 year ago

Former Fox News host Geraldo Rivera: โ€œBy focusing on the censorship aspect and the First Amendment aspect, itโ€™s losing sight of what should be the lead and thatโ€™s that Jimmy Kimmel owes the family of Charlie Kirk and his wife Erika, two small children, an apology. You know, you know, whatโ€™s he saying? That if youโ€™re if youโ€™re a member of MAGA and Charlie is a friend of MAG, of MAGA, then he had it coming. Itโ€™s just โ€” itโ€™s โ€” itโ€™s in some ways โ€” itโ€™s very โ€” itโ€™s โ€” extremely โ€” extremely insensitive. The country is in a country is in a very tough spot right now. Everyone is walking on eggshells. The First Amendment is not a license to incite hatred and, you know, I think that we can think that we can start the discussion once Jimmy Kimmel apologizes, then they can talk about the business aspects and whether or not he gets whether or not he gets back on the schedule and so forth, but thereโ€™s got to thereโ€™s got to be a recognition that a terrible thing has happened here, and that millions of Americans are grievously hurt by what happened. You know, there is a โ€” Charlie Kirk was beloved by many. And to just trample over it. Heโ€™s not even buried yet for goodness sake. And to make fun of the flags at half staff and so forth. I just half staff and so forth. I just think that weโ€™ve got to look at it with a โ€” with a notion that the country has to be healed, that we have to work to bring people together, that we need to respect each other. You know, we donโ€™t have to agree, but we have to respect. And I think that, you know, the audience has deserted him for a good reason.โ€

Curtis Houck

825,225 views โ€ข 9 months ago

Joe Rogan drops a bombshell theory about why Barack Obama pushed the โ€œFine Peopleโ€ hoax to try and get Kamala Harris elected. Rogan says Obama โ€œmust knowโ€ that โ€œfine people on both sidesโ€ was a hoax, yet he pushed it anyway. Why? Once Rogan laid out his theory, he admitted he would push the โ€œFine Peopleโ€ hoax, too, if he were in Obamaโ€™s position. ROGAN: โ€œWhy would you sacrifice [your stature and integrity] for someone who just probably wasnโ€™t gonna win anyway?โ€ JEFF DYE: โ€œI donโ€™t know if itโ€™s money or if itโ€™s some sort of oath or if itโ€™s intentional, but that stuffโ€™s so dangerousโ€ฆ that shortening of what someone said, taking it out of context.โ€ ROGAN: โ€œI think thereโ€™s also the consequences of people going to trial for that Russiagate stuff because I think that Russiagate collusion hoax that they perpetrated on mainstream media for years, and a lot of people are really uncomfortable with even saying it was a hoax. โ€œNo, it was a hoax, ladies and gentlemen. It was a hoax. And a lot of people coordinated that hoax. And there were a lot of people involved, and I think theyโ€™re super sketched out about Trump being president again and possibly digging into that stuff. And heโ€™s doing that now. โ€œAnd youโ€™re finding real evidence thatโ€ฆ the intelligence agenciesโ€ฆ it seems like they also meddle, and not just meddle but completely try to sabotage someone and paint them out in a way thatโ€™s completely inaccurate, knowingly, with taxpayer dollars funding it all.โ€ JEFF DYE: โ€œโ€˜For the greater good.โ€™ For their greater good.โ€ ROGAN: โ€œBro. I might say โ€˜very fine people,โ€™ too, if I was doing that kind of stuff. Say whatever. โ€˜Heโ€™s a f*cking Nazi.โ€™ โ€˜Heโ€™s Hitler.โ€™ Letโ€™s say whatever the f*ckโ€”keep him out of office.โ€

Vigilant Fox ๐ŸฆŠ

631,189 views โ€ข 8 months ago

"Abel Ferrara's 'Bad Lieutenant' (1992) is among the greatest pictures made about a manโ€™s descent in search of redemption." --- Martin Scorsese Full Excerpt: "I thought 'Bad Lieutenant' (1992) was a key film. Itโ€™s the kind of film that I wanted 'The Last Temptation of Christ' (1988) to be. But maybe it was because I dealt with the iconography of Jesus directly that I was not able to get certain aspects that I wanted. Harvey Keitel really felt that itโ€™s what he was aiming for all his life; we had stumbled around it ourselves in the movies we made together, Keitel and myself. And we tried to get it directly in 'The Last Temptation of Christ', but itโ€™s better the way Ferrara and he got it here โ€” especially the confrontation with the image of Jesus in the church. And not just the obviously shocking part of it; itโ€™s when he breaks down and cries and says heโ€™s bad. Thereโ€™s this beautiful ending with the boy leaving, then Keitel being shot in the car. And thereโ€™s the use of Pledging My Love by Johnny Ace, which we had in 'Mean Streets' (1973). In any event, itโ€™s an exceptional movie, extraordinary โ€” I mean, itโ€™s not to everybodyโ€™s taste. I loved the themes, and the way Ferraraโ€™s style is so straightforward. You cut into a scene with two women, and theyโ€™re naked and music is playing, and then suddenly Keitel is naked, in a sort of trance. Then you cut and youโ€™re into another scene. Itโ€™s so strong you donโ€™t need a style. Another example: he goes and gets shot up with some heroin from a woman who is obviously a junkie โ€” it must be for real. So what do you need to know? If you dare, follow him through till the end of the night. Itโ€™s among the greatest pictures made about a manโ€™s descent in search of redemption." ('Projections 7', edited by John Boorman and Walter Donohue, 1997)

DepressedBergman

42,563 views โ€ข 5 months ago