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Ever catch yourself rewatching that 9/11 classroom clip? Bush sitting there, expression blank, while the kids read “My Pet Goat” out loud and the Secret Service guy whispers in his ear. Absolute chills. But here’s the part that still fries my brain. Bush later insisted he saw the first...

974,139 次观看 • 7 个月前 •via X (Twitter)

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James Fox just revealed that real-life Men in Black covered up the most groundbreaking UFO footage ever. In 1997, a Vietnam vet got high-quality video of a massive black UFO in Phoenix, Arizona. A City Councilwoman asked him to see it. Then, two men showed up to his house in an unmarked government car and took the video. Fox: “I investigated the Phoenix Lights case … working with a councilwoman, Frances Emma Barwood.” “I was interviewing all the witnesses and there was one guy, a Vietnam vet.” “He contacted Frances Barwood—one of the few elected officials that was willing to [say], ‘let’s investigate what happened, what these people saw.’” “He said … ‘I was on my roof that night trying to get a video on a tripod of the Hale-Bopp comet … and I have a CB radio and I was listening to the truckers come up Interstate 10 from Tucson, and they were all describing this massive boomerang-shaped craft … and I filmed it going right over the top of my house.’” “She’s like, ‘I’d love to see it.’” “So they make arrangements where he was gonna drop it off at her office.” “I don’t know if it was later that day or the very next morning or that night, two men roll up in an unmarked government vehicle in suits.” “They’re like, ‘we’re from Frances Emma Barwood’s office. We’re here to pick up the video.’” “And he says the only question they asked is, did he make any copies? And he said no.” “They took the footage and left.” “A couple days go by, he doesn’t hear from Emma, so he calls her up.” “He goes, ‘what’d you think of the footage?’” “She goes, ‘what do you mean? … I didn’t get the footage.’” “He goes, ‘you had two men from your office show up.’” “She goes, ‘I didn’t send anybody.’” “That was like the first time that I really heard about these so-called men in black, and that was in the 90s.” James Fox Jesse Michels

Holden Culotta

111,787 次观看 • 6 个月前

🦊: how did you spend your birthday? 🐻: i just spent my birthday really ordinarily! i ate nice food and slept in. there actually wasn’t anything particular—wait, there was! somebody took one of my social media accounts yesterday, so i made a new one 🐰: what’s this about? 🐻: my account got hacked. you know, that account that posts about food 🦊: so, you just made a new one! 🐶: interesting 🦊: the day you and that account were born are the same, so it must be meaningful in a way. who among the members wished you the earliest? 🐻: youngk was the first! his call came first 🦊: that was already past 10 minutes since midnight, though! 🐰: it was me! was it not? 🐻: not you 🐰: i sent you a text right at midnight 🐻: seems like i was the one who read it late… sorry 🐰: i was counting down to midnight‼️ 🦊: anyways, i was the first‼️ 🐻: the first person who wished me at the same time when i was on my phone was youngk! you should’ve called me 🦊: you gotta match the timing and predict when exactly he’s gonna be on his phone. how did dowoon send his wish? 🐶: me? i asked hyung what he wanted and he answered that he wanted me… i didn’t know what to do. i was shy 🐻: please don’t lie. he told me he was my present and because i have him already, it ended there. he didn’t even congratulate me! 🦊: was it the text i saw? 🐻: yes! that was literally all. dowoon was busy after sending that, so… you went to sleep early, didn’t you? because of that schedule 🦊🐰🐶: ohhh!

𝙢𝙜𝙙𝙣𝙙𝙨

13,934 次观看 • 2 年前

John Carpenter on how Howard Hawks's "Rio Bravo" (1959) inspired him to become a filmmaker: "As I got older I began to see that certain directors did certain things. One of the earliest examples of this was Roger Corman. I started going to see these exciting, fast, kind of cheesy but really fun monster movies, and there was one name that kept coming up on the screen: Roger Corman. 'It Conquered the World' (1956), 'Not of This Earth' (1957), 'Attack of the Crab Monsters' (1957), 'The Undead' (1957)... But | really understood for the first time what a director did when I saw 'Rio Bravo' in 1959. There was something about that movie that was like home and I can't really explain it. It was held over in Bowling Green for three or four weeks in a row because people kept coming to see it. I abandoned to see what was new in the other movie house in town to see this movie every weekend again and again because there was something in it that was different from the other westerns I had seen. I had certainly seen John Wayne before. He had become a part of my growing-up experience. He was the action guy, the cowboy. He was the guy in 'Flying Tigers' (1942) who was flying the airplanes. So what was so different about that movie? Then I became aware of this credit: “Howard Hawks’ Rio Bravo.” I looked at the poster and I said to myself, “Who is this guy? He didn't write the movie and he wasn't starring in it so why is his name up here? And why is he last in the credits?” All these things started to occur to me, but it was the emotional impact of the film that got me to start using my brain. Some way I figure out that this director made that movie." ("The Prince of Darkness: The Prince of Darkness", Gilles Boulenger, 2001) P.S: Remembering the great American filmmaker Howard Hawks on his 130th birthday.

DepressedBergman

55,467 次观看 • 1 个月前