John Schuck, who previously played the Klingon Ambassador in Star Trek IV & VI returns as Dr. Antaak. (He also had non-Klingon roles in DS9 and Voyager)
Also a bit of trivia but Schuck was married to Susan Bay, who later married Leonard Nimoy. She appeared as Admiral Rollman on DS9's Past Prologue and Whispers.
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Bad movie I have The Curse of the Jade Scorpion 2001
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Dick Halligan on "Holmes & Yoyo"
I was doing one of my occasional searches for anything new regarding the show (still hoping to one day be able to watch it in original English or find that one last TeleJunior comic I need to complete my collection) when I saw that the composer, Dick Halligan, had died in January this year. After a little research, I found that he'd written an autobiography called "Musical Being" published in 2013.
Unfortunately, there wasn't a whole lot he had to say about working on the show's music, which is wonderful stuff BTW, but I did find this paragraph in the book:
I was also writing a lot of music for television in those years, mostly at Universal Studios. Coincidently, I was having lunch with my daughter one day in Venice, Ca., when I recognized a man walking by, who had been the star of one of the first TV series that I worked on, "Holmes and Yo-Yo". It was a terrible detective comedy show that aired in 1976 for thirteen weeks. This actor, John Schuck, played Yo-Yo, a partially mechanized Russian detective. I wrote comedy detective music, with synthesizer sounds suggesting his mechanical nature. That's what I remember anyway. It was an absurd way to make a living. I didn't say anything to him, fearing that he might probably be embarrassed by his association with the show. Maybe I would have too.
If you want to read his book, you can buy it here:
You can also read about his career here:
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Outrageous Fortune, German lobby card. 1987
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Tales From the Crypt: Demon Knight
Although it wasn’t originally planned to be part of a projected TALES FROM THE CRYPT film franchise, Ernest Dickerson’s TALES FROM THE CRYPT: DEMON KNIGHT (1995, Criterion Channel) shares more with the series than just the tacked-on opening and closing with the animated Crypt Keeper (shot by another director, so don’t blame Dickerson if you find them a little forced). Dickerson uses the same neon color scheme of many of the series’ episodes along with its mixture of queasy violence and humor. There’s less sense that it’s a horror fable, though. Instead, it seems like the start of a different franchise that never happened. And the first twist is so big, the only thing I can tell you is that the plot revolves around a battle between William Sadler and Billy Zane over a key filled with holy blood. There are demons involved, and some people are tempted to accept possession as a way of life. Dickerson keeps the whole thing moving very well, and the camera work is quite fluid. It also has a terrific main set, the interior of a church that’s been turned into a motel. The cast is filled with distinctive types like CCH Pounder, who gets most of the best lines, Dick Miller, Jada Pinkett, Thomas Haden Church and John Schuck. There’s also a whole lot of acting going on, much of it quite entertaining, with Zane something of a standout. The problem is that it all needs to be a little more. Only Pinkett’s temptation scene has any zing to it. It’s got a nice surrealistic feel. The others are either bland or embarrassing. For the rest of the film, the colors could be brighter, the jokes could be funnier and except for Pounder and Miller, the acting could go a little more over the top. Although poorly reviewed at first, the film has garnered more appreciation in years since, partly because Pinkett’s casting is still somewhat revolutionary. Overall, though, it just doesn’t go far enough to make it to cult status.
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Die Zustände im Feldlazarett direkt hinter der koreanischen Front sind zu schrecklich, um nicht die ganze Zeit fürchterlichen Unfug zu treiben. Selbstmord ist immerhin schmerzlos, so das fabelhafte Titellied. Füllte einmal mehr eine cineastische Bildungslücke mit der zwar irgendwie in meinem kollektiven Bewußtsein verankerten, aber überhaupt nicht präsenten halblegendären Kriegsklamotte MASH, die erstens nicht mit der gleichnamigen Fernsehserie verwechselt werden sollte, und zweitens wahnsinnig erfolgreich war, bestimmt weil sie irgendwelches Neuland auftat, das halt jetzt nicht mehr so richtig neu wirkt. Die Leute, die behaupten, dies sei die großartigste Militärkomödie seit Erfindung des Tonfilms allerdings, haben Duck Soup wahrscheinlich gar nicht gesehen.
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Thieves Like Us (Bluray Review)
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full list of biden letter 2:
Aaron Bay-Schuck
Aaron Sorkin
Adam & Jackie Sandler
Adam Goodman
Adam Levine
Alan Grubman
Alex Aja
Alex Edelman
Alexandra Shiva
Ali Wentworth
Alison Statter
Allan Loeb
Alona Tal
Amy Chozick
Amy Pascal
Amy Schumer
Amy Sherman Palladino
Andrew Singer
Andy Cohen
Angela Robinson
Anthony Russo
Antonio Campos
Ari Dayan
Ari Greenburg
Arik Kneller
Aron Coleite
Ashley Levinson
Asif Satchu
Aubrey Plaza
Barbara Hershey
Barry Diller
Barry Levinson
Barry Rosenstein
Beau Flynn
Behati Prinsloo
Bella Thorne
Ben Stiller
Ben Turner
Ben Winston
Ben Younger
Billy Crystal
Blair Kohan
Bob Odenkirk
Bobbi Brown
Bobby Kotick
Brad Falchuk
Brad Slater
Bradley Cooper
Bradley Fischer
Brett Gelman
Brian Grazer
Bridget Everett
Brooke Shields
Bruna Papandrea
Cameron Curtis
Casey Neistat
Cazzie David
Charles Roven
Chelsea Handler
Chloe Fineman
Chris Fischer
Chris Jericho
Chris Rock
Christian Carino
Cindi Berger
Claire Coffee
Colleen Camp
Constance Wu
Courteney Cox
Craig Silverstein
Dame Maureen Lipman
Dan Aloni
Dan Rosenweig
Dana Goldberg
Dana Klein
Daniel Palladino
Danielle Bernstein
Danny Cohen
Danny Strong
Daphne Kastner
David Alan Grier
David Baddiel
David Bernad
David Chang
David Ellison
David Geffen
David Gilmour &
David Goodman
David Joseph
David Kohan
David Lowery
David Oyelowo
David Schwimmer
Dawn Porter
Dean Cain
Deborah Lee Furness
Deborah Snyder
Debra Messing
Diane Von Furstenberg
Donny Deutsch
Doug Liman
Douglas Chabbott
Eddy Kitsis
Edgar Ramirez
Eli Roth
Elisabeth Shue
Elizabeth Himelstein
Embeth Davidtz
Emma Seligman
Emmanuelle Chriqui
Eric Andre
Erik Feig
Erin Foster
Eugene Levy
Evan Jonigkeit
Evan Winiker
Ewan McGregor
Francis Benhamou
Francis Lawrence
Fred Raskin
Gabe Turner
Gail Berman
Gal Gadot
Gary Barber
Gene Stupinski
Genevieve Angelson
Gideon Raff
Gina Gershon
Grant Singer
Greg Berlanti
Guy Nattiv
Guy Oseary
Gwyneth Paltrow
Hannah Fidell
Hannah Graf
Harlan Coben
Harold Brown
Harvey Keitel
Henrietta Conrad
Henry Winkler
Holland Taylor
Howard Gordon
Iain Morris
Imran Ahmed
Inbar Lavi
Isla Fisher
Jack Black
Jackie Sandler
Jake Graf
Jake Kasdan
James Brolin
James Corden
Jamie Ray Newman
Jaron Varsano
Jason Biggs & Jenny Mollen Biggs
Jason Blum
Jason Fuchs
Jason Reitman
Jason Segel
Jason Sudeikis
JD Lifshitz
Jeff Goldblum
Jeff Rake
Jen Joel
Jeremy Piven
Jerry Seinfeld
Jesse Itzler
Jesse Plemons
Jesse Sisgold
Jessica Biel
Jessica Elbaum
Jessica Seinfeld
Jill Littman
Jimmy Carr
Jody Gerson
Joe Hipps
Joe Quinn
Joe Russo
Joe Tippett
Joel Fields
Joey King
John Landgraf
John Slattery
Jon Bernthal
Jon Glickman
Jon Hamm
Jon Liebman
Jonathan Baruch
Jonathan Groff
Jonathan Marc Sherman
Jonathan Ross
Jonathan Steinberg
Jonathan Tisch
Jonathan Tropper
Jordan Peele
Josh Brolin
Josh Charles
Josh Goldstine
Josh Greenstein
Josh Grode
Judd Apatow
Judge Judy Sheindlin
Julia Garner
Julia Lester
Julianna Margulies
Julie Greenwald
Julie Rudd
Juliette Lewis
Justin Theroux
Justin Timberlake
Karen Pollock
Karlie Kloss
Katy Perry
Kelley Lynch
Kevin Kane
Kevin Zegers
Kirsten Dunst
Kitao Sakurai
KJ Steinberg
Kristen Schaal
Kristin Chenoweth
Lana Del Rey
Laura Dern
Laura Pradelska
Lauren Schuker Blum
Laurence Mark
Laurie David
Lea Michele
Lee Eisenberg
Leo Pearlman
Leslie Siebert
Liev Schreiber
Limor Gott
Lina Esco
Liz Garbus
Lizanne Rosenstein
Lizzie Tisch
Lorraine Schwartz
Lynn Harris
Lyor Cohen
Madonna
Mandana Dayani
Mara Buxbaum
Marc Webb
Marco Perego
Maria Dizzia
Mark Feuerstein
Mark Foster
Mark Scheinberg
Mark Shedletsky
Martin Short
Mary Elizabeth Winstead
Mathew Rosengart
Matt Lucas
Matt Miller
Matthew Bronfman
Matthew Hiltzik
Matthew Weiner
Matti Leshem
Max Mutchnik
Maya Lasry
Meaghan Oppenheimer
Melissa Zukerman
Michael Aloni
Michael Ellenberg
Michael Green
Michael Rapino
Michael Rappaport
Michael Weber
Michelle Williams
Mike Medavoy
Mila Kunis
Mimi Leder
Modi Wiczyk
Molly Shannon
Nancy Josephson
Natasha Leggero
Neil Blair
Neil Druckmann
Nicola Peltz
Nicole Avant
Nina Jacobson
Noa Kirel
Noa Tishby
Noah Oppenheim
Noah Schnapp
Noreena Hertz
Odeya Rush
Olivia Wilde
Oran Zegman
Orlando Bloom
Pasha Kovalev
Pattie LuPone
Paul & Julie Rudd
Paul Haas
Paul Pflug
Peter Traugott
Polly Sampson
Rachel Riley
Rafi Marmor
Ram Bergman
Raphael Margulies
Rebecca Angelo
Rebecca Mall
Regina Spektor
Reinaldo Marcus Green
Rich Statter
Richard Jenkins
Richard Kind
Rick Hoffman
Rick Rosen
Rita Ora
Rob Rinder
Robert Newman
Roger Birnbaum
Roger Green
Rosie O’Donnell
Ross Duffer
Ryan Feldman
Sacha Baron Cohen
Sam Levinson
Sam Trammell
Sara Foster
Sarah Baker
Sarah Bremner
Sarah Cooper
Sarah Paulson
Sarah Treem
Scott Braun
Scott Braun
Scott Neustadter
Scott Tenley
Sean Combs
Seth Meyers
Seth Oster
Shannon Watts
Shari Redstone
Sharon Jackson
Sharon Stone
Shauna Perlman
Shawn Levy
Sheila Nevins
Shira Haas
Simon Sebag Montefiore
Simon Tikhman
Skylar Astin
Stacey Snider
Stephen Fry
Steve Agee
Steve Rifkind
Sting & Trudie Styler
Susanna Felleman
Susie Arons
Taika Waititi
Thomas Kail
Tiffany Haddish
Todd Lieberman
Todd Moscowitz
Todd Waldman
Tom Freston
Tom Werner
Tomer Capone
Tracy Ann Oberman
Trudie Styler
Tyler James Williams
Tyler Perry
Vanessa Bayer
Veronica Grazer
Veronica Smiley
Whitney Wolfe Herd
Will Ferrell
Will Graham
Yamanieka Saunders
Yariv Milchan
Ynon Kreiz
Zack Snyder
Zoe Saldana
Zoey Deutch
Zosia Mamet
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John Schuck Born February 4, 1940
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Supporters of #NoHostageLeftBehind Open Letter to Joe Biden - Part 1/2
The letter consists of lies, no mention of Palestinian genocides, and a call for ceasefire.
Read the full letter:
Dear President Biden,
We are heartened by Friday's release of the two American hostages, Judith Ranaan and her daughter Natalie Ranaan [Raanan] and by today's release of two Israelis, Nurit Cooper and Yocheved Lifshitz, whose husbands remain in captivity.
But our relief is tempered by our overwhelming concern that 220 innocent people, including 30 children, remain captive by terrorists, threatened with torture and death. They were taken by Hamas in the savage massacre of October 7, where over 1,400 Israelis were slaughtered—women raped, families burned alive, and infants beheaded.
Thank you for your unshakable moral conviction, leadership, and support for the Jewish people, who have been terrorized by Hamas since the group's founding over 35 years ago, and for the Palestinians, who have also been terrorized, oppressed, and victimized by Hamas for the last 17 years that the group has been governing Gaza.
We all want the same thing: Freedom for Israelis and Palestinians to live side by side in peace. Freedom from the brutal violence spread by Hamas. And most urgently, in this moment, freedom for the hostages.
We urge everyone to not rest until all hostages are released. No hostage can be left behind. Whether American, Argentinian, Australian, Azerbaijani, Brazilian, British, Canadian, Chilean, Chinese, Danish, Dutch, Eritrean, Filipino, French, German, Indian, Israeli, Italian, Kazakh, Mexican, Panamanian, Paraguayan, Peruvian, Polish, Portuguese, Romanian, Russian, South African, Spanish, Sri Lankan, Thai, Ukrainian, Uzbekistani or otherwise, we need to bring them home.
Supporters:
Adam & Jackie Sandler
Amy Schumer
Aaron Sorkin
Barry Diller
Behati Prinsloo
Bella Thorne
Ben Stiller
Bob Odenkirk
Bobbi Brown
Bradley Cooper
Brett Gelman
Chris Rock
Constance Wu
Courteney Cox
David Alan Grier
David Chang
David Geffen
David Oyelowo
Diane Von Furstenberg
Eli Roth
Emma Seligman
Eric Andre
Ewan McGregor
Gal Gadot
Gwyneth Paltrow
Harvey Keitel
Isla Fisher
Jack Black
James Brolin
Jason Blum
Jason Sudeikis
Jeff Goldblum
Jerry Seinfeld
Jesse Plemons
Jessica Biel
Jessica Seinfeld
Joey King
John Slattery
Jon Hamm
Jordan Peele
Josh Brolin
Judd Apatow
Judge Judy Sheindlin
Julia Garner
Julianna Margulies
Julie Rudd
Justin Theroux
Justin Timberlake
Karlie Kloss
Katy Perry
Kirsten Dunst
Lana Del Rey
Laura Dern
Liev Schreiber
Madonna
Martin Short
Michelle Williams
Mila Kunis
Nicola Peltz
Noa Tishby
Olivia Wilde
Orlando Bloom
Paul & Julie Rudd
Richard Jenkins
Rita Ora
Ross Duffer
Sacha Baron Cohen
Sam Levinson
Sarah Paulson
Sean Combs
Shira Haas
Sting & Trudie Styler
Taika Waititi
Thomas Kail
Tiffany Haddish
Tyler Perry
Will Ferrell
Andy Cohen
Alex Edelman
Amy Sherman Palladino
Aubrey Plaza
Barry Levinson
Billy Crystal
Brad Falchuk
Brian Grazer
Bridget Everett
Brooke Shields
Chelsea Handler
Chloe Fineman
Chris Jericho
Colleen Camp
David Schwimmer
Dawn Porter
Dean Cain
Debra Messing
Elisabeth Shue
Erin Foster
Eugene Levy
Gene Stupinski
Gina Gershon
Guy Oseary
Henry Winkler
Holland Taylor
James Corden
Jason Reitman
Jessica Elbaum
Jimmy Carr
Jonathan Ross
Josh Charles
Juliette Lewis
Kristen Schaal
Kristin Chenoweth
Lea Michele
Mark Foster
Mary Elizabeth Winstead
Matthew Weiner
Michael Rappaport
Molly Shannon
Noah Schnapp
Pattie LuPone
Regina Spektor
Sara Foster
Sarah Cooper
Scott Braun
Seth Meyers
Sharon Stone
Zack Snyder
Zoey Deutch
Zosia Mamet
Zoe Saldana
Alex Aja
Aaron Bay-Schuck
Amy Chozick
Aron Coleite
Adam Goodman
Alan Grubman
Adam Levine
Allan Loeb
Amy Pascal
Angela Robinson
Antonio Campos
Anthony Russo
Alexandra Shiva
Andrew Singer
Alison Statter
Alona Tal
Ali Wentworth
Ari Dayan
Ari Greenburg
Arik Kneller
Ashley Levinson
Asif Satchu
Barbara Hershey
Barry Rosenstein
Beau Flynn
Ben Turner
Ben Winston
Ben Younger
Blair Kohan
Bobby Kotick
Brad Slater
Bradley Fischer
Bruna Papandrea
Cameron Curtis
Casey Neistat
Cazzie David
Charles Roven
Chris Fischer
Christian Carino
Cindi Berger
Claire Coffee
Craig Silverstein
Dan Aloni
Dan Rosenweig
Dana Goldberg
Dana Klein
Danny Strong
Daniel Palladino
Danielle Bernstein
Danny Cohen
Daphne Kastner
David Bernad
David Baddiel
David Ellison
David Gilmour &
Polly Sampson
David Goodman
David Joseph
David Kohan
David Lowery
Deborah Lee Furness
Deborah Snyder
Donny Deutsch
Doug Liman
Douglas Chabbott
Eddy Kitsis
Edgar Ramirez
Elizabeth Himelstein
Embeth Davidtz
Emmanuelle Chriqui
Erik Feig
Evan Jonigkeit
Evan Winiker
Francis Benhamou
Francis Lawrence
Fred Raskin
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McCabe & Mrs. Miller (Robert Altman, 1971)
Cast: Warren Beatty, Julie Christie, Rene Auberjonois, William Devane, John Schuck, Corey Fischer, Bert Remsen, Shelley Duvall, Keith Carradine, Michael Murphy. Screenplay: Robert Altman, Brian McKay, based on a novel by Edmund Naughton. Cinematography: Vilmos Zsigmond. Production design: Leon Erickson. Film editing: Lou Lombardo.
McCabe & Mrs. Miller may be Robert Altman's best film, as well as the greatest of all "stoner Westerns." It's very much of the era in which it was made, with its fatalistic view of its loner protagonist, doomed by his naive willingness to go up against the big corporate mining interests who want to buy him out. Hippies against the Establishment, if you will. It's also very much at the heart of the mythos of the American Western, which always centered on the loner against overwhelming odds. McCabe & Mrs. Miller came along at a time when the Western was in eclipse, with most of its great exponents, like John Ford and Howard Hawks, in retirement, and some of its defining actors, like John Wayne, having gone over to the side of the Establishment. So when iconoclasts like Altman and Warren Beatty, coming off of their respective breakthrough hits M*A*S*H (1970) and Bonnie and Clyde (Arthur Penn, 1967), took an interest in filming Edmund Naughton's novel, it was clear that we were going to get something revisionist, a Western with a grubby setting and an antiheroic protagonist. The remarkable thing is that McCabe & Mrs. Miller, perhaps more than either M*A*S*H or Bonnie and Clyde, has transcended its revisionism and formed its own tradition. For once, Altman's mannerisms -- overlapping dialogue, restless camerawork, reliance on a stock company of actors like Michael Murphy, John Schuck, and Shelley Duvall, and a generally loosey-goosey mise-en-scène -- don't overwhelm the story. Some of this is probably owing to Beatty's own firmly entrenched ego, which was often at odds with Altman's. His performance gives the film a center and grounding that many of Altman's other films lack, especially since he works so well in tandem with Julie Christie's performance as Mrs. Miller, the only thing about the film that the Academy deigned worthy of an Oscar nomination. How the Academy could have overlooked the contribution of cinematographer Vilmos Zsigmond remains a mystery, except that at this point the cinematographers branch was dominated by old-school directors of photography who had been brought up in the studio system, which was to flood the set with light -- one reason why Gordon Willis's magisterial chiaroscuro in The Godfather (Francis Ford Coppola, 1972) failed to get a nomination the following year.
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I’m on S2E19 (”Bushmaster”) in my MacGyver rewatch and this is the first time I’ve heard a slight Jack O’Neill delivery from RDA.
Pete Thornton: [Handing over a gun to MacGyver] Here. Just for insurance.
MacGyver: Pete, you know how I feel about those things.
Pete Thornton: Yeah, I do, but you're defenseless out here.
MacGyver: No, just weaponless.
That last line isn’t a very O’Neill thing to say, granted, but the way he delivered it kinda was.
I’m not actually enjoying this episode - the girl who stowed away on the mission is super irritating. At least John Schuck is here to soften the blow.
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Bad movie I have McCabe & Mrs.Miller 1971
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"The New Television Season" (Starlog Magazine, 1976)
Here's a scan I found from Starlog magazine that describes "Holmes & Yoyo". Here is a transcription of the relevant parts:
And, finding that science fiction
does indeed have an audience (how
could anyone have doubted it?), ABC
has gone ahead with two other shows.
The first of these is a situation
comedy called Holmes and Yoyo. The
basic premise is that of assigning a
425 pound robot, which is supposedly
indestructible, to be the assistant to
an accident-prone police detective,
whose accidents are often fatal—to
his assistants. There has been a great
deal of confusion between this show
and an ABC Movie of the Week
called Future Cops, starring Ernest
Borgnine. Future Cops used the same
basic situation, but in a straightfor-
ward, adventure-story approach to
the subject. Holmes is obviously
played for laughs.
Holmes is played by Richard B.
Shull, and both the robot Yoyo and
its creator, Dr. Gregory Yoyonovich,
are played by John Schuck. Obvious-
ly the robot was "modeled" in the
likeness of its creator, and that is
just about as close to a message as
the show will get. Also appearing will
be Bruce Kirby as Capt. Harry Sed-
ford and Andrea Howard as Officer
Maxine Moon. Maxine finds Yoyo
absolutely irresistible, not least
because the robot has no romantic
programming at all. John Schuck
will, of course, be recognized from his
role in the movie M.A.S.H. as Pain-
less, the dentist, from numerous
other films, and his role as Sgt.
Enright on McMillan and Wife.
PHOTO CAPTION:
Below: Richard B. Shull is Detective
Holmes in the new ABC comedy, Holmes
and Yoyo. He is trying to figure
out the inner workings of his robot
assistant Yoyo, played by John Schuck.
I'd like to know where James M. Elrod got some of that information. Yoyo's creator didn't appear in the show, though Chief Buchanan's comment upon meeting Yoyo in episode 2 ("Yoyonovich? Do you have a brother who's an inspector?") implies a likely resemblance, so if the original Gregory Yoyonovich (whose sole namedrop did not include the title "Dr.") had shown up, I wouldn't have been surprised if John Schuck also played the role.
Also, I never felt like Maxine was portrayed as crushing on Yoyo. She was friendly to him, but she was just as friendly to Alex. When she had to go undercover and pretend to be newlyweds with Yoyo in episode 5, she was focused purely on the job. No sense of desire or sexual tension whatsoever. However, I think that Max crushing on Yoyo and Yoyo trying to deal with that and Alex trying to deal with Yoyo trying to deal with that without hurting Max would've been a rich vein of conflict and comedic situations to mine.
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Outrageous Fortune, German lobby card. 1987
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Kill the Batman (The Arab Drug Dealer)
Famous Foes of Literature:
Hannibal Rising (Venus Terzo).
Dark Knight (James Holmes).
Angel (Scott Peterson).
Beyblade (Jeffrey Lange).
Casino Royale (Andrew Schuck).
Skyfall (Judi Dench).
No Time to Die (Alexandra Rhzanova).
Calexit (Cassie-Leigh Stock).
Alias (Dan Slot).
Featured Writes:
William Riker (Star Trek).
David Xanatos (Gargoyles).
Goku (Dragonball).
Mickey (Area 88).
Shin (UN Squadron).
Megaman (Megaman X1).
Harry Potter (Novel Series).
Voldemort (Movie Series).
Quake Guy (Quake 1).
Mackelvoy (Law and Order).
Detective Flass (Gotham).
Contributions to Gaming:
GTA3.
Gears of War.
Candy Crush.
Arkham Asylum.
Arkham City.
Arkham Knight.
Arkham Origins.
Left 4 Dead.
Cyberpunk 2077.
Dead by Daylight.
Irish Mafia Wetwork:
New England Restaurants Investment (Boston PD).
Legal Weed (Tree Surgeon Approved).
ONI Assassination of Queen of England (Mossad Gestapo, Hanoi SIS).
Syria No-Fly Zone (Russian Mafia, Hopkinton High).
Barack Obama Election (John Allen Muhammad Escapes Custody).
No-Sauce Pizza (The Reverse Fart Sniff, Heterosexual Italy).
CIA Assassinations (Putin Gun Control Platform).
School Shootings Averted (Alex Jones, Sandy Hook RCMP, Goes Down).
Trump Indictment (The CIA Dies, if You Fire Us).
Goddess Arsine Dodges Prison (Luke Cage).
Marvel USMC Shuts Down (Hell's Angels).
Sons of Anarchy (Marilyn Manson Jailed, Twiggy Ramirez Free).
The Spy Who Loved Me (It's Not Merely Physical, Joshua Moen).
Russian-Jewish Medicine (McHale's Navy, the Film, TV Show Too).
Autism Speaks Rights (Labor Programs Halted and Reversed, For Down's and Lobotomies).
Mad Pride (Masturbation Returned to Mental Illness Community).
Apple Shutdown (MUSH Removed, Spies on Shareware Now Illegal).
Adderral (Not For Self-Defense, Sorry B-Rock, You're the Machines).
MI-6 Bellevue (Snitched, "Gotham"' BD Wong Wasn't Gay, You Stole His Daughter for Porn and Prostitution).
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