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#josh exley
telltaleclerk · 1 year
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You’re gonna tell me Arthur Dales and Josh Exley weren’t in love? 🙄 Pff. Ok.
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niennaofnumenor · 9 months
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another-dumb-user · 2 years
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Just finished watching the X-Files episode, The Unnatural, and my god! Josh Exley and Arthur Dales!! The power of love and baseball!! I am frothing at the mouth! Such a good episode
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iron-sides · 2 days
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yeah art maybe worry moreabt the kkk who are alive and well in ur town than josh exleys secretly being an alien
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faronnorth · 1 year
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so arthur dales (not the one in florida) was in love with josh exley and i will hear NO arguments about it
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thatabitcryptic · 3 years
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Shout out to the best x files character I hope he’s having a good day
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mistsofavalon13 · 5 years
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So I just watched the baseball episode of the x files, and I gotta say ... Arthur and Josh?? That was some wholesome gay shit right there
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roadworkaheadyea · 6 years
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You’ve heard of the Roswell Greys but get ready for the Roswell Gays
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sleevesareforlosers · 2 years
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'i hit a home run tonight. number 61. thats a record' with that liitle smile and the tears in his eyes okay SOBBING
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halfsizehellboy · 3 years
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okay you can tell me that dudes can be friends all you want, but officer arthur dale and josh exley were dating
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tripolarcher · 3 years
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Just rewatched the unnatural and yes !! trans coded josh exley and they were definitely in love that is all
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incomingalbatross · 5 years
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The X-Files episode “The Unnatural” is a delight just on principle, but I spotted something while rewatching that made it even better.
Josh Exley, an alien, is explaining how he defected from his native culture because he fell in love with baseball:
JOSH EXLEY: I tell you, when I saw that baseball game being played this laughter just... it just rose up out of me. You know, the sound the ball makes when it hits the bat? YOUNG ARTHUR DALES: (smiling) Yeah. JOSH EXLEY: It was like music to me. You know, the smell of the grass, 11 men-- first unnecessary thing I ever done in my life and I fell in love. I didn't know the unnecessary could feel so good. You know, the game was meaningless but it seemed to mean everything to me. It was useless, but perfect. YOUNG ARTHUR DALES: Yeah, like, uh... like a rose. JOSH EXLEY: Yeah, yeah, yeah, like a rose. See? You can get it, Arthur. You're a fan.
Compare, if you will:
“What a lovely thing a rose is!" He walked past the couch to the open window and held up the drooping stalk of a moss-rose, looking down at the dainty blend of crimson and green. It was a new phase of his character to me, for I had never before seen him show any keen interest in natural objects. "There is nothing in which deduction is so necessary as religion," said he, leaning with his back against the shutters. "It can be built up as an exact science by the reasoner. Our highest assurance of the goodness of Providence seems to me to rest in the flowers. All other things, our powers, our desires, our food, are all really necessary for our existence in the first instance. But this rose is an extra. Its smell and its color are an embellishment of life, not a condition of it. It is only goodness which gives extras, and so I say again that we have much to hope from the flowers.”
--Sherlock Holmes, in “The Adventure of the Naval Treaty”
And I know, of course, that a rose isn’t exactly an uncommon example of this point, so it may not have been on purpose... But Josh and Holmes are talking about the two things in the same way. And I really love the implication that, consciously or not, baseball hit this alien as unexpected and powerful evidence of a benevolent Creator.
(And whether it was intended or not, I think Confirmed Holmes Fan Mulder would notice the correlation as well. So that’s fun.)
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msclaritea · 2 years
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Saikat Chakrabarti set up the small dollar donation scheme that allows Bernie and The Squad to avoid disclosing who funds them, and he learned how at Stripe, a Silicon Valley credit card processor funded by Peter Thiel.
Bernie and The Squad have received ~$300m in credit card donations of less than $200 each, conveniently evading disclosure requirements. Is someone with knowledge of credit card processing and fraud detection helping them disguise illicit funds? Enter Chakrabarti and Stripe.
Stripe is a Silicon Valley company founded by Patrick Collison in 2010. It began as a credit card processing company similar to PayPal. Peter Thiel was Stripe’s first investor in July 2010 when no one else was interested, and the “PayPal Mafia” has pumped millions into Stripe.
Stripe founder Patrick Collison worships Peter Thiel and both of them are followers of Tyler Cowen, who runs a Koch-funded, libertarian think tank. Thiel and Collison also share the view that the financial system needs to be destroyed and replaced with cryptocurrency.
Thiel’s early investment in Stripe and ideological alignment with Collison give Thiel influence over Stripe. Stripe is currently valued at $100 billion and expanding into cryptocurrency. Other early Stripe investors include Musk, Josh Kushner and Russian oligarch Yuri Milner.
In March 2011, Thiel and Elon Musk helped Stripe raise $2m, allowing Stripe to hire new software developers Saikat Chakrabarti, Ross Boucher and Sheena Pakanati, all of whom were friends and would end up leaving Stripe as a group in May 2013 just as they arrived in March 2011.
Thiel invested in Stripe again in July 2012, allowing it to hire ActBlue founder, Benjamin Rahn. Rahn helped Stripe dominate the market for credit card donations in the 2016 election, and is said to have introduced Chakrabarti to Rahn’s friend and former colleague, Zack Exley.
In March 2013, Zack Exley returned from a trip to Russia and began looking for software developers and other volunteers to help him set up what would become Justice Democrats. Exley said his plan would rely on small dollar credit card donations and lax campaign finance laws.
In May 2013, Chakrabarti, Pakanati and Boucher all suddenly quit Stripe. We do not know whether they joined Exley immediately after leaving Stripe, but we do know that Chakrabarti and Pakanati began developing software for organizing political campaigns after leaving Stripe.
In 2015, Zack Exley joined the Bernie 2016 campaign as head of organizing and named Chakrabarti head of technology. In subsequent interviews, Exley and Chakrabarti have told a series of conflicting stories about how they came to work together.
Exley and Chakrabarti both claim Saikat joined the Bernie campaign in September 2015 but, in May 2015, Chakrabarti, Pakanati and Boucher began making strange small dollar donations to the Bernie campaign. Were these test donations to see how they would be recorded by the FEC?
After the Bernie campaign cratered in 2016, Exley and Chakrabarti formally launched the group that would become Justice Democrats, which Exley and an unnamed group of volunteers had been working on since 2013.
Chakrabarti set up an elaborate scheme using limited liability companies that allowed Justice Dems to obscure what they spent their money on in addition to where that money came from in the first place. Saikat’s friend from Stripe, Ross Boucher, created the Justice Dem website.
We know Thiel backed Justice Democrat Ro Khanna way back in 2011 just like he paid for Stripe to hire Saikat Chakrabarti way back in 2011. Is this all a coincidence or is Thiel one of the architects of the Justice Democrats’ plan to undermine the Democratic Party?
About Justice Dem Watch: I started keeping watch over AOC and Justice Dems one year ago because of their connections to Bernie Sanders, who is supported by Russia. So I figured maybe Justice Democrats were supported by Russia as well. What I’ve discovered has been shocking.
First, I did a ton of background research on Justice Democrats, their staff and their candidates, starting with their Twitter activity. Most of them had either deleted their old accounts or changed their handles to hide their past activity, but I pieced most of that together.
We’ve been told Justice Democrats was conceived in 2016 by Bernie staffers while working on Bernie’s campaign, but that’s a lie. I’ve learned they’ve been working on black ops to set the stage for Bernie and Justice Dems since 2011. Occupy Wall Street was one of those black ops.
Thread: Ro Khanna and the PayPal Mafia Ro Khanna was the very first Justice Democrat in Congress and he got there with significant support from Peter Thiel and the PayPal Mafia. Why would a far-right lunatic like Peter Thiel support Ro Khanna? 
Peter Thiel is a Silicon Valley billionaire who founded PayPal with fellow “PayPal Mafia” members, Elon Musk and Reid Hoffman. In 2009, Thiel announced his libertarian philosophy, saying freedom and democracy are incompatible and women shouldn’t be allowed to vote.
Peter Thiel and Ro Khanna are both acolytes of Tyler Cowen, who runs the Koch-funded Mercatus Center libertarian think tank. Cowen, Thiel and Khanna share the view that America has stagnated since the 1920s which, of course, Thiel attributes to women being allowed to vote.
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wineanddinosaur · 3 years
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Steven McEnrue, General Manager of Brooklyn’s Beloved Metropolitan Bar, Is Steering the ‘Mothership of Brooklyn Nightlife’
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Gay bars play a specific role in local and cultural ecosystems. As community hubs, safe spaces, and centers of political organizing, these important venues have provided a shelter for communities that are constantly under threat. Among New York City’s many LGBTQ+ watering holes, few are as universally beloved as Metropolitan Bar in Williamsburg, Brooklyn. As the longest-surviving gay bar in Williamsburg, Metropolitan — often affectionately referred to as “Metro” — has showcased nearly every drag performer and nightlife creature in the borough and beyond, from baby queens to the world’s most esteemed talent. The bar and nightclub is both a tight-knit family of gender rebels and queer punks and a living, breathing symbol of queer resilience.
Steven McEnrue has been Metro’s general manager for over a decade. His guidance has shaped the more boundary-pushing style of performing now known, for better or worse, as “Brooklyn drag.” More than an event curator, McEnrue is helping steer Metro into the future, as he makes sure this mainstay survives yet another political storm.
VinePair caught up with McEnrue for a chat about the history of his establishment, the most blissful moments of the bar’s existence, the socio-political function of the gay bar, and the future of nightlife.
1. Can you tell us a little bit about the history of Metro and how you got involved?
Metro has been here since 2002 — we’re definitely Williamsburg’s oldest gay bar. No one is exactly 100 percent clear on the date we opened but it was sometime around Halloween or early November. It was opened by a gentleman named Troy Carson, who currently manages The Rosemont.
I started working here in January 2007. I started as a bartender, and then I ended up getting more shifts — because, well, the stars aligned! No one ever really seems to leave here. I just busted my ass working for Troy and he offered me a management position after a while. I was his right-hand man. He left town for a few years, and when he left I took over as GM and I’ve been here for 15 years now. I have complete creative control of what happens here. I’m rarely ever told what I need to do. I just bring in parties, bring in the money, and they leave me alone.
2. What’s been the curatorial philosophy that has guided your choice of promoters and parties? Is there a guiding philosophy or aesthetic in mind?
I’ve learned from a lot of drag queens. They hustle! They’ll be here at 7, somewhere else at 9, and another place at 11. As long as it’s not a party that competes with mine, theme-wise — or as long as they’re not the headliner here — then I’m totally OK with them going somewhere else after. I’ve been in the scene for a long time. 15 years!
When I first got here I was very starry-eyed. I ended up in circles with Ladyfag and Amanda Lepore and Rainblow and Little Josh and all them. When [the now-shuttered gay bar] Sugarland opened, that’s where I met people like Miz Jade, Thorgy, Misty Meaner and Mocha Lite — all these people who have been in the scene for a very long time had all gotten their start there. I tend to gravitate towards them, but I try as best as I can to reach out to new people and to give opportunities to people I haven’t worked with before. The problem is that I tend to be pretty loyal to people, so they tend to stick around for a while.
We’ve had live music, too. We had [rapper] Will Sheridan throwing events for a while. I was doing Richard Cortez and his quartet, too — it was live jazz, once a week. I’m trying to bring that back. There’s been other nights with live bands, but not as often as I’d like. I’ve had a year off, so there’s a lot of ideas I have. The wheels have been spinning!
3. Pretty much every major drag performer that is internationally known has passed through this bar. What’s been your favorite performance or memory?
I had [nightlife promoter] Frankie Sharp in here doing Saturday nights for about six or seven years. He brought a whole different element here. There was one summer where we were bursting at the seams because every week we’d have a current-season “RuPaul’s Drag Race” girl come through here. It taught me a lot — it taught the business a lot — about what we can handle, what we can do. But a lot of these girls are booked by these super-big venues. For them, it’s like, “OK, the meet and greet is at this time, performance at this time, show up at this time.” As opposed to here, where I’m like, “There’s no meet and greet, just show up, say hi, have some drinks.” Sometimes, they don’t want to do that, but the ones that do… [ RuPaul’s Drag Race Season 11 winner] Yvie Oddly was just hanging out ‘til close. Valentina’s been here, too. She did three numbers. This place was packed to the brim. The AC wasn’t working. It was hot as hell. The floors were wet ‘cause drinks were flying everywhere. And she comes out in this long, beautiful white gown. And the look on her face — she was mortified. She was inching along. We were trying to move everyone out of the way. We had to mop the stage.
4. What roles do you feel that bars play in LGBTQ+ culture?
History-wise, they’ve been a safe place for people to come to. I know that for a while there was this whole buzz — people were saying that with dating apps, gay people weren’t going to want to go out. I don’t think that’s the case at all. I think everything has its ups and downs, and ebb and flow. I think gay bars will always be around. People have learned that they want to be social. Even if some people would prefer to stay home, other people are still going to want to go out, rub elbows, get face time. And gay bars have always provided a safe place for people. I know that here, we have a community.
5. Within NYC, Metro has become known as a home for what’s sometimes pejoratively discussed as Brooklyn drag. What do you think about this debate? Is there a difference between Brooklyn drag and other types of drag?
Well, I think it’s rather silly, because if we’ve seen one thing it’s that Manhattan queens have really started paying attention to Brooklyn queens. Brooklyn queens are really starting to get booked out there, too. Brooklyn drag started off very, very raw. Very… I don’t even know the word for it. It wasn’t polished, I guess you could say. But these girls have been at it for years. You have these girls now — the looks are phenomenal, the makeup skills, the outfits, the performances. But there are other girls that are OK with being more raw. That’s the act. In Brooklyn, you really get a buffet. I don’t think there’s a community or venues even open to more avant-garde performances in Manhattan. They’re not as interested in things that are more out of the box.
6. A debate in the drinks world has developed around whether gay bars will embrace upscale-cocktail and higer-end mixology culture or not. It’s obvious Metro has stuck with the dive bar vibe, but had you ever considered going another route?
I’ve worked in places in the past where you get those fancy cocktails. The Exley is a gay bar in the neighborhood that serves fancy cocktails, and they’re wonderful! They’re a much smaller venue, so it works well for them. For us to do a fancy cocktail here — I mean, if someone asked us for a Mojito — we wouldn’t be able to serve as fast, and we’re a really busy bar. I love fancy cocktails, I enjoy them. But if someone orders a Manhattan here, we’re all like, “Ugh! Now I have to spend an extra minute on this.” But I want people to get what they want to drink. If someone wants a Long Island Iced Tea, fine. If you want to order a Manhattan when there’s a line 10 people deep, you do it. But we mostly just don’t have the time for that here.
I think in the past there was a cultural tendency towards not being interested in those kinds of drinks. But I’ve noticed that now that we have table service due to Covid regulations, people are not just ordering vodka sodas — they’re ordering lots of Martinis, lots of Manhattans, lots of Cosmos. They’re asking for Mojitos, Daiquiris, frozen drinks. And that was not the case before. I don’t know what it will be like when everyone’s walking in again. The table service is changing things. [The customers] have a second to think about what they want instead of just ordering the first thing that comes to mind.
7. What do you think the future of nightlife or gay bars looks like?
I’m never going to be someone that says New York is dead. Even when everyone was saying New York was dead — like in the early aughts — it wasn’t dead. New York nightlife is never dead, it’s just evolving, and it’s going to go through this multiple times. It’s true, a lot of people left and peoples’ priorities are different coming out of Covid. But I think moving forward, it’s hard to predict what the beast is going to be. The thing that everyone I hear talking about is that they can’t imagine partying until 4 a.m. again. Getting home at midnight, having some cocktails at the house and then going to bed? It’s not too bad of a life. I think people are going to take care of themselves in different ways. But I think the scene’s going to do just fine.
8. What do you love most about working at Metro?
I put a lot of time and energy into this place, and what I love is the results I’ve gotten. I love the people that come in. I love the people that work here. The performers that have come through here and the way they have treated me — they’ve all been so wonderful to me. Maybe I see it through rose-colored glasses. I feel the burden of responsibility because this place has a history. People call it the mothership of Brooklyn nightlife. I feel like I’m part of something bigger. And that makes me love this place. I love the fact that people enjoy it so much, and the outpouring of love and support we’ve gotten since reopening has reaffirmed how important a place like this is — how important every gay bar is to the community, and to each clientele it serves.
The article Steven McEnrue, General Manager of Brooklyn’s Beloved Metropolitan Bar, Is Steering the ‘Mothership of Brooklyn Nightlife’ appeared first on VinePair.
source https://vinepair.com/articles/steven-mcenrue-metropolitan-bar-brooklyn/
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