Monday, May 16, 2016

Fear the Walking Dead




JOURNAL ARCHIVE: November 06, 2007

JOURNAL ARCHIVE: 11/06/07 2:44 AM
When I wake up, as I have on many occasions, and realize I am holding a knife in my hand, which I was not holding when I went to sleep, I wonder what I was dreaming about.


[JOURNAL ARCHIVE 06 November 2007 excerpt ends]





JOURNAL ARCHIVE: 10/01/08 2:44 PM
What the hell must I have been dreaming about that makes me realize I am clenching a knife in my hand when I wake up.


[JOURNAL ARCHIVE 01 October 2008 excerpt ends]










http://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/ws/index.php?pid=105195

The American Presidency Project

Barack Obama

XLIV President of the United States: 2009 - present

375 - The President's Weekly Address

May 17, 2014


We know business owners don't seek out crumbling roads and bridges and backed-up supply chains. They set up shop where the newest, fastest, most convenient transportation and communications networks let them invent and sell goods made in America to the rest of the world as fast as possible.










http://www.seattlepi.com/local/science/article/Can-Bellevue-s-Intellectual-Ventures-invent-its-7465031.php

seattle pi - Seattle Post-Intelligencer


Can Bellevue's Intellectual Ventures invent its way to redemption?

By JAKE ELLISON, SEATTLEPI.COM STAFF Updated 3:44 pm, Sunday, May 15, 2016

When Nathan Myhrvold and Edward Jung, both of Microsoft lore, created the invention- and patent-centric company Intellectual Ventures in 2000, they burst onto the scene firing both lawyers and gunning for the competition ... or that's certainly the way it appeared to many in the tech and science worlds.

They amassed a treasure trove of intellectual property and quickly got the reputation of shaking down the very people — inventors — they said they wanted to help.


That's the set up.

The company has taken a public lashing, weathered the criticism and now hopes to become the catalyst for a business revolution in solving problems through invention. But what problems?

"The easy problems have been solved," Jung said. "The kind of problem that you, yourself, can walk around in nature and figure out, immediately invent something on the spot and build it, those pretty much are solved problems. And if there are problems that can be solved by, let's say, a single researcher, a single inventor, a single company, those all get solved too."

What are the problems that remain?

"They are bigger ones, like infectious disease. ... That's a big problem. We look at things like urbanization. We look at things like the total expanse of what happens in this digital age." he said. "They are bigger problems than single companies can solve. We need to get much, much better at building systems for how to deal with those problems. They are the ones that remain."

What makes Jung and his crew at IV think they can make this kind of heady progress in the world of invention (aside from having "40,000 IP assets in active monetization programs" and talented lawyers)?

"11 of America's top 50 inventors currently work with IV," their website states. That includes America's most patented inventor, Lowell Wood. As Bloomberg wrote late last year:

"He's not terribly good with the ordinary aspects of life—paying bills, say, or car washing. He's too consumed with inventing solutions to the world's problems. Ideas—really big ideas—keep bombarding his mind. 'It's like the rain forest,' he says. 'Every afternoon, the rains come.' "


Speaking of tools, here are a couple of good tool quotes that reflect IV's nerdiness:

Johanson said IV built up a "staff with a lot of folks who don't just pick up a thing and try to figure out what it's designed to do. We pick up a thing and figure out what we can make it do. Which I think is a different view on the world and helps enable a lot of things that we do around here."










JOURNAL ARCHIVE: Posted by H.V.O.M at 2:24 PM Tuesday, October 07, 2008


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Copyright_infringement

Copyright infringement

'Copyright infringement' (or copyright violation) is the unauthorized use of material that is covered by copyright law, in a manner that violates one of the copyright owner's exclusive rights, such as the right to reproduce or perform the copyrighted work, or to make derivative works.



First element: establishing ownership of a valid copyright

A plaintiff establishes ownership by authorship (by the plaintiff itself or by one who assigned rights to the plaintiff) of (1) an original work of authorship that is (2) fixed in a tangible medium (e.g. a book or musical recording). Registration is not required for copyright itself, but in most cases is a jurisdictional requirement to bring the suit. Registration is also useful because it gives rise to the presumption of a valid copyright, and eliminates the innocent infringement defense, and (if timely made) it allows the plaintiff to elect statutory damages, and be eligible for a possible award of attorney fees.

Works that are not sufficiently original, or which constitute facts, a method or process cannot enjoy copy protection.. U.S. Courts do not recognize the "sweat of the brow" doctrine


[JOURNAL ARCHIVE 07 October 2008 excerpt ends]











































Trolls are as lame-oid as DJs .jpg










From 10/28/1994 ( premiere US film "Stargate" ) To 5/17/2014 is 7141 days

From 11/2/1965 ( my birth date in Antlers Oklahoma USA and my birthdate as the known official United States Marshal Kerry Wayne Burgess and active duty United States Marine Corps officer ) To 5/22/1985 ( premiere US film "Rambo: First Blood Part II" ) is 7141 days



From 10/28/1994 ( premiere US film "Stargate" ) To 5/17/2014 is 7141 days

From 11/2/1965 ( my birth date in Antlers Oklahoma USA and my birthdate as the known official United States Marshal Kerry Wayne Burgess and active duty United States Marine Corps officer ) To 5/22/1985 ( premiere US film "A View to a Kill" ) is 7141 days



From 11/22/1989 ( premiere US film "Back to the Future Part II" ) To 5/17/2014 is 8942 days

8942 = 4471 + 4471

From 11/2/1965 ( my birth date in Antlers Oklahoma USA and my birthdate as the known official United States Marshal Kerry Wayne Burgess and active duty United States Marine Corps officer ) To 1/29/1978 ( Tim McCoy deceased ) is 4471 days



From 3/16/1991 ( my first successful major test of my ultraspace matter transportation device as Kerry Wayne Burgess the successful Ph.D. graduate Columbia South Carolina ) To 5/17/2014 is 8463 days

From 11/2/1965 ( my birth date in Antlers Oklahoma USA and my birthdate as the known official United States Marshal Kerry Wayne Burgess and active duty United States Marine Corps officer ) To 1/3/1989 ( Ronald Reagan - Message to the Congress Transmitting Proposed Whistleblower Protection Legislation ) is 8463 days





http://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/ws/index.php?pid=105195

The American Presidency Project

Barack Obama

XLIV President of the United States: 2009 - present

375 - The President's Weekly Address

May 17, 2014

Hi, everybody. At a time when our businesses have created 9.2 million new jobs in just over 4 years and more companies are considering bringing jobs back from to foreign countries overseas, we have a choice to make: We can make it easier for businesses to invest in America, or we can make it harder.

I want to work with Congress to create jobs and opportunity for more Americans. But where Congress won't act, I will. And I want to talk about three things we're doing right now.

First, we're helping more businesses bring jobs to America from overseas. Three years ago, my administration created SelectUSA, a team of people in Embassies abroad and agencies here at home focused on insourcing instead of outsourcing. Today, they're helping a Belgian company create jobs in Oklahoma. They're helping a Canadian company create jobs in Kansas. In my State of the Union Address, I asked more businesses to do their part. And this week, business leaders from across the country are coming here to the White House to discuss new investments that will create even more jobs.

Second, on Thursday, I'll be heading to Cooperstown, New York, home of the Baseball Hall of Fame, to talk about tourism. Because believe it or not, tourism is an export. And if we make it easier for more foreign visitors to visit and spend money at America's attractions and unparalleled national parks, that helps local businesses and grows the economy for everyone.

Finally, we know that investing in first-class infrastructure attracts first-class jobs. And I want to spend a minute on this, because it's very important this year.

We know business owners don't seek out crumbling roads and bridges and backed-up supply chains. They set up shop where the newest, fastest, most convenient transportation and communications networks let them invent and sell goods made in America to the rest of the world as fast as possible.

Here's the problem: If Congress doesn't act by the end of this summer, Federal funding for transportation projects will run out. States might have to put some of their projects on hold. In fact, some already are, because they're worried Congress won't clear up its own gridlock. And if Congress fails to act, nearly 700,000 jobs would be at risk over the next year.

That's why I put forward a plan to rebuild our transportation infrastructure in a more responsible way. It would support millions of jobs across the country. And we'd pay for it without adding to the deficit by closing wasteful tax loopholes for companies that ship jobs overseas.

Now, the Republicans in Congress seem to have very different priorities. Not only have they neglected to prevent this funding from running out, their proposal would actually cut by 80 percent a job-creating grant program that has funded high-priority transportation projects in all 50 States. And they can't say it's to save money, because at the very same time, they voted for trillions of dollars in new tax cuts, weighted towards those at the very top.

Think about that. Instead of putting people to work on projects that would grow the economy for everyone, they voted to give a huge tax cut to households making more than a million dollars a year. So while Congress decides what it's going to do, I'll keep doing what I can on my own. On Wednesday, I was in New York where workers are building the area's first large, new bridge in 50 years. And they're doing it ahead of schedule. Three years ago, I took action without Congress to fast-track the permitting process for major projects. Normally, it would have taken 3 to 5 years to permit that bridge in New York. We did it in a year and a half. And I announced a new plan to cut redtape and speed up the process for even more projects across the country.

All these steps will make it easier for businesses to invest in America and create more good jobs. All of them can be done without Congress. But we could do a lot more if Congress was willing to help. In the meantime, I'll do whatever I can, not just to make America a better place to do business, but to make sure hard work pays off and opportunity is open to all.

Thanks, and have a great weekend.

NOTE: The address was recorded at approximately 3:20 p.m. on May 15 in the Grand Foyer at the White House for broadcast on May 17. The transcript was made available by the Office of the Press Secretary on May 16, but was embargoed for release until 6 a.m. on May 17.










http://www.dictionary.com/browse/conspire

Dictionary.com


conspire

to agree together, especially secretly, to do something wrong, evil, or illegal










http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0090264/quotes

IMDb


A View to a Kill (1985)

Quotes


Max Zorin: If you're the best they've got, they're more likely try and cover up your embarrassing incompetence.

James Bond: Don't count on it, Zorin.

Max Zorin: [laughs] Ha ha, you amuse me, Mr. Bond.

James Bond: It's not mutual.










http://www.stargate-sg1-solutions.com/wiki/Stargate:_The_Movie_Transcript

STARGATE WIKI


Stargate: The Movie (1994)


O'NEIL
Your job here is to realign the Stargate. Can you do that or not?

[Daniel nods, then shrugs.]

DANIEL
I can't.

[The three look stunned.]

O'NEIL
(threateningly)
You can't or you won't?










http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0090264/releaseinfo

IMDb


A View to a Kill (1985)

Release Info

USA 22 May 1985 (San Francisco, California) (premiere)



http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0090264/fullcredits

IMDb


A View to a Kill (1985)

Full Cast & Crew

Roger Moore ... James Bond










http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0089880/releaseinfo

IMDb


Rambo: First Blood Part II (1985)

Release Info

USA 22 May 1985



http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0089880/fullcredits

IMDb


Rambo: First Blood Part II (1985)

Full Cast & Crew

Sylvester Stallone ... Rambo










http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0111282/releaseinfo

IMDb


Stargate (1994)

Release Info

USA 28 October 1994










http://articles.latimes.com/1989-11-12/entertainment/ca-1979_1_future-ii

Los Angeles Times


Back to the Hype

November 12, 1989 Sue Martin \f7

Universal's got a lot riding on its big fall release "Back to the Future II"--due out Nov. 22. The original "Back to the Future" (1985), you'll recall, grossed over $200 million domestically. So promo for "II" is already upon us:

* Three impressive billboards--two here, one in N.Y.C.'s Times Square--are up, with giant digital clocks counting back the hours until the film opens. (It gets an early premiere Nov. 20 at the Universal City Cinemas to benefit Tripod, a nonprofit organization for hearing-impaired children.)

* "BTTF II" digital desk clocks went out to the press back around Labor Day. Other promotional tie-ins on tap: Futuristic sunglasses for $1.99 with certain Pizza Hut orders; DeLorean car models (microsize $2.49, a radio-controlled car for $49.99 and a battery-operated, drivable one for $159) from Toys 'R' Us, which will also have T-shirts, baseball caps and a skateboard; and models of futuristic Texaco gas stations based on one seen in the film--offered at Texaco stations, natch.

* An official "Back to the Future" fan club, run by the same folks who operate the authorized Lucasfilm and "Star Trek" clubs. For $9.95, you get a magazine, logo patch, photo and stickers.

* The novelization, with an initial print run of 400,000-plus copies, hit book stores late last month.










http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0096874/quotes

IMDb


Back to the Future Part II (1989)

Quotes


Match: [grabbing Marty] Sonny, we can do this the *easy* way or the *hard* way!










http://articles.latimes.com/1989-11-20/entertainment/ca-92_1_future-part-ii

Los Angeles Times


'Back to the Future'--Filming in Double Time : Movies: Two sequels to the megahit that took in $358 million at the box office are coming to the present. The first opens this week; the second is scheduled for summer.

November 20, 1989 ELAINE DUTKA TIMES STAFF WRITER

"Synchronize your watches," proclaims the massive billboard hovering over the Sunset Strip, keeping a vigil on the number of hours, minutes and seconds remaining until the release of "Back to the Future Part II," a follow-up to the top-grossing film of 1985.

Similar billboards have been counting down in Universal City and in New York City's Times Square. There is no name identification. Just the familiar image of Michael J. Fox, who, as the adolescent time traveler Marty McFly, helped sell $358 million worth of tickets worldwide for Universal Pictures.

A payoff like that begs for a sequel, and now, after a 4-year wait, Universal has not one but two sequels, shot back to back and scheduled for release within six months of each other.

"Back to the Future Part II," which takes Marty, his girlfriend Jennifer (Elisabeth Shue) and wild-eyed Doc Brown (Christopher Lloyd) to the year 2015, opens Wednesday; "Back to the Future Part III," set mostly in the Old West, is set to surface at the beginning of next summer. The studio has yet to determine plans for the release of the sequels' videos.

The price tag for the two is about $80 million, which director Robert Zemeckis acknowledges is $10 million to $15 million less than if they'd been shot separately, but still more than twice the industry average.

"Doing both at the same time was quite a risk," said Tom Pollock, president of Universal Pictures. "It was much more expensive initially . . . like laying out the money for four films at once."

Zemeckis and co-producer/screenwriter Bob Gale, faced with a "floodgate of ideas," pitched the two-sequel idea to the studio last fall.

"It seemed an audacious, insane proposal on the face of it," said Gale, "but it made sense economically and creatively. No sets had to be reassembled, no schedules coordinated three years down the line. And since Michael had to play a high school kid, waiting the few years it usually takes for a studio to mount a big special-effects movie would have been pushing the outside of the envelope."

"Part II" begins where the original left off. "It's your kids, Marty. Something's gotta be done about your kids," warned Doc Brown--and Marty and Jennifer, zooming off in the DeLorean time capsule, take his words to heart. What they encounter is neither Orwellian nor Lucas-like, but rather a humorously depressing picture of their middle-aged selves . . . and, later on, the specter of an "alternate 1985" in which greed and environmental neglect have run amok.

"We decided there was no way we could predict the future accurately," Gale noted, "so we decided to have some fun with it."

What surfaced was a true modern-day fantasy, a world in which the Cubs win the pennant and the justice system (devoid of lawyers) works well. Sight gags and inside jokes abound. "Surf Vietnam," reads one travel poster. Playing at the local theater is " 'Jaws 19,' directed by Max Spielberg."

A trailer with highlights of "Part III" is tacked onto the end. "Depending on what happens with this one, it's either the world's most brilliant marketing ploy or the most audacious affront," said Fox, talking by phone from the Northern California set where "Part III" is still in production. "It could be perceived as presumptuous, but the last thing Bob Zemeckis wants is for people to think he phoned this one in. He's a great 'You ain't seen nothing yet' kind of guy."

The two Bobs have collaborated ever since their days at USC Film School, sharing screenplay credit on three Zemeckis films--"Used Cars," "I Wanna Hold Your Hand" and "Back to the Future"--as well as on Steven Spielberg's "1941." "Bob G. is the thinker, the strategist," Fox explained. "Bob Z. is the doer, the one who takes the seeds that have been planted and reads even more into them than originally intended."

Zemeckis said that doing a sequel was the furthest thing from his mind when he and Gale knocked out the first "Back to the Future" draft in 1981. The project, originally developed at Columbia, had been turned down by every major studio, and prospects for getting it to the big screen were dim.

"It was before 'E.T.,' " said Gale, "and no one was sure there was a market for a 'sweet' film. Everyone told us to take it to Disney, which, in the pre-Eisner-and-Katzenberg days, wasn't up for a film about a romance between this kid and his mother."

A month after his "Romancing the Stone" took off at the box office in 1984, Zemeckis' time-warp comedy got the green light from Universal. When the studio asked him to do the sequel, however, the director had second thoughts.

"I didn't know if I wanted to re-enter Back-to-the-Futureland," said Zemeckis, from the Jamestown, Calif., location. "But it became clear that the train was going to leave the station whether I was on it or not. Better to have some control and be faithful to the original, I figured, than to turn my back and walk away."



http://articles.latimes.com/1989-11-20/entertainment/ca-92_1_future-part-ii/2

Los Angeles Times


(Page 2 of 2)

'Back to the Future'--Filming in Double Time : Movies: Two sequels to the megahit that took in $358 million at the box office are coming to the present. The first opens this week; the second is scheduled for summer.

November 20, 1989 ELAINE DUTKA TIMES STAFF WRITER

But the train wouldn't go anywhere, he insisted, until he squeezed in at least one other project. That project turned out to be "Who Framed Roger Rabbit," the No. 1 film of 1988.

There was no master plan or grand design for the trilogy, he said, just a determination not to clone the original.

"We saw this as a saga, along the lines of 'Godfather II' and the 'Star Wars' films," Zemeckis said. "The same characters, the same town seen through different times. The thought of going back into the first movie and shooting the same scenes from a different perspective excited us. My challenge as a film maker was to redefine this thing they call sequel ."

Zemeckis calls "Back to the Future II" his toughest shoot yet. The script calls for the actors to play several characters in the same shot, necessitating elaborate and precise camerawork. (In one scene, Fox plays three roles at once: Marty at 47 and his teen-age children--one boy and one remarkably attractive girl).

Shooting one film while in post-production on another also doubled the director's workload. In between shots of "Part III," he'd head for his mobile editing room to work on "Part II." During a recent stretch, Zemeckis shot one movie from 6 a.m. until sundown, then caught a plane to Burbank, where he did post-production work on the other until late into the night. He then checked into the Sheraton Universal, got up at 5 a.m and took the 50-minute flight back north.

Though admitting to fatigue, he downplayed the commute: "Only 10 minutes longer than it takes me to get from Santa Monica to Burbank at rush hour. And I got to sleep on the plane."

Fox too had his hands full. For six weeks, while filming of "Future" II overlapped the taping of the final season of TV's "Family Ties," he worked days at Paramount playing Alex Keaton and nights (until 2 a.m.) at Universal playing Marty McFly. The birth of his son, Sam, in May compounded the intensity.

"I'm not the martyr I was five years ago when I juggled the two," he said. "Though I'm not known for throwing my weight around, when I'd get exhausted, I'd say, 'Go fire me.' If I'd tried that last time, I'd have lost both jobs. . . . The horrible thing is that we'll still be shooting when this one opens. If it bombs, I'll be there in Monument Valley, Utah, putting my hand to my head . . . 'Oh, my God!' "

Industry analysts, for the most part, don't think he has much to worry about. "The film has a built-in audience, the concept is easily transferable to a sequel, and some of the competition has been pushed back," said Jeffrey Logsdon, an analyst with Crowell, Weedon & Co. "People are keyed up and ready to go. It's the most anticipated film of the Christmas season."

Whatever the outcome, say Zemeckis and Universal executives, there will be no "Back to the Future Part IV." Entertainment lawyer Peter Dekom of Bloom, Dekom & Hergott, has heard that one before. "They say they'll close with this script . . . but that's only until they need revenues. They know it and so does everyone else."










http://articles.latimes.com/1989-11-12/news/mn-2032_1_thomas-jefferson

Los Angeles Times


Presidents Fret Over Acquiring Label of 'Wimp' : Politics: The accusation has been around since the time of Thomas Jefferson, but recent Presidents seem to have gone to an extreme of 'compulsive masculinity.'

November 12, 1989 MIKE FEINSILBER ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON — Wimp-baiting has been a factor in American politics since early in the republic's history, and the result has been a "compulsive masculinity" among recent Presidents, says a professor who has studied the wimp factor in history.

The wimp theme has persisted since Thomas Jefferson, who was called "womanish," through Martin Van Buren, who was accused of wearing corsets and taking too many baths, and George Bush, who had to battle what Newsweek magazine called "The Wimp Factor" in a 1988 cover story that asked if he could overcome it.

Adlai E. Stevenson III, the Democrats' candidate against war hero Dwight D. Eisenhower in 1952 and 1956, was called "Adelade," and Walter F. Mondale, who ran against Ronald Reagan in 1984, had to confront bumper stickers that said "Mondale Eats Quiche." Quiche is considered wimp food, unsuitable for manly presidential palates. Ask Bush, who made a campaign point of eating manly pork rinds, their cholesterol count be damned.

Bruce Curtis, who teaches American thought and language at Michigan State University, says in an age that is less muscular than the past, Presidents have felt obliged to reveal themselves as tough and their opponents as sissies.

"Now that the ideal masculine man is further removed from reality than ever, many nostalgic men, and not a few nostalgic women, demand that our public leaders appear more masculine than ever," he says in an article in the November issue of American Heritage.

The result, he says, is for politicians to assert their virility.

Thus, he says, no President has been more "earthily vulgar" than Lyndon B. Johnson, who ridiculed opponents of his Vietnam policies as "nervous Nellies."

Richard M. Nixon reached for a pugilistic metaphor to describe his "kitchen debate" with Nikita S. Khrushchev, saying he felt he had been "up against a bare-knuckle slugger who had gouged, kneed and kicked."

"Even Jimmy Carter, among recent Presidents seemingly the least driven by machismo, revealed during the 1988 campaign his susceptibility to its public demands by remarking that Bush seemed rather 'effeminate,' " Curtis noted.

In his day, Carter, too, was accused of acting like a wimp. In a famous mistake, the Boston Globe went to press in 1980 with an editorial bearing a prankish headline that had not been intended to see the light of day: "More Mush from the Wimp."

To offset perceived wimpishness, candidates often talk tough.

Bush bragged, the day after his 1984 vice presidential debate with Geraldine A. Ferraro, that he had "kicked a little ass."

Teddy Roosevelt, outraged that Woodrow Wilson initially shied away from plunging America into World War I, said what Wilson had done was "to emasculate American manhood." Ronald Reagan, threatening to veto a bill if Congress sent it to him, borrowed a line from movie strongman Clint Eastwood: "Go ahead, make my day."

In the 19th Century, reformers were ridiculed as "namby-pamby, goody-goody gentlemen" who "sip cold tea." Andrew Jackson, the war hero and Indian fighter, described another politician as "Miss Nancy." Jefferson was called "womanish" because he "took counsel of his feelings and imagination."

Stevenson was "Adelade" to the New York Daily News, which also said he "used teacup words" and had the support of "Harvard lace-liberals" and "lace-panty diplomats."

The need to prove himself tough sent Michael S. Dukakis, the Democrats' presidential candidate last year, into a tank turret for the filming of a campaign commercial that backfired; Dukakis didn't look like he belonged there.

Bush fought to overcome "the wimp factor" although there was an occasional lapse. Once he was overheard saying he'd have "just another splash" of coffee.

Women in politics, like Ferraro or Rep. Patricia Schroeder (D-Colo.), who shed tears when she withdrew as a candidate for the Democratic presidential nomination in 1988, "are condemned no matter what they do," Curtis wrote.

"If gentle, they are womanish; if tough, they are not womanly. By tradition a female cannot be a courageous, charismatic, wise, effective leader as a woman."

"The point," concludes Curtis, "is not that the 'manly' characteristics of the myth--courage, assertiveness in the face of aggression, righteous defense of the weak--are undesirable or dangerous in themselves. The cinematic myth is dangerous because it is labeled 'for men only' and because it may be distorted and debased by actors on the public scene."










http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0089880/quotes

IMDb


Rambo: First Blood Part II (1985)

Quotes


Murdock: Who the hell do you think you're talking to, Trautman?

Trautman: A stinkin' bureaucrat who's tryin to cover his ass!

Murdock: No, not just mine Trautman. We're talkin' about a nation here! Besides, it was your hero's fault. Now if your warrior had gone in and done what the hell he was supposed to do, we'd be out of this clean and simple. He was just supposed to take pictures!










http://www.tv.com/shows/fear-the-walking-dead/sicut-cervus-3376764/

tv.com


Fear the Walking Dead Season 2 Episode 6

Sicut Cervus

Aired Sunday May 15, 2016 on AMC

AIRED: 5/15/16



http://www.springfieldspringfield.co.uk/view_episode_scripts.php?tv-show=fear-the-walking-dead-2015&episode=s02e06

Springfield! Springfield!


Fear The Walking Dead

Sicut Cervus


What the hell are you doing? Chris, get out! Get out!










http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0096874/quotes

IMDb


Back to the Future Part II (1989)

Quotes


Doc: The time-traveling is just too dangerous. Better that I devote myself to study the other great mystery of the universe: women!










http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0096874/releaseinfo

IMDb


Back to the Future Part II (1989)

Release Info

USA 22 November 1989










http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0096874/quotes

IMDb


Back to the Future Part II (1989)

Quotes


Biff Tannen Museum Narrator: Ladies and Gentlemen! Welcome to the Biff Tannen Museum! Dedicated to Hill Valley's #1 Citizen. And America's greatest living folk hero. The one and only Biff Tannen. Of course we've all heard the legend, but who is the man? Inside you will learn how Biff Tannen became one of the richest and most powerful men in America. Learn the amazing history of the Tannen family, starting with his great-grandfather, Buford 'Mad Dog' Tannen, fastest gun in the West. See Biff's humble beginnings and how a trip to the race track on his 21st Birthday made him a millionaire overnight. Share in the excitement of a fabulous winning streak that earned him the nickname "The Luckiest Man on Earth." Learn how Biff parlayed that lucky winning streak into the vast empire called Biffco. Discover how, in 1979, Biff successfully lobbied to legalize gambling and turned Hill Valley's dilapidated courthouse into a beautiful casino-hotel!

Biff Tannen: I just wanna say one thing! God Bless America.










http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0003706/bio

IMDb


Tim McCoy

Biography

Date of Birth 10 April 1891, Saginaw, Michigan, USA

Date of Death 29 January 1978, Raymond W. Bliss Army Hospital, Ft. Huachuca, Arizona, USA (congestive heart failure)

Birth Name Timothy John Fitzgerald McCoy


One of the great stars of early American Westerns.



https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tim_McCoy


Tim McCoy

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Timothy John Fitzgerald "Tim" McCoy (April 10, 1891 – January 29, 1978) was an American actor, military officer, and expert on American Indian life and customs.


Military career

McCoy was a soldier in the United States Army during World War I (although he did not serve in combat nor overseas) and again in World War II in Europe, rising to the rank of colonel with the Army Air Corps and Army Air Forces. He also served the state of Wyoming as its adjutant general between the wars with the brevet rank of brigadier general. At 28, he was one of the youngest brigadier generals in the history of the U.S. Army.

McCoy was a renowned expert in Indian sign language and was named "High Eagle" by the Arapaho tribe of the Wind River reservation.










JOURNAL ARCHIVE: Saturday, October 10, 2009 Posted by H.V.O.M at 11:34 PM


For Lily - Above and Beyond


[JOURNAL ARCHIVE 10 October 2009 except ends]










http://www.excite.com/tv/prog.jsp?id=MV000039410000&s=201605181100&sid=64312&sn=TCMHD&st=201605181100&cn=701

excite tv


The Double Man (1967)

701 TCMHD: Wednesday, May 18 11:00 AM [ 11:00 AM Wednesday 18 May 2016 Pacific Time USA ]

1967, NR, ***, 01:45, Color, English, United Kingdom, Made for TV

A CIA agent (Yul Brynner) is lured to the Alps and replaced in Washington by a look-alike Soviet spy.

Cast: Yul Brynner, Britt Ekland










From 9/27/2013 to 5/18/2016 is 964 days



From 7/9/1987 to 2/27/1990 is 964 days



- posted by H.V.O.M - Kerry Wayne Burgess 3:40 PM Pacific Time Spokane Valley Washington USA Monday 16 May 2016