Sunday, July 13, 2014

Sunday Globe Special: The Last Summer

In two ways. 

The first is because I believe this is actually THE YEAR. What one can deduce from recent events in the Middle East, in particular the Syria-Iraq situation and the recent Israeli genocide in Gaza, is that the final piece of the PNAC/Clean Break plan is being implemented. Africa had been largely occupied by EUSraeli forces and friendly regimes, and a recent overthrow of a pro-Russian regime in the Ukraine had enabled a foothold in a vital Near East region. In the Far East, China had effectively been contained, although they had managed to calm down the crises with AmeriKan allies as of late. Iraq was being broken up as demanded by protocol, and soon the ISIS insurgents and Kurdish components would be probing the Iranian frontier. 

By fall, 2014, a Persian Gulf provocation by unknown parties had produced a conflagration that would soon engulf the entire world (cue music, fade out).

The second is because I'm really not reading the Globe much at all anymore. It has gone from not reading the B-section to not reading the op-ed pages, then no longer reading the turn-ins. Now, I am no longer reading the world articles. Not because I don't care. I care very, very much. I just got to the point where I didn’t care to see the world through the Zionist Jew pri$m anymore. 

Jewishmediapic

Oh, I recognize a certain site in their somewhere (h/t). 

Sorry to have gone so sour on you, dear readers. There is only so much an individual can take when it comes to agenda-pushing, war-promoting, lying distortion and obfuscation, and endless division and omission, all frosted with a dose of eliti$t $upremaci$m in more ways than one. It's something I have been thinking about for a long time. Sorry to leave you out on a ledge.

"Drive-ins use creativity to convert to digital; Many drive-ins have creatively funded upgrades" by Patrick Whittle | Associated Press   July 13, 2014

SACO, Maine — Many in the movie industry feared the need to convert to digital could be the death knell for drive-in theaters, but drive-in operators are finding creative ways to afford the switch.

Wow, another urgent crisis engendering fear. Every page I flip.... (blog editor collapsed from fear fatigue)

Operators say more than 200 of the remaining 348 drive-ins in the country have made the expensive conversion from film to digital, which typically costs more than $70,000.

Theater owners say conversions escalated quickly in 2013 and will help keep the drive-ins in business for now — promising news for an industry that peaked in the 1950s and ’60s, with more than 4,000 drive-in theaters nationwide. 

For $ome rea$on the Globe in general and ma$$ media in particular want to keep us in that kind of time-warped mind-set.

Some drive-ins are raising money using crowd-funding platforms such as Kickstarter while others are taking advantage of financing programs or renting out their theaters as flea markets during off-hours. 

What Kick$tarter and Crowdfund or WhateverTF it is called are nothing but conduits for 1% wealth into their favored projects with well-connected concerns and with the abilities to advance the agenda. It's all $elf-$erving, folks. There is so much wealth $lo$hing around above they have no idea what to do with it all.

So go to the drive-in, America! Forget about the escalating wars and continuous looting by the PTB and thier political slave cla$$. Take in a movie instead (I plead guilty as charged: Gravity didn't have any weight with me last night, sorry. Thumbs down).

Ry Russell, general manager of Saco Drive-In, launched a social-media campaign to win an $80,000 digital projection system in a contest sponsored by Honda. His drive-in theater in Saco is celebrating its 75th anniversary by welcoming hundreds of cars to its giant roadside screen to watch the latest films on a new digital projection system.

‘‘We’re just seeing Darwinism kind of take over,’’ Russell said. ‘‘The ones that survive will prosper.’’ 

Interesting comment seeing as we are right in the middle of WWIII.

It’s a story that’s playing out at drive-ins all over the country, where conversion to digital is the key to survival, said John Vincent Jr., president of the United Drive-In Theatre Owners Association.

Studios are phasing out 35mm film prints as Hollywood moves toward all-digital distribution. Even older movies are difficult to obtain on film because many repertory companies have gone digital, Vincent said, noting that people in the industry expect this season to be ‘‘the last summer of film.’’ 

I haven't gone to see one movie this summer, and now the only good ones are being lost.


You know, I thought I had seen this before.

--more--"

So what's playing this weekend?


I sure ki$$ed him off quick, huh?

UPDATE: Drive-in movie theater in St. Albans, Vt., closes after 66 years