Jeff simon obituary metamora ohio
Hm. A masked figure who's obsessed with a girl. Where have I seen that before?
2023.05.28 11:17 LordCrowL Hm. A masked figure who's obsessed with a girl. Where have I seen that before?
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2023.05.28 04:11 ArchDukeNemesis Every NWA, WCW & WWE world heavyweight championship run from 1904-2023 combined, if every champion held the belt once.
To celebrate the "Return" of the "Big Gold Belt" on Raw, I thought I'd make a history combining all title runs from the first world heavyweight championship, through it's time in the NWA, its two off shoots in WCW and its appropriation by WWE. All lineages combined, all vacancies ignored, all reigns recognized and all champions holding the belt once.
Name | Date | Location | Days |
George Hackenschmidt | May 4, 1905 | New York, New York | 1,065 |
Frank Gotch | April 3, 1908 | Chicago, Illinois | 1,824 |
Americus | March 13, 1914 | Kansas City, Missouri | 55 |
Stanislaus Zbyszko | May 7, 1914 | Kansas City, Missouri | 176 |
Charlie Cutler) | January 8, 1915 | N/A | 178 |
Joe Stecher | July 5, 1915 | Omaha, Nebraska | 644 |
Johan Olin | December 11, 1916 | Springfield, Massachusetts | 142 |
Earl Caddock | April 9, 1917 | Omaha, Nebraska | 1,026 |
Ed Lewis) | May 2, 1917 | Chicago, Illinois | 34 |
Wladek Zbyszko | June 5, 1917 | San Francisco, California | 5844 |
Wayne Munn | January 8, 1925 | Wichita, Kansas | 1360 |
Gus Sonnenberg | January 4, 1929 | Boston, Massachusetts | 705 |
Ed Don George | December 10, 1930 | Los Angeles, CA | 1693 |
Danno O'Mahoney | July 30, 1935 | Boston, Massachusetts | 216 |
Dick Shikat | March 2, 1936 | New York, New York | 54 |
Ali Baba) | April 25, 1936 | Detroit, Michigan | 48 |
Dave Levin) | June 12, 1936 | Newark, New Jersey | 109 |
Dean Detton | September 29, 1936 | Philadelphia, Pennsylvania | 273 |
Bronko Nagurski | June 29, 1937 | Minneapolis, Minnesota | 507 |
Jim Londos | November 18, 1938 | Philadelphia, Pennsylvania | 2628 |
Orville Brown | July 14, 1948 | Des Moines, IA | 501 |
Lou Thesz | November 27, 1949 | Los Angeles, California | 2300 |
Leo Nomellini | March 22, 1955 | San Francisco, CA | 359 |
Whipper Billy Watson | March 15, 1956 | Toronto, ON | 609 |
Édouard Carpentier | June 14, 1957 | Chicago, IL | 153 |
Dick Hutton | November 14, 1957 | Toronto, ON | 421 |
Pat O'Connor) | January 9, 1959 | St. Louis, MO | 903 |
Buddy Rogers) | June 30, 1961 | Chicago, IL | 145 |
Killer Kowalski | November 22, 1961 | Montreal, Quebec | 254 |
Bruno Sammartino | August 2, 1962 | Toronto, ON | 16 |
Bobo Brazil | August 18, 1962 | Newark, NJ | 1239 |
Gene Kiniski | January 7, 1966 | St. Louis, MO | 1131 |
Dory Funk Jr. | February 11, 1969 | Tampa, FL | 1563 |
Harley Race | May 24, 1973 | Kansas City, KS | 57 |
Jack Brisco | July 20, 1973 | Houston, TX | 500 |
Giant Baba | December 2, 1974 | Kagoshima, Japan | 373 |
Terry Funk | December 10, 1975 | Miami Beach, FL | 1350 |
Dusty Rhodes) | August 21, 1979 | Tampa, FL | 616 |
Tommy Rich | April 27, 1981 | Augusta, GA | 143 |
Ric Flair | September 17, 1981 | Kansas City, KS | 355 |
Jack Veneno | September 7, 1982 | Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic | 122 |
Carlos Colón | January 6, 1983 | San Juan, Puerto Rico | 487 |
Kerry Von Erich | May 6, 1984 | Irving, TX | 1238 |
Ron Garvin | September 25, 1987 | Detroit, MI | 515 |
Ricky Steamboat | February 20, 1989 | Chicago, IL | 502 |
Sting) | July 7, 1990 | Baltimore, MD | 257 |
Tatsumi Fujinami | March 21, 1991 | Tokyo, Japan | 116 |
Lex Luger | July 14, 1991 | Baltimore, Maryland | 363 |
Big Van Vader | July 12, 1992 | Albany, Georgia | 21 |
Ron Simmons | August 2, 1992 | Baltimore, Maryland | 10 |
Masahiro Chono | August 12, 1992 | Tokyo, Japan | 145 |
The Great Muta | January 4, 1993 | Tokyo, Japan | 48 |
Barry Windham | February 21, 1993 | Asheville, NC | 210 |
Rick Rude | September 19, 1993 | Houston, Texas | 178 |
Hiroshi Hase | March 16, 1994 | Tokyo, Japan | 123 |
Hulk Hogan | July 17, 1994 | Orlando, Florida | 42 |
Shane Douglas | August 27, 1994 | Philadelphia, PA | 85 |
Chris Candido | November 19, 1994 | Cherry Hill, NJ | 97 |
Dan Severn | February 24, 1995 | Erlanger, KY | 247 |
The Giant | October 29, 1995 | Detroit, Michigan | 29 |
Randy Savage | November 26, 1995 | Norfolk, Virginia | 974 |
Goldberg | July 6, 1998 | Atlanta, Georgia | 174 |
Kevin Nash | December 27, 1998 | Washington, D.C. | 78 |
Naoya Ogawa | March 14, 1999 | Yokohama, Japan | 29 |
Diamond Dallas Page | April 11, 1999 | Tacoma, Washington | 167 |
Gary Steele | September 25, 1999 | Charlotte, NC | 57 |
Bret Hart | November 21, 1999 | Toronto, Ontario | 56 |
Chris Benoit | January 16, 2000 | Cincinnati, Ohio | 8 |
Sid Vicious | January 25, 2000 | Las Vegas, Nevada | 83 |
Jeff Jarrett | April 16, 2000 | Chicago, Illinois | 9 |
David Arquette | April 25, 2000 | Syracuse, New York | 75 |
Booker T) | July 9, 2000 | Daytona Beach, Florida | 71 |
Mike Rapada | September 19, 2000 | Tampa, FL | 6 |
Vince Russo | September 25, 2000 | Uniondale, New York | 50 |
Sabu) | November 14, 2000 | Tampa, FL | 12 |
Scott Steiner | November 26, 2000 | Milwaukee, Wisconsin | 149 |
Steve Corino | April 24, 2001 | Tampa, FL | 91 |
Kurt Angle | July 24, 2001 | Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania | 6 |
The Rock | August 19, 2001 | San Jose, California | 26 |
Chris Jericho | October 21, 2001 | St. Louis, Missouri | 55 |
Shinya Hashimoto | December 15, 2001 | McKeesport, PA | 186 |
Ken Shamrock | June 19, 2002 | Huntsville, AL | 49 |
Ron Killings | August 7, 2002 | Nashville, TN | 26 |
Triple H | September 2, 2002 | Milwaukee, WI | 76 |
Shawn Michaels | November 17, 2002 | New York, NY | 236 |
A.J. Styles | June 11, 2003 | Nashville, TN | 401 |
Randy Orton | August 15, 2004 | Toronto, ON, Canada | 231 |
Ray González | April 3, 2005 | San Juan, Puerto Rico | >1 |
Batista | April 3, 2005 | Los Angeles, CA | 77 |
Raven) | June 19, 2005 | Orlando, FL | 126 |
Rhino | October 23, 2005 | Orlando, FL | 112 |
Christian Cage | February 12, 2006 | Orlando, FL | 49 |
Rey Mysterio | April 2, 2006 | Rosemont, IL | 231 |
Abyss) | November 19, 2006 | Orlando, FL | 133 |
The Undertaker | April 1, 2007 | Detroit, MI | 37 |
Edge) | May 8, 2007 | Pittsburgh, PA | 70 |
The Great Khali | July 17, 2007 | Laredo, TX | 46 |
Adam Pearce | September 1, 2007 | Bayamón, Puerto Rico | 303 |
CM Punk | June 30, 2008 | Oklahoma City, OK | 33 |
Brent Albright | August 2, 2008 | New York City, NY) | 84 |
Blue Demon Jr. | October 25, 2008 | Mexico City, Mexico | 29 |
John Cena | November 23, 2008 | Boston, MA | 196 |
Jeff Hardy | June 7, 2009 | New Orleans, LA | 296 |
Jack Swagger | March 30, 2010 | Las Vegas, NV | 110 |
Kane) | July 18, 2010 | Kansas City, MO | 212 |
Dolph Ziggler | February 15, 2011 | San Diego, CA | 19 |
Colt Cabana | March 6, 2011 | West Hollywood, CA | 48 |
The Sheik | April 23, 2011 | Jacksonville, FL | 148 |
Mark Henry | September 18, 2011 | Buffalo, NY | 91 |
Daniel Bryan | December 18, 2011 | Baltimore, MD | 105 |
Sheamus | April 1, 2012 | Miami, FL | 215 |
Kahagas | November 2, 2012 | Clayton, NJ | 67 |
Alberto Del Rio | January 8, 2013 | Miami, FL | 67 |
Rob Conway | March 16, 2013 | San Antonio, TX | 294 |
Satoshi Kojima | January 4, 2014 | Tokyo, Japan | 407 |
Hiroyoshi Tenzan | February 14, 2015 | Sendai, Japan | 196 |
Jax Dane | August 29, 2015 | San Antonio, TX | 419 |
Tim Storm | October 21, 2016 | Sherman, TX | 414 |
Nick Aldis | December 9, 2017 | Sewell, NJ | 266 |
Cody | September 1, 2018 | Hoffman Estates, IL | 1093 |
Trevor Murdoch | August 29, 2021 | St. Louis, MO | 167 |
Matt Cardona | February 12, 2022 | Oak Grove, KY | 273 |
Tyrus) | November 12, 2022 | Chalmette, LA | 196 |
Seth "Freakin" Rollins | May 27, 2023 | Jeddah, Saudi Arabia | 1+ |
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2023.05.27 23:03 Slackline0 Looking to sell some of my YG’s
2023.05.27 20:26 SillyAd9410 A Semi-Collaborative Pop Culture TL #10
YOU decide what events should change in the world of pop culture, be it real or ASB (future movie gets shown in the past, an actor does/doesn't die, alternate casting choices, unmade media possibly getting made, media is rewritten, a change in the box office or something new entirely)!
I document what happens in a current timeline of Earth!
We all have fun!
CURRENT TIMELINE:
1818: Mary Shelley's The Modern Prometheus, a novel in which scientist Henry Frankenstein creates a sapient creature named Prometheus is made. Prometheus becomes a stalwart of the monster genre.
1907-1908: A young comedian named Charlie Chaplin refuses to accept the offer of Fred Karno to come to the U.S. He becomes a famous comedian, often incorporating a character he named The Tramp in his stand-up routines.
1912: The Olympic ship crashes upon hitting an iceberg, becoming a memorable event. James Cameron's Olympic (1997) would be the first film to gross $1B, even entering the National Film Registry.
1931: Frankenstein and his Prometheus, an adaptation of The Modern Prometheus starring Bela Lugosi and Boris Karloff as Henry and Prometheus is a box-office smash. It would enter the National Film Registry in 1991.
1941: Fleischer Studios' Mr. Bug Goes to Town is a box office success, saving the studio. Today it is one of Disney's biggest competitors, along with Warner Bros.
1951: Fawcett Comics wins a lawsuit over National Comics for the rights to the characters of Captain Marvel and Superman. While National Comics would die in obscurity, Fawcett Comics would be Marvel's biggest competitor.
1962: Marilyn Monroe doesn't die. She goes into hiding in Las Vegas doing revue shows. Discovered by higher ups at NBC, she signs on to The Marilyn Monroe Show, a sketch comedy show that runs until her death in 1999.
1966: Warner Bros.' Twister comes out, becoming the highest grossing film of the year. It would spawn "Tornado-mania", a series of tornado movies made to copy its success. It would enter the National Film Registry in 1996.
1969: Nixon resigns his presidency the become a talk show host. The Dick Nixon show airs until 1983.
Make America Great Again - written and directed by Mel Brooks - is released. The film stars Ronald Reagan as himself as he decides to run for President after becoming a washed up movie star - promising to “Make America Great Again”. Wacky shenanigans ensue, including President Reagan trying to build a massive wall on the Southern border to stop Soviet influence, claiming that “both sides have very fine people” in regards to the Civil Rights Movement, and him accidentally starting a cult about how hippies are secretly stooges of a global satanic cult run by the elites.
The film is a critical and commercial success and becomes one of the greatest and funniest comedies of all time. It enters the National Film Registry in 1999.
The Dick Cavett Show airs on ABC, becoming the main competitor to NBC's Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson. It would end in 1996 to make way for its new replacement The Jon Stewart Show.
Creedence Clearwater Revival release a song about the Civil Rights Movement called Fortunate Son. It becomes their signature song. It enters the National Recording Registry in 2013.
1974: Star Trek: The Continuing Mission, a revival of the original 60s series, airs in syndication until 1981.
1974-1979: Michael John Kricfalusi becomes an anti-Rhodesian mercenary during the Rhodesian Bush War. He becomes a POW by forces from Apartheid South Africa. As a result, he is physically and mentally scarred.
1979: Ozzy Osbourne goes into rehab and continues to play for Black Sabbath, leading to them getting a Beatles-like Renaissance in the 80s, making Heavy Metal one of the 80s most notable music genres.
1980-1981: From February 1980 to August 1981, John Kricfalusi would heal his mental wounds at a mental institution.
1982: John Kricfalusi founds Spümcø, an animation studio that was founded due to John's perceived views on how Hanna-Barbera and Rankin/Bass, two studios he worked at, failed to make good cartoons.
1983: E.T. for the Atari proves to be a very good game, making millions for Atari. This would inspire them to improve their games on their future consoles such as the 5200 and 7800, leading them to become a fierce competitior in the gaming market. The last Atari console came out in the early 2000s.
You Nutzy Rascals!, a short made by John K., is the first to feature prototype designs of Ren and Stimpy.
1985: The War of the Worlds, a film made in collaboration with Disney and Jeff Wayne, based on his musical album adapting the H.G. Wells story, hits theaters. It is a critical and commercial success, cited for starting the Disney Renaissance. Disney and Jeff Wayne would collaborate two more times, making animated adaptations of The Modern Prometheus (1988) and The Time Machine (1992). It would enter the National Film Registry in 2022.
Warner Communications buys Warner Amex-Satellite Entertainment to make Warner MTV Networks.
1986: Ravel's Bolero becomes the theme to The Legend of Zelda. It would later serve to be the theme for the Zelda games in Japan, with a different theme for NTSC releases.
Cliff Burton survives a car crash and continues to play bass for Metallica, helping put thrash metal on the mainstream map.
1987: Morrissey and Johnny Marr become frenemies. The Smiths continue into the 1990s.
1988: During production of Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade, Harrison Ford is shot and killed by a loaded prop gun. This would lead to it being hastily recut in time for 1989. It would lead to a heavy burden on Lucasfilm. The documentary Ford - Spielberg's Right Hand Man would be released in 2008 to great success.
1989: Doctor Who is saved from cancellation by BBC. It remains one of the longest running TV shows.
Sergio Leone dies of old age. He is remembered for his westerns as well as Don Quixote, The Phantom, and Leningrad: The 900 Days.
1990: John K. creates Big House Blues, the pilot for The Ren & Stimpy Show, which is picked up by Nickelodeon.
1991: Eddie Vedder dies in a car crash before the first Pearl Jam album is released. They find a new lead in Chris Cornell, who also sings for Soundgarden until their demise in 1997.
Ren & Stimpy airs on Nickelodeon, along with Doug, Rugrats, Tiny Toon Adventures, Taz-Mania (both this show and TTA would later air in syndication) and Big Beast Quintet (cancelled in 1993). It is currently the longest running American animated series, beating out Matt Groening's The Simpsons, who cancelled the show in 1998 in favor of working on the long-running Futurama which still airs today.
Tim Burton is attached to direct an adaptation of The Addams Family TV show as a movie. It would later spawn three sequels, with Tim leaving after the second movie. The latter two would be critically panned.
1992: Star Wars: Episode I - The Phantom Menace comes out, becoming the highest grossing film of the year. Episodes II and III would later come out in 1995 and 1998 respectively.
J.R.R. Tolkien dies at 100, finishing The New Shadow and The Silmarillion. He was also known for being war minister of the UK from 1940 to 1945.
Stephen Hillenburg is invited to work on Ren & Stimpy after showing his short film Wormholes at the TIFF.
Cartoon Network begins after Ted Turner merges with Viacom in 1986 and buys the Hanna-Barbera library in 1991.
1993: Spielberg quits directing after doing Schindler's List. This not only cancels plans for a Jurassic Park sequel, but also an adaptation of Supertoys Last All Summer Long.
1994: During filming of The Crow, Brandon Lee survives a shot from a prop gun. He would propel into superstardom. He is now known for playing Neo in The Matrix franchise and Johnny Cage in Mortal Kombat (1995).
Kurt Cobain announces the breakup of Nirvana as he goes into rehab. In 2002, the band reunited for You Know You're Right, an album that became a top seller. They still perform to this day.
1995: YouTube, a video sharing site, is released. It would not gain much popularity until 2001, where an influx of YouTubers would bring it to stardom.
Toy Story, a stop motion film, gains critical acclaim due to its incredible scale, becoming the 2nd highest grossing film of the year.
Sarah Michelle Gellar dies in a kayaking incident days before the release of her only film Clueless. This would cause Clueless to become the highest grossing film of the year and become known as one of the best teen films. It enters the National Film Registry in 2005. Bad Boys, a film released the same day as Clueless, would become the 6th highest grossing film of the year despite mixed reviews.
Spotify, a humble music downloading site, releases. In 1997, it would change into a music streaming site, and would often show ads for the latest in music.
Selena Quintalla survives being shot. Jennifer Lopez wanes in popularity.
1996: The Nintendo 64DD comes out in a partnership with Phillips, revolutionising the console industry by introducing CD memory, rising it above the PlayStation and Sega Saturn. One of the top best selling games would be Super Mario 64 2, the sequel to Super Mario 64. The 64DD would serve as motivation for Sega to complete Sonic X-Treme by 1997, which becomes a huge hit. This would give Sega the boost it needed to continue making consoles. Other Mario games made for the 64DD include Mario Takes America and Super Mario's Wacky Worlds.
The Nintendo Entertainment System (NES), which had been under a state similar to the Atari 2600, releases its last two games: Super Mario Legends, a game similar in style to the Mario Land games released by Nintendo R&D1, which becomes a minor hit and Animaniacs, a port of Konami's Game Boy game which got mixed reviews.
Tupac survives being shot while having a drive in Las Vegas. He still has a rap career.
Ren & Stimpy Go To Hollywood, a film released by Warner Bros., becomes the highest grossing animated film of the year, making over $600M. It has a 100% rating on Rotten Tomatoes. This film would also have one of Ronald Reagan's last acting roles.
NDR Filmes' Cassiopeia gets fame for being the first completely computer-animated film. It gets an English dub for a worldwide release. It enters the National Film Registry in 2006.
After his work on Ren & Stimpy, Stephen Hillenburg pitches his own show to Nickelodeon about a sea sponge.
Rapper and music producer Andre "Dr. Dre" Young is shot and killed by a vengefully spiteful Suge Knight in a drive-by shooting, since Young left Death Row Records after accusing Knight of corruption the month prior. His death leads to tributes from fans and colleagues alike, and his first album The Chronic is praised for being influential. Tupac Shakur, in addition to being a rapper, assumes Dr. Dre's role as a music producer out of respect for his newly deceased friend. After Suge Knight is arrested and imprisoned for life due to murdering Young, Shakur takes over Death Row Records. The Chronic enters the National Recording Registry in 2019.
1996-2000: A teen-oriented sitcom, Still Clueless: The Story of Tai and Dionne, runs on ABC from September 20, 1996 to May 19, 2000 for a total of four seasons. A spinoff and continuation to the 1995 film "Clueless", starring the late Sarah Michelle Gellar as Cher Horowitz, and breakouts Regina Hall as Dionne Davenport and Brittany Murphy as Tai Frasier, the series follows protagonists and best friends Tai Frasier and Dionne Davenport as they navigate through life in college without their late friend Cher Horowitz who tragically overdosed to death at a party but hilarious scenarios ensue for the two friends as they mature together in college. Created by Amy Heckerling, Brittany Murphy and Regina Hall reprise their respective roles as Tai Frasier and Dionne Davenport from the 1995 film, and also stars Alan Rickman as the main antagonist, the corrupt and unfairly strict college dean William Davidson. The series becomes very beloved, successful, and memorable, just like its 1995 predecessor. The first season has 23 episodes, the second and third seasons have 22 episodes each, while the fourth and final season has 25 episodes, totalling up to 92 episodes. New episodes always would premiere at 8:30PM on Friday nights, with either a TV-PG or TV-14 rating. The show had a direct competitor in Buffy the Vampire Slayer, another teen-oriented series, which would on Fox for only one season consisting of only eighteen episodes from September 20, 1996 to May 9, 1997. Created by Joss Whedon and based loosely on the 1992 film of the same name, the series stars teen sensation Alicia Silverstone as Buffy Anne Summers, a teenage girl who fights evil vampirical creatures. The show would have a more darker and serious tone unlike it's more lighthearted and comedic competitor "Still Clueless: The Story of Tai and Dionne" on ABC, and new episodes would premiere at 8:30PM on Friday nights, all having a TV-14 rating. Of the two shows, "Buffy" would be less successful as the show would have a lukewarm reception and audiences would more than likely watch the more successful "Still Clueless", which would have an otherwise more welcoming reception (like it's 1995 predecessor). The show's lead actress Alicia Silverstone would still have a briefly successful career in Hollywood; unfortunately, her career would be cut short as she would die from a serious chest infection on February 11, 2002, at the age of only 25.
1997: Reddit, a news and discussion board, is released. It becomes very, very popular.
The Notorious B.I.G. survives a shooting like his friend and collaborator Tupac, and he continues to make music.
Aspiring rapper Sean "Puff Daddy" Combs is killed in a gang shootout in Los Angeles, California; however, right-wing news network Fox News reports the shootout as having happened in New York City, New York (which is untrue). This leads to rapper Christopher "Biggie Smalls" Wallace recording a single dedicated to Combs called "I'll Be Missing You" (which heavily samples "Every Breath You Take" by The Police) which was included as a bonus track on No Way Out, Combs' first and only debut album released posthumously on July 22, 1997. The album became influential in the years since Combs' death, proving that, even in death, one can still have a rap career and be influential. No Way Out would enter the National Recording Registry in 2007.
1998: Neon Genesis Evangelion is unknowingly localized by 4Kids, leading to a HEAVILY censored English dub that makes the show popular during the late 90s-early 00s.
Chris Farley wakes from a coma due to a drug overdose. After deciding to give the role of Shrek to Mike Myers his friend, he gets the role of Doug Heffernan on The King of Queens.
1999: Stephen Hillenburg's SpongeBob SquarePants airs on Nickelodeon. Although it is a hit at first, work complications, problems outsourcing animation to the studio Gainax, and the banned episode Wrasslin' Maniacs where SpongeBob and Patrick beat up Squidward, Hillenburg is fired from the show in 2002.
Tommy Boy's Return, the sequel to Tommy Boy, releases in theaters. It is considered a cult classic today.
2000: Battlefield Earth is released in theaters to be a huge success, ending up the 8th highest grossing film of the year. This would cause an interest in works by L. Ron Hubbard, making the Church of Scientology a rising religion. Battlefield Earth 2 would later release in 2003 to similar acclaim.
4Kids is bought by Warner Communications. As a result, more anime airs on Kids WB.
The Atari Cougar, Atari's final console before being bought by Jakks Pacific in 2002, is released. It is a cult classic console.
Tim Burton's Wizard of Oz gains mixed to positive reviews, and makes the top 10 list of highest grossing films of the year.
2001: Grand Theft Auto III, the third entry in the GTA series is cancelled following 9/11. The game would later redevelop into Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas, which was released in 2004.
Spy Kids, Quentin Tarantino's first kids' film is released in theaters to mixed reviews, but becomes a cult classic. Two more sequels were released in the two years after it, all would get the same fate.
During 9/11, Kevin James dies after being squished by falling debris from the North Tower.
2002: Netflix, the world's first ever online streaming service for film and TV, launches. They release their first Netflix Original - an epic drama gangster film called American Gangster starring Denzel Washington and Russell Crowe and directed by Ridley Scott - five years later on November 2, 2007, after buying the distribution rights from Universal Pictures (who were set to be the original proprietors). All of their films and series are also given DVD and/or Blu-ray releases, courtesy of Sony Pictures Home Entertainment, who owns the home media rights to Netflix Original films/series etc.
2003: Call of Duty, a war shooter game, sells 200,000 copies, making for poor sales. No sequels are planned. The Battlefield series gains from this.
Star Trek: The Original Generation, a Star Trek prequel series, airs for two seasons on Fox before cancellation.
Sony launches the American feed of 24-hour anime channel Animax, which overtakes Adult Swim's Toonami in popularity.
Sylvester Stallone becomes Governor of California until 2011.
TIME names Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein as Person of the Year due to being "One of the great dictators of the modern age".
2004: Fallout 3 releases on Windows to high ratings, saving Interplay from bankruptcy. They would later release 2 console games, Fallout 4 and Fallout 5. Many spinoff games would be made.
Hillenburg's company United Plankton Pictures makes the Newgrounds webseries The Motherfucking Patchy the Pirate Show, focusing on the misadventures of Patchy the Pirate.
2005: Minecraft, a web browser game is released by Mojang with the help of a team that planned a game known as Terraria, where it would be very successful until 2009, when a 3D version for Java was released. It is currently owned by Microsoft, who still makes updates for it.
SpongeBob SquarePants is quietly cancelled due to declining ratings.
FOX airs The Office, an American adaptation of the British mockumentary series of the same name, airing until 2013 for nine seasons. It becomes one of the most memorable sitcoms of all time, winning several Emmys. Mr. Blue Sky becomes the theme song.
2006: Warner Communications contacts Hillenburg for an adult-only SpongeBob reboot.
Night at the Museum is released to mixed reviews as it becomes a box-office bomb. With plans for a sequel dead in the water, Fox sells the rights to Sony in 2007 who plans to reboot the series, but also keep the distribution rights for the original film.
Blockbuster buys Netflix, moving the website to Blockbuster.com, and naming it Blockbuster Online. After all of its stores were closed, it becomes Blockbuster+.
2007: Kanye West dies in a car crash before his album Graduation releases, causing him to be mourned. This would lead to many people buying the album, creating a short-lived rap revival that would temporarily mark the end of gangsta rap until 2010.
Owen Wilson commits suicide. In discussions about the "Frat Pack", he is replaced by Steve Carell and Paul Rudd. Drillbit Taylor and Tropic Thunder are both dedicated to his memory. Plans for a sequel to Cars are cancelled by Pixar and Disney.
2007-2011: Identically similar to events in our world, screenwriter Simon Monjack and actress and "Clueless" sensation Brittany Murphy (who still starred in this alternate reality's version of the 1995 film "Clueless", but here she instead co-stars with rising co-stars Sarah Michelle Gellar playing Cher, and Regina Hall playing Dionne) are about to marry back in May 2007, but Murphy calls the marriage to Monjack off at the exact same wedding. This causes a scandal that briefly kills her good reputation, and gets her blacklisted in Hollywood (for a while). In this alternate history, Simon Monjack is put in prison for attempting murder on Brittany Murphy, but here, is killed by a crazed cellmate whilst serving time (said crazed cellmate also happens to be a fan of Brittany Murphy). Brittany Murphy then moves to an apartment complex in New York in 2008, ditching Hollywood for good and starting a musical career.
Natalie Portman, a fairly successful but struggling rising young TV actress, is having a hard time finding work in Hollywood due to the failure of the Star Trek prequel television series Star Trek: The Original Generation. She co-starred in the series alongside Hayden Christensen, Ewan McGregor, and Samuel L. Jackson. While the then 56-57 year old Jackson at least got to have a successful career in Hollywood (due to being a Christopher Nolan regular), Christensen and McGregor were rejected by the industry; Christensen started an indie rock band while McGregor then went on to become a successful UFC fighter, but would then become very scandalous as he suffers from numerous arrests and an intense drug addiction. McGregor would then unfortunately die young from a drug overdose on December 7, 2008. Going back to Portman, she would become an indie darling in independent cinema, however her career would be cut short when she would die in a car crash on July 19, 2009, just one month and ten days after her 28th birthday. She was last seen in a DTV thriller called "Abandoned", which released in March 2010. Her death leads to tributes from co-stars and fans alike.
In December 2009, Brittany Murphy is then offered the lead role in Darren Aronofsky's upcoming psychological horror film "Black Swan", about a troubled ballerina. The film would co-star Melanie Lynskey as the troubled ballerina's rival, and like in our world, Winona Ryder, Barbara Hershey, and Vincent Cassel. The film released in December 2010 (like in our world), to rave reviews, with critics calling it Brittany Murphy's finest appearance yet. Murphy would then take home the Best Actress Oscar as well as the Best Dramatic Performance in a Movie Golden Globe for her performance in the film in 2011. Murphy would then continue her acting career following a big career boost, as well as her singing/musical career at the same time. In fact, she releases a fairly successful debut album in March 2011 simply called "Brittany", to positive reviews. It would then become the best selling musical album of the year, even winning her a Grammy in 2012.
2008: Bulletman, the highest grossing film of the year, marks the beginning of the successful Fawcett Cinematic Universe (FCU). It would enter the National Film Registry in 2020.
During the premiere of Tropic Thunder, Tom Cruise announces his retirement from entertainment and Scientology. He spends the rest of his life quietly as a Buddhist in England. As Dwayne Johnson takes Tom's place, Paramount announces plans to reboot the Mission: Impossible franchise (though nothing comes from it).
SpongeBob XXX, an adult SpongeBob reboot, airs on AMC alongside Breaking Bad. SpongeBob XXX would be universally panned, airing only 3 episodes out of a made 6 (all were later put on DVD). It is known for being one of the worst animated series of all time.
Iron Age, a film fully funded by UNESCO, is made as the first film of an IRL cinematic universe. It gets nominated for Best Picture at the Oscars, like every film in the IRLCU after it.
2009: Adventure Time, a cartoon by Pendleton Ward, airs on Nickelodeon. It becomes one of Nickelodeon's highest-rated cartoons, airing until 2016. Many people would call it an animation trailblazer, leading to Nick approving more "lore-based" shows.
Half-Life 3 comes out, and continues the high ratings of the Half-Life franchise, making games well until 2017 (counting spinoffs).
Some people would compare it to Regular Show, who they saw as Cartoon Network's equivalent to Adventure Time.
Discord, a discussion site, is released, becoming popular with gamers.
Liam Gallagher has a near-fatal drug overdose after the breakup of Oasis. Finding peace with his brother, Oasis reunites in 2012, releasing a new album in 2015. They still perform.
Amy Winhouse retires after a heavy intervention. She still occasionally produces for Adele.
2011: Fortnite Battle Royale by Epic Games is released to the public. It becomes extremely popular, and is still played today.
2012: Pixar's Newt, a film that came due to the cancellation of Wreck-It Ralph (some claim due to the problems of getting permission from game companies) is released and barely breaks even. It would start a dark age for Pixar, which would continue with Brave and Cars 2.
It would also play a key part in George Lucas refusing to give away Lucasfilm, due to Disney's perceived slump.
After Hillenburg's company dissolves, he becomes the cartoon reviewer Stevey Shark for Channel Awesome.
Jim Carrey dies of a heart attack.
2013: Doug Walker leaves Channel Awesome, leaving Stevey Shark to be the new star. Markiplier, MrEnter, and MatPat would later join Channel Awesome among others.
The Freedom Tower is made to replace the original North Tower destroyed in the attack. Memes would arise from the comparison between the towers.
2014: A Day With Patchy the Pirate, a half-hour short made by Hillenburg, airs on YouTube as Channel Awesome's first foray into animation. It has a troubled production due to being funded online, and would be panned upon release.
Robin Williams survives a suicide attempt, and launches his own suicide prevention program. He would then star in the 2016 drama Uncut Gems by Christopher Nolan, playing crime lord Howard Ratner, giving him a Best Actor Oscar.
2015: Star Wars - Episode VII: The Force Awakens, featuring Darth Maul and Darth Talon as antagonists, is released, becoming the highest grossing film of the year. Two more sequels were made in 2017 and 2019.
2016: John K. dies from multiple scolerosis. Bob Camp takes over as showrunner of Ren and Stimpy.
2017: Growing Around, a new YouTube webseries made by Stephen Hillenburg & Johnathan Rozanski, about a world where grown-ups switch with kids, is released. Despite gaining positive reviews, both the downfall of Channel Awesome and Hillenburg & Rozanski's heinous acts would result in Markiplier buying the license, airing it on his webseries Unus Annus for one last season, ending in 2020.
Chester Bennington survives his suicide attempt. Linkin Park would make its newest album in December of 2020.
2018: Donald Trump starts The Trump Experience, a very popular podcast.
2019: Season 3 of Gravity Falls comes out to near-universal acclaim.
2020: Chadwick Boseman recovers from his cancer.
2022: Jordan Peele's Nope becomes the highest grossing film of the year. It enters the National Film Registry in 2033.
Presidents of the USA since 1977:
Jimmy Carter (1977-1985)
Walter Mondale (1985-1989)
George H.W. Bush (1989-1993)
Mario Cuomo (1993-2001)
John F. Kennedy Jr. (2001-2005)
John McCain (2005-2013)
Barack Obama (2013-2021)
Jeb Bush (2021-today)
Governors of California since 1947:
James Roosevelt (1947-1953) Resigned) Democrat
Pat Brown (1953-1963) Democrat
Richard Nixon (1963-1969) Republican
Edwin Reineck (1969-1974) Resigned) Republican
John L Harner (1974-1975) Republican
Tom Hayden (1975-1983) Democrat
Tom Bradley (1983-1991) Democrat
Clint Eastwood (1991-2003) Independent
Sylvester Stallone (2003-2011) Republican
Conan O'Brien (2011-2019) Democrat
Gavin Newsom (2019-Today) Democrat
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2023.05.27 15:03 subredditsummarybot Your weekly /r/ClassicRock roundup for the week of May 20 - May 26
Saturday, May 20 - Friday, May 26 Top 60s
Top 70s
Top 80s
Top Remaining
Top 5 Most Commented
score | comments | title & link | mirrors |
42 | 391 comments | Three bands and their entire discography. Who are you picking? | |
62 | 241 comments | Deep Cuts | |
50 | 220 comments | Ok! Tough job but… top 5 Classic Rock vocalists. Think voice not performance. All answers are subjective. | |
35 | 185 comments | Classic rock songs you hear constantly | |
32 | 160 comments | Songs where "all hell breaks loose?" | |
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2023.05.27 15:03 Glittering_Bet8181 Main Wiggles Rankings (No Fruit Salad TV)
- Emma: Cmon, when you're replacing Greg Page you really need to know how to sing (crocodile hunter sounded terrible), yeh you can dance but I think part of what made the original wiggles so good is they where kinda really bad at dancing, therefore, the dance moves where easy for me as a kid to do.
- Simon: Overrated as a singer, saw a clip of him singing somebody to love on masked singer and it sounded good, but opera just doesn't suit the wiggles that much, he was much better as a manzilla
- Lachy: Underrated as a singer, him singing elephant is sick, don't know why people don't like him, though I don't watch wiggles stuff, only the og's so I probably missed alot.
- Sam: Actually a good replacement, but can't really compete with Greg, probably why they got Emma who's not a singer to be yellow, and have Lachy and Simon the singers, so people wouldn't compare them (but why not just get new colours????). Sam was able to not go overboard with the opera singing and really sounded great.
- Jeff: I really can't rank the og's, they're all number 1, they all found their own place in the group so you would be missing a piece without one of them, something the new wiggles couldn't really do, they're all just the same character (except Anthony), it's like Ringo Starr once said something along the lines of "new bands have creating their character" it's not actually them. Greg said in an interview that their shtick's came from who they where. Jeff falling asleep was so he could be a part of the show without actually doing something, though I did read that he used to nap before shows so I'm not too sure. Anthony did say "Jeff was the musical backbone of the Cockroaches and the Wiggles".
- Murray: I actually play guitar, so the fact that Murrays not 1 really shows how great the og's are, and depending on the day Murray is number 1. He really is the most influential guitarist of the current day, and it really is just amazing how the Wiggles did something different, and had a real rock band for kids, if the Wiggles didn't exist, who would've thought kids would like a guitarist so much. And Murray is actually a great guitarist as shown in the og shows.
- Anthony: Anthony was the brains behind the Wiggles, and he was always so funny to watch as a kid. There's not much to say, I spent most of Jeff and Murray talking generally about the OG wiggles so not much more to say.
- Greg: Since listening to the wiggles again Greg has become my favourite. Am I the only person that genuinely thinks Greg is one of the greatest singers of all time. Everything I hear him sing just sounds absolutely great. None of the other singers come even remotely close to sounding as good as Greg does, songs like Hot Potato, Rock a Bye Your Bear, and Old Man Emu (underrated) just sound amazing, I don't think anyone else could sing those as good as he does. And than the live shows with all the dancing, how does he continue to sound good, that's something with the other wiggles in the short live clips I've watched I noticed, they always sound out of breath when dancing, Greg never seems to.
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2023.05.27 06:47 CineCraftKC Yellowjackets Season 2: Looking Back and Next Steps (Spoilers)
When I joined this reddit back in the fall of 2021, shortly after Showtime released the pilot episode of Yellowjackets, there were a couple hundred members. Now, as season 2 has ended, we stand at nearly 100,000.
I feel conflicted, because on the one hand my enthusiasm and support of this series remains unaltered. I think the first season of Yellowjackets to be the best first season of a series since Mad Men. The whole series was a masterclass in craft, from the acting and direction to the production design and music.
But at the same time, I risk coming off as utterly incredulous if I refuse to admit where there may be flaws in the second season, and to deny the voices of dissent on the Reddit. So here are one person's thoughts:
Is the second season perfect? No . Is it as good as the first? No. It's very much a different kind of show than the first season. The first was about posing many questions and establishing mysteries that all motivate. The second season, is very much about the consequences of those questions and mysteries, how the survivors respond to them, and cope with the fallout.
It brilliantly subverted our expectations by revealing Lottie to not be a villain, but very much a victim trying in her own way to understand what happened. I found this season to be a beautiful, nuanced portrayal of how individuals copes with trauma and mental illness, and all the attendant fears, anxieties, and sorrows that come with.
This season contained some of the best acting in the series, with Sophie Thatcher, Sophie Nelisse, and Sammi Hanratty all giving award-worthy performances. The casting too is top notch, with new addition Simone Kessell being particularly brilliant. This is such a rich world, with character who I could just happily enjoy watching as they sit and talk for a full hour.
This is a series full of funny moments, and sad moments, and stunning imagery used to convey the blurring lines between the objective and subjective. It continues to toe the fine line between rational and supernatural, and makes a brilliant philosophical statement about the nature of human experience, namely whether it even matters whether a cause is natural or supernatural, in the face of subjective experience. If someone believes what they are experiencing is supernatural, does objective truth even matter? They have made it real, and so, it is real, if we are to honor their personal truth.
And when I read complaints, and negative reviews, often time my feeling is that 1) the viewer is asking the series to be things it never claimed to be and 2) they have not been paying close enough attention. Like a reviewer who complained about Kevyn and Saracusa showing up at the compound out of the blue (if the reviewer had been paying attention, the would know that Walter had lured them to the compound via email in the previous episode).
I think Nat's death worked. It had beauty and power and tragedy and it hurt badly to see her go. I hope it was earnestly felt as the right choice, rather than one necessitated. I don't know what to make of the rumors Juliette Lewis was displeased with the series and her character. But the end result felt magisterial. I wanted to whisper: The queen is dead. Long live the queen.
I read complaints about the police procedural aspects of the show being bad. That the realities of wilderness survival clash with Yellowjacket's portrayal. And I wish we could ban all future comments about teen Nat's roots.
But this show isn't a procedural. It isn't a docudrama. It has more in common with folklore and creation myth. Season 1 was about witnessing civilization stripped away from the teens, first via their estrangement from the outside world, and then by the deaths of those who embody the values of civilization - organized religion via Laura Lee, materialism and leisure via Jackie. Season 2 was all about forming anew, and establishing culture in microcosm, culminating in Van quite literally creating a myth about the wilderness, and the destruction of the last, final vestige of civilization - the cabin.
Now to the point at hand. What didn't work as well as it should have? What mistakes were made? First, foremost, I think they added too many characters too quickly. Van should've been reserved for season 3. Or at the very least, it could have been a wonderful end of season revelation. Van is marvelously cast, and I'm excited to see where things lead, but I fear Lauren Ambrose was given short shrift in a very deep ensemble cast.
We needed 10 episodes, and I'm still unclear as to why this didn't take place. The season finale had about two episodes of developments in one, and felt rushed as a result, in contrast to the previous eight episodes which felt far more of an evenly paced quality. It almost feels as if they had to condense two scripts in one. I would like to hear more about this decision.
I feel Kevyn got short shrift this season, and his demise not handled well. He was a key character in the first season, an echo from the past who grounded Nat and gave her hope. I saw him as a potential ally and instead in season 2 he became a stock character disposed of rather crudely and without any regard for his importance. Nat doesn't find out what happened to him. This was a mistake, and a needless one. Better to have killed Saracusa, and appealed to Kevyn's sense of compassion, which I think was there if they had taken the time to develop things further.
There was definitely something off about the relocation of the cabin to a soundstage. I approached it with an open mind, knowing the logistics of filming a winter setting, but ultimately, something was lacking, and the cabin itself felt underutilized, particularly the attic space. There is something that stifles about confining a season to one setting (shades of the Walking Dead's second season on the farm).
I think they leaned too much into Misty's quirks, as the expense of her malevolence. The Misty of season 2, with her baking lawyer cookie cakes, and having visions in sensory attenuation tanks, seemed to deviate too much from the character we met in the pilot, who turned from sunshine and smiles to malevolent and cruel on a dime.
I think the show on a whole, leaned a bit too much into its newly found status as a pop cultural sensation. Having famous singers cover the theme song feels in hindsight like the show running a victory lap, prematurely. And some of the music choices this season seemed to be less an organic choice, than it was a reflection of the series' prominence. Yes they *could* get the Cranberries' Zombie for the finale, but should they have? It felt like too self-conscious a choice.
Finally, most seriously, this season felt unmoored from the first season. Particularly Tai, whose family, political career, and new dog were all seemingly forgotten or overlooked, despite being foregrounded in season one as highly important to her. We cannot, must not, have such inconsistencies in character foundation, or else the stakes get diminished. Tai's story, and the deterioration of her mental health have especial resonance because she fears how they could impact her loved ones and her political aspirations. Yet if we lose this character motivations of what importance then is the character's actions?
But that is all now in the past. The second season is done. And we are by no means in trouble. The Walking Dead rebounded from that disappointing second season. Other great shows have had uneven early seasons and bounced back. Friday Night Lights, M*A*S*H, Seinfeld to name a few. A dip in quality, a perceived lapse in cohesion, need not be irrevocable and fatal. With the writer's strike on-going, there is time now for the show's creators to appraise this season, and look ahead to what adjustments need to be made.
It is known that more than a few people involved in Yellowjackets, lurk on this reddit. As a gesture of my own goodwill and enthusiasm for their work, and my desire to see this show be as successful as it possibly can be, I would be so bold as to address these thoughts and suggestions to them as we now enter the interim between seasons:
1990s storylines:
We need to return to the wilderness. Literally. I see why the cabin on a soundstage was necessary. But something vital was lost, a certain immediacy that was felt when our survivors were in the actual woods. I think the show would do well to get back to its roots, no pun intended, and regain the outdoors.
We need to better integrate the new yellowjackets into the plot - Gen and Melissa - as well as give more character development to Mari and Akilah. Because it is becoming increasingly clear who is not going to make it out of the woods, and knowing that, one cannot count on shock value to give their deaths dramatic power. We must know and care for them as developed characters.
On a related note, I sorely missed the pre-crash flashbacks of season 1, and I think they should be resumed. Having them would be a great way to quickly give background to the less utilized members of the 1990s cast. Perhaps one could even do a bit of retconning, showing certain events from season 1 through the eyes of these less utilized characters.
Across the whole season, the storylines felt somewhat inert, because everyone was largely confined to the cabin. There were some broad story arcs, like Shauna's pregnancy, but there felt like precious little momentum. Season 1 worked better because each episode played like a mini-mission. Episode 2 was surviving the crash. Episode 3 finding water. Episode 4 learning to hunt. And so on. One of the strongest episodes this season - the dueling hunts of Lottie and Nat - worked so well because it felt like a season 1 episode. We had a mission. Season 3 could use more of these, and it seems like we're headed in that direction. They're going to need to devise new shelter, clothes, and how to hunt now that they have only a small amount of ammo saved from the fire for the gun. Lean into these things. And by having these missions, we can also have vital moments of character development as people pair off, talk, form bonds, etc.
2020s storylines:
There need to be consequences for what went on in season 2, in order to re-establish the connection to season 1, and to regain the stakes that motivate characters. For example, Tai's story arc. It will strain credulity if Tai is able to resume her political work, after seemingly disappearing, and reappearing at the site of a cult where two people die, and a third is wounded. If there are not consequences for her seemingly leaving behind Sammy and Simone. We need to see some repercussions for these characters, to resume multi-season continuity.
Adult Misty is a fan favorite, but remember WHY she became a fan favorite. We need to dial back the quirkiness that overbalanced her character in season 2.
The Adam storyline is done, and I say it should not be revisited, lest the weaknesses in the procedural aspects of its resolution, and Walter's efforts with Saracusa, be exposed as narratively weak.
On that note, something should be done with Saracusa. He was a rather vile character and one we were all rooting for to die. If he is to remain a character, they need to figure out how to make him an ally, or at least a frenemy, to the core cast. There could be some interesting interplay between him, Misty and Walter that could provide some novel plot developments. Sometimes one has to lean into the choices that are made and this is one of them.
One element of season 1 that I felt was lacking in season 2, is the very public nature of the survivor's trauma. We were confronted constantly with their fear of being outed, of public scrutiny. We see tabloids and books about them. We have a PI trying to find dirt on them. We have people like Allie who profited by being bystanders. This is an important ingredient and perhaps a season 3 (sub)plot could involve renewed media scrutiny following the events at the compound, and how the survivors must cope with this attention.
At first I thought that it might work if each season focused on a particular survivor. Shauna was Season 1's star. Nat seemed poised in season 2. Perhaps Tai in season 3, and on. Now, I'm not so sure. I think In hindsight, having two seasons to compare, that Shaun is the key, and Melanie Lynskey the star, and going forward, she needs to be the focal point around which the other survivors are oriented. Because it definitely felt like Lynskey was underutilized, and she really only got one star-worthy scene, namely at the chop shop.
As much as it is overused, I actually think a time jump might actually solve a number of these problems. We could get past the immediate results and see the long term impact. Perhaps Tai has given up her political career, and lives with Van, whose cancer is in remission. Misty could be living with Walter, who has had a positive effect on her, thereby making it more explicable why she has seemingly softened from the ball of chaotic evil she was in season 1. A time jump would be a literal and symbolic way of resetting things, of putting distance between the events of season1 and 2. Those storylines are done, and I think Season 3 will be most successful by leaving them firmly in the past, and starting anew.
Overall:
This series belongs in the winter. I believe that strongly. For as great a series as it is, I think it owes a degree of its success due to airing in a period where most other shows are on hiatus . Moving it to march I think lessoned its impact, compared to if we'd watched it in the dead of winter. And it had to compete with Succession, Barry, and a lot of other shows. Yellowjackets should return to that initial, successful time slot, and if that means forestalling until late 2024, so be it.
As a fan, I loved the participatory aspects of season 2. Getting clues in the mail. Reading those veiled plot clues written as journal entries. But I don't think it worked very well from a narrative perspective. Details were spoiled. It felt derivative of Ozark. And I think it set the wrong tone. Plus, I think the show may have been influenced a tad too much by the enthusiasm of fans. Fan service is mighty dangerous. I think the series should take a step back, and rely less upon these kinds of hype tactics.
I end this by saying this to the writers: I adore this show. It resonates with me on a personal level, more than any show I've ever seen. Like Jeff is for Shauna, I'm a ride-or die. And these comments I make, are in the spirit of offering helpful, constructive feedback. Because I firmly believe Season 2 is just a bump in the road, and the best episodes are still ahead of us. This series is like a sports team that won the big championship with a lot of rookies. And in the next season, they came close, but did not repeat winning. It doesn't mean their bad. It just means a few things didn't come together like they did the first time around. But all the winning elements are there. I have every confidence.
So Yellowjackets team, enjoy a nice break if you can. Writers: give those studios hell, and get your concessions. However long it takes. Us dedicated fans will be waiting when Yellowjackets returns.
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2023.05.26 23:52 GonzoJackOfAllTrades Let’s Not Panic, People
So much wringing of hands, rending of garments, and general wails for the death of the show. Let’s take a deep breath and consider the many positives that this finale has given us, often riding on the back of some of those moments that weren’t satisfying.
For starters, the ‘96 timeline is doing just fine. Yeah, Lottie stepping down feels like a disappointment, but who was ever going to truly challenge her?
Now we have Nat thrust into the leadership role, which she did not seem to want but which seemed to grow on her with each silent oath of fealty. What happens between now and the rescue that turns that smiling young woman into the hot mess of the modern timeline?
I imagine that part of it will be the conflict between her and Shauna that seemed to bleed across 25 years to the moment they meet again in Nat’s motel room.
And yeah, Shauna tearfully scrawling in her diary about how unfair the world is was hilarious but that unfinished sentence about what she realized could have finished in wildly different ways. Based on the respect she commands in the present timeline (at least at the beginning, yeah the power dynamics seem a bit fluid/sloppy), but based on what we see I don’t think that sentence was going to end in a bunch of emo navel-gazing.
Just a couple of weeks ago I was personally rooting for Coach Ben to hop the Crystal Express to Flavortown and put us all out of his misery. Now it would seem that he’s gone the crazed homicidal hermit route. Good times.
Add to that the upping of the difficulty with the loss of the cabin and President Nat’s first 100 days are looking very shaky.
So, yeah. Then there’s the modern timeline. Yes, it feels like the writers suddenly had to clean up their room and decided to shove a lot of shit in the closet, BUT! clean the room they did.
Was Walter’s solution to the Adam Martin situation absolute clownshoes? Yes! Is it a damn shame that Kevyn died while Pornstache lived? Hell to the Yes!
But, have they made Walter seem like the kind of guy who could create the needed digital paper trail to pull it off and made Pornstache seem like the kind of scumbag who would take the offer for professional gain? You know it!
Final result, the Adam Martin plot can be relegated to the dustbin of history. In its wake we have a strange new dynamic between Callie and Shauna and I can’t wait to see how out of his depth Jeff will be with those two.
And yes, the decision to have Jeff and Callie lead the Starsky and Schmuck to the compound was an odd choice, but that moment when Lottie met Callie? Totally worth the forced bottle episode structure.
Nat is gone. Bummer. Without her, how will we find out what really happened to Travis? Guess what. Lottie is not some cunning big bad. She’s a deeply traumatized woman with unreliable brain chemistry just barely keeping her l self in check. Count me among those who think Travis’ death was as dumb and pointless as she said it was.
So Nat’s death sucks. The character was done dirty. But now we get to see what a truly grief stricken Misty looks like as she seeks comfort in the arms of a quietly homicidal lunatic. Yeah, Walter was an absurd deus ex machina, but his calm methodology suggests some absolute madness in the near future.
Some feel Van was done dirty as she loses her laid back charm. RIP chill and quirky Van. Long live desperate manipulator Van.
Yes, Simone and Sammy are somewhere in the depths of New Jersey ready to potentially blow up Tai (and the other YJ’s) world. If she lives, she and pictures of Tai’s altar go to the press. Interesting times.
So, yeah. The pacing was weird (so much ground to cover). We didn’t get everything we wanted. The show has evolved in some ways that weren’t always logical.
Still the stage has been set for some good stuff moving forward. It almost feels like a soft reset on some of the more questionable choices this season.
I,for one, am going to trust the writers.
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2023.05.26 23:33 Southern_Plastic_120 Thoughts
I'll keep watching cause I watch shows until the end, but I am not sure it will be a priority like it is now. When season 1 ended I told all my friends. I could not wait! Now... Idk some of my issues...
Tai- I get it's only been a few days, but yeah She took that lady's car!! Then LEFT it But she also left Sammy and Simone and Steve and even her style. ( all start w S) Is she famous or not? No one knew her at the crime scene but the trucker did. The whole Senate thing was just gone like...ok... All her storylines are gone except Van.
Nat- love Sophie, love Juliette but idc really about Sophie in the Wilderness because well Juliette is dead. That was too much of a trope for Natalie to be all forgiving and loving to just die. Come on. Also why did the others act shocked she was so messed up.
The Sadeki's - I could probably watch a Santa Clarita x Ozark x whatever type show about them like crazy parents that involve the kids. I LOVE JEFF THE TRUE RIDE OR DIE!! and Callie's Apple did not fall far from the psychopathic fucked up man-eating tree. Shauna is a freaking crazy unhinged VILLIAN
Misty and Walter - who is watching the parrot? Besides being likable actors they have no redeemable qualities REALLY they kill w ZERO conscience. They give zero fucks.
The police that are fucked, I loved Kevyn and I liked Matt too. That's just tied up now cause Matt realized he was in way over his head at least, so basically there are NO good guys now only a show of villains..wow.
Ben- good as dead. I mean if the girls don't kill him. Then how does he get rescued, hiding in a tree???
Lottie- so anti-climatic so what the compound is over?? Lisa can't take over more loose ends.
Van - is she dying, not dying whatever don't care.
Mari -dont care if she is rude she is starving in the wilderness and that that's peoples biggest character flaw with the show LMAO
Travis - we obviously DGAF how he really died now.. Or who drained his account...
Javi had to die because he would age or they would change actors.
The redshirts don't care, why are they still around...
Akilah and her nephew's stories are possibly the only likable ones and she is dead.
Crystal no idea if she was real no one ever spoke to her that was not from Mistys POV but idk no one gives AF Coach is missing maybe they think Coach is still in his room. They would rather KILL Javi than find Crystal sooo is she fake...
So now what we wait a year or more to see them what rebuild a shelter and eat more people until they get rescued??
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2023.05.26 23:21 el3ctricblue RFA/UFA Salary Predictions
Just for fun, I did a little scraping and ML to generate predicted salaries for RFA and UFA skaters (didn't do goalies). There may be some strange or unexpected results.
Edit: Revised results from new model (details in comment) =
Google Sheets Link Player | Position | Team | Age | Type | Cap Hit | Length | Total Value |
Jesper Bratt | RW, LW | NJD | 24 | Standard | $8,900,000 | 6 | $53,400,000 |
Alex DeBrincat | LW, RW | OTT | 25 | Standard | $8,600,000 | 8 | $68,800,000 |
Pierre-Luc Dubois | C | WPG | 25 | Standard | $7,800,000 | 7 | $54,600,000 |
Patrick Kane | RW | NYR | 34 | Standard | $7,700,000 | 4 | $30,800,000 |
Timo Meier | LW, RW | NJD | 26 | Standard | $7,500,000 | 6 | $45,000,000 |
Vladimir Tarasenko | RW | NYR | 31 | Standard | $7,400,000 | 5 | $37,000,000 |
Trevor Zegras | C, LW | ANA | 22 | Standard | $7,300,000 | 6 | $43,800,000 |
Vince Dunn | LD/RD | SEA | 26 | Standard | $7,200,000 | 6 | $43,200,000 |
Dmitry Orlov | LD | BOS | 31 | Standard | $7,100,000 | 5 | $35,500,000 |
Oscar Klefbom | LD | EDM | 29 | Standard | $7,100,000 | 6 | $42,600,000 |
Cole Caufield | LW | MTL | 22 | Standard | $6,800,000 | 6 | $40,800,000 |
Shayne Gostisbehere | LD/RD | CAR | 30 | Standard | $6,600,000 | 6 | $39,600,000 |
Damon Severson | RD | NJD | 28 | Standard | $6,500,000 | 6 | $39,000,000 |
Tyler Bertuzzi | LW, RW | BOS | 28 | Standard | $6,300,000 | 5 | $31,500,000 |
Bowen Byram | LD/RD | COL | 22 | Standard | $6,300,000 | 6 | $37,800,000 |
Sean Monahan | C, LW, RW | MTL | 28 | Standard | $5,600,000 | 7 | $39,200,000 |
Ryan Graves | LD | NJD | 28 | Standard | $5,600,000 | 4 | $22,400,000 |
Matt Dumba | RD | MIN | 28 | Standard | $5,600,000 | 4 | $22,400,000 |
Troy Terry | RW | ANA | 25 | Standard | $5,500,000 | 4 | $22,000,000 |
Ryan O'Reilly | C | TOR | 32 | Standard | $5,500,000 | 3 | $16,500,000 |
Jason Zucker | LW, RW | PIT | 31 | Standard | $5,300,000 | 4 | $21,200,000 |
John Klingberg | RD | MIN | 30 | Standard | $5,300,000 | 4 | $21,200,000 |
Alex Killorn | RW, LW | TBL | 33 | Standard | $5,200,000 | 4 | $20,800,000 |
Patrice Bergeron | C | BOS | 37 | 35+ | $5,100,000 | 1 | $5,100,000 |
J.T. Compher | C, RW | COL | 28 | Standard | $5,100,000 | 5 | $25,500,000 |
Vladislav Gavrikov | LD | LAK | 27 | Standard | $5,100,000 | 4 | $20,400,000 |
Evan Bouchard | RD | EDM | 23 | Standard | $4,900,000 | 5 | $24,500,000 |
Max Domi | C, LW | DAL | 28 | Standard | $4,800,000 | 5 | $24,000,000 |
Ivan Barbashev | LW, C | VGK | 27 | Standard | $4,800,000 | 4 | $19,200,000 |
David Krejci | C | BOS | 37 | 35+ | $4,700,000 | 1 | $4,700,000 |
Jonathan Drouin | C, LW | MTL | 28 | Standard | $4,700,000 | 5 | $23,500,000 |
Alexis Lafrenière | LW, RW | NYR | 21 | Standard | $4,700,000 | 5 | $23,500,000 |
Brian Dumoulin | LD | PIT | 31 | Standard | $4,700,000 | 4 | $18,800,000 |
Tomas Tatar | LW, RW | NJD | 32 | Standard | $4,600,000 | 2 | $9,200,000 |
Michael Bunting | LW | TOR | 27 | Standard | $4,500,000 | 4 | $18,000,000 |
K'Andre Miller | LD | NYR | 23 | Standard | $4,500,000 | 5 | $22,500,000 |
Jonathan Toews | C | CHI | 35 | 35+ | $4,400,000 | 2 | $8,800,000 |
Oskar Sundqvist | RW, C | MIN | 29 | Standard | $4,300,000 | 4 | $17,200,000 |
Matias Maccelli | LW | ARI | 22 | Standard | $4,100,000 | 5 | $20,500,000 |
Carson Soucy | LD/RD | SEA | 28 | Standard | $4,100,000 | 3 | $12,300,000 |
Max Pacioretty | LW | CAR | 34 | Standard | $4,000,000 | 2 | $8,000,000 |
Andreas Athanasiou | LW, RW | CHI | 28 | Standard | $4,000,000 | 3 | $12,000,000 |
Alexander Kerfoot | LW, RW | TOR | 28 | Standard | $4,000,000 | 4 | $16,000,000 |
Connor Brown | RW, LW | WSH | 29 | Standard | $4,000,000 | 3 | $12,000,000 |
Andreas Johnsson | LW, RW | SJS | 28 | Standard | $3,700,000 | 4 | $14,800,000 |
Joonas Donskoi | RW | SEA | 31 | Standard | $3,700,000 | 3 | $11,100,000 |
Evan Rodrigues | C, LW | COL | 29 | Standard | $3,600,000 | 3 | $10,800,000 |
Pierre Engvall | RW, LW | NYI | 27 | Standard | $3,600,000 | 3 | $10,800,000 |
Nick Ritchie | LW | CGY | 27 | Standard | $3,600,000 | 4 | $14,400,000 |
Ethan Bear | RD | VAN | 26 | Standard | $3,600,000 | 3 | $10,800,000 |
Erik Johnson | RD | COL | 35 | 35+ | $3,600,000 | 3 | $10,800,000 |
Erik Haula | C, LW | NJD | 32 | Standard | $3,400,000 | 3 | $10,200,000 |
Kevin Shattenkirk | RD | ANA | 34 | Standard | $3,400,000 | 3 | $10,200,000 |
John Moore | LD | ANA | 32 | Standard | $3,400,000 | 3 | $10,200,000 |
Gustav Nyquist | LW, RW | MIN | 33 | Standard | $3,200,000 | 1 | $3,200,000 |
Scott Mayfield | RD | NYI | 30 | Standard | $3,200,000 | 4 | $12,800,000 |
Justin Holl | RD | TOR | 31 | Standard | $3,200,000 | 3 | $9,600,000 |
James van Riemsdyk | LW, RW | PHI | 34 | Standard | $3,100,000 | 3 | $9,300,000 |
Yegor Sharangovich | LW, RW, C | NJD | 25 | Standard | $3,000,000 | 3 | $9,000,000 |
Jake Gardiner | LD | CAR | 33 | Standard | $3,000,000 | 2 | $6,000,000 |
Milan Lucic | LW, RW | CGY | 35 | 35+ | $3,000,000 | 1 | $3,000,000 |
Teddy Blueger | C, LW | VGK | 28 | Standard | $2,900,000 | 3 | $8,700,000 |
Dmitry Kulikov | LD/RD | PIT | 32 | Standard | $2,900,000 | 2 | $5,800,000 |
Radko Gudas | RD | FLA | 33 | Standard | $2,900,000 | 2 | $5,800,000 |
Zemgus Girgensons | LW, C | BUF | 29 | Standard | $2,900,000 | 3 | $8,700,000 |
Pius Suter | C, LW | DET | 27 | Standard | $2,800,000 | 3 | $8,400,000 |
Adam Erne | LW, RW | DET | 28 | Standard | $2,800,000 | 3 | $8,400,000 |
Denis Gurianov | RW, LW | MTL | 26 | Standard | $2,800,000 | 2 | $5,600,000 |
Gabriel Vilardi | RW, C | LAK | 23 | Standard | $2,700,000 | 4 | $10,800,000 |
Ian Cole | LD/RD | TBL | 34 | Standard | $2,700,000 | 2 | $5,400,000 |
Jesse Puljujärvi | RW | CAR | 25 | Standard | $2,700,000 | 3 | $8,100,000 |
Vladislav Namestnikov | LW, RW, C | WPG | 30 | Standard | $2,600,000 | 3 | $7,800,000 |
Maxime Comtois | LW | ANA | 24 | Standard | $2,600,000 | 3 | $7,800,000 |
Craig Smith | RW, C | WSH | 33 | Standard | $2,600,000 | 3 | $7,800,000 |
Akito Hirose | LD | VAN | 24 | Standard | $2,600,000 | 4 | $10,400,000 |
Conor Sheary | LW, RW | WSH | 31 | Standard | $2,500,000 | 2 | $5,000,000 |
Evgeni Dadonov | RW, LW | DAL | 34 | Standard | $2,500,000 | 2 | $5,000,000 |
Caleb Jones | LD/RD | CHI | 26 | Standard | $2,500,000 | 2 | $5,000,000 |
Erik Gustafsson | LD | TOR | 31 | Standard | $2,400,000 | 4 | $9,600,000 |
Jesper Fast | RW | CAR | 31 | Standard | $2,400,000 | 3 | $7,200,000 |
Travis Hamonic | RD | OTT | 32 | Standard | $2,400,000 | 2 | $4,800,000 |
Jake Livingstone | RD | NSH | 24 | Standard | $2,400,000 | 4 | $9,600,000 |
Niko Mikkola | LD | NYR | 27 | Standard | $2,400,000 | 2 | $4,800,000 |
Phil Kessel | RW | VGK | 35 | 35+ | $2,300,000 | 2 | $4,600,000 |
Morgan Geekie | C, RW | SEA | 24 | Standard | $2,300,000 | 3 | $6,900,000 |
Derek Grant | LW, C | ANA | 33 | Standard | $2,300,000 | 2 | $4,600,000 |
Tyson Jost | C | BUF | 25 | Standard | $2,300,000 | 3 | $6,900,000 |
Vinnie Hinostroza | RW, LW | BUF | 29 | Standard | $2,200,000 | 3 | $6,600,000 |
Nick Holden | LD | OTT | 36 | 35+ | $2,200,000 | 2 | $4,400,000 |
Richard Pánik | LW, RW | NYI | 32 | Standard | $2,200,000 | 2 | $4,400,000 |
Noah Cates | C, LW | PHI | 24 | Standard | $2,100,000 | 2 | $4,200,000 |
Ross Colton | LW, C | TBL | 26 | Standard | $2,100,000 | 2 | $4,200,000 |
Miles Wood | LW | NJD | 27 | Standard | $2,100,000 | 3 | $6,300,000 |
Luke Schenn | RD | TOR | 33 | Standard | $2,100,000 | 3 | $6,300,000 |
Oliver Wahlstrom | RW | NYI | 23 | Standard | $2,000,000 | 2 | $4,000,000 |
Shane Pinto | C | OTT | 22 | Standard | $2,000,000 | 2 | $4,000,000 |
Jordan Oesterle | LD/RD | DET | 31 | Standard | $2,000,000 | 3 | $6,000,000 |
Brendan Lemieux | LW, RW | PHI | 27 | Standard | $2,000,000 | 2 | $4,000,000 |
Ondrej Kase | RW | CAR | 27 | Standard | $2,000,000 | 3 | $6,000,000 |
Morgan Frost | C | PHI | 24 | Standard | $1,900,000 | 2 | $3,800,000 |
Nick Foligno | LW, C, RW | BOS | 35 | 35+ | $1,900,000 | 2 | $3,800,000 |
Garnet Hathaway | RW, LW | BOS | 31 | Standard | $1,900,000 | 3 | $5,700,000 |
Patric Hörnqvist | RW | FLA | 36 | 35+ | $1,900,000 | 1 | $1,900,000 |
Trent Frederic | LW, RW | BOS | 25 | Standard | $1,800,000 | 2 | $3,600,000 |
Tomas Nosek | C, LW | BOS | 30 | Standard | $1,800,000 | 2 | $3,600,000 |
Brett Howden | C, LW | VGK | 25 | Standard | $1,800,000 | 2 | $3,600,000 |
Ryan Reaves | RW | MIN | 36 | 35+ | $1,800,000 | 2 | $3,600,000 |
Cody Glass | C | NSH | 24 | Standard | $1,700,000 | 2 | $3,400,000 |
Alex Newhook | LW, C | COL | 22 | Standard | $1,700,000 | 2 | $3,400,000 |
Tyler Motte | LW, RW | NYR | 28 | Standard | $1,700,000 | 2 | $3,400,000 |
Chris Wagner | RW, C | BOS | 32 | Standard | $1,700,000 | 3 | $5,100,000 |
Travis Dermott | LD/RD | VAN | 26 | Standard | $1,700,000 | 2 | $3,400,000 |
Calen Addison | RD | MIN | 23 | Standard | $1,600,000 | 3 | $4,800,000 |
Ryan Donato | LW, C | SEA | 27 | Standard | $1,600,000 | 3 | $4,800,000 |
Anders Bjork | LW, RW | CHI | 26 | Standard | $1,600,000 | 3 | $4,800,000 |
Nick Bonino | C, LW | PIT | 35 | 35+ | $1,600,000 | 2 | $3,200,000 |
Derek Ryan | C, RW | EDM | 36 | 35+ | $1,600,000 | 2 | $3,200,000 |
Connor Mackey | LD | ARI | 26 | Standard | $1,600,000 | 2 | $3,200,000 |
Vitali Kravtsov | LW, RW | VAN | 23 | Standard | $1,600,000 | 2 | $3,200,000 |
Austin Watson | RW, LW | OTT | 31 | Standard | $1,600,000 | 2 | $3,200,000 |
Jamie Drysdale | RD | ANA | 21 | Standard | $1,600,000 | 4 | $6,400,000 |
Mattias Janmark | LW, RW | EDM | 30 | Standard | $1,500,000 | 2 | $3,000,000 |
Christian Fischer | RW, LW | ARI | 26 | Standard | $1,500,000 | 2 | $3,000,000 |
Corey Perry | RW | TBL | 38 | 35+ | $1,500,000 | 1 | $1,500,000 |
Connor Clifton | RD | BOS | 28 | Standard | $1,500,000 | 2 | $3,000,000 |
Declan Chisholm | LD/RD | WPG | 23 | Standard | $1,500,000 | 2 | $3,000,000 |
William Borgen | RD | SEA | 26 | Standard | $1,500,000 | 2 | $3,000,000 |
Jacob Christiansen | LD/RD | CBJ | 23 | Standard | $1,500,000 | 2 | $3,000,000 |
Logan Stanley | LD | WPG | 25 | Standard | $1,500,000 | 2 | $3,000,000 |
Luke Glendening | C, RW, LW | DAL | 34 | Standard | $1,500,000 | 2 | $3,000,000 |
Rafaël Harvey-Pinard | LW | MTL | 24 | Standard | $1,400,000 | 2 | $2,800,000 |
Sam Steel | C, LW | MIN | 25 | Standard | $1,400,000 | 2 | $2,800,000 |
Lucas Carlsson | LD | FLA | 25 | Standard | $1,400,000 | 2 | $2,800,000 |
Paul Stastny | C, LW | CAR | 37 | 35+ | $1,400,000 | 1 | $1,400,000 |
Carl Hagelin | LW | WSH | 34 | Standard | $1,400,000 | 2 | $2,800,000 |
Lars Eller | C | COL | 34 | Standard | $1,400,000 | 2 | $2,800,000 |
Martin Fehérváry | LD/RD | WSH | 23 | Standard | $1,400,000 | 2 | $2,800,000 |
Tanner Jeannot | RW, LW | TBL | 26 | Standard | $1,400,000 | 1 | $1,400,000 |
Slater Koekkoek | LD/RD | EDM | 29 | Standard | $1,400,000 | 2 | $2,800,000 |
Cam York | LD/RD | PHI | 22 | Standard | $1,300,000 | 2 | $2,600,000 |
Danton Heinen | LW, RW | PIT | 27 | Standard | $1,300,000 | 2 | $2,600,000 |
David Kämpf | C | TOR | 28 | Standard | $1,300,000 | 2 | $2,600,000 |
Michael Mcleod | C | NJD | 25 | Standard | $1,300,000 | 2 | $2,600,000 |
Ian Mitchell | RD | CHI | 24 | Standard | $1,300,000 | 2 | $2,600,000 |
Paul Byron | LW, RW | MTL | 34 | Standard | $1,300,000 | 2 | $2,600,000 |
Samuel Bolduc | LD | NYI | 22 | Standard | $1,300,000 | 2 | $2,600,000 |
Austin Wagner | RW, LW | CHI | 26 | Standard | $1,300,000 | 2 | $2,600,000 |
Gustav Lindström | RD | DET | 24 | Standard | $1,300,000 | 2 | $2,600,000 |
Marcus Bjork | RD | CBJ | 25 | Standard | $1,300,000 | 2 | $2,600,000 |
Reilly Walsh | RD | NJD | 24 | Standard | $1,300,000 | 2 | $2,600,000 |
Daniel Sprong | RW, LW | SEA | 26 | Standard | $1,200,000 | 1 | $1,200,000 |
Michael Carcone | LW, C | ARI | 27 | Standard | $1,200,000 | 3 | $3,600,000 |
Zach Parise | LW | NYI | 38 | 35+ | $1,200,000 | 1 | $1,200,000 |
Ryan McLeod | C | EDM | 23 | Standard | $1,200,000 | 2 | $2,400,000 |
Gemel Smith | C | TBL | 29 | Standard | $1,200,000 | 2 | $2,400,000 |
Nick Bjugstad | C, RW | EDM | 30 | Standard | $1,200,000 | 1 | $1,200,000 |
Scott Perunovich | LD | STL | 24 | Standard | $1,200,000 | 2 | $2,400,000 |
Jack McBain | C, LW | ARI | 23 | Standard | $1,200,000 | 2 | $2,400,000 |
Morgan Barron | LW, C, RW | WPG | 24 | Standard | $1,200,000 | 2 | $2,400,000 |
Noel Acciari | C, RW | TOR | 31 | Standard | $1,200,000 | 2 | $2,400,000 |
Trevor Carrick | LD | TBL | 28 | Standard | $1,200,000 | 2 | $2,400,000 |
Gavin Bayreuther | LD/RD | CBJ | 29 | Standard | $1,200,000 | 2 | $2,400,000 |
Jujhar Khaira | LW, C | CHI | 28 | Standard | $1,200,000 | 2 | $2,400,000 |
Nolan Patrick | C, RW | VGK | 24 | Standard | $1,200,000 | 2 | $2,400,000 |
Erik Brännström | LD/RD | OTT | 23 | Standard | $1,200,000 | 2 | $2,400,000 |
Calvin De Haan | LD/RD | CAR | 32 | Standard | $1,200,000 | 2 | $2,400,000 |
Michael Stone | RD | CGY | 33 | Standard | $1,200,000 | 1 | $1,200,000 |
Radim Zohorna | C, LW, RW | TOR | 27 | Standard | $1,200,000 | 2 | $2,400,000 |
Rhett Gardner | C, LW | DAL | 27 | Standard | $1,200,000 | 2 | $2,400,000 |
Alexandre Carrier | RD | NSH | 26 | Standard | $1,200,000 | 2 | $2,400,000 |
Dylan Coghlan | RD | CAR | 25 | Standard | $1,200,000 | 2 | $2,400,000 |
Zachary Jones | LD | NYR | 22 | Standard | $1,200,000 | 2 | $2,400,000 |
Kevin Bahl | LD | NJD | 23 | Standard | $1,200,000 | 2 | $2,400,000 |
Matthew Phillips | C | CGY | 25 | Standard | $1,100,000 | 2 | $2,200,000 |
Nathan Bastian | RW, C | NJD | 25 | Standard | $1,100,000 | 2 | $2,200,000 |
Klim Kostin | LW, RW | EDM | 24 | Standard | $1,100,000 | 2 | $2,200,000 |
Egor Sokolov | LW | OTT | 23 | Standard | $1,100,000 | 2 | $2,200,000 |
Kole Lind | RW | SEA | 24 | Standard | $1,100,000 | 2 | $2,200,000 |
Pavel Dorofeyev | C | VGK | 22 | Standard | $1,100,000 | 2 | $2,200,000 |
Mac Hollowell | RD | TOR | 24 | Standard | $1,100,000 | 2 | $2,200,000 |
Noah Gregor | LW, RW | SJS | 24 | Standard | $1,100,000 | 2 | $2,200,000 |
Pontus Holmberg | C | TOR | 24 | Standard | $1,100,000 | 1 | $1,100,000 |
Connor Carrick | RD | BOS | 29 | Standard | $1,100,000 | 2 | $2,200,000 |
Ryan Carpenter | RW, C | NYR | 32 | Standard | $1,100,000 | 2 | $2,200,000 |
Ty Smith | LD/RD | PIT | 23 | Standard | $1,100,000 | 2 | $2,200,000 |
Leon Gawanke | LD/RD | WPG | 24 | Standard | $1,100,000 | 2 | $2,200,000 |
Brady Lyle | RD | STL | 24 | Standard | $1,100,000 | 2 | $2,200,000 |
Colin White | RW, C | FLA | 26 | Standard | $1,100,000 | 1 | $1,100,000 |
Zack MacEwen | RW, C | LAK | 26 | Standard | $1,100,000 | 1 | $1,100,000 |
Ronnie Attard | RD | PHI | 24 | Standard | $1,100,000 | 2 | $2,200,000 |
Tyler Tucker | LD/RD | STL | 23 | Standard | $1,100,000 | 2 | $2,200,000 |
Alexander Edler | LD | LAK | 37 | 35+ | $1,100,000 | 1 | $1,100,000 |
Chase Priskie | RD | ANA | 27 | Standard | $1,100,000 | 1 | $1,100,000 |
Cal Foote | RD | NSH | 24 | Standard | $1,100,000 | 2 | $2,200,000 |
Dylan Samberg | LD | WPG | 24 | Standard | $1,100,000 | 2 | $2,200,000 |
Nicolas Meloche | RD | CGY | 25 | Standard | $1,100,000 | 2 | $2,200,000 |
Jack Johnson | LD | COL | 36 | 35+ | $1,100,000 | 1 | $1,100,000 |
Sean Day | LD | TBL | 25 | Standard | $1,100,000 | 1 | $1,100,000 |
Tim Berni | LD | CBJ | 23 | Standard | $1,100,000 | 2 | $2,200,000 |
Trey Fix-Wolansky | RW | CBJ | 24 | Standard | $1,000,000 | 1 | $1,000,000 |
Eric Staal | C | FLA | 38 | 35+ | $1,000,000 | 1 | $1,000,000 |
Jesse Ylönen | RW, LW | MTL | 23 | Standard | $1,000,000 | 2 | $2,000,000 |
Derick Brassard | C, LW | OTT | 35 | 35+ | $1,000,000 | 1 | $1,000,000 |
Philipp Kurashev | LW, C, RW | CHI | 23 | Standard | $1,000,000 | 2 | $2,000,000 |
Fabian Zetterlund | RW | SJS | 23 | Standard | $1,000,000 | 2 | $2,000,000 |
Ty Dellandrea | RW, C | DAL | 22 | Standard | $1,000,000 | 2 | $2,000,000 |
Maxime Lajoie | LD | CAR | 25 | Standard | $1,000,000 | 2 | $2,000,000 |
Derrick Pouliot | LD | SJS | 29 | Standard | $1,000,000 | 2 | $2,000,000 |
Joe Hicketts | LD | MIN | 27 | Standard | $1,000,000 | 2 | $2,000,000 |
Julien Gauthier | RW | OTT | 25 | Standard | $1,000,000 | 1 | $1,000,000 |
Nicolas Beaudin | LD | MTL | 23 | Standard | $1,000,000 | 2 | $2,000,000 |
Devin Shore | LW, RW | EDM | 28 | Standard | $1,000,000 | 2 | $2,000,000 |
Benjamin Gleason | LD | DAL | 25 | Standard | $1,000,000 | 2 | $2,000,000 |
Marc Staal | LD | FLA | 36 | 35+ | $1,000,000 | 1 | $1,000,000 |
Pierre-Édouard Bellemare | C, LW | TBL | 38 | 35+ | $1,000,000 | 1 | $1,000,000 |
Robert Hägg | LD | DET | 28 | Standard | $1,000,000 | 2 | $2,000,000 |
Dylan Gambrell | C | OTT | 26 | Standard | $1,000,000 | 1 | $1,000,000 |
Kieffer Bellows | LW, RW | PHI | 25 | Standard | $1,000,000 | 1 | $1,000,000 |
Rasmus Asplund | LW, C | NSH | 25 | Standard | $1,000,000 | 2 | $2,000,000 |
Troy Stecher | RD | CGY | 29 | Standard | $1,000,000 | 2 | $2,000,000 |
Fredrik Olofsson | LW | DAL | 27 | Standard | $1,000,000 | 1 | $1,000,000 |
Joel Kiviranta | RW, LW | DAL | 27 | Standard | $1,000,000 | 2 | $2,000,000 |
Nathan Beaulieu | LD/RD | ANA | 30 | Standard | $1,000,000 | 2 | $2,000,000 |
Lawrence Pilut | LD | BUF | 27 | Standard | $990,000 | 1 | $990,000 |
Alec Regula | RD | CHI | 22 | Standard | $990,000 | 1 | $990,000 |
Anthony Richard | LW, RW | MTL | 26 | Standard | $980,000 | 2 | $1,960,000 |
Filip Hållander | C | PIT | 23 | Standard | $980,000 | 1 | $980,000 |
Ryan Poehling | LW, C | PIT | 24 | Standard | $980,000 | 2 | $1,960,000 |
Connor Corcoran | RD | VGK | 22 | Standard | $980,000 | 1 | $980,000 |
Axel Andersson | RD | ANA | 23 | Standard | $980,000 | 2 | $1,960,000 |
Isaac Ratcliffe | LW | NSH | 24 | Standard | $970,000 | 1 | $970,000 |
Lane Pederson | C | CBJ | 25 | Standard | $950,000 | 2 | $1,900,000 |
Scott Harrington | LD | ANA | 30 | Standard | $950,000 | 2 | $1,900,000 |
Karson Kuhlman | RW | WPG | 27 | Standard | $950,000 | 1 | $950,000 |
Wayne Simmonds | RW, LW | TOR | 34 | Standard | $950,000 | 1 | $950,000 |
Libor Hájek | LD | NYR | 25 | Standard | $950,000 | 2 | $1,900,000 |
Jacob Bernard-Docker | RD | OTT | 23 | Standard | $950,000 | 2 | $1,900,000 |
Dominik Bokk | LW, RW | CAR | 23 | Standard | $940,000 | 2 | $1,880,000 |
Drew O'Connor | LW | PIT | 25 | Standard | $940,000 | 1 | $940,000 |
Mathias Emilio Pettersen | C | CGY | 23 | Standard | $940,000 | 1 | $940,000 |
Grigori Denisenko | LW, RW | FLA | 23 | Standard | $940,000 | 2 | $1,880,000 |
Logan Brown | C, LW | STL | 25 | Standard | $940,000 | 1 | $940,000 |
Dryden Hunt | LW, RW | CGY | 27 | Standard | $940,000 | 2 | $1,880,000 |
Max Willman | LW | PHI | 28 | Standard | $940,000 | 2 | $1,880,000 |
Alex Belzile | C, RW | MTL | 31 | Standard | $930,000 | 2 | $1,860,000 |
Jesper Frödén | RW | SEA | 28 | Standard | $930,000 | 1 | $930,000 |
Joey Anderson | RW | CHI | 25 | Standard | $930,000 | 2 | $1,860,000 |
Joshua Dunne | C | CBJ | 24 | Standard | $930,000 | 1 | $930,000 |
William Lagesson | LD | CAR | 27 | Standard | $930,000 | 1 | $930,000 |
Ryan Merkley | RD | COL | 22 | Standard | $930,000 | 1 | $930,000 |
Lias Andersson | C, LW | LAK | 24 | Standard | $920,000 | 2 | $1,840,000 |
Andrew Cogliano | LW | COL | 36 | 35+ | $920,000 | 1 | $920,000 |
Dmitri Samorukov | LD | STL | 24 | Standard | $920,000 | 2 | $1,840,000 |
Brandon Scanlin | LD | NYR | 24 | Standard | $920,000 | 2 | $1,840,000 |
Vinni Lettieri | C, RW | BOS | 28 | Standard | $910,000 | 2 | $1,820,000 |
Jacob Peterson | LW, C | SJS | 23 | Standard | $910,000 | 2 | $1,820,000 |
Matt Nieto | LW, RW | COL | 30 | Standard | $910,000 | 2 | $1,820,000 |
Will Butcher | LD | DAL | 28 | Standard | $910,000 | 1 | $910,000 |
Rasmus Kupari | C, LW, RW | LAK | 23 | Standard | $910,000 | 1 | $910,000 |
Garrett Pilon | C | WSH | 25 | Standard | $910,000 | 1 | $910,000 |
Joona Luoto | LW, RW | CBJ | 25 | Standard | $910,000 | 1 | $910,000 |
Ryan Murray | LD | EDM | 29 | Standard | $910,000 | 2 | $1,820,000 |
Cavan Fitzgerald | LD | CAR | 26 | Standard | $910,000 | 2 | $1,820,000 |
Oskari Laaksonen | RD | DAL | 24 | Standard | $910,000 | 2 | $1,820,000 |
Cameron Crotty | RD | ARI | 24 | Standard | $910,000 | 2 | $1,820,000 |
Anton Strålman | RD | BOS | 36 | 35+ | $910,000 | 1 | $910,000 |
Brady Keeper | RD | VAN | 27 | Standard | $910,000 | 2 | $1,820,000 |
Alex Chiasson | RW | DET | 32 | Standard | $900,000 | 2 | $1,800,000 |
Alex Limoges | C, LW | WPG | 25 | Standard | $900,000 | 2 | $1,800,000 |
Jesper Boqvist | C, LW, RW | NJD | 24 | Standard | $900,000 | 1 | $900,000 |
Nils Höglander | LW, RW | VAN | 22 | Standard | $900,000 | 2 | $1,800,000 |
Joseph Veleno | C | DET | 23 | Standard | $900,000 | 1 | $900,000 |
Riley Tufte | LW | DAL | 25 | Standard | $900,000 | 2 | $1,800,000 |
Brandon Duhaime | RW, LW | MIN | 26 | Standard | $900,000 | 2 | $1,800,000 |
Kale Clague | LD/RD | BUF | 25 | Standard | $900,000 | 1 | $900,000 |
Gabriel Carlsson | LD | WSH | 26 | Standard | $900,000 | 1 | $900,000 |
Jasper Weatherby | C | DET | 25 | Standard | $900,000 | 1 | $900,000 |
Riley Barber | RW | DAL | 29 | Standard | $890,000 | 1 | $890,000 |
Mason Shaw | LW, C | MIN | 24 | Standard | $890,000 | 1 | $890,000 |
Jack Ahcan | LD | BOS | 26 | Standard | $890,000 | 2 | $1,780,000 |
Matt Filipe | C, LW | BOS | 25 | Standard | $890,000 | 1 | $890,000 |
Olli Juolevi | LD | ANA | 25 | Standard | $890,000 | 2 | $1,780,000 |
Matt Irwin | LD/RD | WSH | 35 | 35+ | $890,000 | 1 | $890,000 |
Axel Jonsson-Fjällby | LW | WPG | 25 | Standard | $880,000 | 2 | $1,760,000 |
John Hayden | C, RW | SEA | 28 | Standard | $880,000 | 2 | $1,760,000 |
Trevor Lewis | RW, C | CGY | 36 | 35+ | $880,000 | 1 | $880,000 |
Patrick Brown | C, RW | OTT | 31 | Standard | $880,000 | 2 | $1,760,000 |
Bobby Nardella | LD | WSH | 27 | Standard | $880,000 | 2 | $1,760,000 |
Jeffrey Viel | LW | SJS | 26 | Standard | $880,000 | 2 | $1,760,000 |
Zach Aston-Reese | LW, RW | TOR | 28 | Standard | $880,000 | 1 | $880,000 |
Casey Fitzgerald | RD | FLA | 26 | Standard | $880,000 | 2 | $1,760,000 |
Zachary Sanford | LW, RW | NSH | 28 | Standard | $870,000 | 1 | $870,000 |
Justin Bailey | RW | EDM | 28 | Standard | $870,000 | 1 | $870,000 |
Viktor Lodin | C, LW | OTT | 24 | Standard | $870,000 | 2 | $1,740,000 |
Mark Pysyk | RD | DET | 31 | Standard | $870,000 | 1 | $870,000 |
Connor Bunnaman | C, LW | FLA | 25 | Standard | $870,000 | 2 | $1,740,000 |
Ty Emberson | RD | NYR | 23 | Standard | $870,000 | 2 | $1,740,000 |
Wyatt Aamodt | LD | COL | 25 | Standard | $870,000 | 1 | $870,000 |
Valtteri Puustinen | LW | PIT | 24 | Standard | $860,000 | 2 | $1,720,000 |
Raphael Lavoie | RW, C | EDM | 22 | Standard | $860,000 | 2 | $1,720,000 |
Michael Del Zotto | LD | ANA | 33 | Standard | $860,000 | 1 | $860,000 |
Mikhail Maltsev | C, LW | COL | 25 | Standard | $860,000 | 1 | $860,000 |
Mathieu Olivier | RW | CBJ | 26 | Standard | $860,000 | 2 | $1,720,000 |
Jeremy Davies | LD | BUF | 26 | Standard | $860,000 | 1 | $860,000 |
Sampo Ranta | LW | COL | 23 | Standard | $860,000 | 1 | $860,000 |
John Ludvig | LD | FLA | 22 | Standard | $860,000 | 2 | $1,720,000 |
Dylan McIlrath | RD | WSH | 31 | Standard | $860,000 | 2 | $1,720,000 |
Nick Wolff | LD | BOS | 26 | Standard | $860,000 | 2 | $1,720,000 |
Wyatt Newpower | RD | DET | 25 | Standard | $860,000 | 2 | $1,720,000 |
Bode Wilde | RD | NYI | 23 | Standard | $860,000 | 2 | $1,720,000 |
Brett Murray | LW | BUF | 24 | Standard | $850,000 | 1 | $850,000 |
Jaret Anderson-Dolan | C, LW, RW | LAK | 23 | Standard | $850,000 | 1 | $850,000 |
Tim Gettinger | LW, RW | NYR | 25 | Standard | $850,000 | 1 | $850,000 |
Michael Pezzetta | LW, RW | MTL | 25 | Standard | $850,000 | 1 | $850,000 |
Jared McIsaac | LD | DET | 23 | Standard | $850,000 | 2 | $1,700,000 |
Jonathan Aspirot | LD | OTT | 24 | Standard | $850,000 | 2 | $1,700,000 |
Jackson Cates | C | PHI | 25 | Standard | $850,000 | 1 | $850,000 |
Jett Woo | RD | VAN | 22 | Standard | $850,000 | 1 | $850,000 |
Kai Wissmann | RD | BOS | 26 | Standard | $850,000 | 2 | $1,700,000 |
Jerad Rosburg | LD | DAL | 27 | Standard | $850,000 | 2 | $1,700,000 |
Joseph Cecconi | RD | BUF | 26 | Standard | $850,000 | 2 | $1,700,000 |
Zackary Hayes | LD | NJD | 24 | Standard | $850,000 | 2 | $1,700,000 |
Darren Helm | C, LW, RW | COL | 36 | 35+ | $850,000 | 1 | $850,000 |
Nathan Todd | C | STL | 27 | Standard | $840,000 | 2 | $1,680,000 |
Denis Malgin | LW, RW | COL | 26 | Standard | $840,000 | 1 | $840,000 |
Justin Dowling | C, LW | VAN | 32 | Standard | $840,000 | 2 | $1,680,000 |
Danny O'Regan | C, LW | DET | 29 | Standard | $840,000 | 1 | $840,000 |
Malte Stromwall | RW | CAR | 28 | Standard | $840,000 | 1 | $840,000 |
Tanner Kero | C, LW | DAL | 30 | Standard | $840,000 | 2 | $1,680,000 |
Evgeny Svechnikov | LW, RW | SJS | 26 | Standard | $840,000 | 1 | $840,000 |
Ben Meyers | LW, C | COL | 24 | Standard | $840,000 | 1 | $840,000 |
Nicholas Caamano | LW, RW | DAL | 24 | Standard | $840,000 | 1 | $840,000 |
Chase Pearson | C | DET | 25 | Standard | $840,000 | 1 | $840,000 |
Max Gildon | LD | FLA | 24 | Standard | $840,000 | 2 | $1,680,000 |
Cale Fleury | RD | SEA | 24 | Standard | $840,000 | 2 | $1,680,000 |
Filip Král | LD | TOR | 23 | Standard | $840,000 | 1 | $840,000 |
Kristians Rubins | LD | CGY | 25 | Standard | $840,000 | 2 | $1,680,000 |
Dmitri Semykin | LD | TBL | 23 | Standard | $840,000 | 2 | $1,680,000 |
Nick Abruzzese | LW, C | TOR | 24 | Standard | $830,000 | 2 | $1,660,000 |
Alexey Toropchenko | LW, RW | STL | 24 | Standard | $830,000 | 1 | $830,000 |
Benoit-Olivier Groulx | C | ANA | 23 | Standard | $830,000 | 1 | $830,000 |
Kevin Stenlund | C, RW | WPG | 26 | Standard | $830,000 | 1 | $830,000 |
Madison Bowey | RD | MTL | 28 | Standard | $830,000 | 1 | $830,000 |
Noah Juulsen | RD | VAN | 26 | Standard | $830,000 | 1 | $830,000 |
Philip Kemp | RD | EDM | 24 | Standard | $830,000 | 2 | $1,660,000 |
Wyatte Wylie | RD | PHI | 23 | Standard | $830,000 | 2 | $1,660,000 |
Peter Diliberatore | LD | PIT | 23 | Standard | $830,000 | 2 | $1,660,000 |
Martin Kaut | RW | SJS | 23 | Standard | $820,000 | 1 | $820,000 |
Joona Koppanen | LW, C | BOS | 25 | Standard | $820,000 | 1 | $820,000 |
Jonah Gadjovich | LW, RW | SJS | 24 | Standard | $820,000 | 1 | $820,000 |
Martin Pospisil | RW | CGY | 23 | Standard | $820,000 | 1 | $820,000 |
C.J. Suess | LW | SJS | 29 | Standard | $820,000 | 1 | $820,000 |
Tyler Madden | C | LAK | 23 | Standard | $820,000 | 1 | $820,000 |
Marc McLaughlin | C | BOS | 23 | Standard | $820,000 | 1 | $820,000 |
Scott Reedy | C | DAL | 24 | Standard | $820,000 | 1 | $820,000 |
Corey Schueneman | LD/RD | MTL | 27 | Standard | $820,000 | 2 | $1,640,000 |
Louis Belpedio | RD | PHI | 27 | Standard | $820,000 | 1 | $820,000 |
Parker Wotherspoon | LD | NYI | 25 | Standard | $820,000 | 2 | $1,640,000 |
Simon Benoit | LD | ANA | 24 | Standard | $820,000 | 2 | $1,640,000 |
Colin Swoyer | RD | PIT | 25 | Standard | $820,000 | 2 | $1,640,000 |
Kyle Burroughs | LD/RD | VAN | 27 | Standard | $820,000 | 2 | $1,640,000 |
Aarne Talvitie | C | NJD | 24 | Standard | $820,000 | 1 | $820,000 |
Gustav Olofsson | LD | SEA | 28 | Standard | $820,000 | 2 | $1,640,000 |
Nathan Clurman | RD | COL | 25 | Standard | $820,000 | 2 | $1,640,000 |
Jérémy Groleau | LD | NJD | 23 | Standard | $820,000 | 2 | $1,640,000 |
Josh Jacobs | RD | COL | 27 | Standard | $820,000 | 2 | $1,640,000 |
Mason Geertsen | LW, LD | NJD | 28 | Standard | $820,000 | 1 | $820,000 |
Aleksi Heponiemi | LW, C | FLA | 24 | Standard | $810,000 | 1 | $810,000 |
Fredrik Karlström | C | DAL | 25 | Standard | $810,000 | 1 | $810,000 |
Lucas Condotta | LW | MTL | 25 | Standard | $810,000 | 1 | $810,000 |
Jakub Galvas | LD | CHI | 24 | Standard | $810,000 | 2 | $1,620,000 |
Dakota Mermis | LD/RD | MIN | 29 | Standard | $810,000 | 2 | $1,620,000 |
Henrik Borgström | C | WSH | 25 | Standard | $810,000 | 1 | $810,000 |
Brayden Pachal | RD | VGK | 23 | Standard | $810,000 | 2 | $1,620,000 |
Jacob Larsson | LD | OTT | 26 | Standard | $810,000 | 1 | $810,000 |
Givani Smith | LW, RW | FLA | 25 | Standard | $810,000 | 1 | $810,000 |
Joshua Maniscalco | RD | PIT | 24 | Standard | $810,000 | 1 | $810,000 |
Tobie Paquette-Bisson | LD | LAK | 26 | Standard | $810,000 | 1 | $810,000 |
Andreas Englund | LD | CHI | 27 | Standard | $810,000 | 1 | $810,000 |
Seth Barton | RD | DET | 23 | Standard | $810,000 | 2 | $1,620,000 |
Steven Santini | RD | STL | 28 | Standard | $810,000 | 2 | $1,620,000 |
Frédéric Allard | RD | MTL | 25 | Standard | $810,000 | 1 | $810,000 |
Matthew Highmore | LW, RW | STL | 27 | Standard | $800,000 | 2 | $1,600,000 |
Lukas Rousek | RW | BUF | 24 | Standard | $800,000 | 2 | $1,600,000 |
Adam Gaudette | C, RW | STL | 26 | Standard | $800,000 | 2 | $1,600,000 |
Olle Lycksell | RW | PHI | 23 | Standard | $800,000 | 1 | $800,000 |
Joël Teasdale | RW, LW | MTL | 24 | Standard | $800,000 | 1 | $800,000 |
Marian Studenic | LW, RW | DAL | 24 | Standard | $800,000 | 1 | $800,000 |
Mitchell Chaffee | RW | MIN | 25 | Standard | $800,000 | 1 | $800,000 |
Jimmy Huntington | C | NSH | 24 | Standard | $800,000 | 1 | $800,000 |
Josh Archibald | RW, LW | PIT | 30 | Standard | $800,000 | 1 | $800,000 |
Markus Nurmi | RW, LW | NSH | 25 | Standard | $800,000 | 1 | $800,000 |
Tyler Benson | LW, RW | EDM | 25 | Standard | $800,000 | 1 | $800,000 |
Jayce Hawryluk | RW, LW | NJD | 27 | Standard | $800,000 | 1 | $800,000 |
Austin Rueschhoff | RW | NSH | 25 | Standard | $800,000 | 1 | $800,000 |
Shane Bowers | C | BOS | 23 | Standard | $800,000 | 1 | $800,000 |
Taylor Ward | RW | LAK | 25 | Standard | $800,000 | 1 | $800,000 |
Victor Mete | LD/RD | TOR | 25 | Standard | $800,000 | 1 | $800,000 |
Blade Jenkins | LW | NYI | 22 | Standard | $800,000 | 1 | $800,000 |
Tobias Björnfot | LD | LAK | 22 | Standard | $800,000 | 2 | $1,600,000 |
Colton Poolman | LD | CGY | 27 | Standard | $800,000 | 2 | $1,600,000 |
Brandon Baddock | LW, C | MIN | 28 | Standard | $800,000 | 2 | $1,600,000 |
Michael Vecchione | C, RW | WSH | 30 | Standard | $790,000 | 2 | $1,580,000 |
Jacob Lucchini | RW, C, LW | OTT | 28 | Standard | $790,000 | 2 | $1,580,000 |
Benjamin Jones | C | CGY | 24 | Standard | $790,000 | 1 | $790,000 |
Rourke Chartier | C | OTT | 27 | Standard | $790,000 | 1 | $790,000 |
Brian Pinho | C, RW | NJD | 28 | Standard | $790,000 | 1 | $790,000 |
Justin Kirkland | LW, RW | ANA | 26 | Standard | $790,000 | 1 | $790,000 |
Pontus Andreasson | C, LW | DET | 24 | Standard | $790,000 | 1 | $790,000 |
Ryan Shea | LD | DAL | 26 | Standard | $790,000 | 1 | $790,000 |
Andrej Sustr | RD | ANA | 32 | Standard | $790,000 | 1 | $790,000 |
Spencer Foo | RW, C | VGK | 29 | Standard | $790,000 | 1 | $790,000 |
Austin Strand | RD | BUF | 26 | Standard | $790,000 | 2 | $1,580,000 |
Serron Noel | RW | FLA | 22 | Standard | $790,000 | 1 | $790,000 |
Mackenzie MacEachern | LW, RW | CAR | 29 | Standard | $780,000 | 2 | $1,560,000 |
Simon Ryfors | C, LW, RW | TBL | 25 | Standard | $780,000 | 1 | $780,000 |
Matt Luff | RW | DET | 26 | Standard | $780,000 | 1 | $780,000 |
Jan Jeník | C | ARI | 22 | Standard | $780,000 | 1 | $780,000 |
Laurent Dauphin | C | ARI | 28 | Standard | $780,000 | 1 | $780,000 |
William Lockwood | RW | NYR | 25 | Standard | $780,000 | 1 | $780,000 |
Noah Philp | C | EDM | 24 | Standard | $780,000 | 1 | $780,000 |
Jack Dugan | LW | CAR | 25 | Standard | $780,000 | 1 | $780,000 |
Daniel Walcott | LW | TBL | 29 | Standard | $780,000 | 2 | $1,560,000 |
Alex True | C, RW | SEA | 25 | Standard | $780,000 | 1 | $780,000 |
Alex Petrovic | RD | DAL | 31 | Standard | $780,000 | 2 | $1,560,000 |
Cole Koepke | LW, RW | TBL | 25 | Standard | $780,000 | 1 | $780,000 |
Stelio Mattheos | C | CAR | 24 | Standard | $780,000 | 1 | $780,000 |
Timur Ibragimov | LW | NJD | 22 | Standard | $780,000 | 1 | $780,000 |
Hunter Drew | RW, RD | CHI | 24 | Standard | $780,000 | 1 | $780,000 |
Nathan Schnarr | C | LAK | 24 | Standard | $780,000 | 1 | $780,000 |
Dawson Barteaux | RD | DAL | 23 | Standard | $780,000 | 1 | $780,000 |
Josh Leivo | RW, LW | STL | 30 | Standard | $775,000 | 1 | $775,000 |
Alex Galchenyuk | LW, C, RW | COL | 29 | Standard | $775,000 | 1 | $775,000 |
Charles Hudon | C, LW, RW | COL | 29 | Standard | $775,000 | 1 | $775,000 |
Semyon Der-Arguchintsev | C | TOR | 22 | Standard | $775,000 | 1 | $775,000 |
Chris Tierney | C | MTL | 29 | Standard | $775,000 | 2 | $1,550,000 |
Drake Caggiula | LW, RW | PIT | 29 | Standard | $775,000 | 1 | $775,000 |
Sam Gagner | RW, C | WPG | 33 | Standard | $775,000 | 1 | $775,000 |
Brogan Rafferty | RD | SEA | 28 | Standard | $775,000 | 2 | $1,550,000 |
Linus Weissbach | LW, RW | BUF | 25 | Standard | $775,000 | 1 | $775,000 |
Tyler Pitlick | RW | STL | 31 | Standard | $775,000 | 1 | $775,000 |
Brett Ritchie | RW | ARI | 29 | Standard | $775,000 | 1 | $775,000 |
Justin Richards | C, RW | CBJ | 25 | Standard | $775,000 | 2 | $1,550,000 |
Logan Hutsko | C | FLA | 24 | Standard | $775,000 | 1 | $775,000 |
Scott Sabourin | RW | OTT | 30 | Standard | $775,000 | 1 | $775,000 |
Akil Thomas | C | LAK | 23 | Standard | $775,000 | 1 | $775,000 |
Dylan Sikura | LW, RW, C | ANA | 28 | Standard | $775,000 | 1 | $775,000 |
Gerald Mayhew | C, RW | FLA | 30 | Standard | $775,000 | 1 | $775,000 |
John Leonard | LW, RW | NSH | 24 | Standard | $775,000 | 1 | $775,000 |
Nick Swaney | RW | MIN | 25 | Standard | $775,000 | 1 | $775,000 |
Carson Meyer | RW | CBJ | 25 | Standard | $775,000 | 1 | $775,000 |
Jakub Lauko | LW, RW | BOS | 23 | Standard | $775,000 | 1 | $775,000 |
Mitchell Stephens | C | MTL | 26 | Standard | $775,000 | 1 | $775,000 |
Samuel Fagemo | LW, RW | LAK | 23 | Standard | $775,000 | 1 | $775,000 |
Sean Malone | C | BUF | 28 | Standard | $775,000 | 1 | $775,000 |
Hugh McGing | LW, C | STL | 24 | Standard | $775,000 | 1 | $775,000 |
Jonathan Gruden | LW | PIT | 23 | Standard | $775,000 | 1 | $775,000 |
Kyle Criscuolo | C | SJS | 31 | Standard | $775,000 | 2 | $1,550,000 |
Riley Damiani | C | DAL | 23 | Standard | $775,000 | 1 | $775,000 |
Rūdolfs Balcers | LW, RW | TBL | 26 | Standard | $775,000 | 1 | $775,000 |
Ryan Dzingel | LW, RW, C | CAR | 31 | Standard | $775,000 | 1 | $775,000 |
Steven Kampfer | RD | ARI | 34 | Standard | $775,000 | 1 | $775,000 |
Cole Bardreau | C | NYI | 29 | Standard | $775,000 | 2 | $1,550,000 |
Buddy Robinson | RW | CHI | 31 | Standard | $775,000 | 1 | $775,000 |
Gabriel Fortier | LW | TBL | 23 | Standard | $775,000 | 1 | $775,000 |
John Stevens | C | VAN | 29 | Standard | $775,000 | 1 | $775,000 |
Aidan Dudas | LW | LAK | 23 | Standard | $775,000 | 1 | $775,000 |
Austin Poganski | RW | SEA | 27 | Standard | $775,000 | 1 | $775,000 |
Evan Barratt | C | PHI | 24 | Standard | $775,000 | 1 | $775,000 |
Henry Bowlby | C | FLA | 26 | Standard | $775,000 | 1 | $775,000 |
Jayson Megna | C, LW, RW | ANA | 33 | Standard | $775,000 | 2 | $1,550,000 |
Nathan Smith | C | ARI | 24 | Standard | $775,000 | 1 | $775,000 |
Saku Maenalanen | RW, LW | WPG | 29 | Standard | $775,000 | 1 | $775,000 |
Anthony Angello | C, RW | NSH | 27 | Standard | $775,000 | 1 | $775,000 |
Carsen Twarynski | LW | SEA | 25 | Standard | $775,000 | 1 | $775,000 |
Collin Adams | LW | NYI | 25 | Standard | $775,000 | 1 | $775,000 |
Damien Giroux | C | MIN | 23 | Standard | $775,000 | 1 | $775,000 |
Derek Stepan | C, RW | CAR | 33 | Standard | $775,000 | 1 | $775,000 |
Andy Welinski | RD | CHI | 30 | Standard | $775,000 | 1 | $775,000 |
Anton Blidh | LW, RW | NYR | 28 | Standard | $775,000 | 1 | $775,000 |
Clark Bishop | C, LW | CGY | 27 | Standard | $775,000 | 1 | $775,000 |
Cameron Hillis | C | CHI | 23 | Standard | $775,000 | 1 | $775,000 |
Jason Demers | RD | EDM | 35 | 35+ | $775,000 | 1 | $775,000 |
Jeff Kubiak | C | NYI | 29 | Standard | $775,000 | 1 | $775,000 |
Jordie Benn | LD/RD | TOR | 35 | 35+ | $775,000 | 1 | $775,000 |
Kody Clark | RW | WSH | 23 | Standard | $775,000 | 1 | $775,000 |
Matej Pekar | C, RW | BUF | 23 | Standard | $775,000 | 1 | $775,000 |
Ryan McGregor | C | ARI | 24 | Standard | $775,000 | 1 | $775,000 |
Wyatt Kalynuk | LD | NYR | 26 | Standard | $775,000 | 1 | $775,000 |
Bokondji Imama | LW | ARI | 26 | Standard | $775,000 | 1 | $775,000 |
C.J. Smith | LW | NYR | 28 | Standard | $775,000 | 1 | $775,000 |
Josiah Slavin | C | ANA | 24 | Standard | $775,000 | 1 | $775,000 |
Anthony Bitetto | LD | FLA | 32 | Standard | $775,000 | 1 | $775,000 |
Cooper Zech | LD | NYR | 24 | Standard | $775,000 | 2 | $1,550,000 |
Maxim Marushev | C | VGK | 24 | Standard | $775,000 | 1 | $775,000 |
Samuel Asselin | C | BOS | 25 | Standard | $775,000 | 1 | $775,000 |
Carson Focht | C | VAN | 23 | Standard | $775,000 | 1 | $775,000 |
Dylan McLaughlin | C | DET | 28 | Standard | $775,000 | 1 | $775,000 |
Ashton Sautner | LD | WPG | 29 | Standard | $775,000 | 1 | $775,000 |
Grant Mismash | LW | TBL | 24 | Standard | $775,000 | 1 | $775,000 |
Joel Hanley | LD/RD | DAL | 32 | Standard | $775,000 | 2 | $1,550,000 |
Riley Sutter | RW | WSH | 23 | Standard | $775,000 | 2 | $1,550,000 |
Bryce Kindopp | RW | ANA | 24 | Standard | $775,000 | 1 | $775,000 |
Carl Dahlström | LD | TOR | 28 | Standard | $775,000 | 2 | $1,550,000 |
Luke Witkowski | RW, RD | STL | 33 | Standard | $775,000 | 2 | $1,550,000 |
Pierre-Cédric Labrie | LW | TBL | 36 | 35+ | $775,000 | 1 | $775,000 |
Patrick Khodorenko | C | NYR | 24 | Standard | $775,000 | 1 | $775,000 |
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2023.05.26 19:37 ValerVincent Ohio trial, Mozenter and Tyson interviews
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2023.05.26 18:54 Sad-Principle-8023 Theory - Adam and Van?
Sorry for the novel.
Full disclosure: I understand why folks are disappointed in the writing, but there’s so many storylines and plot points that I don’t mind because it’s impossible to make them all make total sense and still tell a story. I will sacrifice my where is Steve curiosity and how tf does Walter do any of this with a TBI (or why didn’t anybody have an idea of Lottie being around when she wasn’t under the radar in any way, or…) in exchange for the way the show is an examination of trauma and how it alters and bends reality for the survivors. And how it becomes intergenerational (Callie, Sam)? And impacts the bystanders (Jeff, Simone)? I’m obsessed (and obviously team trauma > supernatural)
So! On to my theory of tying together some other theories/notes others have shared!
Main thing: Whole present day story line is instigated by Van being the puppet master and her cancer. In ep9, we can see the way Van manipulated everybody into making the hunt actually happen at Lottie’s campsite (canceling the crisis unit, drawing cards), but I think she has been planning/manipulating this for much longer. In this episode they make a point of teen Van saying she will never feel guilt or shame around doing anything to survive. This made me reflect on the way she made herself seem fatalistic about her cancer.
I read a post about Van and the postcards being retro as a theory of her being the sender. Theory: For Shauna, who doesn’t really believe in “the wilderness,” Van sent her friend Adam Martin, who had previously donated his bone marrow to her, to somehow get her on board. Adam was Van’s Jeff, a person who would do literally anything for her. When Adam disappeared, she backed off either: because she felt he might have been the hunt victim that spared her, or she needed to re-work her plans to make the formal hunt happen again, or she was just patient? Idk.
The way she interacted so differently with Dark Tai vs. daytime Tai and doesn’t want daytime Tai to know about her cancer until after they get to Lottie’s cult says a lot.
Adult Lottie had run out of meds and couldn’t get in touch with her psychiatrist? How did that happen? Maybe Van was involved somehow. Maybe Van was involved in Lottie’s campsite having the symbol built in somehow. Lottie may have been partially or totally in on it, or just intuited it through Van’s actions by the end of the night. The way she attributes the YJ’s depravity to the wilderness, she may think “the wilderness” is driving Van rather than a sick, traumatized version of “I will trade anybody’s life to save my own.” Lottie had a vision of the AQ encouraging a violent hunt, and we know now the AQ was Nat. By the end of the night, she might feel that Nat wanted it this way too.
Lottie kidnapping Nat and then Misty following might be something Van was somehow aware of too? I don’t know how to explain that part, but if you bring Nat to the campsite, Misty will follow.
So basically I’m doing a lot of mental gymnastics to try and figure out wtf is up with Adam’s role in this story other than him having been fridged for the plot to re-awaken Shauna’s bloodlust and add the police investigation to incite some pushes for the second season plot to move forward. We know the show runners planned the series and expected Van to die, but maybe when they kept her they just gave her a storyline that was part of the original plan but intended for a different character?
Also, some general reactions: Misty now has her Jeff in Walter: a ride or die (literally, cuz Misty) who knows her and is perfect for her! Where tf is Lisa and will they juxtapose her role with Ben’s as a threat to the hive? Also knowing Nat was AQ, I need to go back to the beehive talk with that info! Also lol at send in the clowns while Walter is making poison cocoa for the cops. And young Nat repeating Coach’s fantasy saying “you don’t belong here,” did he connect her to the phone call ripping away his fantasy? Nat coping with why she let Javi freeze by giving herself over to everybody seeing her as AQ makes sense to me as a sick trauma response, tearing away her hold on being above murder and the supernatural fantasy washing away her guilt, and she ends her life re-embracing that humanity to prevent Lisa’s murder
If you read all this, thank you for tolerating my ramblings and giving me endless theories 😂
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2023.05.26 15:12 SillyAd9410 A Semi-Collaborative Pop Culture TL #9
YOU decide what events should change in the world of pop culture, be it real or ASB (future movie gets shown in the past, an actor does/doesn't die, alternate casting choices, unmade media possibly getting made, media is rewritten, a change in the box office or something new entirely)!
I document what happens in a current timeline of Earth!
We all have fun!
CURRENT TIMELINE:
1818: Mary Shelley's The Modern Prometheus, a novel in which scientist Henry Frankenstein creates a sapient creature named Prometheus is made. Prometheus becomes a stalwart of the monster genre.
1907-1908: A young comedian named Charlie Chaplin refuses to accept the offer of Fred Karno to come to the U.S. He becomes a famous comedian, often incorporating a character he named The Tramp in his stand-up routines.
1912: The Olympic ship crashes upon hitting an iceberg, becoming a memorable event. James Cameron's Olympic (1997) would be the first film to gross $1B, even entering the National Film Registry.
1931: Frankenstein and his Prometheus, an adaptation of The Modern Prometheus starring Bela Lugosi and Boris Karloff as Henry and Prometheus is a box-office smash. It would enter the National Film Registry in 1991.
1941: Fleischer Studios' Mr. Bug Goes to Town is a box office success, saving the studio. Today it is one of Disney's biggest competitors, along with Warner Bros.
1951: Fawcett Comics wins a lawsuit over National Comics for the rights to the characters of Captain Marvel and Superman. While National Comics would die in obscurity, Fawcett Comics would be Marvel's biggest competitor.
1962: Marilyn Monroe doesn't die. She goes into hiding in Las Vegas doing revue shows. Discovered by higher ups at NBC, she signs on to The Marilyn Monroe Show, a sketch comedy show that runs until her death in 1999.
1966: Warner Bros.' Twister comes out, becoming the highest grossing film of the year. It would spawn "Tornado-mania", a series of tornado movies made to copy its success. It would enter the National Film Registry in 1996.
1969: Nixon resigns his presidency the become a talk show host. The Dick Nixon show airs until 1983.
Make America Great Again - written and directed by Mel Brooks - is released. The film stars Ronald Reagan as himself as he decides to run for President after becoming a washed up movie star - promising to “Make America Great Again”. Wacky shenanigans ensue, including President Reagan trying to build a massive wall on the Southern border to stop Soviet influence, claiming that “both sides have very fine people” in regards to the Civil Rights Movement, and him accidentally starting a cult about how hippies are secretly stooges of a global satanic cult run by the elites.
The film is a critical and commercial success and becomes one of the greatest and funniest comedies of all time. It enters the National Film Registry in 1999.
The Dick Cavett Show airs on ABC, becoming the main competitor to NBC's Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson. It would end in 1996 to make way for its new replacement The Jon Stewart Show.
Creedence Clearwater Revival release a song about the Civil Rights Movement called Fortunate Son. It becomes their signature song. It enters the National Recording Registry in 2013.
1974: Star Trek: The Continuing Mission, a revival of the original 60s series, airs in syndication until 1981.
1974-1979: Michael John Kricfalusi becomes an anti-Rhodesian mercenary during the Rhodesian Bush War. He becomes a POW by forces from Apartheid South Africa. As a result, he is physically and mentally scarred.
1979: Ozzy Osbourne goes into rehab and continues to play for Black Sabbath, leading to them getting a Beatles-like Renaissance in the 80s, making Heavy Metal one of the 80s most notable music genres.
1980-1981: From February 1980 to August 1981, John Kricfalusi would heal his mental wounds at a mental institution.
1982: John Kricfalusi founds Spümcø, an animation studio that was founded due to John's perceived views on how Hanna-Barbera and Rankin/Bass, two studios he worked at, failed to make good cartoons.
1983: E.T. for the Atari proves to be a very good game, making millions for Atari. This would inspire them to improve their games on their future consoles such as the 5200 and 7800, leading them to become a fierce competitior in the gaming market. The last Atari console came out in the early 2000s.
You Nutzy Rascals!, a short made by John K., is the first to feature prototype designs of Ren and Stimpy.
1985: The War of the Worlds, a film made in collaboration with Disney and Jeff Wayne, based on his musical album adapting the H.G. Wells story, hits theaters. It is a critical and commercial success, cited for starting the Disney Renaissance. Disney and Jeff Wayne would collaborate two more times, making animated adaptations of The Modern Prometheus (1988) and The Time Machine (1992). It would enter the National Film Registry in 2022.
Warner Communications buys Warner Amex-Satellite Entertainment to make Warner MTV Networks.
1986: Ravel's Bolero becomes the theme to The Legend of Zelda. It would later serve to be the theme for the Zelda games in Japan, with a different theme for NTSC releases.
Cliff Burton survives a car crash and continues to play bass for Metallica, helping put thrash metal on the mainstream map.
1987: Morrissey and Johnny Marr become frenemies. The Smiths continue into the 1990s.
1988: During production of Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade, Harrison Ford is shot and killed by a loaded prop gun. This would lead to it being hastily recut in time for 1989. It would lead to a heavy burden on Lucasfilm. The documentary Ford - Spielberg's Right Hand Man would be released in 2008 to great success.
1989: Doctor Who is saved from cancellation by BBC. It remains one of the longest running TV shows.
Sergio Leone dies of old age. He is remembered for his westerns as well as Don Quixote, The Phantom, and Leningrad: The 900 Days.
1990: John K. creates Big House Blues, the pilot for The Ren & Stimpy Show, which is picked up by Nickelodeon.
1991: Eddie Vedder dies in a car crash before the first Pearl Jam album is released. They find a new lead in Chris Cornell, who also sings for Soundgarden until their demise in 1997.
Ren & Stimpy airs on Nickelodeon, along with Doug, Rugrats, Tiny Toon Adventures, Taz-Mania (both this show and TTA would later air in syndication) and Big Beast Quintet (cancelled in 1993). It is currently the longest running American animated series, beating out Matt Groening's The Simpsons, who cancelled the show in 1998 in favor of working on the long-running Futurama which still airs today.
Tim Burton is attached to direct an adaptation of The Addams Family TV show as a movie. It would later spawn three sequels, with Tim leaving after the second movie. The latter two would be critically panned.
1992: Star Wars: Episode I - The Phantom Menace comes out, becoming the highest grossing film of the year. Episodes II and III would later come out in 1995 and 1998 respectively.
J.R.R. Tolkien dies at 100, finishing The New Shadow and The Silmarillion. He was also known for being war minister of the UK from 1940 to 1945.
Stephen Hillenburg is invited to work on Ren & Stimpy after showing his short film Wormholes at the TIFF.
Cartoon Network begins after Ted Turner merges with Viacom in 1986 and buys the Hanna-Barbera library in 1991.
1993: Spielberg quits directing after doing Schindler's List. This not only cancels plans for a Jurassic Park sequel, but also an adaptation of Supertoys Last All Summer Long.
1994: During filming of The Crow, Brandon Lee survives a shot from a prop gun. He would propel into superstardom. He is now known for playing Neo in The Matrix franchise and Johnny Cage in Mortal Kombat (1995).
Kurt Cobain announces the breakup of Nirvana as he goes into rehab. In 2002, the band reunited for You Know You're Right, an album that became a top seller. They still perform to this day.
1995: YouTube, a video sharing site, is released. It would not gain much popularity until 2001, where an influx of YouTubers would bring it to stardom.
Toy Story, a stop motion film, gains critical acclaim due to its incredible scale, becoming the 2nd highest grossing film of the year.
Sarah Michelle Gellar dies in a kayaking incident days before the release of her only film Clueless. This would cause Clueless to become the highest grossing film of the year and become known as one of the best teen films. It enters the National Film Registry in 2005. Bad Boys, a film released the same day as Clueless, would become the 6th highest grossing film of the year despite mixed reviews.
Spotify, a humble music downloading site, releases. In 1997, it would change into a music streaming site, and would often show ads for the latest in music.
Selena Quintalla survives being shot. Jennifer Lopez wanes in popularity.
1996: The Nintendo 64DD comes out in a partnership with Phillips, revolutionising the console industry by introducing CD memory, rising it above the PlayStation and Sega Saturn. One of the top best selling games would be Super Mario 64 2, the sequel to Super Mario 64. The 64DD would serve as motivation for Sega to complete Sonic X-Treme by 1997, which becomes a huge hit. This would give Sega the boost it needed to continue making consoles. Other Mario games made for the 64DD include Mario Takes America and Super Mario's Wacky Worlds.
The Nintendo Entertainment System (NES), which had been under a state similar to the Atari 2600, releases its last two games: Super Mario Legends, a game similar in style to the Mario Land games released by Nintendo R&D1, which becomes a minor hit and Animaniacs, a port of Konami's Game Boy game which got mixed reviews.
Tupac survives being shot while having a drive in Las Vegas. He still has a rap career.
Ren & Stimpy Go To Hollywood, a film released by Warner Bros., becomes the highest grossing animated film of the year, making over $600M. It has a 100% rating on Rotten Tomatoes. This film would also have one of Ronald Reagan's last acting roles.
NDR Filmes' Cassiopeia gets fame for being the first completely computer-animated film. It gets an English dub for a worldwide release. It enters the National Film Registry in 2006.
After his work on Ren & Stimpy, Stephen Hillenburg pitches his own show to Nickelodeon about a sea sponge.
Rapper and music producer Andre "Dr. Dre" Young is shot and killed by a vengefully spiteful Suge Knight in a drive-by shooting, since Young left Death Row Records after accusing Knight of corruption the month prior. His death leads to tributes from fans and colleagues alike, and his first album The Chronic is praised for being influential. Tupac Shakur, in addition to being a rapper, assumes Dr. Dre's role as a music producer out of respect for his newly deceased friend. After Suge Knight is arrested and imprisoned for life due to murdering Young, Shakur takes over Death Row Records. The Chronic enters the National Recording Registry in 2019.
1997: Reddit, a news and discussion board, is released. It becomes very, very popular.
The Notorious B.I.G. survives a shooting like his friend and collaborator Tupac, and he continues to make music.
Aspiring rapper Sean "Puff Daddy" Combs is killed in a gang shootout in Los Angeles, California; however, right-wing news network Fox News reports the shootout as having happened in New York City, New York (which is untrue). This leads to rapper Christopher "Biggie Smalls" Wallace recording a single dedicated to Combs called "I'll Be Missing You" (which heavily samples "Every Breath You Take" by The Police) which was included as a bonus track on No Way Out, Combs' first and only debut album released posthumously on July 22, 1997. The album became influential in the years since Combs' death, proving that, even in death, one can still have a rap career and be influential. No Way Out would enter the National Recording Registry in 2007.
1998: Neon Genesis Evangelion is unknowingly localized by 4Kids, leading to a HEAVILY censored English dub that makes the show popular during the late 90s-early 00s.
Chris Farley wakes from a coma due to a drug overdose. After deciding to give the role of Shrek to Mike Myers his friend, he gets the role of Doug Heffernan on The King of Queens.
1999: Stephen Hillenburg's SpongeBob SquarePants airs on Nickelodeon. Although it is a hit at first, work complications, problems outsourcing animation to the studio Gainax, and the banned episode Wrasslin' Maniacs where SpongeBob and Patrick beat up Squidward, Hillenburg is fired from the show in 2002.
Tommy Boy's Return, the sequel to Tommy Boy, releases in theaters. It is considered a cult classic today.
2000: Battlefield Earth is released in theaters to be a huge success, ending up the 8th highest grossing film of the year. This would cause an interest in works by L. Ron Hubbard, making the Church of Scientology a rising religion. Battlefield Earth 2 would later release in 2003 to similar acclaim.
4Kids is bought by Warner Communications. As a result, more anime airs on Kids WB.
The Atari Cougar, Atari's final console before being bought by Jakks Pacific in 2002, is released. It is a cult classic console.
Tim Burton's Wizard of Oz gains mixed to positive reviews, and makes the top 10 list of highest grossing films of the year.
2001: Grand Theft Auto III, the third entry in the GTA series is cancelled following 9/11. The game would later redevelop into Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas, which was released in 2004.
Spy Kids, Quentin Tarantino's first kids' film is released in theaters to mixed reviews, but becomes a cult classic. Two more sequels were released in the two years after it, all would get the same fate.
During 9/11, Kevin James dies after being squished by falling debris from the North Tower.
2002: Netflix, the world's first ever online streaming service for film and TV, launches. They release their first Netflix Original - an epic drama gangster film called American Gangster starring Denzel Washington and Russell Crowe and directed by Ridley Scott - five years later on November 2, 2007, after buying the distribution rights from Universal Pictures (who were set to be the original proprietors). All of their films and series are also given DVD and/or Blu-ray releases, courtesy of Sony Pictures Home Entertainment, who owns the home media rights to Netflix Original films/series etc.
2003: Call of Duty, a war shooter game, sells 200,000 copies, making for poor sales. No sequels are planned. The Battlefield series gains from this.
Star Trek: The Original Generation, a Star Trek prequel series, airs for two seasons on Fox before cancellation.
Sony launches the American feed of 24-hour anime channel Animax, which overtakes Adult Swim's Toonami in popularity.
Sylvester Stallone becomes Governor of California until 2011.
TIME names Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein as Person of the Year due to being "One of the great dictators of the modern age".
2004: Fallout 3 releases on Windows to high ratings, saving Interplay from bankruptcy. They would later release 2 console games, Fallout 4 and Fallout 5. Many spinoff games would be made.
Hillenburg's company United Plankton Pictures makes the Newgrounds webseries The Motherfucking Patchy the Pirate Show, focusing on the misadventures of Patchy the Pirate.
2005: Minecraft, a web browser game is released by Mojang with the help of a team that planned a game known as Terraria, where it would be very successful until 2009, when a 3D version for Java was released. It is currently owned by Microsoft, who still makes updates for it.
SpongeBob SquarePants is quietly cancelled due to declining ratings.
FOX airs The Office, an American adaptation of the British mockumentary series of the same name, airing until 2013 for nine seasons. It becomes one of the most memorable sitcoms of all time, winning several Emmys. Mr. Blue Sky becomes the theme song.
2006: Warner Communications contacts Hillenburg for an adult-only SpongeBob reboot.
Night at the Museum is released to mixed reviews as it becomes a box-office bomb. With plans for a sequel dead in the water, Fox sells the rights to Sony in 2007 who plans to reboot the series, but also keep the distribution rights for the original film.
Blockbuster buys Netflix, moving the website to Blockbuster.com, and naming it Blockbuster Online. After all of its stores were closed, it becomes Blockbuster+.
2007: Kanye West dies in a car crash before his album Graduation releases, causing him to be mourned. This would lead to many people buying the album, creating a short-lived rap revival that would temporarily mark the end of gangsta rap until 2010.
Owen Wilson commits suicide. In discussions about the "Frat Pack", he is replaced by Steve Carell and Paul Rudd. Drillbit Taylor and Tropic Thunder are both dedicated to his memory. Plans for a sequel to Cars are cancelled by Pixar and Disney.
2007-2011: Identically similar to events in our world, screenwriter Simon Monjack and actress and "Clueless" sensation Brittany Murphy (who still starred in this alternate reality's version of the 1995 film "Clueless", but here she instead co-stars with rising co-stars Sarah Michelle Gellar playing Cher, and Regina Hall playing Dionne) are about to marry back in May 2007, but Murphy calls the marriage to Monjack off at the exact same wedding. This causes a scandal that briefly kills her good reputation, and gets her blacklisted in Hollywood (for a while). In this alternate history, Simon Monjack is put in prison for attempting murder on Brittany Murphy, but here, is killed by a crazed cellmate whilst serving time (said crazed cellmate also happens to be a fan of Brittany Murphy). Brittany Murphy then moves to an apartment complex in New York in 2008, ditching Hollywood for good and starting a musical career.
Natalie Portman, a fairly successful but struggling rising young TV actress, is having a hard time finding work in Hollywood due to the failure of the Star Trek prequel television series Star Trek: The Original Generation. She co-starred in the series alongside Hayden Christensen, Ewan McGregor, and Samuel L. Jackson. While the then 56-57 year old Jackson at least got to have a successful career in Hollywood (due to being a Christopher Nolan regular), Christensen and McGregor were rejected by the industry; Christensen started an indie rock band while McGregor then went on to become a successful UFC fighter, but would then become very scandalous as he suffers from numerous arrests and an intense drug addiction. McGregor would then unfortunately die young from a drug overdose on December 7, 2008. Going back to Portman, she would become an indie darling in independent cinema, however her career would be cut short when she would die in a car crash on July 19, 2009, just one month and ten days after her 28th birthday. She was last seen in a DTV thriller called "Abandoned", which released in March 2010. Her death leads to tributes from co-stars and fans alike.
In December 2009, Brittany Murphy is then offered the lead role in Darren Aronofsky's upcoming psychological horror film "Black Swan", about a troubled ballerina. The film would co-star Melanie Lynskey as the troubled ballerina's rival, and like in our world, Winona Ryder, Barbara Hershey, and Vincent Cassel. The film released in December 2010 (like in our world), to rave reviews, with critics calling it Brittany Murphy's finest appearance yet. Murphy would then take home the Best Actress Oscar as well as the Best Dramatic Performance in a Movie Golden Globe for her performance in the film in 2011. Murphy would then continue her acting career following a big career boost, as well as her singing/musical career at the same time. In fact, she releases a fairly successful debut album in March 2011 simply called "Brittany", to positive reviews. It would then become the best selling musical album of the year, even winning her a Grammy in 2012.
2008: Bulletman, the highest grossing film of the year, marks the beginning of the successful Fawcett Cinematic Universe (FCU). It would enter the National Film Registry in 2020.
During the premiere of Tropic Thunder, Tom Cruise announces his retirement from entertainment and Scientology. He spends the rest of his life quietly as a Buddhist in England. As Dwayne Johnson takes Tom's place, Paramount announces plans to reboot the Mission: Impossible franchise (though nothing comes from it).
SpongeBob XXX, an adult SpongeBob reboot, airs on AMC alongside Breaking Bad. SpongeBob XXX would be universally panned, airing only 3 episodes out of a made 6 (all were later put on DVD). It is known for being one of the worst animated series of all time.
Iron Age, a film fully funded by UNESCO, is made as the first film of an IRL cinematic universe. It gets nominated for Best Picture at the Oscars, like every film in the IRLCU after it.
2009: Adventure Time, a cartoon by Pendleton Ward, airs on Nickelodeon. It becomes one of Nickelodeon's highest-rated cartoons, airing until 2016. Many people would call it an animation trailblazer, leading to Nick approving more "lore-based" shows.
Half-Life 3 comes out, and continues the high ratings of the Half-Life franchise, making games well until 2017 (counting spinoffs).
Some people would compare it to Regular Show, who they saw as Cartoon Network's equivalent to Adventure Time.
Discord, a discussion site, is released, becoming popular with gamers.
Liam Gallagher has a near-fatal drug overdose after the breakup of Oasis. Finding peace with his brother, Oasis reunites in 2012, releasing a new album in 2015. They still perform.
Amy Winhouse retires after a heavy intervention. She still occasionally produces for Adele.
2011: Fortnite Battle Royale by Epic Games is released to the public. It becomes extremely popular, and is still played today.
2012: Pixar's Newt, a film that came due to the cancellation of Wreck-It Ralph (some claim due to the problems of getting permission from game companies) is released and barely breaks even. It would start a dark age for Pixar, which would continue with Brave and Cars 2.
It would also play a key part in George Lucas refusing to give away Lucasfilm, due to Disney's perceived slump.
After Hillenburg's company dissolves, he becomes the cartoon reviewer Stevey Shark for Channel Awesome.
Jim Carrey dies of a heart attack.
2013: Doug Walker leaves Channel Awesome, leaving Stevey Shark to be the new star. Markiplier, MrEnter, and MatPat would later join Channel Awesome among others.
The Freedom Tower is made to replace the original North Tower destroyed in the attack. Memes would arise from the comparison between the towers.
2014: A Day With Patchy the Pirate, a half-hour short made by Hillenburg, airs on YouTube as Channel Awesome's first foray into animation. It has a troubled production due to being funded online, and would be panned upon release.
Robin Williams survives a suicide attempt, and launches his own suicide prevention program. He would then star in the 2016 drama Uncut Gems by Christopher Nolan, playing crime lord Howard Ratner, giving him a Best Actor Oscar.
2015: Star Wars - Episode VII: The Force Awakens, featuring Darth Maul and Darth Talon as antagonists, is released, becoming the highest grossing film of the year. Two more sequels were made in 2017 and 2019.
2016: John K. dies from multiple scolerosis. Bob Camp takes over as showrunner of Ren and Stimpy.
2017: Growing Around, a new YouTube webseries made by Stephen Hillenburg & Johnathan Rozanski, about a world where grown-ups switch with kids, is released. Despite gaining positive reviews, both the downfall of Channel Awesome and Hillenburg & Rozanski's heinous acts would result in Markiplier buying the license, airing it on his webseries Unus Annus for one last season, ending in 2020.
Chester Bennington survives his suicide attempt. Linkin Park would make its newest album in December of 2020.
2018: Donald Trump starts The Trump Experience, a very popular podcast.
2019: Season 3 of Gravity Falls comes out to near-universal acclaim.
2020: Chadwick Boseman recovers from his cancer.
2022: Jordan Peele's Nope becomes the highest grossing film of the year. It enters the National Film Registry in 2033.
Presidents of the USA since 1977:
Jimmy Carter (1977-1985)
Walter Mondale (1985-1989)
George H.W. Bush (1989-1993)
Mario Cuomo (1993-2001)
John F. Kennedy Jr. (2001-2005)
John McCain (2005-2013)
Barack Obama (2013-2021)
Jeb Bush (2021-today)
Governors of California since 1947:
James Roosevelt (1947-1953) Resigned) Democrat
Pat Brown (1953-1963) Democrat
Richard Nixon (1963-1969) Republican
Edwin Reineck (1969-1974) Resigned) Republican
John L Harner (1974-1975) Republican
Tom Hayden (1975-1983) Democrat
Tom Bradley (1983-1991) Democrat
Clint Eastwood (1991-2003) Independent
Sylvester Stallone (2003-2011) Republican
Conan O'Brien (2011-2019) Democrat
Gavin Newsom (2019-Today) Democrat
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2023.05.26 03:30 Optimus_Pyrrha Hm. A masked figure who's obsessed with a girl. Where have I seen that before?
2023.05.26 03:17 shocknickonyoutube Looking for 2 Replacement GMs in 24T Dynasty Salary Cap League - H2H Points - Fantrax
Hey everyone,
We are looking for 2 people to take over orphan teams in our 24T league.
$50 entry.We are in our
2nd year, superhero themed, on discord. We are working with retention and buyouts in our league so it is a little advanced, but very easy to learn.
How the league works - You will need a minimal Cap Floor of 66,333,000. Max is $111,333,000
- If you drop a player, you will have to buyout their contract at 25%. This can be paid out over the duration of their contract, or all at once. For example - 10 million contract over 4 years left. 40 million total cap x 25% = 10 million cap hit. You can choose to pay 10 million all at once or over their contract length. 10 million/4 years remaining = 2.5 million cap hit each year.
- You can trade players and choose to retain contracts up to 50% over entire contract length. (Max 10)
- FAAB ($100 budget) will be used for our waiver wire pickups. Any player dropped will be in waiver wire for 2 days. Then the player with highest priority or highest bid will win claim. FAAB resets every year
More specific rules to be explained if interested. Scoring Assists (A) 3
Blocks (Blk) 0.6
Faceoffs Lost (FOL) -0.02
Faceoffs Won (FOW) 0.05
Goals (G) 4.5
Hits (Hit) 0.4
Shots on Goal (SOG) 0.5
Takeaways (Tk) 0.4
Special Teams Goals (STG) 1
Special Teams Assists (STA) 0.75
Goalies Assists (A) 3
Goals (G) 4.5
Goals Against (GA) -1
Saves (SV) 0.25
Shutouts (SHO) 3
Wins (W) 4
Overtime Losses + Shootout Losses (OL+ShL) 2
Roster20 active - 4 C, 4 LW, 4 RW, 6 D, 2 G - 5 BENCH - 29 MINORS (INCREASES BY 4 NEXT YEAR, THEN CAPS OUT AT 33)*100GP LIMIT FOR MINORS - 60GP FOR MINOR GOALIES*
Team 1 - Buffalo https://preview.redd.it/4cmsrmal852b1.png?width=805&format=png&auto=webp&s=f280d3d5c4ea8aa37ef1d8fb6de8b3c0b8b365e7 Team 2 - New Jersey Daredevils https://preview.redd.it/zhd293jo852b1.png?width=813&format=png&auto=webp&s=b4a47708b867ac366810c73eb0b6f2ef11d0fa9c submitted by
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2023.05.26 03:06 ricuhgee The Wilderness Doesn’t Care About “Good or Bad” and Neither Should We.
Hey Fellowjackets! This is my first post and I’m admittedly a bit nervous, but I need to put these all of these thoughts somewhere. So…here goes nothing lol. [
Contains spoilers up to and including S2E08 with a TLDR at the bottom.]
Since being introduced to the characters, there’s been countless debates about which ones are “good” and which are “bad.” This makes sense because we’ve been conditioned to classify archetypes to better understand the purpose a character inhabits for a story. However, a key character, one that isn’t discussed as much, is the
Wilderness.
Fruitful and providing when it’s summery, barren and unforgiving when it’s frigid, the Wilderness holds all of the options the characters have and facilitates the actions they perform as a result of their decisions. It homes any and everything that is
possible for them. As a character, the Wilderness is the embodiment of both the teens’ dwindling hope and their growing desperation. This season, the teens begin to recognize the Wilderness as a Being, submitting to and worshiping it, doing this more frequently in times of high desperation. They also more commonly refer to the Wilderness by name,
despite It always being present in the story. One of the more central mysteries of the show is the idea of
SPILL. My current theory is that “spill” is a euphemism for the blood that is required to survive.
This does not exclusively mean human blood. The Wilderness provided the first deer and the second sick deer (which shows all spills don’t yield reward), but the group doesn’t attribute these offerings to It. As the Wilderness changes, the group becomes more desperate and begin to appreciate what It provides (the bear). The Wilderness then transforms into snowcapped emptiness and the offerings are more scarce and wary (Jackie’s body and the birds). Then, there’s nothing.
Here, “spill” becomes equated to their will to survive, requiring them to fully accept their cruel circumstances and submit to what the Wilderness has to offer, because it now refers to the blood of a peer. The answer to the question of “
does a hunt that has no violence feed anyone?” is no, but this includes the hunting of animals as well.
Thus, the references of “spill” we see in the present day timeline are a direct reflection of the trauma they bear for the roles they played in the morbid events the Wilderness facilitated, rewarding those who did whatever was necessary to survive.
With this is mind, we also see the Wilderness transform from a symbol of faith to the “willing decider” of the tragic actions the teens believe are necessary to survive. Going back to the idea of “good or bad,” I strongly believe the known survivors will be seen as “bad” to those viewers committed to this dichotomy. This is simply because of what it will take to survive, at least from the characters’ perspectives. Also, this explains why the writers intentionally share information that paint the survivors in a morally gray light.
Here is my rundown of the survivors and how their characteristics and circumstances pre- and post-crash that contribute to their survival.
- Taissa: She is an innate leader and is the only character we’ve seen willingly carry the burden of leadership. She proposes leaving the crash site and finding the lake which led to the discovery of the cabin. She is written to have high sensibility (realizes Shauna was pregnant and shows compassion throughout the pregnancy, attempts to keep Jackie from sleeping outside, etc), but there is often misplaced malice tied to her because her ambition is both a strength and an all-encompassing weakness. Thus, I believe that Dark Tai is the embodiment of Tai’s ego and will to survive. The pilot foreshadows the existence of Dark Tai when she mistakenly breaks Allie’s leg, allowing her ambition to harm those around her. The stakes of surviving the Wilderness are exponentially higher than winning a national game which is why Dark Tai doesn’t fully appear until after the crash. This might also be the reason Dark Tai makes her first appearance in 25 years during the Senate race. This darker other half performs the pragmatic, yet morbid actions Tai herself can’t complete. It extends to her family as well, as Simone revealed her knowledge of the Biscuit sacrifice (R.I.P. my boy) and threatened to go to the press which made her a direct threat. In the end, Adult Lottie may be right in that Dark Tai simply wants to protect Tai but first, she must listen.
- Shauna: As the lost member of Brown’s Class of 2000, she is intelligent and astute. With these positive traits, she also carries an inherent inclination of wanting to do the “bad” thing. This is evident in the teen love triangle between her, Jackie, and Jeff, but it also appears in the affair she has with Adam. While it is no excuse, she mostly lies in an effort to protect others which highlights her recognition of her seemingly uncontrollable “bad” tendencies. Interpersonal drama aside, she displays some sense of fairness, as she doesn’t take extra bear meat for herself despite being pregnant (which honestly would’ve made sense if she did). After the first deer was caught, she curiously volunteers to slit the deer’s throat which is something the other teens were hesitant to do. This underlines her high sense of adaptability, with another example being the soccer skills she reluctantly has (despite “not even liking soccer!”).
- Misty: A two-time Red Cross Babysitter Training course certificate recipient, it is without question that MFG is a valuable resource to the cabin crew. Noticeably desperate for acceptance, she is willing to do whatever it takes to be a part of the group, even if it means slipping into sadism. However, it is unclear if this developed over time by being the subject of bullying (damnit she never did anal with Robbie Delgado!) and wanting to finally feel like a top dog. This season, she learns that it may be easier for her to connect with others if she’s pretending to be someone other than herself (after a failed attempt at transparency) and struggles to balance the weight of the stress that comes with being a resource to those around her. Whether she’s faking it or not, she will do whatever it takes to make it.
- Natalie: Upon meeting her, she’s seemingly the most self aware team member and has no trouble vocalizing her opinion, even if it goes against the grain of the group. Exemplified by her doing acid the night before a high stakes national game, she seemingly takes life as it comes. While this will help her after the crash, it is also a potential trauma response as the result of watching her father’s abuse of her mother and having a role in his accidental death. As everyone else becomes unraveled as they descend into chaos, her perspective remains grounded and holistic, acknowledging the gravity of their circumstances while also doing whatever is in her power to remain alive. This perspective also may explain why she has a “bottomless pit of guilt” about what she does to survive because she never fully “lost it.”
- Van: Despite her overall chill attitude and perfectly-timed side jokes, she carries the spirit of a survivor. The morning of the flight, she’s seen attempting to slap her mom awake which feels like a cue that her mom is an alcoholic. If this is the case, it suggests that she’s had to care and fend for herself (and a parent) in ways in which kids with functional parents hadn’t before the crash. Right after the crash, she somehow finds a way to dismantle the jammed seatbelt and escape the growing flames of the burning plane. After nearly escaping death once, she survived an attack in which a wolf literally tried to devour her face. So there’s no surprise that she’s the first character who outright says that the cabin group needed to “wake up.” Despite her seemingly callous expressions during the first hunt, her approach could also be viewed as almost pragmatic as she understands the only way they can survive is if one of them dies.
- Lottie: Known to “never talk shit unless someone really deserves it,” it’s fair to assume the team holds her opinion and sense of judgement highly before the crash. As a child, she displayed early signs of both psychosis and clairvoyance when she has an episode that seemingly prevented her family from being in a fatal car accident. However, her visions and their potential meanings are halted due to medication. Without her meds, she returns to her most natural state, and as the visions return, she questions what she sees and how it could be tied to their circumstances and overall fate. Though we as viewers know about her psychosis diagnosis, her peers do not and as her belief in what she sees grows more in line with what the group needs (and seemingly receives), so does the faith others have in her.
- Travis: He is one of the more outwardly emotional members of the cabin crew and can be seen allowing his emotions to determine his actions. After the crash, he has the athleticism (and adrenaline boost) to scale a huge tree and risk his own life in an attempt to save his dad. Soon after realizing his has died, he shares that he didn’t even like his dad. Similarly, he forces Javi to spit out the gum their dad gave him, only to exhume his dad’s buried body and retrieve a ring that he soon gives to Javi. He was the subject of bullying (“Flex”) and uses information shared about his bully from Jackie as a reason to lose his virginity and spite Natalie. And with the now loss of his dad and his brother, it feels fair to assume that his grief (one of the strongest emotions we feel) will harden his heart which although very unfortunate, can allow him to do what’s needed to survive.
In contrast,
the characters we’ve lost to “natural” causes up until this point fail to sever their ties with life outside of the Wilderness and evolve in a self-preserving manner that fully considered their new, dreadful circumstances. - Laura Lee: Her religious faith gives her the courage to fly a (quite sketchy) plane after only reading an instructional book on how to fly. It was ultimately that faith and her commitment to her life and perspective before the crash that leads to her own tragic ending.
- Jackie: After the crash, she’s an adamant believer that rescue parties will soon find the team and they’ll all be saved. As the season continues, she realizes her initial belief is false and struggles to acclimate to their new environment and to contribute toward the group’s survival (often reminding them that they’d all be dead soon). In the end, she’s ostracized from the group, due to her judgment about how others were allowing the Wilderness to change them, and ultimately meets her fate.
- Javi: Our sweet sweet boy. As the youngest of the bunch, he doesn’t have the capacity to lead any of the group’s effort, often having to go along with something decided by someone else. He expresses early his question of whether they’d all die in the Wilderness. Unknowingly on shrooms, he becomes fearful of the others as he watches them try to hunt and kill his brother which leads him to seek safety. After months alone in the woods, he doesn’t seek out the group but is instead captured and brought back to the cabin. He shares that his friend “told him not to come back,” which until we learn of an actual “friend,” could just be his intuition warning him of a very present danger. Ultimately, he naively underestimates the group’s true state (who could really blame him?) and places his own life in danger in an attempt to save Natalie, soon meeting a cruel, cold end.
Though we’ve been only been introduced to 7 survivors in the present day timeline, the ritual scene in the pilot suggests there is another survivor unknown to viewers at this time. There have also been quick screenshots of other potential survivors boarding the plane as well.
- Mari: Love or hate her, she’s been (sometimes maybe too) honest about their circumstances but never in a completely defeated way. In the moments the YJs have gone completely feral, she’s often centered in the forefront which may be a visual cue considering she’s a side character. She’s also one of Lottie’s most devout followers, leaning into the idea that the Wilderness represents hope and despair for her.
- Coach Ben: As the assistance coach of the YJs, his dynamic with the group almost immediately shifts when he loses a leg from the crash. Once viewed as an authority figure, he reluctantly and heavily relies on the teens until he’s able to build crutches. Even still, his sense of self is uprooted. Though he is initially an asset because of his outdoors and hunting knowledge, he eventually loses his sense of control over the group. In a downward spiral of regret and starvation, he was on the brink of accepting total defeat, but he now has a newfound will to live. In the finale’s promo, Natalie is seen telling him that, “he doesn’t belong in this place.” Relying on his knowledge, new secret hiding spot, and the fact that all “spills” don’t have to be from a human, there’s a chance he’s on the survivor list.
And for almost completely opposite reasons, it brings me great dread to share that I am absolutely terrified for my sweet
Akilah. This season, she happily speaks about her sister and nephew several times. She also gives Nugget (still processing this one…R.I.P.) a detailed account of all the wonderful things they’d do at the fair.
This is an overt sign that she’s failing to fully submit to the circumstances of the Wilderness (note that no one besides Ben even mentions someone outside of the cabin crew this season). To make matters worse, she is the only person in the hunt who is noticeably empty-handed. And if that wasn’t enough, she’s the one to tell the group, “we can still get him out of there,” highlighting that she still hasn’t completely converted.
As we continue to watch this story unfold, the Wilderness reminds us to not look for “good” or “bad” but for examples that magnify a character’s will to survive.
It underscores that in the end, this has always been a story about survival. The present day timeline is
a tale of unspoken trauma and how if left untreated it can ruin the lives of the survivors and those who love them most. With each episode, the Yellowjackets writers will continue to test the limits to which we can extend empathy and I am truly thrilled and grateful to be on this ride!
---
TLDR: As a character, the Wilderness has always been present in the story. It signifies their dwindling hope and their growing desperation. Eventually, It becomes reduced to being the willing decider responsible for the actions the cabin crew must commit to survive. Because of this, the teens don’t view their actions through a “good or bad” lens more so than a required one. In that case, our girls are the “bad” ones. “Spill” symbolizes the blood needed to spill for survival. This doesn’t always have to mean human blood. The known survivors all have pre- and post-crash characteristics/experiences that play a distinct role in their survival. The teens lost to “natural” causes either fail to truly understand the gravity of their circumstances or evolve in a way that suggests they do. Dark Tai is the embodiment of Tai’s ego. Mari and/or Coach Ben may live. Akilah might unfortunately be the next YJ on the chopping block.
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2023.05.25 18:20 nahimavegan (Selling) Huge list of 1100+ movies! Lots of New and Rare titles!
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Siberia (2018) HD/VU $3
Silent Night, Deadly Night 3-Film Set (3-5) HD/VU $8
Silent Twins 4K/MA $6
Silk Road 4K/VU $5
Sin City A Dame to Kill For HD/VU $4
Sing 2 HD/MA $4
Sing Street HD/VU $4
Sixteen Candles HD/MA $4
Skeleton Twins HD/VU $4.5
Smokey & Bandit HD/MA $3.5
Smokin' Aces 4K/MA $5.5
Smurfs Lost Village HD/MA $3.5
Snake Eyes G.I. Joe Origins 4K/VU $5.5 or HD/VU $4
Snatch 4K/MA $5.5
Social Network 4K/MA $5.5
Son of God HD/MA $3
Source Code 4K/VU $5.5
Spider-Man No Way Home HD/MA $4
Spinning Man HD/VU $4
Spirit HD/VU $4
Spontaneous HD/VU $4.5
Starship Troopers 4K/MA $6
Sting 4K/MA $5 or HD/MA $3.5
Strange World HD/GP $4
Strangers Prey at Night HD/MA $3
Stripes 4K/MA $5
Sudden Death HD/IT $4
Taken 2 HD/MA $3.5
Tangled HD/MA $4
Tar HD/MA $6
Taxi Driver 4K/MA $5.5 or HD/MA $4
Teen Spirit (2019) HD/MA $4
Teen Titans Go! & DC Super Hero Girls Mayhem Multiverse HD/MA $6
Teeth HD/VU $4.5
Tetro HD/VU $4
Thanks for Sharing HD/VU $4
The Batman HD/MA $4
This is End HD/MA $3.5
This Means War SD/IT $1.5
Thor Love & Thunder 4K/MA $5.5 or HD/GP $3.5
Time Freak HD/VU $4
To Kill a Mockingbird 4K/IT $4
Tomb Raider Cradle of Life 4K/VU or IT $5.5
Top Gun Maverick 4K/VU $6 or HD/VU $4.5
Touched With Fire HD/VU $4.5
Town SD/IT $1.5
Transformers 4K/VU $5
Transformers Age of Extinction HD/VU $2.5 or 4K/IT $3
Transformers Dark of Moon 4K/VU $4.5
Transformers Revenge of Fallen 4K/VU $5
Triple 9 HD/IT $3.5
Troy (Director's Cut) HD/MA $4.5
True Grit SD/IT $1.5
Tucker Man & His Dream 4K/VU $5
Turning Red HD/GP $3
Twilight 1-3 (Ext) HD/VU $10
Twilight Breaking Dawn Pt 1 HD/VU $3.5 or 4K/IT $4
Twilight HD/VU $4
Umma HD/MA $4.5
Uncharted HD/MA $4
Uncut Gems HD/VU $4
Under Skin HD/VU $3.5
Underwater HD/MA $4.5
Underworld 5-Film Set HD/MA $17
Virtuoso 4K/VU $5
Vivo HD/MA $5
Voyagars 4K/VU $5
W. HD/VU $4
Wall Street Money Never Sleeps SD/IT $1.5
War of Worlds 4K/VU $5.5
War on Everyone HD/VU $4
Warhunt 4K/VU $4.5
Waterworld HD/MA $4
Wayne's World 4K/VU $5.5
Weekend HD/VU $4
What We Did on our Holiday HD/VU $4
Where Crawdads Sing HD/MA $4.5
Whitney Houston I Wanna Dance with Sombody HD/MA $5.5
Wicker Man (1973) HD/VU $4.5
Winnie Pooh Springtime with Roo HD/MA $4.5 or HD/GP $4
Woman King HD/MA $5.5
X-Men Days of Future Past Rogue Cut 4K/IT $5.5
X-Men First Class & Days of Future Past HD/MA $6.5
X-Men Trilogy (X-Men, X2, Last Stand) HD/MA $12
Zero Dark Thirty HD/MA $3.5
All other movies (A-Z)
101 Dalmatians HD/MA $3.5 or HD/GP $3
12 Years a Slave HD/MA $3.5
13 Hours Soldiers of Benghazi HD/VU $2.5
1917 HD/MA $3.5
2 Fast 2 Furious 4K/IT $3.5
2 Guns HD/VU or IT $2.5
21 Jump Street HD/MA $3
3 From Hell (Unrated) 4K/VU $4 or HD/VU $2.5
31 (2016) HD/VU $2.5
310 to Yuma 4K/VU $5
47 Meters Down HD/IT $3.5
47 Meters Down Uncaged HD/VU $3.5
47 Ronin HD/VU $3 or 4K/IT $3.5
71 HD/VU $4
A Clockwork Orange 4K/MA $5
A Most Wanted Man HD/VU $3.5
A Quiet Place HD/VU $2.5 or 4K/IT $3
A Quiet Place Part 2 4K/VU $5.5 or HD/VU $4
A Wrinkle in Time HD/MA $3 or HD/GP $2.5
About Time HD/VU or IT $3.5
Action Point HD/IT $2
Adore HD/IT $3.5
Adventures Of TinTin HD/VU or IT $2.5
After Earth HD/MA $3
Aladdin (2019) 4K/MA $4.5 or HD/MA $3 or HD/GP $2.5
Alex Cross HD/VU or IT $2
Alfred Hitchcock 5-Film Set (Saboteur, Shadow of Doubt, Trouble with Harry, Marnie, Family Plot) 4K/MA $24
Alice Through Looking Glass HD/MA $3.5 or HD/GP $3
Alita Battle Angel 4K/MA $5 or HD/MA $3.5
All Eyez on Me HD/IT $3
All Money in World HD/MA $3.5
Aloha HD/MA $3.5 or SD/MA $1
Alvin & Chipmunks Road Chip HD/MA $2.5
Amazing Spider-Man 2 HD/MA $4
Amazing Spider-Man HD/MA $3.5 or SD/MA $1.5
America Imagine World Without Her HD/VU $1.5
American Assassin 4K/VU $4.5 or HD/VU $3
American Frontier Trilogy (Sicario, Wind River, Hell or High Water) HD/VU $7.5
American Hustle SD/MA $1.5
American Made 4K/MA $5 or HD/MA $3.5
American Night HD/VU $4
American Reunion HD/VU or IT $3
American Ultra HD/IT $4
Anchorman 2 Legend Continues HD/VU or IT $2.5
Angel Heart 4K/VU $5.5
Angel of Mine 4K/VU $5.5
Anna 4K/VU $5 HD/VU $3.5
Anna Karenina HD/IT $3.5
Annie (2014) HD/MA $3.5 or SD/MA $1.5
Annihilation HD/VU $3
Antebellum 4K/VU $5
Ant-Man & Wasp HD/MA $3.5 or HD/GP $3
Ant-Man HD/MA $4 or HD/GP $3.5
Apollo 13 4K/MA or IT $5 or HD/MA $3.5
Arctic HD/MA $4
Arnold Schwarzenegger 6-Film Collection (Last Stand, Total Recall, T-2, Red Heat, Maggie, Hercules in NY) HD/VU $14
Arrival HD/VU $2.5 or 4K/IT $3
Ash vs Evil Dead Season 3 HD/VU $5
Assassination Nation HD/MA $3.5
Assassin's Creed HD/MA $3
Atomic Blonde 4K/MA $4.5 or HD/MA$3
August Osage County HD/VU $3
Avengers Age of Ultron HD/MA $3.5 pr HD/GP $3
Avengers Endgame HD/MA $2.5 or HD/GP $2
Avengers HD/GP $3
Avengers Infinity War HD/MA $2.5 or HD/GP $2
Back to Future Trilogy 4K/MA $14 or HD/MA $9.5
Bad Boys for Life HD/MA $4
Bad Grandpa HD/IT $2.5
Bad Words HD/IT $3
Bambi HD/MA $4 or HD/GP $3.5
Bangkok Dangerous HD/VU $4
Bank Job HD/VU $3.5
Barbie & Her Sisters in Great Puppy Adventure HD/VU or IT $3.5
Barbie in Princess Power HD/IT $3.5
Barbie Star Light Adventure HD/IT $3.5
Battle of Year HD/MA $3.5
Battleship HD/VU $3 or 4K/IT $3.5
Baywatch HD/VU $2.5 or 4K/IT $3
Beatriz at Dinner HD/VU $4.5
Beauty & Beast (1991) HD/MA $3.5 or HD/GP $3
Beauty & Beast (2017) HD/MA $2.5 or HD/GP $2
Before I Fall HD/VU or IT $3.5
Begin Again HD/VU $3.5
Ben-Hur (2016) HD/VU or IT $3.5
BFG HD/MA $3.5
Big Eyes HD/VU $3.5
Big Hero 6 4K/MA $5 or HD/MA $3.5 or HD/GP $3
Big Lebowski 4K/MA $5.5 or HD/MA $4
Big Little Lies Season 1 HD/GP $2.5
Big Short HD/VU or IT $3.5
Big Wedding SD/IT $1
Birth of a Nation HD/MA $3.5
Black Panther 4K/MA $4.5 or HD/GP $2.5
Black Widow HD/MA $3.5 or HD/GP $3
Blackhat HD/IT $3.5
Blair Witch Project (1999) HD/VU $4
Blockers HD/MA $3.5
Boardwalk Empire Season 1 HD/VU or IT $4
Bombshell 4K/VU $5
Book Club HD/VU $2.5 or 4K/IT $3
Book of Life HD/MA $3.5
Born a Champion 4K/VU $5
Boss Baby HD/MA $2.5
Bourne Identity HD/VU $3.5 or 4K/IT $4
Bourne Legacy HD/VU $2
Bourne Supremacy HD/VU $3.5
Bourne Ultimatum 4K/MA $5 or HD/MA $3.5 or 4K/IT $4
Boy 2 HD/IT $3.5
Boy Erased HD/MA $4
Boy HD/IT $3.5
Boyhood HD/VU or IT $2.5
Braven HD/VU $4
Butler HD/VU $3
Butterfly Effect HD/MA $4
Bye Bye Man (Unrated) HD/IT $2.5
Cabin in Woods 4K/VU or IT $4.5 or HD/VU $2.5
Call of Wild 4K/MA $4.5 or HD/GP $2.5
Captain America Civil War HD/GP $2.5
Captain America First Avenger HD/MA $4 or HD/GP $3.5 or SD/IT $1.5
Captain America Winter Soldier HD/GP $3.5
Captain Marvel HD/GP $2
Captain Phillips HD/MA $3.5 or SD/MA $1.5
Carol HD/VU $4
Cars 3 HD/GP $2.5
Case for Christ HD/IT $2.5
Chaos Walking 4K/VU $5
Charlotte's Web (2006) HD/VU $4
Chicago (Diamond Edition) HD/VU $4
Children (2008) HD/VU $4
Christopher Robin HD/MA $4 or HD/GP $3.5
Cloverfield 4K/VU $5.5 or HD/VU $4
Coco HD/GP $2.5
Cold Pursuit 4K/VU $5 or HD/VU $3.5
Collection HD/VU $3.5
Columbiana (Unrated) HD/MA $4
Come & Find Me HD/VU $4
Commuter 4K/VU $5 or HD/VU $3.5
Company of Heroes HD/MA $4
Contraband HD/IT $3
Cooties HD/VU $4
Cornetto Trilogy (Shaun of Dead, Hot Fuzz, World's End) 4K/MA $15
Counselor HD/MA $4
Courier 4K/VU $5.5 or HD/VU $4
Crank 4K/VU $5.5
Crimson Peak HD/IT $3.5
Croods HD/VU $3.5
Cruella HD/MA $3.5 or HD/GP $3
D Train 4K/IT $4
Daddy's Home 2 HD/IT $3
Daddy's Home HD/VU $3
Dark Tower HD/MA $3.5
Darkest Hour (2017) 4K/MA $5.5
Darkness HD/IT $3
Dawn of Planet of Apes HD/MA $3.5
Daybreakers 4K/VU $5.5
Deadpool 2 (w/Super Duper Cut) HD/MA $4
Deadpool HD/MA $2.5
Dear White People HD/VU $3.5
Dementia 13 (Director's Cut) HD/VU $4
Descendants SD/IT $1.5
Despicable Me 2 HD/VU $3.5 or 4K/IT $4
Despicable Me 4K/IT $5 or SD/IT $1.5
Detroit HD/MA $3.5
Dilemma HD/VU $3.5 or SD/IT $1.5
Dirty Dancing 4K/VU $5 or HD/VU $3.5
Disney Animated Short Films Collection HD/MA $3.5 or HD/GP $3
Divergent Allegiant HD/VU $3.5 or 4K/IT $4
Divergent HD/VU $1.5 or 4K/IT $2 or SD/VU $0.5
Divergent Insurgent HD/VU $2.5 or 4K/IT $3
Django Unchained HD/VU $3 or SD/IT $1.5
Do Right Thing 4K/MA $5.5 or HD/MA $4
Doctor Strange HD/GP $2.5
Dom Hemingway HD/MA $3.5
Don't Worry, He Won't Get Far on Foot HD/VU $4
Doom (Unrated) 4K/MA $5.5
Doorman HD/VU $3.5
Doors 4K/VU $5.5 or HD/VU $4
Dora & Lost City of Gold HD/VU $3.5 or 4K/IT $4
Downton Abbey Movie HD/MA $4
Dracula Untold HD/VU $3 or 4K/IT $3.5
Draft Day HD/VU $3.5
Dragged Across Concrete HD/VU $3.5
Dream House HD/IT $3
Dreamkatcher HD/VU $4
Dredd HD/VU $2.5
Duff SD/VU $1.5
Dumbo (2019) HD/GP $3
Dune 4K/MA $5.5
Dying of Light HD/VU $2.5
E.T. Extra Terrestrial 4K/VU or IT $5 or HD/MA $3.5
Edge of Seventeen HD/VU or IT $3
Edge of Tomorrow 4K/MA $5
Edward Scissorhands HD/MA $3.5
El Chicano HD/MA $4
Encanto 4K/MA $4 or 4K/GP $3.5
Enemy at Gates HD/VU $4
Enough Said HD/MA $3.5
Epic HD/MA $3
Escape Plan HD/VU $2
Eternals HD/MA $3.5 or HD/GP $3
Everest 4K/MA or IT $4.5
Ex Machina HD/VU $3
Exodus Gods & Kings HD/MA $3.5
Expendables 2 HD/VU or IT $1
Expendables 3 (Thea) HD/VU $2 or 4K/IT $2.5
Extreme Prejudice (1987) HD/VU $4
Fast & Furious (2009) HD/VU $3.5 or 4K/IT $4
Fast & Furious 6 (Ext) HD/VU $2 or 4K/IT $2.5
Fast & Furious 6-film Collection HD/VU $12.5
Fast & Furious 7-film Collection HD/VU $14
Fast & Furious 8-film Collection (9 Films) HD/MA $17.5
Fast & Furious 9-film Collection (11 Films) HD/MA $20
Fast & Furious HD/VU $3.5
Fast Color 4K/VU $5.5
Fast Five (Ext) HD/IT $2.5 or SD/IT $1
Fatale 4K/VU $5 or HD/VU $3.5
Fate of Furious (Ext) HD/VU $2
Fate of Furious (Thea) HD/VU or IT $1.5
Fault in Our Stars HD/MA $3.5
Fences HD/VU $2.5 or 4K/IT $3
Ferdinand HD/MA $3.5
Fifty Shades Darker (Unrated) HD/VU $2.5 or 4K/IT $3
Fifty Shades of Grey (Unrated) HD/VU $2.5 or 4K/IT $3
Finding Dory HD/MA $2.5 or HD/GP $2
Finding Nemo HD/GP $3.5
Finest Hours HD/GP $3
First Blood 4K/VU $5
First Man HD/MA $4
Flight HD/VU or IT $3
Florence Foster Jenkins HD/VU or IT $3
Footloose (2011) HD/IT $3
Forever My Girl HD/IT $3
Fortress HD/VU $4
Four Kids & It HD/VU $3.5
Fox & Hound 2 HD/MA $4
Frank & Lola HD/VU or IT $3
Frankenstein (1931) HD/VU $3.5
Free Guy HD/MA $3.5 or HD/GP $3
French Dispatch HD/MA $4 or HD/GP $3.5
Friday 13th Pt 3 HD/VU $3.5
Frozen (Sing-Along Edition) HD/MA $2 or HD/GP $1.5
Frozen 2 4K/MA $4 or HD/MA $2.5 or HD/GP $2
Frozen Ground (2013) HD/VU $3.5
Frozen HD/GP $2
Furious 7 (Ext) HD/VU $2 or 4K/IT $2.5
Fury HD/MA $3.5
G.I. Joe Retaliation HD/VU $3 or 4K/IT $3.5
Gambit (2012) HD/MA $4
Gambler HD/IT $3
Gambler HD/VU $3
Gemini Man 4K/VU or IT $4.5 or HD/VU $3
Get Out HD/MA $3.5 or 4K/IT $4
Ghostbusters (1984) HD/MA $3.5
Ghostbusters 2 HD/MA $3.5
Ghostbusters Afterlife HD/MA $4
Girl on Train HD/VU $3 or 4K/IT $3.5
Girl With All Gifts HD/VU $4
Girls Trip HD/VU or IT $2
Glass Castle 4K/VU $5.5
God's Not Dead 2 HD/MA or IT $2.5
Gods of Egypt HD/VU $2.5 or 4K/IT $3
Gold (2016) HD/VU or IT $2.5
Good Dinosaur HD/MA $3 or HD/GP $2.5
Good Kill HD/VU or IT $3.5
Grace Unplugged HD/VU $2
Greatest Showman HD/MA $3.5
Green Mile 4K/MA $5.5
Grey HD/VU or IT $3
Guardians of Galaxy Vol 1 HD/MA $3.5 or HD/GP $3
Guardians of Galaxy Vol 2 HD/MA $2.5 or HD/GP $2
Guest House 4K/VU $5
Guilt Trip HD/IT $3
Gunman HD/MA $3
Hacksaw Ridge HD/VU $3.5 or 4K/IT $4
Hail, Caesar! HD/IT $3
Hammer of Gods HD/VU $2
Hands of Stone HD/VU $3.5
Hannibal Season 1 HD/VU $5
Hansel & Gretel Witch Hunters (Unrated) 4K/IT $4
Hard Target 2 HD/IT $1.5
Hardcore Henry HD/VU or IT $3.5
Hateful Eight HD/VU $3.5
Heat HD/MA $3
Heaven is for Real SD/MA $1.5
Hell Fest 4K/VU $5
Hell or High Water HD/VU $2.5
Hellboy (2019) HD/VU $3 or 4K/VU $4.5
Hercules (1997) HD/MA $4.5 or HD/GP $4
Hercules (2014) HD/VU $2.5 or 4K/IT $3
Here Comes Boom HD/MA $3.5
Hidden Figures HD/MA $3
Hillsong Let Hope Rise HD/IT $2
Hitman's Bodyguard HD/VU $3.5
Hitman's Wife's Bodyguard 4K/VU $5.5 or HD/VU $4
Hocus Pocus HD/MA $3.5 or HD/GP $3
Home Alone HD/MA $3.5
Homesman HD/VU $3
Honey 2 HD/VU $3
Hop HD/MA or IT $3
Hope Springs HD/MA $2.5 or SD/MA $1
Hostiles HD/VU $3
Hot Fuzz HD/VU $4
Hotel Mumbai HD/MA $4
Hours (2013) HD/VU $4
How Grinch Stole Christmas (2000) 4K/IT $4
How to Train Your Dragon 2 HD/MA $2.5
How to Train Your Dragon HD/VU $3.5
How to Train Your Dragon Trilogy HD/MA $9
Hugo HD/VU or IT $3
Hunger Games 4-Film Collection HD/VU $8
Hunger Games Catching Fire HD/VU $1.5 or 4K/IT $2 or SD/VU $.5
Hunger Games HD/VU $1.5 or 4K/IT $2 or SD/VU $.0.5
Hunger Games Mockingjay Part 1 HD/VU $2.5 or SD/VU $1
Hunter Killer 4K/VU $4.5 or HD/VU $3
Huntsman Winter's War (Ext) HD/VU $3 or 4K/IT $3.5
I Can Only Imagine HD/VU $4
I Feel Pretty HD/IT $2
Incredibles 2 4K/MA $5 or HD/MA $3.5 or HD/GP $3
Incredibles HD/GP $3.5
Independence Day Resurgence HD/MA $2.5
Indiana Jones & Temple of Doom 4K/VU $5.5
Indignation HD/VU $4
Initiation 4K/VU $5 or HD/VU $3.5
Inside Out HD/GP $2
Instant Family 4K/IT $3.5
Internship SD/IT $1.5
Interstellar HD/VU $3.5 or 4K/IT $4
Into Woods HD/MA $3 or HD/GP $2.5
Invisible Man (1933) HD/MA $3.5
Invisible Man (2020) 4K/MA $5.5 or HD/MA $4
Iron Man 3 HD/GP $2
Iron Man HD/MA $4 or HD/GP $3.5
It Follows HD/VU $3.5
It's a Wonderful Life 4K/VU or IT $4.5 or HD/VU $3
Jack & Jill HD/MA $3.5
Jack Reacher HD/VU $3 or 4K/IT $4.5
Jack Ryan Shadow Recruit HD/VU $2.5 or 4K/IT $3
Jacob's Ladder HD/VU $4
Jarhead 3 Siege (Unrated) HD/IT $2.5
Jason Bourne HD/VU $2.5
Jason Statham 4-Film (War, Crank 1 & 2, Transporter 3) HD/VU $10
Jason Statham 6-Film (War, Crank 1 & 2, Bank Job, Wild Card, Transporter 3) HD/VU $14
Jaws 4K/MA $5 or HD/MA $3.5
Jersey Boys HD/MA $2.5
Jesus Music HD/VU $3.5
Jigsaw 4K/VU $4.5
Joe HD/VU $3.5
John Wick 1 & 2 Bundle HD/VU $4
John Wick 3 Parabellum 4K/VU $4.5
John Wick Chapter 2 HD/VU $3.5 or 4K/IT $4
John Wick HD/VU $2 or 4K/IT $2.5
John Wick Trilogy (Parabellum 4K) HD/VU $9
Jonah Hex HD/MA $4.5
Judy 4K/VU $5
Jungle Cruise HD/MA $4 or HD/GP $3.5
Jurassic Park 4K/MA $5 or HD/MA $3.5
Jurassic World 5-Film Collection HD/MA $14
Jurassic World Fallen Kingdom 4K/MA $4.5 or HD/MA $3
Jurassic World HD/VU $2.5
Justice (2017) HD/VU or IT $3
Justin Bieber Never Say Never SD/IT $1.5
Kevin Hart Let Me Explain HD/VU or IT $3
Kick-Ass 4K/VU $5.5 or HD/VU $4 or SD/IT $1.5
Kidnap HD/VU or IT $2.5
Killer Elite HD/IT $3
Killerman HD/VU $4
Kin (2018) 4K/VU $4.5 or HD/VU $3
King Kong (2005) 4K/MA or IT $5 or HD/MA $3.5
Kingsman Golden Circle 4K/MA $4.5 or HD/MA $3
Kingsman Secret Service 4K/MA $5 or HD/MA $3.5
Kiss Kiss Bang Bang HD/MA $4.5
Knick Season 1 HD/IT $3.5
Knick Season 2 HD/IT or GP $3.5
Kung Fu Panda 3 HD/MA $3
La La Land 4K/IT $3.5
Labor Day HD/VU or IT $3
Lady Macbeth HD/VU $4.5
Last Airbender HD/VU $4.5
Last Exorcism HD/VU $4
Last Knights HD/VU $3.5 or SD/VU $1.5
Last Man (2019) HD/VU $4
Last Stand HD/IT $2
Last Vegas HD/MA $3.5
Last Witch Hunter HD/VU $3 or 4K/IT $3.5
Leatherface HD/VU $4
Leprechaun 7-Film Collection HD/VU $12
Les Miserables (2012) HD/VU or IT $2
Let Me Explain HD/IT $2.5
Let's be Cops HD/MA $3.5
Life (2017) HD/MA $3.5
Life of Crime HD/VU $3.5
Life of Pi 4K/MA $5 or HD/MA or IT $3.5
Light of My Life HD/IT $3.5
Like a Boss HD/VU $3.5
Lilo & Stitch 2 Stitch Has a Glitch HD/MA $4 or HD/GP $3.5
Lincoln Lawyer 4K/VU $6.5 or HD/VU $4
Lion King (2019) 4K/MA $4 or HD/GP $2
Live by Night HD/MA $3
Logan HD/MA $3
Logan Lucky 4K/MA or IT $4.5
Lone Ranger HD/MA $3.5 or HD/GP $3
Lone Survivor HD/VU $2.5 or 4K/IT $3
Long Shot HD/VU $3.5
Longest Ride HD/MA $3
Longest Week HD/VU $3.5
Looper HD/MA $3.5
Lorax (1972) HD/MA $5
Lorax HD/VU $3
Lords of Salem HD/VU $4
Lost World Jurassic Park HD/MA $3
Love & Monsters HD/VU $4
Love Coopers HD/VU or IT $4
Love, Simon HD/MA $3.5
Loving HD/VU or IT $3.5
Luca HD/MA $3.5 or HD/GP $3
Lucy HD/VU $3 or 4K/IT $3.5
Madagascar 3 Europe's Most Wanted HD/VU or IT $3
Madea's Witness Protection SD/IT $1.5
Magnificent Seven (2016) HD/VU $3
Maleficent 4K/MA $4 or HD/MA $2.5 or HD/GP $2
Maleficent Mistress of Evil HD/MA $3 or HD/GP $2.5
Mama HD/IT $3
Mamma Mia Here We Go Again HD/MA $2.5
Man Who Shot Liberty Vance 4K/VU $5.5
Mandela Long Walk to Freedom HD/VU $4
Martian HD/MA $3.5
Mary Poppins (1964) HD/MA $3.5 or HD/GP $3
Mary Poppins Returns HD/MA $3 or HD/GP $2.5
Matrix Resurrections 4K/MA $5.5 or HD/MA $4
Max HD/MA $3.5
Max Steel HD/IT $3
McKenna Shoots for Stars HD/IT $2
Mechanic Resurrection HD/VU $2.5
Megan Leavey HD/IT $3
Midnight Sun HD/MA $3.5
Midway 4K/VU $4.5 or HD/VU $3
Mile 22 HD/IT $3
Million Dollar Arm HD/GP $2.5
MindGamers HD/MA or IT $3.5
Minions 4K/MA or IT $4.5 HD/VU $3
Misconduct HD/VU $2.5
Miss Peregrine's Home for Peculiar Children HD/MA $3
Mission Impossible 4 Ghost Protocol HD/VU $2
Mission Impossible 5 Rogue Nation HD/VU $3 or 4K/IT $3.5
Mission Impossible 6 Fallout 4K/VU or IT $4.5
Mission Impossible 6-film Set 4K/VU or IT $23 or HD/VU $17
Moana HD/MA $2.5 or HD/GP $2
Moneyball HD/MA $3
Monkey Kingdom HD/MA $3
Monsters University HD/GP $3
Monuments Men HD/MA $3.5
Mortal Engines 4K/MA $5.5 or HD/MA $4
Mortal HD/VU $4
Mortal Instruments City of Bones HD/MA $3 or SD/MA $1.5
Mother! HD/VU $2.5
Mr. Poppers Penguins SD/IT $1.5
Much Ado About Nothing (2013) HD/VU $4
Mud HD/VU $2.5
Mulan (2020) 4K/MA 4.5 or HD/MA $3 or HD/GP $2.5
Mummy (1999) HD/VU $4
Mummy (2017) 4K/MA or IT $4.5
Muppets Most Wanted HD/MA $3.5 or HD/GP $3
Murder on Orient Express HD/MA $3.5
My All American HD/MA or IT $3.5
Nebraska HD/VU $3
Nerve HD/IT $3.5
NeverEnding Story HD/MA $4
New Mutants HD/GP $3
News of World 4K/MA $5.5 or HD/MA $4
Night at Museum Secret of Tomb HD/MA $3
Nightmare Alley HD/GP $3.5
Nightmare Before Christmas HD/MA $4 or HD/GP $3.5
No Escape (2015) HD/VU $3
No Strings Attached HD/VU or IT $4
No Time to Die 4K/IT $4.5
Noah HD/VU or IT $2.5
Nobody's Fool HD/IT $2.5
Non-Stop HD/VU or IT $3
Norm of North HD/VU $2.5
Nostalgia (2018) HD/MA $3.5
Now You See Me 2 HD/VU $3.5 or 4K/IT $4
Now You See Me HD/VU or IT $2.5 or SD/VU $1
Nutcracker & Four Realms HD/MA $3.5 or HD/GP $3
Oblivion 4K/MA or IT $5 or HD/MA $3.5
Occupation (2018) HD/VU $3.5
Occupation Rainfall HD/VU $4
Office Christmas Party HD/VU $3 or 4K/IT $3.5
Olaf's Frozen Adventure HD/MA $3.5 or HD/GP $3
One Direction This is Us SD/MA $1.5
Ong Bak 2 HD/VU $3
Onward 4K/MA $4.5 or HD/GP $2.5
Other Woman HD/MA $3
Ouija HD/IT $3.5
Ouija Origin of Evil HD/VU or IT $3.5
Outlander Season 1 Vol 1 HD/VU $5.5
Overdrive HD/IT $2.5
Overlord 4K/IT $3.5
Oz Great & Powerful HD/GP $2.5
Paddington HD/VU $3.5
Pain & Gain HD/VU or IT $3.5
Paranormal Activity (Unrated) HD/VU or IT $4
Paranormal Activity 3 (Ext) HD/VU or IT $3
Paranormal Activity 4 HD/IT $2.5
Paranormal Activity Marked Ones HD/VU or IT $3.5
Passengers HD/MA $3
Patriot Games 4K/VU $5
Patriot's Day HD/VU $3 or 4K/IT $3.5
Peanuts Movie HD/MA $3
Penguins of Madagascar HD/MA $3.5
Perks of Being a Wallflower SD/VU or IT $1
Pet Sematary (2019) 4K/IT $3.5
Pete's Dragon (2016) HD/MA $3.5 or HD/GP $3
Philomena HD/VU $2.5
Pinocchio (1940) HD/MA $3.5 or HD/GP $3
Pirates of Caribbean Dead Men Tell No Tales 4K/MA $4.5 or HD/GP $2.5
Pitch Perfect 2 4K/MA $4 or HD/VU $2.5
Pitch Perfect 4K/IT $3
Pixar Short Films Collection Vol. 3 HD/MA $3.5 or HD/GP $3
Planes Fire & Rescue HD/MA $3.5 or HD/GP $3
Planes HD/MA $2.5 or HD/GP $2
Playing with Fire HD/IT $2.5
Pocahontas HD/MA $4.5 or HD/GP $4
Point Break (2015) 4K/MA $5 or HD/MA $3.5
Poison Rose 4K/VU $4.5
Possession HD/VU or IT $2.5
Power Rangers (2017) 4K/VU or IT $4.5
Precious HD/VU $4.5
Predator (2018) HD/MA $3
Predator 4-Film Collection HD/MA $11
Premium Rush HD/MA $3.5
Pride & Prejudice & Zombies SD/MA $1.5
Primal HD/VU $3.5
Prodigy HD/VU $4
Project Almanac HD/IT $3.5
Prometheus HD/MA $2.5
Protector 2 SD/VU $1.5
Punisher 4K/VU $5.5
Punisher War Zone 4K/VU $5.5
Purge Anarchy HD/VU $3 or 4K/IT $3.5
Purge Election Year 4K/MA $5 or HD/MA $3.5
Purge HD/VU $3 or 4K/IT $3.5
Quarry 4K/VU $5
Queen & Slim HD/MA $4
Ralph Breaks Internet HD/GP $2
Rambo (2008) 4K/VU $5.5
Rambo 3 4K/VU $5.5
Rambo 5-Film Collection 4K/VU $23 or HD/VU $17
Rambo First Blood Pt 2 4K/VU $5.5
Rambo Last Blood 4K/VU $4.5
Rango HD/VU $3.5
Raya & Last Dragon HD/MA $3.5 or HD/GP $3
Reclaim HD/VU $3.5
Red Dawn (2012) HD/VU or IT $3
Red Sparrow HD/MA $3.5
Replicant (2001) HD/VU $3.5
Replicas HD/VU $3.5
Requiem for a Dream (Director's Cut) 4K/VU $5.5
Resurrection of Gavin Stone HD/VU or IT $2.5
Revenant HD/MA $3.5
Riddick (Unrated) HD/VU or IT $3
Ride Along HD/VU or IT $2.5
Rings HD/VU or IT $2.5
Riot HD/VU or IT $3
RIPD HD/IT $2.5
Risen HD/MA $3
Robin Hood (1973) HD/MA $3.5 or HD/VU $3
Robocop (2014) HD/VU $2.5
Rocketman (2019) 4K/IT $4
Rogue One A Star Wars Story HD/GP $2
Ron's Gone Wrong HD/MA $3.5 or HD/GP $3
Rough Night 4K/MA $5 or HD/MA $3.5
Runner Runner HD/MA $3.5
Rush HD/VU or IT $3
Safe HD/VU or IT $2.5
Saige Paints Sky HD/IT $3
Same Kind of Different as Me HD/VU or IT $3
Samson HD/MA $3.5
Santa Clause 2 HD/MA $3.5 or HD/GP $3
Santa Clause 3 HD/MA $3
Santa Clause HD/MA $3.5
Santa Clause Trilogy HD/MA $9.5 or HD/GP $8
Savages HD/IT $3
Saving Mr. Banks HD/GP $3
Saw HD/VU $3
Scarface HD/VU $4
Scary Movie 5 HD/VU $4.5
Scary Stories to Tell in Dark 4K/VU $4.5
Schindler's List 4K/MA $5.5
Scouts Guide to Zombie Apocalypse HD/IT $3
Scream (1996) HD/VU $4
Scrooged HD/IT $4
Secret Life of Pets 4K/IT $4.5
Secret Life of Walter Mitty HD/MA $3
Selma HD/VU or IT $2.5
Shack HD/IT $2.5
Shallows HD/MA $3.5
Shang-Chi Legend of Ten Rings HD/MA $3.5 or HD/GP $3
Shape of Water HD/MA $3.5
Sharp Objects HD/GP $2
Shaun Sheep Movie HD/VU $3
Sherlock Gnomes HD/VU or IT $2.5
She's Having a Baby HD/VU $3.5
Shivers HD/VU $4
Siberia (2020) HD/VU $4
Sicario HD/VU $2.5
Side Effects HD/IT $3.5
Sing (2016) 4K/IT $4
Singing in Rain 4K/MA $5.5
Sinister HD/IT $2.5
Sisters (Unrated) HD/IT $2.5
Skyfall HD/VU $2.5
Skyscraper HD/MA $3.5
Sleeping Beauty (1959) HD/MA $4 or HD/GP $3.5
Sleepless HD/IT $2
Snatched HD/MA $2
Snitch HD/VU $2.5 or 4K/IT $3 or SD/VU or IT $1.5
Snow White & Huntsman (Ext Edition) 4K/VU or IT $4.5 or HD/VU $3
Snow White & Seven Dwarfs (1937) HD/MA $3.5 or HD/GP $3
Solo A Star Wars Story HD/MA $3.5 or HD/GP $3
Some Kind of Wonderful HD/VU $3.5
Songbird 4K/IT $4.5
Sonic Hedgehog 4K/VU $5 or HD/VU $3.5
Soul HD/MA $3 or HD/GP $2.5
Southpaw HD/VU $3
Southside With You HD/VU $4.5
Spider-Man 4-Cut Set (Spider-Man 2 w/ Thea & Ext) HD/MA $11.5
Spider-Man 5-Cut Set (Spider-Man 2 & 3 w/ Thea & Ext) HD/MA $14.5
Spider-Man Far From Home HD/MA $3.5
Spider-Man Homecoming HD/MA $3
Spider-Man Homecoming/Far From Home Bundle HD/MA $6
Spies in Disguise 4K/MA $5 or HD/MA $3.5 or HD/GP $3
Spiral (2021) 4K/VU or IT $4.5
Split 4K/MA or IT $5 or HD/MA $3.5
Spongebob Sponge out of Water HD/IT $2.5
Spy (Unrated) HD/MA $3.5
Spy Who Dumped Me 4K/VU $5 or HD/VU $3.5
St. Vincent HD/VU $3
Stand Up Guys HD/VU $3.5
Star SD/MA $1.5
Star Trek (2009) HD/VU $3.5 or 4K/IT $4
Star Trek 1-4 (Motion Picture, Wrath of Khan, Search for Spock, Voyage Home) 4K/VU $18
Star Trek Beyond HD/VU $3
Star Trek Into Darkness HD/VU $2.5
Star Wars Force Awakens HD/GP $1.5
Star Wars Last Jedi 4K/MA $4.5 or HD/MA $3 or HD/GP $2.5
Star Wars Rise of Skywalker 4K/MA $4.5 or HD/MA $3 or HD/GP $2.5
Step Up Revolution HD/IT $3
Straight Outta Compton (Thea & Unrated) 4K/MA $4.5 or HD/MA $3 or 4K/IT $3.5
Suburbicon HD/VU $3 or 4K/IT $3.5
Suits Season 2 HD/IT $3.5
Sum of All Fears 4K/VU $5.5
Sundown Vampire in Retreat HD/VU $3.5
Super 8 4K/VU $5 or HD/VU $3.5
Super Buddies HD/GP $2
Sword in Stone HD/MA $4 or HD/GP $3.5
Ted (Unrated) HD/IT $3
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (2014) HD/VU $2.5
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles Out of Shadows HD/VU $3.5
Terminator 2 Judgment Day (Ext) HD/VU $4.5
Terminator 2 Judgment Day 4K/VU $5
Terminator Dark Fate HD/VU $2.5 or 4K/IT $3
Terminator Genisys HD/VU $2.5
That Awkward Moment SD/MA $1.5
They Came Together HD/VU $4.5
This is 40 HD/MA $3.5
Thor Dark World HD/MA $4 or HD/GP $3.5
Thor HD/GP $3.5 or SD/IT $1.5
Thor Ragnarok HD/GP $2
Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri HD/MA $3.5
Top Gun (1986) 4K/VU $5 or HD/VU $3.5
Total Recall (1990) 4K/VU $5
Toy Story 4 4K/MA $4.5 or HD/MA $2.5 or HD/GP $2
Toy Story HD/GP $3.5
Toy Story of Terror HD/MA $4 or HD/GP $3.5
Transformers Last Knight HD/VU $2.5 or 4K/IT $3
Transporter 3 SD/IT $1.5
Tremors A Cold Day In Hell HD/MA $2.5
Trolls HD/MA $2.5
Trumbo HD/IT $3.5
Trust HD/VU $4
Turbo HD/MA or IT $3
Turning HD/MA $4
Twilight Breaking Dawn 2 HD/VU $1.5 or 4K/IT $2 or SD/VU $0.5
Tyler Perry's A Madea Christmas SD/VU $1.5
Tyler Perry's Madea's Witness Protection SD/VU $1
Tyler Perry's Temptation HD/GP $3
Unbreakable HD/GP $3.5
Unbroken HD/VU or IT $3
Uncle Drew HD/VU $3.5
Underworld Awakening HD/MA $3
Untouchables 4K/VU $5
Valerian & City of a Thousand Planets HD/VU $3.5
Vampire Academy HD/VU $4
Van Helsing 4K/MA or IT $5 or HD/MA $3.5
Vanishing (2018) HD/VU $4
Veep Season 6 HD/IT $3.5
Venom HD/MA $3.5
Victoria & Abdul HD/MA $4
Vivarium HD/VU $4
Voices (2014) HD/VU $4
Vow SD/MA $1.5
Walk HD/MA $3.5
War for Planet of Apes HD/MA $3
Warcraft HD/VU $3 or 4K/IT $3.5
Warm Bodies 4K/VU $4.5 or HD/VU $3 or SD/VU $1.5
Warrior 4K/VU $5 or HD/VU $3.5
Werewolf Beast Among Us (Unrated) HD/IT $3.5
West Side Story (2021) HD/GP $3
What Men Want HD/VU $3 or 4K/IT $3.5
What to Expect When You're Expecting SD/IT $1.5
When Game Stands Tall HD/MA $3 or SD/MA $1.5
Whisky Tango Foxtrot HD/IT $3
Why Him? HD/MA $3
Widows HD/MA $3.5
Wild Card HD/VU $3
Wild HD/MA $3.5
Wilson HD/MA $3.5
Winchester HD/VU $3.5
Wolf of Wall Street HD/VU or IT $3.5
Wolverine (Unrated) (w/Thea) HD/MA $4
Wonder HD/VU $3
Wonder Park 4K/IT $2.5
Wonder Woman 1984 4K/MA $5.5
Woodlawn HD/IT $3.5
World War Z HD/VU or IT $2.5
Wraith HD/VU $4
X-Men Apocalypse HD/MA $3
X-Men Days of Future Past HD/MA $3
XXX Return of Xander Cage HD/VU $2 or 4K/IT $2.5
You Were Never Really Here HD/VU $4
You're Next HD/VU $3.5
Z for Zachariah HD/VU $4
Zeros & Ones HD/VU $4.5
Zootopia HD/GP $2.5
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2023.05.25 16:11 SillyAd9410 A Semi-Collaborative Pop Culture TL #8
YOU decide what events should change in the world of pop culture, be it real or ASB (future movie gets shown in the past, an actor does/doesn't die, alternate casting choices, unmade media possibly getting made, media is rewritten, a change in the box office or something new entirely)!
I document what happens in a current timeline of Earth!
We all have fun!
CURRENT TIMELINE:
1818: Mary Shelley's The Modern Prometheus, a novel in which scientist Henry Frankenstein creates a sapient creature named Prometheus is made. Prometheus becomes a stalwart of the monster genre.
1907-1908: A young comedian named Charlie Chaplin refuses to accept the offer of Fred Karno to come to the U.S. He becomes a famous comedian, often incorporating a character he named The Tramp in his stand-up routines.
1912: The Olympic ship crashes upon hitting an iceberg, becoming a memorable event. James Cameron's Olympic (1997) would be the first film to gross $1B, even entering the National Film Registry.
1931: Frankenstein and his Prometheus, an adaptation of The Modern Prometheus starring Bela Lugosi and Boris Karloff as Henry and Prometheus is a box-office smash. It would enter the National Film Registry in 1991.
1941: Fleischer Studios' Mr. Bug Goes to Town is a box office success, saving the studio. Today it is one of Disney's biggest competitors, along with Warner Bros.
1951: Fawcett Comics wins a lawsuit over National Comics for the rights to the characters of Captain Marvel and Superman. While National Comics would die in obscurity, Fawcett Comics would be Marvel's biggest competitor.
1962: Marilyn Monroe doesn't die. She goes into hiding in Las Vegas doing revue shows. Discovered by higher ups at NBC, she signs on to The Marilyn Monroe Show, a sketch comedy show that runs until her death in 1999.
1966: Warner Bros.' Twister comes out, becoming the highest grossing film of the year. It would spawn "Tornado-mania", a series of tornado movies made to copy its success. It would enter the National Film Registry in 1996.
1969: Nixon resigns his presidency the become a talk show host. The Dick Nixon show airs until 1983.
The Dick Cavett Show airs on ABC, becoming the main competitor to NBC's Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson. It would end in 1996 to make way for its new replacement The Jon Stewart Show.
Creedence Clearwater Revival release a song about the Civil Rights Movement called Fortunate Son. It becomes their signature song. It enters the National Recording Registry in 2013.
1974: Star Trek: The Continuing Mission, a revival of the original 60s series, airs in syndication until 1981.
1974-1979: Michael John Kricfalusi becomes an anti-Rhodesian mercenary during the Rhodesian Bush War. He becomes a POW by forces from Apartheid South Africa. As a result, he is physically and mentally scarred.
1979: Ozzy Osbourne goes into rehab and continues to play for Black Sabbath, leading to them getting a Beatles-like Renaissance in the 80s, making Heavy Metal one of the 80s most notable music genres.
1980-1981: From February 1980 to August 1981, John Kricfalusi would heal his mental wounds at a mental institution.
1982: John Kricfalusi founds Spümcø, an animation studio that was founded due to John's perceived views on how Hanna-Barbera and Rankin/Bass, two studios he worked at, failed to make good cartoons.
1983: E.T. for the Atari proves to be a very good game, making millions for Atari. This would inspire them to improve their games on their future consoles such as the 5200 and 7800, leading them to become a fierce competitior in the gaming market. The last Atari console came out in the early 2000s.
You Nutzy Rascals!, a short made by John K., is the first to feature prototype designs of Ren and Stimpy.
1985: The War of the Worlds, a film made in collaboration with Disney and Jeff Wayne, based on his musical album adapting the H.G. Wells story, hits theaters. It is a critical and commercial success, cited for starting the Disney Renaissance. Disney and Jeff Wayne would collaborate two more times, making animated adaptations of The Modern Prometheus (1988) and The Time Machine (1992). It would enter the National Film Registry in 2022.
Warner Communications buys Warner Amex-Satellite Entertainment to make Warner MTV Networks.
1986: Ravel's Bolero becomes the theme to The Legend of Zelda. It would later serve to be the theme for the Zelda games in Japan, with a different theme for NTSC releases.
Cliff Burton survives a car crash and continues to play bass for Metallica, helping put thrash metal on the mainstream map.
1987: Morrissey and Johnny Marr become frenemies. The Smiths continue into the 1990s.
1988: During production of Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade, Harrison Ford is shot and killed by a loaded prop gun. This would lead to it being hastily recut in time for 1989. It would lead to a heavy burden on Lucasfilm. The documentary Ford - Spielberg's Right Hand Man would be released in 2008 to great success.
1989: Doctor Who is saved from cancellation by BBC. It remains one of the longest running TV shows.
Sergio Leone dies of old age. He is remembered for his westerns as well as Don Quixote, The Phantom, and Leningrad: The 900 Days.
1990: John K. creates Big House Blues, the pilot for The Ren & Stimpy Show, which is picked up by Nickelodeon.
1991: Eddie Vedder dies in a car crash before the first Pearl Jam album is released. They find a new lead in Chris Cornell, who also sings for Soundgarden until their demise in 1997.
Ren & Stimpy airs on Nickelodeon, along with Doug, Rugrats, Tiny Toon Adventures, Taz-Mania (both this show and TTA would later air in syndication) and Big Beast Quintet (cancelled in 1993). It is currently the longest running American animated series, beating out Matt Groening's The Simpsons, who cancelled the show in 1998 in favor of working on the long-running Futurama which still airs today.
Tim Burton is attached to direct an adaptation of The Addams Family TV show as a movie. It would later spawn three sequels, with Tim leaving after the second movie. The latter two would be critically panned.
1992: Star Wars: Episode I - The Phantom Menace comes out, becoming the highest grossing film of the year. Episodes II and III would later come out in 1995 and 1998 respectively.
J.R.R. Tolkien dies at 100, finishing The New Shadow and The Silmarillion. He was also known for being war minister of the UK from 1940 to 1945.
Stephen Hillenburg is invited to work on Ren & Stimpy after showing his short film Wormholes at the TIFF.
Cartoon Network begins after Ted Turner merges with Viacom in 1986 and buys the Hanna-Barbera library in 1991.
1993: Spielberg quits directing after doing Schindler's List. This not only cancels plans for a Jurassic Park sequel, but also an adaptation of Supertoys Last All Summer Long.
1994: During filming of The Crow, Brandon Lee survives a shot from a prop gun. He would propel into superstardom. He is now known for playing Neo in The Matrix franchise and Johnny Cage in Mortal Kombat (1995).
Kurt Cobain announces the breakup of Nirvana as he goes into rehab. In 2002, the band reunited for You Know You're Right, an album that became a top seller. They still perform to this day.
1995: YouTube, a video sharing site, is released. It would not gain much popularity until 2001, where an influx of YouTubers would bring it to stardom.
Toy Story, a stop motion film, gains critical acclaim due to its incredible scale, becoming the 2nd highest grossing film of the year.
Sarah Michelle Gellar dies in a kayaking incident days before the release of her only film Clueless. This would cause Clueless to become the highest grossing film of the year and become known as one of the best teen films. It enters the National Film Registry in 2005.
Spotify, a humble music downloading site, releases. In 1997, it would change into a music streaming site, and would often show ads for the latest in music.
Selena Quintalla survives being shot. Jennifer Lopez wanes in popularity.
1996: The Nintendo 64DD comes out in a partnership with Phillips, revolutionising the console industry by introducing CD memory, rising it above the PlayStation and Sega Saturn. One of the top best selling games would be Super Mario 64 2, the sequel to Super Mario 64. The 64DD would serve as motivation for Sega to complete Sonic X-Treme by 1997, which becomes a huge hit. This would give Sega the boost it needed to continue making consoles. Other Mario games made for the 64DD include Mario Takes America and Super Mario's Wacky Worlds.
The Nintendo Entertainment System (NES), which had been under a state similar to the Atari 2600, releases its last two games: Super Mario Legends, a game similar in style to the Mario Land games released by Nintendo R&D1, which becomes a minor hit and Animaniacs, a port of Konami's Game Boy game which got mixed reviews.
Tupac survives being shot while having a drive in Las Vegas. He still has a rap career.
Ren & Stimpy Go To Hollywood, a film released by Warner Bros., becomes the highest grossing animated film of the year, making over $600M. It has a 100% rating on Rotten Tomatoes. This film would also have one of Ronald Reagan's last acting roles.
NDR Filmes' Cassiopeia gets fame for being the first completely computer-animated film. It gets an English dub for a worldwide release. It enters the National Film Registry in 2006.
After his work on Ren & Stimpy, Stephen Hillenburg pitches his own show to Nickelodeon about a sea sponge.
Rapper and music producer Andre "Dr. Dre" Young is shot and killed by a vengefully spiteful Suge Knight in a drive-by shooting, since Young left Death Row Records after accusing Knight of corruption the month prior. His death leads to tributes from fans and colleagues alike, and his first album The Chronic is praised for being influential. Tupac Shakur, in addition to being a rapper, assumes Dr. Dre's role as a music producer out of respect for his newly deceased friend. After Suge Knight is arrested and imprisoned for life due to murdering Young, Shakur takes over Death Row Records. The Chronic enters the National Recording Registry in 2019.
1997: Reddit, a news and discussion board, is released. It becomes very, very popular.
The Notorious B.I.G. survives a shooting like his friend and collaborator Tupac, and he continues to make music.
Aspiring rapper Sean "Puff Daddy" Combs is killed in a gang shootout in Los Angeles, California; however, right-wing news network Fox News reports the shootout as having happened in New York City, New York (which is untrue). This leads to rapper Christopher "Biggie Smalls" Wallace recording a single dedicated to Combs called "I'll Be Missing You" (which heavily samples "Every Breath You Take" by The Police) which was included as a bonus track on No Way Out, Combs' first and only debut album released posthumously on July 22, 1997. The album became influential in the years since Combs' death, proving that, even in death, one can still have a rap career and be influential. No Way Out would enter the National Recording Registry in 2007.
1998: Neon Genesis Evangelion is unknowingly localized by 4Kids, leading to a HEAVILY censored English dub that makes the show popular during the late 90s-early 00s.
Chris Farley wakes from a coma due to a drug overdose. After deciding to give the role of Shrek to Mike Myers his friend, he gets the role of Doug Heffernan on The King of Queens.
1999: Stephen Hillenburg's SpongeBob SquarePants airs on Nickelodeon. Although it is a hit at first, work complications, problems outsourcing animation to the studio Gainax, and the banned episode Wrasslin' Maniacs where SpongeBob and Patrick beat up Squidward, Hillenburg is fired from the show in 2002.
Tommy Boy's Return, the sequel to Tommy Boy, releases in theaters. It is considered a cult classic today.
2000: Battlefield Earth is released in theaters to be a huge success, ending up the 8th highest grossing film of the year. This would cause an interest in works by L. Ron Hubbard, making the Church of Scientology a rising religion. Battlefield Earth 2 would later release in 2003 to similar acclaim.
4Kids is bought by Warner Communications. As a result, more anime airs on Kids WB.
The Atari Cougar, Atari's final console before being bought by Jakks Pacific in 2002, is released. It is a cult classic console.
Tim Burton's Wizard of Oz gains mixed to positive reviews, and makes the top 10 list of highest grossing films of the year.
2001: Grand Theft Auto III, the third entry in the GTA series is cancelled following 9/11. The game would later redevelop into Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas, which was released in 2004.
Spy Kids, Quentin Tarantino's first kids' film is released in theaters to mixed reviews, but becomes a cult classic. Two more sequels were released in the two years after it, all would get the same fate.
During 9/11, Kevin James dies after being squished by falling debris from the North Tower.
2003: Call of Duty, a war shooter game, sells 200,000 copies, making for poor sales. No sequels are planned. The Battlefield series gains from this.
Star Trek: The Original Generation, a Star Trek prequel series, airs for two seasons on Fox before cancellation.
Sony launches the American feed of 24-hour anime channel Animax, which overtakes Adult Swim's Toonami in popularity.
Sylvester Stallone becomes Governor of California until 2011.
TIME names Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein as Person of the Year due to being "One of the great dictators of the modern age".
2004: Fallout 3 releases on Windows to high ratings, saving Interplay from bankruptcy. They would later release 2 console games, Fallout 4 and Fallout 5. Many spinoff games would be made.
Hillenburg's company United Plankton Pictures makes the Newgrounds webseries The Motherfucking Patchy the Pirate Show, focusing on the misadventures of Patchy the Pirate.
2005: Minecraft, a web browser game is released by Mojang with the help of a team that planned a game known as Terraria, where it would be very successful until 2009, when a 3D version for Java was released. It is currently owned by Microsoft, who still makes updates for it.
SpongeBob SquarePants is quietly cancelled due to declining ratings.
FOX airs The Office, an American adaptation of the British mockumentary series of the same name, airing until 2013 for nine seasons. It becomes one of the most memorable sitcoms of all time, winning several Emmys. Mr. Blue Sky becomes the theme song.
2006: Warner Communications contacts Hillenburg for an adult-only SpongeBob reboot.
Night at the Museum is released to mixed reviews as it becomes a box-office bomb. With plans for a sequel dead in the water, Fox sells the rights to Sony in 2007 who plans to reboot the series, but also keep the distribution rights for the original film.
2007: Kanye West dies in a car crash before his album Graduation releases, causing him to be mourned. This would lead to many people buying the album, creating a short-lived rap revival that would temporarily mark the end of gangsta rap until 2010.
Owen Wilson commits suicide. In discussions about the "Frat Pack", he is replaced by Steve Carell and Paul Rudd. Drillbit Taylor and Tropic Thunder are both dedicated to his memory. Plans for a sequel to Cars are cancelled by Pixar and Disney.
2007-2011: Identically similar to events in our world, screenwriter Simon Monjack and actress and "Clueless" sensation Brittany Murphy (who still starred in this alternate reality's version of the 1995 film "Clueless", but here she instead co-stars with rising co-stars Sarah Michelle Gellar playing Cher, and Regina Hall playing Dionne) are about to marry back in May 2007, but Murphy calls the marriage to Monjack off at the exact same wedding. This causes a scandal that briefly kills her good reputation, and gets her blacklisted in Hollywood (for a while). In this alternate history, Simon Monjack is put in prison for attempting murder on Brittany Murphy, but here, is killed by a crazed cellmate whilst serving time (said crazed cellmate also happens to be a fan of Brittany Murphy). Brittany Murphy then moves to an apartment complex in New York in 2008, ditching Hollywood for good and starting a musical career.
Natalie Portman, a fairly successful but struggling rising young TV actress, is having a hard time finding work in Hollywood due to the failure of the Star Trek prequel television series Star Trek: The Original Generation. She co-starred in the series alongside Hayden Christensen, Ewan McGregor, and Samuel L. Jackson. While the then 56-57 year old Jackson at least got to have a successful career in Hollywood (due to being a Christopher Nolan regular), Christensen and McGregor were rejected by the industry; Christensen started an indie rock band while McGregor then went on to become a successful UFC fighter, but would then become very scandalous as he suffers from numerous arrests and an intense drug addiction. McGregor would then unfortunately die young from a drug overdose on December 7, 2008. Going back to Portman, she would become an indie darling in independent cinema, however her career would be cut short when she would die in a car crash on July 19, 2009, just one month and ten days after her 28th birthday. She was last seen in a DTV thriller called "Abandoned", which released in March 2010. Her death leads to tributes from co-stars and fans alike.
In December 2009, Brittany Murphy is then offered the lead role in Darren Aronofsky's upcoming psychological horror film "Black Swan", about a troubled ballerina. The film would co-star Melanie Lynskey as the troubled ballerina's rival, and like in our world, Winona Ryder, Barbara Hershey, and Vincent Cassel. The film released in December 2010 (like in our world), to rave reviews, with critics calling it Brittany Murphy's finest appearance yet. Murphy would then take home the Best Actress Oscar as well as the Best Dramatic Performance in a Movie Golden Globe for her performance in the film in 2011. Murphy would then continue her acting career following a big career boost, as well as her singing/musical career at the same time. In fact, she releases a fairly successful debut album in March 2011 simply called "Brittany", to positive reviews. It would then become the best selling musical album of the year, even winning her a Grammy in 2012.
2008: Bulletman, the highest grossing film of the year, marks the beginning of the successful Fawcett Cinematic Universe (FCU). It would enter the National Film Registry in 2020.
During the premiere of Tropic Thunder, Tom Cruise announces his retirement from entertainment and Scientology. He spends the rest of his life quietly as a Buddhist in England. As Dwayne Johnson takes Tom's place, Paramount announces plans to reboot the Mission: Impossible franchise (though nothing comes from it).
SpongeBob XXX, an adult SpongeBob reboot, airs on AMC alongside Breaking Bad. SpongeBob XXX would be universally panned, airing only 3 episodes out of a made 6 (all were later put on DVD). It is known for being one of the worst animated series of all time.
Iron Age, a film fully funded by UNESCO, is made as the first film of an IRL cinematic universe. It gets nominated for Best Picture at the Oscars, like every film in the IRLCU after it.
2009: Adventure Time, a cartoon by Pendleton Ward, airs on Nickelodeon. It becomes one of Nickelodeon's highest-rated cartoons, airing until 2016. Many people would call it an animation trailblazer, leading to Nick approving more "lore-based" shows.
Half-Life 3 comes out, and continues the high ratings of the Half-Life franchise, making games well until 2017 (counting spinoffs).
Some people would compare it to Regular Show, who they saw as Cartoon Network's equivalent to Adventure Time.
Discord, a discussion site, is released, becoming popular with gamers.
Liam Gallagher has a near-fatal drug overdose after the breakup of Oasis. Finding peace with his brother, Oasis reunites in 2012, releasing a new album in 2015. They still perform.
Amy Winhouse retires after a heavy intervention. She still occasionally produces for Adele.
2011: Fortnite Battle Royale by Epic Games is released to the public. It becomes extremely popular, and is still played today.
2012: Pixar's Newt, a film that came due to the cancellation of Wreck-It Ralph (some claim due to the problems of getting permission from game companies) is released and barely breaks even. It would start a dark age for Pixar, which would continue with Brave and Cars 2.
It would also play a key part in George Lucas refusing to give away Lucasfilm, due to Disney's perceived slump.
After Hillenburg's company dissolves, he becomes the cartoon reviewer Stevey Shark for Channel Awesome.
Jim Carrey dies of a heart attack.
2013: Doug Walker leaves Channel Awesome, leaving Stevey Shark to be the new star. Markiplier, MrEnter, and MatPat would later join Channel Awesome among others.
The Freedom Tower is made to replace the original North Tower destroyed in the attack. Memes would arise from the comparison between the towers.
2014: A Day With Patchy the Pirate, a half-hour short made by Hillenburg, airs on YouTube as Channel Awesome's first foray into animation. It has a troubled production due to being funded online, and would be panned upon release.
Robin Williams survives a suicide attempt, and launches his own suicide prevention program. He would then star in the 2016 drama Uncut Gems by Christopher Nolan, playing crime lord Howard Ratner, giving him a Best Actor Oscar.
2015: Star Wars - Episode VII: The Force Awakens, featuring Darth Maul and Darth Talon as antagonists, is released, becoming the highest grossing film of the year. Two more sequels were made in 2017 and 2019.
2016: John K. dies from multiple scolerosis. Bob Camp takes over as showrunner of Ren and Stimpy.
2017: Growing Around, a new YouTube webseries made by Stephen Hillenburg & Johnathan Rozanski, about a world where grown-ups switch with kids, is released. Despite gaining positive reviews, both the downfall of Channel Awesome and Hillenburg & Rozanski's heinous acts would result in Markiplier buying the license, airing it on his webseries Unus Annus for one last season, ending in 2020.
Chester Bennington survives his suicide attempt. Linkin Park would make its newest album in December of 2020.
2018: Donald Trump starts The Trump Experience, a very popular podcast.
2019: Season 3 of Gravity Falls comes out to near-universal acclaim.
2020: Chadwick Boseman recovers from his cancer.
2022: Jordan Peele's Nope becomes the highest grossing film of the year. It enters the National Film Registry in 2033.
During the Oscars, after Chris Rock makes a joke about Will Smith's wife, Will comes up to Rock and almost beats him to death. Security then escorts Smith out as he is then arrested by the LAPD, and given a prison sentence for attempted murder, followed by Jada Pinkett-Smith divorcing him. Rock fortunately survives and successfully recovers from his injuries, and goes back to the public eye some time later. Smith is released from prison in November 2022 but is placed under parole and only on the condition that he attends rehab and anger management sessions for at least six months. As for the live broadcast, it had to be cut off: some countries showed commercials to compensate for the abrupt ending of the 2022 Oscars' live broadcast, whereas others had shown an eerie black screen or a "technical difficulties" screen, but the ceremony continued in private. This incident led to Smith's then-upcoming 2022 film Emancipation being cancelled and therefore unreleased, making it lost media, and his many other projects - the upcoming fourth Bad Boys included - never being made at all, and Smith's membership from the Academy was revoked (instead of Smith merely resigning in our world) and he was permanently banned from attending any future Oscars ceremonies (unlike in our world where he was banned for only ten years). Will Smith, a once beloved and well-respected Hollywood A-lister, was reasonably blacklisted by Hollywood, and is now viewed by many to be as unlikable as Steven Seagal, O.J. Simpson, or Roseanne Barr.
Presidents of the USA since 1977:
Jimmy Carter (1977-1985)
Walter Mondale (1985-1989)
George H.W. Bush (1989-1993)
Mario Cuomo (1993-2001)
John F. Kennedy Jr. (2001-2005)
John McCain (2005-2013)
Barack Obama (2013-2021)
Jeb Bush (2021-today)
Governors of California since 1975:
Tom Hayden (1975-1983) Democrat
Tom Bradley (1983-1987) Democrat
Pete Wilson (1987-1995) Republican
Gray Davis (1995-2003) Democrat
Sylvester Stallone (2003-2011) Republican
Conan O'Brien (2011-2019) Democrat
Gavin Newsom (2019-Present) Democrat
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2023.05.25 08:55 Optimus_Pyrrha Hm. A masked figure who's obsessed with a girl. Where have I seen that before?
2023.05.25 03:38 SillyAd9410 A Semi-Collaborative Pop Culture TL #7
YOU decide what events should change in the world of pop culture, be it real or ASB (future movie gets shown in the past, an actor does/doesn't die, alternate casting choices, unmade media possibly getting made, media is rewritten, a change in the box office or something new entirely)!
I document what happens in a current timeline of Earth!
We all have fun!
CURRENT TIMELINE:
1818: Mary Shelley's The Modern Prometheus, a novel in which scientist Henry Frankenstein creates a sapient creature named Prometheus is made. Prometheus becomes a stalwart of the monster genre.
1907-1908: A young comedian named Charlie Chaplin refuses to accept the offer of Fred Karno to come to the U.S. He becomes a famous comedian, often incorporating a character he named The Tramp in his stand-up routines.
1912: The Olympic ship crashes upon hitting an iceberg, becoming a memorable event. James Cameron's Olympic (1997) would be the first film to gross $1B, even entering the National Film Registry.
1931: Frankenstein and his Prometheus, an adaptation of The Modern Prometheus starring Bela Lugosi and Boris Karloff as Henry and Prometheus is a box-office smash. It would enter the National Film Registry in 1991.
1941: Fleischer Studios' Mr. Bug Goes to Town is a box office success, saving the studio. Today it is one of Disney's biggest competitors, along with Warner Bros.
1951: Fawcett Comics wins a lawsuit over National Comics for the rights to the characters of Captain Marvel and Superman. While National Comics would die in obscurity, Fawcett Comics would be Marvel's biggest competitor.
1962: Marilyn Monroe doesn't die. She goes into hiding in Las Vegas doing revue shows. Discovered by higher ups at NBC, she signs on to The Marilyn Monroe Show, a sketch comedy show that runs until her death in 1999.
1966: Warner Bros.' Twister comes out, becoming the highest grossing film of the year. It would spawn "Tornado-mania", a series of tornado movies made to copy its success. It would enter the National Film Registry in 1996.
1969: Nixon resigns his presidency the become a talk show host. The Dick Nixon show airs until 1983.
Creedence Clearwater Revival release a song about the Civil Rights Movement called Fortunate Son. It becomes their signature song. It enters the National Recording Registry in 2013.
1974: Star Trek: The Continuing Mission, a revival of the original 60s series, airs in syndication until 1981.
1974-1979: Michael John Kricfalusi becomes an anti-Rhodesian mercenary during the Rhodesian Bush War. He becomes a POW by forces from Apartheid South Africa. As a result, he is physically and mentally scarred.
1979: Ozzy Osbourne goes into rehab and continues to play for Black Sabbath, leading to them getting a Beatles-like Renaissance in the 80s, making Heavy Metal one of the 80s most notable music genres.
1980-1981: From February 1980 to August 1981, John Kricfalusi would heal his mental wounds at a mental institution.
1982: John Kricfalusi founds Spümcø, an animation studio that was founded due to John's perceived views on how Hanna-Barbera and Rankin/Bass, two studios he worked at, failed to make good cartoons.
1983: E.T. for the Atari proves to be a very good game, making millions for Atari. This would inspire them to improve their games on their future consoles such as the 5200 and 7800, leading them to become a fierce competitior in the gaming market. The last Atari console came out in the early 2000s.
You Nutzy Rascals!, a short made by John K., is the first to feature prototype designs of Ren and Stimpty.
1985: The War of the Worlds, a film made in collaboration with Disney and Jeff Wayne, based on his musical album adapting the H.G. Wells story, hits theaters. It is a critical and commercial success, cited for starting the Disney Renaissance. Disney and Jeff Wayne would collaborate two more times, making animated adaptations of The Modern Prometheus (1988) and The Time Machine (1992). It would enter the National Film Registry in 2022.
Warner Communications buys Warner Amex-Satellite Entertainment to make Warner MTV Networks.
1986: Ravel's Bolero becomes the theme to The Legend of Zelda. It would later serve to be the theme for the Zelda games in Japan, with a different theme for NTSC releases.
Cliff Burton survives a car crash and continues to play bass for Metallica, helping put thrash metal on the mainstream map.
1987: Morrissey and Johnny Marr become frenemies. The Smiths continue into the 1990s.
1988: During production of Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade, Harrison Ford is shot and killed by a loaded prop gun. This would lead to it being hastily recut in time for 1989. It would lead to a heavy burden on Lucasfilm. The documentary Ford - Spielberg's Right Hand Man would be released in 2008 to great success.
1989: Doctor Who is saved from cancellation by BBC. It remains one of the longest running TV shows.
Sergio Leone dies of old age. He is remembered for his westerns as well as Don Quixote, The Phantom, and Leningrad: The 900 Days.
1990: John K. creates Big House Blues, the pilot for The Ren & Stimpy Show, which is picked up by Nickelodeon.
1991: Eddie Vedder dies in a car crash before the first Pearl Jam album is released. They find a new lead in Chris Cornell, who also sings for Soundgarden until their demise in 1997.
Ren & Stimpy airs on Nickelodeon, along with Doug, Rugrats, Tiny Toon Adventures, Taz-Mania (both this show and TTA would later air in syndication) and Big Beast Quintet (cancelled in 1993). It is currently the longest running American animated series, beating out Matt Groening's The Simpsons, who cancelled the show in favor of working on the long-running Futurama which still airs today.
Tim Burton is attached to direct an adaptation of The Addams Family TV show as a movie. It would later spawn three sequels, with Tim leaving after the second movie. The latter two would be critically panned.
1992: Star Wars: Episode I - The Phantom Menace comes out, becoming the highest grossing film of the year. Episodes II and III would later come out in 1995 and 1998 respectively.
J.R.R. Tolkien dies at 100, finishing The New Shadow and The Silmarillion. He was also known for being war minister of the UK from 1940 to 1945.
Stephen Hillenburg is invited to work on Ren & Stimpy after showing his short film Wormholes at the TIFF.
1993: Spielberg quits directing after doing Schindler's List. This not only cancels plans for a Jurassic Park sequel, but also an adaptation of Supertoys Last All Summer Long.
1994: During filming of The Crow, Brandon Lee survives a shot from a prop gun. He would propel into superstardom. He is now known for playing Neo in The Matrix franchise and Johnny Cage in Mortal Kombat (1995).
Kurt Cobain announces the breakup of Nirvana as he goes into rehab. In 2002, the band reunited for You Know You're Right, an album that became a top seller. They still perform to this day.
1995: YouTube, a video sharing site, is released. It would not gain much popularity until 2001, where an influx of YouTubers would bring it to stardom.
Toy Story, a stop motion film, gains critical acclaim due to its incredible scale, becoming the 2nd highest grossing film of the year.
Sarah Michelle Gellar dies in a kayaking incident days before the release of her only film Clueless. This would cause Clueless to becoming the highest grossing film of the year and become known as one of the best teen films. It enters the National Film Registry in 2005.
Spotify, a humble music downloading site, releases. In 1997, it would change into a music streaming site, and would often show ads for the latest in music.
Selena Quintalla survives being shot. Jennifer Lopez wanes in popularity.
1996: The Nintendo 64DD comes out in a partnership with Phillips, revolutionising the console industry by introducing CD memory, rising it above the PlayStation and Sega Saturn. One of the top best selling games would be Super Mario 64 2, the sequel to Super Mario 64. The 64DD would serve as motivation for Sega to complete Sonic X-Treme by 1997, which becomes a huge hit. This would give Sega the boost it needed to continue making consoles. Other Mario games made for the 64DD include Mario Takes America and Super Mario's Wacky Worlds.
The Nintendo Entertainment System (NES), which had been under a state similar to the Atari 2600, releases its last two games: Super Mario Legends, a game similar in style to the Mario Land games released by Nintendo R&D1, which becomes a minor hit and Animaniacs, a port of Konami's Game Boy game which got mixed reviews.
Tupac survives being shot while having a drive in Las Vegas. He still has a rap career.
Ren & Stimpy Go To Hollywood, a film released by Warner Bros., becomes the highest grossing animated film of the year, making over $600M. It has a 100% rating on Rotten Tomatoes. This film would also have one of Ronald Reagan's last acting roles.
NDR Filmes' Cassiopeia gets fame for being the first completely computer-animated film. It gets an English dub for a worldwide release. It enters the National Film Registry in 2006.
After his work on Ren & Stimpy, Stephen Hillenburg pitches his own show to Nickelodeon about a sea sponge.
Rapper and music producer Andre "Dr. Dre" Young is shot and killed by a vengefully spiteful Suge Knight in a drive-by shooting, since Young left Death Row Records after accusing Knight of corruption the month prior. His death leads to tributes from fans and colleagues alike, and his first album The Chronic is praised for being influential. Tupac Shakur, in addition to being a rapper, assumes Dr. Dre's role as a music producer out of respect for his newly deceased friend. After Suge Knight is arrested and imprisoned for life due to murdering Young, Shakur takes over Death Row Records. The Chronic enters the National Recording Registry in 2019.
1997: Reddit, a news and discussion board, is released. It becomes very, very popular.
The Notorious B.I.G. survives a shooting like his friend and collaborator Tupac, and he continues to make music.
Aspiring rapper Sean "Puff Daddy" Combs is killed in a gang shootout in Los Angeles, California; however, right-wing news network Fox News reports the shootout as having happened in New York City, New York (which is untrue). This leads to rapper Christopher "Biggie Smalls" Wallace recording a single dedicated to Combs called "I'll Be Missing You" (which heavily samples "Every Breath You Take" by The Police) which was included as a bonus track on No Way Out, Combs' first and only debut album released posthumously on July 22, 1997. The album became influential in the years since Combs' death, proving that, even in death, one can still have a rap career and be influential. No Way Out would enter the National Recording Registry in 2007.
1998: Neon Genesis Evangelion is unknowingly localized by 4Kids, leading to a HEAVILY censored English dub that makes the show popular during the late 90s-early 00s.
Chris Farley wakes from a coma due to a drug overdose. After deciding to give the role of Shrek to Mike Myers his friend, he gets the role of Doug Heffernan on The King of Queens.
1999: Stephen Hillenburg's SpongeBob SquarePants airs on Nickelodeon. Although it is a hit at first, work complications, problems outsourcing animation to the studio Gainax, and the banned episode Wrasslin' Maniacs where SpongeBob and Patrick beat up Squidward, Hillenburg is fired from the show in 2002.
Tommy Boy's Return, the sequel to Tommy Boy, releases in theaters. It is considered a cult classic today.
2000: Battlefield Earth is released in theaters to be a huge success, ending up the 8th highest grossing film of the year. This would cause an interest in works by L. Ron Hubbard, making the Church of Scientology a rising religion. Battlefield Earth 2 would later release in 2003 to similar acclaim.
4Kids is bought by Warner Communications. As a result, more anime airs on Kids WB.
The Atari Cougar, Atari's final console before being bought by Jakks Pacific in 2002, is released. It is a cult classic console.
Tim Burton's Wizard of Oz gains mixed to positive reviews, and makes the top 10 list of highest grossing films of the year.
2001: Grand Theft Auto III, the third entry in the GTA series is cancelled following 9/11. The game would later redevelop into Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas, which was released in 2004.
Spy Kids, Quentin Tarantino's first kids' film is released in theaters to mixed reviews, but becomes a cult classic. Two more sequels were released in the two years after it, all would get the same fate.
During 9/11, Kevin James dies after being squished by falling debris from the Twin Towers.
2003: Call of Duty, a war shooter game, sells 200,000 copies, making for poor sales. No sequels are planned. The Battlefield series gains from this.
Star Trek: The Original Generation, a Star Trek prequel series, airs for two seasons on Fox before cancellation.
Sony launches the American feed of 24-hour anime channel Animax, which overtakes Adult Swim's Toonami in popularity.
Sylvester Stallone becomes Governor of California until 2011.
2004: Fallout 3 releases on Windows to high ratings, saving Interplay from bankruptcy. They would later release 2 console games, Fallout 4 and Fallout 5. Many spinoff games would be made.
Hillenburg's company United Plankton Pictures makes the Newgrounds webseries The Motherfucking Patchy the Pirate Show, focusing on the misadventures of Patchy the Pirate.
2005: Minecraft, a web browser game is released by Mojang with the help of a team that planned a game known as Terraria, where it would be very successful until 2009, when a 3D version for Java was released. It is currently owned by Microsoft, who still makes updates for it.
SpongeBob SquarePants is quietly cancelled due to declining ratings.
FOX airs The Office, an American adaptation of the British mockumentary series of the same name, airing until 2013 for nine seasons. It becomes one of the most memorable sitcoms of all time, winning several Emmys. Mr. Blue Sky becomes the theme song.
2006: Warner Communications contacts Hillenburg for an adult-only SpongeBob reboot.
Night at the Museum is released to mixed reviews as it becomes a box-office bomb. With plans for a sequel dead in the water, Fox sells the rights to Sony in 2007 who plans to reboot the series, but also keep the distribution rights for the original film.
2007: Kanye West dies in a car crash before his album Graduation releases, causing him to be mourned. This would lead to many people buying the album, creating a short-lived rap revival that would temporarily mark the end of gangsta rap until 2010.
Owen Wilson commits suicide. In discussions about the "Frat Pack", he is replaced by Steve Carell and Paul Rudd. Drillbit Taylor and Tropic Thunder are both dedicated to his memory. Plans for a sequel to Cars are cancelled by Pixar and Disney.
2007-2011: Identically similar to events in our world, screenwriter Simon Monjack and actress and "Clueless" sensation Brittany Murphy (who still starred in this alternate reality's version of the 1995 film "Clueless", but here she instead co-stars with rising co-stars Sarah Michelle Gellar playing Cher, and Regina Hall playing Dionne) are about to marry back in May 2007, but Murphy calls the marriage to Monjack off at the exact same wedding. This causes a scandal that briefly kills her good reputation, and gets her blacklisted in Hollywood (for a while). In this alternate history, Simon Monjack is put in prison for attempting murder on Brittany Murphy, but here, is killed by a crazed cellmate whilst serving time (said crazed cellmate also happens to be a fan of Brittany Murphy). Brittany Murphy then moves to an apartment complex in New York in 2008, ditching Hollywood for good and starting a musical career.
Natalie Portman, a fairly successful but struggling rising young TV actress, is having a hard time finding work in Hollywood due to the failure of the Star Trek prequel television series Star Trek: The Original Generation. She co-starred in the series alongside Hayden Christensen, Ewan McGregor, and Samuel L. Jackson. While the then 56-57 year old Jackson at least got to have a successful career in Hollywood (due to being a Christopher Nolan regular), Christensen and McGregor were rejected by the industry; Christensen started an indie rock band while McGregor then went on to become a successful UFC fighter, but would then become very scandalous as he suffers from numerous arrests and an intense drug addiction. McGregor would then unfortunately die young from a drug overdose on December 7, 2008. Going back to Portman, she would become an indie darling in independent cinema, however her career would be cut short when she would die in a car crash on July 19, 2009, just one month and ten days after her 28th birthday. She was last seen in a DTV thriller called "Abandoned", which released in March 2010. Her death leads to tributes from co-stars and fans alike.
In December 2009, Brittany Murphy is then offered the lead role in Darren Aronofsky's upcoming psychological horror film "Black Swan", about a troubled ballerina. The film would co-star Melanie Lynskey as the troubled ballerina's rival, and like in our world, Winona Ryder, Barbara Hershey, and Vincent Cassel. The film released in December 2010 (like in our world), to rave reviews, with critics calling it Brittany Murphy's finest appearance yet. Murphy would then take home the Best Actress Oscar as well as the Best Dramatic Performance in a Movie Golden Globe for her performance in the film in 2011. Murphy would then continue her acting career following a big career boost, as well as her singing/musical career at the same time. In fact, she releases a fairly successful debut album in March 2011 simply called "Brittany", to positive reviews. It would then become the best selling musical album of the year, even winning her a Grammy in 2012.
2008: Bulletman, the highest grossing film of the year, marks the beginning of the successful Fawcett Cinematic Universe (FCU). It would enter the National Film Registry in 2020.
During the premiere of Tropic Thunder, Tom Cruise announces his retirement from entertainment and Scientology. He spends the rest of his life quietly as a Buddhist in England. As Dwayne Johnson takes Tom's place, Paramount announces plans to reboot the Mission: Impossible franchise (though nothing comes from it).
SpongeBob XXX, an adult SpongeBob reboot, airs on AMC alongside Breaking Bad. SpongeBob XXX would be universally panned, airing only 3 episodes out of a made 6 (all were later put on DVD). It is known for being one of the worst animated series of all time.
Iron Age, a film fully funded by UNESCO, is made as the first film of an IRL cinematic universe. It gets nominated for Best Picture at the Oscars, like every film in the IRLCU after it.
2009: Adventure Time, a cartoon by Pendleton Ward, airs on Nickelodeon. It becomes one of Nickelodeon's highest-rated cartoons, airing until 2016. Many people would call it an animation trailblazer, leading to Nick approving more "lore-based" shows.
Half-Life 3 comes out, and continues the high ratings of the Half-Life franchise, making games well until 2017 (counting spinoffs).
Some people would compare it to Regular Show, who they saw as Cartoon Network's equivalent to Adventure Time.
Discord, a discussion site, is released, becoming popular with gamers.
Liam Gallagher has a near-fatal drug overdose after the breakup of Oasis. Finding peace with his brother, Oasis reunites in 2012, releasing a new album in 2015. They still perform.
Amy Winhouse retires after a heavy intervention. She still occasionally produces for Adele.
2011: Fortnite Battle Royale by Epic Games is released to the public. It becomes extremely popular, and is still played today.
2012: Pixar's Newt, a film that came due to the cancellation of Wreck-It Ralph (some claim due to the problems of getting permission from game companies) is released and barely breaks even. It would start a dark age for Pixar, which would continue with Brave and Cars 2.
It would also play a key part in George Lucas refusing to give away Lucasfilm, due to Disney's perceived slump.
After Hillenburg's company dissolves, he becomes the cartoon reviewer Stevey Shark for Channel Awesome.
Jim Carrey dies of a heart attack.
2013: Doug Walker leaves Channel Awesome, leaving Stevey Shark to be the new star. Markiplier, MrEnter, and MatPat would later join Channel Awesome among others.
2014: A Day With Patchy the Pirate, a half-hour short made by Hillenburg, airs on YouTube as Channel Awesome's first foray into animation. It has a troubled production due to being funded online, and would be panned upon release.
Robin Williams survives a suicide attempt, and launches his own suicide prevention program. He would then star in the 2016 drama Uncut Gems by Christopher Nolan, playing crime lord Howard Ratner, giving him a Best Actor Oscar.
2015: Star Wars - Episode VII: The Force Awakens, featuring Darth Maul and Darth Talon as antagonists, is released, becoming the highest grossing film of the year. Two more sequels were made in 2017 and 2019.
2016: John K. dies from multiple scolerosis. Bob Camp takes over as showrunner of Ren and Stimpy.
2017: Growing Around, a new YouTube webseries made by Stephen Hillenburg & Johnathan Rozanski, about a world where grown-ups switch with kids, is released. Despite gaining positive reviews, both the downfall of Channel Awesome and Hillenburg & Rozanski's heinous acts would result in Markiplier buying the license, airing it on his webseries Unus Annus for one last season, ending in 2020.
Chester Bennington survives his suicide attempt. Linkin Park would make its newest album in December of 2020.
2018: Donald Trump starts The Trump Experience, a very popular podcast.
2019: Season 3 of Gravity Falls comes out to near-universal acclaim.
2020: Chadwick Boseman recovers from his cancer.
2022: Jordan Peele's Nope becomes the highest grossing film of the year. It enters the National Film Registry in 2033.
During the Oscars, after Chris Rock makes a joke about Will Smith's wife, Will comes up to Rock and almost beats him to death. Security then escorts Smith out as he is then arrested by the LAPD, and given a prison sentence for attempted murder, followed by Jada Pinkett-Smith divorcing him. Rock fortunately survives and successfully recovers from his injuries, and goes back to the public eye some time later. Smith is released from prison in November 2022 but is placed under parole and only on the condition that he attends rehab and anger management sessions for at least six months. As for the live broadcast, it had to be cut off: some countries showed commercials to compensate for the abrupt ending of the 2022 Oscars' live broadcast, whereas others had shown an eerie black screen or a "technical difficulties" screen, but the ceremony continued in private. This incident led to Smith's then-upcoming 2022 film Emancipation being cancelled and therefore unreleased, making it lost media, and his many other projects - the upcoming fourth Bad Boys included - never being made at all, and Smith's membership from the Academy was revoked (instead of Smith merely resigning in our world) and he was permanently banned from attending any future Oscars ceremonies (unlike in our world where he was banned for only ten years). Will Smith, a once beloved and well-respected Hollywood A-lister, was reasonably blacklisted by Hollywood, and is now viewed by many to be as unlikable as Steven Seagal, O.J. Simpson, or Roseanne Barr.
Presidents of the USA since 1977:
Jimmy Carter (1977-1985)
Walter Mondale (1985-1989)
George H.W. Bush (1989-1993)
Bill Clinton (1993-2001)
George W. Bush (2001-2009)
Barack Obama (2009-2017)
Jeb Bush (2017-2021)
Andrew Yang (2021-today)
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2023.05.24 20:25 jimbobbypaul Ranking the Top 131 FBS Programs of the Last 40 Years: 93. San Jose State
Main hub thread with the full 131 rankings Ah, San Jose State. The Bay Area’s Group of 5 team. I’ve visited their campus many times, and they’ve been good to me, so I’ll try to be good to them. Located in a talent hotbed, SJSU gets access to the Bay Area’s best leftoveoverlooked players. Famous alumni include Bill Walsh and Dick Vermeil, and John Elway’s dad, Jack, was the coach from 1979-1983. Solid NFL players include QBs Jeff Garcia and Steve DeBerg, and 5x All-Pro CB Louis Wright.
Best Seasons and Highlights
1. 2012: 16. San Jose State: 11-2 (26.289) 2. 1990: 14. San Jose State: 9-2-1 (25.042) 3. 2020: 18. San Jose State: 7-1 (20.870) 4. 1986: 18. San Jose State: 10-2 (19.139) 5. 1987: 23. San Jose State: 10-2 (14.639) 6. 1991: 44. San Jose State: 6-4-1 (-2.934) 7. 2006: 50. San Jose State: 9-4 (-3.378) 8. 1992: 50. San Jose State: 7-4 (-7.257) 9. 2000: 63. San Jose State: 7-5 (-10.130) 10. 2022: 70. San Jose State: 7-5 (-10.650) 11. 1989: 59. San Jose State: 6-5 (-11.221) 12. 1984: 63. San Jose State: 6-5 (-12.300) 13. 2013: 76. San Jose State: 6-6 (-12.703) 14. 1983: 59. San Jose State: 5-6 (-14.760) 15. 2008: 84. San Jose State: 6-6 (-21.992) 16. 2015: 88. San Jose State: 6-7 (-24.245) 17. 2011: 90. San Jose State: 5-7 (-24.489) 18. 2002: 75. San Jose State: 6-7 (-24.502) 19. 2019: 98. San Jose State: 5-7 (-26.107) 20. 2021: 98. San Jose State: 5-7 (-28.284) 21. 2007: 89. San Jose State: 5-7 (-29.050) 22. 1997: 85. San Jose State: 4-7 (-33.527) 23. 2016: 101. San Jose State: 4-8 (-34.885) 24. 1998: 89. San Jose State: 4-8 (-35.160) 25. 1988: 88. San Jose State: 4-8 (-36.491) 26. 1999: 99. San Jose State: 3-7 (-37.964) 27. 1995: 92. San Jose State: 3-8 (-39.421) 28. 2003: 95. San Jose State: 3-8 (-40.018) 29. 1993: 97. San Jose State: 2-9 (-41.454) 30. 1985: 95. San Jose State: 2-8-1 (-41.772) 31. 2005: 106. San Jose State: 3-8 (-43.143) 32. 1994: 94. San Jose State: 3-8 (-43.416) 33. 2001: 100. San Jose State: 3-9 (-45.459) 34. 2014: 118. San Jose State: 3-9 (-47.173) 35. 1996: 102. San Jose State: 3-9 (-49.875) 36. 2004: 114. San Jose State: 2-9 (-53.878) 37. 2009: 113. San Jose State: 2-10 (-55.640) 38. 2018: 124. San Jose State: 1-11 (-56.185) 39. 2010: 117. San Jose State: 1-12 (-61.665) 40. 2017: 129. San Jose State: 2-11 (-67.716) Overall Score: 6107 (93rd)
- 196-268-3 record
- 5 conference titles
- 5-3 bowl record
- 0 consensus All-Americans
- 30 NFL players drafted
With a similar record to Army, Ohio, and Utah State, SJSU gets the nod over them with 4 seasons finishing in the top 20, and another in the top 25. 4 top 20 finishes is the most of any program on the list so far, combining recent sporadic success with a mini-dynasty in the late 80’s/early 90’s. 5 conference titles is also tied for the most so far with Utah State and Arkansas State. The most well-known SJSU player drafted since 1983 is probably former Packers WR James Jones.
Top 5 Seasons
Worst Season: 2017 (2-11 overall, 1-7 Mountain West) Brent Brennan’s been a pretty good coach for the last 5 years for SJSU, but his tenure started rough. Brent is a first cousin of the late legendary Hawaii QB Colt Brennan. After a 1-1 start, SJSU lost 56-0 to Texas in Tom Herman’s first win ever with the Longhorns. The results kept getting worse with a 16-54 loss to Utah and 10-61 to Utah State. San Jose State was basically noncompetitive for the rest of the year, losing 7-52 to San Diego State, 14-59 to Nevada, and 14-42 to Colorado State. A surprise 20-17 win over 7-4 Wyoming in the final week prevented them from being the worst team in the country in 2017, but it was mostly due to Josh Allen missing the game with an injury. 7 different players threw a pass for SJSU on the year. QB Jordan Love threw for 928 yards 5 TD 7 INT, but would go on to throw for 3923 yards 22 TD 8 INT two years later for his senior season, winning Mountain West OPOTY. LB Frank Ginda led the nation in tackles with 173! Also put up 2 sacks and 11 TFL, earning 1st Team All-MWC.
5. 1987 (10-2 overall, 7-0 PCAA) This was the final year of the Pacific Coast Athletic Association, which was renamed to the Big West the subsequent year. San Jose State, along with Fresno State, were the teams to beat in the PCAA for 1987. San Jose was coming off a 7-0 conference record and title, while Fresno State finished 2nd at 6-1. Right away, SJSU proved they were the best team in the Bay Area: They beat Cal 27-25 in week 2, and Stanford 24-17 in week 4. A close 34-36 loss to Oregon State in week 3 showed that SJSU could hang with teams in the stronger Pac-10. Around midseason, 5-1 San Jose State headed to the valley to play 3-2 Fresno State, in a game that seemed it would determine the PCAA champion for the second straight year. In a back and forth game, with both coaches waving towels at each other from opposite sidelines, SJSU scored a late TD to win it 20-16 and take control of the conference. The rest of the games were easy in comparison, and SJSU finished with a 10-1 regular season record. They lost 27-30 to Eastern Michigan in the bowl, who was also finishing up one of their best ever seasons. San Jose State QB Mike Perez was one of the best QBs in the country, throwing for 3550 yards 23 TD 13 INT, leading the nation in total yards per play with 7.1, and was 2nd in the nation in total yards with 3499. WR Guy Liggins was the favorite target, ranking 2nd in the nation with 81 catches for 1262 yards, and 10 TD as well.
4. 1986 (10-2 overall, 7-0 PCAA) This was San Jose State’s first of two straight PCAA titles. Expectations were low coming off a 2-8-1 year, but in one of the biggest wins in recent SJSU history at the time, they upset Washington State 20-13 in Pullman in week 2. After dropping a game to Stanford then beating Cal, 2-2 SJSU hosted #19 4-0 Fresno State. Fresno had just beaten Oregon State 37-0 and Louisiana Tech (8-3 the previous year) 34-10. In what was voted Sports Illustrated’s Game of the Year 1986, San Jose State raced out to a 24-0 lead in the 2nd quarter, before Fresno State retook the lead before the end of the 3rd. Fresno held a 41-31 lead with just 1:15 to go, but San Jose State scored 2 TDs in the last 70 seconds, including a 22 yard TD pass from Mike Perez to win it with 18 seconds to go.
San Jose State pulled off the 45-41 upset and it remains arguably the greatest game in the Fresno-SJSU rivalry to this day. SJSU wiped out the rest of the weaker PCAA en route to a 7-0 conference record and PCAA title. Fresno finished a close second at 9-2 with a 6-1 conference record, the game on October 4th proving to be the difference maker. SJSU finished off the year with a nice 37-7 bowl win over MAC champs Miami (OH). Perez led the NCAA in passing yards with 3225 (17 TD 17 INT), while Liggins (mentioned in 1987) had 80 catches for 1116 yards and 8 TD. DBs John King and KC Clark had 6 INTs each.
3. 2020 (7-1 overall, 6-0 Mountain West) Even though Brent Brennan coached the worst San Jose State team of the last 40 years (2017), he also coached the 3rd best in 2020. Coming into the season, pretty much everyone expected Boise State or San Diego State to win the Mountain West, with SJSU being an afterthought. Mountain West didn’t start play until October 24th because of covid, and when it did, SJSU was 7 point underdogs to Air Force in the opener. They won 17-6 in a pleasantly surprising defensive performance. After an expected win over New Mexico, SJSU upset 10.5 point favorites San Diego State 28-17, showing they were to be taken seriously. Fast forward a few weeks later, 5-0 San Jose State hosted 6-1 Nevada for a spot in the Mountain West championship game. Once again, SJSU pulled off the upset, beating the 5.5 point favorites and holding Carson Strong to just 260 yards on 48 attempts. I’m getting tired of saying this, but in the Mountain West championship against Boise State, they pulled off yet ANOTHER upset, this time being 11.5 point underdogs, with a 34-20 win to finish the regular season 7-0. This was SJSU’s first conference title since 1991. #19 San Jose State lost to 6-1 Ball State in the bowl, but they still finished #24 overall, and 18th in my rankings. DL Cade Hall won Mountain West DPOTY with 10 sacks in just 7 games, and Brennan won MW Coach of the Year. 4 players on offense and 4 players on defense were 1st/2nd Team All-MWC.
2. 1990 (9-2-1 overall, 7-0 Big West) San Jose State wins their titles in pairs. This was the first of 2 straight Big West titles, and their 3rd title in 5 years. And this team was REALLY good, very likely better than the 2012 team that’s first on this list. They started the year by tying Louisville 10-10, who went on to finish 10-1-1, beating Alabama in the Fiesta Bowl 34-7. Next game, SJSU played #20 Washington to a 17-20 loss in Seattle, who would go 10-2 on the year and finished #5 in the nation. A few weeks later, SJSU beat Stanford 29-23, who’d finish the year 5-6 led by future Vikings and Cardinals head coach Dennis Green. The last loss on the year came in week 6 against Cal, 34-35, who finished 7-4-1. That’s 2 losses and 1 tie, by a combined 4 points, to three teams that finished with a combined 27-7-2 record. In the final week, a de-facto Big West title game was played between San Jose State (7-2-1 overall, 6-0 Big West) and Fresno State (8-1-1, 5-0-1). SJSU played flawlessly, smoking Fresno 42-7 to win the title. More of the same in the bowl, beating MAC champs Central Michigan 48-24 to finish 14th in my rankings. SJSU cleaned up the Big West awards: Coach Terry Shea won Big West COTY, OLB Lyneil Mayo won DPOTY, and RB Sheldon Canley won OPOTY.
1. 2012 (11-2 overall, 5-1 WAC) I don’t think this team was better than 1990…but they were damn good, and had tons of talent all around. 5 offensive players made NFL rosters at some point, and 7 defensive players too. It took a 4th quarter FG for Stanford to beat SJSU 20-17 in the opener—Stanford finished 12-2 and #7 in the nation that year. A few weeks later, the Spartans beat San Diego State 38-34, who’d finish 9-4. A 12-0 win over eventual 8-5 Navy came a week later. That set up 4-2 Utah State against 4-1 SJSU in a surprisingly key matchup. Utah State won 49-27, but they’d finish 11-2 and #16 in the nation, and 2012 was the best Utah State team in the last 40 years according to my algorithm. SJSU got big win after big win, and saved the best for last. First, they beat 6-4 BYU 20-14. Then they beat preseason conference favorite, 9-2 Louisiana Tech, 52-43 to take 2nd in the WAC. Former Minnesota RB De’Leon Eskridge had 217 rushing yards and 3 TD on 7.8 YPC in that game. Finally, they capped the season with a 29-20 win over 8-4 Bowling Green in the Military Bowl, holding MAC DPOTY and 1st Team All-American DT Chris Jones to just 1 tackle.
QB David Fales finished just 3rd Team All-WAC because of the outstanding QBs in the conference that year, but was one of the most underrated players in the nation, completing 72.5% of passes for 4193 yards, 33 TD and 9 INT. He was #3 in the nation in passer rating with 170.8. WR Noel Grigsby was the top target with 82 catches for 1307 receiving yards and 9 TD. DL Travis Johnson was the WAC DPOTY and an All-American with 65 tackles, 13 sacks, 8.5 TFL, and 3 FF. K Austin Lopez was an All-American as well, going a perfect 17/17 on FGs as a freshman. 12 out of 22 starters on offense/defense made 1st/2nd Team All-WAC.
5th Quarter
Why has San Jose State been so irrelevant as a fanbase? I rarely see anyone talk about them, I find them very interesting as a Bay Area native. Which was the better team/season, 1990 or 2012? What do you think about San Jose State football, do any memories come to mind?
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2023.05.24 18:07 London-Roma-1980 NON-CONFERENCE MATCHDAY 8 RESULTS
Eight games between Top 25 opponents means there's little time for an introduction. Let's start with the big one.
*****
#2t UCLA 70, #5 Kansas 64. It's no secret what the Kryptonite for Kansas is: getting their bigs in foul trouble. The tricky part is doing it -- both Embiid and Chamberlain are experts at avoiding fouling. But if it happens, you can get the win. UCLA proved it.
With Joel Embiid fouled out with three minutes to go and Wilt Chamberlain desperately trying not to, Bill Walton and Kareem Abdul-Jabbar feasted inside late, scoring UCLA's last 18 points between them and leading the Bruins (8-0) to a big win over the Jayhawks (7-1) to become the only unbeaten team on Naismith Island.
"Getting through non-conference play 12-0 is the goal, obviously," Walton said after the game. "We can get there if we stay in our groove and let the game flow. Right now me and Big K [Kareem] are doing it right. We aren't afraid of anything coming our way."
Paul Pierce's 14 points were not enough in the end. "We gotta play disciplined," he said when asked how to do things differently. "We didn't do that, and that's why we lost. If we stay focused and don't foul, we can win that game."
#2t North Carolina 99, #8 Michigan 59. What stood as a chance for the Wolverines to prove there was a sixth big name in town turned into a spectacle for those in baby blue.
Michael Jordan and James Worthy each scored 18 points as all 15 UNC players got to play when the Tar Heels (7-1) annihilated the Wolverines (7-1), making sure only one team would get to 8-0 this season.
"Enough people question you and you take that personally," Jordan said after the game. "We made our intentions clear, no more losing. We showed what we can do given the chance."
With the crowd at full throat before the game began for the Heels, Jordan and his teammates got off to a 17-0 start and never looked back. Fans began to wonder if Michigan was playing tentative basketball, saying they were more yellow than blue during timeouts.
"It was one bad game," center Chris Webber claimed. "We'll be back next time."
#7 Syracuse 79, #9 Connecticut 69. Syracuse may be in the ACC instead of the Big East now, but the blood still boils when these two squads get together. Ultimately, it was an advantage at point guard that made the difference.
Dave Bing's 24 points made up for the standoff between the two outside scorers -- Syracuse's Carmelo Anthony and Connecticut's Ray Allen -- as the Orange (7-1) got past the Huskies (6-2) in a game that brought back memories of the tussles of old.
"I admit it, I kinda miss playing them twice a year," Anthony mused. "But we have to stick up for the best conference in basketball, and they're not a part of it. We're 7-1 now; it's time to show we can hang with the big names."
Bing went on a one-man 10-0 run with 7:13 left in the second half, a run that proved to be the margin of victory.
"You live for days like this," Bing said after the game.
Allen and Anthony canceled out with 17 points each.
#4 Duke 76, #12 Indiana 54. Bobby Knight has long made it personal when talking about his former protege Mike Krzyzewski, often claiming a form of ingratitude from student to teacher. If this was all about coaching, Knight might want to rethink his attitude.
Krzyzewski put Grant Hill at the "point-forward" position, using the man's length to try to shut down Isiah Thomas. It worked, as Hill was dominant in the matchup, scoring 22 and giving out 8 assists to lead the Blue Devils (7-1) to victory over the Hoosiers (6-2).
"I don't think about coaches," Hill said after the game. "It's about players and making plays. Today they gave me a tough assignment, but I came through for the team and I'm glad I could."
Many of Hill's assists were to Corey Maggette, who took advantage of being much faster than his counterpart Tom Van Arsdale. With the twins unable to keep up with Maggette's speed, Knight attempted to use Victor Oladipo in the role more. That just led to JJ Redick and Jeff Mullins getting outside shots to fall.
"We had an answer for everything tonight," Redick admitted.
George McGinnis led Indiana with 13 points.
#16 Louisville 86, #14 Maryland 85, OT. All experts predicted another close one from a Louisville squad that has thrived on the edge all season so far. They got what they thought, and then some. And for Maryland, it meant more heartbreak.
Junior Bridgeman received the Wes Unseld inbound pass and drilled a 15-footer as time expired to lead the Cardinals (7-1) to a stunning overtime win and give the Terrapins (6-2) their second buzzer-beater loss of the season.
"I hope that's the last one," Maryland forward Len Bias, who led the team with 21 points, said after the game. "You play hard up until the final whistle, and it just gets taken from you right when you think there's enough."
For most of the game, Bias and the two Williamses -- Buck and Walt -- were able to control Bridgeman, who only finished with 7 points. However, on the final play after Gene Shue's free throws put Maryland in the lead, coach Denny Crum called for a double screen to get Bridgeman open. It worked.
"Having enough time before the final play to advance the ball was the key," Crum said in talking about the last play. "I'm not saying we didn't have a Christian Laettner [moment] in us, but it's a lot easier to have more options in the half-court. Wesley threw a good look and Junior did the rest. It's why I wanted my center doing the inbound pass -- he could get the ball over the defender."
Darrell Griffith led Louisville with 19 points.
#6 Michigan State 81, #11 Arizona 72. With a full team, the Spartans look dangerous. They'll need to be to survive in the Big Ten.
Jason Richardson's 19 points led all scorers as the Spartans (7-1) held off a furious rally from the homestanding Wildcats (6-2) in order to maintain their perfect record when playing with a full squad.
"Depth matters," Richardson said after the game. "To know we got those guys underneat, Z-Bo [Zach Randolph] and Draymond [Green] allows us to take chances, and you can't leave us open, not the way we were getting shots tonight."
Magic Johnson had 13 points and 11 assists, including two beautiful passes to an open Steve Smith that led to layups that put the game beyond doubt. Aaron Gordon led the Wildcats with 15 points.
#18 Notre Dame 79, #17 Texas 54. When Kevin Durant is on, Texas looks almost impossible to beat. When he's struggling, this happens.
Adrian Dantley's 23 points spurred the offense, while his lockdown of Durant held the star to 11 points and fueled the defense as the Irish (7-1) had a complete win over the Longhorns (6-2) before a stunned Texas Court crowd.
"When you have a gameplan you know is going to work, all you have to do is execute," Irish coach Digger Phelps explained after the game. "We knew that if Kevin Durant couldn't have a big game we had the advantage everywhere else on the court. It was our chance to take advantage, and we did just what we had to do."
With Durant stymied, the rest of the team attempted to step up. It wasn't their night either, as Texas was held to 31% shooting (20-64) over the course of the game. Avery Bradley in particular struggled, shooting 4-20 and ending with 10 points.
"That was bad," Bradley said bluntly. "Let's not do that again."
#15 Southern Cal 78, #10 Ohio State 70. A season-opening loss to Kentucky seems like an eternity ago. It's possible the Trojans have a case to be the second-best team in the Pac-12.
Treetop Robinson had 20 points as Southern Cal (7-1) spaced the floor with their three-guard lineup and upset the Buckeyes (6-2) in a matchup with both football coaches Woody Hayes and John McKay in attendance.
"It felt like a Rose Bowl, didn't it?" McKay said when he invaded the press conference to congratulate Sam Barry and the Trojans. "Any time we can defend our turf, it's good. Rest assured you've set the bar for us when football season comes around."
Jerry Lucas couldn't keep up with Treetop underneath, and when Herb Williams or Clark Kellogg attempted to help with a double-team, it left the lane open for DeMar DeRozan (17 points). Ohio State's outside shooters, sixth-man D'Angelo Russell in particular, had their opportunities, and it was a matter of if they could catch up to the Trojan play. They came up short.
"I'm not going to blame anyone," said Russell, who at 18 points was his team's leading scorer. "We win as a team and we lose as a team."
Georgetown 93, #21 UNLV 84. For the third time this season, Georgetown was involved in a game where the Top 25 team fell to someone unranked. This time, it went the other way.
Allen Iverson took advantage of the fast pace to put up 29 points and lead the Hoyas (6-2) over the Runnin' Rebels (5-3) in a matchup that proved the mid-majors still have a bit of a ways to go in order to compete in the NIBL.
"That just wasn't good enough," Rebels guard Reggie Theus admitted. "We can compete with anyone, but we can't just compete; we need to win."
The high-octane offense seemed to play into the hands of the home Rebels early, as Hoyas center Patrick Ewing Sr was often left behind on transition plays. Coach John Thompson quickly adjusted, moving Alonzo Mourning to center and going with a four-guard lineup of Sleepy Floyd, Iverson, Dino Martin, and David Wingate. It paid off, as quick passes stymied Armen Gilliam on defense and often led to Iverson layups.
Shawn Marion led the Rebels with 20 points.
*****
HOW THE TOP 25 FARED - Kentucky 103, Florida State 67
- UCLA(t) 70, 5. Kansas 64
- North Carolina(t) 99, 8. Michigan 59
- Duke 76, 12. Indiana 54
- Kansas 64, 2t. UCLA 70
- Michigan State 81, 11. Arizona 72
- Syracuse 79, 9. Connecticut 69
- Michigan 59, 2t. North Carolina 99
- Connecticut 69, 7. Syracuse 79
- Ohio State 70, 15. Southern Cal 78
- Arizona 72, 6. Michigan State 81
- Indiana 54, 4. Duke 76
- Illinois 102, Oklahoma 96, OT
- Maryland 85, 16. Louisville 86, OT
- Southern Cal 78, 10. Ohio State 70
- Louisville 86, 14. Maryland 85, OT
- Texas 54, 18. Notre Dame 79
- Notre Dame 79, 17. Texas 54
- Houston 114, Marshall 86
- Minnesota 82, San Francisco 62
- UNLV 84, Georgetown 93
- Alabama 67, Villanova 53
- DePaul 90, Colorado 53
- LSU 85, Detroit Mercy 61
- Arizona State 75, Clemson 63
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