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Post by catherine on Mar 12, 2014 17:02:09 GMT -5
Exactly! If that SOB wasn't black, or half-black, or whatever he claims to be, he would have been booted out of the White House a long time ago.
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Post by catherine on Mar 12, 2014 16:56:41 GMT -5
I didn't see this myself, but I heard about it from people who did see it. There's an old Queen Anne house in the area where I live and an old woman had lived there since she married when she was very young. She was in her 80s when she died and people said that the night that she died, the house itself seemed to be giving off this strange glow. It didn't last long, but several people saw it.
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Post by catherine on Mar 12, 2014 16:36:27 GMT -5
I agree. It is a good article and I'd like to see some of those other plays, too.
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Post by catherine on Mar 12, 2014 16:34:35 GMT -5
I doubt that "everything" will be about the movies. But with David Selby being there for the first time since Night of Dark Shadows was filmed at Lyndhurst, I'm sure there will be more of an emphasis on the movies this year.
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Post by catherine on Feb 21, 2014 12:30:25 GMT -5
You didn't answer the question. Was it normal for this particular person to walk around acting like he had an artificial arm on one side? You've seen all the shows, you should know if this was normal for him.
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Post by catherine on Feb 18, 2014 1:28:23 GMT -5
Then watch the jacket pull trick in the link I've posted and tell me if you're still skeptical.
www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZlM-Uy8ODYQ
As for the lamp moving across the table, the first tablecloth was a crocheted cloth, not a frigging doile cloth! A "doily" is an ornamental mat, not a tablecloth, and it's spelled "doily" NOT "doile."
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Post by catherine on Feb 18, 2014 1:13:05 GMT -5
The first article about this woman is under the Could it be SATAN?! heading, so why is this one here?
Does anyone believe this crazy bitch's story about being initiated into a Satanic cult at 13? Her stories don't make any sense. She says that she killed only "bad people who do bad things," but wouldn't a Satanist kill "good people who did good things?" I think she's full of crap and so are these law enforcement officers who actually believe her. No wonder most of the serious crimes in this country go unsolved with idiots like that in charge. If she had killed 22 people, you'd think she would have had better sense than to kill the Pennsylvania guy in the frigging van where she'd get blood all over the place.
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Post by catherine on Jan 26, 2014 22:31:02 GMT -5
White Mischief was based on the murder, but it wasn't exactly the true story. I've read a few books about the case and I don't really think that Jock Delves Broughton was the killer either because I think that the Earl would have soon found some other woman with a lot more money and Jock knew it, so he really had no reason to kill him. Of course, he had agreed to pay his wife alimony for a few years if they divorced, but what he would have paid her wouldn't have been enough for Erroll to live like he wanted to live.
I have my doubts about Alice, too, even if she was unbalanced and madly in love with him. She was an animal freak and they're always nuts. One of the things that makes me doubt that she did it is that she didn't admit it in any of the letters that she wrote before she committed suicide.
In the past few years, every year or two, it seems that someone else comes out with the "truth" about what happened, but it never goes anywhere.
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Post by catherine on Jan 20, 2014 0:52:47 GMT -5
The Bermuda Triangle disappearances are somewhat interesting, but my favorites are those about unsolved murders.
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Post by catherine on Jan 19, 2014 16:44:46 GMT -5
The Algonquin tribes believed that if a person turned to cannibalism, he would turn into some sort of evil spirit that prowled the earth when it was extremely cold and there was little food in search of human flesh. The Indians believed that it was preferable to commit suicide rather than eat humans. Today people who crave human flesh are said to be suffering from "Wendigo Psychosis."
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Post by catherine on Jan 13, 2014 2:01:44 GMT -5
When True Blood first started, I watched it one night because it was supposed to be set in the South, but as soon as I saw the producers were more interested in political correctness than they were in telling a good story, I switched channels. But even if it hadn't had the obligatory, politically correct garbage, I wouldn't have watched it because what I saw of it was as dull as dishwater.
I think that part of the appeal of Dark Shadows is that it is how we imagine that people should live, not how they do live. Of course, they lived more like that in the 60s than they do today because back then, people dressed a lot better. Both the men and women on the show dressed decently, they didn't go around in jeans and T-shirts, or half-naked, like they do on True Blood. You had the strange family living in an old, dark house, which is classic Gothic horror, and even though Barnabas Collins was a vampire trying to keep a deep, dark secret, he lived in the "old house" on the estate, wore a cape and carried a cane -- a real gentleman. He acted and dressed like a vampire is supposed to act and dress and he spent his days in a coffin.
There's nothing mysterious, or even interesting, about the vampires on modern TV shows because the people who write vampire stories and make TV shows and movies now think that they have to make the vampires more human. I read somewhere that a girl on one of those crappy vampire shows, or maybe it was a movie, got pregnant by a vampire and that's just ridiculous because vampires are dead. The appeal of vampires is that they are "undead" or the "walking dead" and dead men don't get women pregnant!
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Post by catherine on Nov 19, 2013 0:13:56 GMT -5
From what I've read, it would have been impossible for Oswald to get to where Tippitts was shot in time to shoot him. I agree with you, Jason, that he was just a dumb patsy, who didn't have any better sense than to get involved in something that he didn't understand. From what I've read about him, he didn't have any reason to kill Kennedy and now his wife, Marina, has come forward and said that she doesn't believe he did it. Joanna, you need to post the interview with her. I would post it, but you've probably already figured out all the new codes, etc. and I haven't.
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Post by catherine on Nov 19, 2013 0:07:42 GMT -5
You certainly didn't give us much time to vote, Joanna. When I tried to vote at 11 o'clock (CST), the poll was already closed!
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Post by catherine on Nov 11, 2013 18:37:47 GMT -5
The Double Tree is decorated a lot better than the Marriott, it's in a better location and the restaurant is better.
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Post by catherine on Nov 11, 2013 18:29:56 GMT -5
I always doubted that Skakel killed Martha Moxley because bashing someone's head in is a low class murder. The information about her being killed by those thugs came out when the trial was going on, but the defense lawyers didn't pay any attention to it for some reason. If they had, maybe he wouldn't have been convicted.
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