A Jew Produced "Friday Night Lights" propaganda played like the Alex Jones Show

Started by CrackSmokeRepublican, February 12, 2011, 12:25:58 AM

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CrackSmokeRepublican

Friday Night Lights   <$>

http://www.nbc.com/friday-night-lights/ ... t/1238069/

A Sort of (NeoCon) Homecoming:
http://www.nbc.com/friday-night-lights/ ... 0/1231519/




Friday Night Lights 4.04 'A Sort of Homecoming'

The East Dillon Lions find their school spirit for the first time in "A Sort of Homecoming." Photo courtesy of NBC.

Posted by Janie Logan May 29, 2010, 16:32 GMT

After three seasons of cheering on those champion Dillon Panthers, the transition is complete, and we finally feel that Lion pride. "A Sort of Homecoming" was a great episode--one of the best of the series, in my opinion--because it solidified the tone for Season 4: hope for the underdogs.

We get the sense that this East Dillon team might actually have the clear eyes and full hearts that it takes to win. That pep rally at the end was Coach Taylor inspiration at its finest, bringing the town and the players together to get pumped up for the games ahead. He saw that sign on his field for the 1983 State Champions, covered in mud, rust, and overgrown leaves, and he knew that it would be possible to achieve that again, with a determined spirit and hard work.

The characters, too, seem like underdogs in their own lives. Tami is trying to be a great principal for her students, while strangers on the radio and colleagues at the high school bash her for decisions that were out of her control. I love that in spite of all the criticism beating down on her, she goes home and tries to be the best wife and mother that she can, too.

Meanwhile, Eric wants to make the best of his situation at East. He got used to winning, and now he must adjust his perspective. He's a great coach, but it's never been tested like this. He'll be lucky to get a single win this season, and it doesn't help that nobody believes in his team. Nobody, that is, until Buddy Garrity joined his corner.

After years of thinking Buddy was annoying for telling Eric how to do his job and being a car salesman too charming for his own good, I finally appreciate him for his natural gifts. He puts people at ease, and with his support as the new head of the Lions booster club, he might raise them the money and the cheering crowd that they need to have a fighting chance.

They'll never win, though, if their most talented players can't learn to work with each other. Luke Cafferty and Vince Howard would have such bright futures ahead of them, but their backgrounds have put them at a disadvantage. They have to start listening to Coach Taylor.

He may be hard on them sometimes ("I've got a pep rally to organize this week, I've got papers to grade, I've got a family to raise, I've got a wife to love, and then I've got you two bozos--trying to teach you two something you seem damn determined not to learn"), but he's there for his boys when they need him...like picking them up at the jail when they get busted for fighting.

Riggins is still figuring out where he belongs without football. Billy is focused on his pregnant wife, and Lyla has moved away to school at Vanderbilt. He knew college wasn't right for him, and now he's just drifting, working at the auto shop and living in a trailer. His relationship with Becky doesn't quite make sense--she's irritating, and she clearly has a crush on him, which can't end well--but it's good for him to be responsible for someone because it brings out the best in him: "I'm gonna tell you something, alright? And you can't tell it to anyone else... My mother never took me shopping for a pageant gown. And because of that, I never placed at Miss Texas. That's why I got into football."

The ending of the episode seemed to come out of nowhere, with Army officers informing Matt's grandmother that her son had died in Iraq. This should have seemed inevitable because even when he came home to visit, he didn't feel like he belonged anymore. He was always going to be a military man until the day he died. But that doesn't make it any less tragic now that the day has come. For once with these people and this town, football seems not as important in the grand scheme of things. The "sort of homecoming" wasn't about the Lions first pep rally at all. It was about the soldier sort of returning to his family.

http://www.monstersandcritics.com/blogs ... Homecoming
After the Revolution of 1905, the Czar had prudently prepared for further outbreaks by transferring some $400 million in cash to the New York banks, Chase, National City, Guaranty Trust, J.P.Morgan Co., and Hanover Trust. In 1914, these same banks bought the controlling number of shares in the newly organized Federal Reserve Bank of New York, paying for the stock with the Czar\'s sequestered funds. In November 1917,  Red Guards drove a truck to the Imperial Bank and removed the Romanoff gold and jewels. The gold was later shipped directly to Kuhn, Loeb Co. in New York.-- Curse of Canaan