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#31
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#32
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#33
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Raising_of_Chicago wrote:During the 1850s and 1860s, engineers carried out a piecemeal raising of the grade of central Chicago to lift the city out of its low-lying swampy ground. Buildings and sidewalks were physically raised on jackscrews.
Quote:Many of central Chicago’s hurriedly-erected wooden frame buildings were now considered inappropriate to the burgeoning and increasingly wealthy city. Rather than raise them several feet, proprietors often preferred to relocate these old frame buildings, replacing them with new masonry blocks built to the latest grade. Consequently, the practice of putting the old multi-story, intact and furnished wooden buildings—sometimes entire rows of them en bloc—on rollers and moving them to the outskirts of town or to the suburbs was so common as to be considered nothing more than routine traffic.

Traveller David Macrae wrote, “Never a day passed during my stay in the city that I did not meet one or more houses shifting their quarters. One day I met nine. Going out Great Madison Street in the horse cars we had to stop twice to let houses get across.” The function for which such a building had been constructed would often be maintained during the move, with people dining, shopping and working in these buildings as they were rollered down the street.
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#34
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Having_Fun_with_Elvis_on_Stage wrote:Having Fun with Elvis on Stage is a 1974 spoken word concert album by American singer and musician Elvis Presley consisting entirely of dialogue and banter, mostly jokes, by Presley between songs during his live concerts, with the songs themselves removed from the recordings.
Quote:The album is unique in Elvis Presley's discography as it does not contain any actual music or songs; it consists entirely of Presley talking between numbers, recorded during live concerts.[1] Presley is frequently heard humming or singing "Well ...", which, during the actual performances, led into songs that were edited out of the recording.[1] Much of the album consists of Presley making jokes, although the recording is devoid of context.
Quote:Many critics felt that the album's material was spliced in a manner lacking continuity and nearly devoid of comprehensibility or humor.[1][3] Mark Deming of AllMusic states that "some have called Having Fun with Elvis on Stage thoroughly unlistenable, but actually it's worse than that; hearing it is like witnessing an auto wreck that somehow plowed into a carnival freak show, leaving onlookers at once too horrified and too baffled to turn away."[3] Nick Greene, a writer for Mental Floss, felt that the material presented on the record is "so incoherent, you don't really get an idea of his stage presence, despite the fact that all the audio comes from his shows."[1]
The whole thing's on YouTube and has been for a decade presumably because the Elvis estate is too embarrassed to copyright strike it:
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#35
[Image: IroVEep.png]
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#36
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grandpa_Indian wrote:Grandpa Indian (Portuguese: Vovô Índio) is a character conceived in the 1930s with the intention of replacing Santa Claus in Brazil. His aim was to inflate patriotic sentiments among the Brazilian population.[2] The dissemination of the character in the 1930s took place through the Integralist press, whose movement was rooted in Brazilian nationalism with fascist undertones. According to a chronicle in the 1934 Christmas edition of Correio da Manhã, Santa Claus would be deemed a "ridiculous figure" and out of place in a "land of warmth and intense sunlight", where "this chilly and stern old man was becoming impertinent".

Depicted as an elderly gentleman who is "very friendly to the trees", adorned in "feathers of all the colors of the birds", who generously bestows gifts upon Brazilian children, Grandpa Indian faced criticism and mockery upon his debut, and by 1938 he had virtually disappeared.
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#37
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nicolai_Lilin
Quote:Lilin has stated that he was incarcerated in a maximum security juvenile prison at the age of 12 for attempted murder after stabbing a drug addict in self-defence. He also claims that he maimed a man who had driven a young boy to suicide.[22] Lilin states that he killed for the first time at age 14, with the victim being a "Gypsy" drug dealer whom he shot with his grandfather's revolver.[23][27] Still at age 14, per his narrative, he stabbed a boy in the back, leaving him paralysed for life.[27]
Quote:Lilin claims that at age 18 he began serving in the Russian army.[24] In a Vanity Fair interview, he claimed he was drafted while studying yoga in India,[6] while in an interview with Oliver Bullough he stated he volunteered.[28] He further claims to have served for two years and three months in the antiterrorism corps of the GRU during the Second Chechen War.[29][22] Some Italian sources state he served in the 56th Guards Air Assault Regiment.[5]

He claims to have briefly taken part in the battle of Grozny[30][28] and said in an interview with Il Giornale that his unit had tortured prisoners of war.[31] He claims he encountered very few Chechen guerrillas during the conflict, instead fighting mercenaries from Afghanistan, Jordan and Saudi Arabia.[32] He has described two instances during the war in which he was nearly killed: the first occurring when he was shot in the chest with an AK-47, surviving thanks to his body armour, the second happening when a vehicle he was travelling in was capsized by a grenade launcher which left two comrades dead and himself with damage to his hearing.[14]
Quote:Lilin claims that after leaving the army, he attempted to find work in Saint Petersburg, but was rebuffed for being a war veteran.[6] While there, he was arrested for illegal firearm ownership and held in custody for several months, during which he claims to have been regularly beaten.[33] Per his narrative, he later worked as a private security guard for a Russian opposition group with links to Chechen terrorists.[34] He later spent three years[26] working for a private Israeli security company as an antiterrorism consultant.[24] He states that at one point he worked as a drill instructor for the Afghan National Security Forces.[35]

He concluded his service after injuring his leg in Iraq while working as a bodyguard for Western businessmen. In an article he wrote for L'Espresso, he stated that he had been shot,[35] while in his interview with Elena Chernenko, he stated that his leg was injured by a landmine,[36] subsequently elaborating that it had been triggered after an American serviceman jumped on it.[20] He states that he later moved to Siberia to live with his great-uncle by the Lena river, while struggling with PTSD.[32] After retiring, he claims to have been contacted by an ex comrade offering him a position in a pro-Gaddafi mercenary group during the Libyan civil war, which he refused.[35]
Quote:He says he had originally intended to settle in Ireland to work as a fisherman, but was tricked into going to Italy by his mother, who lied about having cancer.[6][14] He claims that, from 2005, he spent two years working for a Vatican-affiliated security company infiltrating Satanic cults, during which he claims to have uncovered a child sex ring operating in Europe and Russia.[40][41] He also credits himself with uncovering the presence of MS-13 in Turin.[41] He further claims that he once suffered an assassination attempt in Turin by Islamic radicals who planted a bomb under his car.[3]
Thank you for your service! 
Spoiler:  (click to show)
Quote:If we summarise the information from Nicolai Lilin's book [Siberian Education], his interviews in the Western press and his speeches at book fairs, then by the age of 23 the author had managed to: serve two terms in a Transnistrian prison, be under investigation in Russia, serve three years as a sniper in Chechnya and a couple more years as a mercenary in Israel, Iraq and Afghanistan. At 24, he got a job as a fisherman on a ship in Ireland, then moved to Italy, where he got married, opened a tattoo parlour, wrote a bestseller and almost became a victim of a politically motivated assassination attempt.
Quote:Zakhar Prilepin compared the premise of the novel to a contemporary German author writing about "a squadron of former SS officers hiding in the forests outside Berlin, listening to Wagner with their children and grandchildren, reading aloud from the works of Junge and banging on tin drums as they rob passing trains".[51]
Quote:Oliver Bullough, in a 2011 interview with Lilin, wrote that "it contains tales so unlikely that most editors would surely have spotted them as false, such as when Lilin finds a Chechen with a rifle loaded with hyper-accurate bullets filled with liquid mercury. Such an idea is nonsense since the liquid would shift in flight and render them useless". He also drew attention to a scene where an urban battle resulted in the loss of 13 lieutenant-colonels.[28] Tim Kucharewski notes how the novel perpetuates the myth of anti-personnel mines being deliberately disguised as toys or boxes of crayons, which Lilin claims were manufactured in San Marino and used extensively by Chechen fighters. Kucharewski points out how the legend originated during the Soviet–Afghan War, but that it made even less sense in the context of the Chechen wars:

What would be the tactical motivation for the Chechens to conceal mines in toy-shapes on their home turf when confronting Russian soldiers as their only opponent? If the notion is disregarded that this had been done to seduce the inner child of potentially looting Russian conscript or contract soldiers, one is hard-pressed to find an explanation. Using underage "child soldiers" or bringing [one's] "own" civilians into the combat zones as human shields are among the few war crimes that have never been alleged against the Russian federation during these wars. The only persons that these alleged toy mines could actually bait, would be Chechen children. Therefore, from any perspective other than one claiming that these Chechens were "barbarian" "bandits" that for some sadistic reason intended to kill or maim their own side's infants and children, the old yarn of the toy mine seems even less credible here than in other wars. Yet, Nicolai Lilin indeed stated this claim, in one of the more implausible paragraphs within the text, of which there is certainly no shortage.[57]
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#38
Sounds like Steven Seagal found his inspiration in characters like that Lilin.
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#39
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Weekend_(1974_TV_program) wrote:By the end of season 1, Weekend had attracted a cult following. Fans dubbed the first weekend of each month a Weekend weekend. "Is this a Weekend weekend?" was often heard around office water coolers.
I trust this, don't need to see a citation at all.
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#40
Can stuff from The Conversation belong here too?

This was a really cool read

https://theconversation.com/hindi-greek-and-english-all-come-from-a-single-ancient-language-heres-how-we-know-264588
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#41
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henry_Box_Brown wrote:was an enslaved man from Virginia who escaped to freedom at the age of 33 by arranging to have himself mailed in a wooden crate in 1849 to abolitionists in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
Quote:In 1849, with the help of James C. A. Smith, a free black man,[4] and a sympathetic white shoemaker named Samuel A. Smith (no relation), Brown devised a plan to have himself shipped in a box to a free state by the Adams Express Company, known for its confidentiality and efficiency.[6] Brown paid US$86 (equivalent to $3,250 in 2024), which was more than half of his savings of US$166 (equivalent to $6,274 in 2024), to Samuel Smith.[6]
Quote:On March 29, 1849 (176 years ago), the trip finally began.[6] Over the next 27 hours, Brown's box was transported by wagon, railroad, steamboat, wagon again, railroad, ferry, railroad, and finally delivery wagon. Despite the instructions on the box of "handle with care" and "this side up", carriers often placed the box upside-down or handled it roughly. Brown remained still, however and avoided detection.[citation needed]

The following day, on March 30, 1849 (176 years ago), the box was received by Williamson, McKim, William Still, and other members of the Philadelphia Vigilance Committee, attesting to the improvements in express delivery services.[6] When Brown was released, one of the men remembered his first words as: "How do you do, gentlemen?"
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#42
(09-30-2025, 10:18 AM)Potato wrote: Can stuff from The Conversation belong here too?

This was a really cool read

https://theconversation.com/hindi-greek-and-english-all-come-from-a-single-ancient-language-heres-how-we-know-264588

they don't include japanese here, even though one of the first japanese words you learn is namai, which is name Hmph
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#43
It's όνομα (ónoma) in Greek.
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#44
[Image: 500px-A_Society_of_Patriotic_Ladies_at_E...0511080003]

[Image: image.png]

[Image: image.png]
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#45
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mr._Smith_(TV_series) wrote:Originally a part of a traveling act called the Atwood Orangutans, Cha Cha and Bobo are separated from their trainer Tommy Atwood (Tim Dunigan) after he is knocked unconscious in a car accident while the act is traveling from Arizona to California. Frightened by the commotion caused by the accident, Cha Cha and Bobo both run away. Cha Cha is eventually found and sent to a government research center in Washington, D.C.. Weeks later, Cha Cha escapes from the center and ends up in a research lab where he finds an experimental mixture to increase human intelligence being developed. After drinking the mixture, Cha Cha is able to talk (his voice was provided by series executive producer Ed. Weinberger)[3] and is later determined to have an I.Q of 256. He is then renamed Mr. Smith and, due to his high intelligence, becomes a political adviser. Mr. Smith's old trainer Tommy later becomes his assistant while Mr. Smith attempts to solve various political problems and his surrounding staff, which includes his secretary Raymond Holyoke (Leonard Frey), attempt to keep his identity hidden from the general public.

edit: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLbLzKniuNYk4U055QafjcWap-AHLsRrnD
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#46
when you're casually reading a wikipedia article about the jim jones cult and your mouse is just kind of hovering in place on the right side, and you're scrolling with the scroll wheel, and then suddenly without any warning at all:

Spoiler:  (click to show)
[Image: 4jvpyx3.png]

no it is not censored, I did that
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#47
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_neon_tetra#Credit_card_fraud

Quote:Credit card fraud

A black neon tetra inadvertently caused its owner's credit card to be charged during a 2023 livestream by "Mutekimaru Channel" on YouTube. The owner was using motion-tracking software to turn the fish's movements into Nintendo Switch inputs, letting them "play" video games. In 2020, the fish beat Pokemon Sapphire after 3,195 hours, a feat that takes about 30 hours for a typical human. On January 14, 2023, Pokémon Violet crashed at 1,144 hours, giving the fish free access to the main menu. They entered inputs that opened Nintendo eShop, added 500 yen ($3.85 USD) to their owner's account, and exposed his credit card details on the livestream. Mutekimaru later requested a refund of the 500 yen from Nintendo. Several media outlets facetiously described the fish as having committed "credit card fraud."

The fish also downloaded an N64 emulator, set up PayPal, used reward points to buy an avatar, and changed Mutekimaru's Nintendo account name to "ROWAWAWA¥". After about seven hours, their movements shut down the Switch.
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#48
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mariano_Melgarejo#Franco-Prussian_War_(1870) wrote:In July 1870, when Prussia invaded France, starting the Franco-Prussian War, Melgarejo asked one of his high-ranking generals to immediately send Bolivian troops to help the French army defend Paris. This was city that Melgarejo was fascinated by with its stories of sophistication and elegance but which he did not even know how to locate on a map. The Bolivian general replied that the plan was impossible, since it would take a long time to cross the Atlantic Ocean. Enraged, Melgarejo replied, "Don't be silly! We'll take a shortcut!"

Blinded by anger, Melgarejo arranged to gather a troop of 3,000 men to embark for Europe and help France. Attending a horse race in Oruro, he suffered a broken foot that stopped him for a month, and planned to cross the Amazon jungles of Brazil to reach the Atlantic Ocean and reach Europe. Resuming his march, Melgarejo received news that France had already capitulated to Prussia but he refused to believe such events.
Hesright
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#49
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Milan_Brych wrote:Brych arrived in New Zealand in November 1968 after being accepted as a refugee. He initially found work as a laboratory technician at Auckland Hospital. After about a year, he successfully applied for a provisional medical licence on the basis that he held the equivalent of a medical degree and doctorate, claims which were subsequently found to be false.[5] According to Myrek Cvigr, who acted as interpreter for Brych upon his arrival in New Zealand, Brych initially claimed to be a psychiatrist rather than an oncologist.[6]

After completing an internship, Brych was hired by the radiotherapy department at Auckland Hospital on the basis that he had worked in oncology in Czechoslovakia.[5] A later investigation found that his supervising consultants had found that he lacked knowledge in the fundamentals of medicine, but they had not raised concerns as they believed his qualifications had were not in doubt.[6] By 1971, Brych had begun to treat patients with a series of injections which he claimed could induce remission of cancer. His claims received substantial media coverage and by late 1972 he had established a separate private practice and begun to treat overseas cancer patients from Australia and North America.[7]

Medical authorities in New Zealand were immediately skeptical of Brych's claims, as he refused to provide details of his treatment methods on the basis they might be stolen by other doctors or by pharmaceutical companies. He also refused to provide patients' medical records to the Auckland Hospital Board and begun making claims that he was being prosecuted by the medical profession.[7]
Quote:Wright's report concluded that Brych had not developed any novel treatments for cancer.[8] It also cast doubt on Brych's qualifications and criticised his "virtually complete absence of proper medical records".[9]
Quote:He eventually withdrew his appeal shortly before a hearing date was scheduled in early 1977, claiming that he was the victim of a conspiracy by the Communist authorities in Czechoslovakia which had destroyed evidence of his academic and professional record.[10]
Quote:At his eventual criminal trial in 1983, he admitted that he had charged as much as $9,600 for monthly injections of drugs that had cost him approximately $10 to obtain.[9]

One of Brych's methods of "treating" cancer was based around laetrile, an extract from apricot kernels which has no medical benefit and may in fact lead to cyanide poisoning.[12] On various occasions he falsely claimed to have isolated "specific antigens, and/or specific antibodies for individual patient's individual cancers", which no researchers had achieved.[13]
Quote: The symposium's organiser Hans Gerhard Schwick [de] later swore an affidavit that Brych had not presented any papers nor participated in any discussions at the symposium, and had stated that he was unable to disclose his research as he was concerned about listening devices being planted by "gangsters organised from America who wished to steal his secret".[6]
Quote:Despite the federal government's opposition to Brych, in March 1978 Queensland premier Joh Bjelke-Petersen publicly invited Brych to set up a practice in Queensland, which he suggested could become a "world centre" for cancer treatment. Bjelke-Petersen described Brych as a "man of great skill and knowledge" and said he should be allowed to establish a self-financed clinic, subject to being registered by the Medical Board of Queensland.
Quote:Brych claimed to have studied medicine at the Masaryk University in Brno. It was later revealed that at the time he claimed to have been studying, he was in fact in prison.[1]
Quote:I was criticised in the same way for my support of cancer therapist Milan Brych... I was the only politician in Australia who said he ought to be given a chance to show his therapy worked. Like Stephen Horvath's car, his methods may yet be vindicated.
Quote from Joh Bjelke-Petersen's autobiography, 1990
Hesright Sad that the lib establishment organized so successfully against someone thinking outside the Western capitalist box just because they couldn't understand his advanced methods.
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#50
If you haven't already, you should read the Sir Joh page. That guy would really tickle your fancy.
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#51
Siren Nsfw Siren

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Animated_gif_of_topless_woman_with_%22GIF%22_painted_above_her_breasts.gif

I don't
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#52
(01-19-2026, 05:53 AM)Uncle wrote: Siren Nsfw Siren

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Animated_gif_of_topless_woman_with_%22GIF%22_painted_above_her_breasts.gif

I don't
Klepek
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#53
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#54
"thornton's plan was rejected" doing heavy lifting for the other guys' reactions

   

"n-no...no, we're not...gonna do that...sorry bud"
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#55
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fourth_International%E2%80%93Posadist#Ufology wrote:Posadas was the author of a number of works with an unconventional slant and towards the end of his life he tried to create a synthesis of Trotskyism and ufology. His most prominent thesis from this perspective was the 1968 pamphlet Flying saucers, the process of matter and energy, science, the revolutionary and working-class struggle and the socialist future of mankind which exposed many of the ideas associated today with Posadism. Here, Posadas claims that while there is no proof of intelligent life elsewhere in the universe, the science of the time makes their existence likely. Furthermore, he claims that any extraterrestrials visiting earth in flying saucers must come from a socially and scientifically advanced civilisation to master inter-planetary travel, and that such a civilisation could have only come about in a post-capitalist world.[4]

Believing visiting aliens to be naturally non-violent and only here to observe, Posadas argues that humans must call on them to intervene in solving the Earth's problems, namely "to suppress poverty, hunger, unemployment and war, to give everyone the means to live in dignity and to lay the bases for human fraternity".
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paul_Schulz_(ufologist) wrote:Posadas's death in 1981 reportedly caused the life of Schulz to fall apart as he would lose basic social skills and his marriage would "disintegrate", causing his renewed fall into depression. In 1983, at the age of 58, Schulz reported to experience an awakening, starting to hear the voices of aliens and writing of a "sudden change" in his personality as well as outlook upon his return from Latin America earlier that year.

...

Upon his awakening, Schulz started looking towards Billy Meier's works to explain his experiences. Meier taught that an advanced and benevolent alien race, known as the Plejorans, would send transmissions to a few hundred humans capable of understanding and disseminating their messages. Schulz, having had experiences of hearing voices, believed himself to be part of said group. In his 2001 book Die offizielle Kontaktaufnahme einer außerirdischen Zivilisation mit uns Erdlingen steht nahe bevor, Schulz summarized the Plejoran's message. According to him, there are 40,353,607 humanoid races in the universe, all living together in peace, with 7.5 million existing in the Milky Way alone. Humans, according to him, were bred as warriors for an ancient conflict in the Sirius constellation that ended a long time ago, they were genetically modified savages said to have a lifetime ten times shorter than their creators. Earth, according to Schulz, was a "war planet", being the only planet with so many wars in the last 10,000 years.

Schulz believed his life to have been structured into three "Cosmic Phases" that would prepare him to help Meier bring humanity into cosmic self-consciousness. The first phase was the rise of Hitler, which would lead to him becoming an anti-fascist and moving to Argentina. The second phase was him becoming a militant for the only socialist who understood that "life on Earth will have to link up with the Cosmos in order to continue", Posadas. The "third" phase was his awakening, after which he committed himself to transmitting the knowledge of a higher power. In his writings, Schulz combined his esoteric beliefs with Posadist and Marxist analysis. One of the primary drivers behind Schulz's writings and beliefs, was the idea that humanity is facing an existential threat of self-annihilation that is to be prevented at all costs. He believed Maarten Dillinger to have been an incarnation of Karl Marx.[4]
hmm
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#56
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/23_skidoo

Quote:Perhaps the most widely known story of the origin of the expression concerns the area around the triangular-shaped Flatiron Building at Madison Square in New York City. The building is located on 23rd Street at the intersection of Fifth Avenue and Broadway, the latter two of which intersect at an acute angle. Because of the shape of the building, winds swirl around it. During the early 1900s, groups of men reportedly gathered to watch women walking by have their skirts blown up, revealing legs, which were seldom seen publicly at that time.

Thinking
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#57
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gregor_MacGregor wrote:was a Scottish soldier, adventurer, and con man who attempted from 1821 to 1837 to draw British and French investors and settlers to "Poyais", a fictional Central American territory that he claimed to rule as "Cazique". Hundreds invested their savings in supposed Poyaisian government bonds and land certificates, while about 250 emigrated to MacGregor's invented country in 1822–23 to find only an untouched jungle; more than half of them died.
...
On his return to Britain in 1821, MacGregor claimed that King George Frederic Augustus of the Mosquito Coast in the Gulf of Honduras had appointed him Cazique of Poyais, which he described as a developed colony with a community of British settlers. When the British press reported on MacGregor's deception following the return of fewer than 50 survivors in late 1823, some of his victims leaped to his defence, insisting that the general had been let down by those whom he had put in charge of the emigration party. A French court tried MacGregor and three others for fraud in 1826 after he attempted a variation on the scheme there, but convicted only one of his associates. Acquitted, MacGregor attempted lesser Poyais schemes in London over the next decade.
Quote:In mid-1822, there appeared in Edinburgh and London a 355-page guidebook "chiefly intended for the use of settlers", Sketch of the Mosquito Shore, Including the Territory of Poyais—ostensibly the work of a "Captain Thomas Strangeways", aide-de-camp to the Cazique,[111] but actually written either by MacGregor himself or by accomplices.[86][112][n 11]

The Sketch mostly comprised long, reprinted tracts from older works on the Mosquito Coast and other parts of the region. The original material ranged from misleading to outright made up.[112] MacGregor's publicists described the Poyaisian climate as "remarkably healthy ... agree[ing] admirably with the constitution of Europeans"—it was supposedly a spa destination for sick colonists from the Caribbean.[114] The soil was so fertile that a farmer could have three maize harvests a year, or grow cash crops such as sugar or tobacco without hardship; detailed projections at the Sketch's end forecast profits of millions of dollars.[115] Fish and game were so plentiful that a man could hunt or fish for a single day and bring back enough to feed his family for a week.[113] The natives were not just co-operative but intensely pro-British.[86] The capital was St Joseph, a flourishing seaside town of wide paved boulevards, colonnaded buildings and mansions,[116] inhabited by as many as 20,000.[117][118] St Joseph had a theatre, an opera house and a domed cathedral; there was also the Bank of Poyais, the Poyaisian houses of parliament and a royal palace.[116] Reference was made to a "projected Hebrew colony".[110] The Sketch went so far as to claim the rivers of Poyais contained "globules of pure gold".[86][119][120]
Quote:Honduras Packet reached the Black River in November 1822. Bemused to find a country rather different from the Sketch's descriptions, and no sign of St Joseph, the emigrants set up camp on the shore, assuming that the Poyaisian authorities would soon contact them. They sent numerous search parties inland; one, guided by natives who recognised the name St Joseph, found some long-forgotten foundations and rubble.[145][n 16] Hall quickly came to the private conclusion that MacGregor must have duped them, but reasoned that announcing such concerns prematurely would only demoralise the party and cause chaos.[146] A few weeks after their arrival, the captain of the Honduras Packet abruptly and unilaterally sailed away amid a fierce storm; the emigrants found themselves alone apart from the natives and two American hermits.[145][n 17] Comforting the settlers with vague assurances that the Poyaisian government would find them if they just stayed where they were, Hall set out for Cape Gracias a Dios, hoping to make contact with the Mosquito king or find another ship. Most of the emigrants found it impossible to believe that the Cazique had deliberately misled them, and posited that blame must lie elsewhere, or that there must have been some terrible misunderstanding.[147]
Quote:The London press reported extensively on the Poyais scandal over the following weeks and months, stressing the colonists' travails and charging that MacGregor had orchestrated a massive fraud.[n 19] Six of the survivors—including Hastie, who had lost two of his children during the ordeal—claimed that they were misquoted in these articles, and on 22 October signed an affidavit insisting that blame lay not with MacGregor but with Hall and other members of the emigrant party.[161] "[W]e believe that Sir Gregor MacGregor has been worse used by Colonel Hall and his other agents than was ever a man before", they declared, "and that had they have done their duty by Sir Gregor and by us, things would have turned out very differently at Poyais".[161] MacGregor asserted that he himself had been defrauded, alleged embezzlement by some of his agents, and claimed that covetous merchants in British Honduras were deliberately undermining the development of Poyais as it threatened their profits.[162] Richardson attempted to console the Poyais survivors, vigorously denied the press claims that the country did not exist, and issued libel writs against some of the British newspapers on MacGregor's behalf.[163][n 20]
Quote:Discarding the idea of co-operation with Spain, MacGregor published a new Poyaisian constitution in Paris in August 1825, this time describing it as a republic—he remained head of state, with the title Cazique—and on 18 August raised a new £300,000 loan through Thomas Jenkins & Company, an obscure London bank, offering 2.5% interest per annum. No evidence survives to suggest that the relevant bonds were issued.[169] The Sketch was condensed and republished as a 40-page booklet called Some Account of the Poyais Country.[170] French government officials became suspicious when an additional 30 people requested passports to travel to this country they had never heard of, and ordered the Nouvelle Neustrie company's ship to be kept in port.
Quote:MacGregor was arrested after three months and brought to La Force on 7 December 1825. He speculated to his confederates that the charges against them must be the result of some abrupt change of policy by France, or of some Spanish intrigue calculated to undermine Poyaisian independence. The three men remained imprisoned without trial while the French attempted to extradite Lehuby from the Netherlands.[172] Attempting to re-associate himself and Poyais with the republican movement in Latin America, MacGregor issued a French-language declaration from his prison cell on 10 January 1826, claiming that he was "contrary to human rights, held prisoner ... for reasons of which he is not aware" and "suffering as one of the founders of independence in the New World".[173][n 21] This attempt to convince the French that he might have some kind of diplomatic immunity did not work. The French government and police ignored the announcement.[173]
Quote:In 1828, MacGregor began to sell certificates entitling the holders to "land in Poyais Proper" at five shillings per acre. Two years later King Robert Charles Frederic, who had succeeded his brother George Frederic Augustus in 1824, issued thousands of certificates covering the same territory and offered them to lumber companies in London, directly competing with MacGregor. When the original investors demanded their long-overdue interest, MacGregor could only pay with more certificates. Other charlatans soon caught on and set up their own rival "Poyaisian offices" in London, offering land debentures in competition with both MacGregor and the Mosquito king.[182]
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#58
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tequila_and_Bonetti wrote:The lead character of the series, Nico ("Nick") Bonetti, is a policeman from New York City who is proud of his Italian heritage and very fond of his vintage rose-colored Cadillac convertible, which he inherited from his father. After he erroneously shoots a young girl during a gunfight, he relocates to a beachfront Los Angeles precinct on temporary assignment. Here he meets his new partners, Tequila (a large, burrito-eating French Mastiff), and Officer Angela Garcia, who joined the department after her policeman husband's death, which she has kept a secret from her young daughter. Their boss is Captain Midian Knight, who is almost as interested in selling a screenplay as he is in police work. The series shows their investigations of crimes and the evolving relationships between the characters. This show has the peculiarity that television viewers are able to hear Tequila's thoughts.
Quote:The series received negative reviews from critics due to the weaknesses of the scripts, California stereotypes, and an embarrassing ambiguity in the fact of making the dog speak in black street jive
There's some segments on YouTube:


There's far more of the REBOOT on there:
Quote:Eight years later, Tequila & Bonetti was rebooted for television with Jack Scalia reprising his role as Bonetti; only this time, the show was filmed and aired in Italy. Bonetti goes to Rome to team up with a new "Tequila", a cross between a Saint Bernard and a golden retriever, and the policewoman Fabiana Sasso (Alessia Marcuzzi). Again, only the audience can hear the dog's thoughts, but this time Bonetti is the one with strange American habits, as seen by his new Italian friends.
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#59
I once dreamt that Jack Scalia was my dad (and Kate Walsh was my mum).
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