Donnie swaggart divorced againonnie swaggart

Donny Dilemma

2024.05.11 17:33 hoopharder Donny Dilemma

It just occurred to me that when Donny and Daphne broke up, Roz never made a move for him. Which I’m now realizing is kind of weird because there was the whole episode where Roz and Niles were trying to get Donny back with her. Was Roz with Roger by then?
I feel like that would have been a fun storyline to explore. Roz comforts Donny, they hook up and start dating, it’s weird but funny cuz they all have to be around each other, maybe Donny helps Niles get divorced from Mel cuz he’s so happy with Roz and everything worked out in the end. Everybody wins!
Except Mel. Niles kind of does her dirty but they both rushed into it and, well, that was a group fail.
Thoughts?
submitted by hoopharder to Frasier [link] [comments]


2024.05.08 20:45 entrelineas_org Las autoridades habían favorecido todo tipo de iniciativas para fomentar el desprecio, la burla y el ridículo contra los negros #Ángeles #JackChick #Amusia #Racismo #Comunismo #Beatles #JimmySwaggart #Stryper #DavidWilkerson #JeffGodwin #JohnTodd

Las autoridades habían favorecido todo tipo de iniciativas para fomentar el desprecio, la burla y el ridículo contra los negros #Ángeles #JackChick #Amusia #Racismo #Comunismo #Beatles #JimmySwaggart #Stryper #DavidWilkerson #JeffGodwin #JohnTodd submitted by entrelineas_org to incredulos [link] [comments]


2024.05.04 20:56 Used_Preference8500 New first Lady...

New first Lady... submitted by Used_Preference8500 to Zany_Trump_Politics [link] [comments]


2024.05.04 20:18 Schroderpillar Crooked televangelists and crooked politicians all know that holding a Bible while promising salvation is a sure way to get folks to empty their bank accounts.

Crooked televangelists and crooked politicians all know that holding a Bible while promising salvation is a sure way to get folks to empty their bank accounts. submitted by Schroderpillar to Trumpvirus [link] [comments]


2024.05.03 13:37 Cool-Specialist9568 Donny Douglas, Divorce Attorney

I still think they could make a spinoff starring Saul Rubinek as Donald Ronald Douglas, a prolific divorce lawyer looking for love after a series of failed marriages. Would you tune in?
submitted by Cool-Specialist9568 to Frasier [link] [comments]


2024.05.01 19:46 Leather_Focus_6535 The 77 inmates executed by the state of Georgia since the 1970s and their crimes (warning, graphic content, please read at your own risk)

Here is the list that I wrote for Georgia's post Furman execution roster for my death penalty project. Like with the previous posts, the dates aren't a precise duration of time spent on death row, but rather an approximation of their earliest known criminal activities to their executions. Many of the crimes discussed in this post are also extremely horrific, and thus please read at your own risk.
As I finished finials yesterday, the remaining states, Missouri, Virginia, Florida, and Oklahoma might be released on a quicker pace. I'm planning on doing Missouri next, but it might be split into at least two separate parts due to the currently 98 executions that have taken place.
The currently executed 77 inmates:
1. John Smith (1974-1983, electric chair): Smith and his wife decided to kill her ex husband, 38 year old Ronald Atkins, and his 29 year old wife Juanita, when they learned that the daughter she had in their former marriage were beneficiaries of the Atkins' life insurance policy. The couple and another accomplice lured the Atkins' to their home with a promise of selling them a television set, and shot them both dead.
2. Ivon Stanley (1976-1984, electric chair): Stanley and an accomplice abducted Clifford Floyd, a 46 year old insurance agent, after they lured him into the accomplice's apartment. Floyd was dragged into a forest, beaten with a hammer, and tied to a tree. He was then shot and buried alive in a shallow grave. Floyd succumbed to a combination of blood loss and suffocation and a total of $234 was stolen from him in the attack.
3. Alpha Stephens (~1961-1984, electric chair): In 1973, Stephens shot dead 57 year old Louise Mercer while robbing a grocery store her brother owned. A year later, Stephens abducted Roy Asbell, a 49 year old minister, from his home with a gun he stole from Asbell's son. Asbell tried bribing his captor with hundreds of dollars in cash for his life, but Stephens simply snatched the money away, dragged Asbell to a barn, and shot him in the head. He had a significant rap sheet that included several armed robberies, prison breakouts, auto thefts, kidnappings, and burglaries, and was first arrested at the age of 16.
4. Roosevelt Green Jr. (1976-1985, electric chair): During a robbery of a convenience store, Green kidnapped the clerk, 18 year old Teresa Allen, stole $466 from the cash register, and drove away with his loot and hostage in her car. He then raped Allen, shot her to death, and dumped her body on a dirt road.
5. Van Solomon (1979-1985, electric chair): Solomon and his accomplice Brandon Jones gunned down 29 year old Roger Tackett while robbing a Tenneco store he managed. Ironically, Solomon himself was shot by an assailant robbing his grocery store some years before the murder.
6. John Young (1974-1985, electric chair): Young attacked 6 elderly men and women with bottles, lamps, fireplace pokers, and vases in their homes, across a single neighborhood. 3 of the victims, 85 year old Coleman Brice, his 83 year old wife Gladys, and 83 year old Katie Davis, were beaten to death in the assaults. Several variables such as jewelry and watches were taken as well.
7. Jerome Bowden (1976-1986, electric chair): Bowden and an accomplice stabbed 55 year old Kathryn Stryker to death and gravely wounded her bedridden mother, 76 year old Wessie Jenkins while burglarizing their home. Several items, such a wig, a pellet gun, some jewelry, and a television set was stolen in the intrusion. The television set was sold by Bowden to one of his acquaintances. Jenkins initially survived the attack, but died from complications relating to their injuries after Bowden was indicted for her daughter's murder.
8. Joseph Mulligan (1974-1987, electric chair): As part of a scheme to collect an insurance policy, Mulligan shot his sister's estranged husband, 30 year old Patrick Doe and Doe's girlfriend, 25 year old Marion Miller, while they were driving to a party. Doe was a captain in the United States Army at the time of his death.
  1. Richard Tucker Jr. (~1963-1987, electric chair): In 1963, Tucker stabbed his aunt, 61 year old Annie Armstrong, 14 times with scissors while burglarizing her home. He was released from incarceration in 1978. 6 months after being let out of prison, Tucker abducted 50 year old Edna Sandefur from a hospital parking lot while she was visiting her ill mother, and drove her to a remote warehouse. He robbed and raped Sandefur, and then beat her to death with an iron pipe. Tucker also had previous convictions of burglary and attempted rape.
10. William Tucker (1977-1987, electric chair): Tucker abducted 19 year old Kathleen Parry, a pregnant clerk, while he was robbing a convenience store she was working at. He forced Parry at knifepoint to withdraw money from the cash register, and dragged her into his car. When they drove to a chapel, Tucker stabbed her to death.
11. William Mitchell (1974-1987, electric chair): Mitchell accosted 50 year old Willard Williams while he was walking down a street and mugged him of $4. He then forced Williams to lay down and shot him execution style. In the following day, he held 34 year old Peggy Carr and her 14 year old son Christopher at gunpoint while they were opening their family owned store. Despite Peggy giving him $160, he made rape threats against her and forced the pair into a freezer. Both mother and son were shot several times and left for dead by Mitchell. Christopher died at the scene, while his mother survived her injuries.
12. Timothy McCorquodale (1974-1987, electric chair): McCorquodale and his entourage accused Donna Dixon, a 17 year old runaway, of stealing money from him and giving it to a black pimp that he thought she was having a relationship with. He bombarded Dixon with racist insults and sexual advances as he and his accomplices kidnapped her from a club. After she was taken to McCorquodale’s apartment, Dixon was bound, and repeatedly beaten and raped. They tortured her by cutting her breasts with razor blades, burned her body with cigarette butts and candle wax, and she was violated with a bottle. The abuse ended when McCorquodale broke her arms and legs, and strangled her to death with a clothesline. On death row, McCorquodale escaped with three other inmates, including Troy Gregg of the 1976 Furman vs Gregg infamy. After the group took refuge at a biker bar, McCorquodale beat Gregg to death in a fight with the help of a Outlaws Motorcycle gang member. Days after Gregg's murder, McCorquodale and the other surviving fugitives were recaptured hiding out at an Outlaws Biker's home.
13. James Messer Jr. (1979-1988, electric chair) To get back at his estranged wife for leaving him with their children, Messer kidnapped her niece, 8 year old Rhonda Tanner, while he was picking her up from school. He raped and severely beat Tanner in a forest and stabbed her to death.
14. Henry Willis III (1976-1989, electric chair): Willis and his accomplices abducted a policeman, 29 year old James Giddens, that was dispatched to stop their robbery of a food market. They took the captive officer near a lake, where he tried to escape by jumping into it. Willis and one of his partners shot Giddens dead while he was trying to swim to safety.
15. Warren McCleskey (1978-1991, electric chair): McCleskey robbed a jewelry store at gunpoint, and fired on the responding officers. One of the officers, 30 year old Frank Schlatt was killed in the shooting.
16. Thomas Stevens (1977-1993, electric chair): Stevens and Christopher Burger abducted a fellow soldier, 20 year old Roger Honeycutt, who was also working as a cab driver, when he picked them up from the enlisted men's club on Fort Stewart. Honeycutt was tied up with a cord, robbed of $20, and sodomized repeatedly by both of his captors. The pair then locked Honeycutt in the trunk of the cab, and drove it into a pond as they jumped out. Being unable to escape, Honeycutt drowned as his car sank into the pond's depths.
17. Christopher Burger (1977-1993, electric chair): As mentioned under Thomas Stevens' section, Burger assisted in the robbery, abduction, rape, and murder of Roger Honeycutt.
18. William Hance (1977-1994, electric chair): Hance, a former Marine that transferred himself to the Army, abducted at least 3 women, 32 year old Irene Thirkield, 24 year old Karen Hickman, and 21 year old Gail Jackson. Thrikield and Jackson were black prostitutes and Hickman was a white Marine servicewoman that was stationed in the same base as Hance. They were all raped and beaten to death with jack handles and tire irons. In a misguided attempt to throw off the police and attract media attention, Hance staged a convoluted hoax involving a race war between a gang of white vigilantes and a gang of black counter vigilantes. He tried to pretend that his victims were murdered from retaliatory killings between the two groups. Hance was also suspected in the murder of another woman in Indiana, but was never charged of it.
19. Nicholas Ingram (1983-1995, electric chair): Ingram broke into the home of 55 year old J.C. Sawyer and his wife Mary. He forced them to hand over $60 and their car keys at gunpoint, tied the couple together to a tree, and shot both of them. J.C. was killed, while Mary survived their ordeal. Ingram then stole their car and fled to California. While a fugitive hiding out in California, he committed another carjacking, and ran off to Nebraska, where he was detained for a DUI and deported back to Georgia to face trial. Due to being a British national, Ingram's execution sparked outrage in the United Kingdom.
20. Darrell Devier (1979-1995, electric chair): Devier lured 12 year old Mary Stoner into his car while she was walking home from school. He raped her in a forest, made an attempt to strangle her during their struggle, and crushed Stoner's head with a rock. Months before the murder, Devier was accused of raping a 13 year old girl, but the charges against him were dismissed from the lack of sufficient evidence.
21. Larry Lonchar (1986-1996, electric chair): During a dispute over gambling debts, Lonchar confronted his bookkeeper, 54 year old Wayne Smith, at his condo while pretending to be a FBI agent. In the altercation, he bound Wayne and his 24 year old son Steven with handcuffs, and shot and stabbed them to death. Wayne's girlfriend, 45 year old Margaret Sweat, called 911, and was also shot and stabbed to death while she was on the phone with the dispatcher. Another one of Wayne's sons was attacked in the incident, but he managed to survive his injuries.
22. Ellis Felker (1977-1996, electric chair): Evelyn Ludlam, a 19 year old cocktail waitress for the Holiday Inn, was lured into Flelker's clutches when he promised her work at his leather store. For religious reasons, Ludlam was disaffected with her job, and wanted a new line of work. Felker raped and strangled Ludlam to death and sexually mutilated her body. After he murdered Ludlem, Felker dumped her remains in a creek. He was registered sex offender with a sodomy conviction at the time of Ludlam's death.
23. David Cargill (1985-1998, electric chair): Cargill and his brother stormed a gas station, and forced a couple, 41 year old Danny and 29 year old Cheryl Williams, to lie on the floor. Cheryl was a clerk for the station, and Danny stopped by to help her close down after he put their sons to bed. The brothers shot the couple execution style, and stole a total of $482.79 from the register. They were also involved with several carjackings.
24. Terry Mincey (1982-2001, lethal injection): Mincey and his accomplices robbed a convenience store at gunpoint, and forced the clerk, 38 year old Paulette Riggs to empty the cash register into their bag. They shot her dead, and took 2 teenage siblings hostage that were present in the store. Coincidentally, a firefighter pulled up to the scene to refill his truck, and Mincey shot and wounded him. The siblings took the opportunity to escape and fled into a nearby field.
25. Jose High (1976-2001, lethal injection): High and his accomplices abducted 11 year old Bonnie Bulloch and his stepfather, 27 year old Henry Philips, from a gas station they were operating, after emptying the cash register. The robbers forced the pair into their car, reportedly taunted the captives about their intentions to kill them, and drove to a remote forest. They then shot Bulloch dead and wounded Philips.
26. Fred Gilreath Jr. (1979-2001, lethal injection): Gilreath's wife, 28 year old Linda, moved out of their home to escape their disintegrating marriage. When Linda returned with her father, 57 year old Gerrit Van Leeuwen, to pack up her belongings, Gilreath shot them both dead.
27. Byron Parker (1984-2001, lethal injection): Parker enticed 11 year old Christie Griffith into his car after she missed her taxi that was supposed to take her to her older brother's high school graduation. He bound Griffith to a tree, and raped and strangled her death, while his two year old son was waiting for him in their car.
28. Ronald Spivey (~1961-2002, lethal injection): While playing pool at a bar, Spivey got into a fight with 32 year old Charles McCook over money he perceived to have won, and shot him to death. A day later, he robbed a bank and took hostages. He fatally shot Bill Watson, a 40 year old off duty police officer that tried to stop him, and injured the manager, 21 year old Welton Allen. Allen tried fleeing to a nearby restaurant, and Spivey following him into it in pursuit. He fired on the establishment in an attempt to kill him, but missed and wounded an employee caught in the crossfire. Spivey then kidnapped a waitress and forced her to drive him to Alabama. She was rescued unharmed by local authorities when they pulled over and captured Spivey. A search of the stolen car found that Spivey stole a total of $360 in his robberies. His previous convictions include several counts of forgery, armed robbery, and auto theft.
29. Tracy Housel (1984-2002, lethal injection) Housel was a sexual predator and thief that victimized men and women alike between the ages of 18-45. He worked as a interstate truck driver, and picked up victims that he befriended from stops all across the country. They were driven to isolated locations, where Housel would bind, rob, and sodomize them. His killing methods were diverse and circumstantial, but Housel mostly used strangulations, beatings, and stabbings in the attacks. Housel was convicted in the deaths of Troy Smith (age unknown) and 44 year old Jean Drew, and is suspected in and/or confessed to 15 other murders. He was also responsible for several non fatal assaults and robberies. Like Nicholas Ingram, Housel's death sentence and execution sparked outrage in the United Kingdom due to him being a British national.
30. Wallace Fugate III (1991-2002, lethal injection): Fugate forced himself inside the home of his ex wife, 39 year old Pattie. He pistol whipped Pattie dozens of times and shot her dead in front of their 15 year old son. Unrelated to the case, but that son was beaten to death in the same house by his friends a year after Fugate's conviction.
31. William Putman (1980-2002, lethal injection): Purtman shot and killed 49 year old William Hodges on the side of a highway. Hours later, he snuck up on a married couple, 28 year old Kate Back and 22 year old David Hardin, sleeping at a rest stop in their car with their children (which included a 9 year old daughter, a 7 year old son, and an 11 month old daughter) and 14 year old niece. He shot David dead and tried to abduct Kate. When she resisted and screamed for her husband, Purtman shot her as well and fled the scene.
32. Larry Moon (1984-2003, lethal injection): According to prosecutors, Moon ambushed 34 year old Ricky Callahan while the later was walking to a pharmacy to buy headache medicine for his wife. Callahan was shot in the head during the attack and had $60 taken from his wallet. Moon was also suspected in the shooting deaths of Jimmy Hutcheson (age unknown) and Thomas DeJose (age unknown), several robberies, and the abduction and sexual assault of a female impersonator. The prosecution failed to convict him for the murder of DeJose on the grounds of self defense and the murder of Butcheson on the lack of sufficient evidence. His conviction for Callahan's murder is contested, as Moon and his supporters claim that a late hitman confessed to the killing.
33. Carl Isaacs (~1960s-2003, lethal injection): Isaacs, with the help of two of his brothers and a cellmate, escaped from the Maryland State prison, and fatally shot 19 year old Richard Miller when he tried to stop them from stealing a car. The group drove by a Georgia gas pump in the hopes of refilling their getaway car. However, the pump was empty, and decided to burglarize a nearby trailer belonging to the Alday family (which consisted of brothers, 62 year old Ned and 57 year old Aubrey, Ned's sons, 35 year old Jerry and 32 year old Chester, and Jerry's 26 year old wife Mary) while they were gone. When the family returned home, Isaacs and his accomplices held the entire family at gun point, gang-raped Mary several times, and shot them all dead. Isaacs had a very troubled history, and committed several burglaries and robberies as a teenager.
34. James Brown (~1968-2003, lethal injection): Brown went on a date with Brenda Watson, a 21 year old stripper. After they were drinking and partying together at a bar, Brown tied up Watson with nylon stockings, and raped and asphyxiated her by shoving panties down her throat. He had a long history involving violence towards women. One of his previous convictions involved an incident of him breaking into a woman’s home, and (non fatally) stabbing and sexually assaulting her. Brown also had a warrant at the time of Watson’s murder for aggravated robbery, kidnapping, and sexual assault charges when he lured another woman by posing as an artist in need of a model.
35. Robert Hicks (~1970s-2004, lethal injection): Hicks laid his eyes on 28 year old Joni Rivers while she was talking to her boyfriend using a grocery store payphone. He chased down Rivers when she tried to flee from him and nearly decapitated her in a frenzied stabbing attack. Rivers' shoes, shorts, and ring were taken and found in Hicks' car. Hicks was released from prison months earlier after serving a half of a 15 year sentence for sexually abusing a 16 year old girl.
36. Eddie Crawford (1983-2004, lethal injection): Crawford tried spending the night with one of his estranged wife's sisters after a drinking binge, but she ejected him from her home. Out of anger, he abducted Leslie English, her 2 year old daughter, from the girl's bedroom, and then raped and strangled her to death.
37. Timothy Carr (1992-2005, lethal injection): Carr and his girlfriend attended a party with 17 year old Keith Young. The couple decided that they wanted to rob the boy, and they lured him into a forest with the help of two other teenagers. Carr slit Young's throat, and then proceeded to beat him to death with a baseball bat. He and his accomplices stole a $125 paycheck and Young's car in the robbery.
38. Stephen Mobley (1991-2005, lethal injection): Mobley shot and killed 25 year old John Collins while robbing a Domino's Pizza restaurant he was managing. He had also held up 6 other restaurants and dry-cleaning shops at gunpoint in his month long crime spree.
39. Robert Conklin (~1981-2005, lethal injection): Conklin stabbed his boyfriend, 28 year old George Crooks, in the ear with a screwdriver in their apartment, and dismembered his body. In an attempt to get rid of the remains, he stuffed them in a garbage disposal in their kitchen and a nearby dumpster. At the time of Crooks' murder, Conklin was on parole from a 6 year sentence for armed robbery.
40. John Hightower (1987-2007, lethal injection): While under the influence of cocaine, Hightower shot his wife, 41 year old Dorothy, and his stepdaughters, 22 year old Sandra and 19 year old Evelyn Reaves, to death in their sleep.
41. William Lynd (1988-2008, lethal injection): Lynd got into an argument with his girlfriend, 26 year old Ginger Moore, over a planned vacation and shot her to death. While on the run in Ohio, he tried to hijack a car, and shot the driver, 42 year old Leslie Sharkey, in the process. Sharkey managed to crawl to safety, and notified the authorities of the attack. She died of her injuries a few days after the shooting.
42. Curtis Osborne (1990-2008, lethal injection): Osborne, a career drug dealer, shot his girlfriend's brother, 29 year old Arthur Jones, and Jones' girlfriend, 28 year old Linda Seaborne, dead in argument over money gained from a motorcycle sale. His death sentence was controversial, as Osborne claimed that his attorney denied him a plea bargain for a racist agenda.
43. Jack Alderman (1975-2008, lethal injection): In an attempt to collect a life insurance policy, Alderman beat his wife, 20 year old Barbara, to death with a wench.
44. Robert Newland (1986-2009, lethal injection): Newland went to the apartment of his girlfriend, 27 year old Carol Beatty, after a drinking binge, and tried to kiss her. When she rejected and slapped him, Newland stabbed and disemboweled her alive. Just before she succumbed to her injuries, Beatty used her own blood to identify Newland as her attacker to the first responders.
45. William Mize (1994-2009, lethal injection): Mize was a leader of a white supremacist gang called the National Vastilian Aryan Party, in which 34 year old Eddie Tucker had filed to join. When Tucker disobeyed his orders to burn down a "crack house" as part of an initiation ritual, Mize lured him into a forest and shot him dead.
46. Mark McClain (1994-2009, lethal injection): McClain robbed a Domino pizza parlor after ordering a pizza. He shot the manger, 28 year old Kevin Brown, dead and stole $130 from the register.
47. Melbert Ford Jr. (1986-2010, lethal injection): Ford had a very specific fantasy about robbing, abducting and then murdering his ex girlfriend, 30 year old Martha Matich, after forcing her beg for mercy. He decided to make his fantasies into a reality, and stormed the grocery store she worked at with the help of an accomplice he hired. Ford shot Matich and her niece, 11 year old Lisa Chapman, dead, and stole $579 from the register.
48. Brandon Rhode (1998-2010, lethal injection): Rhode and his accomplice Daniel Lucas broke into a house, and encountered the residents, 37 year old Steven Moss, and his two children, 15 year old Kristin and 11 year old Bryan. Bryan was home alone when the intruders arrived, and tried to fight them off with a baseball bat. Lucas and Rhodes quickly subdued the boy and shot him to death. Kristen and Steven were also shot dead when they returned home. Their bodies were discovered by Gerri, Steven's wife and the children's mother. The pair were career burglars, and previously targeted the Moss home weeks before the massacre.
49. Emmanuel Hammond (~1983-2011, lethal injection): Hammond, his girlfriend, and her cousin spotted 27 year old Julia Love broken down on the side of the road. They dragged her into their car after she declined their offer for a ride. Love was tied up, forced to withdraw $140 from an ATM, and raped. The attackers partially strangled Love and shot her to death in a remote forest. In exchange for having all charges dropped, Hammond's girlfriend agreed to testify against him and her cousin. He tried to hire a fellow inmate to permanently silence her testimony, but was foiled by prison officials. Hammond had numerous previous convictions, but my sources didn't disclose details.
50. Roy Blankenship (1978-2011, lethal injection): Blankenship climbed into a home of 78 year old Sara Bowen after breaking her window. He raped and beat Bowen, and penetrated her with a bottle. She succumbed to a heart attack from the stress of the assault.
51. Andrew DeYoung (1993-2011, lethal injection): Wanting to use their life insurance policies to start his dream business, DeYoung stabbed his parents, 42 year old Gary and 41 year old Kathryn, and his sister, 14 year old Sarah, to death, and unsuccessfully ordered his accomplice to kill his 16 year old brother Nathan. Nathan escaped through a window and went to a neighbor for help.
52. Troy Davis (1988-2011, lethal injection): Davis was sentenced to death for a crime spree involving several robberies, the non fatal shooting of a teenager, and the beating of a homeless man, Troy Young (age unknown). Larry MacPhail, a 27 year old police officer and security guard, was shot and killed when he intervened in an attempt to protect Young. Davis' execution was controversial, as he managed to amass a popular following that believed in his innocence during his time on death row. He previously plead guilty for a carrying concealed weapons charge, and Davis paid a $250 fine as part of a plea agreement to avoid prison time.
53. Andrew Cook (1995-2003, lethal injection): On a random whim, Cook walked up to a couple, 22 year old Grant Hendrickson and 19 year old Michele Cartagena, parked near a lake, and shot them both to death in their car.
54. Marcus Wellons (1989-2014, lethal injection): Wellons took an obsessive sexual interest in his neighbor, 15 year old India Roberts, and began to stalk and harass the girl in an attempt to groom her into a "relationship." At one point, he even pressured his girlfriend's 14 year old son to date her. His illicit pursuit of Roberts alarmed his girlfriend and she tried evicting him from their apartment. With his relationship in shambles, Wellons' behavior escalated beyond the breaking point. After he ransacked his now ex girlfriend's apartment and poured bleach on her clothes, Wellons ambushed and abducted Roberts while she was walking to school. He raped and strangled her to death with a telephone cord.
55. Robert Holsey (~1990s-2014, lethal injection): Holsey shot and killed Will Robinson, a 26 year old Sheriff's Deputy, during a robbery of a convenience store. At the time of the shooting, he was on parole for an armed robbery conviction.
56. Andrew Brannan (~1980s-2015, lethal injection): In 1998, Branner was pulled over for speeding by Kyle Dinkheller, a 22 year old deputy. While Dinkheller was trying to file a citation, Branner became belligerent, pulled an M1 carbine out of his truck, and opened fire. Dinkheller was killed in the shootout, but he managed to wound Branner in his return fire. Branner was a Vietnam combat veteran, and he tried to use PTSD as a defense for the fatal shooting of Dinkheller and previous domestic abuse charges from his ex wife.
57. Warren Hill Jr. (~1985-2015, lethal injection): Hill was given a life sentence when he shot and killed his girlfriend, 18 year old Myra Wright. His sentence escalated to death a few years later when he fatally beat his cellmate, 34 year old Joseph Handspike, with a nailed board. At the time of his own murder, Handspike was also serving a life sentence for shooting and killing a restaurant manager during a robbery.
58. Kelly Gissendaner (1997-2015, lethal injection): Out of a desire to leave their marriage and to collect a life insurance policy, Gissendan assisted her boyfriend in abducting her husband, 30 year old Douglas, from their home. Her boyfriend stabbed Douglas to death, and she set their car on fire to destroy his body. The couple were also charged with attempting to intimidate witnesses during the murder trial.
59.Marcus Johnson (1994-2015, lethal injection): After Johnson picked up 35 year old Angela Sizemore from a bar, he sexually assaulted her with a knife. Sizemore was stabbed 41 times in the attack, and her throat was cut. Her body was found in her car by a man walking his dog hours after the murder.
60. Brian Terrell (~1992-2015, lethal injection): Terrell forged up to $8,000 in checks using 70 year old John Watson's name. Watson, who was seeking a relationship with Terrell's mother, tried to make a deal that he wouldn't pursue any charges if the money was returned to him. According to prosecutors, Terrell broke into Watson's home, and beat and fatally shot him to avoid repaying the money. His execution caused controversy, as the defense attorneys claimed that the footprints at the scene were smaller then his feet, and that he was condemned only by what they perceived to be misused testimony from his cousin (that testified against him in exchange for a plea deal) and a neighbor (who allegedly claimed that they saw "someone else walk out of the home"). Those arguments were shut down by the courts, but embraced by anti death penalty activist groups and outlets. Regardless of his guilt or lack thereof, strong evidence points to him perpetrating similar armed robberies of other homes, and was on parole at the time of Watson's murder.
61. Brandon Jones (1979-2016, lethal injection): Jones was an accomplice to the above mentioned Van Solomon, and participated in the robbery that killed Roger Tackett.
62. Travis Hittson (1993-2016, lethal injection): Hittson, who was serving on the U.S.S. Forrestal, was convinced by a crewmate to kill Conway Utterbeck, a 20 year old fellow sailor, for the thrill of killing. When they were off duty, Hittson and his accomplice walked into the home of Herbeck's parents, and found Herbeck sleeping on the couch. Before they shot him to death, the pair bludgeoned Herbeck with a baseball bat. To prevent the body's identification, they chopped off his hands, feet, and head with a hacksaw, and dumped his dismembered remains in two separate burial sites across a 300 mile radius.
63. Joshua Bishop (1994-2016, lethal injection): Bishop and another man accosted 44 year old Leverett Morrison at a bar, and demand to have the keys to his jeep. When Morrison refused, the pair beat him to death. Bishop also orchestrated the beating death of 36 year old Ricky Wills for having intercourse with his prostitute mother. The prosecution declined to charge Bishop for Willis' murder, as they wanted to use it as evidence to help secure his death sentence for Morrison's slaying.
64. Kenneth Fults (1996-2016, lethal injection): Fults forced his way inside the home of 19 year old Cathy Bonds. He bound, gagged, and blindfolded Bonds with duct tape, and made an attempt to smother her with a pillow. When that failed, Fults shot Bonds in the head, stole her keys, and drove away with her car.
65. Daniel Lucas (1998-2016, lethal injection): Lucas was the accomplice to the above mentioned Brandon Rhode, and he assisted him in murdering Steven Moss and his children in their home.
66. John Conner (1982-2016, lethal injection): In a drunken rage, Connor beat his friend, 29 year old James White, to death with a whisky bottle and a stick while visiting him in his home. The two had gotten in fight when White refused to take Connor to a liquor store.
67. Gregory Lawler (1997-2016, lethal injection): Lawler and his girlfriend were walking home intoxicated after drinking heavily at a bar, and got into a fight. A witness called the police, and officers, 28 year old John Sowa and 38 year old Patricia Cocciolone, were sent to the scene. They carried Lawler's girlfriend to their car, and drove her to the couple's apartment. Lawler was allowed to walk home unescorted. When he arrived, Lawler grabbed an AR-15, and fired on the officers. Sowa was killed, while Cocciolone survived with crippling injuries and called for backup. The other officers besieged Lawler in his apartment, and he surrendered after a 44 minute standoff.
68. Steven Spears (2001-2016, lethal injection): Spears suspected that his girlfriend, 34 year old Sherri Holland, was cheating on him. He reacted to his suspicions by wrapping Holland's head with duct tape and suffocating her with a plastic bag in her home.
69. William Sallie (1989-2016, lethal injection): Sallie's ex wife, 19 year old Robin Moore, divorced him for his physical abuse and moved back to her family (consisting of her parents, 49 year old John and Linda (age unknown), and her siblings, 17 year old April and 10 year old Justin). He was able to acquire visitation rights to their 2 year old son from the courts, and used that pretext to attack the family. Sallie charged into the Moore family home, shot and killed John, wounded Linda and bound her to Justin with handcuffs, and kidnapped Robin and April. The sisters were both kept captive and sexually assaulted together in a trailer, but they were spared and released after a few hours.
70. J. Ledford Jr. (1992-2017, lethal injection): Ledford was welcomed inside a home by the wife of his neighbor, 73 year old Harry Johnston Jr.. He tied up the couple at knifepoint, stole an undisclosed amount of money and guns, kidnapped Johnston, and drove away with him in his truck. Johnston's body was later found near an abandoned building. He was half decapitated, had a knife embedded in his back, and covered with several minor stab wounds.
71. Carlton Gary (~1964-2018, lethal injection): Gary raped and murdered at least 8 mostly elderly women between 40-89 years old. Almost all of his victims were killed in their homes, but his youngest, 40 year old Marion Fisher of New York, was abducted while walking out of a bar. They were all strangled to death with nylon stockings, which is why Gary was given the “Stocking Slayer" epithet by the media. Despite the overwhelming evidence to the contrary, including positive DNA tests, testimonies from surviving victims, fingerprints found on crime scenes, and semen samples, Gary still has a vocal following trying to proclaim his innocence. He had an extensive criminal history, which started with several arson, assault, and robbery charges as a teenager.
72. Robert Butts Jr. (1996-2018, lethal injection): Butts and his accomplice Marion Wilson carjacked Donovan Parks, a 24 year old off duty correctional officer, after he agreed to give them a ride home from Walmart. They forced Parks to exit the car and the shot him in the head execution style. Both Butts and Wilson were part of a Latin Kings set, and are believed to have killed Parks to gain more prestige from their gang. Butt's previous convictions include charges of shoplifting and burglary.
73. Scotty Morrow (1999-2019, lethal injection): Angry that his ex girlfriend, 26 year old Barbara Young, broke up with him for his abusive behavior, Morrow shot her, and her friend, 21 year old Tonya Wood, dead in their home. A third woman, 18 year old Latoyna Horn, was injured in the shooting. Young's two children, a 5 year old son and an 8 month old daughter, witnessed the killings, but were unharmed.
74. Marion Wilson Jr. (1999-2019, lethal injection): Wilson assisted Robert Butts, a fellow Latin King gangster, in the carjacking and shooting murder of officer Donovan Parks. He had a lengthy and very violent criminal history, which included the non fatal shootings of a Mexican migrant worker and a drug dealer during robberies, unprovoked assaults on a classmate and a youth worker, and an arson attack on an apartment complex. His friends noted that Wilson had a penchant for animal cruelty, and they reported seeing him shooting dogs on random whims.
75. Ray Cromartie (1994-2019, lethal injection): While robbing a grocery store, Cromartie and his accomplice shot two clerks, 50 year old Richard Slysz and Daniel Wilson (age unknown). Slysz died at the scene and Wilson survived with crippling injuries.
76. Donnie Lance (~1990s-2020, lethal injection): Lance broke down the door of his ex wife's, 39 year old Sandra, and fatally shot her boyfriend, 33 year old Dwight Wood Jr.. He then used the butt of his gun to club Sandra to death. According to court documents, Lance subjected Sandra to extreme abuse during their marriage, and reportedly kidnapped and tortured her with beatings, strangulations, and electrocutions on numerous occasions.
77. Willie Pye (~1985-2024, lethal injection): Pye's ex girlfriend, 21 year old Alicia Yarbrough, had a child with another man that he believed was his. Despite his suspicions, Yarbrough and their boyfriend pushed Pye out of the child’s life. In retaliation, Pye and two accomplice’s broke into Yarbrough’s ex boyfriend’s home to rob it, but found her alone with her infant. They abducted and robbed Yarbrough of her jewelry at gunpoint, raped her for several hours in a motel room, and shot her a total of 3 times in the head. Due to reports of him allegedly being cognitively disabled, Pye’s execution sparked some controversy. He was previously convicted of burglary.
submitted by Leather_Focus_6535 to TrueCrimeDiscussion [link] [comments]


2024.04.29 12:10 TheShadowspawn Volume 2: Chapter One Hundred & Thirteen - Therapy Part 2

Human Dave glares groggily at his holo-display through squinted eyes, which shows the face of Commander Beckett, who appears well-rested, and eager to speak to Human Dave.
Human Dave: "... this couldn't wait until the waking hours, Sir?"
Commander Beckett: "Doesn't feel good being woken up this early, does it, Anders?"
HD: "Ugh. I get it. I won't call you when it's this late ever again, Commander."
CB: "... anyway, how are you feeling?"
HD: "Well, I was very happily sleeping after dealing with the point defence systems, since some of them decided that they had enough after 60 years of no maintenance. And then, the damn Nutripaste Dispenser AI decided to ask for a complete overhaul of the internal systems, which I also worked on, despite our differences."
Human Dave sighs heavily, and runs a hand through his hair; briefly stopping when his fingers get caught in his hair, and tug at his scalp, before untangling them from his hair.
HD: "But then, I got a call from a very important person who couldn't seem to wait until the waking hours to contact me."
CB: "Well, we needed to talk about the alliance you've managed to get for us, and Terran High Command has 'requested' all relevant information regarding what exactly you did to broker this arrangement."
HD: "... just Terran High Command, huh?"
CB: "... fine. Terran Space Force has all but demanded that they get priority for weapons from the greatest weaponsmiths in the galaxy. Not to mention every damn authority in the galaxy now salivating at the thought of allying with the one species that actually managed to broker an alliance with Sartellia, not just a working relationship like the Galactic Community has got."
HD: "I sent you the damn recording, as well as an extremely detailed written report. How much more do you want?"
CB: "Terran High Command wants everything. Every single impression you had of the experience, every single thing you felt and saw on the planet, every little bit of information you can possibly recall from the moment you set foot on the planet."
HD: "... you want me to give you a report on my feelings?"
CB: "Sartellia is the only place in the galaxy that is capable of producing Sartellian Steel. Terran High Command wants absolutely every advantage they can get their hands on."
Commander Beckett takes a breath, then sighs lightly before rubbing his eyes.
CB: "Plus, I do blame you for the past few sleepless nights that I've had to take to get everything ready to announce to all of Terra that you've, once again, forged yet another alliance with a powerhouse that could set us forward by another hundred years almost solely in weapons technology; not to mention every other possible avenue of advancement."
HD: "Don't you have a First Officer to do that for you?"
CB: "Stream is a good kid. A little green, and far too eager to please, but this is a bit too big for him to handle."
HD: "What's he like? Stream, I mean. You didn't say much about him."
CB: "First Officer Amadeus Stream. Graduated top marks from the Academy. He's a pathological people pleaser, or so he'd have you think."
Commander Beckett taps on his holo-display, and Human Dave receives a request to switch to an encrypted channel.
Human Dave looks questioningly at Commander Beckett, and accepts the request.
CB: "I'm almost certain he's been planted on board to keep an eye on things, but I'm not sure by who yet."
HD: "Who would want to keep an eye on the Trailblazer? I mean, I get it. It's the flagship for humanity, and the most powerful vessel made by humans, but it's a bit much to think that anyone in authority would go so far as to plant a spy, let alone one in such a prominent position."
CB: "True. Can't help but feel a nagging suspicion about it, though."
HD: "Next you're gonna tell me he was responsible for the mess on the Trailblazer as well."
CB: "I highly doubt that. No one could have anticipated exactly what happened there, let alone controlled those things."
HD: "You still haven't told me what happened. I do remember you saying you'd tell me later, but you never got around to it."
CB: "... I don't want to think about it. I'll just say it was bad enough that I'm seeing a therapist to help me come to terms with it."
Human Dave stares at the image of Commander Beckett with a shocked expression.
HD: "... the great Commander Beckett going to therapy? Now I've seen everything."
CB: "... stupid of me to think I'd get sympathy from you of all people, Anders."
HD: "This is a big deal, Commander! You didn't go to therapy when you got divorced! You outright rejected the very idea of therapy when your kids wanted to try and reconcile with you, and now, you've done a complete 180 on it."
CB: "Ex-wife didn't kill my crew when she was divorcing me."
HD: "The job was your life, Sir. No one told you to neglect your personal life in favour of us."
CB: "You guys needed a competent commanding officer. I could see the job slowly killing you all, and did everything I could to help all of you get through it alive."
HD: "Sir, you're a workaholic. Have you even taken any time for yourself after whatever happened to make you go to therapy?"
CB: "Haven't had time, Anders."
HD: "Well, make time, Sir. You need time to grieve, as well as get your head on straight. Why do you think I went and signed up as a mechanic and engineer?"
CB: "... remind me again how that worked out for you?"
HD: "It's a Hell of a lot better than the wetwork I had to do when I was a Specialist. And yes, there are some bits of this job that I'd rather not have gone through, but I wouldn't change any of it!"
CB: "How's the therapist, by the way?"
HD: "Still having it twice a week, Sir. As it turns out, I've got a lot to unpack."
CB: "As the one who was with you for most of that, I'm not surprised in the slightest. I'm just stunned that you didn't go to therapy long before now."
HD: "Getting over the drinking was an issue, as well as the guilt. I mean, I know it wasn't my fault, but..."
CB: "You still blame yourself for what happened to her."
HD: "It was my fault that she was even there, Sir. If I hadn't requested support..."
CB: "You'd be dead if you didn't. And I'd have to put up with her whinging instead of yours."
HD: "... I don't whinge, Commander."
CB: "Sure you don't. And I do recall telling you dating one of your co-workers would end badly."
HD: "Wish I'd listened."
CB: "You don't mean that."
HD: "... no, I don't. It just eats away at me thinking about it. The end result of the mission wasn't worth losing over half the squad."
CB: "That's why I quit the position and left with you. The intel we got was spotty at best, and they still sent you in, knowing that you were going in blind."
HD: "... looks like we both have a few things to unpack, Sir."
CB: "You really have a gift for understatement, Anders."
HD: "I'm surprised you only learned about it now, Sir. We've been working together for years."
CB: "I suppose you don't actually talk like this to your therapist, do you?"
HD: "I try, but he doesn't make it easy."
CB: "Good. Glad someone can make you act somewhat professionally, even if it is for a little while."
HD: "God forbid I actually talk professionally. He just has a way of getting under my skin. Doesn't actually say anything I don't know about already, but it is a bit confronting having him practically reading my mind."
CB: "I know the feeling. He's very good at what he does."
HD: "... please don't tell me you got the same therapist that I have."
CB: "You practically strong-armed me into getting therapy. So, why wouldn't I choose the same one that's helping you?"
HD: "I just suggested you talk to someone. Never told you to choose my therapist."
CB: "He's a professional, and comes recommended for people like us. War veterans and the like. People who've been in combat situations and haven't been able to cope after the fighting stops."
HD: "... you don't see this as a sort of invasion of privacy?"
CB: "Why would it be? We don't talk about you, Anders. I have my own stuff to deal with, and you have yours. There's no conflict of interest here. And besides, there's nothing that says we can't have the same therapist. It would actually be easier on him if he were familiar with both of us, since we've both gone through similar things, just from different sides."
HD: "I don't recall you working for the Peacekeepers."
CB: "You know what I mean. Same side, different perspectives, and all that."
The conversation is interrupted by Captain, who sticks his head into Human Dave's quarters.
Alien Captain: "Ah. My apologies, Human Dave. I was not aware that you were taking a call."
HD: "That's alright, Captain. I think we're about done here anyway."
CB: "True. Just remember to send that report ASAP."
HD: "... yes, Sir."
The holo-call cuts out, and Human Dave turns back to face Captain again.
HD: "What did you need, Captain?"
AC: "Doctor was wondering when you were coming. She is eager to start the movie nights again, and has been waiting for some time already."
HD: "Oh, I totally forgot. Did you guys decide on what you wanted to watch?"
AC: "Doctor mentioned that she wanted some context regarding aquatic creatures of your cradle-world, whereas Quartermaster requested to continue that extremely lengthy fantasy series with the many subspecies of humans."
Human Dave chuckles to himself.
HD: "Never would have taken Quartermaster as a fan of Tolkien, but to each their own. What movie did Doctor choose? You said aquatic animals?"
AC: "I believe that the title was 'Jaws?' Doctor stated that it looked like an informational film. If it is titled after a piece of anatomy, would it not teach the audience about the rest of the creature?"
HD: "... sure. Jaws does teach a bit about anatomy, but it might be a bit confronting, since it does show at times the kinds of damage those jaws can inflict, but you should learn plenty about the anatomy of a shark by the end of it."
AC: "What is a 'shark?'"
...
Captain, Doctor, and Quartermaster sit speechless as the end credits roll.
Doctor turns to face Human Dave, which causes Minnie to slip off of her lap.
Alien Doctor: "Human Dave."
HD: "Yes, Doctor?"
AD: "I was under the assumption that this would be an informational film."
AC: "As was I."
HD: "... are you saying that you guys didn't learn anything from it?"
Quartermaster: "That is beside the point, Human Dave. Why did you not mention the fact that this film was of the horror genre?!"
HD: "Well, technically speaking, it's a thrilleadventure film."
AD: "Semantics, Human Dave! How long were you going to maintain this deception?"
HD: "Well, it wouldn't have been for very long. You'd all have figured it out pretty quickly once the movie began, and, what would have happened if I had told you guys it was a scary movie? Would you just have refused to watch it, or would your curiosity have gotten the better of you?"
QM: "... personally, I would have preferred the sequel to the fantasy series."
HD: "We'd still be watching it if we chose that one. There's, like 6 movies in that series, and every one of those movie are very long. It's good to have some variety in the kinds of things we watch, I think. Besides, you all didn't hear me complain when you wanted to go through all those martial arts films and TV series'."
AC: "You had complaints with those films, Human Dave?"
HD: "Well, no, but I have seen them all before, since I'm something of a fan of that genre, and knew you guys would all want to watch after I hyped up Bruce Lee a while back."
AD: "... I still prefer Donnie Yen."
HD: "Regardless of Doctor's sexual preferences--"
AD, interrupting: "My what?"
HD: "You heard me. Regardless of all that, did you not learn things from those movies and TV shows?"
AC: "I will admit that they were informative. Especially as they have solidified my resolve to never enter the oceans of your cradle-world, Human Dave."
HD: "Sharks aren't supposed to grow that big. They only made it that way for the movie. But I wouldn't recommend any of the sequels from the series."
Human Dave chuckles to himself.
HD: "None of the sequel films did well. They tried, but they could replicate the success of the first one. Besides, it's only one creature in the oceans that you know about. At least you didn't ask about any of the Piranha movies."
AC: "What is a piranha?"
...
Human Therapist: "It's been a little while since we last spoke, Mr Anders. Anything new to tell me?"
HD: "Well, I may have traumatised the Cradelians on board by showing them a movie that had a lot of dangerous aquatic creatures in it."
HT: "Aquatic creatures? Please don't tell me you subjected them to one of those awful sharks in tornadoes films."
HD: "No. It was Jaws, actually."
HT: "A classic. Nice choice."
HD: "It was actually Doctor who chose it. She didn't know it was a scary movie; she thought it was a documentary style movie that was meant to teach people about sharks."
HT: "Well, I assume they learned something?"
HD: "Yeah. Apparently, Captain doesn't ever want to go into Earth's oceans."
HT: "That is understandable. There is much within the oceans that is still unknown to us surface dwellers. And the Deep Humans can only explore so much."
HD: "... I wasn't going to mention it before, but you've changed the way you talk in a big way."
HT: "A conversation point from your former Commander. You tend to take things easy, so I am attempting to match your enthusiasm and drive. It makes it easier for you to let your guard down, and truly speak what is on your mind."
HD: "... isn't there meant to be some form of confidentiality between your patients?"
HT: "Yes. And I have not broken that confidentiality, Mr Anders. Anything I learn from a single patient is meant to be confidential, and I have not disclosed any information between myself and Commander Beckett to you, other than his understanding of you."
HD: "... still seems a bit suspicious."
HT: "Do you have a better understanding of Commander Beckett's issues than before our conversation started?"
HD: "... no, not really. I would like to think I know him well, but I haven't really tried to get to know his problems or anything yet. Especially whatever he went through lately. He's been tight-lipped about it."
HT: "If I were to comment on that, it would be a breach of doctopatient confidentiality. All I will say in regards to this is that it was bad enough that a workaholic war veteran decided that therapy was the best course of action to deal with his situation."
HD: "... well, at least he never used drinking to cope with it."
HT: "Speaking of, how long has it been since you have imbibed alcohol?"
HD: "Close to a year now. I know, I know, I shouldn't have done it, but I needed to unwind, and it was very early on when I started working with Captain. I was in an unfamiliar situation, for away from everything that I knew and was accustomed to, so I decided that I needed a drink."
HT: "Did any of your past issues affect your experience with the alcohol?"
HD: "Not really. It's horrible of me to say this, but I think about it less and less now."
HT: "No one gets over the death of a loved one easily, Mr Anders. Especially one you worked alongside so closely."
HD: "It wasn't just her. Practically the entire squad died because I couldn't do what I had to."
HT: "From the reports I received, it seemed a situation that no singular person would have been able to resolve. And, from what I recall, infiltration was your mission, not open combat. It was the primary reason why you were chosen for the mission."
HD: "Doesn't make it any easier."
HT: "Specialists are a rare breed. They focus on a single aspect, and master that to such an extent that it would be unreasonable to expect anyone else to be able to measure up to the same standards. And you specialised in infiltration, which made you uniquely suited for the mission."
Human Dave cradles his head in his hands, and remains silent.
HT: "I know that you went through an unreasonable amount of training after the mission ended, and tried to master everything else, but Specialists are not meant to be masters of every situation. You are not synthetics. Nor are you robots. You are people like any other; just with more survival skills than everyone else."
HD: "..."
HT: "You are not actively forgetting about them, are you?"
HD: "No!"
HT: "You are thinking about them less, though, yes?"
HD: "... yes."
HT: "And you feel it is a disservice to them? That you thinking about them less often means you are dishonouring their memory?"
HD: "... I don't know; maybe?"
HT: "... how do you think she would feel if she saw you like this?"
HD: "... she'd probably kick my arse, and tell me to get over myself."
HT: "And the rest of the squad?"
HD: "... they'd probably drag me to my feet, and push me to keep moving until I was okay."
HT: "Do you think that you are dishonouring their memories if you could say what you just said with as much certainty as you did?"
Human Dave looks up at the therapist with confusion.
HT: "You remember them. To the extent that you would be able to determine exactly how they would react to your current state. This is not dishonouring their memories. This is you remembering every one of them, and acknowledging that they will always be a part of you."
HD: "... as far as words go, those were kind of cheesy."
HT: "They made you feel better, did they not?"
HD: "... they did. A bit, at least."
HT: "Inevitably, the best words are the ones you cling to when life gets difficult."
HD: "Sounds profound. Who said that?"
HT: "I did."
HD: "No, really. Who said it?"
HT: "Is it so hard to believe that I could come up with it?"
HD: "I mean, maybe? I don't know. It sounded good, so I thought you might have taken it from someone else."
HT: "Therapists generally have decent amounts of wisdom, after having seen just how people are capable of thinking. Plus, some of us have experience seeing the worst sides of humanity, so we tend to be somewhat eccentric, wich contributes to that wisdom."
HD: "I guess so."
HT: "Now that I mention it, I do have another appointment in about 5 minutes, so we'll have to pick it up from here next time."
HD: "Okay. I'll talk to you later, then."
HT: "Until next time, Mr Anders."
The holo-display disappears from in front of Human Dave, and he sighs in relief, after leaning back into the chair in his quarters.
His body had become tense from maintaining the same position for too long, and does not protest the movement.
HD, to himself: "It's hard to think about it. I guess that's why I don't."
Human Dave stands up, and digs through his photo albums, until he finds the one that isn't labelled.
Human Dave opens the album, turns to a specific page, and just stares at a particular photo.
The photo is one with many people staring back out at him.
The focus of the photograph is a younger version of Human Dave with his arms wrapped around a young human female.
The pair are surrounded by many other humans, all wearing combat fatigues, and smiling for the camera.
Human Dave chuckles a bit, and runs his fingers over the image of the woman beside his younger self.
HD: "Doesn't mean that I don't miss you every day, Hayley."
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submitted by TheShadowspawn to u/TheShadowspawn [link] [comments]


2024.04.26 16:45 entrelineas_org Asa Carter decía que el rock tiene carácter sexual, inmoral y era el mejor camino para fusionar ambas razas #Ángeles #JackChick #Amusia #Racismo #Comunismo #Beatles #JimmySwaggart #Stryper #DavidWilkerson #JeffGodwin #JohnTodd

Asa Carter decía que el rock tiene carácter sexual, inmoral y era el mejor camino para fusionar ambas razas #Ángeles #JackChick #Amusia #Racismo #Comunismo #Beatles #JimmySwaggart #Stryper #DavidWilkerson #JeffGodwin #JohnTodd submitted by entrelineas_org to incredulos [link] [comments]


2024.04.25 18:35 random_name1928 Grieving for Jimmy Swaggart on Letterboxd

Just wanted to make any other movie nerds aware that Lingy's Grieving for Jimmy Swaggart shorts have been added to Letterboxd. brb gotta make them my top 4.
https://letterboxd.com/actokristin-hayte
submitted by random_name1928 to LinguaIgnota [link] [comments]


2024.04.25 11:22 rditty Ozzy Osbourne - Miracle Man [Metal] ; a diss track about Jimmy Swaggart, an American TV evangelist, long time critic of Osbourne, and solicitor of prostitutes.

submitted by rditty to Music [link] [comments]


2024.04.25 06:24 billystack Jimmy Swaggart’s Metallica Themed Font (catch and release; hard pass; who copied who)

Jimmy Swaggart’s Metallica Themed Font (catch and release; hard pass; who copied who)
‘S
submitted by billystack to ThriftStoreHauls [link] [comments]


2024.04.20 22:05 Torisaursky Found this template and thought it would be fun to share my thoughts :P

Found this template and thought it would be fun to share my thoughts :P
Worst Episode: “The Weird World of Wyrm”. I hate this episode with a passion and idk what it is that makes me hate it so much lol
Best Ship: 1987 Shredder and Krang, they were intentionally played like an old married couple and James Avery said they got divorced after the series ended, so it’s practically canon lol /hj
Least Favorite Iteration: Choujin Densetsu Hen, the two-episode anime. It’s bad. The more mainstream answer for me would be Next Mutation, but I still adore that absolutely mess show of a series lol
Best Duo: Bebop & Rocksteady, IDW is my favorite adaptation of them with the Bayverse versions as a close second
Favorite Episode: This was a hard choice because there are so many phenomenal episodes across the nearly 550 that exist, but I decided on “Hidden City’s Most Wanted” from Rise of the TMNT, it’s a super wholesome and funny episode
Worst Fanon Ship: Quick explanation, a lot of Rise fans ship Rise Leo or Rise Donnie with Yuichi Usagi from the Netflix series “Samurai Rabbit: The Usagi Chronicles”. I personally enjoy both of those ships, but some people ship them at the same time such that Usagi would be with Leo and Donnie at the same time, which to me is borderline T-cest (which is a huge issue in some parts of the fandom already, including some people who worked on Rise)
Opposite of Me: 2012 Shredder. I’m a very forgiving person that doesn’t hold a grudge, which is the antithesis of his entire character lol
Least Favorite Character: Lord Dregg, he already annoyed me in 2012 but I hated him in 1987. He replaced the icons that are Shredder and Krang and generally wasn’t a compelling antagonist
Most Relatable: Donatello in general, but mostly Batman Vs TMNT Donnie and Rise Donnie
Best Fanon Ship: Jonatello in 2012, the dumbass x genius trope is really fun and “Race with the Demon” is one of my favorite episodes because of how fun their dynamic is
Favorite Mutant: Hob, easily. He’s my favorite character in the IDW continuity is and is genuinely one of the best characters in the franchise
Favorite Iteration: The 4 animated series are all really close, but I gotta go with 1987. It’s absolutely delightful, hilarious, and goofy in the best possible way. Saturday Morning Adventures has been a fantastic continuation of the series as well
Favorite Character: 1987 Shredder, I love this man so much
Favorite Ninja Turtle: In a general sense Donatello is my favorite, but my one specific favorite turtle is 2003 Mikey
Favorite Human: 1987 Shredder, but that’s because he’s my favorite character overall, so I’ll give it to Harold Lillja. Cranky old man that befriends Donatello, what more do you need?
Worst Design: There’s a lot of rough designs in Back to the Sewer, but Raph got it the worst. First of all, he looks the worst with the irises, and second the Green Mantle design is atrocious (as is the episode in general)
Best Design: This one was also difficult because of how many phenomenal designs there are throughout the franchise, but I ended up picking the Rise boys’ designs. They’re so distinct and fun and play with shapes in a way that we don’t see with other iterations as often
Least Favorite Human: White-washed Shredder. What else is there to say?
Least Favorite Ninja Turtle: Next Mutation Leo, he’s kind of insufferable. Leonardo also generally tends to be my least favorite of the turtles, even when his characterization is fantastic
Who I’d Want to Befriend: Angel Bridge, she reminds me of my sister who is my favorite person in the world
Favorite Headcanon: Every Donatello being autistic, I specifically picked 1987 Donnie because he sort of serves as a jumping off point for other iterations. Rise Donnie is canonically autistic, which makes me very happy
Worst Ship: Leorai. Karai is literally their sister. Even if they aren’t blood related, they both see Splinter as their father and he sees them as his children. Mikey literally calls Karai “our sister” in the show.
Least Favorite Mutant: 2012 Pigeon Pete. Compared to the gem that is IDW Pigeon Pete, this man is insufferable. Plus his design is weird
Worst Duo: I hate what they did with both April and Casey in the Michael Bay films, so they made the most sense here
Favorite Enemy: 2003 Bishop, this man is such a cool antagonist and I wish he was adapted well in more iterations
submitted by Torisaursky to TMNT [link] [comments]


2024.04.09 14:17 ChanseySquad Niles was completely wrong about the stake out!

In the episode Hot Pursuit. he convinces Martin not to take photos of the guy commiting adultery for Donny. This was weird because his own reasoning was what if the cheating was gonna make him a better husband? Now the wife doesn't know for sure that he is cheating so she has to continue getting cheated on, plus now it's harder for her to get anything out of the divorce because she doesn't have proof of adultery. Also it's weird because Martin already committed to doing it but flaked and went back on his word to Donny, which seems so out of character.
Maybe I've seen this show to many times that I'm nitpicking but it always struck me as weird that Niles was so concerned for the cheater and not at all about the poor wife, especially since Maris cheated.
submitted by ChanseySquad to Frasier [link] [comments]


2024.04.07 19:45 entrelineas_org La presión que iniciaron los predicadores norteamericanos como Jimmy Swaggart habrí­a sido inútil sin la ayuda de polí­ticos como Tipper Gore #OzzyOsbourne #OzzyOsbourne #BlackSabbath #Catolicismo #Terror #Satanismo #Suicidio #JimmySwaggart #Religion #Polemica #Muerte

La presión que iniciaron los predicadores norteamericanos como Jimmy Swaggart habrí­a sido inútil sin la ayuda de polí­ticos como Tipper Gore #OzzyOsbourne #OzzyOsbourne #BlackSabbath #Catolicismo #Terror #Satanismo #Suicidio #JimmySwaggart #Religion #Polemica #Muerte submitted by entrelineas_org to incredulos [link] [comments]


2024.03.31 04:25 Responsible_Tea7466 Rise Of The TMNT Episode Order

After looking everywhere online and not finding a correct viewing order for the show, I created my own after rewatching the series. The list is mainly structured on keeping the continuity consistent throughout the episodes and evenly spreading out spotlight episodes (Character appearances, locatons, etc) if possible.
I'm confident that the first half of season 1 are in a suitable order, but the second half is more likely inconsistent in its continuity. Season 2 stays exactly the same aside from switching two episodes' places. Leave any comments if you notice continuity errors with this list.
Season 1: 26 Episodes
Ep 1: Mystic Mayhem
Ep 2: Origami Tsunami/Donnie's Gifts
Ep 3: War And Pizza/Down With The Sickness
Ep 4: Newsworthy/Minotaur Maze
Ep 5: Repo Mantis/Hypno! Part Deux!
Ep 6: The Fast And The Furriest/Mascot Melee
Ep 7: Bug Busters
Ep 8: Shell In A Cell/The Longest Fight
Ep 9: The Gumbus/Mrs Cuddles
Ep 10: Portal Jacked!/Stuck on You
Ep 11: The Purple Jacket/Pizza Pit
Ep 12: Smart LaiHot Soup: The Game
Ep 13: The Evil League Of Mutants
Ep 14: Late Fee/Bullhop
Ep 15: Sparring PartneAl Be Back
Ep 16: Mind Meld/Nothing But Truffle
Ep 17: The Purple Game/You Got Served
Ep 18: The Mutant Menace/Mystic Library
Ep 19: Shadow Of Evil
Ep 20: Man Vs SeweWarren And Hypno, Sitting In A Tree
Ep 21: Turtle-Dega Nights: The Ballad Of Rat Man/One Man's Junk
Ep 22: The Ancient Art Of Hide And Seek/Operation Normal
Ep 23: Snow Day/How To Make Enemies And People Bend To Your Will
Ep 24: Cloak And Swaggart/Jupiter Jim Ahoy!
Ep 25: Insane In The Mama Train
Ep 26: Endgame
Season 2:
Ep 27: Many Unhappy Returns
Ep 28: Todd Scouts/Goyles, Goyles, Goyles
Ep 29: Flushed But Never Forgotten/Lair Games
Ep 30: Breaking Purple/Repairin' The Baron
Ep 31: Air Turtle/Pizza Puffs
Ep 32: Sidekick Ahoy!/Always Be Brownies
Ep 33: Hidden City Job/Mystery Meat
Ep 34: Donnie Vs Witch Town/Raph's Ride Along
Ep 35: Hidden City's Most Wanted/Bad Hair Day
Ep 36: Fists Of Furry/The Clothes Don't Make The Turtles
Ep 37: Battle Nexus: New York
Ep 38: E-Turtle Sunshine Of The Spotless Mind/Shreddy Or Not
Ep 39: Anatawa Hitorijanai/Rise
Here's an alternate version of the first season's second half:
Ep 14: Late Fee/Bullhop
Ep 15: Mind Meld/Nothing But Truffle
Ep 16: Portal Jacked!/The Mutant Meance
Ep 17: Shadow Of Evil
Ep 18: The Purple Game/Operation Normal
Ep 19: Man Vs SeweWarren And Hypno, Sitting In A Tree
Ep 20: Sparring PartneTurtle-Dega Nights: The Ballad Of Rat Man
Ep 21: You Got Served/The Ancient Art Of Hide And Seek
Ep 22: Mystic Library/How To Make Enemies And People Bend To Your Will
Ep 23: Cloak And Swaggart/One Man's Junk
Ep 24: Snow Day/Jupiter Jim Ahoy!
Ep 25: Insane In The Mama Train
Ep 26: Endgame

If anyone wants an explanation as to why these episodes are ordered this way:
The 22-minute episodes are made to be spread out evenly (Ep 1, 7, 13, 19, 25, 26); there'll usually 10 episodes/five 22-minute episodes divided into two segments between each special.
In Bug Busters, as Big Mama talks about the recent mutants, a screen of all the mutant from previous episodes are shown; therefore, Donnie's Gifts, Newsworthy, Repo Mantis, and Mascot Melee are definitely before Bug Busters.
Throughout Ep 8 - Ep 12, we're introduced to the Foot Dudes collecting pieces of Dark Armor. Those episodes will be spread out for consistency in their appearances.
I've binge watched the second half so this'll be far more inconsistent:
Every episode below, I can confirm, comes after Shadow Of Evil; conveniently, there's enough episodes to make up 5 22-minute episodes. The Dark Armor can be seen being reconstructed each episode in each appearance; thoroughly looking at the armor led to this order of the Dark Armor episodes: Warren & Hypno, Sitting In A Tree or One Man's Junk => Operation Normal => How To Make Enemies And People Bend To Your Will (The Dark Armor piece collected in W&H, Sitting In A Tree, from what I've seen, did not make a difference to the Dark Armor's appearance.)
Season 2 basically stays the same. Not many changes need to be made as the continuity stay fairly consistent - aside from a few lines here and there. The only change I made was placing Always Be Brownies after Sidekick Ahoy! because of variety sakes for the character appearances - Always Be Brownies is the only episode where the turtles aren't present (My head canon for this is that the turtles spent the whole day binging Jupiter Jim movies, as seen in the start of Sidekick Ahoy!, explaining why they didn't help April with selling cookies.)

I also compiled an episode order based off of TMNTpedia's listed production codes because the episodes on the wiki are structured by broadcast order rather than production codes. The viewing order is definitely incorrect, and mostly just changes season 1's order:
Season 1: 26 Episodes
Ep 1: Mystic Mayhem
Ep 2: Newsworthy/War And Pizza
Ep 3: Origami Tsunami/Donnie's Gifts
Ep 4: Minotaur Maze/Down With The Sickness
Ep 5: Repo Mantis/Mascot Melee
Ep 6: The Fast And The Furriest/Hypno! Part Deux!
Ep 7: Bug Busters
Ep 8: Shell In A Cell/The Longest Fight
Ep 9: Al Be Back/The Gumbus
Ep 10: Mr Cuddles/Stuck On You
Ep 11: The Purple Jacket/Pizza Pit
Ep 12: Smart LaiHot Soup: The Game
Ep 13: The Evil League Of Mutants
Ep 14: Late Fee/Bullhop
Ep 15: Nothing But Truffle/Turtle-Dega Nights: The Ballad Of Rat Man
Ep 16: Shadow Of Evil
Ep 17: Mind Meld/Portal Jacked!
Ep 18: Warner & Hypno, Sitting In A Tree/Sparring Partner
Ep 19: Mystic Library/Operation: Normal
Ep 20: How To Make Enemies And Make People Bend To Your Will/You Got Served
Ep 21: The Purple Game/Man Vs Sewer
Ep 22: The Ancient Art Of Ninja Hide And Seek/The Mutant Menace
Ep 23: One Man's Junk/Snow Day
Ep 24: Cloak And Swaggart/Jupiter Jim Ahoy!
Ep 25: Insane In The Mama Train
Ep 26: Endgame
Season 2: 13 Episodes
Ep 27: Todd Scouts/Goyles, Goyles, Goyles
Ep 28: Flushed But Never Forgotten/Lair Games
Ep 29: Many Unhappy Returns (Obviously meant to be the premiere)
Ep 30: Breaking Purple/Repairin' The Bison
Ep 31: Air Turtles/Pizza Puffs
Ep 32: Sidekick Ahoy!/The Hidden City Job
Ep 33: Always Be Brownies/Donnie Vs Witch Town (Misplaced Hidden City arc episode)
Ep 34: Mystery Meat/Raph's Ride Along
Ep 35: Hidden City's Most Wanted/Bad Hair Day
Ep 36: Fists Of Furry/Clothes Don't Make The Turtles
Ep 37: Battle Nexus: New York
Ep 38: E-Turtle Sunshine Of The Spotless Mind/Shreddy Or Not
Ep 39: Anatawa Hitorijanai/Rise

Individual Episodes (Season 1): 46 Episodes
Ep 1: Mystic Mayhem (22 minutes) Ep 2: Newsworthy Ep 3: War And Pizza Ep 4: Origami Tsunami Ep 5: Donnie's Gifts Ep 6: Minotaur Maze Ep 7: Down With The Sickness Ep 8: Repo Mantis Ep 9: Mascot Melee Ep 10: The Fast And The Furriest Ep 11: Hypno! Part Deux! Ep 12: Bug Busters (22m) Ep 13: Shell In A Cell Ep 14: The Longest Fight Ep 15: Al Be Back Ep 16: The Gumbus Ep 17: Mr Cuddles Ep 18: Stuck On You Ep 19: The Purple Jacket Ep 20: Pizza Pit Ep 21: Smart Lair Ep 22: Hot Soup: The Game Ep 23: The Evil League Of Mutants (22m) Ep 24: Late Fee Ep 25: Bullhop Ep 26: Nothing But Truffle Ep 27: Turtle-Dega Nights: The Ballad Of Rat Man Ep 28: Shadow Of Evil (22m) Ep 29: Mind Meld Ep 30: Portal Jacked! Ep 31: Warner & Hypno, Sitting In A Tree Ep 32: Sparring Partner Ep 33: Mystic Library Ep 34: Operation: Normal Ep 35: How To Make Enemies And Make People Bend To Your Will Ep 36: You Got Served Ep 37: The Purple Game Ep 38: Man Vs Sewer Ep 39: The Ancient Art Of Ninja Hide And Seek Ep 40: The Mutant Menace Ep 41: One Man's Junk Ep 42: Snow Day Ep 43: Cloak And Swaggart Ep 44: Jupiter Jim Ahoy! Ep 45: Insane In The Mama Train (22m) Ep 46: Endgame (22m)
Individual Episodes (Season 2): 24 Episodes
Ep 47: Todd Scouts Ep 48: Goyles, Goyles, Goyles Ep 49: Flushed But Never Forgotten Ep 50: Lair Games Ep 51: Many Unhappy Returns (22m) Ep 52: Breaking Purple Ep 53: Repairin' The Bison Ep 54: Air Turtles Ep 55: Pizza Puffs Ep 56: Sidekick Ahoy! Ep 57: The Hidden City Job Ep 58: Always Be Brownies Ep 59: Donnie Vs Witch Town Ep 60: Mystery Meat Ep 61: Raph's Ride Along Ep 62: Hidden City's Most Wanted Ep 63: Bad Hair Day Ep 64: Fists Of Furry Ep 65: Clothes Don't Make The Turtles Ep 66: Battle Nexus: New York (22m) Ep 67: E-Turtle Sunshine Of The Spotless Mind Ep 68: Shreddy Or Not Ep 69: Anatawa Hitorijanai Ep 70: Rise

In case anyone's interested, here's a filler list according to what I consider filler and non-filler. I believe the show should be watched in its entirety, but I felt like making one if I were rewatching the show again:
Non-Filler (Main Plot and episodes that greatly support it):
Ep 1: Mystic Mayhem (Hard Non-Filler; main plot)
Ep 2: Origami Tsunami
Ep 3: Donnie's Gifts
Ep 4: War And Pizza
Ep 5: Newsworthy
Ep 6: Minotaur Maze
Ep 7: Repo Mantis
Ep 8: The Fast And The Furriest (Soft Non-Filler; supporting episodes)
Ep 9: Mascot Melee (SNF)
Ep 10: Bug Busters (HNF)
Ep 11: Shell In A Cell
Ep 12: The Longest Fight
Ep 13: Portal Jacked! (SNF)
Ep 14: Stuck On You
Ep 15: Smart Lair (SNF)
Ep 16: Hot Soup: The Game
Ep 17: The Evil League Of Mutants (HNF)
Ep 18: Bullhop
Ep 19: Sparring Partner
Ep 20: Al Be Back (SF)
Ep 21: Mystic Library (SNF)
Ep 22: Shadow Of Evil (HNF)
Ep 23: Turtle-Dega Nights: The Ballad Of Right Man (SNF)
Ep 24: You Got Served (SF)
Ep 25: The Ancient Art Of Hide And Seek
Ep 26: Snow Day (SNF)
Ep 27: Operation Normal
Ep 28: Warren And Hypno, Sitting In A Tree
Ep 29: How To Make Enemies And People Bend To Your Will (HNF)
Ep 30: One Man's Junk
Ep 31: Insane In The Mama Train (HNF)
Ep 32: Endgame (HNF)
Ep 33: Many Unhappy Returns (HNF)
Ep 34: Goyles, Goyles, Goyles
Ep 35: Repairin' The Baron (HNF)
Ep 36: Pizza Puffs
Ep 37: Always Be Brownies
Ep 38: Hidden City Job (SNF)
Ep 39: Mystery Meat (SNF)
Ep 40: Donnie Vs Witch Town (HNF)
Ep 41: Raph's Ride Along (HNF)
Ep 42: Hidden City's Most Wanted (HNF)
Ep 43: Bad Hair Day (HNF)
Ep 44: The Clothes Don't Make The Turtles
Ep 45: Battle Nexus: New York (HNF)
Ep 46: E-Turtle Sunshine Of The Spotless Mind (HNF)
Ep 47: Shreddy Or Not (HNF)
Ep 48: Anatawa Hitorijanai (HNF)
Ep 49: Rise (HNF)
Filler: (Not essential to the main plot, usually self-contained episodes):
Ep 1: Down With The Sickness (Hard Filler; one offs)
Ep 2: Hypno! Part Deux (Soft Filler; recurring characters, etc)
Ep 3: The Gumbus (SF)
Ep 4: Mrs Cuddles
Ep 5: The Purple Jacket (SF)
Ep 6: Pizza Pit (SF)
Ep 7: Late Fee (SF)
Ep 8: Mind Meld (SF)
Ep 9: Nothing But Truffle (SF)
Ep 10: The Purple Game (SF)
Ep 11: The Mutant Menace (SF)
Ep 12: Man Vs Sewer (SF)
Ep 13: Cloak And Swaggart (SF)
Ep 14: Jupiter Jim Ahoy! (SF)
Ep 15: Flushed But Never Forgotten (HF)
Ep 16: Lair Games (HF)
Ep 17: Todd Scouts (SF)
Ep 18: Breaking Purple (SF)
Ep 19: Air Turtles (HF)
Ep 20: Sidekick Ahoy! (SF)
Ep 21: Fist Of Furry (SF)
submitted by Responsible_Tea7466 to Rottmnt [link] [comments]


2024.03.29 18:07 Responsible_Tea7466 Rise Of The TMNT Episode Order

After looking everywhere online and not finding a correct viewing order for the show, I created my own after rewatching the series. The list is mainly structured on keeping the continuity consistent throughout the episodes and evenly spreading out spotlight episodes (Character appearances, locatons, etc) if possible.
I'm confident that the first half of season 1 are in a suitable order, but the second half is more likely inconsistent in its continuity. Season 2 stays exactly the same aside from switching two episodes' places. Leave any comments if you notice continuity errors with this list.
Season 1: 26 Episodes
Ep 1: Mystic Mayhem
Ep 2: Origami Tsunami/Donnie's Gifts
Ep 3: War And Pizza/Down With The Sickness
Ep 4: Newsworthy/Minotaur Maze
Ep 5: Repo Mantis/Hypno! Part Deux!
Ep 6: The Fast And The Furriest/Mascot Melee
Ep 7: Bug Busters
Ep 8: Shell In A Cell/The Longest Fight
Ep 9: The Gumbus/Mrs Cuddles
Ep 10: Portal Jacked!/Stuck on You
Ep 11: The Purple Jacket/Pizza Pit
Ep 12: Smart LaiHot Soup: The Game
Ep 13: The Evil League Of Mutants
Ep 14: Late Fee/Bullhop
Ep 15: Sparring PartneAl Be Back
Ep 16: Mind Meld/Nothing But Truffle
Ep 17: Mystic Library/The Purple Game
Ep 18: You Got Served/The Mutant Menace
Ep 19: Shadow Of Evil
Ep 20: Man Vs SeweWarren And Hypno, Sitting In A Tree
Ep 21: Turtle-Dega Nights: The Ballad Of Rat Man/One Man's Junk
Ep 22: The Ancient Art Of Hide And Seek/Operation Normal
Ep 23: Snow Day/How To Make Enemies And People Bend To Your Will
Ep 24: Cloak And Swaggart/Jupiter Jim Ahoy!
Ep 25: Insane In The Mama Train
Ep 26: Endgame
Season 2:
Ep 27: Many Unhappy Returns
Ep 28: Todd Scouts/Goyles, Goyles, Goyles
Ep 29: Flushed But Never Forgotten/Lair Games
Ep 30: Breaking Purple/Repairin' The Baron
Ep 31: Air Turtle/Pizza Puffs
Ep 32: Sidekick Ahoy!/Always Be Brownies
Ep 33: Mystery Meat/Hidden City Job
Ep 34: Donnie Vs Witch Town/Raph's Ride Along
Ep 35: Hidden City's Most Wanted/Bad Hair Day
Ep 36: Fists Of Furry/The Clothes Don't Make The Turtles
Ep 37: Battle Nexus: New York
Ep 38: E-Turtle Sunshine Of The Spotless Mind/Shreddy Or Not
Ep 39: Anatawa Hitorijanai/Rise
Here's an alternate version of the first season:
Ep 1: Mystic Mayhem
Ep 2: Origami Tsunami/Donnie's Gifts
Ep 3: Newsworthy/War And Pizza
Ep 4: Minotaur Maze/Down With The Sickness
Ep 5: Repo Mantis/Hypno! Part Deux!
Ep 6: The Fast And The Furriest/Shell In A Cell
Ep 7: Mascot Melee/The Longest Fight
Ep 8: Bug Busters
Ep 9: The Gumbus/Stuck on You
Ep 10: The Purple Jacket/Al Be Back
Ep 11: Mrs Cuddles/Hot Soup: The Game
Ep 12: Smart LaiPizza Pit
Ep 13: The Evil League Of Mutants
Ep 14: Late Fee/Bullhop
Ep 15: Mind Meld/Nothing But Truffle
Ep 16: Portal Jacked!/The Mutant Menace
Ep 17: Shadow Of Evil
Ep 18: Man Vs SeweMystic Library
Ep 19: Warren And Hypno, Sitting In A Tree/You Got Served
Ep 20: One Man's Junk/Turtle-Dega Nights: The Ballad Of Rat Man
Ep 21: The Ancient Art Of Hide And Seek/Operation Normal
Ep 22: Sparring PartneThe Purple Game
Ep 23: How To Make Enemies And People Bend To Your Will/Cloak And Swaggart
Ep 24: Snow Day/Jupiter Jim Ahoy!
Ep 25: Insane In The Mama Train
Ep 26: Endgame
If anyone wants an explanation as to why these episodes are ordered these ways:
The 22-minute episodes are made to be spread out evenly (Ep 1, 7, 13, 19, 25, 26); there'll usually 10 episodes/five 22-minute episodes divided into two segments between each special.
In Bug Busters, as Big Mama talks about the recent mutants, a screen of all the mutant from previous episodes are shown; therefore, Donnie's Gifts, Newsworthy, Repo Mantis, and Mascot Melee are definitely before Bug Busters.
Throughout Ep 8 - Ep 12, we're introduced to the Foot Dudes collecting pieces of Dark Armor. Those episodes will be spread out evenly for consistency in their appearances.
I've binge watched the second half, so this'll be far more inconsistent:
Every episode below, I can confirm, comes after Shadow Of Evil; conveniently, there's enough episodes to make up 5 22-minute episodes. The Dark Armor can be seen being reconstructed each episode in each appearance; thoroughly looking at the armor led to this order of the Dark Armor episodes: Warren & Hypno, Sitting In A Tree or One Man's Junk => Operation Normal => How To Make Enemies And People Bend To Your Will (The Dark Armor piece collected in W&H, Sitting In A Tree, from what I've seen, did not make a difference to the Dark Armor's appearance.)
Season 2 basically stays the same. Not many changes need to be made as the continuity stay fairly consistent - aside from a few lines here and there. The only change I made was placing Always Be Brownies after Sidekick Ahoy! because of variety sakes for the character appearances - Always Be Brownies is the only episode where the turtles aren't present (My head canon for this is that the turtles spent the whole day binging Jupiter Jim movies, as seen in the start of Sidekick Ahoy!, explaining why they didn't help April with selling cookies.)

I also compiled an episode order based off of TMNTpedia's listed production codes because the episodes on the wiki are structured by broadcast order rather than production codes. The viewing order is definitely incorrect, and mostly just changes season 1's order:
Season 1: 26 Episodes
Ep 1: Mystic Mayhem
Ep 2: Newsworthy/War And Pizza
Ep 3: Origami Tsunami/Donnie's Gifts
Ep 4: Minotaur Maze/Down With The Sickness
Ep 5: Repo Mantis/Mascot Melee
Ep 6: The Fast And The Furriest/Hypno! Part Deux!
Ep 7: Bug Busters
Ep 8: Shell In A Cell/The Longest Fight
Ep 9: Al Be Back/The Gumbus
Ep 10: Mrs Cuddles/Stuck On You
Ep 11: The Purple Jacket/Pizza Pit
Ep 12: Smart LaiHot Soup: The Game
Ep 13: The Evil League Of Mutants
Ep 14: Late Fee/Bullhop
Ep 15: Nothing But Truffle/Turtle-Dega Nights: The Ballad Of Rat Man
Ep 16: Shadow Of Evil
Ep 17: Mind Meld/Portal Jacked!
Ep 18: Warner & Hypno, Sitting In A Tree/Sparring Partner
Ep 19: Mystic Library/Operation: Normal
Ep 20: How To Make Enemies And Make People Bend To Your Will/You Got Served
Ep 21: The Purple Game/Man Vs Sewer
Ep 22: The Ancient Art Of Ninja Hide And Seek/The Mutant Menace
Ep 23: One Man's Junk/Snow Day
Ep 24: Cloak And Swaggart/Jupiter Jim Ahoy!
Ep 25: Insane In The Mama Train
Ep 26: Endgame
Season 2: 13 Episodes
Ep 27: Todd Scouts/Goyles, Goyles, Goyles
Ep 28: Flushed But Never Forgotten/Lair Games
Ep 29: Many Unhappy Returns (Obviously meant to be the premiere)
Ep 30: Breaking Purple/Repairin' The Bison
Ep 31: Air Turtles/Pizza Puffs
Ep 32: Sidekick Ahoy!/The Hidden City Job
Ep 33: Always Be Brownies/Donnie Vs Witch Town (Misplaced Hidden City arc episode)
Ep 34: Mystery Meat/Raph's Ride Along
Ep 35: Hidden City's Most Wanted/Bad Hair Day
Ep 36: Fists Of Furry/Clothes Don't Make The Turtles
Ep 37: Battle Nexus: New York
Ep 38: E-Turtle Sunshine Of The Spotless Mind/Shreddy Or Not
Ep 39: Anatawa Hitorijanai/Rise

Individual Episodes (Season 1): 46 Episodes
Ep 1: Mystic Mayhem (22 minutes) Ep 2: Newsworthy Ep 3: War And Pizza Ep 4: Origami Tsunami Ep 5: Donnie's Gifts Ep 6: Minotaur Maze Ep 7: Down With The Sickness Ep 8: Repo Mantis Ep 9: Mascot Melee Ep 10: The Fast And The Furriest Ep 11: Hypno! Part Deux! Ep 12: Bug Busters (22m) Ep 13: Shell In A Cell Ep 14: The Longest Fight Ep 15: Al Be Back Ep 16: The Gumbus Ep 17: Mrs Cuddles Ep 18: Stuck On You Ep 19: The Purple Jacket Ep 20: Pizza Pit Ep 21: Smart Lair Ep 22: Hot Soup: The Game Ep 23: The Evil League Of Mutants (22m) Ep 24: Late Fee Ep 25: Bullhop Ep 26: Nothing But Truffle Ep 27: Turtle-Dega Nights: The Ballad Of Rat Man Ep 28: Shadow Of Evil (22m) Ep 29: Mind Meld Ep 30: Portal Jacked! Ep 31: Warner & Hypno, Sitting In A Tree Ep 32: Sparring Partner Ep 33: Mystic Library Ep 34: Operation: Normal Ep 35: How To Make Enemies And Make People Bend To Your Will Ep 36: You Got Served Ep 37: The Purple Game Ep 38: Man Vs Sewer Ep 39: The Ancient Art Of Ninja Hide And Seek Ep 40: The Mutant Menace Ep 41: One Man's Junk Ep 42: Snow Day Ep 43: Cloak And Swaggart Ep 44: Jupiter Jim Ahoy! Ep 45: Insane In The Mama Train (22m) Ep 46: Endgame (22m)
Individual Episodes (Season 2): 24 Episodes
Ep 47: Todd Scouts Ep 48: Goyles, Goyles, Goyles Ep 49: Flushed But Never Forgotten Ep 50: Lair Games Ep 51: Many Unhappy Returns (22m) Ep 52: Breaking Purple Ep 53: Repairin' The Bison Ep 54: Air Turtles Ep 55: Pizza Puffs Ep 56: Sidekick Ahoy! Ep 57: The Hidden City Job Ep 58: Always Be Brownies Ep 59: Donnie Vs Witch Town Ep 60: Mystery Meat Ep 61: Raph's Ride Along Ep 62: Hidden City's Most Wanted Ep 63: Bad Hair Day Ep 64: Fists Of Furry Ep 65: Clothes Don't Make The Turtles Ep 66: Battle Nexus: New York (22m) Ep 67: E-Turtle Sunshine Of The Spotless Mind Ep 68: Shreddy Or Not Ep 69: Anatawa Hitorijanai Ep 70: Rise

In case anyone's interested, here's a filler list according to what I consider filler and non-filler (not gonna be the definitive filler list). I believe the show should be watched in its entirety, but I felt like making one if I were rewatching the show again:
Non-Filler (Main Plot and episodes that greatly support it):
Ep 1: Mystic Mayhem (Hard Non-Filler; main plot)
Ep 2: Origami Tsunami (HNF)
Ep 3: Donnie's Gifts
Ep 4: War And Pizza
Ep 5: Newsworthy
Ep 6: Minotaur Maze
Ep 7: Repo Mantis
Ep 8: The Fast And The Furriest (Soft Non-Filler; supporting episodes)
Ep 9: Mascot Melee (SNF)
Ep 10: Bug Busters (HNF)
Ep 11: Shell In A Cell
Ep 12: The Longest Fight
Ep 13: Portal Jacked!
Ep 14: Stuck On You
Ep 15: Smart Lair (SNF)
Ep 16: Hot Soup: The Game
Ep 17: The Evil League Of Mutants (HNF)
Ep 18: Bullhop
Ep 19: Sparring Partner
Ep 20: Al Be Back (SNF)
Ep 21: Mind Meld (SNF)
Ep 22: You Got Served (SNF)
Ep 23: Mystic Library (SNF)
Ep 24: Shadow Of Evil (HNF)
Ep 25: Warren And Hypno, Sitting In A Tree
Ep 26: Turtle-Dega Nights: The Ballad Of Right Man (SNF)
Ep 27: The Ancient Art Of Hide And Seek
Ep 28: Operation Normal
Ep 29: Snow Day
Ep 30: One Man's Junk
Ep 31: How To Make Enemies And People Bend To Your Will (HNF)
Ep 32: Insane In The Mama Train (HNF)
Ep 33: Endgame (HNF)
Ep 34: Many Unhappy Returns (HNF)
Ep 35: Goyles, Goyles, Goyles (HNF)
Ep 36: Repairin' The Baron (HNF)
Ep 37: Pizza Puffs
Ep 38: Always Be Brownies
Ep 39: Mystery Meat (SNF)
Ep 40: Hidden City Job (SNF)
Ep 41: Donnie Vs Witch Town (HNF)
Ep 42: Raph's Ride Along (HNF)
Ep 43: Hidden City's Most Wanted (HNF)
Ep 44: Bad Hair Day (HNF)
Ep 45: The Clothes Don't Make The Turtles
Ep 46: Battle Nexus: New York (HNF)
Ep 47: E-Turtle Sunshine Of The Spotless Mind (HNF)
Ep 48: Shreddy Or Not (HNF)
Ep 49: Anatawa Hitorijanai (HNF)
Ep 50: Rise (HNF)
Filler: (Not essential to the main plot, usually self-contained episodes): ~20 Episodes
Ep 1: Down With The Sickness (Hard Filler; one offs)
Ep 2: Hypno! Part Deux (Soft Filler; recurring characters, etc)
Ep 3: The Gumbus (SF)
Ep 4: Mrs Cuddles (HF)
Ep 5: The Purple Jacket (SF)
Ep 6: Pizza Pit (SF)
Ep 7: Late Fee
Ep 8: Nothing But Truffle (SF)
Ep 9: The Purple Game (SF)
Ep 10: The Mutant Menace (SF)
Ep 11: Man Vs Sewer (SF)
Ep 12: Cloak And Swaggart (SF)
Ep 13: Jupiter Jim Ahoy! (SF)
Ep 14: Flushed But Never Forgotten (SF)
Ep 15: Lair Games (HF)
Ep 16: Todd Scouts (SF)
Ep 17: Breaking Purple (SF)
Ep 18: Air Turtles (HF)
Ep 19: Sidekick Ahoy! (SF)
Ep 20: Fist Of Furry (SF)
submitted by Responsible_Tea7466 to TMNT [link] [comments]


2024.03.29 14:40 Responsible_Tea7466 Rise Of The TMNT Episode Order

After looking everywhere online and not finding a correct viewing order for the show, I created my own after rewatching the series. The list is mainly structured on keeping the continuity consistent throughout the episodes, and evenly spreading out spotlight episodes if possible:
Season 1: 26 Episodes
Ep 1: Mystic Mayhem
Ep 2: Origami Tsunami/Donnie's Gifts
Ep 3: War And Pizza/Down With The Sickness
Ep 4: Newsworthy/Minotaur Maze
Ep 5: Repo Mantis/Hypno! Part Deux!
Ep 6: The Fast And The Furriest/Mascot Melee
Ep 7: Bug Busters
Ep 8: Shell In A Cell/The Longest Fight
Ep 9: The Gumbus/Mrs Cuddles
Ep 10: Portal Jacked!/Stuck on You
Ep 11: The Purple Jacket/Pizza Pit
Ep 12: Smart LaiHot Soup: The Game
Ep 13: The Evil League Of Mutants
Ep 14: Late Fee/Bullhop
Ep 15: Sparring PartneAl Be Back
Ep 16: Mind Meld/Nothing But Truffle
Ep 17: The Purple Game/You Got Served
Ep 18: The Mutant Menace/Mystic Library
Ep 19: Shadow Of Evil
Ep 20: Man Vs SeweOperation Normal
Ep 21: Warren And Hypno, Sitting In A Tree/Turtle-Dega Nights: The Ballad Of Rat Man
Ep 22: How To Make Enemies And People Bend To Your Will/The Ancient Art Of Hide And Seek
Ep 23: Snow Day/One Man's Junk
Ep 24: Cloak And Swaggart/Jupiter Jim Ahoy!
Ep 25: Insane In The Mama Train
Ep 26: Endgame
Season 2:
Ep 27: Many Unhappy Returns
Ep 28: Todd Scouts/Goyles, Goyles, Goyles
Ep 29: Flushed But Never Forgotten/Lair Games
Ep 30: Breaking Purple/Repairin' The Baron
Ep 31: Air Turtle/Pizza Puffs
Ep 32: Sidekick Ahoy!/Always Be Brownies
Ep 33: Hidden City Job/Mystery Meat
Ep 34: Donnie Vs Witch Town/Raph's Ride Along
Ep 35: Hidden City's Most Wanted/Bad Hair Day
Ep 36: Fists Of Furry/The Clothes Don't Make The Turtles
Ep 37: Battle Nexus: New York
Ep 38: E-Turtle Sunshine Of The Spotless Mind/Shreddy Or Not
Ep 39: Anatawa Hitorijanai/Rise
Notes:
I'm confident that the first half of season 1 are in a suitable order, but the second half is more likely inconsistent in its continuity. Season 2 stays exactly the same aside from switching two episodes' places. Leave any comments if you notice continuity errors with this list.
Here's an alternate version of the first season's second half:
Ep 14: Late Fee/Bullhop
Ep 15: Mind Meld/Nothing But Truffle
Ep 16: Portal Jacked!/The Mutant Meance
Ep 17: Shadow Of Evil
Ep 18: The Purple Game/Operation Normal
Ep 19: Man Vs SeweWarren And Hypno, Sitting In A Tree
Ep 20: Sparring PartneTurtle-Dega Nights: The Ballad Of Rat Man
Ep 21: You Got Served/The Ancient Art Of Hide And Seek
Ep 22: Mystic Library/How To Make Enemies And People Bend To Your Will
Ep 23: Cloak And Swaggart/One Man's Junk
Ep 24: Snow Day/Jupiter Jim Ahoy!
Ep 25: Insane In The Mama Train
Ep 26: Endgame

I also compiled an episode order based off of TMNTpedia's listed production codes because the episodes on the wiki are structured by broadcast order rather than the listed production codes. The viewing order is definitely incorrect, and mostly just changes season 1's order:
Season 1: 26 Episodes
Ep 1: Mystic Mayhem
Ep 2: Newsworthy/War And Pizza
Ep 3: Origami Tsunami/Donnie's Gifts
Ep 4: Minotaur Maze/Down With The Sickness
Ep 5: Repo Mantis/Mascot Melee
Ep 6: The Fast And The Furriest/Hypno! Part Deux!
Ep 7: Bug Busters
Ep 8: Shell In A Cell/The Longest Fight
Ep 9: Al Be Back/The Gumbus
Ep 10: Mr Cuddles/Stuck On You
Ep 11: The Purple Jacket/Pizza Pit
Ep 12: Smart LaiHot Soup: The Game
Ep 13: The Evil League Of Mutants
Ep 14: Late Fee/Bullhop
Ep 15: Nothing But Truffle/Turtle-Dega Nights: The Ballad Of Rat Man
Ep 16: Shadow Of Evil
Ep 17: Mind Meld/Portal Jacked!
Ep 18: Warner & Hypno, Sitting In A Tree/Sparring Partner
Ep 19: Mystic Library/Operation: Normal
Ep 20: How To Make Enemies And Make People Bend To Your Will/You Got Served
Ep 21: The Purple Game/Man Vs Sewer
Ep 22: The Ancient Art Of Ninja Hide And Seek/The Mutant Menace
Ep 23: One Man's Junk/Snow Day
Ep 24: Cloak And Swaggart/Jupiter Jim Ahoy!
Ep 25: Insane In The Mama Train
Ep 26: Endgame
Season 2: 13 Episodes
Ep 27: Todd Scouts/Goyles, Goyles, Goyles
Ep 28: Flushed But Never Forgotten/Lair Games
Ep 29: Many Unhappy Returns (Obviously meant to be the premiere)
Ep 30: Breaking Purple/Repairin' The Bison
Ep 31: Air Turtles/Pizza Puffs
Ep 32: Sidekick Ahoy!/The Hidden City Job
Ep 33: Always Be Brownies/Donnie Vs Witch Town (Misplaced Hidden City arc episode)
Ep 34: Mystery Meat/Raph's Ride Along
Ep 35: Hidden City's Most Wanted/Bad Hair Day
Ep 36: Fists Of Furry/Clothes Don't Make The Turtles
Ep 37: Battle Nexus: New York
Ep 38: E-Turtle Sunshine Of The Spotless Mind/Shreddy Or Not
Ep 39: Anatawa Hitorijanai/Rise
individual Episodes (Season 1): 46 Episodes
Ep 1: Mystic Mayhem (22 minutes)
Ep 2: Newsworthy
Ep 3: War And Pizza
Ep 4: Origami Tsunami
Ep 5: Donnie's Gifts
Ep 6: Minotaur Maze
Ep 7: Down With The Sickness
Ep 8: Repo Mantis
Ep 9: Mascot Melee
Ep 10: The Fast And The Furriest
Ep 11: Hypno! Part Deux!
Ep 12: Bug Busters (22m)
Ep 13: Shell In A Cell
Ep 14: The Longest Fight
Ep 15: Al Be Back
Ep 16: The Gumbus
Ep 17: Mr Cuddles
Ep 18: Stuck On You
Ep 19: The Purple Jacket
Ep 20: Pizza Pit
Ep 21: Smart Lair
Ep 22: Hot Soup: The Game
Ep 23: The Evil League Of Mutants (22m)
Ep 24: Late Fee
Ep 25: Bullhop
Ep 26: Nothing But Truffle
Ep 27: Turtle-Dega Nights: The Ballad Of Rat Man
Ep 28: Shadow Of Evil (22m)
Ep 29: Mind Meld
Ep 30: Portal Jacked!
Ep 31: Warner & Hypno, Sitting In A Tree
Ep 32: Sparring Partner
Ep 33: Mystic Library
Ep 34: Operation: Normal
Ep 35: How To Make Enemies And Make People Bend To Your Will
Ep 36: You Got Served
Ep 37: The Purple Game
Ep 38: Man Vs Sewer
Ep 39: The Ancient Art Of Ninja Hide And Seek
Ep 40: The Mutant Menace
Ep 41: One Man's Junk
Ep 42: Snow Day
Ep 43: Cloak And Swaggart
Ep 44: Jupiter Jim Ahoy!
Ep 45: Insane In The Mama Train (22m)
Ep 46: Endgame (22m)
Individual Episodes (Season 2): 24 Episodes
Ep 47: Todd Scouts
Ep 48: Goyles, Goyles, Goyles
Ep 49: Flushed But Never Forgotten
Ep 50: Lair Games
Ep 51: Many Unhappy Returns (22m)
Ep 52: Breaking Purple
Ep 53: Repairin' The Bison
Ep 54: Air Turtles
Ep 55: Pizza Puffs
Ep 56: Sidekick Ahoy!
Ep 57: The Hidden City Job
Ep 58: Always Be Brownies
Ep 59: Donnie Vs Witch Town
Ep 60: Mystery Meat
Ep 61: Raph's Ride Along
Ep 62: Hidden City's Most Wanted
Ep 63: Bad Hair Day
Ep 64: Fists Of Furry
Ep 65: Clothes Don't Make The Turtles
Ep 66: Battle Nexus: New York (22m)
Ep 67: E-Turtle Sunshine Of The Spotless Mind
Ep 68: Shreddy Or Not
Ep 69: Anatawa Hitorijanai
Ep 70: Rise

In case anyone's interested, here's a filler list according to what I consider filler and non-filler. I believe the show should be watched in its entirety, but I felt like making one if I were rewatching the show again:
Non-Filler (Main Plot and episodes that greatly support it):
Ep 1: Mystic Mayhem (Hard Non-Filler; main plot)
Ep 2: Origami Tsunami
Ep 3: Donnie's Gifts
Ep 4: Newsworthy
Ep 5: Minotaur Maze
Ep 6: Repo Mantis
Ep 7: The Fast And The Furriest (Soft Non-Filler; supporting episodes)
Ep 8: Mascot Melee (SNF)
Ep 9: Bug Busters (HNF)
Ep 10: Shell In A Cell
Ep 11: The Longest Fight
Ep 12: Portal Jacked! (SNF)
Ep 13: Stuck On You
Ep 14: Smart Lair (SNF)
Ep 15: Hot Soup: The Game
Ep 16: The Evil League Of Mutants (HNF)
Ep 17: Bullhop
Ep 18: Sparring Partner
Ep 19: Mystic Library (SNF)
Ep 20: Shadow Of Evil (HNF)
Ep 21: Turtle-Dega Nights: The Ballad Of Right Man (SNF)
Ep 22: The Ancient Art Of Hide And Seek
Ep 23: Snow Day (SNF)
Ep 24: Operation Normal
Ep 25: Warren And Hypno, Sitting In A Tree
Ep 26: How To Make Enemies And People Bend To Your Will (HNF)
Ep 27: One Man's Junk
Ep 28: Insane In The Mama Train (HNF)
Ep 29: Endgame (HNF)
Ep 30: Many Unhappy Returns (HNF)
Ep 31: Goyles, Goyles, Goyles
Ep 32: Repairin' The Baron (HNF)
Ep 33: Pizza Puffs
Ep 34: Always Be Brownies
Ep 35: Hidden City Job (SNF)
Ep 36: Mystery Meat (SNF)
Ep 37: Donnie Vs Witch Town (HNF)
Ep 38: Raph's Ride Along (HNF)
Ep 39: Hidden City's Most Wanted (HNF)
Ep 40: Bad Hair Day (HNF)
Ep 41: The Clothes Don't Make The Turtles
Ep 42: Battle Nexus: New York (HNF)
Ep 43: E-Turtle Sunshine Of The Spotless Mind (HNF)
Ep 44: Shreddy Or Not (HNF)
Ep 45: Anatawa Hitorijanai (HNF)
Ep 46: Rise (HNF)
Filler: (Not essential to the main plot, usually self-contained episodes):
Ep 1: War And Pizza (Soft Filler; recurring characters, etc)
Ep 2: Down With The Sickness (Hard Filler; one offs)
Ep 3: Hypno! Part Deux (SF)
Ep 4: The Gumbus (SF)
Ep 5: Mrs Cuddles
Ep 6: The Purple Jacket (SF)
Ep 7: Pizza Pit (SF)
Ep 8: Late Fee (SF)
Ep 9: Al Be Back (SF)
Ep 10: Mind Meld (SF)
Ep 11: Nothing But Truffle (SF)
Ep 12: The Purple Game (SF)
Ep 13: You Got Served (SF)
Ep 14: The Mutant Menace (SF)
Ep 15: Man Vs Sewer (SNF)
Ep 16: Cloak And Swaggart (SF)
Ep 17: Jupiter Jim Ahoy! (SF)
Ep 18: Flushed But Never Forgotten (HF)
Ep 19: Lair Games (HF)
Ep 20: Todd Scouts (SF)
Ep 21: Breaking Purple (SF)
Ep 22: Air Turtles (HF)
Ep 23: Sidekick Ahoy! (SF)
Ep 24: Fist Of Furry (SF)
submitted by Responsible_Tea7466 to RiseoftheTMNT [link] [comments]


2024.03.20 23:32 paxinfernum Does anyone else remember having a really sad and frightening moment as a child when you realized their parents were gullible?

I'm not talking about the typical teenage "I'm so smart and parents are stupid" way. I mean that moment where, even if you hadn't fully deconstructed yet, you realized your parents had no critical filter and that they would literally fall for anything if someone couched it in religion. I've talked about this before in this sub, but that moment for me was my mother watching Jimmy Swaggart every week on the TV when I was young.
I don't know how familiar any of you are with Jimmy Swaggart, but he is the double first cousin of Jerry Lee Louis, the famous musician. He was the sleaziest pentecostal televangelist I've ever seen. He'd outright tell people that if they sent money into his show, he'd "pray for your miracle" and God would return it to you. It was gross, and it was obvious he was just swindling poor, desperate people.
He'd cry and get into an emotionally swelling voice and say, "Just send in your check to our ministry, and we'll pray for your miracle." I remember watching my mother hold her hands out to the TV. I remember silently loathing the sound of his voice and the sight of her making a fool of herself in front of the television.
She tried to get me into it with her, and I greyrocked because I'd discovered this technique of just not showing a lot of interest or emotion about things was the only way to survive her hyper-emotional parenting style. I was already smart enough to know that saying negative things about religion or preachers would get me the wrong type of attention.
But I finally couldn't hold my tongue when she asked me if I didn't think he was "such a godly man." I said it seemed like he was more interested in getting people to send money than god. She got really upset and said that he was a godly man, and he was just trying to help people. I knew to drop it at that point, but I could tell she was really embarrassed and defensive.
It didn't occur to me until later that she must have sent in money to pray for her miracle. We were really poor, but she sent this obvious scam artist money. She held her hands up in the air while listening to this blowhard, who was later caught with prostitutes, ramble on like a crazy man.
I wasn't deconstructed at that point, but I was already seeing the bullshit, and I was fucking 10 years old! It's so fucking sad to realize I was less gullible than my own mother at the age of 10!
I don't think most normal people understand what I felt at that moment. It was a mixture of sadness and fear. The agony of knowing as a child that your parents are gullible is something I don't think most people can comprehend. Kids rely on their parents to protect them, and the world becomes a scary place when a kid realizes their parents can be fooled so easily.
This shit prematurely ages a kid. It meant I had to start functioning as an adult at a time when most kids were still enjoying just being kids.
submitted by paxinfernum to exchristian [link] [comments]


2024.03.19 07:25 DonnyMox Did....did we watch the same show?

Did....did we watch the same show? submitted by DonnyMox to saltierthankrayt [link] [comments]


2024.03.18 02:28 Det_Lloyd_Gross Andy's FAMILY TREE! The one that Nellie put together for him!

Andy's FAMILY TREE! The one that Nellie put together for him! submitted by Det_Lloyd_Gross to DunderMifflin [link] [comments]


2024.03.18 02:27 Det_Lloyd_Gross 903. Andy's Ancestry (4.26) - Andy's FAMILY TREE! The one that Nellie put together for him. Where to begin...

903. Andy's Ancestry (4.26) - Andy's FAMILY TREE! The one that Nellie put together for him. Where to begin... submitted by Det_Lloyd_Gross to AntiStranglingTF [link] [comments]


2024.03.14 18:57 Particular-Camera612 Jim Kurring's arc in Magnolia as I perceive it (let me know if I'm missing anything)

On the surface, Jim does appear to be the most "flawless" member of the main cast, a Christian police officer who's both professional and very kind to Claudia, a man looking for love so much that he appears on TV to state it. But I feel like the film in it's own way challenges him to actually prove it, mainly at the end.
Basically, in the third act of the film via him loosing his gun, he admits a fault of his (his imperfection as a policeman) to Claudia which leads him to admit that he's had a divorce and not been with any women since. He admits this as a way to counteract Claudia's whole notion that he's so perfect and that she's so bad. And she appreciates this.
I believe that via the gun being taken from him and the date actually happening, he's put in a position to where he basically has to be an honest individual if he really wants a relationship, plus with Claudia still on the fence he's in a state to where he has to both fight a bit more for it and where there's not a guarantee that he will get what he wants. He has to be a good person without the direct possibility of a reward for his own desires. He also has to basically flagellate himself via calling himself a laughing stock and "not a good cop", not to mention bring up his insecurities about being thought of as a fool and being disliked by her as well.
But what backs it up even more in his last couple of scenes. He does spot Donnie Smith, but it's mainly the Frog Raining that causes them to come together. His compassion also does slightly override the fact that Donnie had committed a crime, but I do believe that again, he's being tested. He's running into someone who's incredibly troubled and just needs some actual guidance and whilst he could just book Donnie, he makes the choice to help him correct his own mistake. He doesn't know Donnie and unlike Claudia he's got no already present seated personal reason (of wanting to find a woman who will love him) to help him other than decency towards a desperate man.
That ending monologue he gives certainly ties into this: "Sometimes people need a little help. Sometimes people need to be forgiven. And sometimes they need to go to jail. And that is a very tricky thing on my part... making that call. I mean, the law is the law. And heck if I'm gonna break it. You can forgive someone. Well, that's the tough part. What can we forgive? Tough part of the job. Tough part of walking down the street. "
Then he goes back to Claudia, basically fighting for what he wants but doing so in a way that's respectful/helpful to her. Saying that she's a good person and giving her the choice to chose him. And given how she's been reunited with her own mother and seems to finally be recognising someone's unconditional love and support, she smiles.
There's also the whole angle of God making this happen, which I do think is a possibility if you don't chalk things up to random coincidences. Jim is basically taken away from a simple murder case and put in circumstances where he has to prove his innate goodness. I do feel like this is partly because of his own Christian beliefs (which is most prominent in his Cross above the bed) and this could all be a test of character on God's part. Like making the Frogs rain so that he'd help Donnie or stealing the gun.
This kinda comes together when the gun drops from the sky. One could take this as again, a mere strange coincidence, but this feels like a reward. Like God is telling him "well done, you deserve this for actually living up to your character" Plus Jim even begs God to tell him why a circumstance like him losing his gun is happening to him, but that "Whatever it is I did, I'm going to fix it. I'm going to do the right thing"
Any deeper thoughts on your own perception of his character?
submitted by Particular-Camera612 to paulthomasanderson [link] [comments]


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