Topic: Police Have A Surprise For Tarrentino! | |
---|---|
I think that Jim Pasco, executive director of the Fraternal Order of Police was out of line to make those statements.
I would have taken what he said as a threat.. and that in my opinion is where he crossed the line. While he may not agree with Tarentino's words.. it is still America and Tarentino has the right to say what he wants. As does Pasco. But when you represent 300,000 professional men and woman, and you are not speaking solely for yourself. you should choose your words very carefully. |
|
|
|
at least QT is getting plenty of advertising for his new movie... I wouldn't call a nationwide boycott free advertising....... lmao@ nationwide boycott.. who is boycotting him? people that arent his fans anyway, people that dont see his movies any other time? ,,,ooh,,, meanwhile, I have heard the name of his new movie ten times as much in these gripes than I have in any actual trailer on the television,,, It's such good advertising that the production company that is owned by a vile anti cop socialist Weinstein has distanced themselves from Tarrantino, he even see's the blowback. have you been speaking to him?....lol Nope, but seen his statement to the press saying those are Tarantinos own words and not the views of the Weinstein Company. |
|
|
|
at least QT is getting plenty of advertising for his new movie... I wouldn't call a nationwide boycott free advertising....... lmao@ nationwide boycott.. who is boycotting him? people that arent his fans anyway, people that dont see his movies any other time? ,,,ooh,,, meanwhile, I have heard the name of his new movie ten times as much in these gripes than I have in any actual trailer on the television,,, It's such good advertising that the production company that is owned by a vile anti cop socialist Weinstein has distanced themselves from Tarrantino, he even see's the blowback. have you been speaking to him?....lol Nope, but seen his statement to the press saying those are Tarantinos own words and not the views of the Weinstein Company. so what? thats a pretty standard disclaimer on most network shows these days,,, did they drop him or the movie?,.,,,NOPE,,lol |
|
|
|
The Fraternal Order of Police has a “surprise” in store for Quentin Tarantino.
A surprise like how large & socially & economically & politicaly powerful the union is & how it connects to other unions. But if I were you, I wouldn't look in the pool Quentin. Hhhaa...I joke . *a future movie title* .. I hope part of that is reality check, that he is an... Old Leftist Metrosexual Whatabe Ghetto Fabulous, 2nd Generation American.... Hhhaa.. Cause Poppy is delusional & don't know it. .... Dropped too much acid back in 1968 maybe. Police unions across the country have vowed to boycott the director’s upcoming film, “The Hateful Eight.” Still, the director has refused to apologize for his comments, stating in an op-ed for the Los Angeles Times, "I'm not being intimidated.” And he doesn't have to apologize. No one, in real life believes the famous or the political when they do, anyway.That's just for the media. But of course there are consequences to what we do & say & what we don't do & say. And he'll have his. And it it'll be a reminder of WHO actually paid for his house & pool. "The right time and place will come up and we'll try to hurt him in the only way that seems to matter to him, and that's economically." F@cking A. Boycotting is a powerful thing & a peaceful, lawful thing. So hit him & his friends, where it hurts.. right in the wallet. Police officers protect people," he said. "They don't go out to hurt people." They do help people. Especially those who show them the respect they have already earned. Getting the dreads of society off the streets IS protecting the public. *We are going to need a special task force to keep a few off the screen. Maybe Obama can create another 'Czar' to handle it. If Quentin is a good boy.. maybe he can name his nemesis* |
|
|
|
lol rhetoric and communist in the same sentence ,,,delicious irony,,, I can see the significance of the Article has whizzed past you at Warpspeed! |
|
|
|
Edited by
msharmony
on
Sun 11/08/15 06:47 AM
|
|
lol rhetoric and communist in the same sentence ,,,delicious irony,,, I can see the significance of the Article has whizzed past you at Warpspeed! what, the significance of 'guilt by association'? lol name ONE person in a group of twenty that can be tied to the label 'communist' (and tigers and bears, oh my!) to labelt he whole group of twenty with that title,, 'communist ' (and tigers and bears, oh my!) and then anyone that is associated in anything that twenty do is also to be seen in the same 'negative/positive' light as that ONE?,,,lol no, I got it,, common rhetoric,, but in this case, at least its consistent, with those whose logic seems to be that to be against police BRUTALITY means to be against all police,,, |
|
|
|
Jim Breuer Calls Quentin Tarantino a Moron « CBS Philly
http://philadelphia.cbslocal.com/2015/11/05/jim-breuer-calls-tarantino-moron/ November 6, 2015 Don’t let Quentin Tarantino off the Hook - Breitbart http://www.breitbart.com/big-government/2015/11/24/dont-let-quentin-tarantino-off-hook/ November 24, 2015 |
|
|
|
Quentin Tarantino ‘lies’ about going to jail: LA cops
New York Post By Maureen Callahan November 29, 2015 | 6:01am The LA County Sheriff's Department has no record of Quentin Tarantino being in it system. Photo: Getty Images It’s “Pulp Fiction,” all right. Quentin Tarantino — under fire for recent comments about police violence — has claimed for decades that, as a young man, he served time in a Los Angeles County jail. One problem: The LA County Sheriff’s Department has no record of the filmmaker ever being in its system. At The Post’s request, the department searched its files back through the 1980s, when, according to Tarantino, he would have been incarcerated. “A check of Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department jail records revealed no evidence that Mr. Tarantino was ever incarcerated in our jail system,” said Capt. Christopher Reed of the Sheriff’s Office. Tarantino used to tell the story as evidence of his outlaw bona fides. But on a recent episode of “Real Time with Bill Maher,” Tarantino, now 52, recounted it again to claim solidarity with police protesters — that he understands what it means to be frightened of cops. “Back when I was in my 20s and broke, I was a little scared of the cops, all right?” Tarantino told Maher. “And oftentimes, I had warrants out on me for traffic stuff that I never took care of and everything . . . I’d get stopped, and I’d have to do eight days in county jail.” The Post spent a week calling and e-mailing Tarantino’s agent, lawyer, publicists and Harvey Weinstein, who produced the director’s upcoming movie, “The Hateful Eight.” The Post also left voice mails on Tarantino’s personal phone line. No one responded to any of the inquiries. As a budding film geek, Tarantino worked at LA’s Video Archives rental store for five years — a story key to his creation myth. In the Maher appearance, he said he couldn’t pay his traffic tickets because he earned only $10,000 a year. It’s a claim he has made as far back as 1992, when he told Paris Voice a version of the same story. “If I had a brush with the law, I think I’d wise up fast,” he said. “I spent eight days in the county jail on traffic warrants once. At first, I thought, ‘Wow, I’m going to pick up some great dialogue in here.’ But then you realize what a waste of time it is. They treat you like an animal, and nobody wants to be treated like an animal.” ‘I was kind of excited about going to jail the first time and I learned some great dialogue’ - Quentin Tarantino in 2009 Tarantino’s lone brush with the law, according to the LA County Sheriff’s Department, is a 2000 charge for driving without a license and failure to appear in court. He paid a fine to avoid jail. “A check of court records revealed that in August of 2000, he paid a fine of $871, which included court costs, for violation of driving without a license,” Reed said. The payment was “in lieu of an eight-day sentence imposed by the court,” the captain added. Other versions of the incarceration tale have floated around for years. In some, he did one stint in jail; in others, he has done multiple. One was printed in a 1997 profile of Tim Roth in GQ UK magazine: “Tarantino . . . had worked in a video shop and he had spent eight days in LA County jail for unpaid parking tickets.” In Jeffrey Dawson’s 2000 biography “Quentin Tarantino: The Cinema of Cool,” the writer-director is quoted as saying, “I went to jail about three different times just for warrants on me for moving violations . . . They had warrants on me for three years and eventually I got stopped and they sent me to jail.” In 2009, the British news site Metro.co.uk quoted Tarantino as saying, “I was kind of excited about going to jail the first time and I learned some great dialogue.” Tarantino has been on a press tour for “The Hateful Eight” and has refused to back away from his recent statements about police. “When I see murders, I do not stand by,” he said at a rally in Washington Square Park last month just four days after NYPD cop Randolph Holder was shot dead. “I have to call a murder a murder, and I have to call a murderer a murderer.” Tarantino’s father and several relatives who are NYPD retirees condemned the diatribe. “It makes police officers’ jobs a lot harder,” his cousin, retired NYPD Lt. Anthony Massaro, had told The Post. “It’s much more dangerous today than in my time . . . It’s gotten very bad for police officers to do their job. My heart goes out to them.” http://nypost.com/2015/11/29/quentin-tarantino-lied-about-going-to-jail-la-cops/ --------------------------------- Delusional Whatabee Gangster Hasbeen Fail button: http://youtu.be/m30mG3JKzA8/ |
|
|
|
I will predict that the cops will try to prevent people from reaching the theatre on premiere night simply by directing traffic around the venue such that the 'stars' will maybe have to walk a couple blocks to get to the venue. Being mobbed for autographs by film fans, they may need the cops (or more likely their bodyguards) to 'make a hole' in the crowd to get them to the theatre in time to do interviews, etc. I would also suggest they'll block access to nearby parking facilities and will threaten to ticket and arrest limo drivers who try to stop and let people get out of their cars while on the street. Claims of impeding traffic come to mind. Of course if I'm going to write the driver a ticket, EVERYONE has to stay in the car. I'll question each one of you individually. Did YOU ask the driver to let you out? Did he do it himself? Did you threaten him with his job if he didn't? The idea is the cop wants to know if it was a criminal conspiracy to stop the car, and thus he can lay additional charges. Interviews take time you see. So 6-8 people per limo? Hmmm. This could take a while..... In addition, if theatres have paid duty cops for security, bet that anyone attending his movie will be forced to go through pat downs, electronic wanding, and will be told at the last second that cell phones will not be allowed in the theatre, thus forcing everyone to run back to their cars to dump them and then run back to avoid missing the movie. Cops will happily mess with you for all kinds of reasons. Based on the number of theatre shootings do you think cops would be criticized for being 'extra safe'? If I deny the rich and famous access to the venue and make them go around the block a couple times, do you think maybe some of them go home? All that has to happen is a cop claims to see a suspicious person, maybe with a gun, and we have to keep the place on lockdown. We wouldn't want QT getting shot in front of 50 cops right? How can he complain about his own safety? So how does oh I dunno a 2 hour delay sound? We'll need to send in SWAT, the bomb squad, a couple dogs, maybe a HAZMAT team to test the air quality.... you get the idea. We can do this alllll daayyy Mr. Fancypants Hollywood Director. Still don't want to apologize? Awwww,look, all TV trucks are leaving. That's a shame QT. I guess they have a deadline to meet. So sorry you couldn't have your red carpet interview recorded for posterity after banging back a couple Jagermeisters in the car. Have a nice night! Can anyone say using taxpayer funds to interrupt free trade a là capitalism? A cash cow like Hollywood films that bring billions and keep millions flowing throughout our economy? The first sign of blockbuster blockade will have the production companies and studios calling their mayors governors congressmen and judges. Good luck with that crap. |
|
|