Day: January 16, 2023

  • Clumsy move or beginnings of a potential Kohberger defense

    Clumsy move or beginnings of a potential Kohberger defense

    All eyes will be on Bryan Kohbergher’s trial this coming summer.. until then legal experts are actively opining online and other forums about what move the defense will make to poke holes in what seems to be a solid prosecution theory..

    One criminology expert thinks it will be a focus on DNA evidence and those now famous cell phone pings..

    MORE..

    During an appearance on ITV’s This Morning, David Wilson, a Professor Emeritus of Criminology and founding Director of the Centre for Applied Criminology at Birmingham City University was asked about the knife sheath found and how the DNA found on it was linked back to Kohberger’s father. The 28-year-old Ph.D. student was arrested shortly after the DNA was found.

    This Morning host, Phillip Schofield said that leaving the sheath was a “clumsy move”; however, Wilson interrupted suggesting it could have also been “a remarkably clever move.”

    “Because one of the things that’s really struck me about the person that’s been arrested and accused of this is he is intelligent and high-functioning,” Wilson said. “Would a highly-skilled, intelligent student who is teaching criminology, a Ph.D. student, have made such a basic error?”

    “I could have your DNA,” Wilson said, motioning to co-host, Holly Willoughby. “Your DNA is on me. I could go wherever I wanted to go in the next hour and your DNA would be where I go to. So the defense is clearly going to present issues that will suggest that Kohberger is innocent.”

    David Wilson continues on the cell pings:

    “Moscow isn’t so far away from Washington State University, so it would be natural that there would be some of those towers that might ping,” Wilson said. “There will be a defense.”

  • CONTR ALT DEL: New Twitter dump on COVID

    CONTR ALT DEL: New Twitter dump on COVID

    Twitter file dump! The COVID connection.. MORE FROM LEE FANG //


    ..Pfizer and Moderna’s lobbying group BIO fully funded content moderation compact and worked with Twitter to set content moderation rules about COVID “misinformation” …

    …BIO funded helping Twitter “create content moderation bots..

    x x x

    The Moderna/Pfizer funded campaign included emails to Twitter officials with regular takedown requests:

    MORE..

    BioNTech, which developed Pfizer’s vaccine, reached out to Twitter to request that Twitter directly censor users tweeting at them to ask for generic low cost vaccines:

    MORE..

    // MORE.. DEVELOPING//

  • Pope Francis fuels rumors he may quit in sermon on ‘the virtue of stepping aside at the right time’

    Pope Francis fuels rumors he may quit in sermon on ‘the virtue of stepping aside at the right time’

    During the Sunday Angelus, a Catholic prayer the Pope often leads on Sundays and holy days, the Pontiff said: ‘It is easy to become attached to roles and positions, to the need to be esteemed, recognised and rewarded.’

    He continued: ‘It is good for us too to cultivate, like [Saint] John [the Baptist], the virtue of setting ourselves aside at the right moment, bearing witness that the point of reference of life is Jesus.

    ‘To step aside, to learn to take one’s leave: I have completed this mission, I have had this meeting, I will step aside and leave room to the Lord. To learn to step aside, not to take something for ourselves in recompense.’
    — Read on www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-11639905/Pope-fuels-rumours-quit-sermon-virtue-stepping-aside-right-time.html

    Developing ..

  • Review: We saw Skinamarink so you don’t have to–but you still might want to

    Review: We saw Skinamarink so you don’t have to–but you still might want to

    Unless you want to? Seriously, go see it if you do. You may never see a movie like this in a theater again.

    We traveled to Reading PA to see a late night showing of the film Sunday night–a few friends were mad it wasn’t in their hometown of Philadelphia but a smaller venue like the AMC in Berks County.

    It was not overly crowded for our showing, just a few people sprinkled around the theater, mostly with blankets and their feet up.

    The Horror Report will make the valiant attempt of keeping spoilers mostly out, but expect a few here and there.

    There is a simple (we think) premise:

    In the year 1995, two children wake up in the middle of the night to find their father is missing, and all the windows and doors in their home have vanished. Kyle Edward Ball, the writer of the low budget movie *$15,000!* takes us on a journey from there..

    From the moment the film begins until the second it ends, you feel automatic frustration. There is anger over the camera angles–why do they only show the tops and bottom of doors! Why only feet! Why only legos over and over and over again. Then when the TV starts playing? Sheesh.. We quickly had our fill of old fashioned creepy cartoons. Fast.

    There are scenes of confusion. Scenes where there are subtitles for sentences that you can clearly understand, but no subtitles for muffled words being said in dark hallways or upstairs in the house.

    There were moments of Twilight Zone vibes when toilets vanished and reappeared, or blood streaked and then went backwards. But so many other scenes clearly expanded this movie longer than it should have been. What would have been a great 15-minute turned into an hour and 40 minutes of confusion. Mania. Anxiety.

    So in that sense, it also worked.

    Look, we don’t know if Kyle Ball wants us to like this movie or hate it. It divided the horror world since its inception. But while it seems hard to watch, you can also become trapped by it. You are painfully watching each camera angle and slow movement, you are vaguely understanding what is going on but it all takes place off camera. So you are just a witness to something happening somewhere else, constantly. You never quite see the full story, just hear bits and pieces.

    The magic of this frustration is overwhelming in concept: You are stuck in the house with these kids. Whether you are stuck in a dream, their dream, your dream, or some paranormal realm, you are stuck. The imagery, in all its mundane attire, is perfect for the theme: These dark corners, long hallways, and shadows created by a cartoon at midnight, are all things kids are frightened of. They are the origins of dreams, or at least confusion when you are trying to wake from a dream but somehow still being held in it.

    There is a scene in the film that so perfectly illustrates that stuckness.. It is a moment when a cartoon continuously repeats over. And over. And over. And over and over.. again..

    Enjoy it here:

    At the same time for all the positive statements just made, Skinamarink was at the same time almost unwatchable. Almost. But we watched. Perhaps that was a bit of the goal of film makers? Give us a movie that is so dreadful it is boring, so dark it becomes overdone?

    There is also a sense of sadness in this house. While we cannot put our finger quite on it, the kids don’t have normal reactions. As a matter of fact, we grew to somewhat dislike the kids, eventually you end up not even feeling emotion towards them. Quite frankly, this is one of the few movies ever with little character development. You are simply just a fly on the wall, stuck in the house watching kids react to not having parents, windows, or doors. SPOILER: Even when the girl gets her mouth taken off and the boy stabs himself in the eye, you are so done with them that you lose interest. For all the sadness you felt now you just feel like you want to get out of the theater just as much as they want to get out of the house.

    So yes indeed we watched.

    We watched until the end when the movie simply said ‘the end.’ And THAT may have been the most frustrating part of all.