Thread 211956449 - /tv/ [Archived: 925 hours ago]

Anonymous
6/25/2025, 8:54:44 AM No.211956449
Brooks_Hatlen (2)
Brooks_Hatlen (2)
md5: 670e8d143f3cf214e5c7cfd9f5dadb6c🔍
>"there are too many l cars. This city should be walkable"
Brooks was weak AF
Replies: >>211956977 >>211958454 >>211958713 >>211958827
Anonymous
6/25/2025, 9:14:59 AM No.211956977
>>211956449 (OP)
He killed his wife and kid dyk
Anonymous
6/25/2025, 10:07:47 AM No.211958454
>>211956449 (OP)
OK tell me in a little essay why walkable cities are not good
Replies: >>211958543
Anonymous
6/25/2025, 10:08:57 AM No.211958482
1750706636198221
1750706636198221
md5: 03b0c5213b775fc17eaf6085ef01ecc4🔍
>don't pay attention to things too closely
>don't worry, I'll tell you how to feel about things in my voice over
>you see, Andy was raped repeatedly by a group of men known as the "sisters..."
>but don't worry about that affecting his character in any significant way
>also, don't worry about the fact that all us other inmates are likable...
>sure we're rapists and murderers but just forget about all that and pay heed to our sentimental relationships--the warden and guards are your "bad guys"
>yes we took bets on who would crack and be beaten on their first night...
>but the character who won felt bad about it after (focus on that instead of what an actual prison would be like)
>"I wish I could tell you Ol' Andy fought the good fight..."
>...and wasn't brutally gang-raped on multiple occasions over the course of several years.
>nevermind that now, they got their comeuppance in the end
>and Andy helped that career criminal (who was also a wild at heart rascal, we liked him immediately) get a degree
>it sure was tragic when the guards took advantage of his boyish naivety in order to murder him
>but it all works out so don't you worry a lick
Anonymous
6/25/2025, 10:09:58 AM No.211958504
1750706669029738
1750706669029738
md5: 7cf6acaeaa30058d20c806f2141eab8e🔍
>you see, I'll tell you how to feel about everything at every step
>don't you worry
>isn't the score lovely and emotive?
>you've already forgotten about the homosexual gang rape now, haven't you?
>remember that time we felt like free men up on the roof?
>sunset and ice cold suds
>we could have been working on one of our own houses
>that Hadley sure was one tough screw
>don't you worry a lick...
>I'm telling you he cried like a baby when he was arrested
>doesn't it feel good knowing that?
>it all worked out
>we may have spent decades behind bars but it all worked out
>no lasting trauma and we've been careful to make the negative emotional notes as mild as can be
>it sure was sad when Ol' Brooksy died though
>some men just can't handle the outside
>not us though
>look at this beach
>it's almost sunset again
Anonymous
6/25/2025, 10:11:46 AM No.211958543
>>211958454
Immigration. Urban centres today are the modern equivalent of the Tower of Babel.
Anonymous
6/25/2025, 10:13:11 AM No.211958580
This movie ripped off too much of Alcatraz.
Anonymous
6/25/2025, 10:17:58 AM No.211958713
>>211956449 (OP)
He must be on alert at all times knowing niggers are free now.
Anonymous
6/25/2025, 10:23:20 AM No.211958827
>>211956449 (OP)
>Horse-drawn carriages were once just a way for the average New Yorker to get around the city. In 1853, horsecars—trams on rails pulled by horses—moved 120,000 passengers a day through Manhattan. But by 1880, the city was clearing an average of 41 dead horses from its streets each day—15,000 over the year. Overwork, regular whippings, and crowded, disease-filled stables meant the average carriage horse’s life span was about two years.

Never forget what cars stole from you.