Tag Archives: hitler

Studio Pulling ‘Hitler Finds Out’ Videos

Link: http://www.popeater.com/2010/04/20/hi… Constantin Films, the German company behind Downfall , has started claiming copyright infringement on all those lovely videos of Hitler yelling about things. They claim to be “protecting the artist,” which is obviously total bullshit as the director himself was so enthusiastic. Good job, Germany. Read

What’s Really Behind Those Philadelphia ‘Flash Mobs’: A Breakdancing Crew [Flash Mobs]

Flash mobs terrifying business owners in Philly are said to have been inspired by “Twitter messages to ‘come to South Street.'” That is bullshit: Twitter didn’t cause these flash mobs; neither did “social-networking”. It was a dance crew. This past Saturday night, a violent “flash mob” of teenagers summoned by social-networking websites was supposed to randomly materialize and wreack havoc on South Street in Philadelphia. There was no flash mob, besides the one made up of CNN and Fox News crews, and Philadelphia mayor Michael Nutter and his police entourage, who locked down the area in an attempt to head off the blood-crazed teens. Did the massive police presence and network news cameras successfully prevent a repeat of last week’s destructive South Street flash mob? We believe there’s a much more boring reason: The dance crew Team Nike didn’t happen to have a performance scheduled that night. Philadelphia is currently a city besieged by flash mobs. If you’ve been following the news out of Philly, it seems like there’s some sort of extended Web 2.0 Watts riots going down. ” Another Flash Mob Rocks South Street: In the ‘Tsunami,’ Chants of ‘Burn the city!’ ” blared the Philadelphia Inquirer after a flash mob last Saturday night, March 20th. There have been either three or four large gatherings of—mostly African-American—teens in Philadelphia in the past three months, depending on whose doing the counting. They have turned violent, with some kids smashing up stores and beating up passersby. The March 20th mob was the latest, and it featured some of the worst violence yet . The key aspect of the story, repeated in almost every news account, is that these weren’t just normal groups of teens: They were “flash mobs” ” organized through social networking Web sites. ” Citizens are freaking out: Four days after last Saturday’s, the University of Pennsylvania warned students of an impending flash mob near their campus. Police showed up in force; nothing happened . And the spectre of hundreds of rampaging black teens able to assemble with a few mouse clicks has captivated a social media-obsessed press . We covered the flash mob on South Street that actually happened on March 20th with a heavy emphasis on the social-networking angle. The Times led with the social networking angle, too: ” Mobs Are Born as Word Grows by Text Message .” The Philadelphia Daily News singled out Twitter to blame for the March 20th mob. Inspired by Twitter messages to “come to South Street,” police say hundreds – business owners say thousands – of young teens stampeded down South Street in waves, jumping on top of cars, knocking over pedestrians and fighting and cursing. But, uh, about those Tweets? Here are the results of a Twitter search for “come to south street” from March 20th-March21st Jessika521’s tweet on March 20th at 2:47PM at her friend Brainbangley was the only “come to south street” tweet before the flash mob. The other results were about the Daily News article, after the flash mob took place . Unless all these teens had protected accounts, or the flash mob was entirely organized before 3PM, there’s no way this was a Twitter-mobilized mob. The mob didn’t even begin until around 9, so that’s highly unlikely. (Hilariously, Jessika521 later posted a tweet about a New York Times journalist asking her on Formspring.me if she had been at the flash mob. Her answer: “What the fuck?” She was probably just shopping.) In fact a close reading of the news accounts shows that, far from a roaming mob of teens who just all happened to tweet the same thing at the same time, the majority of these “flash mobs” were actually street performances organized by Team Nike, which is, as far as we can tell, a break-dancing crew made up of teens wearing big white Nike T-shirts. Here’s what two teens told the court during a hearing about the March 20th “flash mob” : Two teens… also said informal, neighborhood dance groups with a presence on MySpace had been at the heart of the gatherings. One dance group identified in court, Team Nike, posted a video on YouTube this week showing about a dozen teens on South Street dressed in what appeared to be homemade Team Nike shirts. The teens dance and shout slogans, but are peaceable throughout. At one point, the message “We got tha whole South Street following us Team Nike” flashes on the screen. The team members are, in fact, shown at the head of a large crowd. Here’s video of Team Nike at the March 20th “flash mob”: And during a hearing for teens arrested in a February 16th “flash mob” that rampaged through The Gallery, a local mall, one teen said: One 15-year-old Gratz student took the blame for sparking the large gathering at the Gallery. He said he is involved in a dance group called Team Nike and that mall security guards let the teens dance there. On Feb. 16 he said he put a “friend blaster” message on MySpace that the dance group was headed to the Gallery to make a video. “Anybody who thinks this is a flash mob, it’s my fault,” the teen said. “This time, it was too many people . . . They ain’t flash mobs. They’re dance groups.” Another 15-year-old Gratz student also said that informal, neighborhood dance groups are at the heart of the gatherings. He said the groups throw parties and sometimes identify themselves with homemade shirts and hoodies. (emphasis mine.) Here’s video of the Krush Groove Crew dancing at the Gallery—apparently a popular spot for Philly breakdancers: Just like that, two out of three (four?) flash mobs are explained. Sorry, CNN, they weren’t mobs of angry black teens empowered by Twitter and looking for something to smash: They were breakdancing concerts. Yes, the kids were perhaps “summoned” by social-networking messages from Team Nike members, just like people are “summoned” to any show or concert. And we’re guessing these kids summoned their friends, who summoned their own and things reached that snowballing point where they get out of hand. Like, imagine a Justin Bieber concert with no security. This explanation is a whole lot less scary than the irrational, all-destroying hive mind that many people seem to think is driving these “teenage flash mobs” as they sweep the city via “social-networking”. This is probably why media accounts have largely overlooked it. The New York Daily News ominously wrote of the February 16th flash mob: “Police suspect the 100 teens gathered at The Gallery on Market St. after organizing the incident on Facebook or Twitter.” No mention was made of the possible Team Nike connection, as if the entire point of the gathering was to cause an “incident.” A puzzled psychologist instead could only offer: “social phenomena have to start somewhere.” The Philadelphia Inquirer asks: ” What’s behind ‘flash mobs?’ ” They suggest everything from “boredom” to “urban inequality” to “the dynamics of large groups.” Yes, those are certainly all at play! But more immediately, we believe we have found your “incident,” your terrifying, unknowable “social phenomena.” This is what’s behind the Philly flash mobs: Presenting: Team Nike. Maybe instead of tooling around Philadelphia trying to guess where the next flash mob is going to happen, Philly authorities can instead try to find Team Nike and their breakdancing buddies a safe place to hold their next street show. If not, we can predict where and when the next street show will get out of hand—er, dangerous flash mob will be summoned. According to one Team Nike member’s MySpace page , they’re planning on “shutting down” 40st on April 10th. See you at the flash mob! Look at this face and tremble, for it is the face of a flash mob: Also, check out their show next month. Should be poppin’!

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What’s Really Behind Those Philadelphia ‘Flash Mobs’: A Breakdancing Crew [Flash Mobs]

Pope on the Ropes: Your 2010 Papal Scandal Primer [Religion]

New revelations of child molestation by Catholic priests, and the Pope’s indifference, have his critics and defenders locked in a holy war of words. Some anticipate his downfall. Others see a secularist smear campaign. Here’s your guide to the controversy. It’s been a rough month for Pope Benedict XVI. First, his letter to Irish Catholics apologizing for past abuses by priests there didn’t go over well . Then the Times printed documents showing that while Benedict headed the Church’s office charged with defrocking priests, he ignored reports of a bishop who molested 200 deaf boys in Wisconsin. And before that, as archbishop of Munich, he allowed a known pedophile to continue leading a parish . Finally, this weekend the Pope had enough. He struck back against the media during his Palm Sunday address , saying he won’t be “intimidated by petty gossip,” and that he doesn’t appreciate the “ignoble attempts” to tarnish his good name. Yesterday, the Times ran an article that says as archbishop of Munich, the Pope, then Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, “expended more energy pursuing theological dissidents than sexual predators,” and that he wasn’t much concerned with the day-to-day managerial side of being archbishop. Like the annoying amount of paperwork that probably goes along with prosecuting a kiddie-toucher? Instead, he focused on more important things, like disciplining a priest for leading a mass at a peace rally in 1981. That priest eventually left the Church, disillusioned. In an editorial on Friday , the National Catholic Reporter said, “the Holy Father needs to directly answer questions, in a credible forum, about his role […] in the mismanagement of the clergy sex abuse crisis.” Andrew Sullivan thinks the Pope’s “cult of total authority” stands in the way of owning up to any personal culpability, and diminishes the authority of the Catholic Church. “It’s obvious he should resign. It’s also obvious he cannot. That’s why this crisis is so grave,” Sullivan writes. Even Sinead O’Connor jumped in, railing against Benedict in a Sunday Washington Post op-ed. The Guardian polled its readers over the weekend: But the Vatican is fighting back. It started Twitter pages in six different languages on March 20. The first tweet was a link to Benedict’s letter to Irish Catholics . And the Pope even has a fan club! They have a website called the The Benedict Blog , and lately it has been busy countering the Pope’s critics in the nasty, secular press. The Telegraph ‘s Blogs Editor, Damian Thompson, goes after “liberal Catholics” for Pope-bashing , and for trying to “sabotage” Benedict’s “liturgical reforms.” New York’s Archbishop Timothy Dolan rushed to the Pope’s defense and compared his plight to the persecution of Jesus, saying “Palm Sunday mass is surely a fitting place for us to express our love for and solidarity for our earthly shepherd now suffering from the same unjust accusation and shouts of the mob as Jesus did.” The Times ‘ religion reporter, Laurie Goodstein, has really pissed off the Vatican. She blew open the story of Reverend Lawrence Murphy, the kiddie-touching Milwaukee priest with a thing for deaf children. Goodstein writes : Top Vatican officials – including the future Pope Benedict XVI – did not defrock a priest who molested as many as 200 deaf boys, even though several American bishops repeatedly warned them that failure to act on the matter could embarrass the church, according to church files newly unearthed as part of a lawsuit. The internal correspondence from bishops in Wisconsin directly to Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, the future pope, shows that while church officials tussled over whether the priest should be dismissed, their highest priority was protecting the church from scandal. The documents emerge as Pope Benedict is facing other accusations that he and direct subordinates often did not alert civilian authorities or discipline priests involved in sexual abuse when he served as an archbishop in Germany and as the Vatican’s chief doctrinal enforcer.” The documents can be seen here . Then there’s Rev. Peter Hullerman. He molested boys at his parish in Germany , was sent to therapy for pedophilia, and days later returned to work with children. He was convicted of molesting boys at another parish that Benedict helped transfer him to. But supporters of the Pope are trying to lay the blame on his right hand man, Rev. Gerhard Gruber. There’s some really bizarre stuff out there, too, like this YouTube video. In a “parody” of the 2004 movie Downfall , Adolf Hitler learns of Benedict’s popularity among “the youth” and loses his mind. One of Hitler’s aides in the bunker tells him: “But at least we got the secular media against [Benedict].” Are they equating critics of the Pope with Nazis? No, of course not. It’s a parody! Ha! Kind of like posting the picture below of Benedict, then Herr Joseph Ratzinger, as a totally unenthusiastic member of the Hitler Youth. Funny stuff! So there’s your 2010 papal scandal as of today. The chorus of prominent Catholics demanding his resignation is growing, but if the Pope’s latest comments are any indicator, old Ratzinger is not going down without a fight. [ Images via Getty ]

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Pope on the Ropes: Your 2010 Papal Scandal Primer [Religion]

Bieber Hits On Barbara Walters

CELEBRITY BUZZ : Bieber shows his preternatural charm in this clip from The View in which he lets B Dubs know exactly what type of lady lover he's into. (Via NYMag .) Read

Hitler Discovers Republicans Have No Ideas

Health care reform isn't officially a major cultural event until Hitler weighs in on it. The Best Links: Hitler Subtitle Mashups on BuzzFeed Via Huffington Post Watch

Hitler Without A Mustache

And look at that purple suit! [ Ed Note : Much better. That Hitler mustache was really holding him back. So many bad connotations, you know?] View

Hitler Hates the IPad

The meme that keeps on giving: Hitler is super disappointed with the lack of multitasking on the iPad. Contribute: Add an image, link, video or comment

Monckton holds strong to Hitler’s Youth statement, “Yes I did it, and I’ll do it again"

It’s hard to listen when your emotions are…heated (couldn’t resist). Just ask Christopher Monckton who, in a heated moment, called the young activists who protested The Americans for Prosperity meeting in Copenhagen yesterday. (Monckton heads up an organization called the Committee for a Constructive Tomorrow, a group known for its opposition to scientific consensus on climate change).

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Monckton holds strong to Hitler’s Youth statement, “Yes I did it, and I’ll do it again"

American WWII veteran had Hitler’s art book

DALLAS – After fighting his way across Europe during World War II, John Pistone was among the U.S. soldiers who entered Adolf Hitler's home nestled in the Bavarian Alps as the war came to a close

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American WWII veteran had Hitler’s art book

Who Said It: Kanye Or Hitler?

Internet duo Garfunkel and Oates notice an alarming consistency between the quotes of Hitler and Kanye West.

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Who Said It: Kanye Or Hitler?