On Mojo Encounters, special guest bigfoot researcher Jim Silsby. They talk about some of the different encounters with giant bigfoot creatures of central Michigan.
R.I.P. MR. JERRY LEWIS! This guy has done more for the children with crippling diseases than most people of Hollywood could dream about. This isn't living through Hollywood dude. This is paying respect to man with a big heart. And what would you know about heart. You do know Trash smells? So take yourself out of my post! You're garbage!
"The problem with the Jerry Lewis telethon was not that he tried to help people with muscular dystrophy. The problem was the way Jerry Lewis did it. Yes the telethon raised a lot of money. But it also perpetuated destructive stereotypes. Jerry’s message was simple: 'crippled children deserve pity.' His critics offered an alternative: 'people with disabilities deserve respect.'
"Every year it was the same. Jerry did his telethon shtick, parading little kids in wheelchairs across the Las Vegas stage, making maudlin appeals for cash, alternatively mugging and weeping, and generally claiming to be a friend to the doomed."
^ not sure who the dip weed is above but clearly he's had a horrible child hood and very little up bringing it seems ^ I have an idea guy how about when you die we let everyone know you never moved out on your own, freaking basement dweller for sure don't worry Mommy will calm you down with a cup of koolaid and a PBJ! You stupid ignorant waste of human flesh ^
I'm pretty sure the benefactors of those funds would disagree with you 9:30. Jerry brought muscular dystrophy to a whole new level. I'm not a big fan of his style either, but I doubt there are many celebrities who could of raised more money or awareness. Fund raising is a business, not a popularity contest to entertain you.
THE KIDS ARE ALL RIGHT is a half-hour documentary about a renegade Jerry's Kid named Mike Ervin. A Muscular Dystrophy Association poster child in the 1960s, today Mike is an outspoken disability rights activist who challenges the MDA 's representation of people with disabilities in its Labor Day telethon through his activist group, Jerry's Orphans.
BACKGROUND Charities have used poster children to raise money since the 1930s because it works. When people see a child with leg braces and crutches, they feel sorry and drop a coin in the jar or call in the pledge. But once the fundraising drive is over, that image of the poor little poster child lingers. The general public absorbs the idea that people with muscular dystrophy, or polio--really all people with disabilities--are pitiable victims who want and need nothing more than a big charity to take care of them. Or, better, to cure them. Mike calls this the charity mentality.
So you're purposing the kids are okay and don't need our money. You should work the next telethon LOL. As previously mentioned, like it or not, fund raising is a business.
This story was circulating the internet way back in 2004, or maybe as far back as 1999. Back when everybody was on 56k dial-up modems and a "Facebook" was just a regular book with directory listing of names and headshots. This story was so disturbing and so shocking that nobody believed it at the time. It was the Robert Lindsay " Bear Hunter: Two Bigfoots Shot and DNA Samples Taken " story of the time. And like Robert's Bear Hunter story , this witness didn't have a name. The only thing known about the witness is that this person was a government employee, anonymous of course. The author of the story was a science teacher named Thom Powell who believe it really happened and that the whole story was an elaborate cover-up. Powell said the anonymous government employee alerted the BFRO about a 7.5 feet long/tall burn victim with "multiple burns on hands, feet, legs and body; some 2nd and 3rd degree burns". Sadly, there was no DNA samples taken from...
Rumors abound on whether or not Finding Bigfoot will continue, but hopeful news is on the horizon. Snake Oil Productions, the production company responsible for Finding Bigfoot, is seeking a permit for filming in the Monterey, Virginia area. Monterey lies between the Monongahela and George Washington National Forests. Definitely a good place to look for bigfoot. We can only speculate if this means Finding Bigfoot has been signed on for additional seasons, or if perhaps a new bigfoot show is in the works. We'll keep you updated on any further announcements for sure.
R.I.P. MR. JERRY LEWIS!
ReplyDelete"What"??
DeleteHave concern for your own family, Zabo. Quit living though hollywood.
DeleteR.I.P. MR. JERRY LEWIS!
DeleteThis guy has done more for the children with crippling diseases than most people of Hollywood could dream about. This isn't living through Hollywood dude. This is paying respect to man with a big heart. And what would you know about heart. You do know Trash smells? So take yourself out of my post! You're garbage!
Agreed Zabo
DeleteMR. Lewis raised over 2 B dollars for needy kids.
Ignore stuool, he's just a white trash wigger
MMC
Stuey can't comprehend compassion.
Delete^ Yes
DeleteAnd because of the underlying cause I feel bad about trolling him/her
But he/she is such a degenerate. ( 4 syllables. WOW)
MMC
"The problem with the Jerry Lewis telethon was not that he tried to help people with muscular dystrophy. The problem was the way Jerry Lewis did it. Yes the telethon raised a lot of money. But it also perpetuated destructive stereotypes. Jerry’s message was simple: 'crippled children deserve pity.' His critics offered an alternative: 'people with disabilities deserve respect.'
Delete"Every year it was the same. Jerry did his telethon shtick, parading little kids in wheelchairs across the Las Vegas stage, making maudlin appeals for cash, alternatively mugging and weeping, and generally claiming to be a friend to the doomed."
https://www.thenation.com/article/end-jerry-lewis-telethon-its-about-time/
^ not sure who the dip weed is above but clearly he's had a horrible child hood and very little up bringing it seems ^ I have an idea guy how about when you die we let everyone know you never moved out on your own, freaking basement dweller for sure don't worry Mommy will calm you down with a cup of koolaid and a PBJ! You stupid ignorant waste of human flesh ^
Delete^Meltdown achieved.
DeleteI'm pretty sure the benefactors of those funds would disagree with you 9:30. Jerry brought muscular dystrophy to a whole new level. I'm not a big fan of his style either, but I doubt there are many celebrities who could of raised more money or awareness. Fund raising is a business, not a popularity contest to entertain you.
DeleteTHE KIDS ARE ALL RIGHT is a half-hour documentary about a renegade Jerry's Kid named Mike Ervin. A Muscular Dystrophy Association poster child in the 1960s, today Mike is an outspoken disability rights activist who challenges the MDA 's representation of people with disabilities in its Labor Day telethon through his activist group, Jerry's Orphans.
DeleteBACKGROUND
Charities have used poster children to raise money since the 1930s because it works. When people see a child with leg braces and crutches, they feel sorry and drop a coin in the jar or call in the pledge. But once the fundraising drive is over, that image of the poor little poster child lingers. The general public absorbs the idea that people with muscular dystrophy, or polio--really all people with disabilities--are pitiable victims who want and need nothing more than a big charity to take care of them. Or, better, to cure them. Mike calls this the charity mentality.
So you're purposing the kids are okay and don't need our money. You should work the next telethon LOL. As previously mentioned, like it or not, fund raising is a business.
DeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
DeleteYes please Stuey, report yourself as many times as you feel necessary.
Delete