अपनी भाषा में प्लॉट जोड़ेंA viral Facebook event to storm Area 51 draws millions of signups, prompting military warnings. As memes spread about Naruto-running past bullets, UFO hunters and internet personalities conv... सभी पढ़ेंA viral Facebook event to storm Area 51 draws millions of signups, prompting military warnings. As memes spread about Naruto-running past bullets, UFO hunters and internet personalities converge for what could be a desert party or clash.A viral Facebook event to storm Area 51 draws millions of signups, prompting military warnings. As memes spread about Naruto-running past bullets, UFO hunters and internet personalities converge for what could be a desert party or clash.
एपिसोड ब्राउज़ करें
फ़ीचर्ड समीक्षाएं
Far more interesting than recent Trainwreck episode "Real Project X" (in which many kids showed up to a birthday party and, for some reason, we know about it), this story involves a better variety of testimonies, with higher stakes considering the location, and a fairly intricate backstory where half-baked internet ideas go head-to-head with reality.
Social media dwellers are a parody of themselves at this point, and anyone with a couple decades will immediately roll their eyes at the immature elements of this doc, but it's still a fun study of people with lives that permit ideas like "let's storm a government base because aliens and party" before facing humility.
Not exactly something you do if you have priorities, but still hilarious to watch, like seeing Johnny Knoxville and pals invent idiotic stunts for your amusement. The silliness is balanced out by interviews with town locals, military, and other grown-ups who live in reality. When all the parts mix in the end, not much happens besides some partying, but thankfully it didn't go the other way resulting in tragedy.
I'm not sure it had to be split into 2 episodes. Yet I didn't feel like much time was wasted if viewed as a single film. It's ultimately a familiar lesson: reality wins against absurdist notions from the internet. But rarely do we see it done so uniquely, and at least a few people got a dance party out of it.
Social media dwellers are a parody of themselves at this point, and anyone with a couple decades will immediately roll their eyes at the immature elements of this doc, but it's still a fun study of people with lives that permit ideas like "let's storm a government base because aliens and party" before facing humility.
Not exactly something you do if you have priorities, but still hilarious to watch, like seeing Johnny Knoxville and pals invent idiotic stunts for your amusement. The silliness is balanced out by interviews with town locals, military, and other grown-ups who live in reality. When all the parts mix in the end, not much happens besides some partying, but thankfully it didn't go the other way resulting in tragedy.
I'm not sure it had to be split into 2 episodes. Yet I didn't feel like much time was wasted if viewed as a single film. It's ultimately a familiar lesson: reality wins against absurdist notions from the internet. But rarely do we see it done so uniquely, and at least a few people got a dance party out of it.
But here's the real deal, she saw and felt nothing but dollar signs and the cool liquid coinage of Scrooge McDuck - come now, as if your whole life wasn't adding up to this moment - at least YOU believed - one doesn't consider selling thier house to bankroll some stoner dreamscape, when they don't see a massive back end - ok ok ok, objectively re this documentary : didn't need to be told and not really a trainwreck, more like a failed happenstance and symptom of perils of social media - whatever.
Do the majority of Americans suffer from Peter Pan Syndrome? Why would anyone really believe the 'event' was real? The meme guy is a loser who could have easily told everyone it was a joke the first day, but no; he wanted his 15 minutes of fame - get a haircut and a real job dude!
The wayward and Spoiled youth of America has become a way of life since the late '50s and it will continue it seems until hopefully someone alerts them to the fact that being a responsible adult begins at 18 years of age, in some countries that would be 16 years old.
Meme guy doesn't care about the amount of tax payers money that was used to secure his 'event' or the debt the that woman is in because of him, he should have been charged with reckless behavior.
The wayward and Spoiled youth of America has become a way of life since the late '50s and it will continue it seems until hopefully someone alerts them to the fact that being a responsible adult begins at 18 years of age, in some countries that would be 16 years old.
Meme guy doesn't care about the amount of tax payers money that was used to secure his 'event' or the debt the that woman is in because of him, he should have been charged with reckless behavior.
Matty is a legend, a lot of of the followers who wanted to denounce him, were too hard-core like he posted the event and you followed him. You can still go which they did, but there was no reason to be angry with him. It got out of hand obviously he had no credibility. He was just a meme profile poster who got a once in a lifetime opportunity I think age 20, which he handled really well, especially with FBI going to his door.
And yet he still created a performance place and got a little bit of money from all this instead of going today, which is the best outcome
I'm just a supporter of this guy he handled everything so well as for the woman who gained debt and didn't even like him in the first place and a lot of the people of that county didn't like this once in a lifetime moment event I get their concerns were reasonable, especially since they were in the middle of the desert, but the most of the concern should be their own property I think they should've just mind their business. I get what was happening, but they were still a pretty wide area there's going to be crazy people for sure and that's not what they signed up for for living in that location but it wasn't a reoccurring event. It was going to be for two or three days Maybe a week for people who wanted to be really prepared.
And props for the security and government people who did investigate and wanted to make sure that another instant like another place happened wouldn't occur again at that location. It was reasonable and I'm glad that people are thinking and trying to make sure things don't happen again. That doesn't happen often enough.
And yet he still created a performance place and got a little bit of money from all this instead of going today, which is the best outcome
I'm just a supporter of this guy he handled everything so well as for the woman who gained debt and didn't even like him in the first place and a lot of the people of that county didn't like this once in a lifetime moment event I get their concerns were reasonable, especially since they were in the middle of the desert, but the most of the concern should be their own property I think they should've just mind their business. I get what was happening, but they were still a pretty wide area there's going to be crazy people for sure and that's not what they signed up for for living in that location but it wasn't a reoccurring event. It was going to be for two or three days Maybe a week for people who wanted to be really prepared.
And props for the security and government people who did investigate and wanted to make sure that another instant like another place happened wouldn't occur again at that location. It was reasonable and I'm glad that people are thinking and trying to make sure things don't happen again. That doesn't happen often enough.
If you've pondered the age old question are Aliens more intelligent than earthlings, this film is for you.
Wasting a couple of hours watching nerdy fame seekers coalescing around government conspiracy theories, exemplify fake courage, and show why working at a vape kiosk is your only skillset, while a local business owner chooses profit over ppl of her town of 50, ponder no more.
So the next question in life- what's worse, these social media idiots or the mainstream media who gives them attention?
Wasting a couple of hours watching nerdy fame seekers coalescing around government conspiracy theories, exemplify fake courage, and show why working at a vape kiosk is your only skillset, while a local business owner chooses profit over ppl of her town of 50, ponder no more.
So the next question in life- what's worse, these social media idiots or the mainstream media who gives them attention?
टॉप पसंद
रेटिंग देने के लिए साइन-इन करें और वैयक्तिकृत सुझावों के लिए वॉचलिस्ट करें
विवरण
- चलने की अवधि
- 1 घं 37 मि(97 min)
- रंग
इस पेज में योगदान दें
किसी बदलाव का सुझाव दें या अनुपलब्ध कॉन्टेंट जोड़ें