Post by PeelerOn Wed, 29 Nov 2023 15:33:59 +0000, clinically insane, pedophilic, serbian
bitch Razovic, the resident psychopath of sci and scj and Usenet's famous
sexual cripple, making a total ass of herself as "Spamming/forging jew
Post by Spamming/forging jew paedophile BARRY 'jewface' ZACHARY SHEINPropaganda
Ah, a jewlover! Here's a jew rectum for you to suck!
SLURRRRRRRRRRRRRRP!
You just CAN'T hide what's the matter with you, eh, pedo swine Razovic,
Usenet's most "famous" sexual cripple? LOL
Normal boys and normal men sometimes fantasize about Judenfraulein
vaginas to fuck.
But who accused him of being a normal man?
To write about a much better topic, here is an article about a
television show.
https://www.reddit.com/r/entertainment/comments/xjw1fo/quantum_leap_reboot_brings_a_rare_asian_american/
‘Quantum Leap’ reboot brings a rare Asian American lead to network
television
“The show is about jumping into other people and having an experience
that is maybe different than yours.”
Image: Raymond Lee as Dr. Ben Song in 'Quantum Leap'.
Raymond Lee as Dr. Ben Song in "Quantum Leap".Serguei Bachlakov / NBC
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Sept. 19, 2022, 10:49 AM PDT
By Max Gao
When Raymond Lee first received an offer to star in “Quantum Leap,” a
sequel to the beloved sci-fi series that aired from 1989 to 1993, he
thought the show’s producers had made a mistake. Instead of a supporting
character, he was being asked to play the lead.
“I got to play the lead in theater, [but] I didn’t know if the landscape
was there for me to do it in television, let alone network television,”
Lee told NBC Asian America. “But lo and behold, it presented itself, and
I was like, ‘I have to take this swing.’ This is the role I’ve been
waiting for.”
Set nearly three decades after Scott Bakula’s Dr. Sam Beckett stepped
into a time-traveling machine and vanished, the new “Quantum Leap” on
NBC stars Lee as Dr. Ben Song, a quantum physicist who discovers a way
to travel through time and space and fix mistakes of the past by
temporarily leaping into the bodies of other people.
Image: Raymond Lee as Ben in "Quantum Leap" .
Raymond Lee as Dr. Ben Song in "Quantum Leap." Ron Batzdorff / NBC
It’s a dream role for Lee, who remembers watching the original with his
best friend in sixth grade. He credits showrunner Martin Gero, with whom
he had briefly worked on a short film in 2019, for entrusting him to
continue the show’s legacy.
Gero, a writer and producer best known for creating the NBC crime drama
“Blindspot,” said the creative team, which includes original producers
Donald P. Bellisario and Deborah Pratt, was looking to cast a nonwhite
actor to headline the revival.
“We knew we wanted a diverse actor for Ben, because they had done the
two white guys version of it before, and part of modernizing this is
telling a broader story,” Gero said. “The show is about jumping into
other people and having an experience that is maybe different than yours.”
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In Lee, the producers found someone who exudes all the qualities of a
leading man, bucking a trend in Hollywood that has historically reduced
Asian characters, especially in the sci-fi genre, to sidekicks of heroic
protagonists.
“The greatest thing about the show is that it’s almost like a different
TV show every week, but it needs that consistency,” Gero said. “Raymond
really has this quality of a leading man that can drop into these
situations. He’s extraordinarily handsome, he’s really sincere, but he
could still be really funny. [He brings] the consistency that is so
tricky while still very freely entering these other people’s lives and
walking a mile in their shoes.”
That younger generations of Asian Americans will be able to see parts of
themselves in his character is particularly meaningful to Lee, who grew
up in an area of California with a significant Asian population but
seldom felt represented in mainstream media.
“I’ve always considered the way I look and my background to be a
superpower,” said Lee, who is Korean American. “I grew up with a lot of
strong Asian figures in my life. I grew up in Glendale, where it was
about 20% Asians. … I had a lot of cool Asian brothers and sisters to
look up to, and there was a community there, and one could only hope
that with a role like this, we can create that sort of energy.”
While he tries to avoid thinking about the significance of this project
when cameras are rolling, Lee reiterated that the responsibility of
playing one of the few Asian American leads on television right now is
not lost on him. Representation “does so much for not only this
industry, but every industry — for anybody to see themselves being
represented in a position of leadership and [as] a person who is
actively going out and doing good and saving lives,” he said.
Image: Caitlin Bassett as Addison and Raymond Lee as Ben in "Quantum Leap".
Caitlin Bassett as Addison and Raymond Lee as Ben in "Quantum Leap." Ron
Batzdorff / NBC
When Lee’s character, Ben, makes an unauthorized leap in the pilot
episode, he loses almost all of his memories, forcing him to cobble
together parts of his own life as he jumps from person to person. As he
starts to remember what prompted him to time travel on his own, Ben will
also begin to reconnect with his cultural heritage. “It’s a way for us
to tell an incredibly specific story about what it’s like to be a Korean
immigrant in a way that he’s also kind of learning about it [again as he
goes],” Gero explained.
When the first draft of the pilot was written, “there was an immigrant
story that was tied to [Ben] that was very present,” Lee revealed. But
now, his backstory will be slowly revealed over the course of the first
season, a creative decision that Lee thinks will ultimately make the
character — and his story — more accessible to a wider audience in the
long run.
“You start with the universal relatability of this person, who is lost
and a fish out of water,” Lee said. “He just feels really out of place —
everyone can relate to that. Not everybody can relate with an immigrant
story right off the bat. So it’s a soft opening into this person who has
a very sordid past, and I think it was very smart of them to withhold
that. Before the end of this first season, a lot of Ben’s background
will come into play.”