Birdsforme : This is a long way from Mission impossible for Martin Landau. It`s a made for tv movie, w...
girlfreddy : Great episode, starting on the making of The Fall Guy and trying to beat the world record ...
AmieWarren : Just started watching it, but I like more detecting and less sexing. It's o.k., but the on...
Pad Solo : Contains spoilers. Click to show. 2:03:53 That was as close to being dead, pulling the gun out like that. I saw it coming wh...
Julianna : Contains spoilers. Click to show. Wow such evil! They will be brought to justice with that profound evidence with the money!...
darthdirk : Awesome Movie for Fans of Upgrade etc. Hardcore Action meets Comedy meets Drama. The choic...
tyetoes : Such an amazing love story.
pellerman : bad acting, weird storylines, yet still watchable. kind of like a ghetto soap opera meets...
Birdsforme : Not at all what I expected. I would have preferred it remain a dark comedy, but horror wa...
AmieWarren : Just started watching it, but I like more detecting and less sexing. It's o.k., but the on...
I actually learned about a few things that I was not aware of before. Definitely worth watching. Trump asking Comey to swear loyalty to him was like corruption on steroids. That would be the equivalent of a Mayor asking the
Police Chief to swear loyalty to him.
John Dean warned the world about Trump back in 2016.
John Dean served as White House counsel to Nixon from 1970 to 73, he was a key figure in the Watergate saga—participating in, and then helping to expose, the most iconic political scandal in modern U.S. history at the time. Back in 2016, Dean said that Trump could easily be the most corrupt presidents ever—and possibly get away with it.
“The American presidency has never been at the whims of an authoritarian personality like Donald Trump,” Dean stated. “He is going to test our democracy as it has never been tested.”
Dean stated that he is not only convinced that Trump will be worse than Nixon in virtually every way—he thinks he could possibly get away with it.
“I used to have one-on-one conversations with Nixon, where I’d see him checking his more authoritarian tendencies,” Dean recalled. “He’d say, ‘This is something I can’t say out loud…’ or, ‘That is something the president can’t do.’” To Dean, these moments suggested a functioning sense of shame in Nixon, something he was forced to wrestle with in his quest for power. Trump, by contrast, appears to Dean, to be unmolested by any such struggle.” Dean went even further in his assessment, stating: “I don’t think Richard Nixon even comes close to the level of corruption we already know about Trump.”