PARIS, TEXAS - Movie Review

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  • čas přidán 28. 05. 2024
  • Website: www.deepfocuslens.com
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    #paristexas #moviereview
  • Krátké a kreslené filmy

Komentáře • 114

  • @kangaroo3708
    @kangaroo3708 Před rokem +37

    Robbie Mueller was one of the best cinematographers of all time

  • @sayeedanwar13
    @sayeedanwar13 Před 6 měsíci +5

    In the final moments, it seems that Travis didn't make a genuine effort to reunite with her because deep down, he acknowledges that he hasn't truly transformed. His enduring love for her, evident when he watches old videos with his son, suggests that the core of his feelings remains unchanged. Travis understands that when he's in love, his ability to work and provide for her diminishes, and he fears falling back into the same patterns as before. In his four years of quest, Travis comes to accept the painful reality that, even if they were to reconcile, the same challenges would likely resurface. It's a melancholic conclusion, but one grounded in the harsh realism of their situation.

    • @accorsistudios
      @accorsistudios Před 4 měsíci

      My guess is, from the soliloquy when he said, "you weren't jealous, you didn't ask where I was." "if you're not jealous, then you showed you don't love me." Additionally, so much of the story is the vastness of emptiness, longing, pain.... as much as you want it to end well, rectify...from a storytelling standpoint, it would pull some of the weight and magnitude away from the theme of emptiness that is so thickly present in the ether of this film. Roger Ebert wrote beautifully, "practical and logical objections can be raised about this story. Wenders uses the materials of realism, but this is a fable, about archetypal longings set in American myth." This film packs a very unexpected punch. One that will stay with you a long while.

  • @voiceover2191
    @voiceover2191 Před rokem +34

    the greatest scene is when travis tells his story in the peep show where he visits the son's mom and reveals their back story. Masterful.

    • @zakwan10
      @zakwan10 Před rokem +3

      That scene is burned into my brain forever.

    • @voiceover2191
      @voiceover2191 Před rokem

      @@zakwan10 the famous "I knew these people ..."

    • @accorsistudios
      @accorsistudios Před 4 měsíci +1

      Agreed. For me it was when Jane first sniffled behind the glass. At first I thought it was a rare filmmaking gaffe. Why was the mic so loud, under her chin. Then the camera pans to show you the insulation in the wall. (It was about here I was frightened I may get emotional and let it out.) Then the audio seemed to shift, we hear Travis on the speaker, her emoting is close to us. Exactly at the moment she is realizing its Travis, exactly at the moment we are seeing her heart and inner beauty. The insulation, the ugliness of the view of the world from her perspective is insanely well thought out.

  • @epicmeade
    @epicmeade Před rokem +23

    I just watched this movie again a few months ago after having not watched it for more two decades, and the impact of it still is as strong as ever. When Paris Texas came out in 1984 I was part of the San Francisco music scene. And I found it really interesting how powerfully that film affected the underground music community in SF and around the country. To such a degree that I think it can lay claim at leas in part to gestating what would come to be known as Alt Country and Americana music. Not just from the brilliant Ry Cooder score but from the poignant images of tortured lives and lonely landscapes that it evoked.

  • @ftzwtr
    @ftzwtr Před rokem +7

    My favorite film ever. Huge inspiration on my wanting to make films, but also a huge influence on me as a musician. Ry Cooder's score is achingly beautiful.

  • @katabirajonathan9909
    @katabirajonathan9909 Před rokem +17

    Thank you for that thoughtful review. This truly is one of my favourite films of all time and I hate how it has just been reduced to its aesthetics on Tumblr yet there so much that it so moving and profound in the cinematography informs the story that is being in such a beautiful and melancholic way.

  • @brendantorsney5891
    @brendantorsney5891 Před rokem +8

    One of the finest nuanced leading man roles ever. Perfectly lost and beat down cool. There's always something of a story behind a man exiting a desert in a suit!!

  • @kangaroo3708
    @kangaroo3708 Před rokem +10

    Harry Dean Stanton was the man!

  • @StellasEncounter
    @StellasEncounter Před rokem +4

    Great review thank you. Should mention that the soundtrack really makes the movie too! Such hauntingly beautiful music by Ry Cooder.

  • @helvete_ingres4717
    @helvete_ingres4717 Před rokem +6

    I remember thinking this was one of the best movies I'd ever seen (mainly due to the intensity of the final act) when I saw it some years ago, wonder if I'd feel the same way about it today, thinking of myself as 'knowing' a lot more about film now than back then. The key image/edit for me was near the beginning, a close-up of Travis appearing to stand in front of a very 'American' city skyline, only to edit to another shot from an angle that shows he's standing in front of a wall painted in a gaudy mural. That's the best kind of cinematic image, that says MORE than a thousand words. And the key emotion is loneliness, quite strongly. btw the final shot of Travis leaving is (it has to be assumed intentional) echo of John Ford's the Searchers (I think thematically, the Searchers, Taxi Driver, and Paris, Texas would be a very powerful triple-bill_

  • @realDialFforFilm
    @realDialFforFilm Před rokem +7

    I've been hoping you would review this at some point. This was one of those films I could tell upon first viewing that it would be a favorite of mine. Great review!

  • @steve4films
    @steve4films Před 9 měsíci +2

    A really lovely review of one of my favourite films of all time. Thanks.

  • @jimpickard3850
    @jimpickard3850 Před rokem +1

    I watched it a few years ago and really enjoyed it, but your review has made me really want to revisit it. Thank you.

  • @shvartze
    @shvartze Před 5 měsíci

    I took ballet classes along with Nastassja Kinski every single day in 1978. She was the most beautiful thing on two feet. Really astonishing beauty. Every now and then Roman Polanski would stop by as he was best friends with my teacher Stefan Wenta.

  • @AnthonyGuerrino_aka_TonyMoro

    Cannot wait for your 50k subscribers vid!

  • @kenb.1212
    @kenb.1212 Před rokem +1

    I'm glad you found Paris, Texas meaningful. I too think it is a brilliant film and it touched me very deeply emotionally. I believe that the budget for Paris, Texas was only 3 million dollars--amazing. The original play/script was written by Sam Shepard. "Buried Child" and "Paris, Texas" are his best in my opinion. Thank you for your wonderful review!

  • @BishopWalters12
    @BishopWalters12 Před rokem +3

    I haven't watched this movie in years but I remember liking it.

  • @vinylrecordplayer
    @vinylrecordplayer Před rokem +1

    Haven't heard this movie's name in quite a while. I'm convinced. Nice review!

  • @johnenglish1955
    @johnenglish1955 Před rokem +1

    🤠 This has always been my favorite movie for as long as I can remember. It was so nice to see this post, and I think you nailed it when it comes to the deeper meanings of the film. Sam Shepard wrote an amazing story. It was acted beautifully. The cinematography was brilliant. And Ry Cooder's score adds so much to the tone of the movie. Thanks for your review! 👍

  • @SanAndreasToday
    @SanAndreasToday Před 9 měsíci

    🙌 Awesome Video
    I can’t express how much I love this movie. I can just think of the soundtrack and get a tear haha. Love the colors, everything
    If I start talking about it I could go on and on. David Lynch slid his way into this for sure, I thought that too.
    Favorite scenes besides the mirror scene
    Walt talking to Travis in the diner and Travis first going into the building and seeing Jane sitting down
    Great video!!!!! I have to watch it this weekend now

  • @Geekofriendly
    @Geekofriendly Před rokem +1

    Fully agreed, Maggie.
    That third act is so shocking and heartbreaking it's making my eyes tear up just thinking about it.
    It elevates the movie from a good indie movie to arguably the most touching American movie of all time.

  • @russellb5573
    @russellb5573 Před rokem +3

    One of those movies that has a wonderfully strange atmosphere. I haven't seen it for years. Thanks for the reminder to seek out my Bluray
    Being half German... not trying to be a vanker but definitely Vim Venders

    • @mordantfilms
      @mordantfilms Před rokem +1

      I almost never hear native English speakers pronounce his name the German way. Same goes for Werner Herzog, Rainer Werner Fassbender and Michael Haneke.
      I've lived in Germany for 14 years and plenty of folks here, mainly in media, rarely pronounce non-German names "properly", so we'll just call it even.

    • @russellb5573
      @russellb5573 Před rokem

      @@mordantfilmsMein Gott! I'm guilty of multilingual mispronunciation my friend! It vos chust meine kleine vanker choke more zan ennisink but danke fur das extra info. Alles gute✌️

  • @710blodgett74
    @710blodgett74 Před rokem +3

    Looking forward to your review until the end of the world

  • @pocphotocompany
    @pocphotocompany Před 10 měsíci +1

    I've seen this movie 3 times most recently seeing it a few months back on a big screen for the first time at AFS cinemas here in Austin. This is one of my favorite movies, for many of the reasons you've cited. I didn't remember that much about Ann the last time I saw it(probably many years ago) but this time my heart really broke for her over losing Hunter. Also this time I fell in love with Ry Cooder's score. I'll put in a plug for two other Wender's films, Wings of Desire and Until The End of The World. Though I've only seen Until The End of The World once many years ago(it seems like in another life) I'm almost afraid to see it again for fear that I might have built up the experience I had watching in my head over these many years and not like it as much. I know that's silly. What I do remember while watching it was being taken on this exciting journey(it's a rather long movie). It's one of those movies where you think about life differently for the next few days. Anyway I should just watch it again.

  • @Kanendd
    @Kanendd Před rokem +3

    Great review of a great masterwork of a film. Stanton's aloofness was so believable, and made the ending monologue with his ex wife even more stark. The film was able develop much deeper subcontexts without making them a part of the main theme or feeling of the film. Wim is a genius in that way.

  • @filmfredrik
    @filmfredrik Před rokem

    Agree with everything you said. It’s a magical film in every way. Curious about your thoughts on other Wenders films like The American Friend and Wings of Desire. I love them all. Keep up the great thoughtful content!

  • @TylerNorCal
    @TylerNorCal Před rokem

    Totally agree about the final act in this film, it touched my soul haha also glad you mentioned the attractiveness of Jane aswell...i was kind of stunned by her beauty watching her on the screen.

  • @thebossman80s
    @thebossman80s Před rokem

    Very interesting review, I wonder what you would think of my favourite wim wenders film wings of desire

  • @coreyconway
    @coreyconway Před 9 měsíci

    Thank you for turning me on to this movie. I got it on blu-ray from Criterion. One of my favorits films of all time now.

  • @trydowave
    @trydowave Před rokem

    This film was given away free as a dvd in a cardboard sleeve on the front of a newspaper here in the UK. I love a freebie and this was one of the best as I'd never seen the film before. The cinematography was amazing.

  • @STEVEHEROLD
    @STEVEHEROLD Před rokem

    was lucky to get the chance to see this on big screen for first time in January

  • @bigfoot_28
    @bigfoot_28 Před měsícem

    thank you for this review

  • @firecrackerheart
    @firecrackerheart Před 10 měsíci

    this film is one of my top 100 for sure. wonderful synopsis. thank you again .. .

  • @accorsistudios
    @accorsistudios Před 4 měsíci

    I'm so curious as to why this film has seemingly picked up attention and discussion in the past year (2023?) Why now? For me, it was Roger Deakins podcast, and I put it off to watch over the holidays. He keeps going back to it, over and over as a formative film in his development as a cinematographer. Why 2023 all of a sudden (a film festival? a streaming release?)

    • @scoobyut
      @scoobyut Před měsícem

      Lana del Rey released a song titled Paris Texas in 2023.

  • @MarkTheBastardCassidy
    @MarkTheBastardCassidy Před měsícem

    One of my favourite films. So many scenes stand out, but for some reason the bit with Travis walking along the bridge as we hear the guy shouting out into the desert always stuck with me.

  • @brandonhamaguchi
    @brandonhamaguchi Před rokem

    To me good companion piece to this film is Lucky (2017) starring Harry Dean Stanton as Lucky. The film is about Lucky's spiritual journey on his lasts days confronting love, family, death on a desert town. Note: Stanton died on 2017 aged 91. Oh, and David Lynch plays a character.

  • @meyers323
    @meyers323 Před rokem +2

    The home movie scene is so beautiful and sad, the ending couldn't go any other way after watching that scene

  • @excelsiormoviereviews
    @excelsiormoviereviews Před rokem +1

    Absolutely, the ending to this film has stayed with me since the middle of 2022. Does anyone else think that it was strange that Travis left his son alone in the hotel room with no timetable of anyone returning?

    • @jimhowaniec
      @jimhowaniec Před 8 měsíci +1

      Not quite true, he waits and watches for her to return, then leaves.

    • @excelsiormoviereviews
      @excelsiormoviereviews Před 8 měsíci

      @@jimhowaniec yes, at the very end. I was talking about when he left his son alone with the letter to go and see the boy’s mother for the last time. There was no one there to watch him for at least an hour or two, right?

  • @mulder006
    @mulder006 Před rokem

    I finally watched this movie last yr after somehow missing it when it came out. (I went to a ton of movies in the 80's) I don't have your impeccable vocabulary, so I'll just say this was one fucking, amazing movie that made me cry and think about it for weeks.

  • @SonnyFrisco
    @SonnyFrisco Před rokem

    Would love to see you do Out of the Blue (1980) directed by Dennis Hopper.

  • @mikethemagician8728
    @mikethemagician8728 Před rokem +1

    Nice to see a film for which you know there will be no sequel or Marvel version

  • @johnpjones182
    @johnpjones182 Před rokem

    Stanton and Kinski both appear in Coppola's "One from the Heart", but don't interact.

  • @kenlawless7247
    @kenlawless7247 Před 10 měsíci

    "Wings of Desire" My favorite film of all time.

  • @iangatere6459
    @iangatere6459 Před 21 dnem

    Neat choice of movie to review. Neat review 👍

  • @dlwseattle
    @dlwseattle Před rokem

    Paris Texas is my favorite movie I met Harry Dean Stanton in 1993 and he came off as kind and down-to-earth and normal as could be

  • @mikefawcett1982
    @mikefawcett1982 Před rokem +1

    Listening to you makes me wish I was intelligent. I loved the movie but my review would go: it's got a great chilled out desert vibe with some emotional family stuff going on.

  • @renan.art.oliveira
    @renan.art.oliveira Před rokem

    My favorite movie. Great review!

    • @helvete_ingres4717
      @helvete_ingres4717 Před rokem

      I know the random fact that this was Kurt Cobain's favourite movie

  • @angelthman1659
    @angelthman1659 Před rokem +4

    Pronounced Vim Venders 😉

  • @eriamjr
    @eriamjr Před 8 měsíci

    I finally got around to watching this movie recently after it had been on my must-see list for years. I love good art house, I admire the actors and I was ready to embrace ‘Paris’ as one of my all-time favourites.
    But I’m afraid this movie didn’t ring true for me either plausibly or emotionally. It was asking me to believe that a guy who had abandoned his wife and child, chained his wife to a stove and was too emotionally messed up even to speak for four years should, just in the space of a few weeks (days?), get it together enough not only to reconcile with his brother and sister-in-law and son and former wife, but then magnanimously turn away again from his wife and son out of the goodness of his heart. Sure, miraculous things can happen in human lives…but this just felt contrived.
    It was also asking me to believe that a boy who’d started out with one father and briefly had two would be content to be fatherless, in the care of a mother who had abandoned him.
    The argument that the plot shouldn’t be taken literally because the movie’s message was symbolic doesn’t wash for me, because there’s nothing in the screenplay to suggest that the events don’t take place in the literal world. I’m a huge fan of David Lynch; but Lynch lets you know in no uncertain terms that he’s delving into dream states and altered realities. The world of Paris, Texas might be metaphorical, but it’s not surreal.
    Then there’s the scene with the mirror. I love movies that push the boundaries of the medium. I was prepared to embrace the mirror scene as one of the most memorable in cinema. But for a start it breaks the golden rule of ‘show, don’t tell’. Travis’s monologue is pure exposition, backstory. Of course it’s also Travis’s way of letting Jane know who he is and how he has changed; but couldn’t the screenwriters have found a subtler way for him to do this?
    And where is Jane’s fear? We see her amused, puzzled, disconcerted, moved - but wouldn’t she also be terrified or at least deeply unnerved to realise that the man who had terrorised her for years had tracked her down and was now only metres away? Wouldn’t she be scared of the impending emotional upheaval, the pain of reopening old wounds?
    As a coup de grace, there’s the scene where the Latino maid instructs Travis that to gain his son’s admiration he needs to dress like Money. And he does! And it works! Outcast of the wilderness gains his son’s love by living the American Dream. American values win the day.
    Paris, Texas could have been one of the all-time greats, especially with that fabulous mirror scene, but I’m afraid for me it loses its way in the desert dust.

  • @rafaelhenriq9803
    @rafaelhenriq9803 Před rokem +1

    one of my favorites for sure

  • @GordonKegg
    @GordonKegg Před rokem

    I have heard a couple of people say to me that nothing happens in this film, and this always makes me laugh! Oh the mainstream! lol

  • @floaty10
    @floaty10 Před rokem

    One of the best soundtracks aswell. Thank you Ry Cooder.

  • @richardlyth
    @richardlyth Před rokem

    I guess the movie might feel Lynchian because the main cast hsve all gone on to work with him - Stanton a bunch of times, Stockwell memorably in Blue Velvet, and even Kinski was apparently in Inland Empire (admittedly I don't remember that last one...)

  • @Suite_annamite
    @Suite_annamite Před rokem

    You've definitely brought up this movie several times before, but it didn't occur to me that you hadn't reviewed until just now.

  • @walterlewis1526
    @walterlewis1526 Před rokem

    Wenders' film Alice in the Cities is very similar in theme in a more European context. Love Wenders, so many great films.

  • @johnpjones182
    @johnpjones182 Před rokem

    I had a _HUUUUUUGE_ crush on Nastassja Kinski in the '80's!!

  • @taker68
    @taker68 Před rokem

    Love it, one of my favorites.

  • @trentlaurentino1293
    @trentlaurentino1293 Před rokem +1

    The way you started that sentence was as if you were about to somehow critique the third act of this movie and I was ready to go ballistic.
    Also, this review popping up on my feed was
    ~~~ much ~~~~ more exciting than any movie trailer that’s been released in the last year.
    One of the best ever!!

  • @ignatiusjackson235
    @ignatiusjackson235 Před 10 měsíci

    I know it's a stretch, but - it's interesting to view the boy as Travis himself, on his journey to becoming his own man. All children must essentially become their own parental figures at a certain point, either by leaving home or by falling in love or by dedicating yourself to something outside of the environment that birthed you. Viewed in that light, it becomes a strange sort of quasi-psychological drama.

  • @saymynameice-zen-berg511
    @saymynameice-zen-berg511 Před měsícem

    I recently got the criterion BLURAY

  • @shawnmartin7500
    @shawnmartin7500 Před rokem +1

    @deepfocuslens Have you seen Frank Perry's 1968 cult film "The Swimmer"? I think it's right up your alley!

  • @justthink5854
    @justthink5854 Před 10 měsíci

    great movie. saw it when it came out

  • @Spikenector
    @Spikenector Před rokem

    Hopefully a 4K edition on the horizon, my Criterion blu ray stop working :(

  • @voiceover2191
    @voiceover2191 Před rokem

    Great soundtrack too by Ry Cooder

  • @DavyDredd14
    @DavyDredd14 Před 4 měsíci

    Beware the dangerous beauty of deepfocuslens..

  • @Ultraway13
    @Ultraway13 Před rokem +3

    Have you seen Wim Wenders' The American Friend?

    • @IndieAuthorX
      @IndieAuthorX Před rokem +2

      I love that movie! A bit off kilter, which makes it so much better than average.

    • @helvete_ingres4717
      @helvete_ingres4717 Před rokem +1

      only one of the Wim Wenders films I've seen that I disliked. Did I really miss something with the Bruno Ganz character, who seems to suspect nothing when a mob guy trying to make him do a hit hands him his medical results instead of maybe a doctor?

    • @Ultraway13
      @Ultraway13 Před rokem

      @@helvete_ingres4717 I don't know. That's one of the strangest movies I've ever seen & I love it. I can't answer your question, I can't explain the ending nor can I describe the relationship between Dennis Hopper's character and Bruno Ganz's character. All I know is that I love every minute of it. The subway station and the train fight sequences are absolutely great. The relationship between the 2 main characters is so unorthodox and so hard to pin point what they are, but I think that's why it's so captivating to watch. At least to me. But I can understand your reasons for disliking the movie.

  • @maciek8159
    @maciek8159 Před rokem

    DeepFocusLens I preferred Wim Wenders The American Friend and Wings Of Desire.

  • @SixSamuraiUnited
    @SixSamuraiUnited Před rokem

    This is my favorite film of all time!

  • @butros5137
    @butros5137 Před 2 měsíci

    Best movie i ever saw. It truly it is a masterpiece.

  • @anthonyscully2998
    @anthonyscully2998 Před rokem

    I thought it was just me, I also think of blue velvet when I think of this film. I don't know why, they don't have much in common

  • @schoolofrockcary6625
    @schoolofrockcary6625 Před rokem

    I'm probably a terrible human being for saying this, but I enjoyed Wild At Heart by Lynch more than Paris, Texas. It's gaudy, surreal, ramped up to eleven, and basically so awful it's orgasmically charming. I mention it because it's also of the "road movie" genre and features the late, great Harry Dean Stanton, among others.

  • @tomislavcehajic9642
    @tomislavcehajic9642 Před rokem

    One of my personal best movie ever made

  • @ignatiusjackson235
    @ignatiusjackson235 Před 10 měsíci

    There were plenty of moments in this film that I absolutely love, but I'm a bit uncomfortable about the ending [SPOILER ALERTS]
    A guy basically kidnaps a boy from a loving, stable household to leave him with a prostitute. I'm not sure I can get behind that as a payoff. Feel free to try and prove me wrong. I'll find the discussion intriguing...

  • @tonycairns6728
    @tonycairns6728 Před rokem

    My Number One movie!

  • @BE-ck3lw
    @BE-ck3lw Před rokem

    Are you on Letterboxd?

  • @leespiderpod
    @leespiderpod Před rokem

    I watched this at 17, it made me want to detach myself from society and wander across the desert. 30 years on and I’m still in the rat-race

  • @rong2912
    @rong2912 Před rokem

    My favorite part of the movie was when they went on the Joe Rogan podcast and talked about how glad they are to not be in the dumpster fire that is California.

  • @lyhuewynegar7312
    @lyhuewynegar7312 Před rokem

    Check out "For The Plasma" (2014), I think you'd appreciate it for what it is.

  • @10md.
    @10md. Před rokem

    Request: buffalo 66 and another happy day

  • @fiddlecastro1453
    @fiddlecastro1453 Před rokem +4

    she waved at me, did you see it? at the beginning...

    • @JDoe-gf5oz
      @JDoe-gf5oz Před rokem

      Calm down there, comrade, she was actually waving at me and you just got in the way.

  • @metalogist5413
    @metalogist5413 Před rokem

    Another Bobby Lee fan I presume ;D

  • @dvdly
    @dvdly Před rokem

    Check out Wenders' Alice in Cities.

  • @nilkilnilkil
    @nilkilnilkil Před rokem +1

    I love the literary descriptions ...

  • @joeodonnell921
    @joeodonnell921 Před rokem

    It's insane when you realize how many autuor directors Harry dean Stanton worked with!

  • @dereksix2081
    @dereksix2081 Před rokem

    🙏🙏🙏

  • @skylinerunner1695
    @skylinerunner1695 Před rokem +1

    Vim Venders.

  • @N_Loco_Parenthesis
    @N_Loco_Parenthesis Před 3 měsíci

    Directed by who, sorry?

  • @Mickey-1994
    @Mickey-1994 Před 14 dny

    Great movie but the uncle and aunt get screwed over. You really don't like the guy.

  • @richardgoodine5863
    @richardgoodine5863 Před rokem +1

    I

  • @henry_b1230
    @henry_b1230 Před rokem +3

    Love love love this movie

  • @mattscole847
    @mattscole847 Před rokem +3

    I'm gonna smoke a Bowl and watch this and the Movie

  • @skylinerunner1695
    @skylinerunner1695 Před rokem

    I'm curious as to whom this review is aimed at. Any serious film lover or cinephile will already be well acquainted with this film, its background, themes and soundtrack. It has been discussed, acclaimed, dissected and meditated over since it was first released. We all know that this is a masterpiece, it's been common knowledge since 1984.

    • @samhadvisions
      @samhadvisions Před rokem +5

      For folks like me who love the movie and want to know her option / perspective on it.

    • @skylinerunner1695
      @skylinerunner1695 Před rokem +1

      @@samhadvisions Cool. Good to hear. 🙂

    • @lockandloadlikehell
      @lockandloadlikehell Před měsícem

      lmao- probably for people that arent aware of it, or just enjoy discussing it; that should be self-evident, except to moe rons, champ; dpeaking of ignorance and stupidity.
      Plummeting is levels *have* been proven to lead to neuroticism; so, no one's surprised. 🤷🏿‍♀️
      Old men are good entertainment.
      ​@skylinerunner1695