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Recommended by "Fox Hunter"
Elmo 2022-04-19 09:01:48
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Kurt 2022-03-24 09:01:43
The distant place full of anticipation may be the hunting ground. A dream fulfilled with pride may be absurd. A sixteen-year-old boy learns that friendship can be bought, so he wants to buy everything. Buy guns in exchange for power, players in exchange for victory, and crowns in exchange for admiration. There is nothing you can buy to replace loneliness in Qixuan Mali. Don't mispronounce my title, don't resist my power, don't betray my affection, after all, the snow is vast and life is too lonely.
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Dejuan 2022-04-01 09:01:03
How can the wayward wealthy who seem to yearn for spiritual satisfaction and disdain material things finally play themselves bad? How rugged has DuPont's emotional trajectory been? Bennett once again seized the hidden side of the incident and made this work a one-way understanding channel where authorship and objective value coexist perfectly, leaving no way for anyone to explain in words. Take your breath away, no one can save you. →On 20.12.5, the archives are refreshed for the second time in five years. The villain is the American Dream, and all characters, including DuPont, are victims. Seeing through America is much harder than seeing through China, Bennett Miller, the most conscientious American director, or none at all. Its musicality is reflected in this: the character does not have any stable "music" inside. Because they are all inconsistent.
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John du Pont: Horses are stupid. Horses eat and shit. That's all they do. It's very silly. It's all very silly.
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[last lines]
MMA Backstage Official: Mark. You're up.
[starts walking to the ring]
MMA Announcer: He is a jujitsu fighter, standing 6 feet, 2 inches tall, weighing 225 pounds. From Moscow, Russia, Vladimir "The Prototype" Milstead.
MMA Announcer: Ladies and gentlemen, fight number three, on our six-bout card features a match-up with this freestyle wrestler out of Lindon, Utah. Standing 5 feet, 20 inches tall, weighing in at 203 pounds. He is a three-time NCAA and three-time world champion, 1984 Olympic gold medalist. Please welcome Mark Schultz!
[the audience roars out in welcoming Mark Schultz, USA! USA! USA! USA!]