I think I might be a Grimm

 

A good catch by my wife is what started all this.

As is our usual habit, we were watching something on TV older than the foul-mouthed, stunt-casted contemporary dreck when it rolled over into another older show called Grimm. I had heard of the series, maybe even seen some of it when it ran originally, and so we gave it a go. In the opening sequence our protagonist sees a young blonde on the sidewalk and as he watches her pretty face changes momentarily into a twisted monster version of her. Then it disappears and she goes to her car and drives away. That’s the premise of a show that ran for six years starting in 2011. The man who sees the transformation is, unbeknownst to him, a descendant of the famous Brothers Grimm who hunted down the monsters found in fairy tales. Here’s the scene I was able to capture later:

Clumsy screen grab. Sorry. Don’t tell anybody.

When the blonde woman did her quick change and vanishing act, my wife laughed and said, “Who knew that Pam Bondi started out as actress?” She was right that there was a resemblance, as you can see from the pics above. We traded quips about moonlighting from the DOJ and resumed watching the show. I’m of an age where I’m finding it harder to distinguish one pretty blonde woman from another, but I was remembering three things that piqued my interest. One, when Pam Bondi was named Attorney-General my wife was incredulous at her appearance. She just looked too young for such a big job. She wasn’t. She was 59 years old. “Surgery,” my wife concluded. Two, when Bondi failed to meet the deadline for releasing the Epstein files, I had had my own doubts about her. I trusted but I wanted verification too. Three, and most irrationally, I seem to have a thing about the name Pam, not a good thing, so I was vulnerable to suspicion.

The show proceeded and she made another dramatic entrance, as a nurse trying to kill Grimm’s hospitalized aunt with a lethal injection. No doubt about the resemblance this time:

Definitely(?) Bondi!

Eerie. She almost succeeds in her mission and does succeed in laying Grimm low, so that the episode ends with his view of her from the floor as he is losing consciousness.


The last we, and he, see of Pam for a while:

Mysteriously, she does not kill Grimm.

Intrigued, I used the show for my nighttime background soporific, waking from time to time during louder moments. She was in other episodes intermittently, involved with Grimm’s police boss (hmm) and was also a pricey attorney (double hmm). So I tuned in during daylight hours and actually paid attention until she suddenly became the central figure in a pivotal episode that threatened to end the life of Grimm’s detective partner.

I watched. It got ugly between Pam and Grimm.

By now I confess I was hooked. Time to dig deeper. Spent the next 24 hours of work time researching Grimm-Bondi Connection (more research hours, I guarantee you, than the NYT Hexenbiests ever put in), and I discovered a provocative clue. Just as other lefty publications — Time, Newsweek, the Atlantic — with once venerable reputations have been raised from the dead for nefarious Alinskyite purposes, no longer printing but still projectile vomiting on the Internet, a similar resurrection has been occurring of the never venerable but widely read Weekly World News. Funded by George Soros obviously, the rag is back in business peddling stories that support the Deep State Badlands. Here’s what I found:

Unlike Time and Newsweek, WWN is actually back in print.

Not only that, they’re working their way back to full color publication. Here’s a planned issue (located via DarkNet) highly reminiscent of Grimm that makes lots of sense given their implicit mission of enabling monsters to conquer America once and for all:

They clearly aim to reclaim the blue collar voters they’ve lost…

Naturally it would be irresponsible to take WWN’s word for anything. I needed to find another, hopefully more credible source of information about what was going on. Finding anyone who was was willing to go on the record talking about the TV series Grimm as anything but entertainment was difficult. The only detailed set of links I could find was at YouTube, where there was an episode-by-episode summary of as much 20 minutes in length for each one. The kicker? All the narration is in a language called Tamil, which happens to be the native tongue of Sri Lanka. Why would they care about Grimm? Then I remembered that Sri Lanka was the place where Arthur C. Clarke sought solace and wisdom later in life. What was it he said?


If Clarke found Sri Lanka a hospitable place to ponder the immense mysteries of the universe, it might be worthwhile to figure out what the explanations narrated in Tamil were actually saying. I found a translator app that gave me text converted into mostly understandable English, but I wasn’t able to copy their text for import to Microsoft Word. The best I could manage was to feed limited excerpts of the text into a text-to-speech app along with introductory and summary words of my own. The writers of the Tamil text obviously don’t want everyone to be able to see them in print. I also copied the most relevant portions of the episode in which the Bondi character was finalized:

She attacks Grimm. There is a fight to the death.
Click Rumble to view the video.

The text-to-speech file I was able to assemble is here:


What to make of all this? I believe in the power of allegory as a literary and artistic tool. I also believe that the exceptional power of certain kinds of allegory rooted in ancient mythologies may be attributable to their source in the Collective Unconscious that knows more about the deep stories of human existence than individuals do. Why there is such a term as “Akashic Records.” 

I don’t know if there is a real world scenario in which Pam Bondi was tempted and perhaps negatively influenced by a secret world run by aepstein and other monsters. I don’t know if she was restored to human morality and mortality by a paranormal experience of some kind. What do I know?

I know that if you want to understand the worst aspects of the Left, their worst faces if you will, look most closely at what they accuse their enemies of. They always already are what they accuse their opponents of being, and they have already committed the crimes they accuse their opponents of having committed. Why the “monster” cover of the color issue of WWN above is so unsettling. If they see us as literal, physical monsters, perhaps they are too.

Truthfully, I have long suspected them of this. Why The title I picked for this post. I publish what I see in my mind’s eye.  Proof in an old IPR post called “Leaders of the Coup Against the Republic.”



AND, I think, whatever Pam Bondi may have experienced in the past, she is a good and reliable anchor of the Trump Administration. 



Thanks for playing. Grimm doesn’t have to mean solemn.

Comments

Pat Hurley said…
I can’t believe this amazing and funny post was inspired by a comment I made about the female on Grimm. Fantastic comparisons to the ugliness we see in politics and the Democrat Party.

A great read. Share it everywhere.

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