A Canadian officer rescued the real Winnie the Pooh
We’ve written before about how the stories of Winnie the Pooh were, at least in part, the result of a World War I veteran trying to explain war, and his own PTSD, to his son. But
Dr. Seuss is a story-writing legend in America. It’s hard to find anyone who hasn’t read “How the Grinch Stole Christmas,” “The Cat in the Hat,” “The Lorax” or “Horton Hears A Who!” When his father deploys, 9-year-old Davidson considers himself “man of the house” — it’s a role he’s filled eight times. Davidson’s father, Dave Whetstone — the surname is a pseudonym for security reasons — is a Green Beret currentl… Joker was always going to be a different kind of Batman movie. It might not even to be fair to call it a Batman movie, centered as it is on Gotham’s most infamous criminal and not its most famous orphan. But besides a narrative focus beyon…The history of Dr. Seuss’ Army career
This Green Beret’s kid wrote a book on coping with deployments
‘Joker’ is definitely not going to be a ‘Batman’ movie