I saw a Truther talking about this new Netflix series yesterday (who said it looks like a White Hat operation), so I thought I'd look into it just to see what it's about. I don't have or watch Netflix, so I don't have an opinion about it one way or the other. Was just curious if anyone has seen it and would like to share your impressions.
Here are a couple of articles about the 6-episode series, which debuted on May 5th:
https://www.avclub.com/pentaverate-review-netflix-mike-myers-1848889811
https://www.theverge.com/2022/3/16/22981671/mike-myers-pentaverate-netflix-comedy-show-trailer
Here are a couple trailers:
https://www.newsweek.com/pentaverate-netflix-cast-mike-myers-characters-1703899
I think I'd need to watch it all again to pick up on more little nuances, but I didn't come away thinking it was white-hat influenced.
In normal Mike Myers fashion jabs are taken at just about all sides for the semblance of neutrality. And while there are little 'wins' for the conspiracy theorist, like vindication of being right, there wasn't a whole lot of 'red-pill' material. Ultimately, it seemed like a black-hat attempt to cede a little ground while justifying their existence.
To add to this: At their Bilderburg-style event most of the real-life elites are shown in a super friendly light...walking out when the 'villain(s)' are making themselves known and the action becomes shady. Bet you could guess one of the few who stays...yep, Putin. Every world leader is clean except for him seems to be the message.
Now that I've written and thought about it a bit I'm more confident in my last sentence above. Attempt to soften their image and coax some back into the fold.
Oh, then this definitely isn't a White Hat operation if this show is painting Putin as the villain. Appreciate your great recaps!
Yup. We they can't hide the existence of something anymore they in turn attempt to downplay and gaslight it .
"Oh it's just a funny thing, you see!"
'So I married an Axe Murderer'... while MM was playing the Scottish dad... he says "Well, it's a well known fact, Sonny Jim, that there's a secret society of the five wealthiest people in the world, known as the Pentavirate, who run everything in the world, including the newspapers, and meet tri-annually at a secret country mansion in Colorado, known as The Meadows." That was in 1993.
Men in Black and this movie also speak of the tabloids providing good info. Considering Will Smith is DS, I am thinking this is part of programming to mock/belittle anyone who offers 'conspiracy theories'.
I saw the first episode and that will probably do it for me. Making fun of CTers as if they’re stupid and backwards. Rips off Super Troopers 2 with all the Canada jokes. It’s also very Austin Powers/ Dr Evil-like. It would’ve probably been better in the late 90s before all the CTs were proven correct. I noticed it didn’t mention covid, I guess that would make the CTs too specific and real instead of supposedly just being vague paranoias to laugh at
Thank you for your input! It's wild how some people out there still view "conspiracy theorists" as wackos or something despite everything we've been saying for years on a wide ranges of topics is proven true! But that just goes to show how severe the brainwashing has been among the population. Very sad!
Ive watched a few episodes. It is pretty comical and silly. But yea....hard to tell who it's mocking. I think everyone from the alex jones type character to the elite scumbags that the pentaverate is apparently the antithesis of. Tons of myers calling out stuff we talk about all the time here.....those "conspiracy theories" we all know are true.
Thank you for sharing your opinion on this show. Do you think it could be kinda like that Southpark episode that made fun of "QAnon" (I know that's not a thing), but had red pills injected all over the place?
Possibly. Sounds like it but dont think i even saw that southpark epi! But yea, as far?as red pills go, id say so. Although, pantaverat is pretty slapstick too so who knows how normies would take it.
Thank you!
Full of Masonic symbolism.
I wouldn't see it mocking them. Mike Myers has been part of the Masonic/Satanic Hollywood system for literally decades, and you can see references to it throughout the work of him and his contemporaries.
Thus, this series has to be comms or a distraction or both.
I looks more like a way to trivialize all of the information that has been shared about their symbolism. Haha! How silly. None of that could possibly be real. I'm not sure if gaslighting is quite the right term, but something like that.
It's what a sociopath or psychopath does when someone under their control starts to notice their real nature. They start making them doubt their instinct. Instead of "I need to take this seriously. This person is dangerous" they get the person to see it as a "quirk" and no big deal. "Oh this, I'm just quirky! Or I'm a little temperamental, but I mean well."
Appreciate your input. The truther who talked about the first episode of this series said there was quite a bit of Masonic imagery and truther 'catch phrases'/topics that we use all the time in our Anon community.
Was wondering if this show may be attempting to reach 'normies' and get them familiar with some of our vocabulary terms in how we talk about the cabal (like in a helpful way) and using humor to aid in their receptivity/dropping their guard.
I don't think that it's meant to be benevolent.
Mike Myers is clearly a radical Satanist, and it wouldn't surprise me if he's been groomed since childhood.
Early "Wayne's Power Minute" sketches had "jokes/comms" re Masonic handshakes.
Wayne's World rose to prominence with a resurgence of "Bohemian Rhapsody" which I believe to be a telling song about the cabal.
Austin Powers is all about the spy game and involves Mike in multiple personas/alters. Also contains controlled sex robots and intimates that Britney Spears was one.
He and Dana Carvey revived the WW characters for a 2008 award show, and Wayne/Mike makes a covert reference to the entire event being "Saturnalian" in nature. Nobody seemed to pick up on it.
He now does "Dr. Evil" sketches which basically exist as ads for the deep state narratives of the day.
You totally nailed it - thank you for all your great insights!