Call Me Stormy

Finding righteous currents in turbulent times

Archive for the tag “Brigitte Bardot”

Another Link in the Chain?

Jamie Dlux examines the string of deaths and tragedies befalling all of the rock stars who became involved with the proposed documentary The Silent Child. It was aimed at exposing some of the chicanery behind child trafficking in the United States. Instead, most of those involved in the film met untimely deaths, described as suicides, but quite possibly murders.

McAllisterTV also takes a deep dive into the art world to uncover signs of cannibalism and pedophile/pedovore art. Much of her focus here is on a Rothschild surreal Illuminati ball from Paris in 1972, attended by Salvador Dali, Rudolf Nureyev, Elizabeth Taylor, Richard Burton, Audrey Hepburn, Yul Brynner, Gregory Peck and Brigitte Bardot, among many others. Not only the table decorations, but also the art, the dinner, the side shows, all underscore the cannibalistic themes. She also takes a quick look at a contemporary art walk in Washington state, where the art displayed has become much more graphic and more hideous.

The video opens with an analysis of the Brett Kavanaugh hearings, with a snarky suggestion indicating the rapacious Democrats just might have been hoodwinked.  We can always hope!

French Exodus to Russia

French actor Gerard Depardieu is weighing an invitation to become a Russian citizen and accept a passport from Vladimir Putin. But he’s not the only movie star from France considering a move to Russia. Now, Brigitte Bardot says she might go there as well. Depardieu’s motivation: The outrageously high taxes being imposed by France’s new Socialist government. Bardot’s beef is different: She’s upset over an animal rights incident.

ARVE error: need id and provider

ARVE error: need id and provider

Go! Girl! Go!–Cincuenta y Nueve

Just before her breakout in And God Created Woman, Brigitte Bardot played a Paris schoolgirl who enters an amateur strip contest, unaware that her new boyfriend is covering the event for his magazine. This leads to a comic attempt on her part to disguise herself, while still going for the gusto and trying to claim the prize money she desperately needs in 1956’s Mademoiselle Striptease, also known as Plucking the Daisy.

ARVE error: need id and provider

Post Navigation