Tags:
Conspiracy,
Rescue,
Theories
Rescue Me is back from their 18 months and the first episodes of season 5 the show is to demonstrate once again all their shots and raucous raunchy cylinders. But it is also a more focused eyes turn again 9 / 11 and its impact on men in 62 trucks.
Thus, this season brings mainstream attention to suggest widespread conspiracy theories of 9 / 11 attacks were an “inside job”. Firefighter Franco Rivera – played by Daniel Sunjata, who in real life it adheres to these beliefs – becomes the spokesperson for these ideas in the program, something Sunjata admitted that he did not expect to see in your script pages.
“I was very surprised because I am known for a fact that those views are not indicative of reflection or FX, Denis Leary, Peter Tolan, or any person affiliated with the creation of the show,” says Sunjata TVGuide.com. “What I like about the way it is addressing the issue is not pre-package for the public – the reactions across the entire spectrum agree to disagree vehemently with a large question mark. I think it is laudable and admirable that is hot and controversial topic, FX was even willing to include it in the show. “
Franco first reveals his theories on the episode on Tuesday to be interviewed by a visiting French journalist writing a book about 9 / 11. In a monologue of two minutes (which can be viewed in its entirety below), Franco suggested the attacks were part of a “neo-conservative massive effort of the government” wants to achieve “global domination of America.” This includes creating the war to control Middle East oil, a prospect that is accelerated by “a new Pearl Harbor.”
Sunjata, which can – and not – talk at length about this and other research in which basa their beliefs, often circumstantial evidence is allowed, but why questions were never more probes. “I feel like all the investigations and conclusions with evidence that entertained only supported the conclusion that, while the omission of other tests and treatment of conspiracy theories viable. Intellectual false and that seems suspicious,” he says.
Personal beliefs aside, these concepts create a great theater for the show, especially as some others share feelings of Franco. His truckmates are anything but shy to ask him, with words that FDNY has a widowed woman, and eventually comes to blows with other firefighters from another house. However, Sunjata said it was important to ask the question, no matter what you think.
“Charlie Sheen, Rosie O’Donnell, Willie Nelson, Marion Cotillard, Gov. Jesse Ventura – who fall into the category of celebrities who have opened their mouths to ask questions about this issue – are greeted with vehement criticism,” he says, noting that there may be some reactions. “I am ready for a backlash, but I feel that this is an act of moral and social conscience for me. After he had made a certain amount of research and had a series of very serious, troubling, unanswered questions about my mobile own mind, I feel I could in good conscience not say anything about it and still claim to represent the memory of the heroes we lost that day in the program. “
But that’s not all about this season is Franco. Together with Sean, Mike Franco helps open a bar with his inheritance money from his dead mother. Franco also channels their aggression gained a new habit of boxing … and, of course, a new woman.
“To be honest to that lady, man, who has a penchant for falling in love all the time,” says Sunjata. “He comes across a female boxer (Tawny Cypress), which develops a strong attachment to, and I do not want to give a spoiler, but the comedy ensues as he discovers that she’s not what he thought she was.”