The Lifeboat trio realized that they aren't living in a black-and-white world.
Instead it's only shades of gray on Timeless Season 1 Episode 12.
Modern villain Flynn jumped back to 1872 to team up with Wild West outlaw Jesse James in search of another way of extending his mission – the only other time-machine pilot who was hiding in Indian territory.
And they left a string of bodies along the way – good guys, bad guys, Indians. It just didn't matter to them.
And for once, Wyatt was more than happy to set history right – with a bullet.
What part of 'Jesse James is killing people' don't you understand? People are dying that aren't supposed to, and the longer he's alive, the more he's going to mess up history. And since when am I the one who's worried about messing up history?
Wyatt [to Rufus] Permalink: What part of 'Jesse James is killing people' don't you understand?...
Instead it's only shades of gray on Timeless Season 1 Episode 12.
Modern villain Flynn jumped back to 1872 to team up with Wild West outlaw Jesse James in search of another way of extending his mission – the only other time-machine pilot who was hiding in Indian territory.
And they left a string of bodies along the way – good guys, bad guys, Indians. It just didn't matter to them.
And for once, Wyatt was more than happy to set history right – with a bullet.
What part of 'Jesse James is killing people' don't you understand? People are dying that aren't supposed to, and the longer he's alive, the more he's going to mess up history. And since when am I the one who's worried about messing up history?
Wyatt [to Rufus] Permalink: What part of 'Jesse James is killing people' don't you understand?...
- 1/24/2017
- by Dale McGarrigle
- TVfanatic
Boston — Matthew Nash's grandfather only mentioned the photographs to him once.
Twenty-five-years later, they are the subject of a new documentary on the Holocaust that Nash spent three years making after finding the pictures his grandfather took while serving as an Army medic in World War II.
Kept hidden from Nash and others in the family, the photos were not something Nash's grandfather seemed to want to talk about with relatives. But they were something he could never forget.
Nash's film – "16 Photographs at Ohrdruf" – tells of the first concentration camp that U.S. soldiers liberated in 1945.
The 72-minute film will have its first public screening Thursday evening at Lesley University in Cambridge, Mass., and also will be shown as part of the Boston International Film Festival on April 16 and the G.I. Film Festival in Washington in May.
The summer he was 12, Nash asked about his grandfather's World War...
Twenty-five-years later, they are the subject of a new documentary on the Holocaust that Nash spent three years making after finding the pictures his grandfather took while serving as an Army medic in World War II.
Kept hidden from Nash and others in the family, the photos were not something Nash's grandfather seemed to want to talk about with relatives. But they were something he could never forget.
Nash's film – "16 Photographs at Ohrdruf" – tells of the first concentration camp that U.S. soldiers liberated in 1945.
The 72-minute film will have its first public screening Thursday evening at Lesley University in Cambridge, Mass., and also will be shown as part of the Boston International Film Festival on April 16 and the G.I. Film Festival in Washington in May.
The summer he was 12, Nash asked about his grandfather's World War...
- 4/4/2013
- by AP
- Huffington Post
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