It's the Day's Day of Days! Because Salome and the Dance of a Thousand Veils.
You know, rather than dwelling on the fact that Muir doesn't get history and his politics are abysmal, I think I'll point out that as Muir's politics have drifted rightwards into naked white supremacism, Jan and Damon have faded as characters while Zed and Sam have grown evermore prominent.
For reasons that are obvious, when you think about it.
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The irony is that Zed and Sam used to be pretty laid back and much more casual about politics than Damon, whom Muir employed as his main arrow-shooter. Both of them have transformed into unrecognizably different people.
ReplyDeleteAs has, one presumes, their author.
Zed and Sam were primarily about 'slice of life' jokes, with the occasional faux-centrist utterance that was really about making Jan look foolish, with Damon supposed to be the perfect way to own libs because 'Conservative Black!'.
DeleteAs none of this worked the way Muir wanted it to, it all naturally broke down.