This is about 10 minutes of on-air coverage of the December 1999 WTO protests/riots from KIRO-TV. As a ENG operator/engineer, I was tasked with covering the protest at "ground zero" at 4th and Pike. My crew at the time was chief photographer Mark Morache and reporter Neal Karlinsky. Coordination of analog microwave signals between multiple crews and all local Seattle TV news stations proved quite chaotic. A decision was made from the news director and assignment desk that the reporters in the field would begin to just call in on their phones, that they could speak not necessarily about the video that was directly on air, but about what they were seeing with their own eyes. That freed up the photographers and ENG crews to capture whatever they could and send it back in any way possible. Much of the recorded video was driven back to the station by the photographers themselves. That enabled just a few ENG crews to be "hot" - live on air - for long periods of time, such as what you see here, which is a shot from Jay Johnson and reporter Richard Thompson on 4th Avenue looking north toward 4th and Pike. If you look at the upper left of the screen, below the live flag and to the left of the streetlight, you will see what appears to be a microwave truck with the mast and dish in the stowed position. That was me. I was operating our newest ENG truck with the first digital microwave transmitter in Seattle. It worked of a smaller antenna that didn't require the mast to be raised. It also failed miserably in this trial by fire. Engineering had tested for weeks but generally between the hours of 1pm and 4pm when our news shows were not on the air. It worked beautifully, as it drove around downtown. But during WTO, the them without notifying
live in Seattle and love seeing poignant moments from the riots. Things they didn't even know were huge moment, small things said, turned into the collapse. Very powerful.
Wow thanks for the video! I live in Seattle and love seeing poignant moments from the riots. Things they didn't even know were huge moment, small things said, turned into the collapse. Very powerful.
@@jamesgentry13 This is about 10 minutes of on-air coverage of the December 1999 WTO protests/riots from KIRO-TV. As a ENG operator/engineer, I was tasked with covering the protest at "ground zero" at 4th and Pike. My crew at the time was chief photographer Mark Morache and reporter Neal Karlinsky. Coordination of analog microwave signals between multiple crews and all local Seattle TV news stations proved quite chaotic. A decision was made from the news director and assignment desk that the reporters in the field would begin to just call in on their phones, that they could speak not necessarily about the video that was directly on air, but about what they were seeing with their own eyes. That freed up the photographers and ENG crews to capture whatever they could and send it back in any way possible. Much of the recorded video was driven back to the station by the photographers themselves. That enabled just a few ENG crews to be "hot" - live on air - for long periods of time, such as what you see here, which is a shot from Jay Johnson and reporter Richard Thompson on 4th Avenue looking north toward 4th and Pike. If you look at the upper left of the screen, below the live flag and to the left of the streetlight, you will see what appears to be a microwave truck with the mast and dish in the stowed position. That was me. I was operating our newest ENG truck with the first digital microwave transmitter in Seattle. It worked of a smaller antenna that didn't require the mast to be raised. It also failed miserably in this trial by fire. Engineering had tested for weeks but generally between the hours of 1pm and 4pm when our news shows were not on the air. It worked beautifully, as it drove around downtown. But during WTO, the amount of analog RF interference (not only from our other analog truck but also from other stations) proved too much for this digital transmitter to overcome. Unable to send a signal out, I was essentially a sitting duck. Protesters began to climb on my ENG truck, and I sensed that the calamity in front of me was about to get out-of-hand. My crew had already begun travelling away from me and shooting video and reporting on their phones. Because they were on their phones I was unable to reach them. I made the decision to extricate my truck from the area before hoodlums targeted it for destruction. To this day I believe I made the correct decision, although my crew was mad as hell that I left them without notifying them. But how could I?
I'm thoroughly disgusted in the media coverage of this serious issue. NO attempt by media to talk about why the protest has even taken place! THIS is why people have grown contempt of the media, who are far removed from ACTUAL journalism.
@@nickkrasovsky238 anyone that's anarchist communist socialist. Or whatever far left bullshit is scum of the earth. I honestly hate anyone far left or far right. But most of the extremists are on the left. You antifa idiots whine about all these nazis out there..but where are they? Just because someone supports trump or capitalism or conservativeism or country first doesnt make them a nazi.
KIRO didnt' broadcast anything from WTO on the first day. I was there and I saw the truck chained to the light. I also met the man who did the chaining. This must be from the second or third day.
We absolutely did. We broadcast our usual news shows covering the start of the event. It wasn't until Tuesday that all the local stations abandoned regular scheduled programming and went to all-day live breaking news coverage. The most interesting thing about the coverage is how, as we had multiple crews with live trucks, covered reporters' first-hand experiences live by mobile phone without them necessarily being tied to a live-to-air photographer/camera. Some photographers were grabbing video and driving it back to the station, some were live via microwave truck link-up, and most all reporter footage was live "voice of" as it was a very fluid situation and difficult to stay in one spot. However, your last sentence is correct, Tuesday and Wednesday were the craziest days and most of the coverage is from those days. FYI I was in the live van seen on 4th Ave at/near Pike, on the crowd side, not the police side. My live truck was facing south.
@@livemeyer 10 minutes of on-air coverage of the December 1999 WTO protests/riots from KIRO-TV. As a ENG operator/engineer, I was tasked with covering the protest at "ground zero" at 4th and Pike. My crew at the time was chief photographer Mark Morache and reporter Neal Karlinsky. Coordination of analog microwave signals between multiple crews and all local Seattle TV news stations proved quite chaotic. A decision was made from the news director and assignment desk that the reporters in the field would begin to just call in on their phones, that they could speak not necessarily about the video that was directly on air, but about what they were seeing with their own eyes. That freed up the photographers and ENG crews to capture whatever they could and send it back in any way possible. Much of the recorded video was driven back to the station by the photographers
@@reporereportrhimynameisric2448 This is about 10 minutes of on-air coverage of the December 1999 WTO protests/riots from KIRO-TV. As a ENG operator/engineer, I was tasked with covering the protest at "ground zero" at 4th and Pike. My crew at the time was chief photographer Mark Morache and reporter Neal Karlinsky. Coordination of analog microwave signals between multiple crews and all local Seattle TV news stations proved quite chaotic. A decision was made from the news director and assignment desk that the reporters in the field would begin to just call in on their phones, that they could speak not necessarily about the video that was directly on air, but about what they were seeing with their own eyes. That freed up the photographers and ENG crews to capture whatever they could and send it back in any way possible. Much of the recorded video was driven back to the station by the photographers themselves. That enabled just a few ENG crews to be "hot" - live on air - for long periods of time, such as what you see here, which is a shot from Jay Johnson and reporter Richard Thompson on 4th Avenue looking north toward 4th and Pike. If you look at the upper left of the screen, below the live flag and to the left of the streetlight, you will see what appears to be a microwave truck with the mast and dish in the stowed position. That was me. I was operating our newest ENG truck with the first digital microwave transmitter in Seattle. It worked of a smaller antenna that didn't require the mast to be raised. It also failed miserably in this trial by fire. Engineering had tested for weeks but generally between the hours of 1pm and 4pm when our news shows were not on the air. It worked beautifully, as it drove around downtown. But during WTO, the amount of analog RF interference (not only from our other analog truck but also from other stations) proved too much for this digital transmitter to overcome. Unable to send a signal out, I was essentially a sitting duck. Protesters began to climb on my ENG truck, and I sensed that the calamity in front of me was about to get out-of-hand. My crew had already begun travelling away from me and shooting video and reporting on their phones. Because they were on their phones I was unable to reach them. I made the decision to extricate my truck from the area before hoodlums targeted it for destruction. To this day I believe I made the correct decision, although my crew was mad as hell that I left them without notifying them. But how could I?
Are some pictures of that this is a delicate being blocked right here at 6th and University in earlier today try to get through he wasn't successful trying to get through the officers of a state patrol officer or trying to work for the other side they're trying to make a wedge so he can get through but it seems that this time the protesters are taking a stand about four or five deep and making some kind of almost like a exasperated we're going to come up there with us with our picture were trying to move closer to the scene as delegate is trying to move through here and keep it a pretty adamant about getting through but police aren't right now state troopers are trying to make a pathway through the protesters as you can see I'm trying to maneuver him through a protest line that was not an easy path for the move of these balloons over here so you can show he made it through but the
KIRO didn't broadcast anything from WTO on November 30 because its news truck was locked to a light standard by a protester. A couple of days before the protests began, the news director said the station wouldn't give air time to protesters. A protester made sure that didn't happen!
I too, was at 4th & Pike when this jumped off... I was working security at the Bank of America branch (on the corner there) AND YES, there were "violent anarchists" there that day, How do I know? I ran off one that spray painted the exterior ATM and another one (dressed in black from head-to-toe WITH HIS FACE COVERED UP), who got in my face and threatened me. I told him "Why don't you take your mask off, Bitch!" He flipped me off as he walked away, but later came back with his crew and smashed out the door and windows of the bank. Soon after I heard a gunshot and later on, with B.O.A's corporate security, we found a bullet hole in the window where one of the employees WOULD'VE been sitting...
@Not Sure I was 29 years old when that happened and I WAS there. Were you? Judging by your reply, either you were too young to had been around at that time, or? Probably someone who's mad at the world because nothing is going well in their life, so you see fit to TROLL comments behind a computer screen to make yourself 'feel better'? And as soon as you are notified of my reply to your ignorant comment, you'll jump back on to use more profanities to try and insult me or anyone else, in order to appear "tough" on this thread. Prove-Me-Wrong and NOT reply. Or? Confirm your immaturity level and of lack of education, by responding back? Chances Are, you will more-than-likely reply, because you'll have to live up to your screen name, since you are: "Not Sure".
I too, was at 4th & Pike when this jumped off... I was working security at the Bank of America branch (on the corner there) AND YES, there were "violent anarchists" there that day, How do I know? I ran off one that spray painted the exterior ATM and another one (dressed in black from head-to-toe WITH HIS FACE COVERED UP), who got in my face and threatened me. I told him "Why don't you take your mask off, Bitch!" He flipped me off as he walked away, but later came back with his crew and smashed out the door and? windows of the bank. Soon after I heard a gunshot and later on, with B.O.A's corporate security, we found a bullet hole in the window where one of the employees WOULD'VE been sitting?
hey hey hey how are you how are you doing what’s up him and me bad boy bad boy bad boy bad boy bad boy bad boy what a boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy bad boy bad boy bad boy bad boy bad boy bad boy bad boy boy bad boy bad boy bad boy bad boy bad boy what up what up nope whoop libra yeah my boy boy bad boy bad boy bad boy bad boy bad boy bad boy bad boy bad boy bad boy bad boy bad boy bad boy bad boy
This is about 10 minutes of on-air coverage of the December 1999 WTO protests/riots from KIRO-TV. As a ENG operator/engineer, I was tasked with covering the protest at "ground zero" at 4th and Pike. My crew at the time was chief photographer Mark Morache and reporter Neal Karlinsky. Coordination of analog microwave signals between multiple crews and all local Seattle TV news stations proved quite chaotic. A decision was made from the news director and assignment desk that the reporters in the field would begin to just call in on their phones, that they could speak not necessarily about the video that was directly on air, but about what they were seeing with their own eyes. That freed up the photographers and ENG crews to capture whatever they could and send it back in any way possible. Much of the recorded video was driven back to the station by the photographers themselves. That enabled just a few ENG crews to be "hot" - live on air - for long periods of time, such as what you see here, which is a shot from Jay Johnson and reporter Richard Thompson on 4th Avenue looking north toward 4th and Pike. If you look at the upper left of the screen, below the live flag and to the left of the streetlight, you will see what appears to be a microwave truck with the mast and dish in the stowed position. That was me. I was operating our newest ENG truck with the first digital microwave transmitter in Seattle. It worked of a smaller antenna that didn't require the mast to be raised. It also failed miserably in this trial by fire. Engineering had tested for weeks but generally between the hours of 1pm and 4pm when our news shows were not on the air. It worked beautifully, as it drove around downtown. But during WTO, the them without notifying
This is about 10 minutes of on-air coverage of the December 1999 WTO protests/riots from KIRO-TV. As a ENG operator/engineer, I was tasked with covering the protest at "ground zero" at 4th and Pike. My crew at the time was chief photographer Mark Morache and reporter Neal Karlinsky. Coordination of analog microwave signals between multiple crews and all local Seattle TV news stations proved quite chaotic. A decision was made from the news director and assignment desk that the reporters in the field would begin to just call in on their phones, that they could speak not necessarily about the video that was directly on air, but about what they were seeing with their own eyes. That freed up the photographers and ENG crews to capture whatever they could and send it back in any way possible. Much of the recorded video was driven back to the station by the photographers themselves. That enabled just a few ENG crews to be "hot" - live on air - for long periods of time, such as what you see here, which is a shot from Jay Johnson and reporter Richard Thompson on 4th Avenue looking north toward 4th and Pike. If you look at the upper left of the screen, below the live flag and to the left of the streetlight, you will see what appears to be a microwave truck with the mast and dish in the stowed position. That was me. I was operating our newest ENG truck with the first digital microwave transmitter in Seattle. It worked of a smaller antenna that didn't require the mast to be raised. It also failed miserably in this trial by fire. Engineering had tested for weeks but generally between the hours of 1pm and 4pm when our news shows were not on the air. It worked beautifully, as it drove around downtown. But during WTO, the them without notifying
live in Seattle and love seeing poignant moments from the riots. Things they didn't even know were huge moment, small things said, turned into the collapse. Very powerful.
Wow thanks for the video! I live in Seattle and love seeing poignant moments from the riots. Things they didn't even know were huge moment, small things said, turned into the collapse. Very powerful.
Capitalism will always win
@@jamesgentry13 This is about 10 minutes of on-air coverage of the December 1999 WTO protests/riots from KIRO-TV. As a ENG operator/engineer, I was tasked with covering the protest at "ground zero" at 4th and Pike. My crew at the time was chief photographer Mark Morache and reporter Neal Karlinsky. Coordination of analog microwave signals between multiple crews and all local Seattle TV news stations proved quite chaotic. A decision was made from the news director and assignment desk that the reporters in the field would begin to just call in on their phones, that they could speak not necessarily about the video that was directly on air, but about what they were seeing with their own eyes. That freed up the photographers and ENG crews to capture whatever they could and send it back in any way possible. Much of the recorded video was driven back to the station by the photographers themselves. That enabled just a few ENG crews to be "hot" - live on air - for long periods of time, such as what you see here, which is a shot from Jay Johnson and reporter Richard Thompson on 4th Avenue looking north toward 4th and Pike. If you look at the upper left of the screen, below the live flag and to the left of the streetlight, you will see what appears to be a microwave truck with the mast and dish in the stowed position. That was me. I was operating our newest ENG truck with the first digital microwave transmitter in Seattle. It worked of a smaller antenna that didn't require the mast to be raised. It also failed miserably in this trial by fire. Engineering had tested for weeks but generally between the hours of 1pm and 4pm when our news shows were not on the air. It worked beautifully, as it drove around downtown. But during WTO, the amount of analog RF interference (not only from our other analog truck but also from other stations) proved too much for this digital transmitter to overcome. Unable to send a signal out, I was essentially a sitting duck. Protesters began to climb on my ENG truck, and I sensed that the calamity in front of me was about to get out-of-hand. My crew had already begun travelling away from me and shooting video and reporting on their phones. Because they were on their phones I was unable to reach them. I made the decision to extricate my truck from the area before hoodlums targeted it for destruction. To this day I believe I made the correct decision, although my crew was mad as hell that I left them without notifying them. But how could I?
20 years ago December 1999
December 2019
I'm thoroughly disgusted in the media coverage of this serious issue. NO attempt by media to talk about why the protest has even taken place! THIS is why people have grown contempt of the media, who are far removed from ACTUAL journalism.
There's no reason for them to be protesting. Just a bunch of dumb retarded marxists kids
@@jamesgentry13 Protesting neoliberalism/neoconservatism is marxist? Yikes, that's pretty cringe bro.
@@nickkrasovsky238 anyone that's anarchist communist socialist. Or whatever far left bullshit is scum of the earth. I honestly hate anyone far left or far right. But most of the extremists are on the left. You antifa idiots whine about all these nazis out there..but where are they? Just because someone supports trump or capitalism or conservativeism or country first doesnt make them a nazi.
@@jamesgentry13 lol
KIRO didnt' broadcast anything from WTO on the first day. I was there and I saw the truck chained to the light. I also met the man who did the chaining. This must be from the second or third day.
We absolutely did. We broadcast our usual news shows covering the start of the event. It wasn't until Tuesday that all the local stations abandoned regular scheduled programming and went to all-day live breaking news coverage. The most interesting thing about the coverage is how, as we had multiple crews with live trucks, covered reporters' first-hand experiences live by mobile phone without them necessarily being tied to a live-to-air photographer/camera. Some photographers were grabbing video and driving it back to the station, some were live via microwave truck link-up, and most all reporter footage was live "voice of" as it was a very fluid situation and difficult to stay in one spot. However, your last sentence is correct, Tuesday and Wednesday were the craziest days and most of the coverage is from those days. FYI I was in the live van seen on 4th Ave at/near Pike, on the crowd side, not the police side. My live truck was facing south.
@@livemeyer 10 minutes of on-air coverage of the December 1999 WTO protests/riots from KIRO-TV. As a ENG operator/engineer, I was tasked with covering the protest at "ground zero" at 4th and Pike. My crew at the time was chief photographer Mark Morache and reporter Neal Karlinsky. Coordination of analog microwave signals between multiple crews and all local Seattle TV news stations proved quite chaotic. A decision was made from the news director and assignment desk that the reporters in the field would begin to just call in on their phones, that they could speak not necessarily about the video that was directly on air, but about what they were seeing with their own eyes. That freed up the photographers and ENG crews to capture whatever they could and send it back in any way possible. Much of the recorded video was driven back to the station by the photographers
From kiro-tv as eng operator/engineers l was tasked q rounds zero at 4th and pike my crew at kiro-tv
delete? option? csps?
breaking news reporter saw 👀 in Seattle
breaking news reporter saw 👀 in Seattle
@@reporereportrhimynameisric2448 This is about 10 minutes of on-air coverage of the December 1999 WTO protests/riots from KIRO-TV. As a ENG operator/engineer, I was tasked with covering the protest at "ground zero" at 4th and Pike. My crew at the time was chief photographer Mark Morache and reporter Neal Karlinsky. Coordination of analog microwave signals between multiple crews and all local Seattle TV news stations proved quite chaotic. A decision was made from the news director and assignment desk that the reporters in the field would begin to just call in on their phones, that they could speak not necessarily about the video that was directly on air, but about what they were seeing with their own eyes. That freed up the photographers and ENG crews to capture whatever they could and send it back in any way possible. Much of the recorded video was driven back to the station by the photographers themselves. That enabled just a few ENG crews to be "hot" - live on air - for long periods of time, such as what you see here, which is a shot from Jay Johnson and reporter Richard Thompson on 4th Avenue looking north toward 4th and Pike. If you look at the upper left of the screen, below the live flag and to the left of the streetlight, you will see what appears to be a microwave truck with the mast and dish in the stowed position. That was me. I was operating our newest ENG truck with the first digital microwave transmitter in Seattle. It worked of a smaller antenna that didn't require the mast to be raised. It also failed miserably in this trial by fire. Engineering had tested for weeks but generally between the hours of 1pm and 4pm when our news shows were not on the air. It worked beautifully, as it drove around downtown. But during WTO, the amount of analog RF interference (not only from our other analog truck but also from other stations) proved too much for this digital transmitter to overcome. Unable to send a signal out, I was essentially a sitting duck. Protesters began to climb on my ENG truck, and I sensed that the calamity in front of me was about to get out-of-hand. My crew had already begun travelling away from me and shooting video and reporting on their phones. Because they were on their phones I was unable to reach them. I made the decision to extricate my truck from the area before hoodlums targeted it for destruction. To this day I believe I made the correct decision, although my crew was mad as hell that I left them without notifying them. But how could I?
Are some pictures of that this is a delicate being blocked right here at 6th and University in earlier today try to get through he wasn't successful trying to get through the officers of a state patrol officer or trying to work for the other side they're trying to make a wedge so he can get through but it seems that this time the protesters are taking a stand about four or five deep and making some kind of almost like a exasperated we're going to come up there with us with our picture were trying to move closer to the scene as delegate is trying to move through here and keep it a pretty adamant about getting through but police aren't right now state troopers are trying to make a pathway through the protesters as you can see I'm trying to maneuver him through a protest line that was not an easy path for the move of these balloons over here so you can show he made it through but the
dark day for democracy.
KIRO didn't broadcast anything from WTO on November 30 because its news truck was locked to a light standard by a protester. A couple of days before the protests began, the news director said the station wouldn't give air time to protesters. A protester made sure that didn't happen!
Protestors need purged
Lies.
Twitter account and see what happens when you get to know how
I too, was at 4th & Pike when this jumped off...
I was working security at the Bank of America branch (on the corner there)
AND YES, there were "violent anarchists" there that day, How do I know?
I ran off one that spray painted the exterior ATM and another one (dressed in black from head-to-toe WITH HIS FACE COVERED UP), who got in my face and threatened me. I told him "Why don't you take your mask off, Bitch!" He flipped me off as he walked away, but later came back with his crew and smashed out the door and windows of the bank.
Soon after I heard a gunshot and later on, with B.O.A's corporate security, we found a bullet hole in the window where one of the employees WOULD'VE been sitting...
There were no bullet holes and no gunshots other than the police you fucking liar
Not Sure i highly doubt you were there so how would you know? Just another brainwashed member of society
@Not Sure
I was 29 years old when that happened and I WAS there.
Were you?
Judging by your reply, either you were too young to had been around at that time, or?
Probably someone who's mad at the world because nothing is going well in their life, so you see fit to TROLL comments behind a computer screen to make yourself 'feel better'?
And as soon as you are notified of my reply to your ignorant comment, you'll jump back on to use more profanities to try and insult me or anyone else, in order to appear "tough" on this thread.
Prove-Me-Wrong and NOT reply.
Or? Confirm your immaturity level and of lack of education, by responding back?
Chances Are, you will more-than-likely reply, because you'll have to live up to your screen name, since you are:
"Not Sure".
I too, was at 4th & Pike when this jumped off...
I was working security at the Bank of America branch (on the corner there)
AND YES, there were "violent anarchists" there that day, How do I know?
I ran off one that spray painted the exterior ATM and another one (dressed in black from head-to-toe WITH HIS FACE COVERED UP), who got in my face and threatened me. I told him "Why don't you take your mask off, Bitch!" He flipped me off as he walked away, but later came back with his crew and smashed out the door and? windows of the bank.
Soon after I heard a gunshot and later on, with B.O.A's corporate security, we found a bullet hole in the window where one of the employees WOULD'VE been sitting?
American work security at the moment please bank
BREAKING news KIRO 7
Everyone hope
Whos' here in 2020?
Twitter account and see what happens when you get to know how
hey hey hey how are you how are you doing what’s up him and me bad boy bad boy bad boy bad boy bad boy bad boy what a boy boy boy boy boy boy boy boy bad boy bad boy bad boy bad boy bad boy bad boy bad boy boy bad boy bad boy bad boy bad boy bad boy what up what up nope whoop libra yeah my boy boy bad boy bad boy bad boy bad boy bad boy bad boy bad boy bad boy bad boy bad boy bad boy bad boy bad boy
Open your coffers.
@Miss Misfits
speak that truth
okay I'm
1991
A couple belts of m50 will clear that street
Just a couple of negotiations away from you having the means to post such things.
Spoken like a true Stalinist..
This is about 10 minutes of on-air coverage of the December 1999 WTO protests/riots from KIRO-TV. As a ENG operator/engineer, I was tasked with covering the protest at "ground zero" at 4th and Pike. My crew at the time was chief photographer Mark Morache and reporter Neal Karlinsky. Coordination of analog microwave signals between multiple crews and all local Seattle TV news stations proved quite chaotic. A decision was made from the news director and assignment desk that the reporters in the field would begin to just call in on their phones, that they could speak not necessarily about the video that was directly on air, but about what they were seeing with their own eyes. That freed up the photographers and ENG crews to capture whatever they could and send it back in any way possible. Much of the recorded video was driven back to the station by the photographers themselves. That enabled just a few ENG crews to be "hot" - live on air - for long periods of time, such as what you see here, which is a shot from Jay Johnson and reporter Richard Thompson on 4th Avenue looking north toward 4th and Pike. If you look at the upper left of the screen, below the live flag and to the left of the streetlight, you will see what appears to be a microwave truck with the mast and dish in the stowed position. That was me. I was operating our newest ENG truck with the first digital microwave transmitter in Seattle. It worked of a smaller antenna that didn't require the mast to be raised. It also failed miserably in this trial by fire. Engineering had tested for weeks but generally between the hours of 1pm and 4pm when our news shows were not on the air. It worked beautifully, as it drove around downtown. But during WTO, the them without notifying
@Miss Misfits
speak that truth