Take That/Other Media: Difference between revisions

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** Ebert strikes again by thanking Bill O'Reilly for including the Chicago Sun-Times in his "Hall Of Shame", claiming to be in a Bill O'Reilly Hall of ''Fame'' [[Your Approval Fills Me with Shame|would be a cruel blow to any newspaper.]] He goes on to compare him to "Squeaky The Chicago Mouse" in response to the latter's claim he was more powerful than any politician, and such an eloquent [[Take That]] has to be [http://rogerebert.suntimes.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20090407/COMMENTARY/904079997 seen to be believed].
* Archaeologists have found ancient Greek sling shots with "[[Take That]]" written on them.
** This survivedhad untilcontinued atinto leastthe afterpresent [[Worldday, War 2]] whenwith bomber crews wouldin the Middle East paintpainting messages on the their explosive payloads.
* Ubiquitous in political campaigning - any specific examples would either double the size of this page fairly quickly or lead to a massive [[Edit War]].
* In ''Häxornas försvarare'' by Jan Guillou, a book about the witch processes in seventeenth-century Scandinavia, the author explains that while at one point the study of witches was considered a credible science, all the information that went into scholarly treatises on the subject had been uncovered by the scholar a) reading what other people had previously written on the subject and b) making stuff up. He further states that understandably, no modern field of science uses this odd form of research, "except of course for national economics."