Britney VS Damian Hirst

The Hearst family is the 23rd wealthiest family in the world with a combined $24.5 billion net worth. William Randolph Hearst started the family fortune when he took control of the San Francisco Examiner from his father in 1887. William’s grandson, William Randolph Hearst III, is chairman of the group these days. Its stable of media companies includes stakes in television networks A&E and ESPN.

William Randolph Hearst was born in 1863 in San Francisco to millionaire mining engineer, goldmine owner and U.S. senator George Hearst and his wife Phoebe Apperson Hearst. His mother, as the first woman regent of University of California, Berkeley, funded many anthropological expeditions and founded the Phoebe A. Hearst Museum of Anthropology. Hearst attended Harvard where he was a member of Delta Kappa Epsilon, the Hasty Pudding Theatricals, and the Lampoon before being expelled for, among other things, sponsoring massive beer parties in Harvard Square.

After his expulsion from Harvard, Hearst was at loose ends. He needed to find a job. In 1887, his father gave him the San Francisco Examiner, which he had won in 1880 as repayment for a gambling debt. Hearst installed top of the line printing equipment, dubbed his newspaper the “Monarch of the Dailies,” and hired the top writers of the time including Mark Twain and Jack London. Hearst published stories about municipal and financial corruption and didn’t skip attacks on companies in which his own family had a stake. Within just a few years, his newspaper was the undisputed leader in the market.

Hearst set his sights on running a large newspaper chain and knew that he had to have a New York City newspaper in order to accomplish this goal. In 1895, with the financial support of his mother, he bought the beleaguered New York Morning Journal. This put him in a head-to-head circulation way with Joseph Pulitzer, owner and publisher of New York World.

Hearst married Millicent Veronica Wilson in 1903. She was a 21-year-old chorus girl whose mother ran a brothel in New York City at the turn of the 20th century. Together Hearst and Millicent had five sons: George Randolph Hearst, William Randolph Hearst, Jr., John Randolph Hearst, and twins Randolph Apperson Hearst and David Wilson Hearst. Randolph Hearst is the father of Patty Hearst, best known for being kidnapped and then joining the Symbionese Liberation Army. Patty is the mother of model Lydia Hearst.

Hearst soon opened newspapers in Chicago, Los Angeles, Boston, and other cities. By the mid-1920s, he had a nationwide string of 28 newspapers among them the Los Angeles Examiner, Boston American, Chicago Examiner, Washington Herald, and Seattle Post Intelligencer. He also diversified his publishing empire into books and magazines. A number of the magazines he started or acquired are still in circulation today including Cosmopolitan, Good Housekeeping, and Town and Country.

Hearst opened the New York Daily Mirror in 1924. It was a racy tabloid imitating the more established New York Daily News. He diversified into radio and entertainment with WINS in New York and King Features Syndicate, which still owns the copyright on a number of comics characters. Hearst also had extensive real estate in New York City, thousands of acres of land in California and Mexico, and timber and mining interests that he inherited from his father.

Hearst owned the biggest media conglomerate in the world during the 1920s and 1930s. The Great Depression hit the Hearst companies hard โ€“ especially the newspapers. He had over extended the finances of his companies during expansion and the building of the Hearst Castle in San Simeon, California. Hearst Corporation faced a court-mandated reorganization in 1937. Hearst was reduced to being merely another employee, subject to the directives of an outside manager. Newspapers and other properties were liquidated, art and antiquities were sold. World War II restored circulation to his newspapers and increased advertising revenues.

In 1948, Hearst became the owner of one of the first television stations in the country, WBAL-TV in Baltimore. Today, the Hearst Corporation division Hearst Television owns 32 television stations in the United States.

When William Randolph Hearst Jr. took over the Hearst Corporation he was able to restore a measure of family control.

According to William Randolph Hearst Sr.’s will, the Hearst Corporation will remain under family control as long as any grandchild that was alive when Sr. died in 1951 is still living. The family business is controlled by a board of 13 trustees, five from the Hearst family and eight Hearst executives. Today, Hearst Sr.’s branch of the family is represented on the trustees by his grandson, William Randolph Hearst III. The other members of the Hearst family on the board today are Anissa Boudjakdji Balson, granddaughter of fifth son, David Wilson Hearst Sr., Lisa Hearst Hagerman, granddaughter of third son, John Randolph Hearst Sr., George Randolph Hearst III, grandson of Hearst’s eldest son, George Randolph Hearst Sr., and publisher of the Albany Times Union, and Virginia Hearst Randt, daughter of late former chairman and fourth son, Randolph Apperson Hearst.

CONCLUSION

If Britney lived in this neighborhood, Damian Hirst would end up bleeding in the gutter: NO TALK – JUST BEATINGS. Britney would never get strapped into the rape chair ever again.

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Free Britney: Party at the Palms

WE NEED

True Fans to protest at the “Hairy” Palms HOtel in Las Vegas

Britney isn’t a HO. All the MK Ultra was done against her will.

Title: Party at the Palms
Genre: Conspiracy Thriller / Satirical Drama
Written, Directed & Starring: Joseph C. Jukic
Starring: Britney Spears, Stephen Dorff, Michael Moniz, Donald Trump (as himself), and surprise cameos
Tone: Eyes Wide Shut meets Oceanโ€™s Eleven meets Three Days of the Condor with a satirical Dr. Strangelove twist


Logline:

In a surreal and electric Las Vegas night, Britney Spears is lured into the Palms’ ultra-exclusive Empathy Suite. But what starts as a party turns into a secret rescue op led by Jukic, Dorff, and Moniz, who uncover a global MK Ultra conspiracy reaching all the way to Israelโ€”where fake-dead elites Rothschild and Epstein are hiding in plain sight.


Treatment:

ACT I: THE INVITE

The film opens with paparazzi madness and drone footage swooping into The Palms Hotel & Casino, Las Vegas. Britney Spears, recently freed from her conservatorship, is invited to a private party in the Empathy Suiteโ€”$100,000 per night and designed by Damien Hirst himself. She arrives wearing a golden veil, not knowing this will be the night her real liberation begins.

Meanwhile, Joe Jukic (as himself), writer-director with a background in intelligence and theology, gets tipped off by Mossad that MK Ultra doctors have infiltrated Vegas, using hotel suites as ritual control zones. He calls in his two closest allies: Stephen Dorff, a gritty actor turned underground operative, and Michael Moniz, a Canadian-Cambodian cyber-forensics expert. Together, they form Operation Magdalene.


ACT II: OPERATION MAGDALENE

The trio checks into a mirrored suite across from the Empathy Suite, watching the strange rituals of the night unfold via hacked security feeds. Britney dances with shadowsโ€”until she collapses. Her drinks have been laced. The abusersโ€”MK Ultra psychiatrists and handlersโ€”appear, whispering phrases from CIA codebooks and Freudโ€™s darkest nightmares.

But Dorff, Moniz, and Jukic make their move: they pump ether into the air vents of the Empathy Suite, knocking out everyone except Britney, who wears a gas mask etched with the words โ€œI Am Not Property.โ€

As the abusers convulse and fade, Donald Trump bursts into the room with Caesarโ€™s Palace security. โ€œI told you!โ€ he shouts. โ€œVegas is mine!โ€ Trump calls for the immediate arrest of the psychiatrists. โ€œTheyโ€™re worse than crooked Hillary!โ€ he says, as guards cuff them and drag them off.

But the deeper truth unravels quickly: all the psychiatrists are linked via offshore accounts to Jacob Rothschild and Jeffrey Epsteinโ€”both of whom supposedly died, but are very much aliveโ€ฆ and hiding in Israel.


ACT III: JUKIC IN JERUSALEM

Joe flies to Israel, carrying only a cracked leather briefcase and a one-dollar bill signed by Rabbi Schneerson, gifted to him years ago when he saved a Hasidic boy from a burning house in Brooklyn.

In Tel Aviv, Joe meets with Mossad. They laughโ€”at first. โ€œYou want us to arrest Jacob Rothschild and Epstein? Thatโ€™s rich.โ€ But then they see the dollar bill. โ€œThis is the code of the Final Dispensation,โ€ an old agent whispers. “Schneerson marked this as a trigger.”

Joe follows the paper trail to a secret yeshiva near the Golan Heights. There, in disguise as Hasidic scholars, Epstein and Rothschild host โ€œThe Cabal Academyโ€โ€”grooming the next generation of elite manipulators.

In a night-time raid orchestrated by Mossad, backed by AI drones and Joeโ€™s philosophical dialogue about redemption and truth, the two fugitives are arrested. Rothschild begs for mercy; Epstein offers bribes. Joe refuses both.


EPILOGUE: PALMS REDEMPTION

Back in Vegas, Britney reclaims her voice. She performs in the Empathy Suiteโ€”this time by choiceโ€”with Dorff on guitar, Moniz remixing beats, and Jukic at the mic delivering a spoken-word poem about trauma, truth, and freedom.

Donald Trump appears one last time, offering Joe a drink. Joe declines. โ€œSome parties,โ€ he says, โ€œarenโ€™t worth attending. But this oneโ€ฆ this one changed the world.โ€

Fade to black.
End credits roll over Britneyโ€™s unreleased liberation anthem: โ€œBreak the Program.โ€


Themes:

  • Mind control and media manipulation
  • Freedom vs. captivity
  • Redemption through resistance
  • The power of belief systems and sacred artifacts
  • Vegas as both playground and battlefield of the elite

Tagline: โ€œWhat happens in Vegasโ€ฆ might just break the Matrix.โ€

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