In another time and place, reportage of a television comedy star publicly demanding to speak to the President of the United States about the government covering up the existence of flying saucers and then publishing a faux-interview with the President in the notoriously anti-Semitic screed The Spotlight would have been noteworthy for one thing: Reporting on the rapidly deteriorating condition of that comedy star's mental condition, his removal by the network, and his eventual hospitalization.
But what if one news network took him seriously, his network looked the other way, and The Spotlight was sourced as a legitimate news organization?
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