Badrang: You're drunk! Clogg: [slurring] That's a dirty lie. And I intend to press charges. The minute I'm sober
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Badrang: You're drunk! Clogg: [slurring] That's a dirty lie. And I intend to press charges. The minute I'm sober
Am I the only one who always assumed Badrang and Clogg were brothers?
Yes
No
Secret Third Option
Have this mini poll while I put together options for the next tournament.
Made a human design for one of my all time favorite Redwall villains, Captain Josiah Tramun Cuttlefish Clogg! (Whew, what a mouthful.) Ramble about the character and design process under the cut, if you're interested!
Badrang and Clogg are ex-boyfriends send tweet
The 2017 fact-based drama “The Post” revolves around the Washington Post’s decision in 1971 to publish the Pentagon Papers. A similar thriller unfolded at the offices of the Sunday Times of London a few years earlier, in 1968. The contentious issue may not have brought about the downfall of the British government, but it did deliver a major blow to a regime hundreds of miles away in Greece, smashing the image the colonels’ dictatorship was trying to cultivate abroad. One of the protagonists of this journalistic drama was the historian Richard Clogg.
Best known here for his book “A Concise History of Greece,” Clogg’s contribution to the anti-dictatorship movement, which he supported from both Athens and London, is not so well known in Greece. However, he was friends with Kathimerini’s previous owner, Eleni Vlachou, and other prominent anti-dictatorship figures like Alexis Dimaras during a period that he describes in great detail in his book “Greek to Me: A Memoir of Academic Life,” and was an active proponent of the movement.
Sitting on the balcony of his hotel against the backdrop of the Acropolis, the 79-year-old historian spoke to Kathimerini recently about those days and the book, which is currently being translated into Greek.
A Hellenist who became fascinated by Greece on his first visit as a university student, Clogg crossed swords with the junta’s propaganda machine on several occasions as a critic in the Times Literary Supplement, where he made a point of criticizing books that cast the regime in a positive light. He also helped Vlachou, who had shut down Kathimerini in protest at the junta and moved to London, where she published the English-language anti-dictatorship magazine “Hellenic Review.” Then one day in September 1968, Vlachou gave him a document that she wanted translated into English.
look. badrang and clogg were just bitter exes ok
badrang, under a banner that says WELCOME CLOGG: hello everybody
banner: *falls, revealing a second banner underneath that says IM FULL OF SHIT*
badrang: ignore that