Leverage S01E11 The 12 Step Job.
And yes, Parker has indeed drawn the plan of the ground floor of the Cairo Museum, which is where the antiquities are kept, and presumably where the alarm room would also be:
seen from Hong Kong SAR China
seen from Croatia
seen from Israel
seen from United States
seen from China

seen from United States
seen from Yemen
seen from United States
seen from Israel

seen from Australia

seen from United Kingdom

seen from Malaysia

seen from United States
seen from New Zealand
seen from China
seen from New Zealand
seen from United Kingdom
seen from Israel
seen from Canada
seen from United States
Leverage S01E11 The 12 Step Job.
And yes, Parker has indeed drawn the plan of the ground floor of the Cairo Museum, which is where the antiquities are kept, and presumably where the alarm room would also be:
bro won three purple hearts
Shit post..
Considering how bad of a speaker and campaigner he was how the hell did Dubya win any of his elections??????
George W. Bush was a poor speaker but he was a GREAT retail politician. Bush's team would carve out three or four policies and Bush was laser-focused on message discipline. He might say some goofy things or throw some malapropisms in there along the way, but he stayed on message, got his points across and he connected with the people who supported him. He wasn't as qualified as his father (or pretty much any other President since World War II besides Trump), but he wasn't as aloof as his father or brother. In fact, he was even somewhat likable and had a charm to him, especially in small groups. Just ask Michelle Obama! Because of his name he was always going to raise tons of money from the big business types who always supported Republicans, but he also raised a ton of money through small fundraisers in 1999/2000 because he went everywhere in New Hampshire and Iowa and South Carolina and people genuinely liked him. People also tend to forget that Bush pretty clearly won two of the three debates against Al Gore in 2000. And there were such low expectations for him in the 2004 debates against John Kerry that holding his own against Kerry was equivalent to a victory.
The problem people had with running against George W. Bush is that people always underestimated him (or, in Bush's words, "misunderestimated" him). Bush was smarter than people thought he was and he worked harder than people expected him to, and most people didn't realize that until he'd served two terms and started two wars. I remember Bill Clinton making those points. Clinton said, "Bush really connects. It's a mistake to underestimate him," and told Al Gore's campaign managers in 2000 to be careful because "compassionate conservatism" was a "genius slogan." Clinton had one of the most brilliant political minds in American history and he said, "I always thought Bush was a good politician. I never thought he was dumb. There's a difference between not knowing certain things and being dumb. But I never bought that. Not ever, not for a minute. I never believed it."
Does anyone ever post about these guys. Ever
John Kerry when I'm his kid and I don't understand the concept of death yet
2004 primary but how well they’re drawn is based on how much I like them