Jurassic World, the media, the Nublar Six, and telling Palatable stories — a deep dive analysis
Part 2
Trigger warnings — discussions of media censorship and propaganda; light discussions of the Grenfell tower fire; discussions of the Palestinian genocide
To read this essay on AO3, click here
If it is not explicitly canon, it’s speculation. This is NOT hate on anyone IRL involved in the show. I love this show with all my heart.
← Part 1
Word count: 2000+
In season 5, we see one of Daniel Kon’s investors talking about how Daniel told them Kenji “Conquered the worst of these dinos.” Conquered, not survived. Extremely interesting and intentional wording. It paints Kenji as a hero, and not the survivor he and his friends are. The reporter also says, “You actually faced down all those dinosaurs?” Faced down, not survived.
In the interview mentioned above, the kids themselves even talk more about the dinosaurs they conquered, and the more badass moments where they survived dinosaur attacks (Ben fighting Toro, Yaz saving them from the Mosasaurus, Sammy surviving being poisoned by a dinosaur). Even Darius saying ’survived’ versus the reporter saying ’faced down’ is such subtle, yet incredibly interesting wording. It’s possible the kids mentioned other things in this interview, but they were edited out of the final version (yes, it was reported live, but this clip was aired six years ago, so it could definitely have been altered).
Daniel also says it himself in Chaos Theory. He’s a “disgraced” criminal, brought down by “the famous Nublar Six,” but Kenji is a “survivor, a hero.” That’s how I think the world sees Kenji and the rest of the Nublar Six.
In the same interview, the kids are referred to as “improbable survivors.” Improbable literally means something unlikely to happen, but it also implies luck or chance, which is odd wording because, in reality, the camp fam were not fortunate at all. They were incredibly unlucky to be there in the first place. The camp fam survived because they had each other of course, but they also had important skills they honed and utilised on Nublar. Of course, there were many instances where they survived because of luck. But a large amount of their survival can be attributed to their skills, intelligence, and teamwork.
On that topic, I think the Nublar Six’s survival skills and resilience would’ve been downplayed to make them seem less competent and more naive and easily digestible by the public. If you think about it, the camp fam has a disturbing set of survival skills that implies a lot of questions behind how they got them in the first place. I could do a deep dive into this, but this essay is long enough lol.
I’m certain this interview is not the only interview of the Nublar Six there was. They were most likely hounded to death by reporters for at least the first few months after they got back. So there were probably multiple interviews online. Including ones where the camp fam told the whole bloody, gruesome story.
And of course, that is not palatable for the public. So those interviews were buried, highly censored, or just straight up didn’t air.
The difference between the scene with the live reporters and all their voices overlapping in Camp Cretaceous, versus the interview Darius still has six years later, interests me. I’m certain that interview, where the camp fam are all smiling and laughing and being optimistic, would’ve ’lasted longer’ on the internet and would’ve been pushed much harder by mainstream media, than interviews with the hard truth. @nickrocketrodriguez confirmed it was a narrative tool to refresh the audience on who the Nublar Six are and how much they mean to each other, but in universe, I personally think the use of this clip, implying it could’ve outlasted other interviews on the internet, is intentional. Good, wholesome viewing about the unlikely friendship between six kids is much more palatable than six kids spilling the ugly truth of how they were abandoned and hurt at the fault of Jurassic World, InGen, Masrani, Mantah Corp, and human failure time and time again.
All of this builds a narrative.
I was watching Grenfell: Uncovered on Netflix a few weeks ago, and something Peter Apps (a news editor) said stuck out to me: there’s a “desire among the media” to find “a simple scapegoat, a simple narrative.” Simplicity is way easier to discuss, talk about, think about, etc. So it makes sense the media would boil it down.
The Nublar Six’s narrative can be condensed to: capable, badass, innocent, loveable teenagers who had to survive on a dangerous island for six months. And we see this narrative hinted at in canon! But note how that’s only a fraction of what happened? Note how the more complicated details are not shown? Note how the dinosaurs are mostly left out of the narrative?
Note how the narrative is bent to paint Jurassic World in the best light possible?
This is very intentional propaganda.
There’s a quote I found in the comments section on a YouTube video: “governments have propaganda, companies have marketing, which is propaganda but rebranded so it doesn’t sound like manipulation. That was the first success of marketing.” And in the media, the camp fam’s branding would’ve likely been referred to as ’marketing’ within corporations and the general context of this issue. But it is definitely propaganda, so I will call it as such.
You may notice in pieces of media that spread propaganda, there is a specific semantic field of vocabulary they use for certain groups, situations, people, etcetera.
The mainstream media’s coverage of the currently occuring Palestinian genocide is a good example of how semantic fields are being used for spreading propaganda. Have you noticed how Palestinian hostages tend to be called “prisoners” whereas Israeli hostages are called hostages? Prisoners have a more negative connotation, because a prisoner makes you think of someone who has committed a crime, whereas a hostage makes you think of someone innocent.
This article concluded that, in articles from two mainstream UK journalist organisations, 77% of the emotive language was used to describe violence against Israelis, but a disproportionate 23% of the emotive language was used to describe violence against Palestinians. It’s described as a “war,” which implies a fair fight where both sides have power and militaries, not the genocidal ethnic cleansing it is. Israelis are “massacred” or “slaughtered,” whereas Palestinians are just “killed.” See how ’massacred’ and ’slaughtered’ have much more aggressive and graphic connotations, and hit harder emotionally, than ’killed’? See how that will automatically make a person who has little to no context sympathise further with Israelis?
The same article found that three left leaning newspapers had more of a focus on violence against Israelis (58% versus 42% focusing on Palestinians), which is massively disproportionate to the much larger number of Palestinian victims of violence compared to Israelis. What the media focuses on is also a powerful tool of propaganda. On the subject of Palestine, note how there is so much talk and focus by the media about October 7th, but not the decades of violence against Palestinians before then? October 7th is what the media wants people to focus on because they are trying to present Israel as tragic victims of an attack by Hamas, who are only defending themselves, rather than committing ethnic cleansing. That is the story the mainstream media are telling people, because it fits with the West’s narrative.
I highly recommend reading the full article for learning more about how language is used to skew public perceptions one way or another. This is all a horrifying example of how semantic fields can distort our perceptions of reality without even realising. Note how emotive language on one side is used to skew the narrative one way in the public’s favour? Note how the media only shows what they want people to focus on?
That happened with the camp fam. It’s canon (see previous examples). Marxist criticism treats language as “not just a periphery consequence of power imbalance, but as an active force of that imbalance” [source]. That means language is such a powerful tool. It’s not just an accidental wording choice; it’s deliberate influence on the reader. And I think the language used to describe the Nublar Six is a deliberate weapon used against them to skew the public’s view of them.
And we know Jurassic World would cover up the truth, because they do canonically.
In the beginning of Jurassic Park II, Ian Malcom is revealed to have told the truth about what happened on Nublar, and the media made him look, in Ian’s words, “like a nut.” He directly mentions misinformation being shoved down the public’s throats that gave Ian a reputation of being a crazed liar. That’s a clear message on the power of propaganda, and I think the same would happen with the Nublar Six after Nublar, and again after Chaos Theory. If Jurassic World can get the public to see a respected professional such as Ian Malcom as a crazy liar, they could do the same about six traumatized young adults easily — but we’re straying off topic into Chaos Theory territory. (I mention the camp fam being traumatized because people can fall into the ableist attitudes of assuming people with mental illnesses are less reliable, and their symptoms can distort reality — which is sometimes but not always true! — and therefore don’t believe them.)
And if Ian is still recognised in a city subway four years later, the camp fam would probably be getting recognised in public for a long time after the events of Nublar and even Chaos Theory.
I also think the Nublar Six were definitely brought up in the events of Fallen Kingdom. The hype of Nublar is still ongoing three years later; the news reporter mentions the Jurassic World incident in 2015 “shocked the world” and the debate over Isla Nublar “rages on.” Clearly, the discussion of all this isn’t over, far from it. And considering how alarming it is that six teenagers were abandoned on an island full of dinosaurs, it’s absolutely possible they would’ve been talked about and involved.
The Nublar Six were probably asked to speak at a court case similar to the one Ian Malcom spoke at in Fallen Kingdom. They’re public figures heavily involved with dinosaurs, and Darius especially does motivational speaking about dinosaurs (I think? I’m not entirely sure what he does) so he’d definitely get asked to give a statement. Like everything else the camp fam says, it gets dissected to pieces by the media and their fans.
There’s a moment in Fallen Kingdom, where Ian Malcom casually mentions God, and the judge brings up the “Almighty,” and tries to distract Ian from his point by bringing in something pretty irrelevant to the question (which has less of a scientific basis) which is another subtle example of propaganda twisting the narrative a little bit towards presenting Ian Malcom as someone whose judgement is flawed, unscientific, and therefore untrustworthy.
Here are two more canon things which could be expanded on; thank you @dearinglovebot on tumblr for the additions!
First, there’s the Dinosaur Protection Group (DPG) which aims to evacuate the dinosaurs off Nublar before mount Sibo erupts (in Fallen Kingdom), but there is also a rival group called Extinction Now! who think humans and dinosaurs should be completely separate, and dearinglovebot suggested Extinction Now would use the Nublar Six’s story to further prove their point. This is also touched on in the first scene of Chaos Theory season 1, where the guys on the podcast are discussing how they think those “Nublar kids” would feel about this, assuming they feel negatively about it — which is a fair assumption, given all the trauma they inevitably have around dinosaurs and the island. But even then, it’s a good and interesting example of how the Nublar Six’s narrative could’ve been used and bent for more negative purposes without actually asking them.
Dearinglovebot also mentioned the Camp Cretaceous creator Zach Stentz said people did try to locate other survivors who hadn’t made it to the ferry with a radar system, but the system didn’t detect the kids because they were in the tunnels. This could result in people assuming Jurassic World was incompetent because their security system didn’t work, or as a way of proving they tried their best to rescue people. There’s even an insidious way they could spin the narrative (on the legal side of things) in a way that makes it the kids’ fault for getting left behind because they were in the tunnels — technically, a restricted area. That removes even more of the blame from Jurassic World, and can be used as a tool of retaliation when the Nublar Six try to speak up against the narrative that paints Jurassic World as blameless.
I meant to post this like a week or two ago, but apparently Tumblr doesn’t want to let me post on my preferred browser and it slipped my mind while trying to troubleshoot (still doesn’t work).
Here’s my take on the Indominus rex from Jurassic World. Not really meant to be a “Here I Fixed Your Character” thing, just expanding on the design and the ideas from the movie in my own style. I made JW Control Room-type graphics to make it look all fancy and to help explain my thoughts while designing it.
I unintentionally ended up kinda rolling the Indominus and Indoraptor into one, which debatably would have been for the best.
Okay, so it's been requested that I list all the prehistoric creatures rescued from the island and brought to the mainland (that we currently know of) so here goes:
Tyrannosaurus (Rexy)
Velociraptor (Blue)
Allosaurus
Baryonyx
Triceratops
Sinoceratops
Stegosaurus
Stygimoloch
Carnotaurus
Pteranodon
Gallimimus
Ankylosaurus
Compsognathus (presumably stowaways)
Mosasaurus (escaped into the ocean)
Unfortunately, larger sauropods like Brachiosaurus were too large for the Arcadia to transport. It's still unknown if any species exclusive to Isla Sorna, such as the illegal species cloned by the Masrani Global Corporation in 1997, were rescued, or were even transported to Jurassic World, for that matter. These illegal species were cloned in direct violation of the Gene Guard Act, established earlier that same year in response to the San Diego incident, involving a Bull Tyrannosaurus rampaging through the city and killing several civilians. It's possible they may have been left to die on Sorna, but we don't know for sure.
A few friends of mine and I talked about gay ships and randomly I said ‘’when Timecock is Time Lord+cock for thoschei is then TimeVagina for Time Lady gay ships, like Missy x Gallifrey!Clara or Rani x Missy?’’ I know we have really weird conversation in our group xD
Jurassic World, the media, the Nublar Six, and telling Palatable stories — a deep dive analysis
Part 4
Trigger warnings — mentions of discrimination and bigotry; specifically sanism and ableism; discussions of media harassment; discussions of the Grenfell tower fire; mentions of death; mentions of corporate neglect; light mentions of sex, pregnancy and abortion; discussions of media censorship and propaganda; mentions of the Palestinian genocide
To read this essay on AO3, click here
If it is not explicitly canon, it’s speculation. This is NOT hate on anyone IRL involved in the show. I love this show with all my heart.
← Part 3
Word count: 2800+
The first year would’ve been the toughest in terms of media exposure. The camp fam (plus their parents, Mae, Dave and Roxie) are all furious with how the media treats them. The adults on their side vouch for them, but no one believes the camp parents because we assume every parent always believes their child no matter what, and Dave and Roxie have already had madness allegations against them (I’ll discuss this later!!) and they care deeply about the camp fam, so they could be biased. The least biased person is Mae, so some people might’ve believed her, but she couldn’t have vouched for what happened on Nublar because she wasn’t there.
Also it’s likely everyone involved probably experienced some degree of discrimination as a result of so much media exposure. Darius, Yaz, Sammy, Kenji, Mae, Roxie (if Roxie isn’t white, which I’m pretty sure is true, since she has tan skin and is voiced by a woman of colour) and their associated families may experience racism. Yaz and Sammy especially, but any of the camp fam who come out as queer, may experience homophobia. Brooklynn, Yaz, Sammy, Roxie, Mae, all the camp fam’s mothers may experience sexism. Yaz with her PTSD and ankle injury, Ben with his anxiety and paranoia, the camp fam with their trauma and mental health issues, (and my headcanon: Roxie with FND), may all experience ableism too. It’s possible Yaz and her mother may experience Islamophobia, and Ben and his mother might experience antisemitism, and more. The latter two are headcanons, but since Pincus is a Jewish surname and people might assume Yaz and her mother are Muslims because they’re Middle Eastern, it is sadly likely.
I think it’s likely there was an interview with the camp fam (a few days after they returned, got changed into cleaner clothes, and had a proper shower, etcetera) where they were brutally honest about everything, and that interview was never aired because it’s way too biased against Jurassic World (someone probably live recorded it and posted it to Dark Jurassic, where mostly leftist people discussed how this interview and the Jurassic World disaster relates to capitalism, but those kind of conversations tend to stay on social media websites, and people trying to talk about anything other than the mainstream’s narrative are branded as conspiracy theorists).
The camp fam and the adults on their side are furious at this, and the whole way the camp fam are getting treated by the media, but eventually, they all stop trying to push back against the narrative, and just want reporters to leave them alone. They (especially the Nublar Six) are fed up, drained and traumatised.
So they keep their mouths shut. Darius sticks to his uncomplicated motivational speaking, Brooklynn shuts down her social media channels and disappears into the shadows, and the hype around the Nublar Six starts to die down. A few people bother the Nublar Six for interviews when the dinosaurs come back to the mainland, but they refuse.
The Nublar Six grow older, and as @vahleeairbus-a330neo suggested here: “I absolutely believe the Six were utilized for propaganda, and why they all chose reclusive lives when they became adults. There's very little indication they were given reliable, relevant, or even adequate treatment for their trauma, which is why Yasmina has to go to Wyoming for that.”
Which, if you think about it, makes a disturbing amount of sense. Kenji has a stable home life with the Bowmans; there is no reason for him to isolate himself in Colorado. Same with Darius. Both of them have moved out and are living alone before Brooklynn’s death, so it isn’t a grief response. Ben was in college, Brooklynn had her investigative journalism, Sammy of course had her issues with her family, and Yaz wanted to go to immersion therapy (it’s worth asking if she was able to access any effective therapy before the dinosaur immersion therapy program). But they’re all really isolated from the outside world.
And why is that? The explanation I like most, and the explanation I think makes the most sense is that they’re hiding. From dinosaurs, from the media... they don’t want to acknowledge that they’re hiding, but they all are and they all know it.
But they have each other (for now) and all is somewhat well... until Chaos Theory.
But first! I’d like to discuss something I think could plausibly be canon, and it’s about Dave and Roxie, and what they were doing while the camp fam were on Nublar.
Of course, they would’ve tried to help them. I don’t believe they would’ve just given up straight away, not after risking their jobs and lives to get the kids back. They certainly wanted to try, because it’s a little bit their fault the camp fam were abandoned on the island. (They’re not entirely to blame, since it’s likely they would probably have been stranded on the island themselves if one of them stayed with the kids, but that’s a whole other conversation.) So we can deduce they either tried some things and none of them worked, or something must’ve stopped them from trying in the first place.
Either way, they would have tried. You know they tried. They would’ve felt so guilty for leaving the camp fam at camp without supervision (even though the camp was perfectly safe to their knowledge, the kids were the ones who disobeyed orders, they had little to no support from the Jurassic World staff themselves, and would have been fine if they had more people to help look after the camp fam).
So what stopped them from trying?
(This is entirely headcanon btw. None of this is canon.)
I was watching Grenfell: Uncovered on Netflix a few weeks ago (Grenfell is a tower block in London that burned down in 2017 and killed 72 people. The fire started due to faulty cladding, and the response to the situation was all-around awful), and what really stood out were the firefighters who did their best to save as many people in the building as possible, but still felt so guilty for the people they couldn’t save.
One firefighter was even getting trialled in court for the few people he couldn’t rescue. The documentary showed a firefighter in a courtroom being absolutely ripped to pieces because he went to a room to rescue a little girl in room 176, but went to room 175 by mistake and it didn’t occur to him to check if there was a family in room 175, which there was, and as far as I know, they got burned to death.
Considering the magnitude of the corporate neglect and mistreatment of the Grenfell residents at the hands of people with much more power (and the fact the firefighters saved so many peoples’ lives that night), this is an utterly disproportionate thing to pick up on. It was one mistake made in the heat of a panicked moment. Just like Dave and Roxie when they chose to leave the kids behind.
There’s a mindset I see a lot of, it’s not your choice what happens but it’s your responsibility to fix it. For example, someone gets pregnant, which isn’t always their choice or what they want to happen, even if they chose to have sex. But some people would say the person should not have an abortion, because the pregnant person is now responsible for the life of the fetus, and has to carry the fetus to term, even if they didn’t choose or want to get pregnant. The whole notion of not your choice but your responsibility to fix it is a cornerstone of right-wing politics. (Yes, in some instances things are genuinely your responsibility, but that’s not relevant to the point here.) And if Dave and Roxie defy that mindset, by refusing to accept all the blame and instead blame the higher ups who neglected to give them sufficient support and listen to the kids, they become anti-right wing without even meaning to. Therefore, they get shunned by the right wing media.
In Dave and Roxie’s case, it was technically their choice to become camp counselors, but it wasn’t their choice to be responsible for six stubborn teenagers who never listen. Continuing the pregnancy metaphor, if someone chooses to have sex, you could argue they chose to accept the risk of getting pregnant, even if that’s not at all what they wanted to happen when they had sex. It wasn’t Dave and Roxie’s choice to not have enough staff for them to properly supervise the kids. It wasn’t their choice to be ignored by higher ups, blatantly disrespected, and get shoved in a waiting room for hours. But it became their responsibility to fix, even though it wasn’t entirely their mistake. Were they in over their heads? Possibly yes. (Credits to @swan2swan for the post.) But Dave and Roxie still did everything they could to try to fix it.
Leaving the kids was a bad, irresponsible decision, don’t get me wrong. But it was one mistake. In comparison to the many, many terrible, deliberate, life-costing decisions made by Jurassic World staff with far more power and influence, that one mistake was almost nothing. Dave and Roxie would’ve been fine if they had more staff/support. There were even two people near the Observation Tower, and there was probably staff constantly nearby at all times. The camp was a terrible idea in the first place, Dave and Roxie tried everything else before going to see Claire Dearing in person, and they were acting in the kids’ best interests: prioritising their safety over the experience of Jurassic World (which, may I remind you, is not at all what Jurassic World did).
But Dave and Roxie would still have been ripped apart by the media once they found out Dave and Roxie left the kids at camp. It destroys them, not only bearing the enormous guilt of the mistake in the first place, but having the media scrutinise it. I think it would be Claire Dearing in the end who vouchers for them, and says the park falling apart was her responsibility. Jurassic World was badly managed, and she should’ve made sure Camp Cretaceous was treated more seriously. But she’s only one person, and it doesn’t do much, but it’s something for Dave and Roxie.
It’s likely Dave and Roxie both developed PTSD, survivors guilt, and other severe mental health issues — especially Roxie, because it was technically her decision to leave the kids, which makes her self blame worse. She falls into such a deep and heavy depression, the media paints her as unstable, and so wrecked by grief, she can’t possibly be telling the truth about the camp fam being alive. Classic “hysterical woman” spiel that’s equal amounts ableist and sexist. I imagine Dave was angrier at the Jurassic World staff and how they handled things, because he and Roxie had to plead for help from the Jurassic World staff on the island, and then be ignored by them once on the island, and again on the mainland.
Roxie’s “hysteria” (mental health issues caused by the Jurassic World incident) plus Dave’s anger (directed at Jurassic World) plus them both unafraidly talking about how much the Jurassic World staff suck, how little support they had in running the camp, and how the park was such a bad idea, equals... a narrative that screws Jurassic World over completely. So what does Jurassic World and the mainstream media do?
They paint them as crazy, traumatised, broken, unhinged and unreliable. That way, who would believe and trust their story? “Oh, they’re mentally ill and grieving, all of their desperation and denial is just a symptom :( how sad :(”
Remember what I said about the not your choice but your responsibility mindset? I think that would’ve been pushed hard on Dave and Roxie. They should’ve been more responsible for the kids, they should’ve done xyz, and not the people in power should’ve taken better care of the camp. It’s Dave and Roxie’s job to pick up the scraps the higher ups tossed at them to clean up. And since they failed, it’s their fault.
In Fallen Kingdom, the reporter mentions that “Activist groups mobilised around the globe” to campaign for the rights of dinosaurs, and it’s definitely possible a similar movement started to petition the governments to act on the missing kids. Since the dinosaurs stuck on Nublar was the “flashpoint” issue of the time, the Nublar Six would’ve been the same three years earlier. If not, Dave and Roxie definitely tried to start a movement like that, to varying degrees of success. Keep in mind the media is doing everything they can to act like Dave and Roxie are deluding themselves.
Obviously, all this would take its toll on their mental health, and they probably tried to go to therapy for it. But I imagine Dave and Roxie would also meet with several condescending, media-brainrotted therapists who all tell them, “Denial is a normal part of grieving....” and Dave and Roxie are insisting, “No, you don’t understand, the kids are ACTUALLY alive. I know they are. We saw them alive on the island.” This happens in circles.
My friend Simon — aka @owengrady2015 — wrote an amazing addition to this, in the form of a hypothetical article by InGen about Dave and Roxie.
“In the aftermath of the unforeseen events on Isla Nublar, concerns arose regarding reports from two camp counselors, Dave and Roxie, who alleged that six individuals had been left behind [on purpose] at Camp Cretaceous. InGen has confirmed these statements were not accurate. Following a comprehensive internal review, the company stated all evacuation protocols were executed without exception, and no guests or campers were abandoned on the island. According to InGen representatives, Dave and Roxie experienced significant trauma during the incident, which likely contributed to their claims. To ensure transparency and public reassurance, InGen has announced both counselors will undergo thorough mental health evaluations. Additionally, InGen Security will continue to work closely with staff and relevant authorities to maintain accountability and provide assurances the safety of all guests and employees remains the company’s highest priority.” (diva u ateeeee)
Dave and Roxie definitely tried to launch rescue efforts as well as protests. Like Brand, they would’ve talked to the army, coast guard, marines, police, etcetera. But, in Fallen Kingdom, the official US statement says they “cannot condone government involvement on a privately owned venture,” which is messed up in a lot of ways, but it could mean government authorities like the army and police weren’t able to intervene and search for the kids on Nublar, even if they wanted to, including any government organisation authorising Dave and Roxie to go to Nublar and look for the kids.
And even if they could, with the authorities busy dealing with the fall of Jurassic World and being consciously aware of the bias against Dave and Roxie, who would’ve listened to and believed them? Who would lend them a boat if even one person at the boat company knows them as the famous camp counselors who were driven mad with guilt?
It is SO noticeable how the media treats people that go against the narrative they’re trying to push. Just look at how Palestine activists are labelled as terrorists by the media, with the use of more violent language used for Palestine activists or Hamas, than the IOF (who are actually committing ethnic cleansing). They’re trying to push the narrative that Israel are the good guys and they’re just fighting back against Hamas. (To be clear, Hamas has done some awful things which I do not condone, but that isn’t the point I’m making here.) Palestine activists do not agree with that interpretation, and many of us are peaceful in our protest/activism methods. By us being peaceful in our protest, that means we go against the narrative that Palestine = evil, bad, and unlawful. It makes people remember: Palestinian rights are human rights. And the mainstream media does not want people to think that.
In this case, the fall of Jurassic World would probably have been labelled by the media as a tragedy (even though it wasn’t; it was a stoppable event that needlessly cost lives) and the line by the reporter confirms this may be the case. Because Dave and Roxie would’ve been very outspoken about how the Jurassic World staff are largely to blame for not giving them enough support in running the camp and not bothering to go back to rescue the kids or even let Dave and Roxie look for them themselves, they threaten the narrative it was merely a tragic accident. So they are immediately shut down and every accusation of madness and incredibility is done to make Dave and Roxie as untrustworthy as possible.
So that concludes my mini tangent. Take note, because there are parallels...
Yesterday @irrfan (a.k.a. #SimonMasrani) turns 53!!!. Please recive a big hug from all the #jurassicfandom!! We hope you're doing very well and that you have a wonderful day!! You keep reminding us how very small we really are, how new!! ;) Enjoy your party!!! :D Happy Birthday Sir!! 😃 ✌🏼😎 // ¡¡¡Ayer #IrrfanKhan (a.k.a. #Simon #Masrani) cumple 54 años!!! ¡¡Recive un gran abrazo de todo el #fandomjurasico!! Esperamos que goces de buena salud y tengas ¡¡un día fantástico!! ¡¡Tú nos sigues recordando lo pequeños que somos, lo nuevo que somos!! ¡¡¡Disfruta tu fiesta!!! :D ¡¡Feliz Cumpleaños!! 😃 ✌🏼😎 #jpsacu #thelegacyofjurassicpark #jurassicpark #jurassicworld #jurassicworld2 #jurassicworld3 #mundojurasico #mundojurasico2 #mundojurasico3 #jurassicpark3 #thelostworld #elmundoperdido #parquejurasico #af #ancientfutures #fallenkingdom #elreinocaido #jurassiccomunity #birthday #jurassicartwork #cumpleaños @jurassicworld #jurassiccast #actor #JurassicLegend https://www.instagram.com/p/B7EDu7YgOyo/?igshid=g8bn67al6eiz