well i mean, not wrong // credits: @screamingemonight on Instagram

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well i mean, not wrong // credits: @screamingemonight on Instagram
Cherry turnovers
New Scream // Turnover
Dispatch Observation
Not sure if anyone else has noticed this about Robert's phoenix speech but I thought I would write up a post.
In Episode 3, during the team meeting, the player decides what Robert sees in the Z-Team. Potential, Fear or Pain. What I find interesting as he speaks, different members of the team will react.
Pain -> Prism and Punch Up
Fear -> Sonar, Prism and Punch Up
Potential -> Sonar, Prism, Punch Up, Coupe and Flambe
My assumption would be that the game is indicating who is resonating with Robert's speech and relates to what he is saying in each option.
I assume this might influence the ending but, otherwise, I just thought it was neat.
In 2015, Dan Price, the CEO and cofounder of Gravity Payments, cut his own pay from about 1 million dollars to 70,000 and set a 70,000 dollar minimum salary for everyone at the company. He said he wanted people to live comfortably and shrink pay gaps.
Turnover// Dizzy on the comedown
Turnover - New Scream
Since the 2020 election, local law enforcement has increasingly been playing a bigger role in helping local officials secure elections.
When Chris Davis first started working in law enforcement over 30 years ago, elections would come and go relatively unnoticed.
"Election Day was something, as a police officer, you may not even realize was happening," he said. "It wouldn't even come up on roll calls."
Davis is now chief of police in Green Bay, Wis. And elections have rapidly become a big part of his job, something he plans for year-round.
"I think a lot of that is just because we're right in the middle of the Wisconsin battleground," Davis said. "I remember really being struck when I came here at just how, almost, nervous a lot of city staff were about elections."
Davis' experience reflects a trend experts have noticed across the country: Since the 2020 election, local law enforcement has increasingly been playing a bigger role in helping local officials secure elections.
"The number of threats that election officials face, that jurisdictions face, that election workers face all mean that law enforcement does have a heightened role to play and a longer-term role to play," said Katie Reisner with the nonpartisan States United Democracy Center. "It's not a matter of just tapping in for Election Day and tapping back out."
According to a survey of local election officials conducted earlier this year by the Brennan Center for Justice, 32% of local election officials reported experiencing "threats, harassment, or abuse because of their job."
Americans are split on wanting the National Guard to monitor voting, a new poll finds
Voting officials are leaving their jobs at the highest rate in decades
Threats and harassment increased notably for election officials after President Trump's unfounded claims that the 2020 election was rife with fraud. The last few years have also seen historic rates of turnover among voting officials.