Netflix's American Primeval Thread (Starting Jan. 9 2025)

Starman

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Hold it down until the Blood Meridian adaptation.
You see the vision.

I'm not even sure we're ready for Judge on screen yet, anyway.

This is like a toe in the water to see if we might be ready.
 

daemonova

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Violent, no nudity

First episode is like Dothraki v Lannisters (no dragons)
 

Starman

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About to start Ep 2. Ep 1 did not disappoint. Was Young really trying to start his own country too? I knew he was some Mormon leader, but I didn't know he was radical like that...

Edit:

Ep.2 opening is hilarious.
 

daemonova

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Fort Bridger was originally a 19th-century fur trading outpost established in 1842, on Blacks Fork of the Green River, in what is now Uinta County, Wyoming (Southeast corner bordering Utah), United States. It became a vital resupply point for wagon trains on the Oregon, California, and Mormon Trails. The US Army established a military post here in 1858 during the Utah War, until it was finally closed in 1890. A small town, Fort Bridger, Wyoming, remains near the fort and takes its name from it.
Near the existing fort, the Mormons established their own Fort Supply the same year. In 1855, Mormons took over Fort Bridger, reportedly having bought it for $8,000 in gold coins.[8] The Mormons claimed, over Bridger's denials, they had purchased the fort from Vasquez. There was a deed dated August 3, 1855, recorded October 21, 1858, in Salt Lake City in Records Book B. p. 128, that ostensibly sold Fort Bridger to the LDS Church. Bridger and Vasquez's names were signed by H. F. Morrell in the presence of Alinerin Grow and William Adams Hickman, purportedly pursuant to a power of attorney. Bridger was absent from the area in 1855, acting as guide for Sir St George Gore.[9]
On November 18, 1857, Bridger leased his surveyed land to the United States, though payment was withheld until Bridger could establish title.

Chief Washakie signed the Fort Bridger Treaty of 1868 at the fort on 3 July, which ceded the Shoshone and Bannock lands in southwestern Wyoming, and created the Wind River Indian Reservation.

Lieutenant Colonel Henry Morrow was in command from 9 November 1867 until 17 April 1869. During this time, Fort Bridger troops helped guard construction of the Overland Route (Union Pacific Railroad) and the Overland Stage and Mail route. In the summer of 1870, Yale College Professor Othniel Charles Marsh used the fort as a base camp during a geological expedition. The fort was also host to the geological survey conducted by Ferdinand Vandeveer Hayden from 12 September to 1 October 1870.  Ultimately, the expansion of the railroads in the west made this and other forts obsolete. Fort Bridger was first abandoned in 1878 but then was re-established two years later. The Army closed the post in 1890 when Wyoming became a state.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fort_Bridger
 
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