MovieChat Forums > Chasing Mummies (2010) Discussion > Meet the only man brave enough to uneart...

Meet the only man brave enough to unearth 100,000 years of history...


"Meet the only man brave enough to unearth 100,000 years of history.".

Brave enough?

What does that even mean? What does bravery have to do with anything?

All this clown cares about is the press. It's hilarious the way he rushes to a scene barging thru people as if it's an emergency and he needs to give some dead pharaoh CPR.

He is also very narrow minded and isn't open to different interpretations or perspectives about anything. He "knows", and that's that. This is actually the opposite of intelligence, the behaviour he exhibits.

He is an egomaniac. He doesn't actually care about what he is doing. I hope when he dies, someone just like him digs him up 4000 years down the road and parades his bones all over the planet.

Think about it. Here he is trying to reclaim this important pylon from the sea, and all he was able to get was this second rate crane that probably couldn't lift my ex mother in law out of her chair.

Officials are probably tired of tying up important resource for every stupid goose chase he goes on. The guy is a moron, and at this point probably even a nuisance to his own people.

He gets underfoot more then anyone on the show.


+++ Jason http://www.youtube.com/user/HaligonianType1

reply

And these are his good points.....

Fire Nancy Dubuc !!! History Made-up Every Day !

reply

I agree. Archaeology is fine and all, but I can’t stand how in each episode, they are in effect desecrating graves. How would people react if someone went to a cemetery in town and started digging up all the graves? What makes one grave and body okay to dig up and another not? Time? That’s pretty arbitrary. The only reasonable explanation I can offer is that the older ones are necessary for providing information because documentation was not what it is today; but then again, do you think that in 5,000 years, people won’t bother digging us up and rely instead on all the myriad books, letters, reports, and such that we create today? Not likely.

--
Synetech

reply