William Shatner starred in the "Twilight Zone" episode "Nightmare at 20,000 Feet".
William Shatner voiced a character - Grand Pear - in the "My Little Pony: Friendship is Magic" episode "The Perfect Pear".
Portrait of a frightened man: Mick Williams is close to being sectioned under the Mental Health Act by imagining scenarios under my name: Rod Serling. Or sued by my Estate; just as nobody dare use certain armoured aliens without express permission of the Estate of Terry Nation.
Unlike Mr. Shatner, who would never resort to unjustified violence - but has used reason; he even calmly reasoned that God was wrong, therefore not reasonable - God resorted to violence.
Even against the innocent unborn in his own 'Word': Hosea 13:16.
Yet, Grand Pear treated Applebloom to a scone with Pear jam: even a free jar of the same.
But then, William Shatner is the source of all Awesomeness in the Universe.
And therefore - like the Tantibus-esque Pony of Shadows - Mick Williams has already entered... The Twilight Sparkle Zone.
@nomad88
The id Tech 6-based "Wolfenstein II: The New Colossus"? Stop it, you're turning me on.
Also:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wolfenstein_II:_The_New_Colossus#Promotion
While the game itself was not intended to reference current events, Bethesda, supported by MachineGames, opted to use current attitudes towards Nazis from these events in its marketing of the title. Hines stated: "We weren't going to hide from the fact our game is about killing Nazis and freeing the US from their rule, and if we can reference current events as part of talking about the game, so be it. Nazis are evil. We aren't afraid to remind people of that". The game adopted the phrase "Make America Nazi-Free Again", based on Donald Trump's slogan "Make America Great Again", as its primary advertising tagline. Other ads used the phrase "Not My America", a slogan used by groups protesting Trump's policies. The marketing campaign drew positive attention, but was criticized by members of the alt-right, as well as Trump supporters who said the advertisements unfairly associated them with Nazis. Responding to the negative feedback, Hines said, "we don't feel it's a reach for us to say Nazis are bad and un-American, and we're not worried about being on the right side of history here"
From something between "Commander Keen" and "DOOM" that defined a gaming genre, Keep rustling certain jimmies, id Software. >:D
There is no such thing as bad publicity indeed. Except for "Daikatana" and Charlottesville, eh John Romero & Alt-Shitists respectively...?!
Nazis are evil. We aren't afraid to remind people of that
Just ask veterans of Omaha Beach, Alt-Shitists, Trumptards etc: including you James Fields, Richard Spencer, Andrew Anglin & Chrissy Cantdoverywell.