For fans of Alan Abbadessa-Green's rather addictive frequent (usually on Thursdays) short video Sync Quick News, from Sync Book Press, the one on
, was, well, provocative. The
" clicked on all pistols.
As it turns out, I was looking into a report of five people being shot outside a restaurant in Newport News Tuesday night, at about 8:20 pm, December 2nd. The telling name of the location: Déjà Vu Restaurant and Lounge, Newport News, near Norfolk, Virginia. The Déjà Vu site is attached to Wynnwood Plaza Hotel. The victims were ages 28, 32, 42, 45, and 59, and were together. One was a Navy sailor, and now the Déjà Vu is off-limits to Navy personnel.
Had I just heard some news from Newport? Or Newport News (oh ya, on
November 28th)? Or
Newtown? Or Newton? Was this the same story or
another? And that restaurant name? Whoa. Oh, and yes, I was recently in Newport, Connecticut.
"It is in the humble opinion of this narrator that this is not just 'something that happened.' This cannot be 'one of those things'....This, please, cannot be that. And for what I would like to say, I can't. This was not just a matter of chance.…These strange things happen all the time." ~ Magnolia, 1999.
Alan Green's video news also, in and of itself, gave me a
déjà vu feeling because it spent time talking about this
Twilight Language's and the
Mask of God's recent discussions of the Hanging Man Tarot Card.
My images were of the Hanging Man card and Heath Ledger's last character as a hanging man.
The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus: Heath Ledger's final role.
This all linked to more syncs coming my way.
Heath Ledger and Andrew Keegan starred in 10 Things I Hate About You (1999).
This is the week when celebrities and syncs
became news.
According to Vice, actor Andrew Keegan started a new age temple and spiritual movement in Venice, California, called "Full Circle." (Venice Beach? Venice Beach? See
here and
here.)
"Synchronicity. Time. That's what it's all about," Keegan told Vice. "Whatever, the past, some other time. It's a circle; in the center is now. That's what it's about."
Andrew Keegan's last film role is an uncredited policeman in
The Dark Knight Rises (2012), which, of course, starred Heath Ledger as the Joker.
What occurred also earlier in the week is that I randomly stumbled across a repeat broadcast of a
Tosh.0 episode about "furries" (people who dress up as furred animals for fun, frolic, and sometimes sexual encounters). It gave me a deep
déjà vu feeling watching Tosh's creepy scenario. But not because I had seen this
Tosh.0 episode before, for I had not.
Originally broadcast on September 3, 2013, this specific one was noted as being from Season 5, Episode 5. You can see the video entitled "Furries-Kid,"
here.
In one of his "web redemptions," Tosh decides to stage a "celebrity" furries party. The associated identities assigned to various characters in the sketch are, well, coincidentally bizarre and déjà vu.
Tosh, on the left above, with skin-colored tights on, and elaborate fake body fur, says he is "Robin Williams."
At the "party," which is sort of a furrie
déjà vu version of Stanley Kubrick's
Eyes Wide Shut, the "Williams" character goes around identifying the costumed "celebrities."
Coming to the pictured pink furrie above, who is engaging in motions suggestive of masturbation and hanging himself, "Williams" identifies this is furrie as "Philip Seymour Hoffman." What?
This was prophetic, in a way, as far as these two characters exchanging behaviors.
[Little did I know how "prophetic." See "
Eyes Wide Furry."]
Back to what took place after Tosh's fiction was produced, in an act of parasuicide, the real Philip Seymour Hoffman, 46, died February 2, 2014 (Groundhog Day), with a syringe in his arm. Hoffman's death was caused by "acute mixed drug intoxication, including heroin, cocaine, benzodiazepines and amphetamine," according to the New York City's Medical Examiner's office.
This all seemed a bit of déjà vu, for Hoffman's friend, Heath Ledger's autopsy result of February 6, 2008, from the same medical examiner's office said Ledger had died "as the result of acute intoxication by the combined effects of oxycodone, hydrocodone, diazepam, temazepam, alprazolam and doxylamine." Heath Ledger was 28, when he died January 22, 2008.
By the way, the film Groundhog Day (1993) is the ultimate cinematic treatment of déjà vu, when the same day repeats over and over again.
A few months after Hoffman's death, on August 11, 2014, the real
Robin McLaurin Williams, 63, died in his Paradise Cay, California, home. The Marin County Sheriff's Office deputy coroner stated Williams had hanged himself with a belt and died from asphyxiation.
Williams hanged himself (in the real world). Not Heath Ledger nor Philip Seymour Hoffman (who both, through film and in Tosh's fiction, did hang). The fiction foreshadowed the reality, however, among friends, in a strange twist of programming.
(L-R) Clifton Collins Jr, Philip Seymour Hoffman, Bennett Miller, Heath Ledger, and Abbie Cornish.
Heath Ledger (far right) next to Philip Seymour Hoffman, at the 2006 Oscars with George Clooney, Joaquin Phoenix and Jake Gyllenhaal.
Above and below: Philip Seymour Hoffman and Robin Williams in Patch Adams (1998).
On December 1st, just by "coincidence," I found myself watching
Magnolia again. And there was Philip Seymour Hoffman again.
Phil Parma [Philip Seymour Hoffman]: "Why are frogs falling from the sky?" ~
Magnolia, 1999.