17 Facts About Narcos And The Drug Lord Who Inspired It All

  
1. Narcos was originally supposed to be a full-length feature film. According to Producer Eric Newman, once they started discussing how in-depth they wanted to get with the backstories of both the good and the bad characters, the team knew there would be way too much content for a movie. The story was just too good. It needed to be a series.

2. Brazilian actor Wagner Moura had to learn Spanish for the role of Pablo Escobar. He fully immersed himself in the character by taking a Spanish class at a local university and reading everything that had ever been printed about Pablo Escobar.

3. Moura also gained 40lbs to play Escobar—and even after that, he had to wear a fake stomach to really nail Escobar’s physique. Director José Padilha explained that Escobar himself was smoking marijuana all day and would literally eat everything in sight. His physical appearance needed to reflect his life of absurd luxury.

4. The production team was very specific about not depicting the drug war in just clearcut black and white, or good versus bad. Moura explicitly stated that the intention was never to make a show that depicted the “good American cops” going to a Third World country to save everyone.

5. Director Padilha admits that Goodfellas was a big inspiration for how he envisioned the final outcome of the series.

6. Since the actual Escobar documented himself so thoroughly, there were loads of photos and archived video footage to consult for costume recreation and inspiration throughout production of the show.

7. Escobar had to invest in $2,500 worth of rubber bands per month, just so he could hold all his cash together (seriously).

8. Roughly 10% of the cash Escobar kept hidden was eaten, each year, by actual rats. The total amount is in the billions. It made next to no difference to his overall wealth.

9. He even purchased a jet specifically to fly and transport his cash.

10. Escobar was making so much money so quickly that it’s been said he literally set fire to and burned a pile of $2 million to keep his daughter warm while they were on the run.

11. Escobar’s home, Hacienda Napoles, which is featured on the show, was built on 5,000 acres of land. It included a zoo, which, even after the property fell to ruins, was occupied by at least 20 hippos.

12. Escobar’s greatest fear was being extradited to the United States. He was terrified of spending the last years of his life in an American jail. He even offered to pay Colombia’s debt in an attempt to change the extradition laws—only about $10 billion.

13. By the end of the 1980s, Escobar was in control and supplying 80% of the world’s cocaine. Approximately 4 out of 5 Americans doing cocaine were snorting lines supplied directly by Escobar.

14. In 1989, Escobar was listed as the 7th richest man in the entire world.

15. Escobar was directly responsible for upwards of 4,000 deaths, including 200 judges, 1,000 police workers, journalists, and government officials.

16. At the same time, Escobar spent millions on renovating parks, schools, stadiums, and hospitals throughout Colombia. That’s how he got his nickname “Robin Hood.”

17. Escobar’s son (also portrayed on the show) changed his name from Juan Pablo Escobar to Sebastián Marroquín and wrote a book about his father. As far as his father’s legacy goes, Morroquîn’s says that Escobar was “very far from being a hero—I always say if someone reads my book and wants to be Pablo Escobar, then I did a bad job.” 

Source | Thought Catalog 

Hundreds See A Huge City Floating In The Clouds Above A Town In China 

  

Now this is pretty creepy stuff! 

The ‘floating city’ video allegedly captured in China has become an online phenomenon and the basis of countless new conspiracy theories. 

Some Youtubers are questioning the validity of the story (and picture) because there seems to be only one video circulating in the news. 

Many believe that if the ‘floating city’ were in fact a real occurance, there would be hundreds of pictures & videos throughout the Internet from perplexed onlookers– especially in today’s picture obsessed ‘Instagram’ society. I kind of agree, but the video is quite mind boggling. — and so are some of the theories surrounding it. 

The fact that there is only one piece of media does kind of seem suspicious. It’s kind of hard to believe that only one person had their camera ready –especially since most of us keep our phones either glued to our hands or very close by. There is no way everybody and their mother wouldn’t have recorded this.

Check out this video on YOUTUBE and peep the comments.

What do YOU think this floating city is??? 

Join the discussion. 

Oakland Church Gets $500-A-Day Fine After Neighbors Complain About Chior Noise

  Via Bossip– The city of Oakland is threatening to impose $500-a-day fines on a church that has long served  residents in Oakland after a neighbor complained that the late-night noise of the church choir was too loud. 

Via SF Gate:
Pastor Thomas A. Harris III of the Pleasant Grove Baptist Church said he was surprised to receive a letter from the city’s nuisance abatement division on Aug. 31, saying the “excessive noise” of organ, drums and amplified vocals during the church’s weekly choir rehearsals is a nuisance to neighbors — and violates city law.

According to the letter, the church could be hit with a $3,529 initial fine, and penalties of $500 a day, until it abates the noise.

“This is strange,” Harris said, adding that it’s “quite unheard of for a church to be fined because of joyful noise.

The problem, according to a copy of the complaint to the city, is that the loud music goes on sometimes until 2 a.m. The copy of the complaint was sent to the local NAACP head, George Holland, but excluded the name of the person who complained, self-described as an 11-year resident of West Oakland who had never had problems with the church noise until 2014.

Harris said the choir practice ends at 9 p.m. He also said he didn’t know which of his neighbors complained but assumed the person must be a newcomer to the area.

“We’ll try to work with the community,” he said. “We don’t want to disrespect them, but we don’t want to be disrespected.”

During one particularly joyful week in August, the peal of gospel music resounded “around the radius of the church” and could be heard from half a block away on all sides, according to a diagram the neighbor sent to city officials.