2025-11-12
24 分钟I mean, it really has been normalized.
It's sort of the elephant in the room and nobody talks about it anymore.
And I thought, well,
this might be interesting to kind of begin to dig beneath the surface of it and,
and lo and behold, you know, there's a lot of material.
And it's terrifying, you know, like to have 12,000 nuclear warheads,
if that's if the count is accurate, nine nuclear countries, only three are members of NATO.
I mean, that's a calculus that I think is kind of heart-stopping.
This is Catherine Bigelow.
She's been writing, producing and directing films for the last 40 years.
And much of her work grapples with power and the way the government wields it.
Her 2008 film, The Hurt Locker, was set during the Iraq War and it won the Oscar for Best Picture.
Bigelow also won for Best Director, making her the first woman ever to win that award.
She went on to direct Zero Dark Thirty, the 2012 film about the search for Osama bin Laden.
Now, she's out with her first film in eight years, A House of Dynamite.
The movie follows government workers and officials responding to a nuclear missile.
They don't know who launched it, but they do know it's headed toward the US.
Current velocity indicates the object will go suborbital.
Current flight trajectory is consistent with impact somewhere in the continental United States.
What's your level of confidence on that, Tony?