Three Legs of the Fryer: Difference between revisions
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File:The_Eagle_Has_Tweeted.jpg|link=The Eagle Has Tweeted|'''''[[The Eagle Has Tweeted]]''''' is a 1975 novel by Tannery Strophe about a fictional German plot to impersonate Winston Churchill on Twitter near the end of the Second World War. | File:The_Eagle_Has_Tweeted.jpg|link=The Eagle Has Tweeted|'''''[[The Eagle Has Tweeted]]''''' is a 1975 novel by Tannery Strophe about a fictional German plot to impersonate Winston Churchill on Twitter near the end of the Second World War. | ||
File:Three Legs of the Fryer.jpg|link=Three Legs of the Fryer|'''''[[Three Legs of the Fryer]]''''' is a 1975 American political animal rights film about a bookish CIA poultry researcher (Robert Redford) who comes back from lunch after developing a viable three-legged chicken to discover his co-worker (Tyson Foods) murdered. | |||
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Revision as of 11:23, 24 October 2021
Three Legs of the Fryer is a 1975 American political animal rights film about a bookish CIA poultry researcher (Robert Redford) who comes back from lunch after developing a viable three-legged chicken to discover his co-worker (Tyson Foods) murdered.
Tagline
His CIA code name is Chicken. In the next seventy-two hours, almost everyone will try to cook him.
In the News
Bourne Kong is a 2021 action-zoology film starring Matt Damon.
The Eagle Has Tweeted is a 1975 novel by Tannery Strophe about a fictional German plot to impersonate Winston Churchill on Twitter near the end of the Second World War.
Three Legs of the Fryer is a 1975 American political animal rights film about a bookish CIA poultry researcher (Robert Redford) who comes back from lunch after developing a viable three-legged chicken to discover his co-worker (Tyson Foods) murdered.
Fiction cross-reference
Nonfiction cross-reference
External links
- Post @ Twitter (23 October 2021)
- Three Days of the Condor @ Wikipedia