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Mailing List Logs for ShadowRN

Message no. 1
From: Role Playing Manager <moria@*****.EERIE.FR>
Subject: Coke storyline
Date: Thu, 4 Nov 1993 16:47:19 GMT
Following my mail, here's the storyline of the ad, made by one of my friends :
( alquier@*****.fr )

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I saw on TV ( french TV of course ) a preview of a commercial that
litterally stunned me.

The action takes place in dark and Blade-runner like streets.

This are the 2020s, the USA are under a facist government. People are
frightened by a gang of rollers. The rollers run through the streets at a
crazy speed. ( It looks like a japanese anime but its a little movie ). The
rollers act as rebels or outlaws. They stop in front of a shop, break the
chains of the doors and get the bottles they find inside : in these ages of
prohibition, COCA-COLA is forbidden ( or restricted ).

In the same time, a child witnesses tbe scene from the upper window of
a nearby house. His mother, frightened as the others tries to shut every
window down. When she gets to the child, the rollers have finished their work
and start their crazy ride again.

But before leaving, one of them notice the child and his scared,
japanese, mother.

On the last picture, the logo of Coca-Cola appears on the screen, with
the name of the company replaced by a barcode....


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Bring to you by your fellow servant,


Ben - NightWolf

-=-=-

+-----------------------------+----------------------------------------------+
| Benjamin Legangneux | "How can you find your way in the shadows, |
| | If you have no light ?" |
| e-mail : moria@*****.fr | |
| legangne@*****.fr | Michael Styx - Tales of the Black Dove |
+-----------------------------+----------------------------------------------+

Further Reading

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Disclaimer

These messages were posted a long time ago on a mailing list far, far away. The copyright to their contents probably lies with the original authors of the individual messages, but since they were published in an electronic forum that anyone could subscribe to, and the logs were available to subscribers and most likely non-subscribers as well, it's felt that re-publishing them here is a kind of public service.