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- Challenged by phone by the Pro Bono Spy Hunter and his valet, The Boss travels to the year 2121, where the USSR won the Cold War. Caught spying, The Boss undergoes a subtle questioning technique that tortures him and his interrogator.
- Friedrich funds a contemporary clone of Karl Marx. Marx's hideout is in Peru. Karl will be in a meeting of the Communist Party. Dads, moms, and kids arrive to enjoy a birthday party. Karl freaks out, noticing a priest and nuns.
- When, by phone, the Sociologist provides advice on counter subversive torture, he vaguely feels that previously the Intelligence Officer, the Special Operations Officer, and the Painter-Narrator believed in Latin American and world peace.
- ParlaNchíno is a Chinese reporter. He follows the rules imposed by the wise Chinese Communist Party. He points out an audience knows what entertains it. If they like what a film director does, they like his style. It is his brand.
- ParlaNchíno is a Chinese reporter. He follows the rules imposed by the wise Chinese Communist Party. He points out that Mr. Moo mistreats him. He forces him to eat repulsive and expensive food. Moo is a tyrant. Moo stays hidden.
- ParlaNchíno is a Chinese reporter. He follows the rules imposed by the wise Chinese Communist Party. He points out that he knows Mr. Moo and his philosophy. Mr. Moo isn't a Marxist.
- ParlaNchíno is a Chinese reporter. He follows directives by the Chinese Communist Party. He hates American filmmakers. He doesn't think that they are artists. He looks at them as mercenaries. They sold out workers' ideals.
- ParlaNchíno is a Chinese reporter. He follows the rules imposed by the Chinese Communist Party. He points out that his news program has a high rating. The viewers love it. They want to learn more about class struggle.
- ParlanChíno is a Chinese reporter. He follows directives by the Chinese Communist Party. He points out that the cultural elite didn't have much public in the US. The film producers did. So, by treating filmmakers as artists, it got one.
- The Research Director runs The Institute. It deals with mind powers. It has an Art Gallery. It is a scam. It is a front for gunrunning. He supports art and culture as tools of war. He is a cynic.
- The Narrator shares with us how, by phone, a Latin American Sociologist explained a military-funded study on the feasibility of a coup d'état to the Intelligence Officer, visited by a Special Operations Officer after that.
- ParlaNchíno is a Chinese reporter. He follows the orders imposed by the wise Chinese Communist Party. He points out that mind powers are a new dangerous Communist tool. He suffered a backlash. He shares some stories about him and Mr. Mu.
- ParlaNchíno is a Chinese reporter. He follows the rules imposed by the wise Chinese Communist Party. He points out that class struggle is a class war. War is an activity that demands strategies. To win, thinking like a coward is helpful.
- Bilioso Moral is a sociologist. He must promote a book on morals. He knows his specialized and unusual viewpoint is not the best for selling the book. He goes ahead and explains the subject cunningly.
- ParlaNchíno is a Chinese reporter. He follows the rules imposed by the wise Chinese Communist Party. He points out that the viewers cannot talk to the TV set. It works like a bullhorn. It sends messages. It doesn't receive them.
- ParlaNchíno is a Chinese reporter. He follows the rules imposed by the wise Chinese Communist Party. He points out that a person is a body and the mind a tiny part. The bourgeoisie states the opposite. So, it pays much less to the workers.
- ParlaNchíno is a Chinese reporter. He follows the rules imposed by the wise Communist Party. He points out that hypocrisy is a bourgeois tool and skill. On air, he talks to Mr. Moo.
- ParlaNchíno is a Chinese reporter. He follows the rules imposed by the Chinese Communist Party. He points out that the function of film directors is to approve the capitalist taste. So, this taste doesn't have competitors. It is king.
- Bilioso Moral is a sociologist. He loves theory. He promotes a book on morals. He points out that punctuality is a human invention. He provides complex examples. He dissects how time is measured. He enjoys explaining it.
- ParlaNchíno is a Chinese reporter. He follows the rules imposed by the wise Chinese Communist Party. He points out that Moo is the man who programs the computer that runs this virtual world. As a bourgeois, he likes to fool the workers.
- After Intelligence Officer One shows interest in researching how JFK was killed, the Boss keeps revealing telephone conversations with the Pro Bono Spy Hunter and his valet, having to avoid being 'replaced' by unidentified forces, later.
- ParlaNchíno is a Chinese reporter. He follows the rules imposed by the wise Communist Party. He points out that belief is the key to mind powers. China will conquer the world with them. He heals himself after a flawed mental experiment.
- ParlaNchíno is a Chinese reporter. He follows the rules imposed by the wise Chinese Communist Party. He points out that the wealthy protect their interests. They pay people to praise them and how they earn money. They like the applause.