




'thanks Bob, see you inside & tell David I am on ward C when he turns up, his bed is next to mine. '
Introducing the Staff:
Hessain Warrior plays Chibs a crazy bike gang leader who had to get a regular job after spending time in prison for various unknown crimes.
Introducing the Staff:
Big Nurse likes to be in control & as such she uses strict rules & manipulation to ensure the patients & other employees do as she asks. However, this does not always work in her favour.
Introducing the Patients: post 6 an absolute lunatic patient who besides other things calls himself The King.
Last yr he thought he was a fashion designer.
We will come back to other staff members later on.
The story begins the morning that a new "Admission," Randle McMurphy, is introduced to an insane asylum where Chief is the longest-residing patient. McMurphy is larger than life, intelligent, and observant. He stirs up the ward immediately by introducing friendly competition—gambling—and encouraging the men to rebel against the petty rules created and enforced by Nurse Ratched (often referred to as "Big Nurse").
McMurphy places a bet with the other men on the ward that he can break Nurse Ratched without
a) getting sent to the Disturbed Ward, b) getting treated with electroshock therapy or c) being lobotomized.
Slowly, McMurphy undermines Nurse Ratched’s system of control while remaining Mr. Nice Guy. She’s no fool, however. What McMurphy doesn’t understand is that Nurse Ratched has a lot of control over the situation. Since he’s a patient in the asylum, she can keep him locked up as long as she wants.
Chief Bromden, a schizophrenic Native American man who pretends to be deaf and dumb so that everybody will ignore him, he narrates One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest.
HAHA Marco...the earth is about as flat as your moms chest...and from what I recall...it's not that flat!! now go get me a deck of cards.
A fight broke out with 2 men seen below doing battle in the yard.
The one accused the other of constantly playing the Village People record YMCA.
The King disarmed K-knight, who he teasingly called Gayknight during the sword fight.
Apparently K-knight was quoted as saying 'It is not over yet'.