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President Trump is practicing the "Art of the Possible". He has done this his entire life, thus his Big Beautiful Bill. Trump ...
George Mullen is constantly hearing the song "Who Killed Bambi?" throughout Zero Day, and it turns out that it has a connection to the former president's past.Zero Day reveals that George Mullen's ...
Ultimately, George Mullen is absolved of all this because it turns out that he neither has dementia and he’s able to identify the real perpetrators of Zero Day. So how does Zero Day end?
George Mullen's visual and auditory hallucinations prove that something clearly isn't right with the former president, with it having a severe impact on his work.Mullen's fogginess causes him to ...
It’s George Mullen having to identify the dead body of his secretary Roger that triggers his flashback to the scene of his ...
George Mullen is on the case to find the truth, and he's got an elite staff to help him, including workers hacking into the internet to track the cell of hackers who caused the attack.
For the first half of Zero Day, it seems fairly obvious that George Mullen is exhibiting signs of dementia. However, there’s a later twist that conveniently explains the leader’s ...
When George Mullen confronts Dreyer, he confirms what Alex said, adding that he did what he did out of loyalty to the country with the hopes of giving it the “last chance” to save itself.
Another mystery plaguing George Mullen in Zero Day has to do with his own grip on reality. The former President is clearly experiencing memory loss and hallucinations. The obvious answer is he is ...
Throughout the first four episodes of Netflix's limited series Zero Day, the main character, former POTUS George Mullen, hears the 1979 Sex Pistols song "Who Killed Bambi?" It is introduced in the ...
Is George Mullen cured of Proteus in 'Zero Day?' Proteus—the top-secret technological weapon that severely impedes memory and invokes hallucinations—was administered on Mullen, ...