![]() ![]() But that can’t be so, can it? 51% got Super Biff into office, but I refuse to believe that 51% of our population are Biffs. A country split, dead-even. Good versus evil, right versus left, wrong versus right. ![]() Modern media paints the same picture daily. And whether you feel responsible for that turn of events or not, it is the current reality in which we are living. The archetype for the sequel-style, super bad guy is President. "Back to the Future writer Bob Gale revealed Biff Tannen was based on Trump last year during celebrations of Back to the Future Day (October 21, 2015)."Īt present, we’ve created a future in which Super Biff has an influence on not just US politics, but has attained it’s highest political office. “Biff Tannen, the bully and bad guy of the series, becomes a billionaire businessman with an enormous 27-story casino and an influence in US politics.”Įerie, right? Well this same article reported a not-so-stunning bit of insight from the Back to the Future creative team: "It was the dystopian future Marty McFly was desperate to avoid.” It's worth noting that this originally came out just two days after the election: He reeks of evil.Ĭheck out these excerpts from a British online publication from Novemwith reference to Super Biff. Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles did it with Super Shredder. You take the bad guy from the original storyline and up the ante. Specifically in the sequel.įor those of you not up on your Back to the Future canon, in the sequel Biff isn’t just a bully. The closest parallel to Back to the Future I can draw is that our president does kind of resemble Biff Tannen. ![]() Smart appliances have become a thing, but they haven’t come close to the wonders portrayed in future Marty's house. Our hover boards aren’t actually hover boards. Not Marty McFly’s future like so many fans of the Back to the Future films had hoped. ![]()
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