I posted this as a reply on another thread but I think it warrants it's own, so here it is.
But instead of a "Hot Tub" on the back cover, we have this:.
See it for yourself.
It's a little strange this is the ad on the back of April 2001 Popular Mechanics isn't it? A month after he made the statement (which he only could have done if he were time traveling although to be fair, magazines often send out issues way in advance - sometimes months ahead of the date on the cover).
It is also a little strange they would show a round air filter and case when the 2001 Silvarado air filtration system didn't even resemble it, don't you think? Google, why is part of the text covered with a seal?
Notice it is "being installed", just as he said it was. Maybe the "Hot Tub" is a time machine they call "Hot Tub" in homage to Hot Tub Time Machine (which obviously hadn't been filmed yet in 2001). Maybe it is a device installed into vehicles to convert them into time machines?
Obviously this is an ad time travelers were using to contact each other. Maybe there is some sort of code?.
I managed to find the same ad without the seal over it:
I wonder who was answering the phones at 877-THE-TRUCK that month?
A month later this happens:John Titor:Q- Let me ask you one simple question: instead of sitting at your computer, why not present yourself to the government?JT- Please take a look at the front cover of this month's (technology magazine) because its a great example of your legacy to 2036 after the war. One side of the cover describes in great detail how your government is already spying on you. On the other side (and just as important) it tells you how to install a hot tub.
The reason time travelers do not reveal themselves is because your society scares the hell out of us. We do not want to end up in a cement room on a permanent supply of truth drugs as men with lab coats poke at our machine.
But instead of a "Hot Tub" on the back cover, we have this:.
See it for yourself.
It's a little strange this is the ad on the back of April 2001 Popular Mechanics isn't it? A month after he made the statement (which he only could have done if he were time traveling although to be fair, magazines often send out issues way in advance - sometimes months ahead of the date on the cover).
It is also a little strange they would show a round air filter and case when the 2001 Silvarado air filtration system didn't even resemble it, don't you think? Google, why is part of the text covered with a seal?
Notice it is "being installed", just as he said it was. Maybe the "Hot Tub" is a time machine they call "Hot Tub" in homage to Hot Tub Time Machine (which obviously hadn't been filmed yet in 2001). Maybe it is a device installed into vehicles to convert them into time machines?
Obviously this is an ad time travelers were using to contact each other. Maybe there is some sort of code?.
I managed to find the same ad without the seal over it:
I wonder who was answering the phones at 877-THE-TRUCK that month?