I'm going to preface this by admitting that no, I personally have yet to see the new one Bruce Springsteen movie starring the beloved chaos goblin Bear cook Jeremy Allen White. However I listened Nebraska just recently, today, when it was created for me as part of Project “1001 albums” This is a bunch of Exclaim! employees took part.
That in itself doesn't give me the right to give you what is arguably the game's most damaging spoiler. Deliver me out of nowhere although one can imagine; All I can say is what I saw on the social media platform formerly known as Twitter, supplemented with a little additional research (like reading reviews and fan comments).
Much has been said about whether the film gets the story right. This quells some concerns about which the Boss himself was consulted. Deliver me out of nowherebut this does not mean that it is a perfect reflection of historical data – although the work Rolling StoneThe magazine's Andy Greene suggests that it takes considerably fewer liberties than any other musical biopic in Hollywood history. Unfortunately, they got one thing very wrong, and it is my solemn duty to inform you that the film clearly does not respect Springsteen's taste in condiments.
I have it on good authority that there is a scene there. Deliver me out of nowhere where White's Springsteen talks to the child of his friend Faye Romano, a composite character played by Odessa Young This is reportedly based on stories that several girlfriends the musician had during that time period about hot dogs, and something suggests that mustard was his favorite condiment. As @GenZBruceFan pointed out on Twitter, Springsteen actually hates mustard. At a 2015 concert in East Rutherford, New Jersey, he even ranted about how much he hated mustard.
Reflecting on how he once lived above the diner, The Boss told the crowd that he would order a ham sandwich every day (and watch his future wife Patti Scialfa walk down the street, according to NewJersey.comshow review) with no mustard: “Don’t give me any fucking Gray Poupon!”
Having a lifelong aversion to mustard can be a formative experience (for example, as a child I told people I was allergic to mustard so they wouldn't force me to eat it, and now I have to tell people I have a non-celiac gluten intolerance), so it's sad that the filmmakers decided to leave it out of Springsteen's story; but in the end, Nebraska nevertheless appeared – and not a single mustard was harmed during production.





