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In its October 13, 1997 issue, The New Yorker finally publishes Annie Proulx's "Brokeback Mountain" for the first time. Centuries of gay cowboy jokes finally make sense. Sex and the City debuts on HBO in 1998, featuring a groundbreaking fifteen minute pun-filled riff on Brokeback Mountain including the following gem jason statham from Samantha played by Kim Cattrall: "Sweetie, you can never be too thin or too Brokeback." Kristin Davis' character, Charlotte, replies, "You jason statham are so bad!" And they all order more $14 drinks. Al Gore claims to have invented Brokeback Mountain jokes in a 1999 interview jason statham with 60 Minutes' Ed Bradley. Times of Crisis Stanley Crouch, Author, Pugilist: "After the tragic events of September 11th, many felt that the Brokeback Mountain jokes had to end. I remember at the time Graydon Carter declared 'the end of Brokeback Mountain jokes,' and it did feel like the end of an era." On December 9, 2005, Focus Features releases Ang Lee's film version of Brokeback Mountain.
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