
A fanlisting is a web clique that lists fans of a particular subject. Unlike most web cliques, a person does not need a web site in order to join. Fans from around the world submit their information to their approved fanlisting and they are then listed to show their love for the subject. (The Anime Fanlisting FAQ).
Let's play with your head!, a real basterd history is a worldwide fan list for those who love The Jew Bear, Sg. Donnie Donowitz and his bat, character from Quentin Tarantino's "Inglorious basterds" film. If you are a fan of this rude man, and you wish to join the list, you just need to go to the rules section and follow the advices that are shown next. It's very easy!
In German-occupied France in 1941, Colonel Hans Landa of the SS and SD, nicknamed "The Jew Hunter", has the Jewish Dreyfus family killed, with the exception of teenage Shosanna, whom Landa allows to escape. In the United States, 1st Lieutenant Aldo Raine recruits a team of eight Jewish-American soldiers to parachute into France as civilians prior to the Normandy landings. Their mission is to cause panic and havoc within the Third Reich by savagely killing as many German servicemen as possible, including a "take no prisoners" attitude and scalping their victims. "The Basterds", as they come to be known, develop a modus operandi involving leaving one soldier alive to spread news of the terror of their attacks; Raine carves a Nazi Swastika into at least one of these survivors so that he will be universally identifiable as a Nazi after the war. (Wikipedia)
Eli Roth as Staff Sergeant Donny Donowitz aka "The Bear Jew", second in command of the Basterds. A "baseball bat-swinging Nazi hunter" from Boston who is known as "The Bear Jew" among German servicemen.[14] Some of them fear that Donowitz is in fact a vengeful golem summoned by an angry rabbi. According to Roth, the baseball bat he wields is signed by all the Jews from his neighborhood in Boston. Tarantino reportedly wanted Adam Sandler to play the role of Donowitz, but he declined due to schedule conflicts with the film Funny People.[15] Roth, a professional film director, also directed the film-within-a-film, Nation's Pride, which alludes to German wartime propaganda films.