Gender: Unspecified Location: Your mom's basement.
no i only moved once
i lived in one room for a long time but moved when my brother moved from this room
there's three bedrooms technically. but with the two other rooms we turned into bedrooms it's five
In the beginning, during the opening credits, we see the original Nite Owl I stop a thief. There are Batman/Fledermaus posters hanging on the wall of the alley. We can assume the people he rescues are Mr. and Mrs. Wayne, the parents of Batman, coming out of the theatre. Thus, there's no need for Bruce Wayne to become Batman in the Watchmen's Universe.
Popular John F. Kennedy assassination-conspiracy-theory suggests that the President was killed by a bullet fired from the front; specifically, from a fence behind a grassy knoll; also that three transients arrested soon after Kennedy's murder are said to be the "additional assassins". The opening montage portrays the Comedian delivering the fatal bullet from the grassy knoll's fence dressed in the same outfit as one of the "3 Tramps" as they were famously photographed. The puff of gun smoke said to have been seen, turns out to be Blake's cigar smoke. At Blake's funeral, the soundtrack plays "The Sound of Silence" by Paul Simon & Art Garfunkel, a song reportedly inspired by national emotional trauma from the Kennedy murder.
When Dan Dreiberg and Hollis Mason watch a TV news report referencing Rorschach, they see a black and white 'file footage' of Rorschach walking quickly away and to the right of the camera position, glancing back over his right shoulder momentarily and then continues walking away. That footage is intentionally designed to precisely mimic the infamously-disputed film of Bigfoot (known as the Patterson-Gimlin film of 1967).
The shooting of President John F. Kennedy in the movie is framed exactly like the famous "Zapruder film", the only film showing the actual assassination. In the foreground, just as Kennedy is hit, you see Abraham Zapruder with his camera.
During the opening credits in the scene showing Ozymandias outside Studio 54, the following people appear: The Village People (on the right), and David Bowie as Ziggy Stardust leaning on the car with Mick Jagger from The Rolling Stones. (Ozymandias reaches for David Bowie to shake his hand after he turns from the cameras.)
The original draft by Sam Hamm features a vastly different vision than that depicted in the final film. The most prominent sequences is Veidt's plan to change the world (traveling back in time and assassinating Jon Osterman via sniper rifle before he becomes Doctor Manhattan); Doctor Manhattan subsequently killing Veidt instead of letting him live in the graphic novel/final movie; Rorschach's passing judgment on the Child Rapist on the case that created him (drenching the man in cow blood and meat and letting him be fed to his own dogs); and, of course, the ending: Doctor Manhattan destroying himself in the past before Jon is transformed into Doctor Manhattan causes a rift in time and space and causes an alternate dimension which Laurie, Dan, and Rorschach are sucked into and discover an alternate world where they are characters in a hit comic book serial and decide to pick up fighting crime again.