Where were you when Susan Sarandon and Debra Messing started a political feud on Twitter? This is a question that your grandchildren and, possibly, your great-grandchildren will ask you many years hence, so you’d better take note of your whereabouts right now.

If you’re unfamiliar with the great Sarandon-Messing War, some background: on Monday night, March 28, Susan Sarandon—actress, activist, ping-pong evangelist—went on the MSNBC show All in with Chris Hayes, and, honey, you’d better believe that Susan Sarandon went all in. Meaning, she suggested that if her preferred presidential candidate, one Bernard “Middle Names Are for Wall Street Robber Barons” Sanders, loses the nomination to Hillary Diane Rodham Clinton, she might not vote for Clinton. In fact, she (facetiously, I think) almost implied that she’d vote, hypothetically, for Donald Jazmyn Trump because the extremity of his presidency—the Children of Men–style descent into apocalyptic madness that it would almost assuredly bring about—would hasten a progressive revolution. Here’s the video:

Now, people really freaked about this, because they took Sarandon’s intimations as literal instead of theoretical. Sarandon was, I think, really just flippantly hinting at an accelerationist notion that we must tip the country into chaos so a true change can happen, a sort of cleansing by fire that’s fun to think about from the cushy remove of comfort and wealth, but that sounds pretty scary to other people who don’t exist in that remove. Was Sarandon really advocating this kind of thing? Hard to say. Sarandon later clarified that she of course would never support Trump, but that wasn’t enough for some.

Sarandon’s comments launched a thousand earnest, scolding, defensive content ships, and, most crucially, they spurred one Debra Lynn Messing into action. Remember Debra Messing? She’s the Will & Grace actress who starred in that weird reality series Smash for two seasons and now solves mysteries. She’s very into Twitter and politics and stuff, and is a vocal Clinton supporter. So she took to tweeting about this interview shortly after it gained traction and has basically not stopped since. Sarandon has tweeted back, criticizing Messing for re-tweeting negative comments even, and the whole thing has spiraled into a kind of gay Ragnarök.

At this point this post could just become a compendium of Debra Messing’s, and Susan Sarandon’s, tweets from the last 36 hours, but I’ll spare you that. If you’re curious about the minutiae of this cataclysmic event—“cataclysmic” is not hyperbole; this thing is so significant that I have spoken to every single gay man I know about it in the past day—you can go look through their timelines. But here, in the interest of service journalism, I will provide a few highlights from the Sarandon-Messing War that feel, for various reasons, particularly relevant.

(Yes, you read that correctly. It does say “Sally Fields.”)

That last one has nothing to do with anything exactly, I just thought you should know about it.

So there you have it! Debra Messing and Susan Sarandon are fighting, they’ve dragged Kathy Najimy and Rosie O’Donnell into it, and it’s still going on. It’s still churning along! Those of us who wish there was a third season of Smash can feel like we’ve at least gotten a little taste of what that would look like, and everyone else can feel cozy in the righteousness of not having started a beef with Susan Sarandon recently. I mean, most of us haven’t done that in the last, I dunno, couple of months, right? I don’t think most of us have. O.K. I think that’s all. Go read Twitter! That is the one time I will ever tell any of you to do that. It’s really worth it. Witness history.